logo
‘Dan's Boogie' Review: Destroyer's Songwriting Stays Sharp

‘Dan's Boogie' Review: Destroyer's Songwriting Stays Sharp

Canadian singer-songwriter Dan Bejar has been sharing thoughts about the world outside his window for 30 years. Early on as the frontman of Destroyer, which oscillates between a solo project and a band, he wrote songs that touched on the Vancouver music scene, politics and the perils of romance, spicing up his stories with literary and musical allusions and quirky diction. As he's aged, Mr. Bejar's wry observations have grown broader, and details from his life often serve as punchlines to his setups. He's found a comfortable place as an indie-rock institution. His audience is modest but loyal, and they love hearing from him on new records every couple of years.
Mr. Bejar's songwriting voice is specific to him and doesn't change much from one LP to the next—he strings one funny line after another about the people and places he encounters, and these lines almost magically assemble into complete statements that are both clever and touching. What varies is Destroyer's musical setting. Early on, the project was rooted in folk, with Mr. Bejar frequently delivering his lyrics over acoustic guitars. More recently, he's experimented with a sax-driven ambience that dances between early-'80s yacht rock and the new romantic balladeers who followed in the wake of Roxy Music. The title of the new Destroyer album 'Dan's Boogie' (Merge), out Friday, is characteristically self-referential and suggests we could be in for a bluesy, hip-shaking record. But this time, Mr. Bejar opts for a survey of favored styles from the past, while his writing remains as sharp as ever.
The fake-out of the title sets the stage for an album that creates expectations and then subverts them. Once again working with producer and multi-instrumentalist John Collins, Mr. Bejar indulges his fascination with artifice, experimenting with how a song's arrangement can convey gnawing disappointment and puncture pretension with wit. 'The Same Thing as Nothing at All' opens like a rapidly rising curtain, as a wall of synthesized strings and horns delivers a cheap, knock-off version of grandeur. The singer's voice is processed to sound like it's echoing upward from the bottom of a well, and he sounds exhausted and slightly irritated as he delivers lines like 'The chandelier struggles to light / Up the night.'
The following 'Hydroplaning off the Edge of the World' is a huge, electrifying buzz of a song, with 'ba-di-ba' backing vocals and a rush of synth drone. It's an oddly catchy and even hypnotic number that instantly ranks with Mr. Bejar's finest creations. He delivers a cluster of images and sensations detailing a world that's gone mad—as he wanders the streets, he encounters a priest who mistakes him for a fellow man of the cloth, and then bumps into someone who wonders if Mr. Bejar might be a professional basketball player. Such cases of mistaken identity are common in his music, where all and sundry are trying desperately to know themselves and figure out their place in the universe.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Viens, Ward lead Canada past Haiti 3-1 before rowdy crowd in women's soccer friendly
Viens, Ward lead Canada past Haiti 3-1 before rowdy crowd in women's soccer friendly

Hamilton Spectator

timean hour ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Viens, Ward lead Canada past Haiti 3-1 before rowdy crowd in women's soccer friendly

