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Trevor Alguire finds his stride with sixth album

While scrolling through emails, songwriter Trevor Alguire stumbled across a message from an unfamiliar address. After curiously opening the note, Alguire said he was humbled and surprised at what he found.

While scrolling through emails, songwriter Trevor Alguire stumbled across a message from an unfamiliar address. After curiously opening the note, Alguire said he was humbled and surprised at what he found.

"I love playing in Alberta because people are actually listening." Submitted photo
"I love playing in Alberta because people are actually listening." Submitted photo

It was from this DJ in France and it was in broken English, but he just wrote to tell me that my latest album didnt just make his day, but his whole month, Alguire said over the telephone. When people ask me why I keep making music I say because of thatbecause of one guy in France who cares enough to send a note.

At the end of September, the 46-year-old released Perish in the Light, his sixth album. Despite the decades of music behind him, Alguire said this is the first album that he actually feels at ease with.

I dont know what it is, but this album just felt like it went together the way it was supposed to, he said. It seems like Im finally starting to figure out how things work and what goes well together.

Alguire first picked up a guitar as a shaggy-headed teenager in the 1980s, spending hours jotting down rough lyrics and dreaming up guitar riffs.

Music has always been like a puzzle that I loved putting together. I was always that kid running around trying to put bands together, he said. But it wasnt until I was about 30 that I finally had something to say.

I think the best songwriters are the ones who have been around for awhile and have been through stuff in life, whether it be tough, amazing or something in betweenthats the stuff that makes a songwriter.

Since those early days, music has kind of taken over Alguires life, blurring the lines between musician, business owner and father.

Its not easy finding a balance, but music is pushing me more and more. Its got a hold of me and wont let go, he said. I love having something to show at the end of the day and Ive always been that way.

Drawing from his own stories, the folk-country tracks of Perish in the Light brings listeners down with dark and lonesome ballads like My Sweet Rosetta and then picks them back up again with faster-paced tunes like Flash Flood and You Dont Write Anymore.

I want to bring people up and down with my music. I tried to make an album that resembles a month in my life and not just a day, said the musician. I dont write fiction. I write about my life and the people Ive met and the things that we go through.

The album is dark, but its still hopeful.

To make his raw lyrics stand out, Alguire said he puts a lot of thought into finding a sweet balance between music and lyrics, adding organs, fiddle and pedal steels to the latest album.

I start with the vocal pattern and guitar and then all of a sudden I start to hear things come inIll hear a fiddle go through a certain part or Ill hear an organ in one part, said Alguire, adding that he brought in a handful of other talented musicians for the recent recordings.

Thats what being a musician is all aboutputting that puzzle together.

Since the release of Perish in the Light, Alguire has kept busy trekking across Western Canada, booking a slew of shows in Alberta including a stop at Jaspers Whistle Stop Pub, Nov. 15.

I like playing in Alberta because people are actually listening. In some places crowd engagement is really dropping off and people dont seem to listen, he said. But in Alberta its just different.

The music starts at 9 p.m. and admission is free.

While scrolling through emails, songwriter Trevor Alguire stumbled across a message from an unfamiliar address. After curiously opening the note, Alguire said he was humbled and surprised at what he found.

It was from this DJ in France and it was in broken English, but he just wrote to tell me that my latest album didnt just make his day, but his whole month, Alguire said over the telephone. When people ask me why I keep making music I say because of thatbecause of one guy in France who cares enough to send a note.

At the end of September, the 46-year-old released Perish in the Light, his sixth album. Despite the decades of music behind him, Alguire said this is the first album that he actually feels at ease with.

I dont know what it is, but this album just felt like it went together the way it was supposed to, he said. It seems like Im finally starting to figure out how things work and what goes well together.

Alguire first picked up a guitar as a shaggy-headed teenager in the 1980s, spending hours jotting down rough lyrics and dreaming up guitar riffs.

Music has always been like a puzzle that I loved putting together. I was always that kid running around trying to put bands together, he said. But it wasnt until I was about 30 that I finally had something to say.

I think the best songwriters are the ones who have been around for awhile and have been through stuff in life, whether it be tough, amazing or something in betweenthats the stuff that makes a songwriter.

Since those early days, music has kind of taken over Alguires life, blurring the lines between musician, business owner and father.

Its not easy finding a balance, but music is pushing me more and more. Its got a hold of me and wont let go, he said. I love having something to show at the end of the day and Ive always been that way.

Drawing from his own stories, the folk-country tracks of Perish in the Light brings listeners down with dark and lonesome ballads like My Sweet Rosetta and then picks them back up again with faster-paced tunes like Flash Flood and You Dont Write Anymore.

I want to bring people up and down with my music. I tried to make an album that resembles a month in my life and not just a day, said the musician. I dont write fiction. I write about my life and the people Ive met and the things that we go through.

The album is dark, but its still hopeful.

To make his raw lyrics stand out, Alguire said he puts a lot of thought into finding a sweet balance between music and lyrics, adding organs, fiddle and pedal steels to the latest album.

I start with the vocal pattern and guitar and then all of a sudden I start to hear things come inIll hear a fiddle go through a certain part or Ill hear an organ in one part, said Alguire, adding that he brought in a handful of other talented musicians for the recent recordings.

Thats what being a musician is all aboutputting that puzzle together.

Since the release of Perish in the Light, Alguire has kept busy trekking across Western Canada, booking a slew of shows in Alberta including a stop at Jaspers Whistle Stop Pub, Nov. 15.

I like playing in Alberta because people are actually listening. In some places crowd engagement is really dropping off and people dont seem to listen, he said. But in Alberta its just different.

The music starts at 9 p.m. and admission is free.

Kayla Byrne [email protected]

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