Thematically, a lot of the new Wilderness of Manitoba album, Island of Echoes, is about the past year or so and all of the songs come from that timeframe.
There wasn’t a lot of downtime for the Toronto-based band as they were on tour, primarily in the United States and England. Vocalist/multi-instrumentalist Will Whitwham reflects, “For me personally, a lot of my songwriting was done on the road because it had to be. So, whenever I was home, I'd have a week or two to record demos and then be back at the drawing board again in a van or hotel room.” The constant touring, the ever-changing geography, playing larger venues and working the new songs into the live sets, all had a profound influence on both the band and the new album. Whitwham started playing electric guitars and the sound became more expansive to fill the halls they were playing. “This also carried over into writing the new songs as we had fuller band arrangements in mind”, adds Whitwham.
The downside of life on the road was the departure of vocalist Melissa Dalton. However, when it came to recording the new album, as Whitwham points out, “It forced us to find the right person for the various songs we were recording and we ended up asking some of the best singers we knew (who also happened to be female) to collaborate. The results were even better than we expected.” One of those singers was vocalist/violinist Amanda Balsys of Kingston band The Gertrudes. From its inception, the Wilderness of Manitoba has been known for its three and four part harmonies. Balsys ensures the continuity of that signature vocal blend and contributes to the instrumental mix with her effects laden violin. Rounding out the band is drummer/percussionist Sean Lancaric and bassist Wes McClintock who bring a sense of rhythm and personality to the intricate arrangements.
The band’s previous two releases, Hymns of Love & Spirits and When You Left The Fire, were recorded mainly in the basement recording studio of the house on Delaware Avenue where most of the band members lived. Gradually, over the course of the year, everyone except Whitwham moved out and found apartments. When it came time to record Island of Echoes, the decision was made to record the basic tracks and mix at Revolution Recording, a throwback to the original great Toronto studios of the sixties and seventies. Intent on capturing the band’s evolving live sound, Whitwham says they got the best of both worlds, “We have never made a studio album until now and I think you can especially hear it in the percussion as well as the overall mixes. We still had the necessary time and space to alter and experiment with overdubs at the house for a month, but the backbone of the tracks has a much fuller studio presence than any of our earlier recordings.”
Expanding on the changes reflected in the new album, Whitwham explains, “We don't want any of the albums to be similar, but, at the same time, we aim to create a mood or cohesiveness in everything we do. It felt as though we'd already made folk records and it was time to experiment with what that means. There are elements of folk happening throughout the album, but it is in no way a folk record although it is definitely a Wilderness of Manitoba record. The seventies was just a reference point that happens to include some of our favourite influences such as Fleetwood Mac. We were looking to bring in the kind of instrumentation you hear from that era that is heavy with electric guitars, Hammond organ, synthesizers and a prominent backbeat with lots of harmonies happening vocal-wise on top.” In addition to Whitwham’s vocals, the presence of Balsys along with Elise Legrow and Felicity Williams brought the high end/female vocals to another level and contributed to the more dynamic music direction being pursued by the band.
The new album is called Island of Echoes. The name will likely conjure up several images to each person, but the central idea comes from nostalgia and all that surrounds it. Most people write about what they know which inevitably becomes or already is the past. 'Echoes' refers directly to burdens or triumphs that you carry with you, that remind you of what you've been through. “Without memory, we wouldn't know what to make of our identity”, says Whitwham. “I also kept playing with the idea of different bodies of water in the songs and its effect. Then, there is a line from a novel when two men were canoeing on a lake through a forest fire. ‘It's like the island we slept on when we finally made it out of the fire’, which reminded me of everything that has happened to us since When You Left The Fire was released. Lastly, I started thinking about the island as the mind and the ocean as encompassing all things outside of it. An island of echoes was our island of memories.”
There were a number of highlights for the Wilderness of Manitoba over the past two years, ranging from their UK debut at the End of the Road Festival where they received a standing ovation to playing the Philadelphia Folk Festival and meeting Levon Helm; from their first shows in Berlin, Hamburg and the Netherlands to touring the U.S. opening for artists ranging from Cloud Cult to Aimee Mann; from playing the WOMAD festival in the UK with artists like Robert Plant to performing at SXSW in Austin. 2013 promises to be just as exciting as the band returns to Austin for SXSW and starts a monthly residency in New York. Island of Echoes was released on September 18th in Canada.