There’s a line in “Tall Glass of Water,” the lead single off Tim
Darcy’s debut solo album, Saturday Night, where Darcy asks himself a
rhetorical question: “if at the end of the river, there is more river, would
you dare to swim again?” He barely pauses before the answer: “Yes, surely
I will stay, and I am not afraid. I went under once, I’ll go under once
again.” That river shows up again and again in the lyrics of Saturday Night.
It’s about how wonderful it can be to feel in touch with that inner current.
It’s about how good it feels to make art, and how
terrifying; how you don’t always get to choose whether you’re swimming or
drowning as we grow and move through life, just that you’re going to keep
diving in. That’s the impulse that links all the songs on
Saturday Night.
The album title comes in part from the nights and weekends when it was recorded: a six month period that overlapped with the recording of Ought’s second album where Darcy gathered with friends to record in the storage room of a commercial studio in Toronto. The result sounds like a person exploring his voice in a room full of people he trusts: joyful, shot through with struggle, unfakeably honest. Intimate and rollicking as a house show, delicate as a late-night phone call.
The album’s lead single “Tall Glass Of Water” featured airplay across the regional alternative stations.