Calgary-based band Ghostkeeper are sharing another new track from their upcoming LP,Multidimensional Culture, out May 27 via Victory Pool. “This Is How I Know You” is a “prayer for our missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls…and a prayer for Truth and Reconciliation,” says Shane Ghostkeeper.
The single arrives with a video from the band’s Sarah Houle who says of the visuals, “The two protagonists are seeking new eyes in an attempt to understand the reality of MMIWG. With the help of four Spirit Creatures, they witness what was broken become whole again.”
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‘Let these bodies know / that they exist for one another,’ beckons Ghostkeeper above an angularly shifting progression. ‘This is a reckoning of truth and perception / a smooth
redemption. Each phrase is echoed by a response from a ghostly choir, which blurs the line
between the spirit world and the world of flesh and bone. These are the opening lines from Ghostkeeper’s latest offering, Multidimensional Culture, an album which contains no shortage of dimensions, both sonically, and spiritually.
The duo of Ghostkeeper and Houle (originally from the Paddle Prairie Metis Settlement in Alberta) met in their early twenties, and began artistically collaborating soon after. Sarah, already a visual artist and musician, was integral to determining the imagery for the project from early on. She utilized her talents to design their album artwork, t-shirts, and masks, while Shane, who had only recently embarked on his musical journey, began laying the ground work for what would become their shared musical voice. Once their vision for the project had presented itself, the duo’s trajectory and purpose became clear.
Their early recordings were released through Calgary-based record labels Saved By Vinyl and Flemish Eye (home to acclaimed artists Chad Vangaalen, Yves Jarvis, and Preoccupations). The band have long collaborated with Calgary heavy-hitter musicians Ryan Bourne and Eric Hamelin, who are integral in forging the melodic complexity of the bands’ sonically expansive catalog. Multidimensional Culture is at once unpredictable, and easily digestible.
The album blends the avant-garde instincts of Ghostkeeper’s previous releases with a new found peacefulness that has presented itself since the couple became parents. Thematically, Multidimensional Culture tackles many of life’s big questions, from the fragility of human existence, to the innocence of love. Even the pain of their ancestral discrimination is approached with a tenderness and understanding that only a narrator with true empathy and wisdom could provide. The sonic range of this record traverses a wide spectrum of influences, including African psychedelia, traditional Metis music, 70’s freak-folk traditions, and proto-punk guitar based bands like Television. All of these influences blend seamlessly into a sound that is unique, yet familiar.
Each song holds its own weight as a pillar to which the greater sonic structure rests upon. Each story has been lived, and there is a penetrating honesty in both Shane and Sarah’s delivery that is palpable. Ghostkeeper channels the spirit world in all of its pain, beauty and wonderment, and gifts it to anyone willing to accept.