J.P. Mortier Is Ready, Willing And Able To Drive Far For You

The Montreal singer-songwriter makes his contribution to the driving-song canon

J.P. Mortier gets his motor running and head’s out on the highway with his new road-trip anthem Drive Far — showcasing today on Tinnitist.

The history of rock is rife with great driving songs: Radar Love, Highway Star, I Drove All Night. To that list, add Mortier’s latest track, an instantly addictive entry in the pantheon of tunes that compel you to lean on that pedal just a little bit harder the moment the first bars kick in.

His gas tank full and his yen to explore boundless, the Montreal singer-songwriter accelerates himself through a night of motor-vating all the way until dawn, “always searching for what’s just beyond.” At the end of the eternal horizon waits the perfect passenger—someone who can join him in his addiction to the open road. “Someday I’ll find you,” he promises. “I’ll drive you very far.”

The song is a case study in petrol-burning forward motion, although its galloping rhythm and earthy atmospherics lay bare Mortier’s particular intention to ape the film scores of Ennio Morricone. (The “imaginary Western” feel is cemented by a transcendent trumpet solo from Josiane Rouette.) “It’s definitely a road song, as the title suggests,” Mortier says. “But it’s also about finding your way in life and finding a partner to take that journey with. I wanted to capture the feeling I got when I was driving in western Canada and the U.S. when I was touring over the past years. Play that song in your car (or while riding your horse) and feel the call to head out on a road trip of your own.”

Photo by Akim Kermiche.

The number is an exhilarating highlight of Mortier’s latest album Together, an eclectic collection of tunes it took him three years (and six different studios) to perfect. Care and commitment ring out from every note of the world-class material, ranging from the punked-out and disdainful Buck the System to the epic title track, which documents the stages of a relationship over an impressive 16 minutes.

The making of the album itself was indeed a distance event, but it wasn’t solely due to Mortier’s exacting standards. There was a certain worldwide pandemic to contend with, which forced him to entirely rethink (and then re-rethink) his approach to recording. At the same time, he had to weather some intensely personal tragedies: The loss of a 14-year-old guitar student to cancer, and then the passing of his own sister (a protracted and painful process that informed the album’s closing track, Zen Moment).

The result is far-ranging but uniformly heartfelt — a milestone in Mortier’s ongoing quest to combine the lyricism of Nick Cave, David Bowie and Leonard Cohen with by the sonic power of Pink Floyd and Radiohead. A songwriter for more than 30 years, he’s released seven albums over the course of his illustrious career and mounted a full five cross-country Canadian tours. But if there was ever any risk he’d succumb to the stagnation of routine, the COVID years — and the attendant upheaval they wreaked on the basic process of making and disseminating music — took care of that. Now more on the lookout than ever for innovative ways to get his music before fresh ears, Mortier has hooked up with L.A. company A Matter of Music, to license his songs to films, TV and other media.

Check out Drive Far above, sample Together below, and follow J.P. Mortier on Facebook, Instagram and TikTok.

 

Photo by Michael Watier.