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SUMMARY:The White Buffalo
URL:http://www.harbourliving.ca/event/the-white-buffalo/
LOCATION:Capital Ballroom :: 858 Yates Street Victoria, 
DESCRIPTION;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:<p>I've always taken great pleasure in being difficult to categorize," says the White Buffalo's big-voiced frontman, Jake Smith. Since releasing his first album in 2002, Smith has explored the grey area between genres, carving out a sound rooted in dark folk, countrified soul, cinematic storytelling and roadhouse-worthy rock. He keeps things unclassifiable on the White Buffalo's sixth album, Darkest Darks, Lightest Lights, the most hard-hitting, electrified album of his career.<br /><br />Although recorded in Smith's hometown of Los Angeles, where he grew up listening to the country twang of George Jones and the pissed-off punk of Bad Religion, Darkest Darks, Lightest Lights looks to the passion and punch of White Buffalo's live shows for inspiration. Smith has been a road warrior for more than a decade, doubling as his own tour manager along the way. Gig after gig, he's built a cult following without a major label's support, boosting his band's international visibility with more than a dozen TV-worthy songs &mdash; including the Emmy-nominated "Come Join the Murder" &mdash; that were featured on shows like Sons of Anarchy and Californication.<br /><br />"I'm kind of an island," he says proudly. "We tour on our own and have built our own fanbase, so the idea with this album was to capture that live feel &mdash; the passion that we produce in a stage setting &mdash; in a studio performance."<br /><br />Island or not, Darkest Darks, Lightest Lights finds Smith reaching far beyond his own experience for a string of detailed, character-driven songs. Many of these tunes explore the gloomy, dangerous corners of America, spinning stories of sinners, crooks, bad decisions and broken hearts. On "Border Town/Bury Me in Baja," a drug dealer awaits his death at the hands of the Mexican mafia. "Avalon," a desperate, driving anthem worthy of Bruce Springsteen, finds its protagonist "wishing he could flip a switch [and] turn his life around." "Nightstalker Blues" &mdash; an amped-up blast of harmonica-filled, guitar-fueled roots rock &mdash; revolves around the story of serial killer Richard Ramirez, whose murder spree haunted southern California during the mid-Eighties.<br /><br />As the album's own title promises, though, this is a record about balance. A record about life's ups and downs. "I wanted to hit all the emotional spots," explains Smith, whose voice &mdash; a booming, rumbling baritone, with a slight quaver that can sound ominous one minute and warmhearted the next &mdash; takes a tender turn during love songs like "Observatory" and "If I Lost My Eyes."<br /><br />Together, Darkest Darks, Lightest Lights offers up the White Buffalo's strongest material to date, doubling down on Smith's strengths while pushing his sound into new territory. Stripped-down folk. Electrified swamp-soul. Heartland rock. Bluesy boogie-woogie. It's all here, tied together by the super-sized vocals and articulate songwriting of a bandleader whose work is sometimes moody, sometimes menacing, but always melodic<br /><br />"My hope is that this album will touch people," he says. "Make people feel. The good, the bad, and the ugly. The darkest darks, and the lightest lights.</p>=0D=0A=
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<p><a href="http://atomiqueproductions.com/calendar/the-white-buffalo/">http://atomiqueproductions.com/calendar/the-white-buffalo/</a></p>=0D=0A=
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DTSTART:19691231
DTEND:19700101
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