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Look no further than the opening track of the new album Gypsy Summer to understand Cam
Penner. "It's going to get worse before it gets better" Penner chants on the powerful opener
?Driftwood'. This album is a rallying call. It reaches out, boldly and magnanimously into present-day
existence. With Gypsy Summer, Penner continues to successfully roam from his comfort zone into
new territory.
His fourth and first self produced album finds Penner exploring new textures and bolder sounds. It
is his most self assured outing to date. Even though his fractured rootsy persona still creeps into
the mix, this isn't a depressing record. Gypsy Summer is full of hope. It's full of love. It's electrifying
and provoking. It's full of everything we should be looking for, not only musically, but in life.
Penner plays to his strengths; every tale is a relatable, personal story delivered from the
perspective of characters we want to know so when he adds steel and harmonies to the beautiful
?Flesh & Bone', the noisy fuzz to ?Gypsy Woman' or strings and electric guitar to the inspirational
?Hey My My My', you aren't overwhelmed by the new textures, you simply sink into the backdrops.
The symphony of strings that frames the classic Penner lyricism of ?Hour of Need' showcase the
tasteful evolution of his sound, but the change seems completely natural and essential to his
growth as a musician.
His gruff voice still oozes more emotion than you'd think possible and the straight forward lyrics
"follow your heart wherever it leads, I will follow my heart until it bleeds" are still gripping, but there
are moments that will surprise and amaze even the most devoted Cam Penner fan. ?My Lover & I'
explodes out of the speakers with a pseudo-funk groove and the drum heavy intro to ?Throw Your
Hands Up' is so surprising, but Penner understands these bigger sounds well.
In a complicated world, Cam Penner finds beauty in simplicity, with an honest, spare approach to
folk music that is refreshing in an age filled with so much insincerity and irony. Singing
uncompromising songs about redemption and truth, his is a voice for the disenfranchised, a
storyteller for those who never reach their destination. Penner's fiercely personal lyrics are
complemented by a gentle acoustic guitar style, and the defiant heroes of his songs are weary, but
they are never defeated.
Penner had a unique view on the world early; his parents owned and ran an illegal roadhouse and
his grandfather made and sold his own moonshine within a small Manitoba Mennonite town. At
eighteen Penner left small town life to wander the highways and back roads of North America. A
year later he found himself in Chicago serving mystery soup and stale bread to two hundred and
fifty homeless men a day. Next, a women & children's shelter, then youth shelters and detox
centers. For thirteen years he immersed himself in this subculture absorbing as much raw
humanity as he could. When the shift was over he would spend endless cathartic hours writing and
playing his guitar, exorcising his emotions through music. After becoming a self-taught expert on
homelessness, he decided to become a full time touring artist, meanwhile becoming homeless
himself.
Cam Penner has carved his own path. Music born from the soil and sin of this world. He has
described his philosophical outlook and songwriting muse: "Sometimes I feel the thousands of
souls I've listened to are people living inside of me, telling their tales." Agreed. When listening to
Penners songs you can hear the struggle, the hope, the yearning to be better.
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