Goodbye (Live)
Lemon Bucket Orkestra are Toronto’s original guerrilla-folk
party-punk massive. The multi-award-winning ensemble has been heralded as a
groundbreaking, genre-bending phenomenon by media and fans alike, and over the
past 8 years have performed all over the world from WOMAD in New Zealand and
Pohoda in Slovakia, to Festival D’Été in Québec City, and Luminato in Toronto.
The Guardian proclaimed that their performances are “gorgeously sung and
passionately played” and The New York Times declared them “charismatic…handsome
and ambitious.”
Equal parts exhilarating precision and reckless abandon,
LBO’s live shows are a truly immersive experience – ranging from the ecstatic
to the cathartic and all points in between – and they have expertly captured
that unique blend of energy and emotion on their new album If I Had The
Strength. Released worldwide on August 10th via a new deal with Six Degrees
Records.
The band will be bringing the new material and their
notoriously engaging live show out on an 11 date US release tour starting
September 14th (see below for a complete list tour dates). Two years in the
making, the new album once again draws its repertoire and inspiration from a
myriad of folk traditions across Eastern Europe. But unlike their two previous
albums (2012’s Lume, Lume and 2015’s Moorka), which were both just collections
of individual, unrelated songs, IIHTS explores an overarching narrative through
line, to tell a much bigger story. “This is an album about coming home, about
never being the same, about the parts of ourselves we lose, the parts we gain,
and about the prisons we inhabit or that inhabit us,” says Lemon Bucket
Orkestra ringleader, Mark Marczyk.
With IIHTS, the increasingly dynamic and theatrical group
have created a song cycle inspired by a century old Slavic prison ballad that
tells the story of a young rebel coming home after laying it all on the line.
The work draws emotional weight from the band’s personal experiences with the
Ukraine-Russia conflict, but it also highlights the dozen strong ensemble’s
party-punk roots and attitude, developed and honed since their formative days
busking on the streets of Toronto. “We start in a musty train car overlooking
the fields and valleys of our youth through permanently smudged windows,
reflecting on the life that once was and wondering how we can face our mothers,
with the horrifying fact that we will never be the beloved boys or girls we
once were,” Marczyk says, expanding on the album’s conceptual theme. “Then,
with a sudden jolt we are transported to the memory of what led us to this
moment and we’re sprinting for dear life in a struggle to keep ahead of our
past selves. The whole album navigates between the shaky train car and a series
of flashbacks – in the language of eastern European folklore – the main site of
resistance and celebration for the Lemon Bucket Orkestra for the better part of
the past decade.”
Documenting Lemon Bucket Orkestra at the height of its
musical powers, the new album also features a compelling list of special
guests; from beloved Canadian soprano, Measha Brueggergosman, to Montreal-based
Latino rapper, Boogat, to a triumphant-yet-tragic 60 strong reading of the late
Adrienne Cooper’s Sholem by the mighty Choir!Choir!Choir! Weaving in and out of
the prison ballad theme, the work takes listeners on an emotional journey
exploring trauma and tragedy through the lens of musical exploration and
communal celebration.
Lemon Bucket Orkestra has been wowing international
audiences for close to a decade now, bringing their unstoppable and infectious
musical mayhem to stages and streets far and wide. Voted Toronto’s Best Live
Band by the readers of NOW Magazine, the band’s previous album, Moorka, took
home a 2015 Canadian Folk Music Award for World Group of the Year, and was
nominated for a 2016 JUNO award for World Music Album of the Year. The band is
best known for its raucous parties, impromptu street performances and legendary
live shows. But in the last year, they have also made a mark with their
powerful and award winning ‘guerrilla folk opera,’ Counting Sheep (which
features the entire band as the cast). The unique theatre experience has
already played for enthusiastic audiences in Canada, Scotland, Ireland, the UK,
Germany and the US (where it has run in Berkeley, Stanford and NYC) and will be
staged again at the Vault Festival in the UK in early 2019.
“The album is a statement of resistance and celebration,”
Marczyk concludes. “We’re guerrilla-folk party punks both imprisoned and
liberated by eastern European folklore. The title track (borrowed from the late
great Adrienne Cooper) says it all: ‘If I had the strength, I would run in the
streets – I would scream PEACE! PEACE! PEACE!’ This album records the process
of gathering that strength and the obstacles that we encounter along the way.”
Lemon Bucket Orkestra is: IAN TULLOCH (sousaphone) , OS KAR
(savage drums, screams), MARICHKA MARCZYK (accordion, vocals), MICHAEL LOUIS
JOHNSON (trumpet), JULIAN SELODY (saxophone), JAASH SINGH (darbouka). ALEX
NAHIRNY (guitar), MARK MARCZYK (violin, vocals), STEPHANIA WOLOSHYN (dance,
percussion, vocals), NATHAN DELL-VANDENBERG (trombone), JAMES McKIE (violin)
2018 US Release Tour Dates:
Sept 14 – World Music Festival, Madison WI
Sept 15 – Landfall Festival, Cedar Rapids IA
Sept 19 – Global Roots Festival, Minneapolis MN
Sept 20 – Gibson Music Hall, Appleton WI
Sept 21 – Anodyne, Milwaukee WI
Sept 22 – Globalquerque, Albuquerque NM
Sept 25 – Brillo Box, Pittsburgh PA
Sept 26 – Drom, New York NY
Sept 27 – Martyrs, Chicago IL
Sept 28 – Lotus Festival, Bloomington IN
Sept 29 – Lotus Festival, Bloomington IN
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