Wednesday, Mar 10th

Last update:11:41:44 PM GMT

You are here:

Joel Plaskett is on the road

E-mail Print PDF
Recent Articles
Ok so its Spring Time in Montreal, guys can show the tag on their $200 jeans and girls can wear thig...
Not to short Change the Montreal Rap scene,its surely came to the level of Toronto in the pass years...
Syan was  born in Montreal in May 1982. He grew up being the son of a blues musician. He began...
  Swollen Members  is set to release one of the biggest music compilations by any group t...
There were several Mixtapes that articulated the anxious, minds on hiphop lovers in Canada since the...

Joel Plaskett has been described as a hard-touring artist. He's on the road -- a lot. So it's fitting that, when he answers his cellphone, he's already on the move.

He's late for an appointment, so there's some huffing and puffing as he hoofs it to his car, where he switches to speakerphone to avoid any hand-held finger-wagging from Nova Scotia's finest.

"It's tough," he says of life on the road. "I kind of pick my battles now. I don't just go out willy-nilly anymore. I don't go out if it looks like there's a chance that the shows are going to suck."

The award-winning singer -- who performs solo, with his band the Emergency, and is even reuniting with his old band Thrush Hermit for a series of one-off shows in the spring -- didn't have to think too hard about trekking across country recently to open for American singer-songwriter Steve Earle as part of Vancouver's Cultural Olympiad on Jan 23.

"They said, 'Do you want to play with Steve Earle in the Cultural Olympiad?' and I said, 'Uh, yeah.'

"I have to admit, though, that I don't know his records. I saw him play at the Edmonton Folk Festival this past summer, and I gotta say, I also really enjoyed him on (HBO's) The Wire."

But Plaskett shares some similarities with the man known as "the hard-core troubadour."

Both are genre-bending artists in their own right, and both are respected for their songwriting and storytelling abilities, as well as a shared habit of marching to the beat of their own music.

Last year, for example, the prolific Plaskett released a triple album that featured 27 songs.

"There was a certain degree of foolishness and self-indulgence there," he says. "But you gotta give people something to talk about. A triple record isn't exactly an economical way to release music, but then, what is?

"I did it because I could, basically."

That album, aptly titled Three, was shortlisted for a 2009 Polaris Prize (his self-described concept album Ashtray Rock was also shortlisted in 2007).

Over the years, he's been nominated for five Junos (including one with Thrush Hermit), not the least of which was 2006 and 2008 nods for songwriter of the year, where his competition included The Arcade Fire, Feist and legendary songwriter Neil Young.

"The songwriter nominations were real big for me," he says. "It's funny, I've been really lucky. I've flown under the radar in many respects, but I've also surfaced enough to satisfy my ego and sense of self-worth. It doesn't hinge on those nominations by any stretch, but at the same time, it's pretty encouraging to be included amongst people like that. It's a huge honour."

Joel Plaskett will be opening for the Barenaked Ladies on his upcoming tour.

Canadian tour dates include:

St. John's, Feb. 26

Moncton, March 18

Halifax, March 19 - 20, April 24

Ottawa, March 25

Toronto, March 26 - 27

Victoria, April 6

Calgary, April 8

Saskatoon, April 12

Regina, April 13

Edmonton, April 14

Hamilton, April 28

Montreal, April 30

Comments (0)add comment

Write comment

security image
Write the displayed characters


busy