Ever since I saw them open at a Givers concert last year, I’ve been incredibly transfixed by Lord Huron’s sound. It’s immense, yet intimate, spiritual yet worldly. It’s the type of music you’d expect to hear score a summer drive across the country, an epic vision that makes everything seem larger than life. Lord Huron may be hidden from the masses for now, but come October 9th, when their debut LP Lonesome Dreams is released, fans of the Fleet Foxes, Local Natives, and Bon Iver sound may have found themselves a new band to love. Check out the first single from Lonesome Dreams, "Time To Run".
Tag: Lord Huron
I’ll be the first to admit that I was a little underwhelmed with this years music releases, not that there weren’t plenty of quality albums out there, but the trend seemed to be going a place that my ears didn’t want to hear. Thank God for Lord Huron. While I was trying to come to terms with the much lauded “guitar rock” that both Wye Oak and Real Estate boasted, Lord Huron went out and crafted the best guitar song of the year. (Also, when did opiate-laced vocals become so popular?) “Man Who Lives Forever” features a kaleidoscope of guitar imagery, from the buoyant picked intro to the slow burning swell of the low strung E that rumbles and hums in the background. For all the wrong steps that music might have taken this year, “Man Who Lives Forever” stands to correct them, and Lord Huron delivers with one of 2011’s best songs. Check out the video from Rollo & Grady and below check out the free download.
Lord Huron – Man Who Lives Forever from Rollo & Grady Sessions on Vimeo.
Talkin’ Turkey: A Mixtape
Just in time for everybody to tuck in to the most lazy and food filled day of the year. As always the tracks are all free downloads, but support these wonderful artists if you can.
Man Who Lives Forever (Rollo & Grady Session)- Lord Huron
Lord Huron has been a band that is constantly defying my expectations, they’re due out for a well deserved full length album this coming year and if Man Who Lives Forever is any indication of where their sound is going, look for them to be all over the indie airwaves next year.
Man Who Lives Forever- Lord Huron
Song to Sing When I’m Lonely- John Frusciante
Possibly the greatest talent to emerge from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, John Frusciante has shown that he’s no one trick pony and a masterful songwriter in his own right, Song To Sing When I’m Lonely is one of my favorites, starting with a melody right out of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
Song To Sing When I’m Lonely- John Frusciante
Fletcher- Blitzen Trapper
Blitzen Trapper have the new Americana sound locked down on their most recent full length, American Goldwing. Think of it as Wilco with a little more drawl and optimism. Not many bands these days can write a narrative as compelling as this Portland group.
Coeur D’Alene- The Head and The Heart
Critics of The Head and the Heart stated that their debut album was filled with derivative sounds of Americana, on “Coeur D’Alene” all they can note is a perfectly crafted pop song.
Coeur D’Alene- The Head and The Heart
I Stopped Missing You Today- Stone Darlings
Stone Darling is an all-girl group that single-handedly defies the label.
I Stopped Missing You Today- Stone Darling
More Than Muscle- Luke Temple
Quite possibly my favorite song of 2011 with its off-kilter rhythms and technicolor arrangements, Temple lures you in with the first few notes and by the time his charming lilt comes into the fore there’s no letting go.
Handwriting- White Denim
White Denim is one of those bands that can make prodigious skill seem par for the course for their songwriting, “Handwriting” being an intriguing guitar run through that makes you wonder how they’re playing what they’re playing and can still mold it into a conventional song form. The pedal steel puts a nice touch.
Freeze Out- Snorri Helgason
If not the best thing to come out of Iceland, by far he is the most underrated. Sure his name might never be commonplace in pop music but he is as well deserving as any singer-songwriter out there right now.
The Only Way- Gotye
Gotye shows the creative intensity that we used to expect out of Beck, but this Australian troubadour proves his equal and more through his clever approach at arrangements and his chameleon vocals.
Livin’ In The Jungle- Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears
Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears seem intent on bringing R&B back to what it once was, the hard propulsive blues that brought the Black Keys into prominence with Brothers only with more of a funky kick and a wicked horn section.
