Published 2024-10-18 06:00
Announcing "Easygoing", the new full length album from Skinny Dyck, that's Lethbridge based songwriter and stringsman Ryan Dyck, for those not in the know , following hot on the heels of 2022's "Palace Waiting", which “distilled the spirit of wide cut country”, according to Exclaim! magazine.
"Easygoing" sees Dyck moving a few steps further away from the country music environs he once wholly inhabited, but fear not, twang fans, rather than replacing that sound wholesale, he and his studio collaborators have instead created their own hybrid approaches. Or, as Dyck puts it, “I still like to collect my mail at the old shack off the highway, but I no longer want to live there exclusively”.
There is a pleasing straightforwardness to the music of Skinny Dyck. His voice is clean and clear, and usually nestled in a bed of lush reverb, the songs are held together with spacious instrumentation and smart, tasty hooks, including Dyck's signature pedal steel work, and the band is right on the money, everything in its right place and not a note wasted.
This shouldn't come as a surprise, however, co-producer and bassist Aladean Kheroufi, a multi faceted musician and songwriter in his own right applied some of the old school, minimalist recording techniques he picked up while interning at Daptone Records years ago, and he has been at the core of Skinny's live band, alongside drummer Clayton Smith, for the last handful of years. So when Dyck and Kheroufi hit the basement to lay down these songs, it was as easy as slipping into a pair of old jeans. And that sprightly, jazz-inflected lead guitar work comes courtesy of Winnipeg's Austin Parachoniak, who helped bring a whiff of Merle Haggard's 80's band to the mix.
"Easygoing" had its finishing touches applied by the prime candidate for the role, celebrated mix engineer Mark Nevers, whose credit list is a veritable who's who of fresh, forward thinking songwriters and bands that exist in the between genre sphere. Artists such as Bonnie “Prince” Billy, Silver Jews, Calexico, Andrew Bird, Bill Callahan, and Lambchop have benefited from Nevers' touch, a blend of his trusted ears and vintage analog gear. As a mixer who began working in the traditional country scenes and slowly gravitated to the more expansive world of indie music, Nevers was a fitting choice for the job.
And this notion of “country but not” courses through "Easygoing" in a pretty tangible way, its success partially measured by how unnoticeable it is. Take “Nosedive” for example, what might be one of the album's more traditional “boots kickin' up dust” kind of song features a deeply psychedelic spoken word outro, with enigmatic vocals bubbling through a thick web of analog delay, it's truly a unique blend of approaches, and it works.
Elsewhere, things continue to pair nicely, with conga drums undercutting sparkling lead guitar and the occasional synth flourish, while “Lean In” features a delicious bass line that sounds as if it was plucked straight from a vintage James Jamerson played Motown track. The combination of the band's cool chug and Dyck's classic songwriting moves on title track “Easygoing” recall the endless horizon feel of classic War On Drugs, another band who've managed to successfully infuse the familiar with a jolt of something new.
“I used to write songs but then shifted into being more of a side guy”, Dyck says. “Now I write songs again and I'm happy to focus on my own project”. Well, we're happy about it as well, and "Easygoing is available October 25th, 2024 on Sound Asleep Records in Europe, and on Victory Pool Records in the rest of the world.