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The Acorn (band)

Canadian indie folk band From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Acorn (band)
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The Acorn is the music project of singer-songwriter and musician Rolf-Carlos Klausener formed in Ottawa, Ontario in 2003. Their music spanned numerous genres, from art-folk and indie, to minimal electro and folk-rock, and members played with numerous other bands.[1] Their songs have charted on Canadian campus charts and have been in rotation on CBC Radio 3 and The Verge.[citation needed]

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History

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Rolf Klausener, the principal songwriter, vocalist and guitarist, founded the band as a solo project, but was soon joined by guitarist Howie Tsui, bassist Jeff Debutte and drummer Jeffrey Malecki.[2]

They were quickly signed to Kelp Records, and produced the 2004 album The Pink Ghosts.[3] Their subsequent tour produced the album Live At Royal Albert Hall,[4] and they released the EP Blankets.[5][6]

In 2006, they signed with the label Paper Bag Records and released the well-received EP Tin Fist. [7][8] They were also joined by singer and keyboardist Keiko Devaux; Bryce left the band and was replaced by drummer Jeffrey Malecki.

In 2007, they released Glory Hope Mountain, whose songs describe the life of Klausener's Honduras-born mother, Gloria Esperanza Montoya.[9][10][11] That was followed by the albums Heron Act (2007),[12] Ear Worms (2008),[13] the EP Little Elms (2008),[14] and a split EP with the band Ohbijou.[15] After Glory Hope Mountain, singer-songwriter Rolf Klausener joined the band, as did multi-instrumentalist Shaun Weadick. Weadick and Devaux left in 2008.

The Acorn then went on the road, traveling to the UK as the opening act for Fleet Foxes, Elbow, Akron / Family and Bon Iver, and playing the End of the Road Festival, Electric Picnic, the Brighton Festival, and The Great Escape Festival, among other gigs.[16][17][18] In Canada, they played the Calgary Folk Music Festival, the Hillside Festival,[19] and the Winnipeg Folk Festival.[20]

In 2009, The Acorn was a long-listed nominee for Uncut Magazine's Uncut Music Award, for Glory Hope Mountain.[21] The album was also nominated for the Polaris Music Prize, making The Acorn the only Ottawa band to ever be so nominated.[22] In early 2010, they released the EP Restoration[23] and, in June, the album No Ghost[24][25] and went on a two-month tour. In the interim, they recorded a remix album of No Ghost, called Make The Least Of The Day: No Ghost Reinterpreted, which includes remixes by Four Tet, Chad VanGaalen, Born Ruffians and Diamond Rings.[26][27] Tsui and Maleckie left the band in 2010; they were replaced by drummer Pat Johnson, multi-instrumentalist Adam Saikaley and bassist Martin Charbonneau.

In 2011 Klausner began working on an electronic dance project called 'Silkken Laumann' with Johnnson and Saikaley.[28] The group released their debut album Not Forever Enough on January 1, 2014.[29] They regrouped as The Acorn to release the 2015 album Vieux Loup,[30][31][32][33] which was nominated for the 2015 Polaris Prize.[34]

In 2011, Klausener had co-founded Ottawa's Arboretum Festival which, in 2018, re-branded as 'Bon-Fire'.[35] Klausener is the festival's creative director. The Acorn last performed in 2017;[36] Klausener speaks of The Acorn in the past tense.[37]

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Discography

Albums

  • The Pink Ghosts (2004, re-released 2007), Kelp Records
  • Live At Royal Albert Hall (2006), Kelp Records
  • Glory Hope Mountain (2007, re-released 2017), Paper Bag Records
  • Heron Act (2007), Paper Bag Records
  • Ear Worms (2008), Independent
  • No Ghost (2010), Paper Bag Records, Bella Union
  • Make The Least Of The Day: No Ghost Reinterpreted (2010), Paper Bag Records, Bella Union
  • Vieux Loup (2015), Paper Bag Records

EPs

  • Blankets (2005), Kelp Records
  • Patches (2005), Duotone Records (Japan)[38]
  • Tin Fist (2006), Paper Bag Records[39][40]
  • Little Elms (2008), Independent[41]
  • The Acorn + Ohbijou Split 12" with Ohbijou (2008), Kelp Records[42]
  • Restoration (2010), Bella Union

Compilation Inclusions

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See also

References

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