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New Album Articles

Posted: Thu Mar 18, 2010 5:51 pm
by Miguel
Post any new articles about the new album here!!

http://www.americansongwriter.com/2010/ ... -illusion/
Sarah McLachlan Eyes Return With The Laws Of Illusion
By Kevin Richards on March 18th, 2010

After declaring her intentions to revive the Lilith Fair after an eleven year lay-off, festival founder Sarah McLachlan has announced that she has a new studio album due as well. Dubbed The Laws Of Illusion, it is the Canadian singer-songwriter’s first collection of all-new material in seven years, and is due June 15 on Arista Records. The album was recorded in Montreal and Vancouver alongside McLachlan’s longtime producer and collaborator Pierre Marchand.

Fans who pre-order The Laws Of Illusion at Sarahmclachlan.com will get exclusive pre-access to Lillith Fair tickets, as well as an instant download of the new track “One Dream,” a song McLachlan wrote for and performed at the Vancouver Winter Olympics. The pre-order for the first set of tickets begins in three days.

Lilith Fair 2010’s roster includes Mary J. Blige, Sheryl Crow, Kelly Clarkson, Erykah Badu, Sugarland, Heart, Norah Jones, Ke$ha, Corinne Bailey Rae, Loretta Lynn, Emmylou Harris, Tegan and Sara. Visit lilithfair.com for details.
P.S. we don't want this thread to become redundant so if it has something new and noteworthy, please do post it!! :)

Re: New Album Articles

Posted: Thu Mar 18, 2010 8:38 pm
by Karine
In Montréal? It's been a long time since she recorded there. Was is for FTE or Solace? I hope it'll be a great album!

Re: New Album Articles

Posted: Fri Mar 19, 2010 4:56 am
by Miguel
I wasn't sure either, so I looked it up and it was Solace :) it was in one of Pierre's studios then, not sure about now

Re: New Album Articles

Posted: Fri Mar 19, 2010 3:35 pm
by Karine
It could be a good thing, to be away from home for the recording. It's a less "safe" place to work, maybe less comfortable for her. I hope it will make good sounds!

Re: New Album Articles

Posted: Sat Mar 20, 2010 2:50 am
by biancadantas
Karine wrote:In Montréal? It's been a long time since she recorded there. Was is for FTE or Solace? I hope it'll be a great album!
Perhaps just some instruments were recorded in Montreal, since sometimes Pierre plays instruments in some tracks. This would also be considered as recorded in Montreal....
Or maybe she decided to take a break from recording home in some tracks....

Re: New Album Articles

Posted: Sun Apr 25, 2010 9:55 pm
by Miguel
New article from The Globe and Mail :)

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/art ... le1546119/
Marsha Lederman

From Monday's Globe and Mail Published on Sunday, Apr. 25, 2010 1:59PM EDT Last updated on Sunday, Apr. 25, 2010 2:59PM EDT

When last we heard new material from Sarah McLachlan, she was working out some difficult personal issues: U Want Me 2 and Don’t Give Up On Us, the two new songs on 2008’s greatest hits release Closer, dealt with the break-up of her marriage.

With her new single, McLachlan’s heart is boldly back on her sleeve, but it appears to be all patched up, and then some. She sounds positively blissful in the upbeat, definitely-not-a-ballad Loving You Is Easy. “I’m alive and I’m on fire,” she belts out.

McLachlan says the song marks a decidedly different up-tempo mood her music has not shown before - and it is autobiographical.

“It’s been a roller coaster these last few years for sure,” McLachlan said. “A lot of emotional highs and lows. I did get a taste of finding love again, which is certainly what this song is all about. The delirious, overwhelming flush of new possibilities. That being said, I am happily single these days and better from the whole experience.”

The multi-Grammy winner performed the song publicly last September, at a star-studded fundraising concert in West Vancouver, where she lives. At the time, she called it “a happy song.”

But it addresses that dark period of her life, too: “I’ve been down a long road / I’ve become a stranger to myself,” she sings. And later: “Nothing came from wanting / And I became so small and insecure.”

Loving You Is Easy is the first single from The Laws of Illusion, McLachlan’s first full studio album of new material in seven years. The album will be released June 15, shortly before she takes her Lilith tour out on the road (after an 11-year hiatus) along with a caravan of other female musicians, and her two daughters.

