Louie Sanchez shares video and releases debut EP via Next Door Records (The Weather Station, poolblood) / Opens up about experience in Canadian military
Louis Sanchez (Eirene Cloma of Pantayo) releases their self-titled EP, out November 8 via Next Door Records. The EP was recorded at Gavin Gardiner’s All Day Coconut studios, with an array of musicians including Stew Crookes on pedal steel, Lucas Gadke on electric and upright bass, Laura C. Bates on fiddle, Ohbijou’s Casey Mecija on background vocals and Justin Ruppel on drums. It was produced by Simone Schmidt (One Hundred Dollars, The Highest Order, Fiver, Splitter), with arrangements by Schmidt and Cloma.
Recently, Cloma opened up about their experience serving in the Canadian Military and how playing music helped them cope while being deployed to Kandahar. “Want You To Notice Me”, is a song written “after coming home from my deployment to Afghanistan at the age of 21 and adjusting to civilian life,” says Cloma. “Speaks to the invisibility and loneliness I felt as a young racialized army veteran trying to get on my feet after a very intense experience. I felt like I couldn’t relate to my peers in leftist activist spaces. I thought that being in the military and going to war would help gain the respect and confidence I was looking for but that wasn’t the case. I wrote this song while processing that grief and disappointment. A resistance song for working-class Filipinos in Canada. Connecting migrant labor to intergenerational trauma, Spanish colonization, US imperialism, and on-going militarization of the Philippines. When recording this song, Simone and I envisioned listening to the radio alone on a warm late night.”
WATCH / SHARE “WANT YOU TO NOTICE ME” HERE
MORE ABOUT EIRENE CLOMA’S MILITARY BACKGROUND
"In September 2009, I deployed to Kandahar Airfield (KAF) on Op Athena as a Material Management Technician. At 21, I was the youngest logistician and co-managed the camp warehouse for the National Support Element, a unit of over 500 personnel overseeing transportation, supplies, and maintenance of the combat mission in Afghanistan.K AF had guitars and other instruments on base and I would practice in an aisle of the after hours. On this deployment, I would cycle through feelings of loneliness and uncertainty. Being in a combat operation, it was hard to feel at ease."
"I balanced the stress and rigidity of the army with creativity. I spent a lot of my down time during training and deployment listening, playing, recording, and writing. Sometimes song ideas would come to me while in the field or in the middle of a brief. Music was a reminder of who I was outside of the military. Throughout my service in both the army and navy, I would feel that tension inside me that was expressive, imaginative, and boundless but also trying to fit into the expectations of military thought and conduct. Singing and playing helped soothe worries as I navigated young adulthood in the military."
LISTEN / SHARE “COME HOME TONIGHT” HERE
MORE ABOUT LOUIE SANCHEZ
It’s no easy feat to carry the fervency of the modern love song, but Louie Sanchez has the vivid timbre and warm confidence to inject the lost art with some wayward outlaw swagger. The solo project of Toronto-based multi-instrumentalist Eirene Cloma successfully avoids familiar platitudes and unnecessary bells and whistles, opting instead for the solid songwriting of the ballad. “At the beginning, I thought I’d make a country album,” says Cloma, “And then producer [Simone Schmidt] asked me, ‘well, what is country?’ which got me thinking about how to make this record really sound like me.”
Cloma is well-known as a member of queer Filipinx kulintang ensemble Pantayo, whose self-titled debut was shortlisted for the 2020 Polaris Music Prize. Where Pantayo plays with percussive atonal delirium (what they call “lo-fi R&B gong punk”), Louie Sanchez is inspired by the self-assured croon of Filipino folk music, harana. Harana is a courtship practice in which a man serenades his beloved from outside her window, hoping to gain her attention. “When I think of harana, I think of a voice that fills the humid, tropical air. You know, like you’re listening to the radio on a warm summer evening and a song is crackling from the speaker, keeping you company.”
WATCH / SHARE “ONE THING I CAN AFFORD” HERE
It’s not an overstatement to say Eirene Cloma has the rare vocal talent deep enough to lend gravity and smoky enough to fill the entire room. It shines on “I Want You To Notice Me,” where the desire for recognition is paired down to the penetrating lucidity of voice and finger-style guitar. “Here with Me Now,” has an overt country flair thanks to its pedal steel twang, but the luscious declaration of the chorus (“all i want is you/in that perfect moment/here with me now”) plays in the risky low-end of ‘adult contemporary’ - think reverent, slightly cheeky nod to the glory of the Women & Songs era, Tracy Chapman does James Taylor. ““I think of Louie as a humble, soft spoken singer,” says Cloma, “I’ve always loved solo acts. Jose Gonzalez, k.d. Lang, Paula Cole, Jim Croce — I mean, who can deny a good Sheryl Crow song?”
There’s a no-frills verve and serene tenderness to Louie Sanchez, where the work of romance is both an offering and an invitation – to arrive as yourself - melancholy, worn, a little rugged, with open hands.