Hug of Thunder
Hug of Thunder is the fifth studio album by the Canadian indie rock collective Broken Social Scene, released on July 7, 2017, through Arts & Crafts Productions.[1] The record marks the band's return from a seven-year hiatus following their 2010 self-titled album, featuring 12 tracks that blend orchestral arrangements, anthemic choruses, and politically charged lyrics inspired by global events such as the 2015 Paris attacks.[2] Produced by Joe Chiccarelli and recorded primarily in Toronto, it reunites core members Kevin Drew and Brendan Canning with an expansive lineup of 19 contributors, including vocalists Feist, Emily Haines of Metric, and Amy Millan of Stars.[3] The album's tracklist includes standout singles like "Halfway Home" and the title track "Hug of Thunder," which showcase the collective's signature wall-of-sound style tempered by more intimate, reflective moments.[4] Critics praised its renewed focus and emotional urgency, with Pitchfork awarding it an 8.4 out of 10 and designating it "Best New Music" for distilling the band's communal ethos into vital, uplifting rock songs.[2] Hug of Thunder peaked at number 14 on the Canadian Albums Chart and received a Juno Award nomination for Group of the Year in 2018, affirming Broken Social Scene's enduring influence in the indie rock scene.[5]Background
Hiatus and Reunion
Following the release of their 2010 album Forgiveness Rock Record, Broken Social Scene entered an indefinite hiatus in late 2011, allowing core members Kevin Drew and Brendan Canning, along with the extended collective, to pursue individual projects such as solo albums and collaborations with artists like Feist and Metric.[6][7] The break was announced by Drew in October 2011, marking a pause after over a decade of active touring and recording that had defined the band's communal ethos.[8] In 2013, the collective briefly reunited for select performances, including a headline set at Toronto's inaugural Field Trip Arts & Crafts Music Festival, where they played their seminal 2002 album You Forgot It in People in its entirety to celebrate the 10th anniversary of their label, Arts & Crafts. This one-night-only event, extended to include a television appearance on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon alongside Feist, marked their first full shows since the hiatus began and rekindled fan interest without signaling a permanent return.[9][10] The performances highlighted the band's enduring chemistry but were positioned as exceptions rather than a revival, after which the group returned to dormancy.[11] The full reunion materialized in late 2015, spurred by the November 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris, which prompted Drew and Canning to reconvene the collective as a means of fostering community and resilience through music. This catalyst led to collaborative songwriting sessions starting in 2015, evolving into the recording of Hug of Thunder over the subsequent two years, with the album emerging as their first full-length release in seven years.[2][12] Drew later reflected on the impetus, noting the attacks inspired a "swift return to action" amid global uncertainty, transforming personal hiatus reflections into a collective effort.[13] The reunion expanded the lineup to 18 members for the project, emphasizing the band's tradition of fluid, inclusive creativity.[3]Songwriting and Composition
The songwriting for Hug of Thunder emerged from a collaborative process involving the band's core members—Kevin Drew and Brendan Canning—along with contributions from up to 19 participants, including returning members like Leslie Feist, Emily Haines, and Ariel Engle. The album's creation began in late 2015, following festival performances and discussions prompted in part by global events such as the Paris attacks, though the band emphasized that the reunion was driven by a desire to recapture their collective energy after a seven-year hiatus. Songs were typically initiated by individual members bringing in ideas, lyrics, or rough demos, which were then developed through group jamming sessions that emphasized improvisation and organic layering of instrumentation. This approach allowed for the integration of diverse elements, such as electronic drum machines and orchestral swells, while maintaining the band's signature expansive sound.[14][15][16] Brendan Canning, a co-founder and primary musical arranger, described his role as facilitating the best ideas from the group, often contributing to arrangements rather than lyrics. He typically starts with spontaneous vocal takes at the microphone, later refining nonsense syllables into coherent lyrics on paper to foster intimacy and avoid the detachment of digital tools. Canning's process draws from personal curiosity and everyday observations, such as biking through Toronto, but he avoids overly autobiographical content, prioritizing emotional and humorous resonance in the music. Similarly, Kevin Drew focused on steering the overall direction, ensuring the material evolved through friction and compromise among the large ensemble. The band recorded over 40 pieces during three years of sessions, editing down to the final 12 tracks to achieve concise, pop-oriented structures without losing their orchestral density.