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Upcoming shows: C Duncan... Dustin O’Halloran... Chuck Prophet... The Ocelots... Sean Rowe... Jim Ghedi... Fionn Regan... The Weather Station... Martin Kohlstedt... The Loft... Beans on Toast... Joshua Burnside... Easter... Nadia Reid... Danny & the Champions of the World... Ruth Lyon... The Delines... Helena Deland... Chris Brain... Index for Working Musik... Heather Nova... Mark Eitzel... Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Band... Jeffrey Martin... Austin Stambaugh... Sounds From The Other City 2025... Federico Albanese... Amelia Coburn... Hayden Thorpe & Propellor Ensemble... Jerron Paxton... Lauren Housley & The Northern Cowboys... Sam Amidon... Throwing Muses... Shotgun Jimmie... Lael Neale... Niamh Regan... Basia Bulat... AVAWAVES... Albertine Sarges... Jamie Duffy... BC Camplight...

When: 7.30pm on Tuesday 11 March 2025
Where: Band on the Wall, 26 Swan Street, Manchester M4 5JZ

We’re excited to be welcoming The Weather Station back – this time, to Band on the Wall.

The Weather Station – the project of Toronto-based Tamara Lindeman – announces her return with Humanhood, out 17 January via Fat Possum, and releases lead single/video, Neon Signs. Humanhood, the most arresting album Lindeman has ever made as The Weather Station, follows 2021’s Ignorance, ‘an invigorating and poignant chapter in an already impressive career’ (Stereogum). It was written during one of the most difficult periods of Lindeman’s life and rendered with a rock band with improvisational chops just as she began to recover by reckoning with a complicated truth: sometimes, life simply tries to dismantle us, no matter how good everything may seem, and we must accept that in order to survive.

From the outside, 2022 likely appeared a year of glory for Lindeman. Ignorance, in which her ‘shape-shifting avant-folk [reached] a kind of apex, as she sings coolly about climate grief, love, lust, healing, and the upheaval of self-discovery’ (New Yorker), was one of that year’s highest praised records. It was a time of touring, travel, and activism alongside Ignorance’s more austere companion, How Is It That I Should Look at the Stars. But at an ostensible new professional peak, she was also struggling with a mental health crisis. Working through a crisis of meaning, she wrote from within the confusion of the experience to create the songs that would ultimately become Humanhood, a narrative album that, listened to front to back, transcribes the journey from dissociation back towards connection.

It takes only 10 seconds for Lindeman to pull us to the floor on Neon Signs, the opening song on Humanhood. ‘I’ve gotten used to feeling like I’m crazy – or just lazy,’ she sings, her voice at once a soft whisper to a confidant and a full-throated confession to a crowd. ‘Why can’t I get off this floor? Think straight anymore?’ she sings of our true modern malaise, that unbound sense of not knowing how or what it is we’re supposed to contribute to this fractious world, or if we even have the energy or will to try.

‘I wrote Neon Signs at a moment of feeling confused, upside down, at that moment when even desire falls away, and dissociation cuts you loose from a story that while wrong, still held things together,’ Lindeman explains. ‘The song came with multiple strands entwined; the way that something that is not true seems to have more energetic intensity than something that is, the confusion of being bombarded with advertising at a moment of climate emergency, the confusion of relationships where coercion is wrapped in the language of love. Ultimately though, isn’t it all the same feeling?’ The Neon Signs video, co-directed by Lindeman and Jared Raab, is a journey through different sets of eyes, perpetually shifting perspectives between people and objects.

Humanhood was recorded over two sessions in fall of 2023 at Canterbury Music Company with drummer Kieran Adams, keyboardist Ben Boye, percussionist Philippe Melanson, reed-and-wind specialist Karen Ng, and bassist Ben Whiteley. The songs were left open; Lindeman and co-producer Marcus Paquin wanted to hear the sudden sparks made by these new encounters, to witness everyone react in real-time to the songs and sketches she supplied. They all dropped into the fugue, shaping the hazy unease that is so endemic these days into tangible sound. Other friends eventually added their own pieces, like old-time updater Sam Amidon, ace guitarist James Elkington, and textural magus Joseph Shabason. In the final stage, mixer Joseph Lorge helped make sense of these musical webs, and the album was crafted into a near continuous piece of music, with interstitial instrumentals fading into and out of songs. Textures repeatedly shift between organic and synthetic; synths merging with sax, electronic drums shifting into banjo, as songs coalesce and then disintegrate in a direct echo of the emotional experiences that inspired them.

Much of Humanhood is a riveting and real document of what it means to be lost, to be hamstrung by confusion, unease, and grief for a period so long you begin to wonder if there is an end. As with Ignorance, the first person lyrics point to a wider resonance; we’re all dealing with ourselves through climate disaster, as the world totters near a breaking point, and none of it is easy or precedented. On previous albums, Lindeman mostly wrote about her past, turning backwards to gain perspective. But for Humanhood, she wrote from the present as she tried to work through it. Humanhood, then, radiates with new urgency – and emerges as a sort of tether, offered up here for anyone else feeling disconnected from the vertiginous reality of right now.

Tour support comes from Georgia Harmer. Known for her dulcet voice and sincere lyricism, Georgia Harmer is a bright star of an artist, rising from the core of Toronto’s tight-knit music scene. Her songs guide listeners through a wide landscape of emotions, gliding seamlessly between triumphant anthems and bucolic ballads. Following the success of her debut album, Stereogum noted that she has ‘established herself as a noteworthy talent’, and SPIN Magazine named her a 2022 artist-to-watch, exclaiming that ‘for Georgia Harmer, it’s a matter of when, not if”.

Harmer’s sophomore record, Eye of the Storm, is set for release in summer 2025. This offering features esteemed collaborators such as mixing engineer Tucker Martine (R.E.M., Neko Case, Modest Mouse), and musical contributions from Matt Kelly (City & Colour) and Ben Whiteley (The Weather Station). Harmer has also partnered with acclaimed artist and photographer, Norman Wong, to create music videos and album artwork.

This is a 10+ show. Under 16s must be accompanied by an adult.

This show is a co-promotion with Now Wave.

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All shows are 18+ unless otherwise stated.