Rek760
This album was my happy escape from when the COVID pandemic was in full swing and everyone was locked down. everything in the world was so bleek and grim at that time and this album came along and really brightend up the day.
Favorite track: Worrier Spirit.
realswellfan
This album manages to feel deliberate, impulsive, confident, and scattered all at the same time... probably thanks to the unfiltered and somewhat draconian way that the songs were written. As someone who heard these songs piecemeal during the SOTW project, it is extremely satisfying to hear these songs fully fleshed out and curated together.
The arrangements on this album are so well constructed and natural. The album breathes in and out naturally, trusting the direction that the songs take it.
Favorite track: Worrier Spirit.
Jim Pownall
Really glad I pre-ordered this! Easily Gregory Pepper's most heartfelt album yet. Each track is brilliant and, after listening, I had to quickly run and show my girlfriend some favourite tracks. Pretty good!
Favorite track: Father's Day / Coda.
In 2017, Gregory Pepper threatened to write, record, and release a song a week for a calendar year. Song of The Week was meant to be a personal challenge, a grab at a little subscriber lucre, and something to do in lieu of and in between albums. Kicking off with the euthanization of his cat, the project stayed on schedule through the death of Pepper's dad, his becoming a dad himself, and wound down with the death of his MacBook pro. During a year in which anyone in their right mind would cut themselves some slack, Pepper stayed true to his word and met his own demands.
While never explicitly diaristic or autobiographical, each week’s submission found the elder statesman of self-deprecating basement pop either twiddling his thumbs or racking his brain, using song writing and his self-imposed regimen as a means of both holding off the rush of life and diving into it. The idea of a record being an actual record in the archival sense is pretty fusty by today’s standards, but what Pepper produced over those 52 weeks gets close to a record in the truest meaning. Conceived, performed, and disseminated within such a tiny blast zone, the songs of The Song of The Week unintentionally captured a year of tumult in the multi-instrumentalist’s life. I Know Now Why You Cry, his 6th album, is a record of that record.
A meticulously curated revision of fourteen of the years’ worth of songs, the 35-minute LP is Pepper’s most organized song cycle since 2012’s Escape from Crystal Skull Mountain. Opening with a twinkling music box riff that gets taken over by a growling cello, Pepper dives headfirst into fear and vulnerability. The aimlessness of aging quickly gives way to the precariousness of life, that precariousness to the preciousness of life. In the end, as the entirety of the record whorls together, Pepper--now understanding why we cry--gives a hopeful thumbs-up as he’s lowered into molten pool of experience.
Though his most serious and earnest albums to date, I Know Now Why You Cry also ranks as Pepper's most fun. Dark considerations and bummer resignations are set to the sort of ear worms you’d hum to calm and distract a bawling kid. But Pepper’s newfound sincerity doesn’t come at the expense of sarcasm, nor mawkishness to the detriment of mocking. He still writes with acerbity of a pop culture drunk, slurring Sublime together with Enya, shouting out Larry David, The Terminator, and Bill and Ted. He's always been expert at singing with a tongue in his cheek, and he manages to be just as articulate with a lump in his throat.
Characteristically death obsessed, Pepper is equally life obsessed this time around. Not since the under-heard self-titled debut has he been this acoustic and sounded this live. The guitars and cello and violin resonate with each other, the accompanying wind and brass breathe together. There's tinkle of a baby piano, the chime of a toy xylophone, the 140 BPM whump of a sonogram: this is music made in the moment with what’s around, with the experiences and instruments at hand. For the past fifteen years, Pepper has been perfecting a performance and production so tight that hardly a fart can escape and while that laconic pop is still present, it’s here accompanied by more languid, reflective moments. I Know Now Why You Cry has learned the lesson of its maker's past year: slow the fuck down, bro.
-Andrew Hood, 2020
credits
released February 14, 2020
All songs written and played by Gregory Pepper
Recorded and mixed by David Partridge (HELM)
Additional overdubs recorded at Camp Pepper
Mastered by Andy Magoffin (House of Miracles)
Featuring: Tyler Belluz (arco bass), Colin Couch (tuba), Ben Grossman (hurdy gurdy), Matt Monoogian (pedal steel), Karen Ng (flute, clarinet, saxophone), Claire Whitehead (violin), Adam Zantinge (drums), and Ira Zingraff (trumpet). Gang vocals by the Peptones
Cover painting and label art by Harry Perets
We would like to acknowledge funding support from the Ontario Arts Council, an agency of the government of Ontario.
supported by 43 fans who also own “I Know Now Why You Cry”
Factor never disappoints, always solid for me. Those features too! i think I've found a huge amount of new artists just through factors music over the years. Arsenal Malfunction