News for Bria Salmena

NEWS : TUE, JAN 14, 2025 at 6:00 AM

Bria Salmena To Release Debut Album Big Dog Available March 28th

On March 28th, Bria Salmena will release her debut solo album Big Dog on CD/LP/DSP, with Royal Mountain in Canada and Sub Pop for the remainder of the world. Big Dog chronicles a story of transformation–a deeply personal exploration of resilience and a declaration of artistic independence forged through collaboration.
 
Long celebrated as the frontwoman of Canadian post-punk outfit FRIGS and as a vocalist in Orville Peck’s band, Salmena culminates her artistic evolution on Big Dog. Anchored by her commanding voice—alternately tender, raw, and defiant—the album traverses the terrain of vulnerability and connection, marking the arrival of an artist boldly coming into her own.

Big Dog’s sound hovers between worlds, it takes elements of hypnotic krautrock and shimmery shoegaze, opulent goth and pulsing darkwave, with a smearing of electronic textures for a sophisticated and often uncanny sound. Amidst this vast sonic landscape, Salmena’s potent lyrical imagery and vocals stand dead center, perfectly in focus.
 
Today, you can watch the captivating new video for the debut single “Stretch the Struggle”, directed by Gennelle Cruz & David May. Throughout the video, we are struck by its rebellious nature and the immediacy and power of Salmena’s performance. The surveillance motif that runs throughout the video mirrors Salmena’s own personal reckoning as she confronts the truths necessary to break free from what no longer serves her. Click here to watch.
 
For Salmena, it is impossible to unlink the personal journey represented by Big Dog from the collaborative relationships that went into its creation. Salmena worked with producer and multi-instrumentalist Duncan Hay Jennings in both FRIGS and Orville Peck’s band. Jennings, who is not only Salmena’s closest creative collaborator but also her closest friend, wrote Big Dog with Salmena over several years, during which Salmena was based in LA and Jennings in Toronto. Before Big Dog, the two gave classic and modern Americana songs a goth-y dream pop treatment on Salmena’s Cuntry Covers EPs.
 
Graham Walsh (Holy F**k, METZ, Debby Friday, Alvvays) helped the pair further refine their budding mix of rock and electronic music, while Meg Remy (of critically acclaimed experimental pop project U.S. Girls) focused primarily on Salmena’s vocals. Remy helped coax out the unforgettable performances that lie at the center of Big Dog through a series of cathartic meetings, pushing Salmena to dig even more deeply into the meaning of her lyrics and really think about different ways of using her voice. As Big Dog came together, it became apparent that Salmena’s songwriting had taken a raw and intimate turn, going well beyond her and Jennings’ work on their prior EPs. Big Dog features additional contributions from alternative rock icon Lee Ranaldo, who contributes guitar on the song “See’er.”

Salmena has announced an initial run of headline tour dates for 2025; see below for a full list of North American dates—further dates to be announced. Tickets will be on sale on January 17 (10 AM local time) and available via Bria Salmena’s official website.
 
 
Tour Dates
Wed. Apr. 02 - San Diego, CA - Casbah
Fri. Apr. 04 - Pioneertown, CA - Pappy + Harriet’s
Sat. Apr. 05 - San Francisco, CA - Make Out Room
Tue. Apr. 08 - Seattle, WA - Madame Lou’s
Wed. Apr. 09 - Portland, OR - Swan Dive
Fri. Apr. 11 - Visilia, CA - Cellar Door
Sat. Apr. 12 - Los Angeles, CA - Lodge Room
Fri. Apr. 25 - Philadelphia, PA - World Cafe Lounge
Sat. Apr. 26 - Kingston, NY - Tubby’s
Sun. Apr. 27 - New York, NY - Baby’s All Right
Tue. Apr. 29 - Baltimore, ML - Metro Baltimore
Wed. Apr. 30 - Richmond, VA - The Camel
Thu. May 01 - Nashville, TN - The Blue Room
Fri. May 02 - Cincinnati, OH - Southgate House Revival
Sat. May 03 - Chicago, IL - Hideout
Wed. May 07 - Montreal, QC - Bar Le Ritz PDB
Fri. May 09 - Toronto, ON - The Great Hall
 
Big Dog is now available to pre-order from Sub Pop. LP pre-orders from the Sub Pop Mega Mart (North America), Mega Mart 2 (UK/EU), and independent retailers worldwide (excl CA) will receive the album on Orchid Vinyl.
More about Bria Salmena’s Big Dog:
Big Dog is a record of big emotions and big ambitions.
Musically, it hovers between two worlds, gritty punk honesty always simmering below gleaming atmospherics, impossible to ignore. There are alternative rock touchstones—you’ll hear Live Through This, Kate Bush, Mazzy Star —and one genuine alternative rock icon in Lee Ranaldo, who contributes guitar to “See’er.” But there’s also a sleekness that’s just as much a callback to ‘80s coldwave as it is to ecstatic forms of dance music. The split effect can be eerie, as on the clanging “Rags,” a song that seems to groan and shimmer. It can be soothing as on the fractured pop song “Hammer,” Big Dog’s one true love song. Or it can be both at the same time as on the Mazzy Star-esque “Twilight,” the oldest song on the record and one that features a stripped back sound foregrounding its sense of naivety and surrender.
 
