Sarah Harmer - Harmer's Charm
Written by Nicholas Jennings    Monday, 01 February 2010 01:00    PDF Print E-mail

Tags: 2001 | Canadian music | Juno Awards | Sarah Harmer | singer-songwriter | Songs for Clem | You Were Here

Sarah HarmerMultiple nominees at this year's Juno Awards (March 4, CBC TV) range from such established stars as Barenaked Ladies and the Tragically Hip to bright new artists like Nelly Furtado and Nickelback. Being the 30th anniversary, the event will also have its heritage moments, including a performance by the Guess Who and the induction of singer-songwriter Bruce Cockburn into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame. Among the newcomers is Sarah Harmer, who is winning a place for herself in the finest tradition of Canadian songwriting.

Sarah Harmer is no technical whiz. Sure, like any musician, she knows her way around a recording studio. She has a cellphone and an e-mail-equipped laptop computer, which she tries to use to correspond with family and friends. Her record distributor even gave her a digital voice recorder for Christmas, which Harmer took on a Mexican vacation in the hope of capturing song ideas. Unfortunately, she left it switched on and the batteries were dead before she could figure out how to use it. Then, when Harmer returned to Canada, her old Ford Econoline van, which she'd left parked at her parents' farm outside of Burlington, Ont., wouldn't start. Alone in the farmyard, she was more than a little frustrated when her cellphone suddenly rang. It was her manager calling with news of her two Juno Award nominations. "I said, 'Well, that's great,' " recalls Harmer, " 'but I'm standing here outside freezing, nobody's home and I'm just trying to get my van going.' "

The scene underscores the gulf Harmer feels exists between herself and the pop world. Defiantly independent, the 30-year-old musician takes pride in a grassroots approach to her career. She recorded her first solo album on the back porch of her farm north of Kingston, Ont. -- complete with the sound of rain and crickets -- and released it on her own label, Cold Snap Music. For her next recording, Harmer borrowed money from her mother, and produced You Were Here, a stunning collection of original songs that blended sharp lyrics with the subtle sounds of clarinets, cellos and an upright bass. That record would have remained another largely undiscovered gem were it not for a radio programmer in Philadelphia, whose station's support for the album led to major deals with Rounder Records in the United States and Universal Music in Canada. Late last year, Harmer found herself thrust into the spotlight, as You Were Here topped many critics' year-end lists and earned a rave review in Rolling Stone, which called the album "marvellously compelling." Now, with Juno nominations for best pop album and best new solo artist, and a North American tour under way, the gulf between Harmer and the pop world is rapidly shrinking.

Sitting in a funky Toronto restaurant, the self-described "country girl" confesses to feeling a bit unprepared for big-city success. "Ever since I was a little kid," says Harmer, "I thought I should have lived in the 1800s when things were simpler." Yet growing up on a 40-hectare farm fed her creatively, enabling her to write such evocative elegies to rural life as The Hideout and the shimmering Lodestar, two of the best songs on You Were Here. "I used to love reading Susanna Moodie," says Harmer, adding with a laugh, "real Little House on the Prairie type stuff." Harmer's sister Barbara recalls how Sarah often created a make-believe world in the barn, wearing gingham dresses and raising her own chickens. "We were all older than she was, so she played on her own quite a bit," says Barbara, now a producer at CBC Newsworld's Counterspin. "She always had a great imagination."Sarah Harmer - You Were Here

The youngest of six children born to farmer Alan (Clem) Harmer and his schoolteacher wife, Isabelle, Sarah followed three sisters to Queen's University in Kingston. While enrolled in the arts program, she was drawn to live music, having discovered local heroes the Tragically Hip through her sister Mary. After a brief stint with the country-rockers the Saddletramps, Sarah formed Weeping Tile, with Mary on bass, and released two promising albums. During a hiatus from the band, Harmer recorded a collection of country and jazz favourites to give to her father for Christmas. The resulting Songs for Clem kick-started her solo career, and led to You Were Here, which has established Harmer as a formidable young songwriter, with Joni Mitchell's confessional gifts and Gordon Lightfoot's unerring sense of place.

Some of the tracks on You Were Here are breaking-up songs that deal with loss and regret -- but without a trace of self-pity. "I experienced some hurt and betrayal," admits Harmer, who doesn't elaborate on her love life. "But I'm a hopeful person and definitely optimistic." Harmer professes to be happiest when she's on her farm in Elginberg, just north of Kingston, where she likes to work in her organic garden. "It was an old boarding house, part of a Quaker settlement, built in 1911," she explains. "I like having an attachment to history, to feel connected to what's gone on within these walls or on this landscape. That's what really excites me as a writer."

Maclean's  March 5th 2001



Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websites
Reddit! Del.icio.us! Mixx! Free and Open Source Software News Google! Live! Facebook! StumbleUpon! TwitThis Joomla Free PHP
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 14 July 2010 14:34 )
 

Reviews

News image

Carole King - The Legendary Demos

2012 | Administrator | Thursday, 26 April 2012

She’s best known for her bestselling album Tapestry. But King also penned hits for other artists. Along with songs associated with the Everly Brothers and the Monkees, this collection of...

News image

Ozzy Osbourne - Diary of a Madman

2011 | Administrator | Wednesday, 15 June 2011

Before he became the befuddled father of TV’s The Osbournes, Ozzy Osbourne was revered by heavy-metal fans as the “Prince of Darkness.” The former Black Sabbath frontman made his mark...

News image

Frank Sinatra/Count Basie - The Complete Reprise Studio Recordings

2011 | Administrator | Sunday, 18 September 2011

When pop’s premier vocalist and the leading jazz orchestra first joined forces in 1962, it was hailed as the quintessential dream team. This CD, which combines that first recording, Sinatra-Basie:...

News image

Kathleen Edwards - Voyageur

2012 | Administrator | Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Her aptly titled fourth album finds the Canadian songbird journeying into new waters. Having split with guitarist-husband Colin Cripps, who helped shape her alt-country sound, Edwards has co-produced her latest...

Features

News image

The Messengers

2013 | Administrator | Wednesday, 13 March 2013

For Adam Messinger and Nasri Atweh, success has come from having the right songs at the right time.             Within a month of relocating to Los Angeles from Toronto in 2007, the songwriting-producing duo known as...

News image

Kathleen Edwards is an Emotional Voyageur

2012 | Administrator | Tuesday, 13 December 2011

A lot can change in four years—especially in the music world. In 2008, when Kathleen Edwards released her album Asking for Flowers, the Ottawa native was known primarily for story songs about other characters, some drawn...

News image

Passing the Torch

2012 | Nicholas Jennings | Sunday, 9 September 2012

When Dustin Bentall was 12, he spent the summer with his parents at a cabin they bought in Cariboo Country, in British Columbia’s interior. There his father, veteran Canadian musician Barney Bentall, taught him the guitar...

News image

Hey Rosetta! - Literary songwriting worth yelling about

2012 | Administrator | Sunday, 4 March 2012

Tim Baker has a problem. As frontman for Newfoundland’s Hey Rosetta!, one of Canada’s fastest-rising, hardest-working bands, he is touring for nine months of the year, performing concerts on three continents. Trouble is, Baker is also...