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NEW ARKELLS ALBUM, MORNING REPORT, OUT TODAY

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NEW ARKELLS ALBUM, MORNING REPORT, OUT TODAY

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BAND ALSO ANNOUNCES TWO SPECIAL SHOWS AT MASSEY HALL IN TORONTO NOVEMBER 4 AND 5

05 AUGUST 2016 (Toronto, ON) MORNING REPORT, the highly-anticipated fourth studio album from 4X JUNO Award-winners Arkells is out today via Universal Music Canada, the country’s leading music company. Following a string of festival performances this summer including Bonnaroo, Lollapalooza, Firefly Music Festival, Pemberton Music Festival, WayHome Music and Arts Festival and Rock The Shores, the new music that the gold-selling band teased on stage is now officially available to fans. “Private School”, the first single off MORNING REPORT, is currently #2 at Alternative radio in Canada, and the release of the album’s first track “Drake’s Dad” took the internet by storm last week with coverage in Pitchfork, Time and The FADER. “Drake’s Dad” is about a chance encounter that Arkells frontman Max Kerman had with Drake’s dad himself while visiting Memphis with some friends on a bachelor weekend. Drake’s dad, Dennis Graham, is also featured in the video. Today’s release of MORNING REPORT also coincides with the band’s announcement that they will be playing two headline shows at Toronto’s Massey Hall on Friday, November 4 and Saturday, November 5, with very special guests Frank Turner and The Sleeping Souls.

Listen to MORNING REPORT

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Massey Hall tickets on sale from Wednesday, August 10 at 10 a.m. EST
Friday, November 4
Saturday, November 5

Arkells are proud to have English folk-punk troubadour Frank Turner join them on these two incredible nights. Last week Arkells announced a slew of US tour dates in support of Frank Turner, in addition to a select number of headlining dates. For more information on Arkells tour dates and pre-order packages, please visit arkellsmusic.com.   About MORNING REPORT:

PRODUCED BY: JOE CHICCARELLI (THE STROKES, MY MORNING JACKET), TONY HOFFER (BECK, M83), BRIAN WEST (SIA, AWOLNATION), GUS VAN GO (THE STILLS, WINTERSLEEP)

“It’s a weird time to be a rock band right now,” observes Max Kerman, the singer, guitarist, and chief songwriter for the Arkells. “I just feel like rock has gotten so conservative and doesn’t know where to go. To be honest, I don’t really listen to a lot of rock music right now.” That’s not a radical statement for your average twenty-something in this EDM-dominated era, but it’s a bit surprising coming from a guitar-slinging guy whose band seemingly personifies a certain old-school, ethic. Hailing from the gritty industrial outpost of Hamilton, Ontario, the Arkells have notched four Juno Awards and a gold record on their sweat-rusted belts, proving there’s still a place for passionate, no-bullshit rock ‘n’ soul in the mainstream. (In 2015, they were the most-played band on Canadian alt-rock radio.) But the group’s new album, MORNING REPORT, betrays a more irreverent, adventurous ethos that more readily recalls the cut-and-paste approach of hip-hop beatmakers than the plug-and-play attack of a live rock band, with click-tracked rhythms, subliminal samples, electronic pulses, and sax and violins threaded into the richly textured mix. Certainly, this is the Arkells’ most eclectic album to date, from the piano-pounded, “California Love”-schooled swagger of “Private School” to the silver-lined break-up song “My Heart’s Always Yours,” the sort of ascendant, blood-pumping anthem you can easily imagine sparking an arena full of waving illuminated smartphones. But if the Arkells have mostly scrubbed away the surface soot of their Hamilton-spawned sound, lyrically, Kerman’s songwriting hits even closer to home. “A lot of the songs are about me and characters in my life: my friends, my parents, my girlfriend,” Kerman says. “And a lot of times, they’re songs about what happened the night before. So that’s why it’s called MORNING REPORT: you text your friend the next day and it’s like, ‘Give me the morning report!’” But MORNING REPORT balances tales of last night’s debauchery with more sobering examinations of a time in life that doesn’t get much play in rock music: your late-twenties. It’s the phase when all your friends start getting married, your parents suddenly decide to get divorced, and long-distance relationships hit their shit-or-get-off-the-pot breaking point. But while melancholic, meditative ballads like “Passenger Seat” and “Come Back Home” provide unflinching portraits of marriages on the brink of collapse, rousing, soul-powered sing-alongs like “A Little Rain” pay poignant tribute to the friendships that help you through the tough times, and provide that much-needed shoulder to cry on. “That’s another thing that’s so conservative about white-guy indie rock,” says Kerman. “What makes Drake so awesome is he just puts all his emotions right on the table for you to see. All of these songs and stories come from a genuine place for me.” The morning reports we get from our friends may arrive through smartphone screens, but the songs on MORNING REPORT all chronicle face-to-face interactions—with all the intimacy, intensity and awkwardness they entail. “This is our weirdest, funniest, saddest record yet,” Kerman concludes. “And therefore, our most honest one, too."

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