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MRG Live presents

Margaret Glaspy

Event Details

Date

Friday, November 10, 2023

Time

Doors: 7:00 PM - Show: 8:00 PM

Age Restriction

19+

Venue

Biltmore Cabaret

Address

2755 Prince Edward St, Vancouver, British Columbia

Artist


About the Event


Important Information

Venue Information

Biltmore Cabaret

2755 Prince Edward St, Vancouver, British Columbia

Margaret Glaspy

Margaret Glaspy photo

In an era of excess and endless distraction, the New York-based singer/songwriter Margaret Glaspy rejects the noise in favor of something far more essential. On the self-possessed title track for her new album I Am Both Glaspy offers an ardent refusal of any outside pressure to compromise her multidimensionality. “I wrote ‘I Am Both’ a while ago; the story is based on a female character that I look up to deeply—a woman who contains multitudes while seeing reality very clearly,” says Glaspy. “It can feel safer to try to fit myself into a category, but I find that embracing my own complexity is much healthier for me.” That embrace of complexity runs throughout the album’s eleven tracks.

In the making of I Am Both Glaspy stepped away from social media and soon discovered a clarity of mind she hadn’t experienced in years, followed by a sustained burst of creative momentum. As she penned her lyrics in longhand and then polished them up on a typewriter,

Glaspy assembled a selection of songs that span from fictional vignettes to unguarded self- revelation to empathetic observation of the troubled world around her. Produced by Joe Henry

(the three-time Grammy-winning singer/songwriter/producer known for his work with luminaries like Aimee Mann and Joan Baez), I Am Both ultimately stands as a striking new statement from one of the modern music canon’s most formidable songwriters.

“When I started writing for this record I had a goal of getting my practice back—to walk the walk in terms of how I envision myself as a songwriter,” says Glaspy, a Northern California-bred artist who made her debut with 2016’s lavishly acclaimed Emotions and Math. “At first it was really hard to break that addiction to social media, but after a while something shifted. It felt like I’d gotten back to original thought instead of being under the influence of so many outside opinions. It was life-changing.”

Her fourth full-length album, I Am Both emerged from three days of sessions at New York City’s Reservoir Studios, where Glaspy recorded live with drummer/percussionist Jay Bellerose (Bonnie Raitt, Robert Plant, Alison Krauss), keyboardist Patrick Warren (Tracy Chapman, Tom Waits, Bruce Springsteen), and bassist Ross Gallagher (Paula Cole, Grails). “I always think of myself as more of a photographer than a sculptor in the studio—it’s about capturing the moment rather than layering and building things up over time, and Joe has a similar mentality when it comes to recording,” says Glaspy, who first connected with Henry at a T Bone Burnett-curated tribute to Bob Dylan at New York’s Town Hall in 2022. “There was an incredible chemistry with the band and the whole process felt electric, so a lot of what you hear on the album is the first take.” Throughout I Am Both, Glaspy reveals one of the more thrilling outcomes of deepening her creative practice: a commitment to following her own internal logic when structuring songs. On the slow-building and softly powerful “Reminder,” she contends with her own smallness against the scale of others’ suffering, rendering her inner monologue in a rush of unbroken syntax (“Hope can only get me so far / I also have to be willing to catch a few scars / And I also have to be willing to apologize / And I also have to be willing to scrutinize / And I also have to be willing to not be right / But I also have to be willing to fight, fight, fight”). “That song’s a message to myself for when it feels like I’m doing nothing of value, reminding me that it’s important to keep showing up in lots of little ways instead of giving up altogether,” says Glaspy. “It’s an example of something I never would’ve written if I were still praying to the gods who told me everything needs to be neat and tidy and symmetrical.”

That sense of self-acceptance extends beyond identity and into Glaspy’s broader philosophy: one that increasingly resists the cultural appetite for hierarchy and ascent. “In any industry, success is measured by climbing as high as you possibly can, but these days I think of music as something more like a public service,” she says. “You show up in city after city and you bring the music with you, and hopefully it reaches whoever needs to hear it. I feel really honored to be of service in that way.”

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