Search Results for:

THE RUBY SUNS

The Ruby Suns

Sprite Fountain

    The Ruby Suns, the band-ish pseudonym of nomadic Californian-New Zealander Ryan McPhun, return after four years with a brilliant and ambitious new record Sprite Fountain.

    It began in earnest upon moving to Oslo, Norway from Auckland in 2013's twilight with impending fatherhood tapping him on the shoulder. A slowly ripening thing, it was made amidst child rearing and touring with NZ pals Lawrence Arabia and remixing, recording and touring with Norwegian acts like Snasen, Heyerdahl and Beezewax.

    Having released on Sub Pop and Memphis Industries in the past, new independent album Sprite Fountain is a pithy nine songs running over thirty-three minutes, stylistically it's an amalgam of the 4 previous Ruby Suns records. Rhythmically and harmonically complex, McPhun's influences are eluded to like snatches of a jukebox heard across a busy motorway. The touchstones are brief - ELO for four bars, a hint of Julia Holter in an arrangement - before they disappear into a kaleidoscopic tapestry that reveals McPhun to be a singular savant hinted at by his diverse back catalogue.

    Though harmonious in macro, there is a mania within – a fitting analog to what is often the predicament of a new parent: constantly under-slept, delirious and confused yet somehow elated. Not to mention the matter of cultural isolation that comes with being an immigrant in a new country, and an antipodal one at that.

    McPhun has trouble relating to the 'Pram Gangs' he passes by on the street and grapples with Norway's political movements in 'Blåhvalene.' He then goes back to California with the Wilsonesque 'Blankee' - a Steinbeck referencing ode to his teenage surf break (Ventura Point) and the almost A Capella album closer 'King Cake,' citing McPhun's own brush with the law and the overextending slippery tentacles of the War on Drugs in the mid 90s. Elsewhere things get a little more upbeat. 'Gatrapa' is a tropicalia-induced, Siri Hustvedt-quoting epistle on the inexorable parade of time, and 'Tilt of His Hat' - a jovial but bumpy supplication to an overworked and overstressed loved one. 'K Rd Woody' recounts halcyon days on Auckland's Karangahape Road with it's transient dive bars, cheap late night eateries and pre-mixed drink of choice, the Woodstock bourbon and cola, while 'Waterslide' is a fuzzy cautionary tale of Primitivism gone awry.

    Sprite Fountain was made almost single-handedly by Ryan McPhun in Scandinavia. Beginning in an old schoolhouse in Asker, Observatoriet studio in central Oslo, and McPhun's home in Grünerløkka, Oslo. He then moved onto Spice Boys studio in Copenhagen, with finishing touches made in a friend's 18th century villa in Chelva, Spain. Live Ruby Suns member and long time sonic guru of McPhun's Bevan Smith (Introverted Dancefloor/Signer) visited Norway with his Eventide Harmonizer and assisted with the final mix of the record.

    It's a treasure box of potent ideas, discrete and often discreet. The record makes for an experience that is blissful, psychedelic and always totally surprising; with each subsequent listen revealing gleaming new attractions.


    TRACK LISTING

    1. Waterslide
    2. Blankee
    3. Pram Gang
    4. The Zipper
    5. Tilt Of His Hat
    6. Gatrapa
    7. Blahvalene
    8. K Rd Woody

    The Ruby Suns

    Christopher

      When The Ruby Suns’ main mover Ryan McPhun alighted in Oslo, Norway in the winter of 2010, he knew he’d found an artistic haven. Recently split from his long-term girlfriend and bandmate, on holiday from his adopted home of New Zealand, McPhun was ready for something new.

      He’d always been a musical wayfarer, collecting sounds and styles from his travels around the globe and depositing influences and ephemera into three knockout Ruby Suns albums (2006’s ‘The Ruby Suns’, 2008’s ‘Sea Lion’ and 2010’s ‘Fight Softly’). In Scandinavia - amidst its icy architecture and sky-high fjords, not to mention the indomitable gloss-pop that’s the region’s leading export - he discovered the inspiration for this album.

      The story of ‘Christopher’ mirrors McPhun’s own coming of age: after a childhood spent in nerdy isolation, hiding away in his bedroom with his guitar while his older sister hosted high school ragers in their parents’ Ventura, CA home; after leaving home and becoming a citizen of the world; after disengaging from the relationship that defined most of his adult life, McPhun has stopped thinking so much and joined the party.

      ‘Rush’ sets the process in motion, but of all the songs on the album, ‘Jump In’ encapsulates a carpe diem MO - “When you reach the end of the world,” McPhun sings in his tender falsetto, “don't wanna have no regrets and no penitence.”

      ‘Christopher’s opening song, ‘Desert Of Pop’ - recorded at a friend’s home studio in Oslo, floating on Nord modular synths and ecstatic dancefloor energy - details McPhun’s inebriated encounter with Robyn backstage at a music festival in Cologne, Germany. “Flower among the leaves is what you are,” he sings, his sheepish grin practically bursting out of your speakers, “cold glass of water in the desert of pop.”

      The Ruby Suns

      Sea Lion

        "Sea Lion" is a massive step forward from the critically adored 2007 debut record. Whereas the first leaned heavily on the influence of Brian Wilson, "Sea Lion" displays a dizzying breadth of musical styles from African and Polynesian folk music, to flamenco, to eighties synth pop, to Disney movie soundtracks.


        Just In

        125 NEW ITEMS

        Latest Pre-Sales

        158 NEW ITEMS

        E-newsletter —
        Sign up
        Back to top