- Digital
Apollo Suns
Departures
DO RIGHT! MUSIC
- Cat No: DR095
- Release: 2023-09-22
Track List
-
1. Apollo Suns - Through the Woods
03:06 -
2. Apollo Suns - Sisyphus
04:44 -
3. Apollo Suns - Crybaby
03:24 -
4. Apollo Suns - Horses
05:26 -
5. Apollo Suns - Pluto
04:17 -
6. Apollo Suns - Midnight in Winter
04:48 -
7. Apollo Suns - Hard Time
03:48 -
8. Apollo Suns - Fonxy
03:58 -
9. Apollo Suns - The Aeronaut
04:15 -
10. Apollo Suns - Serpentine
03:48 -
11. Apollo Suns - Triptych
04:04 -
12. Apollo Suns - Beyond the Woods
03:25
24bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
The debut album from Winnipeg psychedelic jazz-funk collective Apollo Suns, 'Departures' (Do Right! Music), finds the band evolving across new styles and moods, encompassing the shifting tides of the pandemic years.
Produced by Juno award-winning producer Ben Kaplan (Bootsy Collins, Five Alarm Funk), Departures is a cinematic journey inspired as much by artists like Goblin, Lettuce, and Frank Zappa as film, TV and video game scores and soundtracks. The band combines classic compositional techniques with synths and electronics, showcasing genre-melding finesse. Introducing strings, acoustic guitar, grand piano, and lap steel into the mix, Apollo Suns explore the visceral and heavy, the elegant and ethereal, epic house rock to New Orleans-y brass, proggy pathways, string-backed balladry, greasy funk and beyond.
"It's been a heavy couple of years. We wanted to make an album that summed it all up," says bandleader Ed Durocher. "I always kind of think of music as the different parts of life. Sometimes it's aggressive, sometimes it's fun and loose, and sometimes it's sad and hard. So, since we don't have vocals, a lot of these songs try to convey those experiences through sound."
Produced by Juno award-winning producer Ben Kaplan (Bootsy Collins, Five Alarm Funk), Departures is a cinematic journey inspired as much by artists like Goblin, Lettuce, and Frank Zappa as film, TV and video game scores and soundtracks. The band combines classic compositional techniques with synths and electronics, showcasing genre-melding finesse. Introducing strings, acoustic guitar, grand piano, and lap steel into the mix, Apollo Suns explore the visceral and heavy, the elegant and ethereal, epic house rock to New Orleans-y brass, proggy pathways, string-backed balladry, greasy funk and beyond.
"It's been a heavy couple of years. We wanted to make an album that summed it all up," says bandleader Ed Durocher. "I always kind of think of music as the different parts of life. Sometimes it's aggressive, sometimes it's fun and loose, and sometimes it's sad and hard. So, since we don't have vocals, a lot of these songs try to convey those experiences through sound."