FOLK IMPLOSION
THE NEW FOLK IMPLOSION
AVAILABLE NOW

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BRAND OF SKIN
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BRAND OF SKIN  
 


ON THE ROAD with Alaska! and Mia Doi Todd

3/8 Salt Lake City Liquid Joes
3/9 Denver Bluebird
3/11 Kansas City Grand Emporium
3/12 Minneapolis 400 Bar
3/13 Chicago Abbey Pub
3/14 Detroit Magic Stick
3/15 Toronto Horseshoe Tavern
3/17 Montreal La Salsa Rosa
3/18 Boston Upstairs Middle East
3/19 New York Knitting Factory
3/21 Hoboken Maxwells
3/22 Philadelphia The Fire
3/23 Baltimore Ottobar
3/24 Chapel Hill Cats Cradle
3/26 Atlanta Echo Lounge
3/27 Athens 40 Watt Club
3/28 Hattiesburg The Hippo
3/29 New Orleans Shim Sham Club
3/30 Houston The Proletariat
4/1 Austin Mercury Arts
4/2 Denton Rubber Gloves
4/3 Norman Opolis Production
4/5 Phoenix (Tempe) Mason Jar
4/6 San Diego The Casbah
4/9 Los Angeles Troubadour


“Now this is the record I needed to do,” says Lou Barlow about The New Folk Implosion.

Barlow’s prodigious creative energy has manifested itself in 20 albums. From an early gig playing bass in Dinosaur Jr., to leading indie rock standard bearer Sebadoh and releasing cassettes of his lo-fi home taping solo project Sentridoh, through to scoring a Top 40 hit with “Natural One” from the Kids soundtrack with Folk Implosion, his quality to quantity ratio has been inordinately high.

A change in collaborators is in large part of what makes The New Folk Implosion, well, new. All past Folk Implosion releases were a product of the collaboration between Barlow and John Davis. With Davis retired (“he never really fully embraced being a musician as a lifestyle”) he decided to call the album The New Folk Implosion.

Explains Barlow, “Before, I’d sort of split things up -- I’d keep my folk or rock-based stuff [and] do that with Sebadoh. The studio experimentation or experimenting with beats and writing in the studio or fully collaborating with somebody else, I saved that for Folk Implosion. But now I’m doing songs that would’ve become Sebadoh songs or Folk Implosion songs and putting them under one name.”

Perhaps unsurprisingly for an artist who has christened some projects with made-up words (Sebadoh and Sentridoh) and another with a riff on another band’s name (Folk Implosion, i.e. the diametric opposite of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion), this creative shift is both random and urgent.

Through a recent difficult period, one of the most prolific artists in rock was left with, as Barlow says, “This feeling of just wanting to just quit entirely. ‘What the hell is this for? Why do I want to share this pain with people?’ With The New Folk Implosion “I definitely wanted to get back to why I wanted to do it,” he says, “which is the same old story, ‘I’m doing it for myself.’ This record is for me. It’s an expression of something I did with my friends and it’s something I’m proud of because I did it with my friends.”

None of this is to say that the album is inaccessible or esoteric. Quite to the contrary, with Imaad Wassif’s guitars churning over pensive basslines and Barlow’s strongest-ever vocals, it’s a cohesive, melodic and alluring disc, if a little dark.

“The feeling that I had,” he says, “the feeling of the last couple years that the record is describing is just something I can’t contrive something out of, or make a story out of it. Leaving something and moving on to something else. Struggling with physical and mental addictions. It’s about the struggle. I know when I hear it, I hear a catharsis.”

The sense of release is palpable on the new album. The simmering energy that begins with the opening chords of “Fuse,” through the imploring of “Releast” finally dissipates in the to the last lines of the last track, “Easy”: “The fight is over…”

“I began writing ‘Easy’ literally five years ago and it’s gone through so many mutations,” he explains. “It’s a song that I would attempt and be so dissatisfied with it, to the point where I couldn’t tell why I kept pursuing it. That particular lyric, ‘the fight Is over,’ I had a really strong intuition about it, and the song’s strength.”

It’s as if in writing songs like “Brand Of Skin” (“what brand of skin do you occupy”), Barlow has figured out how to be comfortable in his. And with that acceptance has come recognition of his legacy as an indie rock icon, The Man Who Launched A Thousand Home Recordings.

“It seems like the way I influence people is more on this theoretical, philosophical way,” Barlow says, “and they seem to pick up on the fact that it’s about empowerment, about being empowered in your personal life to survive situations, and if you’re a musician, them being empowered to record their own songs or express themselves artistically. That’s perfect. I wouldn’t want it any other way.”