The New July Talk Album Is Official
It’s Called Remember Never Before

Listen to “After This” + “Certain Father” + “Hold” Now
Watch “After This” Video Here

Photo by Colin Medley.

July Talk announced their new album, Remember Never Before, from the Horseshoe Tavern in Toronto where they’ve just played the whole thing from top to bottom. In maximalist fashion, the news of July Talk’s fourth full-length record comes with three new songs and videos, with more to come. Remember Never Before arrives January 20, 2023.

Hurl yourself into the moment: this is the ethos of Remember Never Before.

“After This” opens the album - there was never any doubt it should - with the confidence of not overthinking it. Produced by Kevin Drew, driven by intuition, its frenetic energy sets the tone and pace for the collection. July Talk is starting anew. With a scientist’s eye and a survivor’s heart, listen for a voice from the past guiding the song through to its chaotic release. Of the accompanying video: “This is who is making the sound that you are listening to,” says July Talk’s Peter Dreimanis. Watch “After This” here.

“Certain Father,” featuring Spencer Krug (Wolf Parade, Frog Eyes, Sunset Rubdown), embraces extreme anti-melodic dissonance as it faces the discomfort of acknowledging That Guy. “Certain Father” posits that we uphold the patriarchy even when we don’t want to, even when we know better, out of comfort, out of fear, out of habit, out of being born into the systems that maintain these mechanisms. Squelchy and industrial in equal measure, “Certain Father” is a beacon in the sludge, a message of hope to those who engage in conflict with this paradigm.

“Hold” is both an outlier, like nothing July Talk has done before, and the blood-pumping heart of the triple offering. A love song, a testament to patience, a CCFX’s ”The One To Wait” vibe quest, the song was borne in the strange swirling air of disagreement. “Love can be so critical,” it goes, and through this truth, it finds its path to connection, without judgment.

Remember Never Before, produced by Graham Walsh, Kevin Drew + Ian Docherty, will be released January 20, 2023.

Remember Never Before Track Listing:

After This
Certain Father ft. Spencer Krug
Track 3
Hold
Track 5
Track 6
Track 7
Track 8
Repeat
Track 10
I Am Water

Media previews available upon request.

ABOUT JULY TALK

The basic structural facts of rock band July Talk are this: two front people, Leah Fay Goldstein and Peter Dreimanis, surrounded by whiplashing guitarists Ian Docherty and Josh Warburton, and double drummers Danny Miles and Dani Nash. For this compulsively DIY, rigorously self-realizing group, the essence of July Talk has always been the tension between precision and chaos. To understand this tension, we can reduce it to sets of twos, or we can magnify it and look deeper as to why we feel the need to frame it one way or the other. What we see says more about what we’re looking for. With July Talk, as with most things, what have we missed?

We need not ask what July Talk’s two writhing frontpeople’s relationship is to each other, but rather what their relationship is to us, their audience, and to the world, this tender, villainous, confounding world. These bodies welcome our gaze, they revel and recoil in it while they furiously push back, asking of us what they ask of each other: please see me for who I am. If we see July Talk as a woman and a man, in opposition to one another, what we are seeing is our own projections upon these bodies.

What goes on between these bodies, all of them, that kinetic, staticky, sticky space, is where the truth of July Talk takes shape. On stage, July Talk unfurls and explodes. The action pings from slo-motion commotion to back-bendy communion, fluid (as in bodily) and liquid (as in the dark goo phase of metamorphosis). Things get weird, occasionally grotesque, always enthralling. Each show offers moments of grace that reveal for a moment the inner workings of this unknowable universe. Hold onto those until the next time.

July Talk is known by their success at radio and their unmatched live show. Both of these things are true, but neither tells the complete story. As video directors, their meticulous and masterful visual work has created an entirely unique aesthetic, and propelled them into collaborations with other artists, including Tanya Tagaq, Born Ruffians and Jasmyn. Their pandemic drive-in show presented an emphatic vision of creative direction, with balletic live projections opening new possibilities for coming performances. July Talk’s quieter triumphs, growing in their roles as advocates for industry change and defining their own parameters for safer, decolonized spaces at rock shows with their Love Lives Here posters, now translated into twelve languages, are as important to the band’s identity and humanity.

Even in the stark orderliness of black and white, July Talk has always been a work in progress. More accurately, it’s a work of progress, a communal pursuit of limitlessness as a mode of being. For a decade, July Talk has continued in its relentless project to know itself, a fundamental baseline from which to access raw ecstasy and agony. With Remember Never Before, the most potently yet inventively “July Talk” album yet, the band returns - changed - to where they began. It starts with “After This.” The song introduces July Talk all over again: the return of the guitar, the driving energy and frenzied release at once familiar and new.

We can hear July Talk as the contrast of two voices that interject, operate and overlap around one another. We’re not wrong, but it’s not the full story. July Talk is a decade-long dialogue between two people; it is also a continuous conversation with older generations, previous selves, collaborators. New songs sharply highlight this multitude, through the appearance of a 1982 recording of Goldstein’s Babcia Stella ruminating on the universe on “After This,” and Spencer Krug’s disconcertingly off-kilter feature on “Certain Father.”

This album screams out at the world: this is what’s next, and this is what’s now. Driven by a mantra to “hurl yourself into the moment” and find who you were when you felt completely in awe of the world, July Talk offer Remember Never Before. It’s for them, and it’s for you.

The album title comes from Track 8, you’ll see.


For more information, please contact:
Emily Smart
Six Shooter Records
emilysmart@sixshooterrecords.com

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