"I'm kind of a junkie for sad songs and ballads," says Bob Sumner, the younger half of Vancouver-based Americana outfit The Sumner Brothers. "As a teenager most of my friends were into hip-hop, but I felt pretty out of place rolling around suburban White Rock, British Columbia, pumping gangster rap." Sitting in his room with his headphones on, Sumner compiled downhearted mixtapes pulling together the more introspective songs of CCR, The Band, Led Zeppelin, Emmylou Harris. As he began writing his own songs, this innate attentiveness to songcraft and emotional understanding became a hallmark of Sumner's songwriting and aesthetic. In the years since, he's released five albums with The Sumner Brothers, blending sounds as disparate as Neil Young and The Dead Kennedys, but Bob Sumner's Wasted Love Songs (out January 25) presents Sumner back in the bedroom, attentive to the quieter recordings of his formative years. Helmed by the gentle intentionality of Sumner's voice and lyricism, this rare debut from a songwriting veteran expresses the timeless quality found in the melancholy of Townes Van Zandt, the atmospheric momentum of Tom Petty, and the prophetic restlessness of Bruce Springsteen.
The culmination of Sumner's creative intention and sensitivity, Wasted Love Songs is born out of an entwining of musical influences spanning decades. With his brother Brian, he's written and played finely tuned songs erected at the borders of country and rock and roll for nearly 15 years, making the Sumner family name synonymous with the alternative folk and country music scenes throughout the Pacific Northwest and Western Canada. In the midst of The Sumner Brothers' growing orientation toward rock and roll in recent years, Bob Sumner felt the draw toward his balladic roots. "I had all these ballads and folk songs that worked really well together," he says. "I wanted to make an album someone could just put on and unfold into."
"We've always done recording in cabins and whatnot, bringing in an engineer, and some kegs of beer," he says of The Sumner Brothers' recordings. "But for Wasted Love Songs I wanted to go into a proper studio and work out these songs I'd been sitting on for these years." Engineered and produced at Vancouver's Afterlife Studio by Erik P.H. Nielsen, the album features synthesizers, keys, and pedal steel from Chris Gestrian and Matt Kelly (The City and Colour), and string arrangements by Jesse Zubot, grounded by guitars from Etienne Tremblay and Paul Rigby (Neko Case) and drums by Leon Power (Frazey Ford). Drawn together by Sumner's mature songwriting they present a longingly gorgeous landscape undergirded by lush sonic flourishes that are equally classic and modern. In short, Bob Sumner's Wasted Love Songs has the heft and heart of an instant classic.
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