Justin Nozuka - Run To Waters (2018)

  • 17 May, 21:18
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Run To Waters
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Glassnote Entertainment Group LLC
Genre: Indie Folk, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 56:54
Total Size: 131 / 347 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. No Place In Mind
2. All I Need
3. Aurora
4. Hourglass
5. Bayou
6. Laury
7. Warm Under The Light
8. Reverie
9. Run To Waters
10. Heavy Stone
11. Sail Away Momma

Canadian based artist Justin Nozuka announces his full-length album Run To Waters. The album has unfolded in three stages starting with the three song offering, High Tide released in October of last year and Low Tide, with three more songs this past February. The final piece will include all songs from the High Tide and Low Tide as well as four new ones to make a complete album that was produced by Chris Bond (Ben Howard).

Singer-songwriter Justin Nozuka had a hit album at 17; by the time he’d turned 21, he’d opened shows for Stevie Wonder, Mary J. Blige, John Mayer and Jason Mraz, appeared on Letterman, Kimmel and Good Morning America and earned his second Juno Award nomination — competing against Neil Young for Adult Alternative Album of the Year honours in Canada’s equivalent of the Grammys.

Not long after, Nozuka made a radical move: he stepped off the merry-go-round to replenish his creative juices and consider his future.

It turned out to be a wise decision. The time off gave him a chance to grow personally while exploring where he wanted to go artistically. On his well-crafted new Liberator Music/Glassnote Records release, Nozuka has chosen to look inward, to lovely effect. Produced by Chris Bond, the collection reveals mature, thoughtful lyrics and beguiling melodies.

“When you make a record, you live in that record for a few years, and potentially many years,” Nozuka observes. “I wanted to make something that I felt I could live in; something honest that I could be proud of and enjoy touring.”

Run To Waters reflects his evolution from the youthful passion and funky, bluesy pop rhythms that permeated early songs like ‘After Tonight’, to a quieter, more contemplative sound that’s just as exciting — and perhaps more lush.

Its songs share a sunny, yet nostalgic vibe, while conveying the kind of intimacy that comes only through the understanding of experience. They’re gentler, folkier, inspired by artists such as Simon & Garfunkel, Neil Young and Howard — though of course, they still exhibit the gorgeous high tenor voice and singing style Nozuka developed as an adolescent listening to artists like Lauryn Hill, Marvin Gaye and Boyz II Men.

The response to new music so far has been positive, with fans expressing excitement and praise. Such feedback resonates deeply because, he admits, getting to this place wasn’t easy.

“I had started touring and releasing music when I was 16,” explains Nozuka, “My team and I had been working for five years pretty heavily, building momentum, and we had been growing pretty well, but at the end of the day, I had to stop touring and have a breather to take care of my well-being and my creativity.

“I just wanted to press ‘refresh’ and spend some time at home, get grounded, and make music that I was into,” he says.

Not that he regrets his earlier output or the success he achieved — 2007’s Holly (named for his mother) and 2010’s You I Wind Land and Sea both reached gold status in France, and the latter hit No. 1 on Billboard magazine’s Heatseekers chart — but Nozuka also recognized that fame at a young age can mess with one’s psyche.

So he got off the road and returned to Toronto, where he spent the second half of his childhood; his Canadian-born mother had moved the family there from New York.

“It was a pretty stressful time,” he says of his decision to stop touring. “I was letting go of everything, but I really needed to in order to nourish… had to take a step back from it all for a minute.”

After releasing an experimental album, Ulysees, in 2014, Nozuka reset his musical compass. He knew he was ready to get back on the road and tour, which meant crafting music conducive to playing live. But he confesses, “I had to kick myself in the butt and get serious about reaching a certain standard. It was a long and windy road.”

He also spent time searching for the right producer. That turned out to be Chris Bond, of Devon, England, best known for producing, arranging and performing on U.K. artist Ben Howard’s albums, as well as backing him on tour. On the album, in addition to producing, engineering and mixing, Bond played bass, drums, guitars, organ and percussion and contributed backing vocals. Also accompanying Nozuka, who played acoustic and electric guitars and percussion, were Chris’ brother “Bear” Bond, who played keys and engineered in England, Alex Beamont on cello and Alex Jamaima on backing vocals.

Nozuka tracked down Bond after hearing a couple of Howard’s albums. “I just really loved the sound. It had an exciting energy, and felt very natural as well,” he says. “I really enjoy when music has this element of organic breath; you can feel nature in it.”

Nozuka’s music also has that feel — a warm, uplifting vibe he describes as “a summery, nature-inspired, youthful-type energy.”




  • mufty77
  •  01:25
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.