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DR. DOG
FATE
Frank McElroy (Thanks) on multi-string guitar,
full-grip chords, harmonies
Juston Stens (Triumph) on trapset and harmonies
Scott McMicken (Taxi) on woof+mud distortion solo guitar and voice
Toby Leaman (Tables) on finger bass, vocals
Zach Miller (Text) on organ
“FATE” is the record Dr. Dog were destined to make,
a timeless yet contemporary distillation of the band’s open-armed,
big-hearted sound taken to new heights of craft and creativity.
Inventive, magnificently realized, and absolutely irresistible,
the Park The Van Records release sees the Philadelphia-based quintet
filtering the gamut of American popular music into its own idiosyncratic
brand of blue-eyed, dilated-pupil soul. Songs like “Hang
On” and “Uncovering the Old” delve deep into
the mysteries of life and love, offering bittersweet and buoyant
reflections into the very nature of our human condition. As
ever, Dr. Dog makes magic from an enduring pop palette of intricate
harmonies, shape-shifting melodies, and ramshackle audio ingenuity – all
presented through the band’s slightly skewed and utterly
individualistic outlook.
As the title makes plain, “FATE” was fueled by la
forza del destino. Dr. Dog allowed the winds of fortune
to carry them towards making an album they came to see as a uniquely
conceptual work, though they are careful to point out the amorphous
nature of that notion.
“We realized pretty early on that the songs tied together,” says
singer/songwriter/bassist Toby Leaman. “We didn’t
really know how – and I’m still not completely sure – but
we know they do.”
“We didn’t start the record with the idea of ‘fate,’” explains
the other half of the band’s voice, singer/songwriter/guitarist
Scott McMicken. “It just became apparent to us at a point
that it was already going on. It was happening and it was
just a matter of us noticing. Once we got a good chunk of
stuff down, it was apparent that something was going on, that these
themes were just coming without our awareness of it. Then
it became really exciting to say, wow, there’s this aspect
of fate that’s governing this process as well as being the
subject of it.”
Songs such as “The Old Days” and the album-opening “The
Breeze” touch on big picture truths like the inexorable passage
of time, of taking inventory of one’s current state through
the prism of the past. The songs express wistful regret and
thoughtful introspection, both in terms of subject matter as well
as their classicist musical content.
“It takes this kind of muddled and fragmented path towards
a very simple understanding of the present,” McMicken says. “That
comes in part from getting a little older and realizing that you’ve
spent all this time crafting this imaginary sense of self. But
the older you get, the more you realize that what you are, you’ve
always been.”
The confluence of matter and method, of songs grappling with the
powers of destiny being driven by outside forces beyond the band’s
purview, proved invigorating, offering Dr. Dog both freedom and
structure.
“It was really helpful to look at it thematically,” Leaman
explains, “because then we were able to look at the songs
and go, ‘Okay, this one isn’t really relevant to the
album.’”
“Being conceptual takes it out of our hands,” McMicken
says, “and that’s very empowering. Ultimately
you’re still driving to the studio and doing it every day,
but you’ve created this fantasy that there are these gigantic
other factors which are outside of your control that are as relevant
to the process as you are.”
In some ways, the intangible relationship between fate and “FATE” links
back to Dr. Dog’s 2002 debut, “THE PSYCHEDELIC SWAMP,” which
was constructed around a narrative in which the band “translate” messages
from a parallel universe into its own music.
From the band’s birth in 2002, recording had always been
rather loose and slightly homespun. 2004’s “EASY
BEAT” catapulted the combo to national – and then worldwide – attention
and acclaim. Their increase in stature allowed them the opportunity
for growth, exhibited by the increase in sonic scope found on 2006’s “TAKERS
AND LEAVERS” EP and its full-length follow-up, “WE
ALL BELONG.” The album’s recording proved an
often-laborious learning experience for the band, as they struggled
with the complexities of crafting their organic, naturalistic pop
via 24-track equipment. This time, Dr. Dog was better prepared
for the work at hand and as such, the sessions flowed smoothly
from the get-go.
“We knew how to work the equipment a lot better,” says
Leaman. “We all got a lot better at working fast,
knowing how to mic stuff properly, getting the sounds we wanted
faster than we used to. There was still a lot of guesswork,
but it wasn’t like on the last album, where we spent so much
time figuring out the logistics of it.”
To further relay the interwoven thematic content, Dr. Dog bonded “FATE” with
the sound of one of the album’s most frequent lyrical symbols,
the train. A romantic, distinctly American metaphor, the
railroad ties the songs together, spanning the many parallels in
the process in which Dr. Dog were immersed. They viewed themselves
as hard-working craftsmen and delighted in the homonymy of railroad
and recorded tracks. Most significantly, it seemed an ideal
physical manifestation of fate itself.
“We decided on the train as the best metaphor because it
represents this thing in the distance,” McMicken says, “moving
towards you or moving away from you. Or it’s right
in your face, ever-present and forceful.”
Forward-thinking but reflective, searching yet remarkably confident, “FATE” is
the work of an extraordinary band operating full steam ahead. Perhaps
it was inevitable. Dr. Dog has always trod its own analogous
path, a band of outsiders from the start, now more than ever holding
true to its own inimitable place in the universe.
“This band was started and built on the idea that we were
the only band there was,” McMicken says. “That
gave us the freedom to be in complete control. You can start
a band and say, ‘In Dr. Dog World, up is down and blue is
red.’ Because who’s gonna tell you you’re wrong?”
*****
DR. DOG ANNOUNCE NEW ALBUM
“FATE” TO BE RELEASED JULY
22ND ON PARK THE VAN RECORDS
Park The Van Records and Dr. Dog are proud to announce the release
of FATE, the new studio album from the Philadelphia quintet.
Set for a July 22nd release, FATE follows up the critically
acclaimed WE ALL BELONG, which had both critics and fans
calling it one of the best albums of 2007. As with the band’s
previous releases, FATE was produced and recorded by Dr.
Dog at their studio in North Philadelphia. The eleven tracks that
fill FATE embrace the inevitable consequences of human
experiences and relationships and reinterpret them using the basic
sounds of voice, bass, drum, piano and guitars. FATE rekindles
the same spirit that embodied Dr. Dog’s first album PSYCHEDELIC
SWAMP: creating a sound with a singular voice and a purist
tone.
Dr. Dog has spent the last five years working and writing to make
an album like FATE.
Clocking in at 43 minutes, FATE draws upon the events
and circumstances that have surrounded the band and incorporates
them into the group’s most stunning work to date. Putting
the focus on the actual instruments in hand, Dr. Dog has reached
a new level of intricacy in terms of both composition and production
giving the songs a cohesiveness and timeless appeal.
From the simultaneously loose and assured HANG ON to
the caffeinated Americana of OLD DAYS, from the
flirtatious UNCOVERING THE OLD to the duality of MY
FRIEND, FATE is a intoxicatingly symphonic sound
of strings, horns and open-hearted vocal arrangements.
Tour dates to be announced shortly.
For more information, please contact Steven Trachtenbroit at Big
Hassle Media
212.619.1360
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