The Fugitives

The Fugitives, established in 2007, have released four records, which have been nominated for multiple Canadian Folk Music Awards and a Western Canadian Music Award. Their previous album, Everything Will Happen, spent ten weeks on the top ten Canadian folk charts, and earned them a support slot across Western Canada with Buffy Sainte-Marie and an appearance at UK’s Glastonbury Festival. Their follow-up, The Promise of Strangers, is set for release on January 26th on Borealis Records.

 

Filtering by Category: News

Tour Blog I

Entry #1: Tour, the Global Apocalypse, and Facebook  The Fugitives head out on the latest cross-Canada tour next week. All the way from Vancouver to Charlottetown and back - four bodies, four instruments, hundreds of cd’s (what can we say, we think positively), and underwear, all packed into a tiny rental car courtesy of Budget (they didn’t give us the car for free, by ‘courtesy’ I mean we paid for it).

My friend Jo told me that blue whales have a heart the size of a car; I’ll try to think about this in the next few days as we trade the mountains for the Prairies – the four of us traipsing across our native land like the huge thumping heart of the largest animal ever known to have existed, pulsing to the beat of eclectic urban folk music.

Which is all a bit optimistic. I love the crap out of my bandmates and don’t worry about getting along with them in close quarters for thirty odd days. But I do worry about myself – that I’ll suddenly become that overbearing/taciturn/melancholy dude that everyone wishes they could drop off in the middle of the Canadian Shield at the gas station that sells nothing but country cassettes and refrigerated sandwiches.

To date, I have yet to royally flip out on tour, but I have a history of self doubt when it comes to things like this. Whenever the global apocalypse comes up (and let’s face it, it comes up a lot), I’m adamant that I would never be that guy in The Road who could ‘keeps the flame alive’ when things got tough.

My friend Randall disagrees, but he’s just being nice. 

“All the books make it out worse than it is,” he says. “It’s not like you have to go around shooting bears and stuff. It’s just about being resolute and forthright.”

                “But I’m not resolute and forthright. And why would I shoot a bear after an apocalypse? One, how did bears survive the apocalypse? Two, if animals did survive, why wouldn’t I shoot a deer or an elk or a moose – something people actually eat?”

                “See. You’re already thinking practically.”

                “Yeah, but even if I had a gun I couldn’t shoot it. When I went paintballing with my Dad I mowed him down in the head.”

“That’s perfect. You’re supposed to shoot for the head.”

“And even if I did shoot something I could never cook it. I can’t cook now, and I have a stove and a microwave.  I’d be helpless with just a lighter and some sticks -”

                “If you even had a lighter -”

                “Unless the apocalypse happened because of global warming. Then I guess I could shoot things, let them cook under the blazing hot sun, and duck under a tree until they were finished.”

“If there even were trees -”

I’m sure there’ll be lots of conversations like this between my bandmates and I after we spend thirty days cramped together in a car (read: heart of a blue whale).  

Oh well, the fame and glory are worth it. Like this message I got from someone after our recent going away shows at the Vancouver East Cultural Centre:

 

Dude. You don’t know me but I peed beside you at the urinal once and then you signed my cd. So I guess you can say our friendship is messed up. Oh well, you rule. Add me.

 

I added him. Because that message is awesome. And because I add everyone; I have unscrupulous Facebook standards.

The New Album Comes out March 23!

The Fugitives are proud and pleased to announce the release of their new full length album, Eccentrically We Love, due out March 23. The album will be supported by a long awesome tour across Canada and back. Read about the album below.

On March 23, albums will be available for order at Canadian record stores, the 604 Records store (www.604records.com/store), and for preorder over Itunes.

In late 2009, The Fugitives released a short EP, Find Me, which tracked extreme examples of people living in isolation: a park ranger suffering from cabin fever, a woman trapped in an unforgiving marriage, and a man whose death went unnoticed for seven years. Maybe the band’s just getting old and morbid, but the songs made them uneasy. Not to mention neurotic. After a brief spell where they walked around telling everyone, “who cares, nothing matters, we’re all going to die alone,” they decided this response was boring, and headed back into the studio.

