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WHOSE LINE IS IT ANYWAY?

Record Collector

|

May 2023

As melodic and lyrically masterful as ever, Ron Sexsmith mines the past on a potent new album, The Vivian Line, inspired by leaving the big city for more humble surroundings. But is he, as longtime cheerleader Elvis Costello once suggested, still “cursed” by being born out of time? Terry Staunton takes a road trip to find out.

- Terry Staunton

WHOSE LINE IS IT ANYWAY?

The Vivian Line is a stretch of highway running between the modest Canadian town of Stratford and the significantly busier Toronto, 90 miles to the east. Named, informally, after a local pioneer, the region’s first female school bus driver, it also serves as a jumping-off point for one of the country’s most eloquent songwriters to ponder his own history.

Ron Sexsmith was born and raised in another part of Ontario province, nearer the border with the USA, but has called Stratford home for the last few years and was struck by the area’s parallels to where he lay his childhood head. “Me and my wife moved out here because, frankly, we couldn’t afford the kind of house we wanted in Toronto but needed to still be relatively close to the city,” he explains. “It’s sort of semi-rural, a population of about 30,000 compared to Toronto’s three million, and seems convivial to what I do. I wrote my last album [2020’s Hermitage] here, and I also finished a musical, but this is the first one where the memories came flooding out.

“I would walk along the river every day and when I got home, I’d have all these songs in my head,” he continues. “Almost without me thinking about it, the road came to represent a portal from my old life to my new life. That opened a whole can of worms.”

Those worms manifest themselves in pockets of the singer’s 14th full album, so it’s natural he should name it The Vivian Line. Fans can rest assured the record ticks the requisite Sexsmith boxes of brain-lodging, persuasive melodies and selfharmonies in an Americana vein that intermittently ventures towards power pop, adorned by imagery-laden lyrical portraits of everyday people. The chief difference is how often the new songs refer directly to their maker.

Record Collector'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

Record Collector

Record Collector

UNDER THE RADAR

Artists, bands, and labels meriting more attention

time to read

4 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

LOOKIN' AFTER No 1s THE XMAS FACTOR

Does your granny always tell ya that the old songs are the best? The truth might be more curious and complex, as Chris Roberts finds, tearing off the wrapping paper to discover the full history of the Christmas No 1

time to read

13 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

Behold The Man Friday, The Leader Of The Virgin Prunes

Since the late 70s, Gavin Friday has trod a singular path, whether as part of influential post-punks The Virgin Prunes, soundtracking Hollywood blockbusters.

time to read

10 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

THE ENGINE ROOM

The unsung heroes who helped forge modern music

time to read

4 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACKERS

In 1975, 10cc and Queen reigned supreme with I'm Not In Love and that also happened to be the Christmas No 1. But how did both Bohemian Rhapsody. The former was the chart-topping sound of the game-changing singles happen that year, and which, wonders Paul summer and a production landmark, the latter a multi-part song-suite McNulty, remains the most revolutionary example of 70s songcraft?

time to read

24 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

'WE'D JUST WALLOW IN HOW FUCKING BRILLIANT WE WERE'

Graham Gouldman on I'm Not In Love, The Original Soundtrack and 10cc's next-level pop.

time to read

8 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

The Collector

Warren Kurtz began collecting records in the 60s and has written about music since the 70s.

time to read

6 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

Heaven From Hell

An exhilarating masterpiece wrung from a period of turmoil and unease, all done up for its 50th birthday.

time to read

5 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

33½ minutes with...Brinsley Schwarz

It's 60 years since Brinsley Schwarz made his recording bow, a handful of singles with the semi-psychedelic pop band Kippington Lodge, but he became a more visible presence later in the decade when he lent his name to the pub rock figureheads who also included Nick Lowe in their number.

time to read

4 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

TEEN SPIRIT

Of all the first-wave punk bands, Eater were arguably the truest to form.

time to read

9 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

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