Single I Matt Andersen – Only An Island
Matt Andersen & The Big Bottle of Joy
“I toured with Port Cities a few years back, I heard them do this song and fell in love with it. If you’ve got at person in your life, hang onto them.” – Matt Andersen
The Big Bottle of Joy is about celebration – hard-won, overflowing, exuberant celebration. Matt Andersen’s latest long-player lives up to the grand title from its opening song, “Let It Slide”; a muscular, organ-drenched urge for people to chill out and be good to each other – to its understated, romantic curtain-closer, “Shoes.” Andersen finds reason to sustain this celebration of the life we share together everywhere – on the road, missing a lover; between the sheets in a southern Ontario motel room; from Montreal “all the way to New Orleans;” in a “little kitchen ballroom” on a quiet night at home. Over a dozen songs infused with raw blues-rock, rollicking Americana, thoughtful folk, and ecstatic gospel, he testifies to something we could all do well to remember: the time we have together is special, so let’s spend it the right way.
“Being good to each other, you know, in taking care of each other – those are the biggest things I want to put out there,” Andersen says. “If we’re in it together, it’ll be a lot easier than trying to do it on our own.”
Appropriately, The Big Bottle of Joy was a team effort. The title doesn’t just refer to the record, but the band that Andersen put together to make it. The songs were written with not just a band in mind, but this exact group of people, and Andersen tailored
moods and arrangements and sections to elevate the already substantial talents of the players. The approach gave them the best possible scenario to record live-off-the-floor at The Sonic Temple, and the individual performances – shot through with the kind of dynamism that can only come from being in a room together – flow seamlessly into
each other.
“Somebody told me a long time ago that when you put a band together, you need to make yourself the weakest musician,” Andersen says. “So that’s always what I’ve done. And they’re all just absolutely monstrous at what they do.”
The combined vocal power of the Smiths: Reeny, Haliey, and Micah – is all over the album, adding extra electricity to “How Far Will You Go” and soulful harmonies to the pining “Only an Island.” Drummer Geoff Arsenault’s nuanced rhythms mimic bumpy, endless highways on “Rollin’ Down the Road” and swing soft on the ode to touring “Miss Missin’ You.” Mike Farrington Jr.’s bass lines drive the pulse of love songs like “Golden” and the Richie Havens cover “Hands of Time,” and Cory Tetford shares six-string duties to add extra flavour to the support anthem “So Low, Solo.” Kim Dunn’s bright, rolling piano moves “Aurora” – a Canadian, mini-epic road romance – down the line in fine style, mingling with the lush organ accompaniment of multi-instrumentalist Chris Kirby(who also sets the place on fire for “What’s on My Mind”). And throughout, Andersen leads the band in masterful fashion, weaving his way through intimate moments and raucous ones. The final song, “Shoes” (co-written with Donovan Woods), finds him celebrating a precious night at home, “dancing with the shoes we’ve got on,” as Kirby’s accordion and Smith’s Hammond B3 organ plays Andersen through a twirl with his one-and-only around the kitchen floor.
Website:http://www.stubbyfingers.ca/