Livin’ in the Jungle – Black Joe Lewis & the Honeybears
I’ll Walk Away- James Hunter
James Hunter wowed Van Morrison with his debut Believe What I Say even getting the man himself to duet on a couple tracks with him, if Sam Cooke had managed to live to old age this croon might be what we were in for.
Million Dollar Bill- Dawes
When it hits me that she’s gone/ I think i’ll run for president/ Get my face put on the million dollar bill/ So when these rich men that she wants/ Show her ways they can’t take care of her/ I’ll have found a way to be there with her still
Within the opening of “Million Dollar Bill” Taylor Goldsmith managed to portray the sadness, jealousy, and ultimately love that’s still present when your lover has left you. Proof why he’s one of the greatest songwriters of his generation.
I Found You- Alabama Shakes
Otis Redding reincarnated in girl form, no other description should be necessary.
Soulless- Fake Problems
Who said people couldn’t write upbeat rock songs anymore.
Big Man- Boy & Bear
It wouldn’t be the farthest stretch to compare this band with Mumford & Sons, but that would greatly undermine the talent present in this group, the lyrics and vocals alone on this song should guarantee them recognition for album of the year (and yes, the rest of the album is fine too).
Big Man- Boy & Bear
From The Start- Tiger Waves
For the acoustic guitars and the rolling drum fills that propel this song along and the endearing harmonies that go along with it. Who couldn’t like a band called Tiger Waves? And you call yourselves American.
The Understanding- Jones Street Station
No matter how many incarnations there was and will always be of tight harmonies and acoustic fingerpicking, it will always sound good, and Jones Street Station isn’t about to change that. But they certainly liven the arrangement up to great success.
The Understanding- Jones Street Station
Mighty- Lord Huron
The yearning for discovery and the search for happiness and the unknown all bottled up into one song, but it’s more than a song, it’s a whole world.
Who Is Lord Huron and Why Should You Listen To Them?
Truth be told, I hadn’t heard much of Lord Huron before this year, despite their two EP’s being released the year before; Into the Sun and Mighty respectively. However I had the pleasure of hearing them live at the Middle East in Cambridge and walked away awestruck by the potency of their music and lyrical interplay. Although they opened for Givers, a great band in their own right, anybody who was listening could reckon that Lord Huron stole the show.
“Of all the strangers you’re the strangest that I’ve seen.”
Their music is something akin to Manifest Destiny, with vocals suiting the expansive uncharted landscapes and their instrumentation both American and otherworldly. It would be easy to say that Lord Huron evokes bands like Fleet Foxes with their vocal charms and large atmospheres but it would be a disservice to both to bother comparing the two. Rather their music transcends archetypes and melodrama, laudable in its own right for the sheer listenability of their work.
It might be important to note that both the EP’s, though Lord Huron is a full band live, were recorded by the lead singer himself Ben Schneider, but it’s to his credit that he doesn’t turn the story down a comparative path to Bon Iver’s famous trip out to a cabin in Wisconsin. Although Schneider also hails from the Great Lake region (Michigan) his songwriting isn’t crafted out of an experience of heartbreak, but in the American experience itself, harkening back to the questions of identity and primitivism that few musicians have dared to explore.
Music at its most pure is an escape from the everyday life, inviting the listener to lose oneself in the world that is crafted by the musicians alone and it is in this regard that Lord Huron excels. A discerning ear can pick out the individual instruments in any of their songs (a pedal steel here, a ukelele there, a mandolin at another) but its the cohesion of these disparate elements that makes it work.
Lord Huron is the muse for the wandering mind. Music that’s perfect for sunrise and sunsets and long drives, for the broad realization that spring is upon us and the hope of new life. If Ralph Waldo Emerson had a favorite band, Lord Huron would surely be it. Their craft evokes not only the natural environment but human kind in that natural environment, unchained from the bonds of modern society.


