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I'm
standing at a window; I'm pressed against the past;
I'm looking on in black and white through the eyes of photographs.
Stephen Fearing, "The Longest Road"
April 2006 - It has been 20 years
since songsmith Stephen Fearing released his self-titled debut.
Over the following two decades, he has built up a very loyal and
committed international audience, one sure to be delighted by his
beautiful new recording.
Yellowjacket is Fearing’s eighth solo album and as always
it features a potent combination of powerful and affecting lyrics,
pure vocals and masterful musicianship. Yellowjacket also marks
something of a breakthrough in Stephen’s approach to recording
as he assumes the mantle of producer for the first time since his
early albums. The result is a relaxed fluency vocal and guitar work
and a unique sonic palette, which make this album distinctly different,
again, from his previous releases.
Over
the course of his career, Fearing has been able to learn from some
of roots music’s finest producers. English folk star Clive
Gregson (Any Trouble, Gregson and Collister) produced his acclaimed
1989 album, Blue Line; Steve Berlin (Los Lobos) was on hand for
1994’s The Assassin’s Apprentice (a disc featuring fans
Sarah McLachlan and Richard Thompson), whilst Stephen’s close
friend Colin Linden manned the console for 1997’s Industrial
Lullaby, 2000’s So Many Miles – LIVE and 2002’s
That’s How I Walk (which Fearing co-produced).
To record Yellowjacket, Stephen set up shop in the Guelph studio
of noted musician/producer, Scott Merritt (Fred Eaglesmith), who
engineered and mixed the sessions. Together, they have crafted a
richly diverse collection of songs. These range from a rollicking
guitar “march” that could have been written by John
Phillip Sousa and Dr. Seuss (“Whoville”), to intricately
arranged pieces featuring strings and female backing vocals (“Yellowjacket,”
“Like Every Other Morning”), poignant ballads suffused
with Salvation Army-style horns (“Johnny’s Lament”,
Love Only Knows) to full band workouts reminiscent of Blackie and
The Rodeo Kings (“One Flat Tire”)
This
diversity also reflects changes in Fearing’s perspective on
songwriting, and his ongoing experimentation with co-writing. “Writing
songs with another person allows you to be a little more objective,
a little less critical and a lot more productive and surprisingly,
I’ve found that it really informs the material I write on
my own”. “Collaborating opens up a whole other vista,
it’s like taking a walk outside of my own stuffy little brain”
Fearing’s songwriting partner on four of the songs in this
collection, is Josh Finlayson, from much-loved roots-rockers The
Skydiggers. After one brief phone call they met at Fearing’s
home and immediately tapped into a rich creative connection, trading
lyrics and melodies in an instantly productive “crazy rush
of ideas”. This rapport is vividly illustrated on “Love
Only Knows,” a tender portrait of a parent coming to terms
with a child’s burgeoning maturity - “Love only knows
what happens now, Yesterday turns under the plough, Only a fool
would not allow You to stand on your own.”
Yellowjacket’s title song is a co-write with Stephen’s
close creative comrade, Tom Wilson. Spawned during a long drive
in the rain from Nashville back to Ontario, a trek fuelled by ‘yellow
jacket’ caffeine pills, it depicts a restless soul out there
“following the big beat.” The protagonist is one of
those young Jam-band disciples, a Deadhead perhaps, escaping some
decaying Midwestern town and running out of youth.
As is customary on Fearing's records, the supporting musical cast
is of the highest order. The list includes Dan Whiteley (Heartbreak
Hill), Jeff Bird (Cowboy Junkies), backing vocalist Suzie Vinnick,
Josh Finlayson, and Stephen’s B&RK bandmates, Colin Linden,
Gary Craig, John Dymond and Richard Bell.
The consistent quality of work produced over Stephen Fearing’s
two decades plus career has earned him a West Coast Music Award
for Best Folk Music Recording and five Juno Award nominations as
a solo artist and a faithful international fan base.
Born in 1963 in Vancouver, he spent most of his boyhood and teenage
years in Dublin. There, he picked up the guitar and traces of the
Irish and English musical traditions that have informed his music
ever since. After a short stint in the U.S. Midwest, he returned
to Canada, and is now long-established as a regular and popular
fixture on the folk club and festival circuit in North America and
the U.K. Successful appearances at the prestigious WOMAD and Reading
Festivals in the U.K. confirmed Fearing’s ability to engage
large audiences with his onstage charm.
Like most contemporary songwriter/performers, Stephen is not bound
by any particular musical genre or category and the release of Yellowjacket
continues this exploration of various musical forms, as does his
continued participation in the highly successful Canadian roots
rock super trio, Blackie & The Rodeo Kings. Over the past decade,
B&RK have released three highly praised and award-winning albums
including a Juno Award for their most recent release “BARK”.
“It’s wonderful to be able to work as a solo artist
and to be active in such a powerful ensemble as The Rodeo Kings.
These guys are my friends and there is no doubt in my mind that
my continuing work with them influences my solo playing very deeply”.
With
two more Blackie records on the near-horizon plus an ongoing collaboration
with Irish singer/songwriter Andy White, Stephen has never been
more prolific. In his own words, “Yellowjacket feels like
a new beginning.”
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Bio courtesy True North Records
Finkelstein Management
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