Country: Canada
Language: English
Genre: Indie Rock
Label Number: SC011-2
☠: Selected by Lass
© 2000 Sub City Records
The personal remains the political whichever way you want to cut it. Winnipeg's Weakerthans embody this ethic better than most on their second and long-awaited follow-up to their 1998 debut, Fallow.
Splitting from Winnipeg's more punk Propagandhi, John Samson is
following a more melodic and introspective path while retaining much of
the politics. Constructed of vignettes of precise moments in time and
place which manage nonetheless to speak volumes, Left and Leaving
deftly mixes social commentary with folk and punk rock. This is an
intelligent, literate album, and Samson a wordsmith the likes of Elvis Costello or Ron Sexsmith.
There is the nice turn of phrase with the line "I am your pamphleteer"
referring as much to an absent loved one as to the listener, and on
"Aside," Samson sings that he relies "a bit too heavily on alcohol and
irony." While "Exiles Among You" describes the disposed among us whom we
step over and dare not make eye contact with, the album is never
heavy-handed, but simply illustrative of another way of life, the path
not chosen or hopefully avoided, especially on tunes like "This Is a
Fire Door." Left and Leaving is as well-played an album as it is written. Produced by Ian Blurton, musically Left and Leaving is equal parts agit folk and punk-pop. There are dashes of the Rheostatics, a touch of Bob Mould, and a tasty Neil Young
guitar solo on "Elegy for Elsabet." Coming out of the blue collar city
of Winnipeg, the images ring true, reminding us that in this fevered era
of technology, the people who actually produce the stuff consumed
remain much as they always have, rarely seen and rarer still heard.
tags: the weakerthans, left and leaving, 2000, flac,
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