"Muireann Bradley, une technique de la six-cordes digne de l’héritage d’un Bert
Jansch."Télérama
À seulement 17 ans, Muireann Bradley s’impose comme l’une des révélations de la
scène folk
The Weather Station
Description
Tamara Lindeman heeft maar 10 seconden nodig om ons mee te sleuren op ‘Humanhood’, het zevende en meest pakkende album dat ze ooit heeft gemaakt als The Weather Station. Ze neemt je meteen mee in het ongebonden gevoel van niet weten hoe of wat we geacht worden bij te dragen aan deze verscheurde wereld. Het is de rode draad van ‘Humanhood’, geschreven tijdens een van de moeilijkste periodes van Lindemans leven, op het moment dat acceptatie een ernstige optie werd.
In de herfst van 2023 verzamelde Lindeman zes muzikanten in Canterbury Music Company, waar ze ‘Ignorance’ en ‘How is it That I Should Look at the Stars’ mee had opgenomen. Hoewel sommigen onder hen al hadden samengewerkt, was dat nooit in deze specifieke opstelling of context. Lindeman wilde immers de plotselinge vonken horen die nieuwe ontmoetingen veroorzaken, om te zien hoe iedereen in realtime reageerde op de liedjes en schetsen die ze aanleverde.
********** Français **********
Une fusion poétique de folk et de rock introspectif
********** English **********
It takes only 10 seconds for Tamara Lindeman to pull us to the floor on Humanhood, the seventh and most arresting album she has ever made as The Weather Station. “I’ve gotten used to feeling like I’m crazy—or just lazy,” she sings at the start of “Neon Signs,” her voice at once a soft whisper to a confidant and a full-throated confession to a crowd. “Why can’t I get off this floor? Think straight anymore?” If you don’t know this feeling, consider yourself blessed, because it seems these days like our true modern malaise, that unbound sense of not knowing how or what it is we’re supposed to contribute to this fractious world, or if we even have the energy or will to try. That disoriented sense is the emotional throughline of Humanhood, written during one of the most difficult periods of Lindeman’s life and rendered with a rock band with improvisational chops just as she began to recover by reckoning with a complicated truth: Sometimes, life simply tries to dismantle us, and we must accept that in order to survive.
From the outside, 2022 likely appeared a banner year for Lindeman. Her 2021 album Ignorance—a deeply personal but widely resonant reflection on climate change, or how we’ve learned to live alongside our own existential undoing—was one of that year’s most celebrated records. 2022, then, was a time of touring, travel, and activism alongside the release of Ignorance’s more austere companion, the beautiful How Is It That I Should Look at the Stars. But at an ostensible new professional peak, she was also going through a mental health crisis she mostly kept hidden. As Lindeman has done for at least 15 years, she turned to songwriting, combining pain, confusion, and flickers of distant hope with ideas about advertising, capitalism, and how we’re meant to feel very specific ways into pages and pages of lyrics. In the past, Lindeman mostly wrote about her past, turning backwards to gain perspective. But for Humanhood, she worked with the present as she tried to endure it. Humanhood, then, radiates with new urgency—and emerges as a sort of tether, offered up here for any of us else feeling disconnected from the vertiginous reality of right now.
In the fall of 2023, Lindeman gathered six musicians at Canterbury Music Company, where she had recorded Ignorance and How Is It That I Should Look at the Stars, alongside co-producer Marcus Paquin. Several of these players—drummer Kieran Adams, keyboardist Ben Boye, percussionist Phillippe Melanson, reed-and-wind specialist Karen Ng, and bassist Ben Whiteley—had worked together but never in this specific arrangement or context. Lindeman, after all, wanted to hear the sudden sparks made by these new encounters, to witness everyone react in real-time to the songs and sketches she supplied.
Tickets
Normal
22€