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For a new album that The Sheepdogs didnât initially set out to make, Changing Colours is a stunning achievement. Proud purveyors of guitar-driven modern-day retro rock, the triple Juno Award-winning Saskatoon-based quintet has expanded its sound on Changing Colours to encompass more styles and hues to enhance the Sheepdogsâ trademark beef-and-boogie twin-axe riffs, hooks, shuffles and long-haired aesthetic.
âWe identify strongly with rock ân roll, but thereâs definitely some branching out,â says Ewan Currie, The Sheepdogsâ singer, guitarist, songwriter and occasional – and yes, youâre reading this correctly –
clarinetist. âThe sounds we use on this â thereâs more keyboards featuring Shamus and more stringed instruments. Itâs still rock ân roll but there are more colours.â
Itâs also great, passionate music born out of spontaneity: first resonating in the 17-song albumâs euphoric opener âNobodyâ and continuing to flavour such invigorating numbers as the electrifying
âSaturday Nightâ and the driving âIâve Got A Hole Where My Heart Should Be,â the recordâs infectious first single.
But The Sheepdogs havenât only stretched their sonic palate: theyâve also expanded stylistically, tastefully embracing other genres as well.
Thereâs the country-lite feel of âLet It Roll,â the Stax-soul aura of the mid-tempo anthem âI Ainât Coolâ that features trombone — and the resplendent Latin-rock vibe that fuels âThe Big Nowhere.â
This is what occurs when The Sheepdogs are left to their own devices: when the band completed its global responsibilities in promoting its fifth album, 2015âs Future Nostalgia, the band took a busmanâs holiday, renting Torontoâs Taurus Studio and hiring its owner, Thomas DâArcy, to engineer and co-produce whatever emerged from their creative loins.
âIt was very low key,â says Currie. âWe didnât have a clock. We would work until we were bored or tired. Then we would stop.â Drummer Sam Corbett said the music that eventually evolved into Changing Colours benefitted from the relaxed approach.
âMost of the records weâve made have been under a short time constraint,â Corbett explains. âThis one was done over six months, with some songs sitting around for two months. Then weâd come back and try different things, so I think that as a result, some of the songs took a different shape. âIn some situations, thereâs more of a âjammingâ feel because we could experiment.â
The Changing Colours sessions also marks the recording debut of the newest Sheepdog: guitar wiz Jimmy Bowskill, parachuted into the lineup as a live, last-minute replacement. âHe joined us on tour, learned our whole set basically in one rehearsal and has been with us ever since,â says bass player Ryan Gullen. âHe gave us a new sensibility â he plays a bunch of instruments as well â mandolin, steel, banjo and fiddle.â
The band honours Bowskillâs addition with an instrumental tribute to his Bailieboro, Ontario hometown in the folk-flavoured âThe  Bailieboro Turnaround,â part of a six-song medley that begins with âBorn A Restless Manâ and concludes with âRun Baby Run.â Medleys, in general, have become something of a Sheepdogs signature. âWe like having those medleys that run together at the end of the
album,â says Currie.
As far as the songs themselves, Currie says Changing Colours songs like âNobodyâ to the one-two combo of âCool Downâ and âKiss the Brass Ringâ cover topics like the freedom of a good road trip and compromises in the pursuit of success. But the subject matter is never pre-planned. âI donât know where my lyrics come from,â Currie confesses. âItâs sort of sub-conscious thing. I try not to write deliberately. Iâve never been a guy who sits down and says, âokay, hereâs a subject Iâm going to write about.â Itâs always been music first.â
In the six years since The Sheepdogs claimed Rolling Stone magazineâs one and only Best Unsigned Band contest â earning them a U.S. record deal and a fervent endorsement from The Kings of Leon â the platinum-selling group has tirelessly criss-crossed the planet. Touring in support of critically acclaimed albums Learn & Burn, The Sheepdogs and Future Nostalgia has only honed the bandâs
workhorse ethic, generating hits like âI Donât Know,â the gold âFeeling Goodâ and âThe Way It Isâ along the way and transforming them into a highly disciplined live attraction. Itâs a calling that they have never taken for granted. âWe could never sit back and rest on our laurels,â notes Corbett.
Changing Colours is a testament of The Sheepdogsâ never-ending desire to follow their muse, become increasingly prolific and deliver thrilling evenings of thundering, organic rock to their devoted
audiences. The rest just takes care of itself. âDo good work and the people will find you,â notes Ewan Currie. âLet the work speak for itself. Thatâs our big philosophy.â