Today, Megan Nash is sharing the ‘workout’ video for her latest single, “Quiet”. "This is my ‘Parking Lot Approved’ workout,” says Nash. “A way to get the blood flowing after sitting in a van for a couple of hours. Exercise helps me manage my anxiety and it’s something I need to make a priority when we get touring again. It’s a very goofy video but the intent is to bring some home workout joy to folks in the dark month of February and maybe help a dialogue with musicians about practicing movement as self care while touring. (When it is safe to do so!)"
WATCH AND SHARE “QUIET” HERE
BUY / STREAM / “QUIET” HERE
“Quiet” is a song about “your husband, soon to be ex-husband, driving away from you on the prairies,” says Nash. “What an unforgiving horizon Saskatchewan has. It can really draw out a goodbye. ‘Quiet’ was born out of heartbreak and I hope it serves as an anthem for the lonely, the one left behind. The lyrics are personal and heavy for me yet I want to dance when we play it on stage. It contains two truths - life is pain and life is a party.”
The Strombo Show premiered the JUNO Award nominated artist’s new track on the national airwaves, it has also been recently heard on CBC q and the Saskatchewan songwriter’s chatted with Saskatchewan Weekend about the song itself. “Quiet” is out everywhere now.
“Quiet” Single Artwork // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES
MORE ABOUT MEGAN NASH
When the frigid winter ends and the earth absorbs every last blanket of snow, infinite dust blooms from the prairies. If you walk down a twilit dirt road in the middle of nowhere, south central Saskatchewan, that dust creeps onto and into you, cementing your relationship with the endlessness of the place—endless skies, endless wind, endless dust. Megan Nash knows this feeling more intimately than most. Despite taking their music all over the world, their songs always retain some piece of the prairies. There’s the grit of dust in the crunch of an overdriven guitar; the howl of wind in a soaring, hypnotic eruption of horns. And there is a boundlessness in her voice—electric with timbres both luminous and dusky, coloured with the textures of her poetry—that can’t help but recall those spellbinding skies.
With their 2017 album Seeker, Nash used that voice to establish herself as an artist with a singular vision. Mining loss, heartache, grief, dreams, and desire over lush soundscapes, she revealed themselves as the titular seeker—someone with a suitcase they never really empty, whose reach always exceeds their grasp. In the time since Seeker, Nash’s life has taken tumultuous turns. In their own words, the new music she’s been working on was written, “in the cracks of a foundation—in moments of reflection during years of whirlwind romance, gut wrenching heartbreak, reviving friendships, and life saving dog love.” They’re heavy, haunting, elegiac songs in which Nash has rendered themselves more vulnerable than ever.
WATCH/SHARE “ARTIFACT” HERE
BUY / STREAM “ARTIFACT” HERE
In the middle of these mercurial past few years, Nash has been busier than ever on the road, most often with their seasoned backup outfit, The Best of Intentions (Dana Rempel on bass, Darnell Stewart on guitar, and Tanner Wilhelm Hale on drums). She’s played some of their biggest gigs both at home and on tour in Germany, Estonia, and the U.K., riding the momentum of her JUNO Award nomination for Seeker. And in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, she’s been proactive finding ways to connect with fans via events like drive-in and virtual shows. Rest assured that if it’s possible, she’ll be following those highway lines in 2021.
Photo Credit : Aaron Sinclair // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES