HOLDING BACK THE LEVEE

“I wanted to make something that sounded like all the albums I love to listen to. From Neil Young through to The Jayhawks.”

Evocative storytelling, rich musicality and the heartfelt conveyance of human emotion. Those are some of the hallmarks of Holding Back The Levee, the exceptional debut solo album from Melbourne songwriter Mitch Dean. After the success of his Suburban Speakeasy EP (2017), Mitch has delved deeper into his creative well and crafted an album that blends soulful Americana from its key components of country, folk and the blues.

Mitch’s musical journey began with acoustic guitar sessions with his dad, in the shed of their Mornington Peninsula home. That experience piqued his curiosity and led to the realisation that he could write and primitively record his own early attempts at songwriting. From there the world opened up as Mitch dove headfirst into the heady rush of rock ’n’ roll, initially with garage-rock band The Marzies and then, in 2005, a swing down the dusty road of country-rock with The Distance – the band in which Mitch would find his feet and gain his alt- country bearings over the ensuing decade.

Both bands allowed Mitch to experience collective songwriting, recording and touring, all of which contributed to the continued refinement of his own writing. Playing with The Distance solidified his standing in the local scene, brought him into contact with heroes and respected contemporaries and planted the seed that allowed him to grow into his role as a solo artist.

Mitch recalls that when he began writing the songs for Holding Back The Levee, he was enthralled with Tom Petty’s Wildflowers album. “I just remember being really taken with how he could just use four chords to illustrate a story so well. A part of me was aiming towards that kind of direction for most of these songs and I purposely kept all of them very simple in terms of structure.”

Holding Back The Levee sounds like an album that has been crafted by a songwriter who knows the importance of allowing songs the space to breathe and their melodies and phrasing to shine. Mitch has clearly studied the masters and has a strong admiration for songwriters such as Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Gary Louris (The Jayhawks), Neil Young and Kevin Bennett. As such, it was clearly a thrill and honour to have Bennett sing guest vocals on the album title track.

“We (The Distance) used to support his band The Flood when they’d come to VIC for shows, and if we weren’t supporting we’d still go along to see him play. I’ve always kept in contract with KB over the years, he’s a great supporter of the next generation of songwriters and performers and he’s always been so encouraging. Years ago I asked him if I ever did an album would there be a chance he could sing on it and even after all these years he stayed true to his word and made it happen for me, he’s an absolute legend!”

That song is a mid-album anchor of grit and grace – the centrepiece that rocks and rolls a little harder than it’s surrounding songs. It’s a sign of the range that Mitch, producer Colin Leadbetter and the musicians were able to bring to the album. They recorded primarily at two Melbourne studios (The Aviary, EOR Studio) and utilised a number of home studios for vocals and piano.

On album opener, and first single, ‘A Face In A Long Line’, Mitch’s keening, high and lonesome voice takes centre-stage – supple and soulful like an Antipodean Chris Robinson (The Black Crowes). Elsewhere he invests just the right amount of six-string bite and shimmer in the tragic tale of ‘His Father’s Gun’, picks up the pace with freight train drumming and bluesy harmonica on the Dylanesque romp of ‘It’s In The Stream’ and testifies to the power of keeping an open heart in a strong relationship on ‘Let It Fall’. ‘What Can Go Wrong?’ throws caution to the wind with optimism, silver linings and a killer guitar solo, while ‘Please Don’t Wake Me’ is perfectly cast through a dreamy, cosmic country lens.

These are songs that unfurl with economy and endless, instantly hummable melodies. Combined with the gentle gravitational pull of the rhythm section it’s the sound of lazy Sunday afternoons and a custom-made soundtrack to rolling down sun-kissed ocean highways.

1. His Fathers Gun

From ‘Holding Back the Levee’ Released June 19th 2020

2. Broken Wing

From ‘Holding Back the Levee’. Release Jun 19th 2020

3. In the Stream

From ‘Holding Back the Levee’ Released Jun 19th 2020

FOLLOW MITCH DEAN ON SPOTIFY

Yeah its all in the stream these days. Everyone’s getting swept downstream, the tide is rising!!!
So jump on in, drown yourself, be immersed and above all help the artists by following their Spotify profiles (god knows we need any help we can get to break through the 1000 distractions that are all fighting for your attention!) .