[17][18][16] Specific tracks highlight the individualized yet communal nature of the composition. The title track, "Hug of Thunder," was primarily written by Feist, who brought a basic idea from Toronto and completed it after a 15-minute group improvisation where Canning added bass, Andrew Whiteman contributed drums, and Charles Spearin improvised melodies; Feist then penned the lyrics over two days, capturing themes of resilience. Emily Haines crafted the lyrics for "The Protest Song," addressing recurring societal failures and human endurance, with the band adding layers like horns for emphasis. Ariel Engle wrote and sang the bossa nova-inflected "Stay Happy," while duets like "Victim Lover" (featuring Drew and Lisa Lobsinger) and tracks such as "Halfway Home" involved rhythmic negotiations among members, including drummer Justin Peroff's adaptations to unify disparate parts. This method ensured the album's cohesion, blending indie rock with ambient motifs that gradually build into anthemic grooves.[15][14][16]Recording and Production
Studios and Sessions
Recording for Hug of Thunder spanned from February 2016 to February 2017, involving a collaborative process among the band's core members and extended contributors across multiple locations in Canada and the United States. Initial sessions began informally in Toronto, with core members Kevin Drew, Brendan Canning, Charles Spearin, Justin Peroff, and Andrew Whiteman reuniting at Drew's home and Canning's Victorian-era living room, which had been converted into a jam space. These early gatherings, encouraged by producer Joe Chiccarelli, focused on jamming and writing, yielding several songs but requiring negotiation to refine the tracklist.[19][20] Many sessions took place at Spearin's Toronto studio, a key hub for the band's rehearsals and recordings, where the group experimented with arrangements and invited guests like Emily Haines of Metric and Feist to contribute vocals and ideas. For instance, the title track emerged during an informal session at Drew's house with Feist, while "Protest Song" was developed with Haines in a rehearsal setting emphasizing live chemistry over extensive overdubs. The process was democratic yet challenging, involving trial and error to accommodate input from up to 18 musicians, including new member Ariel Engle, who co-led tracks like "Stay Happy."[19][21] Formal tracking occurred at several professional studios: The Bathouse in Bath, Ontario; Union Sound Company and The Lost Rooster in Toronto; and Mixart Studios in Montreal. Additional recording happened at Sunset Sound in Hollywood, California, to polish elements like horns and backing vocals from contributors including Amy Millan and Evan Cranley of Stars. Charles Spearin often handled engineering duties during these sessions, with the band prioritizing organic performances built on their long-standing rapport. Mastering was completed at The Lodge in New York City.[22]Production Team
The production of Hug of Thunder was led by producers Nyles Spencer and Joe Chiccarelli, who handled principal recording and additional engineering duties across multiple studios.[23][4] Spencer served as the primary recording engineer, overseeing sessions that captured the album's expansive ensemble sound, while Chiccarelli contributed drum programming on select tracks and additional engineering support.[23][24] Mixing was managed by Shawn Everett, with assistance from Ivan Wayman, emphasizing the album's layered indie rock textures and dynamic range.[23][4] Everett also provided additional engineering, helping integrate contributions from the collective's 19 members and guest vocalists like Feist and Emily Haines.[24][25] Mastering was completed by Emily Lazar at The Lodge in New York City, assisted by Chris Allgood, ensuring a polished, cohesive final product suitable for the album's anthemic scope.[23][4] Additional engineering came from band member Charles Spearin and Alex Gamble, supporting the intricate arrangements.[23]Musical Style and Themes
Genre and Sound
