Crystal Eyes Release Soaring Indie Track "Don't Turn Around" (Bobo Integral Records)

 

Crystal Eyes. Photo courtesy of the band

Perfect for the pastel wistfulness of spring’s earliest days, Calgary-based psych-rockers Crystal Eyes offer you one simple message – “Don’t Turn Around”. This single marks the second to be released from the band’s upcoming album The Sweetness Restored, out on April 22 via Bobo Integral Records.

Gravelly and nostalgic, “Don’t Turn Around” soars with intensity, toying with notions of surrender overtop of a textural indie haze. The track warmly complements the guiding narrative of leading single “Wishes”, guaranteeing a sense of longing for what’s to come.

In the days following “Don’t Turn Around”’s release, vocalist and guitarist Erin Jenkins sat down with Also Cool to deconstruct her plethora of personal touches to the creative process, along with the stacked lineup of Canadian musicians who helped to craft its sonic depth.

Rebecca Judd for Also Cool Mag: This single packs a heavy thematic punch, and the upcoming record promises to as well – described as a "feel-good self-help record for the age of existential dread". Tell us more about the darker themes to "Don't Turn Around", and which external forces inspired this direction from Crystal Eyes.

Erin Jenkins of Crystal Eyes: My songwriting mostly comes from a subconscious place – so I guess this is inspired by whatever anxieties are secretly lurking down there *laughs*. I don't really set out to write songs about anything specific; I try to stay open to the possibility of what the song could be, and then analyze what it means later.

The songs on this record are equally inspired by external influences – the people I'm playing with, music I'm listening to, or music I've loved, aesthetics I'm trying to interpret as a melody or a rhythm. It's a very collaborative process that everyone contributes to. When I listen to “Don't Turn Around”, I think it's definitely about memories, the weight of years added up, how we measure our worth by what we build and the years by what they take. There is pain in caring too much, but there is beauty too.

Also Cool: "Don't Turn Around" marches forward with grungy vocals and a steady beat, harkening back to the indie rock grit of the 2000s. Which artists and projects influenced the makings of this single?

Crystal Eyes: To be honest, I wasn't necessarily thinking about early 2000s music when we were working on this, but I totally hear it now that it's been pointed out. It makes a lot of sense because I love music from that era – I grew up on it!

For “Don't Turn Around”, I was mostly thinking about stuff like Echo and the Bunnymen, The Chameleons and New Order – post-punk rock that is super pop, but still really organic-feeling.

Crystal Eyes. Photo courtesy of Walter E. Neuman

AC: Contrasting the depths of this track is the music video, featuring breezy vintage footage of parasailors on a beach. How did you put this video together? Was there any intentionality in choosing this footage to complement the sound?

CE: This is some old family footage I discovered one Christmas. I love home movies. I thought the footage really reflected the music, it just felt right. There's kind of a vulnerability in the video and a sense of it being a memory that seemed to work.

I took a stab at a first edit of the video, and then Joleen (Crystal Eyes’ synth player) came in and really sharpened it up and tightened the narrative because we really didn't have much footage to work with!

AC: This record marks your latest release since "Radical Softness" in 2019. How has the band evolved since then, and what more is to be expected from The Sweetness Restored?

CE: I'd say the band has evolved a lot since then, because I've collaborated with so many different people over the years. The recording process for The Sweetness Restored was really amazing. We went to Montreal and recorded at Breakglass Studios – this was shortly before the pandemic.

My friend Andrew Woods produced and engineered the record, and his spirit and vision brought everything together. There was just such an air of creativity and generosity – and silliness. Andrew got the idea to add a string quartet (we were thinking big), so he brought in Eve Parker Finley and Zou Zou Robidoux to add string arrangements to a number of the songs.

Basia Bulat was also a big part of the process, lending her wisdom – especially for the vocals. She sat in the studio while I was recording vocals and would run in between takes to shout suggestions – “try it like this!”. Monty Munroe played bass and just killed it, and is, like, the hardest working person ever. We also got to use some amazing instruments like a Therevox and a Hammond C3 with Leslie Speakers.

Past Crystal Eyes member Kenny Murdoch played drums, and current members Jordan Tettensor played lead guitar and Joleen Toner on synth. There's even a choir on one track (Hermitess and her Witch Choir on “No Heaven”). Mark Lawson mixed the record. We threw him probably 1,000 tracks to work with, and he was somehow able to wrangle it into a cohesive, really beautiful sound.

The album covers a lot of ground - genres, moods, etc., but I think it flows really well together. It's definitely something where I hope people can listen to the album as a whole.

AC: Thanks for your time – we're super excited for The Sweetness Restored to be released in all its glory! Aside from dropping this record, what else is in store for Crystal Eyes for the rest of the year?

CE: We have a couple upcoming festival shows at Big Winter Classic in Calgary and Winterruption in Edmonton. We're looking forward to playing a lot more shows and getting back to touring.

We're also writing a lot of new songs, and I anticipate we'll be starting plans to record more again soon. It's been a weird time to be a band, I'm just trying to be patient with myself and everyone else and do the things we want to do, not things we feel like we have to do. No need to force the universe.

Stream “Don’t Turn Around” below!


Crystal Eyes

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Rebecca Judd is the features editor of Also Cool Mag.


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