
Queens of the Breakers
To begin their third album, The Barr Brothers weren't writing any songs. For the first time, the Montreal outfit's three members - namesake siblings Brad and Andrew Barr, harpist Sarah Pagé - went empty-handed into the studio. No plans or preconceptions, no books of lyrics or sheets of chords - they went down miles of snowy road to a cabin on a frozen lake, a place full of windows and microphones and starlight and sunshine, with amplifiers in the bedrooms, their volumes turned up loud. On the fringes of Saint Zenon, Québec (pop. 1,1150), a 30-minute snowmobile ride to the nearest grocery store, the band spent seven days making things up. Improvisations that lasted hours at a time - noons and midnights, dusks and dawns, with grooves inspired by India, West Africa and 808s; by Brad's scorching electric guitar; and by Pagé's new inventions, hacks to turn her harp into a versatile, sub-bass-booming noisemaker.
Queens of the Breakers was born at that cabin in the country. Then the band took that racket and distilled it into songs: 11 tracks of blazing courage and failing resolve; suffused with groove, melody and the Barr Brothers' wide-open sense of the blues. At times the sound's all twinkling, the score for a lost John Hughes film; at other times it's whetted, searching, like the stuff of Lhasa de Sela or Led Zeppelin's III. These are tales of teenagers prowling through Rhode Island mansions (the title track), coming to Montreal and falling in love ("Song That I Heard"), tattered patriotism and clenching fists ("Kompromat", "Ready for War"). There's also "Defibrillation", a mournful letter from a father to his son, inspired by the broken rhythm of a pair of hospital heart monitors - and a drumbeat based on that dither.
It's this tension, this dither, that lives at the centre of Queens of the Breakers. Three players - friends, comrades, music-makers, all of them trying to play in sync. Three bandmates - each of them fumbling, remembering, trying to invent something together. A band still playing, even occasionally reimagining, their rock'n'roll.
Product Details
- Black 12" vinyl 140g
- Gatefold with printed inner sleeve
- Cardboard sleeve
- 16-bit/44.1k
- 320 kbps
- Secret City Records
- October 13, 2017
Musicians
- Guitars / Vocals / Keyboards / Bass
- Drums / Percussion / Keyboards / Bass
- Harps / Vocals / Guitars
- Bass (Queens of the Breakers, It Came to Me, Hideous Glorious)
- Bass (Defibrillation, Kompromat, Ready for War)
- Vocals (Defibrillation)
- Vocals (Song That I Heard / Hideous Glorious Part 2)
- Kamale n'goni (Kompromat)
- Requinto (It Came to Me)
- Violin (You Would Have to Lose Your Mind, Ready for War)
- Viola (You Would Have to Lose Your Mind, Ready for War)
- Cello (You Would Have to Lose Your Mind, Ready for War)
- Saxophone (Song That I Heard)
- French Horn (Song That I Heard)
- Trumpet (Song That I Heard)
Production Credits
- Brad Barr / Andrew Barr
- Ryan Freeland
- Marcus Paquin
- Graham Lessard
- Marcus Paquin
- Brad Barr / Andrew Barr / Pierre Remillard
- Brad Barr / Andrew Barr
- Richard Swift
- Francis Bélanger
- Kim Rosen
Compositions
- Brad Barr
- Brad Barr / Andrew Barr / Sarah Pagé
- Nathan Moore
- Nathan Moore
- Brad Barr / Boris Petrowski
- Andy King