Hug of Thunder is classified as an indie rock album, building on Broken Social Scene's established sound within the genre.[26][27] The album's sound emphasizes anthemic rock songs characterized by energetic guitar riffs, catchy hooks, and a triumphant, upbeat pop-oriented approach. It features multifaceted jams driven by the collective's large ensemble of up to 15 core members, incorporating prominent guitars, swirling instrumentation, and occasional woozy horns. Tracks like "Halfway Home" exemplify this with kinetic builds and cohesive arrangements, while quieter moments, such as the title track led by Leslie Feist, introduce beguiling, solo-driven introspection reminiscent of her solo work. Elements of dream-pop and post-rock persist in atmospheric openers like "Sol Luna," blending utopian collectivism with jazz-inflected choruses.[2][26][27] Compared to earlier releases like Forgiveness Rock Record, Hug of Thunder adopts a more focused and unified structure, toning down experimental tendencies in favor of straightforward rock compositions that avoid meandering. This renewed emphasis on vital, personable songwriting, enhanced by producer Joe Chiccarelli's polished touch, positions the band as a revitalized indie-soul revue capable of stirring emotional anthems. Guest vocals from Emily Haines on tracks like "Protest Song" add hard-rock edges and lo-fi contrasts, further diversifying the sonic palette without disrupting the album's coherent montage.[2][27]Lyrical Content
The lyrical content of Hug of Thunder explores themes of emotional resilience, political disillusionment, and communal survival in the face of global and personal chaos, reflecting the collective's response to a turbulent era marked by rising authoritarianism and social fragmentation.[28] Drawing on the contributions of multiple vocalists including Kevin Drew, Emily Haines, Brendan Canning, Feist, and Ariel Engle, the lyrics blend introspective confession with anthemic calls for unity, shifting from the band's earlier oblique, youthful obsessions to more direct expressions of adult unease and hope.[29] This forthrightness underscores a missionary spirit aimed at rekindling idealism among the disillusioned, confronting cynicism with compassion and grounding exercises in empathy.[2] Central to the album is a thread of political protest tempered by introspection, as seen in "Protest Song," where Emily Haines chants, "We're just the latest on the longest rank and file list ever to exist in the history of the protest song," positioning the band within a lineage of resistance while acknowledging the exhaustion of endless activism.[28] Similarly, "Halfway Home" evokes a fugitive's evasion of despair with lines like "If you never run, never run/How they going to catch you alive?" and "You'll forget/ Call out for change/ But not believe in anything," capturing purposelessness in political and personal spheres.[30][28] These lyrics avoid prescriptive solutions, instead offering survival strategies rooted in self-possession and interpersonal bonds as antidotes to a fractured world.[28] Emotional and existential themes dominate tracks like the title song "Hug of Thunder," where Feist ruminates on memory, mortality, and inner numbness with lyrics such as "All along we're gonna feel some numbness/ Oxymoron of our lives/ Getting fed up by that hunger/ Supersize we found inside," emphasizing the discovery of strength amid vulnerability.[30][28] In "Gonna Get Better," Ariel Engle counters nihilism with defiant optimism: "Things are gonna get better because they can’t get any worse" and "Future’s not what it used to be, we still gotta go there," daring listeners to embrace progress despite foreboding.[2] "Stay Happy" probes identity and self-assurance through Engle's query, "The more you are, will I be me?," while "Please Take Me With You" yearns for connection in a landscape where "all the fools are winning," highlighting vulnerability as a form of surrender to human limitations.[28][29] The album closes on a note of communal uplift in "Mouthguards of the Apocalypse," where Kevin Drew declares, "I’m trying for the living and I’m staying so I can leave," balancing self-annihilation with a commitment to collective endurance, and "Please Take Me With You" reinforces escape through solidarity with "We'll run away for life."[28][2] Tracks like "Skyline" add foreboding with "Skyline waits for the fall," evoking impending collapse, yet the overall lyrical arc prioritizes hope and growth over despair, as in "Protest Song"'s resilient "Days don’t end for night’s alone."[30][29] This blend of passion and acceptance marks a maturation in Broken Social Scene's songwriting, fostering emotional anthems that contrast individualistic turmoil with shared values.[31][29]Release and Promotion
Singles and Marketing
The lead single from Hug of Thunder, "Halfway Home", was released on March 31, 2017, marking Broken Social Scene's first new music in seven years.[32] The track debuted with a live performance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, featuring 13 band members onstage and highlighting the collective's expansive sound with layered vocals, guitars, and brass.[33] It was world-premiered earlier that day on SiriusXM's Lithium channel.[34] The title track, "Hug of Thunder", followed as the second single on May 15, 2017, debuting on Apple Music's Beats 1 radio show hosted by Zane Lowe.[35] Described as a baroque-pop anthem offering a "serotonin rush of positivity," it was released alongside the full album announcement on May 8, 2017, building hype for the July 7 release via Arts & Crafts in North America and City Slang internationally.[3] An official audio video was uploaded to YouTube, emphasizing the song's uplifting themes amid global turmoil.