Wednesday 18 April 2012

Music is love, in search of the words

This is a review of Hey Ocean!'s upcoming album, IS.


I don't normally write music reviews, but sometimes, I come across music from a band that is so underrated, yet so good, that I can't help but share it in the hopes that others will understand my level of insanity for this band.


In this post, I am crazy in love with Hey Ocean! (the exclamation mark is a part of the band name, not to diminish the fact that I am also very enthusiastic when it comes to them).


I have known of Hey Ocean! for a couple years now. They were Vancouver's songbirds, much loved and incredibly popular amongst the city's quirky music scene and its hippie fanbase. But my first real encounter with them and their music was in the summer of 2011, when they were in the lineup at Live At Squamish, the annual music festival that takes place north of Vancouver.


They were the band with the blow-up whale.


Nothing screams Vancouver like a blow-up whale.


Their brand of summer beach music was enticing and alluring. It suited the sun that shone high up in the blue sky that day. I remember watching them and thinking that they were like the Canuck west coast version of The Beach Boys.


I found out later that they were the Canadian musicians who used to play songs on Costa Rican beaches, which explains their brand of exotic - music that feels foreign yet at the same time feels like home.


Ashleigh Ball was the girl on fire. She was everywhere at that festival. I remember seeing her hopping through the crowd to join The Zolas on-stage, where Zachary Gray introduced her as his high school sweetheart. I remember watching Shad (one of the best live performers I had ever seen), yell out her name because he needed her for a song. She's a multi-instrumentalist with a voice so light and expressive it could dance on water.


I could have fallen asleep to this trio's music. I almost did. The grass at Squamish is incredibly lush and green. Surrounded by mountains, you want to do nothing but sleep to beautiful music.


Hey Ocean! currently has two studio albums: 2006's Stop Looking Like Music and 2008's It's Easier To Be Somebody Else. IS is slated for release this year, and the four year wait has definitely been worth it.


This is not going to be a traditional review. The best way to describe Hey Ocean!'s IS? It's like a soundtrack to a romantic story set in Vancouver. So I'm going to take a little poetic license with this next track-by-track review and use their band name as inspiration.


1. If I Were A Ship

Hey Vancouver, let's go out to Jericho Beach on a bright day, and watch the vessels move across English Bay.

2. Make A New Dance Up

Hey Vancouver, let's dance a flash mob at Robson Square in front of unexpected tourists.

3. Big Blue Wave

Hey Vancouver, Point Atkinson lighthouse is for lovers.

4. Islands

Hey Vancouver, the Strait of Georgia awaits you.

5. Jolene

Hey Vancouver, sometimes I forget how beautiful you are.

6. New Love

Hey Vancouver, you're a well of pent up loneliness.

7. Bicycle

Hey Vancouver, let's utilize those bike lanes and be romantic for a day, eh?

8. Change

Hey Vancouver, spring has arrived, stop raining on the candy flowers.

9. Steady

Hey Vancouver, your white lights at night look like new stars.

10. I Am A Heart

Hey Vancouver, the glassy blue sky reflects you.

11. (For)give

Hey Vancouver, why so silent?

12. Give

Hey Vancouver, I shouldn't be afraid to love her.

13. The Last Mistake

Hey Vancouver, don't let me down.


Something that cannot be ignored of this album is the vocals. Hey Ocean! is definitely one of those bands with the vocal and instrumental capabilities that make them a lot more fun to watch and listen to live than on a recording. However, the production on this album does not at all diminish their organic sound. It is very raw, something that complements the honesty of the songs. Ball, Vertesi and Beckingham's voices are absolutely wonderful. Some standout tracks are Ball on "New Love," Vertesi on "Jolene" and Beckingham on "Steady." They have the ability to convey a wide range of emotion in their voices and at the same time make it seem effortless, flowing perfectly with the music while not trying to outdo the beautiful melodies that they accompany. 


Whether they meant for IS to be a concept album or not, it definitely comes across as one. Love as a unifying theme surrounded by references to the mountains and the skies and the ocean. That's what Vancouver feels like to us who live here, and I love that it's being reflected in the music that comes from this city.


As a little bonus, here is Ashleigh, David and David performing "Jolene" in an acoustic session. It's one of the most heartfelt performances I have ever seen.


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