Chris Robinson Brotherhood have announced their latest studio album ‘Servants Of The Sun‘
will be released June 14 on Silver Arrow Records. The CRB’s sixth
full-length recording since forming in 2011 finds the band setting aside
the studio explorations of more recent work, instead coming full circle
to deliver their most direct, bare bones, rock and roll offering since
debut companion albums ‘Big Moon Ritual‘ and ‘The Magic Door.’ Hear and share the first single “Comin’ Round The Mountain” out today on all streaming services.
“I let my head go to a Saturday night at The Fillmore, and said,
‘what’s the best set we could play?'” says Robinson. “The record was
conceived from that starting point. With our last couple of albums we
made songs we knew we probably weren’t going to play live. This time
around every one of these songs will fall into the live repertoire.”
Bottling the CRB’s pure essence into 10 new songs, ‘Servants Of
The Sun’ bursts into the clear blue air with the funky upper atmosphere
bubbling of vintage keyboards, sky-climbing guitar lines, driving rhythm
and the voice of one of rock music’s great singers. A gateway swings
wide open to a universe that the Chris Robinson Brotherhood has been
tirelessly constructing for eight years through extraordinary
musicianship, epic touring and a roving, seemingly bottomless wizard’s
chest of sonic delights.
“The best thing about the CRB after all this time is that no
matter what we’re going through, when there’s a new piece of music that
everyone is interested in, the entire band gets in there and goes for
it,” continues Robinson.
The major themes of ‘Servants Of The Sun’ are experienced in a
constant swirl within the CRB sound. There’s the uptempo ramble and
strut of “Comin’ Round the Mountain” juxtaposed against the surreal on “Venus In Chrome.” There’s redemption through love on “The Chauffeur’s Daughter” set alongside the ominous poetry of “A Smiling Epitaph.” “Dice Game” is an exquisite slice of blue country, while “Let it Fall” sashays with fond homage to the slinky rhythms and stoned, but sizzling energy of Little Feat
and New Orleans soul-funk. The album captures Robinson and company
hurtling between the fire and mania of Saturday night and the bruises
and rain-on-the-bus-window reflection of the cold Sunday morning dawn.
Beyond the bullet holes, red-eyed angry angels, alchemy, praying
mantises, hangovers, and all other manner of cosmic debris gone
lyrically airborne—love is lost, new love is found, relationships are
bent and broken by distance and time or by unrelenting proximity and
timelessness. All the while, the line between autobiography and
psychedelic fantasy is completely blurred.
“I like to write ‘scenes.’ I want you to be able to storyboard
these lyrics into a visual, even the abstract part of them,” says
Robinson. “We’re creating a world and we want people to come in. We’re
doing it through language and this texture of music and melody.
Sometimes it’s a celebration, sometimes its mourning. It can be anything
once you get inside.”
The CRB’s evolution that led to ‘Servants Of The Sun’ stretches
from clubs, to theaters, to the farms of Oregon and the fields of Marin,
to sold out tours across Europe, to the annual summer festival circuit
including LOCKN’, High Sierra Music Festival, Mountain Jam, Peach Music Festival and their own Freaks for the Festival in Big Sur—all coalescing at the band’s beloved multi-night stands at The Fillmore
in San Francisco each December. The CRB were, in fact, a band born on
the road from their very first days touring up and down the California
coast in residencies in 2011 as they began to build a now mightily
expanded international fanbase that might better be described as a tribe
bound by music, fun, lifestyle and not just a little dose of obsession.
“Ultimately, our ‘freak family’ are the Godhead of this thing,
they’re the ones that breathed life into a lump of clay and made the
scene,” says Robinson. “It’s their involvement and their participation
that gives this whole thing dimension and life.”
It is to the credit of the Chris Robinson Brotherhood’s musical
naturalism that such a ferris wheel of themes, tones and characters can
exist in the same fast moving air. With ‘Servants Of The Sun’ they’ve
conjured yet another authentic statement free-flowing from their
essential expression. In the effortless stream of storylines,
hornet-stung emotions, and Kodachrome snapshot images rushing by, the
listener hasn’t just landed in the CRB’s world and the joys and sorrows
of their lives, they’ve also awakened in their dream. And as Chris
Robinson sings, “sometimes a dream is to be believed.”
‘Servants Of The Sun’ is available now for pre-order.
Music News
Chris Robinson Brotherhood new ‘Servants Of The Sun’
Chris Robinson Brotherhood new ‘Servants Of The Sun’
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