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Andy Shauf: Wasted On You

This features a strong melody, reflective lyrics, and gently warm vocals.

Andy Shauf: Wasted On You

By Kerry Doole

Andy Shauf - Wasted On You (Arts & Crafts): This internationally-lauded Toronto-based singer/songwriter has just announced that a new album, Norm, will be released on Feb. 10, 2023.


The lead single/video, Wasted On You, is now out. The keyboard-led melody is strong, and Shauf reflects upon the subject of death with typically gentle and warm vocals. Am not sure that the offbeat video adds much, but the tune itself is a winner.

A label press release describes the upcoming album this way: "With Norm, Shauf has slyly deconstructed and reshaped the style for which he’s been celebrated, elevating his songwriting with intricate layers and perspectives, challenging himself to find a new direction. Under the guise of an intoxicating collection of jazz-inflected romantic ballads, his storytelling has become decidedly more oblique, hinting at ominous situations and dark motivations."

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On earlier albums, 2016’s The Party and 2020’s The Neon Skyline, Shauf established himself as one of our most literate songwriters, and his tunes married subtly pleasing melodies and his understated but gently beguiling vocals.

For Norm, Shauf took advantage of the pandemic-induced break from touring to lock himself in his garage studio, self-producing and playing every instrument on Norm, a collection of more conventional songs written predominantly on guitar, piano and synths. He then hired Neal Pogue (Tyler, the Creator, Janelle Monae, Outkast), a prodigious shaper of genre-and-time-defying tracks, to mix the album, enhancing its atmospheric elements. We await the complete album with real relish.

Shauf has a Mexico City show tomorrow (Nov. 18), and he has announced a major 2023 Norm tour. This begins with solo shows in Fredericton (Jan. 20) and Halifax (Jan. 21), followed by US dates (Feb. 21 to March 8, then Western Canada shows  (March 10-17), more US gigs, and then April/May shows in Ottawa, Montreal, and Ontario, concluding on May 5 at Massey Hall. Itinerary here

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Publicity: Ken Beattie, Killbeat

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Chairman & Chief Executive Officer of Universal Music Group Sir Lucian Charles Grainge attends Universal Music Group Hosts 2020 Grammy After Party on January 26, 2020 in Los Angeles, California.
Rodin Eckenroth/WireImage

Chairman & Chief Executive Officer of Universal Music Group Sir Lucian Charles Grainge attends Universal Music Group Hosts 2020 Grammy After Party on January 26, 2020 in Los Angeles, California.


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Read Lucian Grainge’s Memo on UMG-TikTok Deal: ‘Entire Music Ecosystem’ Will Benefit

The new agreement, announced in the early morning, addresses "key changes in several critical areas," Grainge said in outlining what UMG achieved in negotiations.

Universal Music Group chairman/CEO Lucian Grainge penned a memo to staff, obtained by Billboard, about the music company’s new licensing agreement with TikTok that ended a three-month standoff between the two entities, saying the deal ended with “a decidedly positive outcome,” with TikTok agreeing “to key changes in several critical areas.”

The announcement of the new deal, which came after a high-profile dispute between the world’s largest music company and one of the current premier social media platforms in the world that first erupted in late January, was announced early this morning (May 2). The agreement will see UMG’s millions of compositions and songs, both from its recorded divisions and its publishing company, return to the platform “in due course.” The feud has been one of the biggest talking points in the music business for the better part of this year, with artists and songwriters caught in the middle of the corporate standoff and looking for alternate ways to promote and market their music beyond the parameters of TikTok.

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