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If
quality, not popularity was the true measure of a band’s success, Halifax’s
prodigal band Sloan would go down as one of the greatest Canadian bands
of all times. Not that they haven’t been popular, but due to complicated
record label politics they haven’t received the exposure that is perhaps
their due.
Formed like so many bands before them, Sloan was the product of a “coming
together of friends". Started at the Nova Scotia College of Art & Design
in 1991, the band made waves on the local level with both their energetic
live show and their debut EP Peppermint .
Peppermint , which was released by the band’s own Murder Records label,
put the spotlight on Sloan and led several larger labels to actively pursue
the talented band. DGC Records won the race, signing Sloan and quickly
releasing the band’s major label debut, Smeared. Called “a record where
Sonic Youth met Beatlesque pop", the term “Beatlesque" would become another
label that the band fought.
Sloan snagged opening act status to some alternative heavyweights (Lemonhead,
FIREHOSE) but this didn’t translate into notable record sales for the
band. Despite Gold status in their native Canada, weak sales in the US
only began an all-too-familiar story for Sloan.
1994 saw the release of Twice Removed which many feel to be of the best
albums ever. Pop, with powerful alt-rock undertones, the album saw Sloan
on many “best-of" charts around the world. Still, this didn’t translate
into record sales for Sloan. DGC Records refused to support the album
with any kind of American exposure, an act which led the band to question
its own future. Rumors persisted of the band’s impending break-up.
Instead, Sloan fought back the only it knew how: by dumping their uninterested
label and making more music. After disappearing for most of 1995, Sloan
emerged in 1996 with One Chord to Another , distributed in Canada by its
own Murder Records, and in the US by Virgin.
One Chord to Another finally solidified the bands success in Canada and
made significant inroads in the US. Since that release, the band has toured
and recorded constantly, enjoying the comfort zone their increased popularity
has allowed them. Releasing Navy Blues , Four Nights at the Palais Royale
and Between the Bridges in the latter part of the nineties, Sloan show
no signs of slowing down or giving up.
By Erin Boyle, CanEHdian.com 2000
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