Timbre Concerts presents
,
Doors: - Show:
At Biltmore Cabaret - Vancouver
Event Info
Provoker
By the time Provoker released their 2023 sophomore outing Demon Compass, they were already talking about their next album. The LA synth-pop trio were on a roll, and the songs kept coming. Holed up in an Echo Park attic, frontman Christian Crow Petty began to think of hauntings — him as a specter in his friends’ house, or the apparitions and memories that follow us around. Provoker’s next feat of world-building was underway, with Petty conjuring a landscape full of dead selves, the things we have left behind or dearly wish we could leave behind, all housed in a third album aptly titled Mausoleum.
“It did make me feel like I was a ghost,” Petty laughs about his stint in the attic. “You’re the one making the creaks in the ceiling.” But as much as Mausoleum’s thematic content was defined by isolation, the music was the most communal of Provoker’s career. Petty deepened his songwriting partnership with Jonathon Lopez, the synth wizard who originally founded Provoker ten years ago as a solo vehicle to write imagined film scores. While some material was still completed individually, much of Mausoleum came together with Petty, Lopez, and bassist Wil Palacios workshopping ideas in various studio sessions, responding to each other in real time.
Having promised new creative approaches for their third album, Provoker also opened themselves up to more collaboration. “Before, we were pretty reclusive,” Petty explains. Mausoleum found the trio working with a host of music scene friends, with production from Elliot Kozell, Simon Christensen, Mikey Heart, and Zach Fogerty — all of it overseen by none other than esteemed producer Kenny Beats.
The burst of collaboration and inspiration meant Provoker had around twenty songs for Mausoleum. When they first met up with Kenny Beats, it was intended as a social hang, but after playing him a track he asked if he could rework it. This blossomed into an executive producer role where he took the nearly completed Mausoleum and put everything through a new filter, amping up the bass and drums across the album. “He made it sound like us, but way bigger,” Lopez recalls.
With Beats’ guiding hand, Provoker achieved a new sense of grandeur. Their trademark aesthetic — synth shadows, crystalline beats, and smoky vocals equal parts R&B croon and post-punk growl, all influenced by otherworldly horror movies and video games — remains intact, but boasts a different scope and muscularity. Three albums in, Mausoleum finds Provoker at a moment of both synthesis and evolution, their unique sound having grown bolder and sharpened.
Where in the past Petty filled Provoker’s music with supernatural creatures and sci-fi scenarios, he explores a subtler vein on Mausoleum — exorcising personal demons rather than fictitious ones, imagining the album taking place in a disgusting, squalid metropolis populated by ghosts sometimes literal but more often spiritual. It’s a distorted version of our own reality. “I like to make mini-movies, where if you listen to the song it places you in this world,” Petty explains. “This one is more of this world, but still haunting.”
True to genre fiction that often spurs Petty’s writing, Mausoleum is shrouded in mystery. Petty conceived the album as an “anthology” with five storylines occurring at once, most of its tracks partnered in twos by themes of eternal human struggle — self-worth, relationships, redemption.
“When you watch a movie, you see certain things happen to the character that are relatable,” Petty explains. “While made up, it’s something you’ve felt before.”
“On the surface, the songs are stories,” Lopez adds. “You have to really listen to it to get those themes.”
Mausoleum couches these emotions in Provoker’s characteristically vivid, lurid imagery. “Tears In The Club” may be something we’ve all felt — out at night seeking connection, but feeling like the odd one out — but it’s heightened, its protagonist depicted as a gross, creepy reveler on the dancefloor. Opener “Swarm Of Flies” derives from heartbreak, but relates the story of a man so riddled by loss he turns himself into a monster so he can never be loved again; similarly, the throbbing surge of “Gun 2 My Head” dramatizes relationship strife into a scene of a man infected by an apocalyptic disease begging his lover to kill him. At the same time, these songs are now balanced with some of Petty’s most vulnerable writing, with singles “Another Boy” and “Pantomime” wielding melancholic hooks and wistful synth lines to capture lovelorn existential crises. In the final act, the smeared, nocturnal atmospherics of Mausoleum’s title track captures the helplessness that connects so many of the album’s characters.
Provoker marries the two approaches in “Replay.” A closer both shocking and poignant, it depicts a man whose wife dies, and he devotedly tends to her corpse in an attempt to keep their marriage alive when she herself is gone. “Replay it over and over again,” Petty sings in the chorus, the meaning of the words twisted in the song’s narrative, but sly in the context of the album. At its end, Provoker immediately invites you to return to the start and venture deeper and deeper into their world, to keep looking for the secrets buried deep in Mausoleum.
Faerybabyy
Born in Conroe, Texas to a teenage mother, Payton came from a troubled childhood that ignited her artistic inspiration. Initially drawn to poetry, she shifted towards music after being spurred on by an ex-boyfriend's doubt about her artistry. Despite this skepticism, she not only embraced songwriting but ventured into music by hitting the road as a runaway with various garage rock bands, selling merchandise at just 16. Influenced by a diverse mix of sounds that include Russian post-punk, Soviet Rock, Surf Rock, and the deep resonance of bass drum of death, she began to mold her unique musical identity.
RIP SWIRL
Since the release of his 2022 critically-acclaimed debut album Blurry, RIP Swirl, born Luka Seifert, has been continuing to expand his moody sonic palette which marries his work as a producer, DJ in Berlin’s club scene with his lifelong relationship with the guitar and his analog approach to recording.
His music has found fans among everyone from Gen Z alt-kids to techno purists, and he has since become a close collaborator and producer to several rising vocalists including Copenhagen’s Ydegirland Ariana Manmoon of untitled (halo). His 2023 single with Ydegirl titled “Let’s Make Out” appeared on YEAR0001’s RIFT Two compilation (listed among DJ Mag’s compilations of the year).