THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE: “Everybody could use a trip away from 2020 and 2021. Maybe just a weekend on the lake … even if it’s just a trip of the mind. The Sheepdogs’ No Simple Thing has the wattage to take you to that mental cottage with six new songs so summery you’ll only need to pack your jean shorts and flip flops.
Recorded in Montreal at Mixart Studios (built by Mahogany Rush’s Frank Marino in the ’70s), this EP sees Saskatoon’s fave furry sons returning with their classic rock-influenced sound. The rich harmonies and rounded guitar tones they’re known for are further refined, and “like an experienced chef, the band keeps honing their recipes, constantly creating more complex yet subtle flavours,” lead singer and main songwriter Ewan Currie explains. Recorded in late summer 2020, all tracks were laid down live with every member on-site in a sprawling studio with old-school monitors on mammoth 2” analog tape. Unlike a lot of other remotely tracked pandemic rock, The Sheepdogs’ bubble of comradery enabled them to focus completely, with little else to do in Covid-restricted Montreal than kick out the jams.
Their lead-off mission statement track of Rock and Roll (Ain’t No Simple Thing) boogies strong out of the gate paying tribute to the mysterious healing powers of rock music, Friday nights and summer flings. To show and not just tell, the intoxicating guitar solo that kicks off with a big tempo lunge puts those title brackets where their mouth is. As with all the band’s material, it’s reverent of rock history, yet Currie’s distinctive lead vocal continues to sound richly honest and never imitative as he urges you levitate with the band as the music “soothes your soul”.
Switching gears into the stomp-and-sway glam T. Rex beat of the first single Keep on Loving You and its reassuring look at long-time love with a bit of sugar on top, we then get the good advice of Talk It Over, which just might be The Sheepdogs’ own Share the Land. Born out of seeing the sometimes-hideous side of human nature, it’s a gentle call to “try to listen to one another”, and was the last one written before recording. “We’re not overtly preachy, but this one was a reaction to seeing all the fighting on social media and everywhere else in the last year,” states Currie.
Not just the “Rolling Stone Cover Guys” anymore, the now-veteran band with three EPs and nine commercial releases under their belts (that all have cool big belt buckles on them) are far enough down the road to look back at how things were when they started on Singing In The Band. “It’s an ode to the working musician and that exciting first feeling of discovering the power of music, this new skill of relating through song.” Currie remembers. In this spirit, this EP is to be one of a number of shorter records to be released during these weird times to keep the lines of communication open with listeners.
A first for The Sheepdogs, No Simple Thing’s piano-driven Are You A Good Man? was penned solely by brother/fellow Sheepdog Shamus and not by Ewan. Originally earmarked for their solo project Bros, it got flagged as more Sheepdogs territory and brought over into these sessions which resulted in this pensive soul-searching Beatles-esque side trip.
Like always, the guitars are so big and woolly that they just might clog your drain, but none so pronounced as on the EP’s closer Jesse Please, which starts out on the cottage dock and ends things at full Live at the Fillmore level intensity. “We always like to build songs into little cycles with distinct parts and this is one of them, but it started with me just writing it by the side of a lake,” Ewan recalls “and the guitar solo on Jesse conveys the emotion as much or more than any of the lyrics in the song.”
Going with the “if it ain’t broke don’t fix it” creedo, No Simple Thing is the fourth release produced by sonic leader Ewan. All that’s left to do is to throw those headphones in the bag with your tank tops and swim suit and get started on that rock ’n’ roll voyage.”