CHECK OUT OUR VINYL OF THE MONTH FOR OCTOBER HERE!

The Weather Station – Ignorance limited edition vinyl

THE WEATHER STATION - IGNORANCE VINYL RE-PRESS (LTD. ED. BLUE)

Regular price £20.99 Sale

Release Date: 16th July 2021

 

Tamara Lindeman is back with her first new The Weather Station album since her superb 2017 self-titled record. Ignorance sees Lindeman upping the ante in every way from the more expansive and explosive musicianship to the deeply rooted lyrics. With a full plethora of instruments ranging from the acoustic to the electronic, the record dynamically shifts from the intimate to the outright euphoric - making it impossible to simply describe this as a “folk-rock” record. ‘Ignorance’ is bliss!

FFO: HC McEntire, Laura Veirs, Hannah Georgas, Luka Kuplowsky 

 

“The Weather Station - project of Tamara Lindeman - releases her new album, Ignorance, on Fat Possum. Through Ignorance, Lindeman has remade what The Weather Station sounds like, using the occasion of a new record to create a novel sonic landscape, tailor-made to express an emotional idea. Ignorance is sensuous, ravishing, as hi-fi a record as Lindeman has ever made, breaking into pure pop at moments, at others a dense wilderness of notes; a deeply rhythmic and painful record that feels more urgent and clear than her work ever has. Ignorance began when Lindeman became obsessed with rhythm; specifically straight rhythm, dance rhythm, those achingly simple beats that had never showed up on a Weather Station album before. The album marks Lindeman’s first experience writing on keyboard, not guitar, and her first time building out arrangements before bringing them to a band. Montreal producer Marcus Paquin (Arcade Fire) co-produced, with Lindeman, and also mixed the record. The lyrics across Ignorance roil with conflict. The narrator confronts characters who turn away from love. “I used to be an actor, now I’m a performer,” Lindeman says. In those roles she often finds herself to be the subject of projection, reflecting back the ideas and emotions of others. In turn, the album cover shows Lindeman laying in the woods, wearing a hand made suit covered in mirrors. Throughout Ignorance, she sings of trying to wear the world as a kind of ill fitting, torn garment, dangerously cold; “it does not keep me warm / I cannot ever seem to fasten it” and of walking the streets in it, so disguised and exposed.”