Joel Plaskett | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | William Joel MacDonald Plaskett |
Also known as | Joel Plaskett |
Born | Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, Canada | April 18, 1975
Origin | Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada |
Genres | Indie rock, Folk rock |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter, record producer |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, guitar, bass guitar, drums, mandolin, keyboards |
Years active | 1992–present |
Labels | MapleMusic Recordings, New Scotland Records, |
Website | joelplaskett |
William Joel MacDonald Plaskett (born April 18, 1975) is a Canadian rock musician and songwriter based in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He was a member of Halifax alternative rock band Thrush Hermit in the 1990s. [1] Plaskett performs in a number of genres, from blues and folk to hard rock, country, and pop.
Plaskett's songwriting frequently contains allusions to his home city, Halifax. [2] With his band The Emergency, he has toured throughout North America and Europe with The Tragically Hip, Sloan, Bill Plaskett (his father), and Kathleen Edwards.
Plaskett grew up in Lunenburg, a small town on Nova Scotia's South Shore. His father, Bill Plaskett, is also a musician, and was a cofounder of the Lunenburg Folk Harbour Festival. [3] Plaskett learned to play guitar and write songs while listening to an eclectic range of music, from singer-songwriters such as Joni Mitchell and Neil Young to rockers such as the Sex Pistols and the Pixies.
Plaskett's family moved to Halifax when he was twelve; by the next year, he had formed his first band with friends Rob Benvie and Ian McGettigan. Initially, they called themselves Nabisco Fonzie. [2] By 1992, they were a foursome called Thrush Hermit, with Michael Catano on drums. [4]
Plaskett was the lead singer and guitarist for the Halifax-based band Thrush Hermit. Catano was replaced by drummer Cliff Gibb in 1994, the same year the band was signed to Murderecords. [2] After two EPs, the group went on to release its full-length debut on Elektra in 1997--Sweet Homewrecker, which was recorded in Memphis with producer Doug Easley. The album did not do well commercially, and they were dropped by their label. The band would record one more album, Clayton Park, for Sonic Unyon Records, before quitting in 1999. [5] [6]
In late 1998, Neuseiland was formed by Plaskett of Thrush Hermit, as well as members of popular Halifax bands The Super Friendz and Coyote, the Euphonic, both of which had also recently broken up. Taking the name of the band from a Dutch children's book by Annie Schmidt called The Island of Nose, the band consisted of Plaskett on drums, Charles Austin and Drew Yamada on guitar, Andrew Glencross on keyboard and Tim Stewart on bass. They cited King Tubby, Kraftwerk, Pink Floyd, Ray's Chicken Pita and Willie Nelson as influences. The goal of the band was to mix conventional song structure with experimentation inspired by krautrock, stoogian protoplasm and the subtractive mixing techniques of "version" reggae. [7] The band released one album, the self-titled Neuseiland, recorded and released on March 4, 2000. [8] [9] The band released an extended play, The Disappearing E.P., on December 8, 2001. [10] Sessions for a third release, titled Ai Yi Yi, were recorded in 2002, but never materialized in an official release until 2014. [11] The band broke up after performing a farewell show on January 6, 2005.
In August 2014, the band released a digital-only compilation collection titled Rarae Aves, which included outtakes, CBC RadioSonic performances, and select demos from recording sessions dating back to 2002, on Bandcamp. Included in this collection were photographs and a near-complete video of their final show in 2005. [11] [12]
On August 3, 2017, the band's bassist Tim Stewart passed away. [13]
After the breakup of Thrush Hermit and Neuseiland, Plaskett embarked on a solo career. His first release, In Need of Medical Attention , consisted of leftover songs that were written near the end of his days in Thrush Hermit. It was well received by critics, but not until the release of 2001's Down at the Khyber did Plaskett begin to enjoy more widespread acclaim. Khyber was a harder-rocking album that featured a new backing band, The Emergency, consisting of Plaskett, drummer Dave Marsh and bass player Tim Brennan. [14] Together they called themselves Joel Plaskett Emergency. The album earned Plaskett a Juno Award nomination as best new artist. [15]
The band's next album, Truthfully Truthfully , in 2003, was Plaskett's first all-out commercial success. [15] It was produced by his old Thrush Hermit bandmate McGettigan and was the band's debut release for MapleMusic Recordings. [2] The album featured the song "Come On, teacher," which became a hit in Canada. The album later received an East Coast Music Award as best rock recording.
