Label Review.
2019 album. Rock.
Our Overview.
Canadian indie rockers Mauno are releasing their new album ‘Really Well’. The Halifax based duo - vocalist Eliza Niemi and guitarist Nick Everett - title comes from the line in the opening track, “Really Really,” which is sung by vocalist and bassist Eliza Niemi. “Ask me how it goes and I’ll tell you all about how I’m doing really well,” she sings over brisk, skiffle-ish fingerpicking. On its face, it’s a pensive track that Niemi calls warbly and wilting, but the subtext is a certain self-deprecation; Niemi explains that it illuminates the humour of empty small talk, which doesn’t actually invite honesty. Really Well , like it’s namesake track and the band which recorded it, is always acutely aware of this: interactions that feign intimacy and authenticity, what is really contained beneath them, and the strange comedy that lives in between them.
‘Really Well’ is an expansive, idiosyncratic study in these creases, and the ways that music—guitars, bass, drums, synths, and vocals—can explore and express them. Written by Niemi, vocalist/guitarist Nick Everett, guitarist Scott Boudreau and drummer Adam White and recorded at Chad VanGaalen’s Calgary studio, the record collapses the personal and the professional within critiques of capitalism and creative labour. Musically, too, it is non-linear, jutting from the twisted, plucky indie-skiffle of the opener to the charged post-punk march of “Half It,” to the spring-reverb-tweaked riffing of “Reeling II,” to the dreamy, sidestepping guitar pop of “Expectations,” to the gorgeous, macabre slow-jam of “Vampire.”
While Mauno’s 2017 LP ‘Tuning’ was rooted conceptually in an R. Murray Schaefer text, Really Well is free of conceptual guidelines—an early attempt at this record followed a conceptual framework, but was scrapped in favour of a more boundless venture. “There’s no guiding principle except for just serving the songs,” Everett says. “Everything that will limit and guide what we’re going to do is already there, and has been since the moment we started writing the songs, so it’s almost like this weird implicit thing.” Niemi adds that, as a result, she feels these are the most honest songs they’ve written.
Lyrically, the record deals with Mauno's preoccupations with the nature of creative labor, relationships, and the self under capitalism. They note that their critiques are filtered through a lens of the absurd, turning them playful. "There's something about humour and laughter that is very subversive and deeper than I think a lot of people realize", Niemi says. "With these songs, I was trying to sort of dance on the line". "There's a double meaning to everything", adds Everett. "You have to leave space for people to think. Where is the place for the listener if they're not going to contribute their own thoughts, or their own interpretations?"