[36] "Skyline" served as the third and final pre-album single, released on May 31, 2017.[37] The track, co-written by Kevin Drew and Ariel Engle, showcased the band's signature indie rock with soaring melodies and communal energy. To extend promotion post-release, an official music video directed by Drew premiered on September 14, 2017, featuring a narrative of friendship and survival in Toronto, starring Brendan Canning and photographer Dimitri Karakostas in a whimsical, lo-fi style involving skateboarding and absurd antics like peanut butter eating contests.[38] Marketing for Hug of Thunder centered on the band's reunion of nearly all 19 core members, positioning the album as a cathartic response to personal and political challenges, including the 2015 Paris attacks that inspired the title.[3] The campaign leveraged sequential single drops to sustain momentum, radio premieres, and high-profile TV slots to reintroduce the collective's sound to audiences. Arts & Crafts handled North American distribution with physical formats like vinyl and CD, while City Slang managed European rollout, including limited-edition pressings to appeal to indie collectors.[39] Pre-order bundles on Bandcamp included digital downloads and merchandise, fostering direct fan engagement.[1]Touring
To promote their 2017 album Hug of Thunder, Broken Social Scene undertook an extensive world tour spanning Europe, North America, and select festival appearances from May 2017 to August 2018, encompassing over 50 performances across 54 documented shows.[40] The tour marked the band's first major outing since 2011, featuring a rotating lineup of up to 19 members, including core contributors like Kevin Drew, Brendan Canning, and Ariel Engle, alongside guests such as Feist and Amy Millan on select dates.[41][42] The European leg commenced in late May 2017, kicking off with headline shows at Manchester's Albert Hall on May 23 and London's Brixton Academy on May 24, followed by dates in cities including Paris, Berlin, and Barcelona through early June.[43][44] Notable festival appearances during this phase included Primavera Sound in Barcelona on June 1, where the band debuted several Hug of Thunder tracks like "Halfway Home" amid a diverse international lineup.[35] Returning to North America, the band launched their fall 2017 headline tour in September, beginning with U.S. dates such as September 29 at Chicago's Aragon Ballroom and extending through October with West Coast stops in Vancouver (October 20 at the Commodore Ballroom) and Los Angeles (October 28 at the Wiltern).[45][42] Frightened Rabbit and The Belle Game served as openers for key segments of the North American tour, including shows in Minneapolis on September 28 at the Palace Theatre, allowing Broken Social Scene to showcase the album's anthemic tracks like the title song in intimate mid-sized venues. The North American portion also featured festival slots, such as Osheaga in Montreal on August 5, blending Hug of Thunder material with classics from earlier albums to engage longtime fans.[46] The Canadian homecoming run ended November 3 at Toronto's Air Canada Centre.[47] In early 2018, Broken Social Scene extended the tour with a spring U.S. leg announced in January, starting March 23 at Austin's Stubbs BBQ and routing through the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic, including stops in New Orleans (March 28 at the Joy Theater), Orlando (March 30 at the House of Blues), and Baltimore (April 6 at Rams Head Live!).[48][49] This phase emphasized the album's themes of vulnerability and resilience, with performances often incorporating extended improvisations and guest vocalists to reflect the collective's ethos. The tour concluded in August 2018 with a West Coast finale at San Francisco's The Independent on August 10, followed by select Canadian dates like October 17 in St. John's at Club One, solidifying Hug of Thunder's live impact through a mix of sold-out theaters and festival energy.[40][50]Reception
Critical Reviews
Hug of Thunder received generally favorable reviews from music critics, earning a Metascore of 76 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 30 reviews, indicating "generally favorable" reception.[51] Reviewers praised the album's return to the band's signature communal and anthemic sound after a seven-year hiatus, highlighting its emotional depth and invigorating energy amid themes of hope and uncertainty. Pitchfork awarded it an 8.4 out of 10, designating it "Best New Music" and commending its distillation of Broken Social Scene's essence into coherent, urgent rock songs that appeal to lapsed idealists.[2] Critics frequently lauded the album's dense, textured arrangements and collaborative spirit, with contributions from up to 18 musicians creating a sense of togetherness. Vulture described it as a "bath in the comforting physicality of togetherness," emphasizing its sweetness despite grim undertones and tracks like the reggae-inflected "Stay Happy" with flutes and horns. The Quietus called it the band's best album, anthemic and uplifting like Arcade Fire, with glorious melodies on the title track featuring Leslie Feist and R&B-inflected horns on "Stay Happy."