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Common Deer
They are called Common Deer, but this band is anything but common. You’ve never seen anything like them. Onstage they are mesmerizing; one musician jumps from vocals to violin to guitar while another moves from guitar to electric cello, or steps over to the synths and drum machine. This is done so seamlessly in a single song that it’s truly a well-rehearsed game of musical chairs. Few musicians could pull off such a thing without awkward gaps, tripping over cords or distracting the audience, but Common Deer – Graham McLaughlin (vocals, violin, guitar), Sheila Hart (vocals, keys), Adam Hart (cello, guitar, synth), Liam Farrell (percussion, synth, samples) and Connor Farrell (bass) – are exceptional multi-instrumentalists, and this becomes part of their engaging set. Add to that the unique fact that of the five bandmates, two sets are siblings. You don’t have to experience Common Deer live to get sucked into their music. Their debut EP, simply titled “I”, was written and recorded in 2016 and produced by Laurence Currie (Sloan, Wintersleep). It includes the creepy and crisp “Damages”, a reflection on toxic codependency, and the bright, harmony-heavy “Settle Down”, a call to arms for rejection of normative adulthood. These are two examples of the diverse musical potential the band possesses; with both Graham and Sheila as the primary lyricists, this creates a perfect balance between light and dark, optimism and realism. The EP also includes “Feather and Bone” – which received thousands of plays online prior to its official studio recording with Currie – a song that came to Adam after attending an EDM show and considering the deeper corporate and political interests of such events. And for the record, the band has never been concerned about who wrote what; they share writing credits to avoid getting attached to any one part. “It makes it easy to look at what’s best for the song as a whole and it keeps ego out when we’re all working together,” says Adam. Overall, the band describes themselves as having a “signature post-classical sound with new wave influences, weaving themes of the natural world with broader issues of modern life”.
Born and raised in various cities across Southern Ontario, each band member had diverse academic and career pursuits prior to joining Common Deer, spanning from mechanical engineering and business to classical performance, culinary arts and social work. Now music is their full-time job, with one of Canada’s top managers on their team, Jake Gold of The Management Trust (which developed The Tragically Hip into an arena act). Gold hooked them up with Currie to record a follow-up to their first demo. Released in 2014 before the current lineup was solidified, their original folk sound quickly – and consciously – has developed in a more progressive direction.
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