“I'm facing all that is ahead with enthusiasm and certainly a bit of trepidation,” she admits, about heading full-on back into the spotlight. “I love the new songs and I'm very excited to play them live and to do Lilith again. My girls are both great travellers so this will be one big adventure to them. It's going to be a great summer.”

Re: New Album Articles

Posted: Mon Apr 26, 2010 11:04 am
by Karine
She's single again?? There will be more than happy love songs in this album...


Edit:

"Love, however, is no longer blooming between Sarah McLachlan and Brett Wilson. A very flirty Wilson told guests at Molson Canadian Hockey House that they broke up two weeks ago, which would explain why he was working the single man dance move on several targets."
February 14, 2010

A very flirty... :?

Re: New Album Articles

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 6:31 am
by Jessel
^^ Loving You Is Easy is a fitting tribute to their short-lived affair then. :D
I'd say this for that Brett guy: he taught Sarah not to take relationships way too seriously haha! Kudos to Brett.

Re: New Album Articles

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 1:56 pm
by jessiemonkey
Jessel wrote:^^ Loving You Is Easy is a fitting tribute to their short-lived affair then. :D
I'd say this for that Brett guy: he taught Sarah not to take relationships way too seriously haha! Kudos to Brett.

i agree :) relationships should just be fun, no stress. and if it doesnt work out, it doesnt. i was actually thinking about this on my way to work as i was listeing to it. i felt kind of bad thinking she wrote a song about being happy in a relationship. and now they are broken up. but i think its all good, i dont think anything could hurt her more than the split with ash. so good for her to keep things positive :)

Re: New Album Articles

Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2010 9:21 pm
by Miguel
And they keep on coming! :)

http://www.afterellen.com/people/2010/4 ... page=0%2C0
Interview with Sarah McLachlan
by Lesley Goldberg
April 28, 2010

It's been seven long years since Sarah McLachlan released Afterglow, her last full-length studio album of original material and 11 years since Lilith Fair closed up shop.

But all that is changing this summer as both McLachlan and Lilith Fair mark their triumphant return. Laws of Illusion, McLachlan's sixth all-original album, bows June 15 — and the singer-songwriter who founded the "celebration of women" hits the road with Lilith Fair 2.0 less than two weeks later to support the record with artists including Brandi Carlile, Kelly Clarkson, Queen Latifah, Rihanna, Tegan and Sara and the Indigo Girls, among others.

AfterEllen.com caught up with McLachlan to talk about Lilith Fair, Laws of Illusion and why sexual orientation "doesn't matter."

-----

AfterEllen.com: It’s been seven-plus years since you’ve recorded an album of all original material, and you’ve historically taken a few years off between albums. Is there a specific reason for that?
Sarah McLachlan: Yeah. Mostly it's because I had kids. I wasn't a prolific writer by any stretch of the imagination before that and having children really slows down the process because, well, they're the most exquisite distraction there is. I was really lucky that I got to take big chunks of time off to be a mom.

AE: How is Laws of Illusion different than Afterglow?
SM: I don't know; I haven't really thought about comparing the two. There's a lot of light and darkness on this record, and there's a sort of real raw energy to this record that I haven't felt before. The process in which we recorded it was a lot quicker. We recorded it live off-the-floor stuff, which is sort of a bunch of musicians in a room, here are the songs, here are the chords, go, record.

We did six songs in five days that way; the bulk of the songs. That was really exciting and fun and just kept it fresh with a different kind of energy. The past couple records have been a week in Montreal and then my producer coming to Vancouver. So lots of slowly building up songs a lot quicker.

AE:
Where does the album title come from?
SM: I was thinking about illusions and loss, which are a lot of the themes of the record, but it just seemed a little too depressing! (Laughs.) When I told it to my producer, he was like, "Did you say 'loss' or 'laws' of illusion?" And I was like, "Oh, I like that!" And then I was thinking about laws of illusion.

I like the fact that it doesn't make any sense — it's all about the fantasies that a lot of us buy into about how your life is going to play out and you're going to meet that person and get married and have kids or what ever your path is. Then all of the sudden, it's no longer in front of you. That whole big chunk of your life that you sort of had checked that off and went, "OK, that's settled." It defines you. It defined me to a large degree and I sort of had to go and pick up the pieces and figure out who I was at that point. The process of figuring that out was making this record.

