The Staves
Tuesday, April 16
6:00 pm
Varsity Theater
1308 4th St SE, Minneapolis, MN 55414
The Staves
All ages
Enter for a chance to win passes to this show.
The Current is pleased to offer a ticket giveaway to this concert. Enter by noon (CDT) on Monday, April 8 for a chance to win a pair of passes to this concert. ONE (1) winner will receive two guest list spots to The Staves on April 16.
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The Staves
It’s a decade since The Staves self-released their first EP and a lot has happened since then. Their third album, Good Woman, was written and recorded amid major upheaval, heartbreak, and bereavement. The new-found boldness, loudness, and lyrical directness on this record are indicative of lives forced to become a serious concern.
Following the 2015 release of their critically embraced second album If I Was (Stereogum described it as “unimaginably beautiful,” concluding The Staves were “one of the greatest bands in the universe.”) and a sold-out show at London’s Royal Festival Hall as part of Guy Garvey’s Meltdown Festival, the group moved to Minneapolis to begin work on new music and to follow a long-held desire to tour more of America.
During this intensely creative time the sisters took complete control over their output, taking the reins of production on their Sleeping In A Car EP and the standalone single "Tired As Fuck", as well as scripting and directing the videos. In 2017 The Staves produced a collaborative record with the experimental chamber ensemble yMusic. The Way Is Read merged yMusic’s minimalist compositions with newly written Staves songs loosely inspired by Phillip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy; with Emily, Jessica and Camilla also adding their voices, as instruments, to the orchestra. The Sunday Times called it “a delightful surprise… an unexpected success.” Gaining respect and recognition from fellow musicians, The Staves were invited to sing on the final Leonard Cohen album, posthumously produced by his son, and Paul Weller’s hotly anticipated 2020 LP On Sunset.
The music of The Staves has changed significantly since the acoustic pastoralism of their 2012 debut album Dead & Born & Grown. But early songs such as "Mexico" and "Winter Trees" not only introduced us to the band’s breath-taking sibling harmony and astounding gift for melody; they’ve since become cover version standards on YouTube, with fans uploading phone-filmed renditions on a daily basis. The group gratifyingly acknowledge that so many of those fans are young women their own age, whose experiences, burgeoning confidence, and defiance, Good Woman reflects.
The Staves began writing material for a new record in December 2017. With Emily and Jessica now back in the UK and Camilla living with her boyfriend in the US they wrote remotely, exchanging ideas on GarageBand and Voice Notes across the ether. But their lives were soon turned upside down. In June 2018 their beloved mum, a constant supportive presence at their gigs, and at whose kitchen table many of their first songs were written, unexpectedly died. A month later, Camilla’s relationship was abruptly and painfully ended, leaving her stranded in America far from her family. When she returned, broke and broken, she moved into her mum’s now empty house. Feeling a need to regroup and look after each other, the sisters called a halt to recording and touring, parted from their management company, and took control of every aspect of the band, finding a new strength and autonomy in difficult times.
Thankfully 2019 began with the happier but still life-changing news that Emily and her partner were expecting their first child. In the following months, plans were put in place to begin recording their long-awaited third album.
Good Woman was recorded at RAK studios in London in the final months of 2019. It was produced in collaboration with John Congleton, whose work with Sharon Van Etten, Angel Olsen, and St Vincent similarly aided a more self-confident and raw expression of intent to emerge.
Several of the tracks were built on top of the original demo recordings, retaining the spirit in which they were made, resulting in what Jessica describes as “a patchwork of different sonic spaces.” Field recordings made by the band became part of the arrangements, most noticeably on the title track which features layers of ambient noise and conversations of women talking; recordings of the sisters’ friends and family.
In early 2020 the band resumed touring, unveiling their expansive and exhilaratingly powerful new sound, and previewing these emotionally affecting songs in intimate venues across the country; with tickets selling out in seconds. They ended the tour with a triumphant homecoming appearance at the 6 Music Festival.
The Staves’ first album in five years is an accumulation of everything that life has thrown at them in that time.