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East My Love - Olive
- (Colored Vinyl)
- Format: LP
- Release Date: 11/10/2024

East My Love - Olive
(Colored Vinyl)
- Artist: Current Joys
- Label: Secretly Canadian
- Genre: Rock
- UPC: 656605048635
Product Notes
East My Love, the resplendent, country-tinged 12th album by
Current Joys, feels familiar. It's meant to: the 12 songs contained within dive
deep into the rich folklore of the American West to tell time-worn tales of love
and trauma, heartbreak and spiritual renewal. Cast with a warm glow and
finding Current Joys' Nick Rattigan tapping into some of his lushest, most
high-fidelity production to date, it's the kind of album that listeners could see
themselves within, and, hopefully, keep close when they're most in need of
reassurance or escapism. For Rattigan, though, it's all that and more.
Rattigan wrote East My Love alone in the woods in Tennessee, with
no cell reception and nobody in earshot for miles. Composed three years
before Love + Pop, the experimental pop double record he released in 2023
and 2024, the songs on East My Love felt too raw to confront until he felt well
and truly out from underneath the cloud that had been cast over him.
Rattigan describes the songs as "landmines" that, for years, threatened to
upend his carefully balanced mental state. "They were just triggers that
would put me back in this emotional space, and I think eventually I got to a
place where they were more comforting," he recalls. "That's what I hope
people find out of the record - a solace from any anxieties or depressions."
Along with that comfort comes pain, and an acknowledgement
that any repair requires some level of breakage. Lead single "California Rain"
acts like a tableau depicting Rattigan's attempt to escape his demons, it's
placid lyrics a distinct counterpoint to the tidal-wave production: "Isn't it nice
to get away?/Clearing my head up, and dull away the pain." It speaks to the
album's constant coin-toss between peace and chaos: "It's like you're trying to
outrun your demons, but at a certain point, they become your friend, and you
have to walk alongside them," says Rattigan. "I feel like you don't know that
when you're suppressing them - when you're hiding them in the rain."
At other points, Rattigan is more clear-eyed about the struggle of
moving forward; opening track "Echoes of the Past," aches with the
acknowledgement that inner peace exists on a knife's edge. "The world won't
end in blazing fire and brimstone - it'll end from us not learning from our past
and our mistakes," says Rattigan.
There's a purity of catharsis that runs through these songs; written
without pretense, they take base human needs and desires and fit them into
a grander tradition of American songwriting that takes in everything from
Willie Nelson to Bright Eyes. True to that, many of the songs on East My Love,
due to their outside-looking-in perspective, play like standards. "Slowly Like
The Wind," a simple voice-and-guitar ballad, finds Rattigan reassuring his
subject that "slowly like the wind" he'll help push them in the right direction
in times of need. On "Lullaby for the Lost," which feels parched but
emotionally rich, he urges himself to remember that "we'll get oh so strong"
despite the depths of despair he may be feeling in the moment. "I wanted it
to be very slow and meditative, with these punctuations of lyrics that I really
wanted to stick out. I felt like it was powerful to accentuate certain points, but
also let the song be a meditative comfort to the listener." That comfort can be
traced back to an idea at the core of East My Love that Rattigan describes
simply: "Everyone deserves peace of mind."