World's Most Stressed Out Gardener
2020 was a terrible year for gardening. It was terrible for peppers, it was terrible for tomatoes, it was terrible for the condition of the soul. But Chad VanGaalen somehow raised a garden all the same: carrots and sprouts and broccoli and a revivifying new album, all of them grown at home. He likes to eat directly off the plant, he saysâ"I get down on my knees and graze. It's nice to feel the vegetables in your face"âand the 13 songs on World's Most Stressed Out Gardener were harvested with just such a spirit: in their raw state, young and vegetal, at the very moment, they were made.Â
What that means is that the Calgary songwriter's new album is a psychedelic bumper crop. A collection of tunes that does away with obsessiveness, the anxiety of perfectionism, in favor of freshness and immediacy â capturing the world as it was met while recording alone at home over a period of years. "Don't overthink it," VanGaalen told himself again and again, despite the push/pull love/hate of his relationship with songwriting. "I'm always trying to get outside of the songâbut then I realize I love the song."
This is a record that gleams with VanGaalen's musical signatures: found sound, reverb, polychromatic folk music that is by turns cartoonish and hyperphysicalâlike ultra magnified footage of a virus or a leaf. Apparently, the LP began life as a "pretty minimal" flute record. (There's only a vestige now, on "Flute Peace"âone of three instrumentals.) Later it became an electronic record "for a while" and finally, "right at the last second," it "turned into a pile of garbage." The good kind of garbage: glinting, useful, free. Music as compostâleaves, and branches ready to be re-ingested by the earth, turned into a flower. Â
Throughout these 40 minutes, VanGaalen floats from mania to solace to oblivion, searching for zen in all the wrong places. "Turn up the radio / I think weâre dead," he sings on "Nothing Is Strange"; or, on the inside-out rocker "Nightmare Scenario": "Youâre stressed out when you should be feeling very well." The singer's mental landscape is rotting and redemptive, beautiful in spite of itselfâand his soundscapes reflect this fertile decay. He has been influenced by his instrumental work on TV scores (Dream Corp's third season began this fall), but still "nothing can really replace the human voice,â he admits. Like Arthur Russell or Syd Barrett, itâs VanGaalenâs vocals that shine a path through the swamplandâfrom the cello-lashed âWater Brotherâ to âStarlightââs krautrock pipe-dream.Â
These days, VanGaalen cherishes the privacy of the studio, the capacity to wander around, get distracted, and "move at the speed of life." Whereas once he would obsess over mic techniques, now he puts the microphone in the same place every timeâtrying to capture a song quickly, the idea at its heart. He'll act on his infatuationsâfor the flute, a squeaky clarinet, his basement's copper plumbing (remade into xylophones for "Samurai Sword")âand then he'll try to get out, "veering away from responsibility," before he overdoes his stay.Â
In the end, it's like gardening. You have to live with your horrible decision-making; the weather's going to fuck you if it wants to; and if you plant a hundred heads of broccoli, "now you gotta eat a hundred heads of broccoliâor watch them go to seed." But mostly VanGaalen just tries to be a deer: "I remember seeing some deer come out in the Okanagan Valley once," he says, "watching them wait for a sunbeam to hit a perfect bunch of grapesâand then eating them right out of the sunbeam. I'd recommend that."Â Â
You can do it tooâtaste the sun-swabbed grapesâwhen World's Most Stressed Out Gardener is released on March 19, 2021.Â
by Sean Michaels
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Description
2020 was a terrible year for gardening. It was terrible for peppers, it was terrible for tomatoes, it was terrible for the condition of the soul. But Chad VanGaalen somehow raised a garden all the same: carrots and sprouts and broccoli and a revivifying new album, all of them grown at home. He likes to eat directly off the plant, he saysâ"I get down on my knees and graze. It's nice to feel the vegetables in your face"âand the 13 songs on World's Most Stressed Out Gardener were harvested with just such a spirit: in their raw state, young and vegetal, at the very moment, they were made.Â
What that means is that the Calgary songwriter's new album is a psychedelic bumper crop. A collection of tunes that does away with obsessiveness, the anxiety of perfectionism, in favor of freshness and immediacy â capturing the world as it was met while recording alone at home over a period of years. "Don't overthink it," VanGaalen told himself again and again, despite the push/pull love/hate of his relationship with songwriting. "I'm always trying to get outside of the songâbut then I realize I love the song."
This is a record that gleams with VanGaalen's musical signatures: found sound, reverb, polychromatic folk music that is by turns cartoonish and hyperphysicalâlike ultra magnified footage of a virus or a leaf. Apparently, the LP began life as a "pretty minimal" flute record. (There's only a vestige now, on "Flute Peace"âone of three instrumentals.) Later it became an electronic record "for a while" and finally, "right at the last second," it "turned into a pile of garbage." The good kind of garbage: glinting, useful, free. Music as compostâleaves, and branches ready to be re-ingested by the earth, turned into a flower. Â
Throughout these 40 minutes, VanGaalen floats from mania to solace to oblivion, searching for zen in all the wrong places. "Turn up the radio / I think weâre dead," he sings on "Nothing Is Strange"; or, on the inside-out rocker "Nightmare Scenario": "Youâre stressed out when you should be feeling very well." The singer's mental landscape is rotting and redemptive, beautiful in spite of itselfâand his soundscapes reflect this fertile decay. He has been influenced by his instrumental work on TV scores (Dream Corp's third season began this fall), but still "nothing can really replace the human voice,â he admits. Like Arthur Russell or Syd Barrett, itâs VanGaalenâs vocals that shine a path through the swamplandâfrom the cello-lashed âWater Brotherâ to âStarlightââs krautrock pipe-dream.Â
These days, VanGaalen cherishes the privacy of the studio, the capacity to wander around, get distracted, and "move at the speed of life." Whereas once he would obsess over mic techniques, now he puts the microphone in the same place every timeâtrying to capture a song quickly, the idea at its heart. He'll act on his infatuationsâfor the flute, a squeaky clarinet, his basement's copper plumbing (remade into xylophones for "Samurai Sword")âand then he'll try to get out, "veering away from responsibility," before he overdoes his stay.Â
In the end, it's like gardening. You have to live with your horrible decision-making; the weather's going to fuck you if it wants to; and if you plant a hundred heads of broccoli, "now you gotta eat a hundred heads of broccoliâor watch them go to seed." But mostly VanGaalen just tries to be a deer: "I remember seeing some deer come out in the Okanagan Valley once," he says, "watching them wait for a sunbeam to hit a perfect bunch of grapesâand then eating them right out of the sunbeam. I'd recommend that."Â Â
You can do it tooâtaste the sun-swabbed grapesâwhen World's Most Stressed Out Gardener is released on March 19, 2021.Â
by Sean Michaels













