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Ducks Ltd.
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Toronto’s Ducks Ltd. (formerly Ducks Unlimited), the bright jangle-pop duo of Tom McGreevy (lead vocal, guitar, bass,
keyboards) and Evan Lewis (guitar, bass, drum programming), accomplish the impossible. The pair craft songs that
play to very specific inspirations without drowning underneath them—immediately evidenced on their critically
acclaimed EP, Get Bleak, and sharpened on Modern Fiction, their debut LP. “The Servants, The Clean, The Chills,
The Bats, Television Personalities, Felt,” Evan rattles off. “Look Blue Go Purple is one I reference a lot with our
production.” Echoes of ‘80s indiepop abound, but they never overwhelm. This is not a nostalgic record, after all, nor is
it a derivative one. Instead, across 10 cheery-sounding songs, Ducks Ltd. explore contemporary society in decline,
examining large scale human disaster through personal turmoil (hence the title, taken from a university course called
Gnosticism and Nihilism in Modern Fiction, influenced by Graham Greene novels. Bookish indie fans, look no further.)
Writing the album was intimate. Tom drafted the nucleus of a song on an unplugged electric guitar and brought it over
to Evan’s apartment, where the pair sat in his bedroom, placing percussive beats from a drum machine under
nascent melodies, passing a bass back and forth, adding organs and bridges where necessary. “It’s computer music
trying extremely hard not to sound like computer music,” Tom jokes. Fearful that limited and expensive studio time
would kneecap the project creatively, eroding their charming naivete, the pair re-recorded the album in a storage
space owned by Evan’s boss. Ornamentation through collaboration followed: there’s Aaron Goldstein on Pedal Steel
in the Go-Betweens’ “Cattle and Cane”-channeling interlude “Patience Wearing Thin,” Eliza Niemi on cello (“18
Cigarettes,” a song loosely inspired by a 1997 Oasis performance of “Don’t Go Away”), and backing harmonies from
Carpark labelmates The Beths (on an ode to friendship at a distance, “How Lonely Are You?,” “Always There,” and on
the sped-up Syd Barrett stylings of “Under The Rolling Moon.”) While in his native Australia due to covid-19, Evan
worked closely with producer James Cecil (The Goon Sax, Architecture in Helsinki) on Modern Fiction’s finishing
touches—at one point, in the mountains of the Macedon Ranges in Victoria, recorded a string quartet (featured on
“Fit to Burst,” “Always There,” “Sullen Leering Hope,” “‘Twere Ever Thus,” “Grand Final Day.”)
It’s danceable, depressive fun, with some relief: in “Always There” and “Sullen Leering Hope,” Modern Fiction’s
faithful heart. “There’s a tendency in my writing, because of my world view, to be very bleak.” Tom explains. “A quality
I don’t always see in myself and really appreciate in others is the courage to go on.” And yet, the record manages
resiliency—enough for pop fans to fall in love with.
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