Haven't heard of Jesse Rivest? You
know - guitarist/singer/songwriter from Alberta and British Columbia.
Sounds a bit like Justin Rutledge and Martin Sexton having breakfast
together around a campfire in the mountains. Sound familiar? Lucid
Forge said he “...has written some good tunes to show off the fact
that he's got plenty of soul.” Not ringing any bells? Well,
that's not surprising – he's still quite unknown to the world. He
has no hit singles. No critically acclaimed or award winning
releases. He has a very brief list of accomplishments, so this bio
should be short and sweet, even with a bit of fluff.
Jesse is enjoying a liberating phase he
calls “the podcast years”, where he digitally releases songs as
soon as their little wings will carry them. Unlike offspring,
younger and newer songs are often more mature than older ones. A
follow-up to his 2006 release Seventeen Oh-Two Oh-Six is
ever-formulating, with aim for a 2010 release. When will “Jesse
Rivest” become a recognized name in the world of music? He
believes that it all reduces to the quality of his songs and
performances, and his persistence throughout the wrinkling of time.
Thus, with growth and exploration always at heart, he continues to
perform in Canada and New Zealand (his other home), while he
continues to watch, listen, and create.
A writer most of his life, Jesse even
won an award in grade school; he was singled as best writer of a
creative short story (about train safety) in the Parkland School
Division (west of Edmonton). Many years later, he was accepted as a
Best Newcomer Finalist in the 2005 Calgary Folk Music Festival
Songwriting Contest for his song Deadbeat Blues,
a frustrated and colorful rant about downstairs tenants. Next
up was his independent release of Seventeen Oh-Two Oh-Six, an
acoustic roots/blues-influenced long-play of original songs. After
promoting it in Calgary (his home at the time) he took it on the road
through British Columbia, and abroad through New Zealand and
Australia. It was around then that he began podcasting.
“Olive oil skin and a birch-bark
dress... olive oil skin and my heart's a mess!” Jesse's passion
for love and imagery is evident in songs like The Romance of
Kaslo, an earthy-bluesy slide guitar track named after the town
in the Kootenays, and the fruit-stealing caper Summer Grace:
“As they dried they lay side-by-side and dined on cherries in the
buff.” Meanwhile, his melancholy heart flutters to a catchy,
Americana rhythm in Down Again: “I am a shipwreck, sunken
off your shore.” Motion and scenery are recurring themes in his
work. In Greyhound Through the Rockies, he laments, “Follow
a stream until it turns to snow... follow a dream that let's you down
so slow,” during what appears to be an escape from the highway and
coach ride that the song is named for. Finally there's the eerie,
should-I-or-should-I-not-be-laughing, Australian road-kill hymn
Silent, illustrating familiar tragedies with his endearing
baritone and falsetto: “While two of us men looked for an axe or a
shovel, the girl picked it up and ripped its... head off!” Jesse
is a multi-dimensional songwriter with an unforgettably natural voice
that radiates through even the low-fi episodes of his podcast.
So, perhaps you have heard of
Jesse Rivest. It would greatly delight him if you listened to his
podcast, subscribed, and came back for more. It would delight you
greatly to see him at an upcoming show!
Check out the Press section of his
website for a one-sheet and photo.
(September, 2008)
Jeff Martin (The Tea Party), Kevin Kane (The Grapes of Wrath), Lester Quitzau, Metallica, Xavier Rudd, Roy Orbison, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Pearl Jam, Raging Slab, The Tragically Hip, Soundgarden, The Black Crowes, Joni Mitchell, AC/DC, Gordon Lightfoot, Tom Petty, Sarah McLachlan, Hayden Desser, Blue Rodeo, Big Sugar, Wide Mouth Mason, Xavier Rudd, Ben Harper, Luke Doucet, Melissa McClelland, Sarah Harmer, Justin Rutledge, Josh Rouse, Danny Michel, Feist, Josh Ritter, Wilco, Gillian Welch, Martin Sexton, Jeremy Fisher, Greg Brown