New Video: Acclaimed JOVM Mainstays Low Release an Aching and Feverish Visual for “I Can Wait”

Founded back in 1993, the acclaimed Duluth-based indie act and JOVM mainstays  Low — married couple Alan Sparhawk (guitar, vocals) and Mimi Parker (drums) — are considered pioneers of slowcore, an indie rock sub-genre featuring slowed down tempos and minimalist-leaning arrangements. despite the fact that the band has gone through a series of lineup changes, they’ve been consistent in their disapproval of the term slowcore. And gradually, the band has managed to completely shrug off the sub-genre’s established strictures altogether.

2015’s B.J. Burton-produced Ones and Sixes began an ongoing series of uncompromising and challenging material. With the critical success of Ones and Sixes, the members of Low wanted to go further with Burton and his aesthetic, to see what someone, who as Sparhawk has described as a “hip-hop guy” could do to push their music in radically new directions. Unsurprisingly, working with Burton has resulted in a completely different creative process: Instead of obsessively writing, revising and rehearsing in Duluth, before heading to the studio, the band went to  Eau Claire, WI with rough ideas and sketches for one of the most collaborative writing sessions they’ve ever had with a producer. 

During the Double Negative sessions, they’d build pieces up, break them down and build them up again until each individual song found its purpose and force. Over the two year writing and recording sessions, the outside world slid deeper into madness and instability — and in some fashion Double Negative may be seen as a document of our peculiar moment: the material is at times loud, contentious, chaotic and jarring. Sparhawk’s and Parker’s gorgeous harmonies sometimes seem to be desperately fighting against the noise and chaos, other times hidden with it. 

As you’ll recall, the Duluth-based JOVM mainstay’s critically applauded, Grammy-nominated 13th album HEY WHAT was released last year. Continuing their ongoing collaboration with B.J. Burton, the album finds Sparhawk and Parker focusing on their craft, staying out of the fray and holding fast to their faith to find new ways to express the discord and delight of being a living human being, while turning the duality of existence into modern day hymns we can share. The album’s 10 songs are individually built by their own undeniable hooks — but they’re turbocharged by the vivid textures surrounding them. 

In the lead up to the album’s release and its release, I’ve managed to write about four of the album’s singles:

  • Days Like These,” a disorientating track featuring hushed passages with strummed guitar fighting for space between dense layers of noise and distortion that accrete and then fall apart. The entire affair is held together by Sparkhawk and Parker’s gorgeous and slightly Autotuned harmonies, serving as a lifeline from the shore, thrown out to the poor soul just about to drown in the breakers. At its core, “Days Like These” is a yearning plea for meaning and peace in a world that’s completely mad and doesn’t make much sense. 
  • Disappearing,” a meditative slow-burn centered around ebbing and waning feedback and distortion. Sparhawk’s and Parker’s yearning harmonies ride the uneasy crests and valleys of the song’s oceanic-like production. The song is an an aching meditation of loneliness, isolation and the unknown beyond all of this.
  • More,” a disorientating track featuring heavily distorted and scorching power chords paired with Parker’s gorgeous lead vocal turn, singing lyrics expressing frustration while yearning — and demanding — more in a world that’s grossly unfair and inequitable.  
  • White Horses,” which featured Sparhawk’s and Parke’rs gorgeous harmonies floating over scorching synth fuzz and feedback with bursts of shimmering strings peeking out of the fray. Much like its predecessors, “White Horses” balances the uneasy and abrasive with the breathtakingly gorgeous.

“I Can Wait,” HEY WHAT‘s fifth and latest single lyrically vacillates between patience, impatience, regret, shame and yearning in a way that captures the thoughts of someone who has been trapped within their heads. Sonically, the Duluth-based duo’s achingly yearning vocals uneasily float atop undulating synths and guitar feedback — before slowly fading out into droning feedback.

Directed by Manuel Aragon, the recently released visual for “I Can Wait” follows a collection of diverse, every day people as they try to go about their day-to-day lives but while haunted by their past mistakes and heartbreaks and longing. The end result is a brightly colored, collective fever dream that’s very human.

The band will be embarking on an extensive world tour that begins with North American dates in February, March and April 2022. The North American leg of the tour includes a March 31, 2022 stop at Webster Hall. The UK and European Union leg of tour goes from late April to mid-May. As always, tour dates are below.


 
North America 2022:

Feb. 16 — Chicago, IL — Metro

Feb. 17 — Milwaukee, WI — Cactus Club

Mar. 22 – Bloomington, IN – Bishop

Mar. 25 – Birmingham, AL – Saturn

Mar. 26 – Atlanta, GA – Terminal West

Mar. 28 – Washington, DC – Miracle Theatre

Mar. 29 – Philadelphia, PA – World Cafe Live

Mar. 31 – New York, NY – Webster Hall

Apr. 01 – Providence, RI – Columbus Theater

Apr. 02 – Montreal, QC – Theatre Fairmount

Apr. 04 – Toronto, ON – The Axis Club

Apr. 05 – Detroit, MI – Loving Touch 

Apr. 08 – Madison, WI – High Noon Saloon

UK & Europe 2022:

Apr. 25 – Edinburgh, UK – Queen’s Hall

Apr. 26 – Dublin, IE – Vicar Street

Apr. 27 – Manchester, UK – Manchester Cathedral

Apr. 28 – Brighton, UK – St. George’s Church Brighton

Apr. 29 – London, UK – St. John at Hackney Church –

Apr. 30 – Bristol, UK – Trinity

May 02 – Paris, FR – Alhambra

May 03 – Cologne, DE – Kulturkirche Köln

May 04 – Antwerp, BE – TRIX

May 05 – Amsterdam, NL – Paradiso

May 06 – Aarhus, DK – Voxhall

May 07 – Copenhagen, DK – Vega

May 09 – Hamburg, DE – Uebel & Gefährlich

May 10 – Berlin, DE – Festsaal Kreuzberg

May 11 – Vienna, AT – Wuk

May 12 – Bologna, IT – Teatro Duse

May 13 – Lausanne, CH- Les Docks

May 14 – Zurich, CH – Mascotte

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