AE:
“Loving You Is Easy” is the first single. Is that autobiographical?
SM: Oh yeah. (Laughs.) They all are, but there's also lots of creative license in all these songs because life just isn't that interesting most of the time (laughs.) And you have to create a bit of a story.

Yeah, "Loving You Is Easy" is sort of my first foray into the possibility of a new relationship; that sort of delirious and heady feeling of lust and passion that ensues and that sort of "Wow, I didn't know I'd ever be feeling this again — great!"

AE: How has songwriting and getting back into the studio helped you deal with the break-up of your marriage?
SM: Well, it's been a big part of it. Music and writing has always been the biggest way I can express myself and sort through the things that are going on in my life. So it's been very cathartic.

AE: Switching to Lilith Fair, what sort of impact do you think Lilith Fair has had on female musicians since it first launched in 1996?
SM: I'd like to think that we created a sense of community that didn't really exist before for a lot of women musicians and a lot of those friendships continued and we dispelled a lot of myths within the industry about not being able to put two women on the same bill, not being able to play two women back-to-back on the radio because people won't come, or people won't listen. But guess what, they sure do! And they came, and they listened and they loved it.

We created something I think that took on a life of its own; it was so much bigger than the sum of its parts. The idea of bringing that back again and growing that legacy and the fact that we have a wealth o f new musicians now that we can add to that and that we have the sort of momentum behind us of people sort of remembering, "Wow, that was great." I'm very excited about the possibilities.

AE: What about on the music industry as a whole?
SM: That's kind of hard to answer without really tooting my own horn. I'd like to think that it helped a lot of artists — it gave a lot of them a platform that was larger than the one they would have had if they were playing on their own, certainly. Again, I think it really helped the industry recognize that women were a powerful force and we make great music.

It's interesting, too, because one of the things that I sort of felt when Lilith finished in 1999, I think music is very cyclical and it seemed like the door swung shut on the singer-songwriter. That was sort of when Britney Spears, the Backstreet Boys and 'N Sync were becoming so huge and that sort of prefab bubblegum pop was just taking over everything. That was a little bit disheartening — even though I'm a closet Backstreet Boys fan (laughs), a few songs anyway. But again, the sense of community it created with the artists, the fact that it was incredibly successful, the industry had to take notice of that and recognize the power that women had.

AE: Do you have plans to tour solo once Lilith Fair has concluded?
SM: I don't yet and I don't know if I will because my girls are in school and the older one is in Grade 2 going into Grade 3 and she really needs routine and I don't think she'd do very well. A lot of people take their kids on the road and have a tutor, but she needs to be home and I can't leave her. I think it's going to be touring in the summer for me — and one-offs for a while.

AE: What do you think about your huge lesbian following? You're somewhat of an icon within the community.
SM: Am I? Why?

AE: A lot of readers identify with your music and Lilith Fair has just become such a part of the lesbian cultural landscape.
SM: That's one of the greatest gifts about music — whether you're gay or straight, it's just so fantastic to hear that something I helped to create has a positive impact in a stranger's life. That's such a gift for me.

Maybe selfish isn't the right word but it's kind of a selfish thing that I do make my music — I don't do it to please anyone else, I do it to please myself. And that I can give that out to the world and have it affect people in any kind of way, much less a profound kind of way is the biggest compliment to me. And it makes me feel connected to people. Again, music has a gift like that —whether it's art or photography or a great movie, or a song, you hear it, you see it, and you're instantly moved. It resonates something within you and that is that connection we all crave — to ourselves, to each other.

This world we live in now is so defined by fast-food culture and quick time snippets and sound bites. We're all texting each other as opposed to speaking to each other and I think art is so incredibly important for that very thing of just grounding us, reminding us of our own fragility and beauty.

AE: A lot of people are curious how you would label yourself: gay, straight or bisexual. Care to touch on that?
SM: I'm not big on labels. I don't think about people as gay or straight; I think about them as human beings. Sexual orientation doesn't matter. It's about love, feeling love and giving love.

Sarah McLachlan's new single, "Loving You is Easy" will be released on May 4, and the album, The Laws of Illusion, drops on June 15.