Bros Landreth

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2023 Juno Award Winner
Contemporary Roots Album of the Year 
The Bros. Landreth, a long time favourite band among fans of Vancouver Island MusicFest, are coming back this summer.

Hot off of a 2023 Juno nomination for  (Contemporary Roots Album of the Year) and as writers for the song ‘Made Up Mind’ which just won Bonnie Raitt a Grammy award for Best Americana Performance, the Bros are flying high.

“I wanna thank the Bros. Landreth for writing this kick-ass song,” legendary American blues singer and guitarist Bonnie Raitt said in her acceptance speech for Best Americana Performance at Sunday’s 65th Grammy Awards.

“Oh man, I woke up on the right side of the bed, let me tell ya. It’s a good day,” Dave Landreth, one half of the Bros. Landreth, told CBC Manitoba’s Information Radio guest host Pat Kaniuga. “I’m just over the moon, man. It’s just the best, best news ever, we’re so happy. The entire journey of this song has been utterly mind boggling and so surreal and so wonderful.”

The Bros. Landreth welcome a new day with Come Morning, an album that marks both a rebirth and refinement of the  band’s blend of North American roots music and harmony-heavy soul.

The most immersive, emotive record of the Landreths’ career, Come Morning finds brothers Joey and Dave lacing their melody-driven songs with layers of atmospheric synth, organ, and textured guitar. The group’s previous albums shone a light on their strength as a live act, capturing the spontaneity and sonic stomp of a band of hard-touring road warriors. If those records unfolded like snapshots of The Bros. Landreth’s nighttime shows, then Come Morning sketches a markedly different picture, showcasing the introspection and clarity that comes with a long period of rest.

For Joey and Dave, rest wasn’t always an easy thing to find. From their early days attending their father’s gigs as babies (“Mom would take us in the bassinet and stick us under the bar tables,” says Dave) to their years logged onstage and on the road, they’ve spent much of their lives being moved — both physically and emotionally — by music.

After pursuing separate careers as sidemen, they launched The Bros. Landreth with 2013’s Let It Lie, a debut album that drew upon the shared soundtrack of their childhood — Bonnie Raitt’s blues, Little Feat’s funky country-rock, Ry Cooder’s eclectic instrumentals, Lyle Lovett’s twangy traditionalism — for a sound that saluted the past while planting its flag firmly in the present.

Let It Lie won the 2015 JUNO Award for “Roots & Traditional Album Of The Year – Group;” earned The Bros. Landreth a nomination for “International Artist of the Year” at the 2016 UK Americana Music Awards. Building a global audience took a toll on the brothers, though, and Dave temporarily stepped away from the lineup for three years. Joey used that time to launch a solo career, with albums like Whiskey and Hindsight cementing his reputation as a modern-day guitar hero. By the time the siblings reunited for their second album, ’87, things had changed.

“When we decided to record a sophomore album for The Bros.,” Joey explains, “it was fraught with confusion, resentment, and tension. Dave and I both desperately wanted to get back to making music together, but there was a lot to unpack.”

’87 arrived in September 2019 and marked an expansion of the band’s sound, but its accompanying tour was cut short by the Covid-19 pandemic. Deflated, Joey and Dave found themselves back home in Winnipeg, riding out the lockdown by funneling their energy into a new batch of recordings. For years, they’d begun each album the same way: by assembling a band and playing together in the studio, allowing their live performances to form the foundation of each song. It was an approach that highlighted the chemistry they’d sharpened on the road, but it didn’t always encourage exploration or intentionality. With Come Morning, things were different. Forced to keep a tight circle due to Covid restrictions, Joey and Dave worked together in near-seclusion, pulling long hours in the studio and building songs one instrument at a time. They recorded, layered, stripped away, and layered again. Sounds were sampled, re-sampled, and twisted into something new. Prioritizing moody textures over fiery fretwork, Joey took an understated approach to the guitar, saving his big solos for key moments. He placed an equal emphasis on keyboards, beefing up the recordings with Hammond organ and analog synth. Slowly, steadily, the Landreths pieced together a transportive album built for the heart, the head, and the headphones. This time, the songs weren’t the only thing telling a story; the sounds told a story, too.

On “Stay,” the two brothers — both of whom became first-time fathers shortly before Come Morning‘s creation — look for a balance between a touring musician’s commitments to the road and a family man’s priorities at home. “After the Rain,” one of two songs co-written with Jonathan Singleton, finds them optimistically clinging to the silver linings that shine through the darkest of times, while “You Don’t Know Me” mourns the loss of a friendship over achingly sparse percussion, soft swells of organ, and gorgeous pedal steel work from guest musician Joe Pisapia. With “Corduroy” and “Come Morning” — two songs about examining emotional damage to repair what’s been broken — Joey and Dave even give a nod to their recent history of mending bridges.

“The overarching theme here is hope,” says Joey, who shared production duties with longtime collaborator, Murray Pulver. “Many of these songs lean into the tough stuff, like processing emotional trauma and finding strength on the other side. It’s a bit of a myth that you’re ever done working on that.”

Come Morning is a new dawn for The Bros. Landreth, featuring appearances from Leith Ross (whose 2020 debut was released on the Landreths’ record label, Birthday Cake) and drummers Aaron Sterling and Daniel Roy. At the album’s core are the Landreths themselves: two born-to-collaborate brothers who sing songs about hard truths and new beginnings, having been brought back together during a time of unprecedented isolation

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