Suburban Speakeasy EP

On Mitch Dean’s new EP ‘Suburban Speakeasy’ you can hear the history of roots music, filtered through a decade of song writing and live shows and culminating in five songs that explore heartache, tender love and muddied emotional waters.

From a shed in the suburbs of Melbourne, Mitch set about crafting songs that spoke to universal concerns, daily troubles and the realities of life. The title Suburban Speakeasy is “a reference to those prohibition-era 1920’s homes where people would come to forget their worries, congregate, talk, muse and dream… all with the aid of a drink of course! It kind of summed up the destination and the writing process for this EP,” reflects Mitch.

After spending 10 years writing and performing as part of the alt-country rock band ‘The Distance’, Mitch felt the time was right to move from side of stage and shine a new light on his own songs. “Making an EP to call my own was something I’d always wanted to try for a long time but never really had the reason to do so.”

Enlisting the talents of producer/mixer Colin Leadbetter (Katie Noonan, Whitley), and surrounding himself with a collection of some of Melbourne’s finest musicians, including Andy Reed (drums), Joe Cope (Hammond organ), Sarah-Rose McIvor (piano), Colin Leadbetter (bass), Brendan Mitchell (pedal steel), Damian Cafarella (electric guitar, mandolin) and Jemma Nicole (backing vocals), Mitch has recorded an EP that serves as a signpost to his future musical direction and shows the strength of his songwriting abilities.

VISIT THE WEB STORE TO BUY THE EP

Mitch’s songs are steeped in imaginative storytelling, the kind that leaves the listener believing he has lived and loved like the characters in his songs. Musically he effortlessly straddles the worlds of acoustic and electric country and folk music – perfectly blending them into what is now considered Americana music. Suburban Speakeasy drifts from catchy melody-driven tunes to downright dark and foreboding at times, with a real sense of melancholy. His influences draw from old time favourites Neil Young, Dylan and Petty, but also some newer lights including Gary Louris (Jayhawks), Ryan Adams and Kevin Bennett (the Flood).

With a high, yearning vocal sound, Mitch opens the EP with the seasonal strains of ‘Before the Fall’. Its heady melodicism conjures up open roads and wide plains as he sings of a lover’s ever-changing heart. ‘Muddy Water’ ventures into darker Americana-noir territory, accompanied by lush, ominous orchestration and Jemma Nicole’s haunting vocal “Muddy water hides the lies until the tide runs out“ sing the pair, through the gothic tale of death and guilt. ‘Something To You’ lifts the mood with a Ryan Adams-styled devotional ballad that trades in beautiful lyrical phrasing and a timeless take on the tangled intricacies of relationships. ‘Like A Thief’ finds a rich, warm groove to ride on, a nod to one of Mitch’s strongest influences in The Jayhawks. It also highlights his ability to craft a melodic verse that shifts up a level to a soaring chorus, elevating the tale of a spurned lover, abandoned and cast adrift. Rounding out the EP is the five minute ‘Shelter From The Rain’, a gorgeous Hammond organ-led song that spotlight’s Mitch’s arrangement skills and ability to corral tension, storytelling and emotional resonance into a single track. It builds and builds without ever resorting to bombast or overt rock-isms. He sings of vulnerability and both the risk and solace found in giving oneself over to another person in a relationship.

As a debut solo release, Suburban Speakeasy is a commanding example of the art of song writing and how depth and lyrical poetry can be found in music that deals primarily with affairs of the heart. Modern country music demands authenticity and Mitch Dean, as a solo artist, is undoubtedly an auteur in that regard.

EP was released February 3rd, 2017 via iTunes, Bandcamp, Google play, Spotify and Mitch’s webstore: go here to buy it!

FOLLOW MITCH DEAN ON SPOTIFY

Yeah its all in the stream these days. Everyone’s getting swept downstream, the tide is rising!!!
So jump on in, drown yourself, be immersed and above all help the artists by following their Spotify profiles (god knows we need any help we can get to break through the 1000 distractions that are all fighting for your attention!) .

1. Before the Fall

From ‘Suburban Speakeasy’ EP – Released Feb 2017

2. Muddy Water

From ‘Suburban Speakeasy’ EP. Release Feb 2017

3. Something to You

From ‘Suburban Speakeasy’ EP – Released Feb 2017

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