The hard working Good Lovelies now have four releases behind
them including the 2007 debut EP ‘Oh My’
and a 2009 festive album but it is their two full length compilations of self
penned songs that comprise the bulk of their live performances, which can
number around 150 a year. Both albums have received critical praise in their
homeland with prestigious Juno nominations/awards and in particular, it is the
current release, ‘Let the Rain Fall’,
which forms the centrepiece of their 2012 UK gigs. A Good Lovelies show is not
just a very comprehensive package of a couple of forty five minute sets, it is
a story telling journey about their lives, loves and experiences of travelling
both around the vastness of their home country and the early adventures of
being fortunate to take their talents overseas.
After opening the evening with the catchy number ‘Kiss Me in the Kitchen’, the girls went
on to perform another six tracks from the current album in the first set
including two songs with a heavily
Canadian influence , ‘Old Highway’
and ‘Backyard’, the latter written
against the backdrop of much derision of their home town by fellow Canadians. The alternative subject of personal relationships
was also explored in the mellow song ‘Best
I Know’. The group are also keen to celebrate the work of other selected
artists in their set and paid tribute to fellow Canadian band The Deep Dark
Woods with a cover of ‘Winter Hours’
before closing the first half with an acapella off-mic version of Gram Parsons’
‘Juanita’. You could sense the girls
were really ready to ditch the microphones and test the church acoustics with
their beautiful harmonies and the appreciative audience were clearly in full
agreement with this.
For the second set, the band delved a little into their back
catalogue by selecting three tracks from their 2009 self titled release, the
stand out song being ‘Lie Down’ , a number performed towards
the end of the evening with its easily remembered chorus collaborated with
prompted audience participation. This
second part of the evening also included some personal favourites from the new
album, ‘Free’ which needed no
introduction from the band and ‘Mrs T’
with its enchanting French interludes. The girls were also keen to come off-mic
again and their exquisite harmonies delighted those present with an
unaccompanied version of the Boswell Sisters’ ‘Heebie Jeebies’, a song preceded by a wonderful tale of it being
sung at a US/Canadian border crossing. The
audience were given one final rendition of this style of delivery with their
encore version of Leonard Cohen’s ‘Hallelujah’.
Although an acknowledged predictable choice, this performance, assisted only by
Caroline’s unplugged guitar and the arrangement of each girl taking the lead on
particular verses, worked well and rounded off a perfect evening of musical
entertainment.
The strength of a Good Lovelies show is their sanguine
disposition, confident banter, infectious harmonies and uncomplicated sound,
though the girls showed their diverse string
instrumental skills as well by effortlessly switching between bass, banjo,
acoustic guitar and mandolin. It is hoped the band return to our shores soon
and perhaps the biggest complement is that they made the time and money
invested in a 120 mile round trip extremely worthwhile.