MONTREAL - Evelyne Viens scored twice in the first half as Canada rolled to a two-game sweep over Haiti with a 3-1 win in a women's international soccer friendly Tuesday. Holly Ward tallied her first Canadian senior national team goal and added an assist. The 21-year-old Vancouver Rise FC forward made her second senior appearance. Captain Jesse Fleming also provided two first-half assists for Canada. Melchie Dumornay replied for Haiti before 18,321 rowdy spectators — the vast majority supporting the visiting side — at Stade Saputo. Fans from Montreal's large Haitian community decked the stands in the country's blue, red and white colours, chanted 'Haiti! Haiti!' and cheered loudly at every touch of the ball. Seventh-ranked Canada also beat No. 53 Haiti 4-1 on Saturday in a farewell game for veteran midfielder Desiree Scott in her hometown of Winnipeg. The Canadian women improved to 5-0-0 against Haiti with Tuesday's win. Head coach Casey Stoney, hired in January to replace Bev Priestman, returned to the sidelines after missing Saturday's match for family reasons. Seven minutes in on Tuesday, Canada's Olivia Smith needed to be carried off the field on a stretcher after a Haitian clearance hit her in the face at the edge of the 18-yard box. Medical staff quickly rushed onto the field, with Smith lying on the pitch for around six minutes before Adriana Leon subbed in. Viens opened the scoring in the 16th minute, heading home a high ball from Fleming. The 28-year-old Viens from L'Ancienne-Lorette, Que., provided two assists when Canada beat Mexico 2-0 in Montreal last June before the Paris Olympics. A number of fresh faces filled Stoney's starting 11. Defender Zara Chavoshi made her senior debut, while Ward and Emma Regan of AFC Toronto in the Northern Super League also featured in the young, experimental lineup. The Ward selection certainly paid off. Ward doubled the lead with another header off a Fleming cross in the 23rd minute, before setting up Viens for her second with a superb through ball to make it 3-0 just 42 minutes in. Canada fended off two Haitian chances in the first half. Louis Batcheba's shot from inside the box sailed over the bar in the 32nd minute and Gabrielle Carle slid to block a chance from Sherly Jeudy in the 40th. Fans finally erupted out of their seats when Dumornay converted a penalty kick low to the bottom corner in first-half stoppage time after Canadian defender Marie Levasseur fouled Kethna Louis. Haiti controlled more of the play in the second half. Dumornay had a chance to cut the lead to 3-2 with a shot from just outside the six-yard box in the 68th, but Canadian 'keeper Sabrina D'Angelo denied the opportunity. A fan invaded the pitch in the 88th minute and briefly hugged Haiti's Roseline Eloissaint before security rushed in to escort him off the field. Dumornay almost scored again when she pounced on a turnover in second-half stoppage time, but D'Angelo got her arm out for a miraculous save. Fans began chanting Dumornay's name in the dying seconds after the Haitian captain dazzled with multiple moves on a rush through the midfield. Next up, the Canadian women host Costa Rica in a friendly on June 27 at Toronto's BMO Field before visiting the United States on July 2 in Washington. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 3, 2025.

Rick Mercer's long finished ‘Talking to Americans,' but he's got new ways to address neighbourly tension
Rick Mercer's long finished ‘Talking to Americans,' but he's got new ways to address neighbourly tension

Hamilton Spectator

time2 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Rick Mercer's long finished ‘Talking to Americans,' but he's got new ways to address neighbourly tension