Plaskett's follow-up album was a solo effort, called La De Da , on which he played most of the instruments himself (McGettigan, however, played bass). [15] Plaskett consciously sought a different sound for La De Da than he did for his previous effort; he considered it a record more for himself than for commercial radio. The album was released in 2005 and earned two East Coast Music Awards in 2006, as Male Artist of the Year and Songwriter of the Year, for the song "Happen Now." He was also nominated for a Juno Award for songwriter of the year that year and was named male artist of the year and songwriter of the year at the East Coast Music Awards. [2]
In March 2006, Joel Plaskett Emergency released their first DVD, Make a Little Noise . It included an EP of three songs. The single "Nowhere with You" has received the most mainstream radio airplay of any Plaskett release to date, and was featured in a Zellers television commercial. Make a Little Noise had three wins at the 2007 East Coast Music Awards: DVD of the year, single of the year ("Nowhere with You"), and songwriter of the year (Joel Plaskett, for "Nowhere with You"). [16]
The band's next album was Ashtray Rock , released in April 2007. A concept album about high school love and suffering [17] Ashtray Rock was on the shortlist for the 2007 Polaris Music Prize, [18] but lost to Patrick Watson's album Close to Paradise . The album's single "Fashionable People" was nominated for the 8th Annual Independent Music Awards for pop/rock song of the year. [19]
During the week of December 10, 2007, Plaskett and the Emergency played six consecutive shows at the Horseshoe Tavern in Toronto as part of the music venue's 60th-anniversary celebrations. Each night, a different album was performed in its entirety, starting with In Need of Medical Attention on Monday and finishing with Ashtray Rock on Friday night and Saturday night. [20]
Emergency was nominated for seven East Coast Music Awards in 2008, more than any other act. They won six of those awards, tied with the previous record. [21] [22]
Another solo album came next: the album Three , which was released on March 24, 2009. It consists of three discs each consisting of nine songs for a total of 27 songs. The first single from the album was "Through and Through and Through." The triple album was nominated for the 2009 Polaris Music Prize short list. [23] In the same week that the Polaris shortlist was announced, Paul McCartney announced that he had selected Plaskett and the band Wintersleep as the opening acts for his concert of July 11 at Halifax Common. [24] Three won adult alternative album of the year at the 2010 Junos; Plaskett was also nominated for songwriter of the year. [2]
In May 2011, he became the first artist ever to reach one million plays on CBC Radio 3's online music streaming site, [25] and released an exclusive acoustic version of "Nowhere with You" to the network for the occasion. In June, he released a B-sides and rarities compilation titled EMERGENCYs, false alarms, shipwrecks, castaways, fragile creatures, special features, demons and demonstrations. [26]
The band returned for the 2012 Joel Plaskett Emergency album Scrappy Happiness , released in March. [27] The album followed a unique release strategy, in which Plaskett and his band recorded one song each week for ten weeks, releasing each song to iTunes for sale as a single as soon as its recording and production were completed, and then rereleased the songs as a complete album once the project was concluded. [28]
His album The Park Avenue Sobriety Test was released in March 2015. [3] He released the album Solidarity , a collaboration with his father Bill, in 2017. [29]
A "spiritual successor" to his album Three , Plaskett released the quadruple album 44 on April 17, 2020, the last day he was 44 years old. [30] [31] Plaskett recorded the 44-song collection across Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Memphis, Nashville and Toronto, having worked with 33 other musicians over four years. [32] Each of the four records in the album contains 11 songs, with their own title and theme. The first record (41: Carried Away) is centred around travelling, the second collection (42: Just Passing Through) turns to finding a homecoming unfamiliar, the third set (43: If There's Another Road) tackles transitioning from lost to found, and the last record (44: The Window Inn) deals with arriving at a personal destination. [32]
Plaskett's eleventh album, One Real Reveal, was announced in May 2024, [33] and released on September 13, 2024. [34]
In recent years, Plaskett has embarked upon a number of projects. He has acted as record producer for a variety of Atlantic Canadian artists, including Steve Poltz, David Myles, Mo Kenney, Sarah Slean, and Meredith Shaw. [35] As well, in 2004 he made his television debut as a rock coach on the CBC Television documentary series Rock Camp . [16] In 2008, Plaskett and his father Bill were featured in an episode of the Bravo! television concert series The Berkeley Sessions . [36]
Plaskett also appeared as a busker in the film One Week [16] and was a guest anchor on the March 5, 2013 episode of This Hour Has 22 Minutes . [37] A collaboration with CBC Kids in 2012 resulted in a music video for an alternate rendition of Plaskett's "Fashionable People", recast from the original song's satirical portrait of hipsters into a song about how fun it is to play dress-up. [38] Fellow East Coast Canadian musician Classified (Luke Boyd) featured Plaskett on his single "One Track Mind" from his 2009 release, Self Explanatory.
Plaskett and Chris Murphy collaborated on the production of Prize for Writing, a posthumous album by singer-songwriter Matthew Grimson which was recorded in 1995 but was not commercially released until 2020. [39]
Year | Song | Chart peak | Album | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CAN All [41] | CAN Alt [42] [43] | CAN Rock [44] [45] [46] | CAN Hot AC [47] | ||||||
2006 | "Nowhere with You" | 25 | 6 | Make a Little Noise | |||||
2011 | "Jimmie's Still Jimmie" | 26 | 25 | Jimmie's Still Jimmie / That's Not Joel (with Shotgun Jimmie) | |||||
2012 | "Transit Strike" | — | 48 | Non-album single | |||||
"You're Mine" | 38 | 40 | Scrappy Happiness | ||||||
2020 | "Head over Heels into Heaven" | 44 (41: Carried Away) | |||||||
"Just Passing Through" | 44 (42: Just Passing Through) | ||||||||
"If There's Another Road" | 44 (43: If There's Another Road) | ||||||||
"Melt the Universe with Brotherly Love" | 44 (44: The Window Inn) | ||||||||
"—" denotes a release that did not chart. | |||||||||
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44 is the sixth solo album by Canadian indie rock musician Joel Plaskett, released on April 17, 2020. Dubbed the "spiritual successor" to Plaskett's prior triple album Three, the 44-song, quadruple album was released the day before the artist's 45th birthday. Plaskett recorded the album across Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Memphis, Nashville and Toronto, having worked with 33 other musicians over four years.
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