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Dirty Otter Presents...

Owen

In the past decade, Chicago's Mike Kinsella has played a variety of instruments in a handful of bands including Cap'n Jazz, Joan of Arc, The One Up Downstairs, American Football, Owls, Maritime, and Aloha.

Owen is his solo project.

The songs Mike Kinsella writes as Owen have always had rock solid lyrical foundations. And on new album, LAmi du Peuple, the same can be said for the music. Emphasis on the rock.

Anyone vaguely familiar with Kinsellas musical lineage (Capn Jazz, American Football, Owls) knows hes far from a one-note musician. And now, he expands his repertoire as a solo songwriter to include a touch of female vocals, pounding drums, and even dueling electric guitar lines that area the closest thing hes done in tribute to his 80s hair metal obsession.

The variety of sounds featured on LAmi du Peuple can largely be attributed to a new approach Kinsella took to the writing and recording process. Rather than locking himself in a room with mostly finished song ideas for a couple of weeks before emerging with a finished album, this time Kinsella involved producer Neil Strauch (Iron & Wine, Bonnie Prince Billy, Andrew Bird) from the very beginning and spaced out recording over a few month period.

This enabled him to naturally bring a different mood or vibe to the material he was working on every time he entered the studio -- re-evaluating what had been recorded during the previous session and collaborating with Strauch on the direction new songs should take.

As a result, LAmi du Peuple sounds markedly different than any album Kinsella has released under the Owen moniker.

From the electronic blips and hand claps that punctuate I Got High, to the ragtime piano melody running through Where Do I Begin? each track possesses a unique and surprising identity.

In the past Ive stifled a bunch of my influences and leaned on a couple consistently, but this time I just let each song happen as I heard them and had a lot of fun trying some new things, Kinsella reveals.

The benefits of this anything goes mindset are plainly apparent on album centerpiece Bad Blood -- a track propelled by a quasi-country stomp that explodes halfway through with an electric guitar solo before dovetailing into a closing crescendo.

Bad Blood also affirms that lyrically Kinsella remains as raw and personal as ever. As the title suggests, the song finds Kinsella lamenting his pedigree: Bad blood / Hereditary law you cant run away from / (Trust me, Ive tried).

This focus on familial relationships occurs often, but with the addition of a new angle on top of those Kinsella has adopted previously Now the parent of two children, Kinsella finds his perspective on life inevitably shifting from being a son to being a father.

This role reversal adds a new dimension to Kinsellas self-examination of his thoughts and fears. As he explains, Instead of being a son whose father passed away, Ive moved on to being the father afraid of passing.

His anxiety at life passing by too quickly is evident on closing track Vivid Dreams: How long have I been sleeping? / Im a dad and my dads dead.

The question he poses doesnt come with an easy answer, but for an artist like Kinsella who is constantly evolving and reinventing himself, death is just an opportunity for rebirth.

Tuesday 10th December 2013

Price: £8.00 advance (+stbf)

Doors: 19:30



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