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The Coast release their much-anticipated debut full-length,
Expatriate, on Aporia this
April. Recorded in winter 2007 in Toronto with producer Chris Stringer (We're Marching On,
Ohbijou), the album is a departure from the layered epics of their first EP, harnessing
the off-the-floor energy of their live show and letting their signature hooky guitar
melodies stand on their own.
The band was touted as one of the acts to watch in 2008 by Canada's national music monthly
Exclaim and
Toronto's Eye Weekly, thanks to the buzz that continued to grow as the band
toured extensively across North America last year, playing alongside such acts as Tokyo Police
Club, The Dears, Sam Roberts, The French Kicks, and a coveted CMJ showcase with Foals, A Place
to Bury Strangers, and Le Loup.
"There was far more integration between writing and arranging this time around," Spurr adds.
"We stopped being so precious about the songwriting and let everyone bring their own strengths
to each song."
"When you've been in a band with friends you’ve been with since you were a kid, it can become
a difficult thing, separating your creative relationship from your relationship as friends,"
Melchoirre says. "I think that the writing and recording of this record required us all to
be far more honest with each other about what we expected from one another musically and how
we wanted to sound. Ultimately, to me, if there is a central theme of the record, it has to be
one of feeling disappointed with yourself and others and dealing with the ramifications of that."
"We first started thinking about
"Expatriate
" as a title when we were touring a lot last year,"
Spurr explains. "It begins to feels like you’re living outside of your own life. Even when you're
not traveling, you're not home. It feels like you’re exiled from your own life."
The Coast are currently on the road, somewhere between Winooski, Vermont and Eugene, Oregon.