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The Low Anthem: Revivalists at heart

Tuesday night the The Low Anthem come into Urbana to play a rare headlining show for the revivalist folk/Americana band from Providence, Rhode Island. The band’s last album, Smart Flesh, came out in early 2011 and after a long tour last fall there were few people who expected them to come out of hiatus until they had another album in hand.

For the past few weeks they have been traveling throughout Canada in support of City and Colour (Dallas Green from Alexisonfire) and the show here in town is one of only a few stops where the band has a chance to headline. As co-founding member Jeff Prystowsky said in an interview with Smile Politely last week, “it will be exciting to get back in the states and get to play for our fellow Americans.”

But The Low Anthem are no strangers to tours in support of larger acts selling out spacious theatre venues. They have wandered the streets with the likes of Iron & Wine, Emmylou Harris, The Avett Brothers, and The National. More than anything, I think this speaks tremendously to the band’s tremendous revivalist allure.

They aren’t the only band reviving traditional sounds and instruments to toe the line between the folk sounds of the past and the modern demands of “indie” music, but there are few that work so hard at getting it right.

After this current tour the band is looking forward to getting back to work on their emotional folk revival. “We finally have our own studio in Providence, Rhode Island and as soon as we get off of this tour we will be back at home and working our sound,” Prystowsky said.

The band recently moved into a new recording space that is a perfect backdrop for their music, an old abandoned theatre.

The Columbus Theatre is an old opera house that has been shut down due to fire code and it’s so beautiful,” he said of the new space. “I was just talking the other day about how we are playing shows in all of the beautiful old theaters across Canada, but we still think that the Columbus edges them out. There is a cuteness about it. It has a kind of beauty that just doesn't exist anymore.”

The Low Anthem feature a supple folk sound that is thoughtful and orchestrated without being unemotional. They use a wide range of instruments and it would be easy to assume that any band playing a saw, clarinet, pump organ, and harp is just trying a little too hard to be folk for the sake of the scene, but it’s easy to tell they know these instruments intimately.

This thoughtful approach to music is part of the reason why the band has, most recently, been working to score the music for a film debuting at the upcoming Berlin Film festival called Arcadia. Prystowsky described how this meticulous process fit them well, but pushed them out of their usual comforts.

“It was really eye-opening and a whole different kind of process. Working with a director, looking at a series of visual images, or a dialogue between two characters and trying to come with the appropriate music to set that,” said Jeff.

“It was a whole different approach to making music. And through that process it influenced a different approach from which we usually work.”

The Low Anthem play at the Canopy Club Tuesday, February 7th at 7 p.m. (doors at 6 p.m.). Be sure to break up your workweek with some beautifully orchestrated folk that is often delicate, sometimes rowdy, but always a forceful reminder of how beautiful a new take on a traditional sound can be.

"Ghost Woman Blues" by The Low Anthem


Most Recent Music Comments

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Get yours early. The Rave’s CD will be available at Exile and at The C-U Flea on Saturday. C-U Flea details here: http://www.smilepolitely.com/news/sp_radio_podcast_c-u_flea_arrives/

isaac arms avatar

represent, Matt.

{username}

Yeah, I’d agree that Transporter Room 3 is the worst house venue I’ve ever seen.

{username}

*slow. clap.* Still offering no threat of intelligence…. I know I said I thought you should just write this whole column yourself next year, Isaac, but now that you’ve gone and taken a “part deux” run at it, I’d like to modify my request: Best Music 2013,…

isaac arms avatar

Actually, it’s kind of nice, the quiet.  John Heoffleur’s engaging commentary/dialogue is sorely missed, however. In lieu of someone intelligent saying something, I’ve compiled a list of Honourable Mentions: BEST ROCK BAND: Take Care ::these gentlemen have four completely different sets at their disposal right now (which…

isaac arms avatar

What?  Echo! (Echo!) Where’s the dischord and dissent?

{username}

That article almost looks like something out of The Onion

{username}

Thanks! I’m looking forward to writing even more….

Annie Weisner avatar

Yay!  Love this!  Welcome to the family!

isaac arms avatar

that last photo’s a doozie, Chris.  good work.

Most Recent Comments

Eric Bussell avatar

Did the Crave Truck get a permit to park in city metered spots and city right of way?  Or did they just get a permit?  The city clerk’s office seems to be a suspect here, but it’s not clear they did anything wrong.  Did the Crave Truck…

isaac arms avatar

High-profile whining. AKA Lobbying.

isaac arms avatar

it’s quite choice. looking forward to seeing how it and its patronage grow and develop over the course of the year.  could be a neat little ecosystem.

{username}

“It was at this point, before he started his business, that working with city employees should’ve raised red flags…” But they didn’t because: 1) The City Clerk’s office originally mis-interpreted the rules,  or are indeed re-interpreting them. 2) Champaign’s brick-n-mortar merchants hadn’t yet started whining about The Crave Truck.

isaac arms avatar

Super cool! Excellent track, Excellent band.

{username}

Looking forward to trying this place!

Dan Schreiber avatar

I’m in the middle (or the beginning or end, depending on how you look at it) of re-reading Slaughterhouse Five.  What a great companion column.

{username}

Get yours early. The Rave’s CD will be available at Exile and at The C-U Flea on Saturday. C-U Flea details here: http://www.smilepolitely.com/news/sp_radio_podcast_c-u_flea_arrives/

{username}

I don’t know about Gerard and a random police sargeant. My (mild) outrage is based on this: “...he worked closely with Champaign City Clerk Marilyn Banks to make sure he was licensed properly as a transient food peddler, filling out the necessary paperwork and paying a $225…

Eric Bussell avatar

Local Yocal pretty much nails it here.  I suspect there will be merchants who oppose food trucks because they arguably don’t pay their fair share to locate their trucks in high traffic (high rent) areas.  The food trucks take away business from rent payers, park in city…

Mike Ingram avatar

Oh nice!  I’d totally vote for Matt Campbell!

Rob McColley avatar

“Smile Politely sports writer announces candidacy for city government.”

{username}

I also got to visit Big Grove Tavern during the soft open and definitely enjoyed the pork belly the most of all the dishes I sampled. The cheesy grits and the vinegary pickled vegetables were a perfect compliment to the rich pork belly.

Michael Feltes avatar

The Alan Partridge lookalike on the right in the first small photo has nothing to condescend to anyone about. AH HA!

{username}

Snell and the little Hitlers of the neighborhood association need to chill out. Legitimate businesses should have the freedom to exist without having to endure the slings and arrows of ignorant and misguided opposition.

isaac arms avatar

represent, Matt.

{username}

Yeah, I’d agree that Transporter Room 3 is the worst house venue I’ve ever seen.

{username}

Food trucks are the start-up, small businesses of the future for those unable to afford real estate. No surprise, that merchants who pay rent, utilities, and maintenance on a property would despise the traveling competition. Or developers who build more empty retail spaces would want to close…

{username}

Not so much far-right Tea Party as a balanced, moderate viewpoint between letting businesses succeed and protecting society with reasonable regulations. In spite of what the city reps are saying, the interpretation of policy on this issue certainly has changed. Letting a business start up under one…

Rob McColley avatar

I think it’s neat that SP has turned rightward, now espousing a Tea Party-style frustration with government regulations & taxes.

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