Ben Weaver - Paper
Sky (Glitterhouse / Dist. Differ-Ant). Juin 2007
Info
"I only have one rule when it comes to songwriting.
That is: whenever I have an idea I stop whatever I am doing
and I write it down."
So goes the life of Ben Weaver. And though
the Oregon-born songwriter spends more time in his basement
getting those ideas down than is likely proper or healthy, it's
hard to argue with the results - evocative, hushed songs populated
by birds, phone booths, lovers, empty parking lots, friends,
shoppers in the checkout line, and plastic bags stuck in trees.
A former Casket Company warehouse in Minneapolis,
Minnesota is Weaver's current world headquarters. Multitudinous
organs, synthesizers, guitars, a sampler, a piano, a dog, Polaroid
cameras, sketch books, New Yorker back issues, boxes of CDs
and a PowerBook mark the territory. There is an air of controlled
chaos and the musty smell of old tube amps.
This is where, under the watchful eye of a
dog and perhaps several hundred interred ghosts, Weaver's striking
new album, Paper Sky, took shape. With the aid of committed
producer Brian Deck (Modest Mouse, Iron & Wine), the record
coalesces into a seamless blend of urban and rural, experimental
and roots. "This record explores urban and industrial themes
that I hadn't touched before. I have been living in the city
and that has made me see the relationship between the city and
field differently."
Consequently, Weaver's interest in experimental
and electronic music steps to the forefront on Paper Sky, with
crinkly synthesizer textures and other mutilated sounds mixed
beneath beautiful layers of cello and blasts of processed trumpet.
"Deck exposed me to the Austrian laptop performer Fennesz. He
was a huge influence for a lot of the sound stage and static
feel of this record. But I was also listening to a lot of Bill
Evans, Glenn Gould, Silver Jews..."
When not writing, recording or releasing his
records, Weaver is often on the road, touring through Europe,
America and Australia. "I try and change my surroundings as
often as I can," says Weaver, who performs solo and with a revolving
cast of collaborators. "This way I am always being exposed to
new things that effect and change my interpretation of the world,
which leads to a constant renewal in my art."
Weaver writes continuously, a process perhaps
more akin to breathing than composing, and has released a veritable
Minnesota blizzard of material - at the tender age of 27, Paper
Sky is his fifth record. So perhaps it's not a surprise that
Weaver has already set to planning the record to follow Paper
Sky. "I have always identified with those people who make art
because they have to, that sense of necessity and urgency. That
is why I make art, to fulfill that need within myself and to
connect with, and provide art to the people of the world who
also cannot live without it."
"ce 'ciel de papier" assez coloré
apporte un éclairage neuf sur cet esthète du country-folk
contemporain". M. Zisman, Rock & Folk
Contact promo France: sean@talitres.com
- 05 56 91 71 45 - Glitterhouse
France