Salmena’s rich voice is ever-present, a constant warm glow within a mesh of mechanical sounds. It’s ever-present and impossible to ignore, whether Salmena is angelically harmonizing with herself, murmuring in her lowest registers, or pushing herself into an uncomfortable falsetto and staying there. “I just need it, need it, need it,” she repeats on “Stretch the Struggle,” a song about being suspended in that anguished moment between realizing something needs to go and actually letting it go, her voice slowly becoming subsumed in pulsing electronic beats and bubbling synths.
 
At its core, Big Dog is more than just a record about discovering who you are by processing painful experiences. It’s a record about discovering that you are never really alone.


Bria Salmena
Big Dog
 
Track Listing:
1. Drastic
2. Backs of Birds
3. Closer to You
4. Hammer
5. Radisson
6. Twilight
7. On the Line
8. Stretch the Struggle
9. Rags
10. See’er
11. Peanut
12. Water Memory

Posted by Abbie Gobeli

NEWS : THU, JUL 25, 2024 at 7:00 AM

Bria Salmena Shares New Single “Bending Over Backwards” (+ Official Video) Available Now On All DSPs

Today, July 25th, Sub Pop & Royal Mountain Records will digitally release “Bending Over Backwards” from Bria Salmena. This stand-alone single from the Canadian artist marks the first original music released under her full name. It also follows Salmena and her longtime collaborator and producer Duncan Hay Jennings’s departure from Orville Peck’s band.
 
“Bending Over Backwards” is a hazy, euphoric song with a pulsing trance-like beat and anthemic chorus, showcasing Salmena’s range as a vocalist. “It’s about some crazy life experiences that I’ve had in the past four years and the work that it takes to go into chaos and come out of it,” she says. Describing the song as “a manic conversation with myself,” Salmena developed different vocal styles for the different parts, pushing herself to sing in an uncomfortable falsetto for the verses, demonstrating her heartfelt desire to embrace change and discomfort in pursuit of artistic authenticity.
 
Directed by Talvi Faustmann, you can watch the official video for “Bending Over Backwards” here.
 
“Bending Over Backwards” was co-produced by Duncan Hay Jennings and Meg Remy (U.S. Girls), mixed by Graham Walsh & Steve Chahley, and mastered by Heba Kadry. Additional instrumentation from Evan Cartwright (Cola) on drums, Lucas Savatti (FRIGS) on bass guitar and piano, with backing vocals from Jaime McCuaig and saxophone from Andy Manktelow.
 
For the better part of the last decade, Bria Salmena has refused to be pigeonholed, effortlessly exploring various genres. Initially becoming known as the frontwoman for critically-acclaimed Canadian experimental post-punk group FRIGS, which she co-founded with producer and multi-instrumentalist Duncan Hay Jennings, Salmena then joined up with the enigmatic sensation Orville Peck, with whom she toured the world for the past half-decade as an indispensable and instantly recognizable member of his live band. Between tours, Salmena and Jennings (also a Peck collaborator) recorded two well-received covers EPs, giving classic and modern Americana songs a gothy dream pop spin, pushing the boundaries of the country genre; the cheekily named Cuntry Covers Vol. 1 & 2 were previously released on Sub Pop under the mononym Bria.
 
Yet the artistically restless Salmena was ready to start carving out her own sound after conquering both the worlds of punk and country—and that meant it was time to lean into the sense of vulnerability that comes with being a solo artist, even if it scared the shit out of her. “I have a really hard time defining myself so concretely because I think that’s just creatively boring,” she says. “I want to do a bunch of different things and explore in all sorts of ways, so it’s nerve-wracking—but it’s also me taking ownership, and that feels good.”
 
And she isn’t entirely on her own, either. Jennings remains Salmena’s closest creative collaborator— since both left Peck’s band earlier this year, they have dedicated themselves to mapping out a musical path that feels artistically authentic and fresh, forging new territory free from past expectations. “I come from a punk background, and then I explored my affection for country music. I feel like those two worlds are combining, and I’m finding my own sound within that,” says Salmena.
 
In her solo music, Salmena pairs various eras of brooding rock music—from austere goth and cottony shoegaze to hypnotic krautrock and gleaming coldwave—with an introspective singer-songwriter approach, her rich, distinctive vocals a perfect match for evocatively personal lyrics. Similar in vibe to the idiosyncratic chamber pop of Aldous Harding or Kate Bush, the raw art rock PJ Harvey, and the long-form ambient of Grouper, Salmena approaches genre like a puzzle, her music a strangely beautiful amalgamation that feels immediate, intimate, and original.


Posted by Abbie Gobeli