[52][53] The Guardian highlighted its big, emotionally invigorating anthems, noting jazzy breakbeats that add charm to songs like "Vanity Pail Kids" with dive-bombing saxes and "Halfway Home," which channels Bruce Springsteen's energy.[31] While overwhelmingly positive, some reviews noted minor flaws in cohesion due to the collective's size. Rolling Stone gave it 3.5 out of 5 stars, praising its sprawling communal sound blending melancholy and hope on tracks like the title song and "Halfway Home," but suggesting some familiarity and occasional lack of innovation in arrangements. Pitchfork observed that the second half loosens slightly compared to the focused opener, though less meandering than typical. Metacritic excerpts reflected this balance, with one review at 70/100 noting "some of it doesn’t work" from too many inspired minds, and another at 60/100 citing occasional loss of focus without a central frontperson.[54][2][51] Overall, the album was celebrated for its missionary spirit and compassionate closer "Gonna Get Better," with lyrics affirming "Things are gonna get better because they can’t get any worse," resonating as a protest against nihilism.[2][52]Accolades
Hug of Thunder received a nomination for Group of the Year at the 2018 Juno Awards, recognizing Broken Social Scene's collective achievement as one of Canada's premier musical ensembles.[55] The category featured strong competition from acts including Arcade Fire, Alvvays, Hedley, and A Tribe Called Red, with the latter ultimately winning the award.[56] This nomination highlighted the album's role in revitalizing the band's prominence in the Canadian indie rock scene following a seven-year hiatus.[57]Commercial Performance
Chart Positions
Hug of Thunder debuted at number one on the Canadian Albums Chart, marking the band's second chart-topping release in their home country.[58] In the United States, the album entered the Billboard 200 at number 96 during the week of August 5, 2017.[59] The album also charted on the Billboard Independent Albums chart at number 3, reflecting its strong performance on independent labels.[60] Internationally, it peaked at number 11 on the UK Official Albums Chart and spent three weeks in the top 75.[61]| Chart (2017) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Canada (Billboard Canadian Albums) | 1 |
| US (Billboard 200) | 96 |
| US (Independent Albums) | 3 |
| UK (Official Albums) | 11 |
Sales and Certifications
Hug of Thunder achieved moderate commercial success upon release, particularly in Canada, but did not receive any certifications from major recording industry associations such as Music Canada or the RIAA. Specific sales figures for the album remain undisclosed in public records, reflecting the band's indie rock status and distribution through Arts & Crafts. The album's performance was bolstered by strong streaming and digital sales, contributing to its chart placements without reaching thresholds for gold or platinum status in reported markets.Track Listing
| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Sol Luna" | 1:19 |
| 2. | "Halfway Home" | 4:41 |
| 3. | "Protest Song" | 4:18 |
| 4. | "Skyline" | 4:11 |
| 5. | "Stay Happy" | 4:10 |
| 6. | "Vanity Pail Kids" | 3:59 |
| 7. | "Hug of Thunder" | 4:54 |
| 8. | "Never Ever" | 5:27 |
| 9. | "Trash" | 5:12 |
| 10. | "Wanting" | 3:37 |
| 11. | "Victim Lover" | 4:55 |
| 12. | "Please Take Me With You" | 4:54 |
Personnel
Broken Social Scene
- Kevin Drew – lead vocals, backing vocals, electric guitar, acoustic guitar, piano, synthesizer, drums, keyboards
- Brendan Canning – bass guitar, electric guitar, synthesizer, vocals, backing vocals, piano, loops, acoustic guitar
- Charles Spearin – electric guitar, nyckelharpa, synthesizer, bass guitar, trombone, organ, keyboards, percussion
- Justin Peroff – drums, percussion
- Andrew Whiteman – electric guitar, synthesizer, vocals, drum machine, bass, tres
- Ohad Benchetrit – slide guitar
Additional musicians
- Ariel Engle – lead vocals, backing vocals
- Amy Millan – backing vocals
- Leslie Feist – vocals, backing vocals, keyboards, organ
- Emily Haines – lead vocals, backing vocals
- Evan Cranley – trombone
- David French – saxophone, flute
- Jimmy Shaw – trumpet
- Julia Hambleton – clarinet
- Julie Penner – violin
- Jason Collett – guitar, backing vocals
- Sam Goldberg – electric guitar, guitar synthesizer
- Roger Manning Jr. – vocoder
- Shawn Everett – backing vocals, synthesizer
- Nyles Spencer – sampler, synthesizer
- Joe Chiccarelli – drum programming
Production
- Joe Chiccarelli – production
- Nyles Spencer – production
- Shawn Everett – mixing
- Emily Lazar – mastering
- Chris Allgood – mastering assistance
Artwork
- Justin Peroff – artwork, layout, design
- Kimikimo – artwork, layout, design