Barenaked Ladies
Sat 21 Sep 2024 - 19:30 MDT
with special guest Toad the Wet Sprocket
Ford Amphitheater,
Colorado Springs, CO
Barenaked Ladies Biography
"I think it would be fair to say if the band was collectively known as Stella, then this record would indicate the reality that Stella had indeed got her groove back." states Ed Robertson of Toronto's Barenaked Ladies. After 27 years together, over 14 million albums sold, multiple Juno Awards, and Grammy nominations, Silverball, the cerebral band's fourteenth album finds the long-standing partnership of Ed Robertson (guitar, vocals), Jim Creeggan (bass, vocals), Kevin Hearn (keyboard, guitar, vocals) and Tyler Stewart (drums, vocals) firing on all cylinders.
The album's graying protagonist is battered and bruised by life, but as the opening song, Get Back Up, indicates, he keeps lifting himself off the campus, Rocky-like, to deliver a flurry of counterpunches, along with a wisecrack or two. But there's an underlying poignancy to Silverball as well. This is a mature album containing rock & roll songs repurposed to portray resiliency in midlife.
The boxing metaphors come fast and furious in "Get Back Up"; indeed, at one point Robertson wryly rhymes "Muhammed Ali" with "boxing imagery." "I was writing that song with Kevin Griffin of Better Than Ezra, an old friend and collaborator," Ed explains. "I also love that line in the first verse: 'I'm not gonna be the next big thing/But I'm getting fitted for a new brass ring.' In other words, I'm not reaching for a brass ring, I'm just having one made."
"This is the first record since our debut Gordon that was written with no hand-wringing, second-guessing, insecurity or self-doubt," Robertson asserts. "As we got ready to make the record, I was thinkin', man, this is what I get to do: I try to process some of the stuff I've gone through and am going through and write songs about it. I play them for the guys I've played with for 27 years, and they call me back and go, 'Dude, these songs are awesome - we can't wait to make this record.' I had an overwhelming feeling of confidence and gratitude heading into it."
"My goal has always been to write things that don't sound awkward," Robertson says of his approach to writing lyrics. "To find parts of conversation that roll off the tongue, that have meaning and that people can identify with. For me, the ultimate goal in trying to write a song is to get those phrases to just fly by, to fit in the rhythm of the song. So if I'm futzing around too much with grammar or rhyme, I know that it's not the right line; I need to find a way to say it that sounds like conversation."
Once the material was set, BNL wasted no time deciding on a producer, turning to their longtime friend Gavin Brown (The Tragically Hip, Metric), who had helmed their previous project, 2013 Grinning Streak. "We had so much fun making the last record -- it felt great and worked well for the dynamic of the band," Robertson explains. "So we decided to go back in with Gavin and his team and work back home in Toronto. And it was absolutely the right move."
The title track references Robertson's obsession with pinball; he's been collecting and refurbishing vintage machines since 1998. Silverball was an attempt to put another song out there so that Pinball Wizard wasn't the only song about pinball in the world," Robertson jokes. "I didn't really see the appeal of writing a pinball song until I started to think about it as a metaphor for a relationship - for this notion of an intricately connected machine where you literally push its buttons - and it started to make sense in describing a relationship. If you're engaging with a person and you know what you're doing, you light everything up and take it to the next level; that's the metaphor. Gavin noted that Silverball should be the name of the record. It's just such a cool word; it's nostalgic and evocative."
The album's most emotionally direct song is its climactic closer, Tired Of Fighting With You, written and sung by Hearn. "That song is particularly poignant," Roberson says. "Kevin's cancer came back, and he wrote that song in the midst of everything he was dealing with. It's a beautiful song - a heartbreaking song. It's so perfect. It gives you a little insight into how heavy a track that is. And the beauty of that song is that it works on whatever level you take it on."
