JOSÉ LOBO ANNOUNCES NEW ALBUM, SHARES FIRST SINGLE

JOSÉ LOBO SIGNS WITH VICTORY POOL RECORDS TO RELEASE DEBUT LP, IN ALL GOOD HOPE, OUT OCTOBER 27, 2023

WATCH / SHARE “TBTBNM (todo bien todo bien nada mal)” HERE
BUY / STREAM “TBTBNM (todo bien todo bien nada mal)” HERE

PRE-SAVE IN ALL GOOD HOPE HERE

Photo Credit : Colin Medley // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

In All Good Hope, the debut album from singer, songwriter, and musician José Lobo, is a masterclass in intimacy, everything about it exuding a sense of closeness. From the highly personal lyrical themes and sparse, delicate instrumentation, to the singing, which sounds like a friend whispering a secret into your ear, the experience of listening to In All Good Hope is akin to entering an inner sanctum, or what Lobo aptly refers to as “a reverie of the quotidian.”

Today, the multilingual artist is sharing the first single from the album, “TBTBNM (todo bien todo bien nada mal)”. Lobo explains, “The title is a phrase I said a lot when a friend would asked me how I was doing and it’s something like can’t complain and the literal translation is ‘all good, all good, nothing bad’ and it’s one of those phrases where depending where the comma is placed or the way that is said it can mean from ‘just pushing through’ to ‘I’m thriving’, and I think the lyrics really speak to those two corners of my emotional landscape.”

“My favourite lyric in this song is ‘soy el heteronimo de mi mismo, soy un amigo, un esclavo, un inquilino de esta cabeza que solo a veces sabe a que vino’ which translates to ‘I am the heteronym of myself, a friend, a slave, a tenant of this head that only sometimes knows why it came here’. The word heteronym (heteronimo) was used by the writer Fernando Pessoa to describe all the authors that came from within him and pen names he adopted. I wanted to say that sometimes I feel like a third party of my own story - sometimes I am the friend, sometimes I am bound to it like a tenant and only sometimes do I feel like I know what it is that I came to the world to do.”

The single arrives with a video made by Lobo’s friend and collaborator Fernando Rodriguez, filmed in NYC this past January. “Fer took with him his super8 camera and recorded me while we walked around the city, we also got into this abandoned lot in Brooklyn and there was this pile of construction debris and Fer decided I should climb to the top of it and run down through it and I did (very clumsily as it can be seen in the video). The video is a homemade compilation of those moments with him. It is also a stark contrast to when I wrote this song while living with my parents in suburban Ontario during the pandemic and this song was almost like a conversation with myself accepting it was time to go and I couldn’t stay there any longer.”

WATCH / SHARE “TBTBNM (todo bien todo bien nada mal)” HERE
BUY / STREAM “TBTBNM (todo bien todo bien nada mal)” HERE

Single Art // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

MORE ABOUT JOSÉ LOBO AND IN ALL GOOD HOPE
Originally hailing from Venezuela, Lobo has spent the better part of the last decade in a somewhat nomadic mode, splitting his time between his current homebase of Montreal, San  Francisco's Mission District, Paris, and also Hamilton, Ontario, where much of the album was recorded. 

Tellingly, In All Good Hope opens with a creak, perhaps an old chair or some well-worn floorboards, and easily maintains this relaxed, cozy sense of presence as Lobo weaves through these hushed, multilingual songs. The bulk of the album is centred around his nylon-string guitar and mellifluous vocal style, which is always mixed right up front, capturing every breath and nuance. The astute listener may pick up a strong scent of bossa nova, which is no accident, as Lobo developed a great love for the '60s Brazilian genre while living in the city of Belo Horizonte during his teenage years. There are also shades of Tropicalia, bossa nova's slightly more  adventurous younger sibling, and to that end, one might recall the similarly inspired singer Devendra Banhart and the warmly psychedelic ‘freak folk’ movement of the '00s, Brazilian legend Caetano Veloso, fellow nylon string player José Gonzales, Toronto-based singer and producer Sandro Perri, and contemporary Brazilian artist Rodrigo Amarante, whose solo and band work has provided deep wells of inspiration for Lobo. 

And though the album is a veritable linguistic bouquet – sung in Portuguese, Spanish, French, and English – its themes create a cohesive through line. “The album is sort of like a book of short stories,” Lobo says, “made up of day-to-day moments and observations of my surroundings.” The opening track “se deter pra entender” acts here as a prologue of sorts, asking the listener to stop and “understand that the syllables count”, while gentle cascades of harp, synth, and softly strummed guitar float beneath. For Lobo, the song – and indeed the album as a whole – is about “the weight of our words, words that remain inside us and those that exist in the world.” Written largely over the course of 2020, the songs were Lobo's “attempts to find some magic in my day-to-day life, as it became more and more routine and closed off by the pandemic.” A perfect metaphor here is the song “agujeros”, which paints a picture of Sasha the family dog, whose daily quest for little slivers of sunlight  around the house “was a fundamental part of keeping my family sane.” 

Though the album is largely a solo affair, there are key collaborators at play throughout. Lobo became familiar with Hamilton-based singer-songwriter Scott Orr through mutual appreciation and the magic of Bandcamp, and the core elements of the album were recorded at his studio, largely through a vintage 1950s ribbon microphone. Alongside Montreal-based producer Victor Zhang, Lobo fleshed out the rest of the album in his bedroom with warm, hazy synth pads, and judicious sprinklings of hand percussion, bass, flute, harp, and string arrangements. Many of these elements were recorded remotely by guest musicians from around the world, and their international provenance speaks to Lobo's years of travelling and connecting with like-minded artists. After graduating from university, Lobo lived in San Francisco's Mission District for a spell, and his time there was fruitful, leading to work in theatre penning the music for Andreina Maldonado's Our Work Our Dignity, a play exploring the realities of immigrant workers in the city. But it was his friendship with songwriter and social activist Diana Gameros that initially drew him there, and in a neat full-circle swoop, she contributes the elegant second vocal on the track “lista pa la carrera”. 

Lobo says that many of the songs were written as “an homage to the morning, my favourite time of day,” and like those slivers of sunlight that Sasha chased around the living room each day, In All Good Hope will warmly illuminate whatever situation it may occupy, making good on its title (borrowed from poet Ralph Waldo Emerson's sign-off in his letters), and Lobo's vision of “holding hands with the present”, an image he found “so soothing, but also really hard to attain”. This album will make that just a little bit easier. 

PRE-SAVE IN ALL GOOD HOPE HERE

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IN ALL GOOD HOPE TRACKLIST
01 se deter pra entender
02 TBTBNM (todo bien todo bien nada mal)
03 pajarita
04 lista pa la carrera
05 abuela canta su bolero y yo la acompaño en su futuro / mi presente
06 nuevos dias
07 quiero esculpir mi vida
08 meteors
09 agujeros
10 si vale la pena decir que si

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