
Pennan Brae

Walk With Me
Pennan Brae’s music has a 1970s tinge employing lush string arrangements, roaming pedal steel guitar and a rich, driving beat. Pennan’s 4th release, ‘The Astronot’, features 11 songs that serve as a soundtrack for the accompanying feature film ‘The Astronot’, which Pennan wrote, co-produced, and acted in.
The lead singles, ‘Walk With Me’ & ‘Crashland’ feature drummer Steve Ferrone (Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, Eric Clapton) & bassist Garry Gary Beers (INXS). The album was mixed by producer Kirk Kelsey (3 Doors Down, Creed) & mastered at Abbey Road Studios by Grammy Award-winning engineer Sean Magee (The Beatles Remasters, Pink Floyd). The album and film are set for release in the Summer of 2017.
BIOGRAPHY
“Shoot for the moon and if you miss you will still be among the stars”
Vancouver based singer-songwriter Pennan Brae could be a living vestige that the above quote is absolutely true. While working on his fourth album, he took an artistic turn he couldn’t have expected, leading him in a surprise direction that ended up fulfilling many of his ambitions. As a performer, Brae constantly challenges himself to not only grow musically, but to take risks. In doing so, he has created a work he is incredibly proud of, establishing himself as a truly independent artist.
“As a kid, I was fascinated by pictures of the planets, solar system and galaxies,” says Brae. “The space picture books of the 1970s really captured this. It was the tail end of the NASA moon landing missions and there were so many books for kids to read. The color of the pages and pictures; I don’t know what was in their ink, but the illustrations seemed so majestic.” With this in mind, Brae’s goal for the album cover – at that time called Midnight Reverie – was going to be fairly straightforward, with him dressed in a space suit standing in the countryside underneath a full moon. While riffing about ideas, photographer Dan Jackson suggested Brae hold an old ladder so it looked like he was going to climb up to the moon. Brae immediately changed the name of the album to THE ASTRONOT, and the seed was planted for another idea…but more on that later.
THE ASTRONOT was recorded at Blue Light Studio in Vancouver with Producer Kaj Falch-Nielsen, with additional sessions taking place in Los Angeles with renowned drummer Steve Ferrone (Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, Duran Duran, Eric Clapton) and INXS bassist Garry Gary Beers. “Hearing Steve Ferrone lay down the drums and Garry Gary Beers adding bass on “Walk with Me” and “Crashland” is the highlight of my career. When I was younger, I used to watch Steve drum on Eric Clapton’s 24 Nights at the Royal Albert Hall, which I had on VHS. With Garry, I was a big INXS fan in high school. They are an original band with an original sound and one of the all-time greats.” Composer and producer Eric Alexandrakis served as a mentor and one of the producers on THE ASTRONOT, and it was he who brought in Steve and Garry. “Working with Steve and Garry is such an honor. These are my musical heroes, it still hasn’t fully sunk in that I had the chance to record with them.”
Producer Kirk Kelsey (3 Door Down, Creed) joined the crew, working with Brae to make magic on the mix. “Kirk has such a wonderful touch and sensitivity on the tracks. His mixes gave the album a cinematic feel.” THE ASTRONOT was mastered by Grammy Award winning engineer Sean Magee(The Beatles Remasters, Pink Floyd, U2) at his home Studio, Abbey Road (“hallowed ground to me”), and, for the first time, Brae recorded with several instruments he’d never used before, adding violin, cello, mandolin, pedal steel guitar and banjo in to the orchestration. The songwriting was equally important. “I usually write alone, I kind of like to be in a quiet, dimly lit room and just start banging away. Writing lyrics is hard, sometime you write something amazing, other times you don’t, and you just have to keep at it. The lyrics on THE ASTRONOT cover a variety of universal topics: loneliness, longing and love.”
Not unlike the books Pennan read as a child, THE ASTRONOT has a 70’s feel, with piano led tracks and a take-the-top-down-go-for-a-ride vibe. Standout tracks include “Walk With Me,” a 3:12 second rocking stomper, “Crashland,” with its wicked guitar riff and Kinks-like touch, the very groovy “Goin’ Down,” featuring cello by David Peters, taking the song in a luminous direction and “If I Lose You,” a gorgeous tune with a shimmering harmonica break. The otherworldly “Crashland Dream” completes the album with its buzzy, spacey sound.
Along with the ear-worm worthy tracks, incredible guest performers and deft instrumentation, there’s something else to THE ASTRONOT; while shooting the cover Brae was struck with the idea to make a feature length movie, also called THE ASTRONOT, with his music serving as the soundtrack. “(Photographer) Dan made the suggestion that I should hold a rickety old ladder and from that moment I had the idea of a character who longed to be an astronaut but was inhibited in some way.” Anyone who is familiar with Brae’s first three albums won’t be entirely surprised at this path, since his popular YouTube channel features music videos that have gotten upward of 25,000 views.
Mostly THE ASTRONOT was the opportunity for the progress and change that Pennan Brae had been looking for. “This release is special because it represents growth. We tried many different arrangements and recorded with different instruments and musicians. It certainly feels like a departure from my earlier three albums. My goal was to write an album instead of a group of separate singles. I wanted this record to flow from song 1 to song 10, and I think we did that. I hope that listeners enjoy hearing it unfold.”