

These are lofty goals at any time, let alone at the end of the brutal year we’ve all experienced, and that’s the challenge Stokes and Corrigan were compelled to meet. We wanted to deliver them to a place where they’re wiser and more compassionate, a place where they’re kinder and more unified, a place where they’re ready to truly protect and care for each other.” Writing’s always been the way we’ve made sense of the world, though, so that’s what we did.”Īdds Brad Corrigan, “We wanted to walk people through the feelings of sadness and anger and loss we’ve all been experiencing lately and take them to the other side. “As fathers of young kids who worry about what kind of world we’re leaving behind, as people who’ve lost family and friends to suicide and addiction, as bandmates navigating this transition from trio to duo, I think that feeling of everything being in flux was particularly acute for Brad and me. “Everyone in this country has been facing some kind of turmoil these last four years,” said Chadwick Stokes. This multi-phase project speaks not only to the band’s personal evolution, but to human nature itself. These new songs were written and recorded as the band’s means to process all this change, in the spirit of collective awakening with all its pain and beauty. In the Madison Square Garden format, the song features several instruments including the trumpet, saxophone, and trombone, an. While personally facing the death of loved ones and the joy of childbirth, Stokes and Corrigan have also parted ways with their beloved partner and bandmate, Pete Francis who stepped away in 2018 to focus on mental health. The song has appeared in multiple formats, including its original version on the album Bang Bang, as well as multiple live versions on their albums Gut the Van, All Points Bulletin and, most recently, Dispatch: Zimbabwe. Over the last year, bandmates Chadwick Stokes and Brad Corrigan have encountered and transcended unprecedented personal change against the backdrop of the societal upheaval that we have all been experiencing. The result is a timely and essential collection of songs from a band still breaking new ground two and a half decades into its storied career, an ode to resilience and survival that manages to find hope and joy on even the darkest of days. This music is pure Dispatch, blending infectious roots rock with hints of reggae, folk and blues, and the production is suitably lean and energetic, leaving plenty of space for some of the group’s most pointed political lyrics to date. The journey begins with the chaos of “Phase 1,” which works its way through a litany of modern fears and frustration on the driving “May We All,” and laments the direction of the country in no uncertain terms on the simmering “All This Time” (listen closely for soulful vocal contributions from The White Buffalo), followed by the sadness of losing a loved one on “One By One.”
#DISPATCH ROCK BAND SERIES#
Celebrated roots rock band Dispatch have announced the launch of an extraordinary multi-part project that will be released in a series of phases, and today fans can stream “Phase 1.” PRESS HERE to listen to “May We All,” “All This Time,” and “One By One.” This series of phased drops will culminate in the band’s eighth studio album in 2021.
