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The
Cliks
Biography
It’s
remarkable that something so good can come from feeling so bad. As is the
case of most great art, Toronto trio the Cliks have dredged the emotional
mire of the past two years to create Dirty King, a rich rock extravaganza
showcasing a sonic expansion for the band. With music as textured and
layered as the deeply varied emotional terrain it treads, feeling bad
never sounded so good.
Composed
from a place of deep turmoil, lead singer Lucas Silveira began work on
the Cliks’ second album following the highly successful tours behind
sophomore release Snakehouse. The band’s incendiary live shows became the
calling card by which they were known, and in short order, musical heroes
Ian Astbury of the Cult and Cyndi Lauper hand-picked the band for their
respective tours. Late-night bookers were listening too, and soon the
Cliks found themselves on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, not to
mention a very special performance Lucas did with Cyndi Lauper on Jimmy
Kimmel Live! The band picked up momentum and fans when Logo awarded them
the NewNowNext Artist On the Brink Award which ultimately led to an
appearance on teenybopper mecca TRL to discuss their plans for the
future.
Though
critically lauded and publicly adored, Silveira returned road weary and
emotionally shattered. Having spent 400 days on the road touring behind
Snakehouse, Silveira was eager to return home, but home wasn’t the
reprieve he’d hoped it would be. “The album is based around defeat, lies,
deception, loss of trust in others and yourself,” explains Silveira. “I
wrote the album coming from a really lonely place.” Indeed, the album
plumbs difficult depths in the form of relationships and identity
politics, as did the band’s Warner Music debut, Snakehouse, but here,
there is a redemptive quality absent from the band’s previous output. The
price of that, however, is eternal vigilance. “Dirty King is more about
having risen out of the ashes, being on your feet, but constantly having
to dodge people trying to knock you down,” says Silveira.
With
their rise out of the ashes comes new sonic territory for the band. Their
most adventurous album to date finds the band teamed with
producer-engineer Sylvia Massy (Red Hot Chili Peppers, Tool) at her Weed,
California based Radio Star Studios. “She’s my kind of producer,” says
drummer Morgan Doctor. “She doesn’t come from a singer-songwriter
background, but an engineering background, so she’s more about creating
sound and texture in the studio.” Massy’s studio -- filled with enough
amps, effects and instruments to make it a veritable playground for
musicians – served as the band’s bedrock to create the full range of the
album’s sounds and correlating emotions, from the jagged rock of its
denials to the soulful balladry of its admissions.
The
album’s namesake, and perhaps the clearest distillation of Silveira’s
emotional state during the writing of the album, is “Dirty King.” Based
on the gulf between how Silveira felt and how he was perceived, the song
slides in on a surf guitar riff as Silveira alternates between a vamp and
growl, teasing out the chorus in a voice that manages to sound menacing
and seductive at once. Elsewhere, the band changes gears on the mournful
“Not Your Boy” and “Emily,” the catchiest evidence of the band’s
expanding sound. “’Emily’ is definitely a big leap for the Cliks as a
band, but for myself as a songwriter, I have lots of songs like this
under my belt. I just never introduced them to the band because I didn’t
feel like it was ‘Cliks’ material,” says Silveira of the waltzing,
string-laden track that’s more dulcet than biting. The song’s inclusion
is a testament to the direction of Massy, who encouraged Silveira to
continue writing after he’d played her an early version. The song also
demonstrates Massy’s analog approach, and the adventurousness of the
band. Where most producers would have downloaded the sound of glass
breaking to use on the track, the band and producer headed out onto the
streets of Weed to procure their own found noise. “We were out late at
night on the main street of Weed, breaking a huge piece of glass and
recording it live,” says Doctor.
Dirty
King also sees the band writing together, as well as playing. After
bassist Jen Benton wrote the bassline for “Career Suicide” while on tour,
she began playing it at soundcheck. Doctor suggested she continue
developing it, and ultimately all three would collaborate to write it.
“On tour Lucas and I came up with the pre-chorus together, [and] we put
together the chorus and the bridge, which was written to a very
rhythmically defined beat Morgan came up with,” says Benton. “It was a
great experience for [us].”
Despite
themselves, the Cliks couldn’t help but make a record that made order out
of tumult and sense out of turbulence. With pop hooks lacing the rock
spines The Cliks are known for, the songs inhabit the specificity of the
circumstances under which they were written, all the while appealing to
broader audiences.
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