In Robertson's view, Silverball has already attained a lofty status in the band's canon, for reasons that are fundamental and enduring. "I think the strength of this record is the band playing together," he says. "We're pushing in new directions - as always, I think - but it's still unmistakably these four guys playing together, and that's what I'm most proud of. I put the record on and it doesn't sound like anything we've ever done before, and yet it is unmistakably the new Barenaked Ladies record. We made it quickly and effortlessly, and I think it's a great showcase of what this band is capable of."
The album's graying protagonist is battered and bruised by life, but as the opening song, Get Back Up, indicates, he keeps lifting himself off the campus, Rocky-like, to deliver a flurry of counterpunches, along with a wisecrack or two. But there's an underlying poignancy to Silverball as well. This is a mature album containing rock & roll songs repurposed to portray resiliency in midlife.
The boxing metaphors come fast and furious in "Get Back Up"; indeed, at one point Robertson wryly rhymes "Muhammed Ali" with "boxing imagery." "I was writing that song with Kevin Griffin of Better Than Ezra, an old friend and collaborator," Ed explains. "I also love that line in the first verse: 'I'm not gonna be the next big thing/But I'm getting fitted for a new brass ring.' In other words, I'm not reaching for a brass ring, I'm just having one made."
"This is the first record since our debut Gordon that was written with no hand-wringing, second-guessing, insecurity or self-doubt," Robertson asserts. "As we got ready to make the record, I was thinkin', man, this is what I get to do: I try to process some of the stuff I've gone through and am going through and write songs about it. I play them for the guys I've played with for 27 years, and they call me back and go, 'Dude, these songs are awesome - we can't wait to make this record.' I had an overwhelming feeling of confidence and gratitude heading into it."
"My goal has always been to write things that don't sound awkward," Robertson says of his approach to writing lyrics. "To find parts of conversation that roll off the tongue, that have meaning and that people can identify with. For me, the ultimate goal in trying to write a song is to get those phrases to just fly by, to fit in the rhythm of the song. So if I'm futzing around too much with grammar or rhyme, I know that it's not the right line; I need to find a way to say it that sounds like conversation."
Once the material was set, BNL wasted no time deciding on a producer, turning to their longtime friend Gavin Brown (The Tragically Hip, Metric), who had helmed their previous project, 2013 Grinning Streak. "We had so much fun making the last record -- it felt great and worked well for the dynamic of the band," Robertson explains. "So we decided to go back in with Gavin and his team and work back home in Toronto. And it was absolutely the right move."
The title track references Robertson's obsession with pinball; he's been collecting and refurbishing vintage machines since 1998. Silverball was an attempt to put another song out there so that Pinball Wizard wasn't the only song about pinball in the world," Robertson jokes. "I didn't really see the appeal of writing a pinball song until I started to think about it as a metaphor for a relationship - for this notion of an intricately connected machine where you literally push its buttons - and it started to make sense in describing a relationship. If you're engaging with a person and you know what you're doing, you light everything up and take it to the next level; that's the metaphor. Gavin noted that Silverball should be the name of the record. It's just such a cool word; it's nostalgic and evocative."
The album's most emotionally direct song is its climactic closer, Tired Of Fighting With You, written and sung by Hearn. "That song is particularly poignant," Roberson says. "Kevin's cancer came back, and he wrote that song in the midst of everything he was dealing with. It's a beautiful song - a heartbreaking song. It's so perfect. It gives you a little insight into how heavy a track that is. And the beauty of that song is that it works on whatever level you take it on."
In Robertson's view, Silverball has already attained a lofty status in the band's canon, for reasons that are fundamental and enduring. "I think the strength of this record is the band playing together," he says. "We're pushing in new directions - as always, I think - but it's still unmistakably these four guys playing together, and that's what I'm most proud of. I put the record on and it doesn't sound like anything we've ever done before, and yet it is unmistakably the new Barenaked Ladies record. We made it quickly and effortlessly, and I think it's a great showcase of what this band is capable of."
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