TORONTO - Rick Mercer picks up the bottle of sparkling water he just ordered, puts on his glasses and inspects the label. 'Where's that from? We're not having that in the shot if it's American. Jeez,' he says, glancing at the video camera with an impish smile. It's a product of Italy, but he moves it out of the shot anyway. 'Are we rolling?' We are. On this Tuesday afternoon in late spring, Mercer sits in a booth by the window at a Toronto restaurant. The sparkling water, his now-discarded reading glasses and some notes he doesn't reference are the only things in front of him as he promotes his new comedy tour, 'Stand-Up for Canada,' which gets underway in September. The show's message, he says, meets the moment: one in which U.S. President Donald Trump has imposed punishing tariffs on Canada and threatened this country's sovereignty. 'That has permeated almost every aspect of our lives, but it actually hasn't impacted my act at all. I'm doing the same act,' he says. 'I decided a long time ago that everything I do was going to be celebrating the country.' Mercer believes people are looking for that now more than ever, given the animosity that's developed between Canada and the United States: a relationship that is in some ways foundational to our national self-image. 'If you want to have that conversation about what it means to someone to be Canadian, you've really got to dig because the first thing that nine out of 10 Canadians will do is they'll start talking about how we're different than Americans, which is no way to define yourself,' he says. 'What's happening in the country now — people are standing in the middle of drugstores Googling what's a Canadian toothpaste, and they're reading labels in the ways that they've never read before, and their making choices about whether they'll eat a kiwi fruit — that's new. But I think it's always been there: Canadians, we're a proud country, there's no doubt about it.' Playing off of this cross-border kinship is part of how Mercer became a household name north of the 49th parallel. His wildly popular segment 'Talking to Americans' took off on CBC's 'This Hour Has 22 Minutes' and spawned an hour-long comedy special in April 2001. More than two million viewers tuned into the special to watch Mercer ask Americans leading questions about Canada based on ludicrous stereotypes. Would they consider a visit to our national igloo? What do they think of Canada's national dish, the beaver ball? 'It really was one joke over and over again, but it was a joke that Canadians really enjoyed,' he says. The execution of that joke relied on two things, Mercer says: Americans' ignorance about Canada and their goodwill towards Canadians. 'I was aware that by and large Americans knew nothing about Canada. But they did know we were the neighbours, and they wanted to be only generous and kind to the neighbours,' he says. 'That has clearly changed somewhat. People are very suspicious of Canada. I think Americans are more suspicious of everyone, both inside their country, their neighbours, and then outside their country as well.' That Americans are looking more closely at Canada is one of many reasons the bit wouldn't work today, Mercer says. The list also includes the general mistrust in mainstream media and the likelihood that once-unsuspecting Americans might recognize him from online clips. For his purposes, that's OK. It seems like it's time to look inward rather than measuring ourselves against others, he says: 'In order for Canada to be good, Denmark doesn't have to be bad.' The temptation to focus on the giant underneath us is ever-present, but Mercer is practised at resisting it. He left 'Talking to Americans' behind when he launched his flagship TV show, 'Rick Mercer Report,' in 2004. Over the course of 15 seasons, he travelled across the country, poking fun at politicians along the way. 'When I was doing 'Mercer Report,' one of the big learning curves that writers who worked on the show had to deal with was that in our universe that we created, America didn't exist. Like, it really didn't. We were just like, 'we don't talk about that.'' Americans got enough attention elsewhere, he says, so if the show talked about entertainment, it wouldn't be American entertainment. If it talked politics, it wouldn't be American politics. Whether his September tour will take the same tack remains to be seen. It's early yet, he says, but he doesn't foresee dunking on the United States overmuch. Tickets go on sale later this week, but he isn't due to hit the road until Sept. 11, performing 22 shows in 38 days alongside comedians Sophie Buddle, Mayce Galoni and Julie Kim. This is Mercer's third standup tour. He's leaned into live performance since leaving TV behind in 2018. Last year, he toured in conversation with musician Jann Arden. He also wrote two memoirs, 'Talking to Canadians,' about everything leading up to 'Rick Mercer Report,' and 'The Road Years' about the time he spent on the show. 'If you're in my business, if you're creating TV shows, if you're doing one-man shows — which I used to do in my early 20s — if you're writing books, if you're writing scripts, it really helps if you love your subject matter. And my subject matter has always been my country,' he says. 'And I'm not saying it's perfect, not by a long shot. It's just, that's someone else's lane. Right now it's all about celebrating.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 3, 2025.

'90s Pop Icon, 56, Stuns Fans With Shocking Appearance
'90s Pop Icon, 56, Stuns Fans With Shocking Appearance

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'90s Pop Icon, 56, Stuns Fans With Shocking Appearance

'90s Pop Icon, 56, Stuns Fans With Shocking Appearance originally appeared on Parade. Sarah McLachlan, 56, has clearly found the fountain of youth. The '90s pop icon and Lilith Fair regular shared a social media video over the weekend that had fans doing a double take at the Canadian songstress's ageless Fumbling Towards Ecstasy singer posted a video in which she answers random questions to help fans get to know her better. Wearing an adorable white jumpsuit, her hair swept up in a messy bun, and sporting little to no makeup, McLachlan put her natural beauty on full display. She effortlessly shared her answers, even revealing a personal pre-show ritual. 'Melissa and I, um… we smack each other really hard on the bum — just wakes us up!' McLachlan revealed, before laughing and admitting she may have overshared. Fans were quick to notice her toned arms, with one commenting, 'Those arms — whoa 🤯 ❤️,' and another adding, 'You are so cool and timeless. Also, your arms!!! They are so strong. 💪🏻💪🏻❤️❤️❤️'McLachlan shares two daughters with her ex-husband, Ashwin Sood. She recently celebrated 30 years since the release of Fumbling Towards Ecstasy. 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 '90s Pop Icon, 56, Stuns Fans With Shocking Appearance first appeared on Parade on Jun 1, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 1, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store