SOUNDTRACK: SLOAN-Commonwealth [Shamrock Side–Patrick Pentland] (2014).
For Sloan’s 11th album, the four members of the band each wrote the songs of a side. I originally thought that they recorded all of the music alone, but that seems to be wrong–and would hardly be a Sloan album). In conjunction with the album, each guy was given a suit of cards (and an actual deck was made as well). While this doesn’t necessarily mean the album is very different from their others (it still sounds very Sloan), it seems to have given the guys a bit more room to experiment.
I’ve always had trouble telling whose songs are whose in Sloan, primarily because they all write such different songs all the time. But also because their voices aren’t radically distinct.
According to the CBC website, Patrick Pentland is responsible for some of the band’s biggest hit songs, including “The Good in Everyone,” “Everything You’ve Done Wrong” and “Money City Maniacs.”
Pentland only wrote four songs for his side. And none of them are especially long. Overall his songs are heavier fuzzier and rockier.
“13 (Under a Bad Sign)” is a heavy rocker at only two minutes. Even though it’s the same length as Murphy’s also heavy “Get Out” it just rocks a lot harder. It also opens with a bass–one of the few songs on the album that does so. It’s a big loud rocking riff. “Take It Easy” is even noisier. The guitars feedback as the bass propels along. It’s a simple song, with a simple heavy chord structure, and it has a simple catchy chorus. Good rocking Sloan.
“What’s Inside” slows things down a bit—it has a familiar bass line and swirling guitars. There’s lots of echo on this song, especially in the chorus which seems almost shoegazey. It’s probably my least favorite song on the album because of the way it kind of meanders–it rather slows the momentum of the disc. But his final song, “Keep Swinging (Downtown)” totally redeems it, with a super catchy classic rock sound classic. It has a great got sing along chorus. This could easily be a huge single and a live concert favorite. It’s 3 and a half minutes, but nearly the last minute is an extended outro with a great pretty acoustic guitar riff.
For only four songs, Pentland makes a huge statement.
[READ: October 11, 2014] “Brute”
The Walrus’ summer reading issue presents three stories and two poems in which: “The Walrus presents fresh takes on old crimes.” Each story is about a crime of some kind, but seemed from an unexpected way. I rather enjoyed the way the writers played around with the crime genre to make them something very different. This story is about murder.
Of the three stories I liked this story the least. Not because it from the point of view of a dog–that part I liked. In fact I enjoyed a lot of details in the story–like that there was a character named Grassy Noel, that the narrator believes all golden labs have a Scottish accent and that the narrator speaks as if he is not a dog.
First we learn about Big Cy’s (the narrator) history. He used to hang around the bus station grubbing for food.
Then he witnessed a Lab rescue a baby and saw that dog praised and held high. He wants to know:
Who is better. The dog who is … naturally good or the one who struggles to be good.
This was an interesting dilemma I thought. But Big Cy knew that he must kill the lab and live with that family. And he says that he and the animal he kills are not the same species.
He builds a ramp with which to hop the fence in to the lab’s yard. But when he kills the lab, the family comes out and shoots at him. He escapes and makes his way downtown. He started eating out of dumpsters until one day he saw an open convertible and he hopped in. When the driver came Big Cy felt that he and the driver were spiritually of the same species. This was Grassy Noel, a gambler and a petty thief.
The end of the story is less than satisfying. I didn’t really care for the way it wrapped up.

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