Great
Big Sea is a bastard. Forged from the loins of Figgy Duff and Ryan’s
Fancy, GBS found its feet on the unforgiving streets of St. John’s,
and stood their ground when others faltered. When asked about their unlikely
success, founding member Bob Hallett is typically candid: “We weren’t
the best musicians in town,” he says, “we just wanted it more.
We were driven by a bloody-minded need to succeed and we were rewarded
for our bleeding.”
The band dragged themselves out of the city’s infamous bars to
release their Warner debut Up in the spring of 1995. Relentless touring
and a raucous live show quickly propelled the record to platinum. Their
next effort Play enjoyed even bigger success and the band moved its show
into hockey stadiums across the nation.
The US labels took notice and GBS was subsequently signed to Sire by
Seymour Stein (Madonna/Talking Heads), who unleashed the band on an unsuspecting
American public. Accolades and a solid cult following ensued. “We
are showmen and we live and die by our trade,” offers electrified
lead singer Alan Doyle. “I am drawn to the light and I was born
to burn”.
Born
and raised in ‘the far east of the western world’, the lads
have traversed the globe, all the while wearing their hometown on their
sleeves. “Our music is of Newfoundland,” explains McCann.
“It would be impossible to do what we do if we were from anywhere
else. Our songs come from the sea and the cliffs and the rocks and all
the other natural beauties our country provides. Without her we simply
couldn’t exist.”
For this, their ninth album, the band made the surprise choice to work
with indie gadfly Hawksley Workman.
“We wanted to push ourselves, to be surprised by our own music,”
said Hallett, “and Hawksley was the right pilot for the flight…or
the fight, depending on the circumstances.”
A
remarkable 15 years in, the band should by this time be content to slow
down and rest on their laurels. Instead, Fortune’s Favour sees them
boldly embracing new sounds and new ideas, fearlessly pushing the boundaries
of their own art and music. In their lifelong quest to marry the traditional
music of Newfoundland with their own pop explorations, Fortune’s
Favour is a new benchmark.
“We embraced the law of the road when we started this, and we apply
the same rules to our music,” explains Doyle. “If you are
not going forwards, you are going backwards. And we hate retracing our
steps.”
“This album is a stew of all our influences,” adds Hallett.
“Bob Marley, the Clash, Fergus O’Byrne, Ron Hynes, Johnny
Cash, Donal Lunny, and who knows what else. So who better to sum it all
up than C.S. Lewis: ‘Further in and further up.’”
Alan
Doyle, Sean McCann, and Bob Hallett still live, breath, and create in
Newfoundland and Labrador. Their ninth studio recording, Fortune’s
Favour will be released on June 24th.
Alan Doyle - vocals, guitar, percussion
Bob Hallett - vocals, fiddle, mandolin, bouzouki, whistles, Irish flutes,
accordion
Darrell Power - vocals, bass, bones, percussion
Sean McCann - vocals, guitars, bodhran, tin whistle
Great
Big Sea Web Site
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