Eccentrically We Love, The Fugitives’ newest full-length, takes anxiety and isolation as its starting point. As it turns out, the band thinks anxiety is good. They are also fans of: frustration, discontent, being overworked, and living in broken down houses with noisy roommates. It’s not that they’ve suddenly developed a pessimistic worldview - the album is primarily about gratitude, but it avoids clichés by centering on topics we’re normally not appreciative of. The album opener, 'Snail Shell’ revels in the everyday annoyance of hearing your neighbor’s love life through the walls (and sometimes ceiling). The title track celebrates human relationships at their most exasperating, and ‘All this Trouble’ is an affectionate list of life’s sand-papery frustrations. In a sense, these are all songs about love and affection, but they aren’t offering anyone bouquets of flowers. If Find Me was about people lost to isolation, Eccentrically We Love chronicles the beautiful itchiness of being close. It’s about getting irritated, angered and distraught, and the exhilarating necessity of feeling this way.

The secret to the theme of this album might lie in how it was made. Immediately upon their return from a seven-week Canadian tour to support Find Me, the band locked themselves in North Vancouver’s Neighbourhood studios and embarked upon a month of recording. After 1,536 hours in each other’s company (yes, they were counting), the group decided that they still liked each other. More than that, they realized that their different musical backgrounds and lyrical approaches actually brought them closer, and made them a better band. Eccentrically We Love is the result of co-writing, co-editing, and co-performance - a true collaboration that balances eclecticism with the kind of unity a band earns by spending days and days in each other’s company.

Featuring co-production by Leo-Award winning producer\composer Matthew Rogers, guidance from Canadian art-rock icon Veda Hille, as well as guest appearances by Jesse Zubot and Rod Murray, Eccentrically We Love expands on the “top notch” vocal harmonies established in Find Me (ChartAttack) and the tight composition of their Canadian Folk Music Award nominated debut. The album will be supported by a cross-Canada tour in April 2010, a brief stint to Europe in the fall, and a request for fans and friends to send ‘small troubles’ to their website. These daily annoyances are to be funny, poignant, or heartfelt. Hopefully, when all is done, a quick survey of the amalgamated catalogue will make one feel grateful (and normal) for the beautiful, unavoidable difficulties in life.

Announcing Cross Canada Tour Dates!!

Hello everyone! We are all set to tour the country in April! Yes! Fugitives love abounds! Below are the cross-canada dates. Please contact venues for time and price of shows. We will see you there! Bring bells! (as in, on you).

April 1 – West End Cultural Centre, Winnipeg (tix here: http://www.wecc.ca/)

April 3 – Apollo Bar, Thunder Bay (www.myspace.com/apollobar )

April 6 – Garrison, Toronto (www.garrisontoronto.com/)

April 7 – London Music Club, London (www.londonmusicclub.150m.com/)

April 8-  Jimmy Jazz, Guelph (www.vinyljimmyjazz.com/)

April 9 – Black Sheep Inn, Wakefield (www.theblacksheepinn.com )

April 10 – Le Divan Orange, Montreal (www.divanorange.org )

April 12 – The Mansion, Kingston ( www.themansionkingston.com)

April 13 – Carleton Place Cinemas, Carleton Place, Ontario (www.cpcinemas.com )

April 15- Baba’s, Charlottetown (www.myspace.com/babaslounge )

April 16 – The Company House, Halifax (www.myspace.com/thecompanyhouse)

April 17 – Peppers, Saint John (www.lemmongrasssaintjohn.com)

April 20 – Lop Lops, Sault St. Marie (www.loplops.com)

April 24 – Lydia’s Loft, Saskatoon (www.lydiaspub.com)

April 25 – The Artery, Edmonton www.artery.ca

April 28 – Henotic, Lethbridge www.henotic.ca

April 30 – The Auburn for the Calgary Festival of Spoken Word, Calgary www.calgaryspokenwordfestival.com



 

Support provided by:

 
 
FACTOR-Combined-CMYK-White.png
 
 
 
CanadaWordmark-Combined-CMYK-white.png