Wednesday, March 21, 2012
BONNIE STE-CROIX'S NEW CANADIAN GIRL VIDEO
Canadian folk favourite Bonnie Ste-Croix has a new video out for her most recent effort, Canadian Girl. Released last year, the disc is a cycle of songs inspired by her move across the country, from B.C. to Nova Scotia. While making the trip, she recorded songs in each province and territory, with local guests. It's part road trip and travelogue, part reflections on this country.
Now she has a new video for the title track, which documents the journey. Check it out here, and following that, I've re-posted my review of the disc from last August.
http://youtu.be/cPt6NV-NVBg
Major moves can trigger lots of changes. When you're pulling up stakes and changing homes, cities, even coasts, other life changes tend to get tossed in the mix as well. And, some big ideas can pop into your head as well. That's what happened to Bonnie Ste-Croix last year when she found herself moving from Vancouver all the way to Halifax. She decided to be closer to her mother, who was not well. Ste-Croix had grown up in Gaspe, so it was sort of a homecoming, the right ocean anyway. Thinking about all the provinces she'd cross to get there inspired a unique idea.
Ste-Croix decided to make a trip cross-country and do what she does best: Make music at every stop. To this end, she planned a tour that took her to each province and territory, to play shows, but also to record. In 13 stops, she recorded 13 tracks, with special guest from each location, friends from the folk music community. You'll know lots of the names; Catherine MacLellan was there in PEI, Natalie MacMaster for Nova Scotia, The Once in Newfoundland, etc. Here in N.B., it was a bilingual date, with Jessica Rhaye joining on vocals, Dominque Dupuis on fiddle, as well as Aaron Currie on guitar. They recorded a track called Theo, a good one, and like all the tracks, composed by Ste-Croix. The songs weren't specifically about each area, thank goodness, that's too difficult and would have resulted in bad travelogue ads no doubt. The highlight of this number is the fine vocal blend between Rhaye and Ste-Croix.
Ste-Croix calls the process the adventure of a lifetime, and I think she's actually hit on something here. Concept discs, whether they are tributes or charity efforts or thematic adventures, tend to fall flat in the hype, or the forced performances between disparate colleagues. Here Ste-Croix hasn't tried to write-to-order per province, or record with the biggest names. Instead, she's taken the songs she already had, and played with people she liked and wanted to, who properly fit the roles and material. Plus, the songs are of strong quality throughout. In the end, it turns out to be a high-quality celebration of the folk-and-roots community of the country.
Okay, there's one song that was written-to-order about Canada and home and such, but since it's also the best on the album, it deserves singular praise. Canadian Girl gives the album its title, and here represents her new Nova Scotia home, also gives us the great statement of the project. Ste-Croix now sees the whole country as her home, having gone from small towns to big cities, to all three coasts, and become familiar with just about every stop between. That's a thought right up there with "Something to sing about, this land of ours."
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