Sparta will release their new album, Trust the River, on April 10th. Today they’ve shared a video for the new song “Believe” and pre-orders are now up.
Track Listing
- Class Blue
- Cat Scream
- Turquoise Dream
- Spirit Away
- Believe
- Graveyard Luck
- Dead End Signs
- Miracle
- Empty House
- No One Can Be Nowhere
Tour Dates
- 04/23/20 – San Francisco CA @ Bottom of the Hill
- 04/24/20 – Los Angeles CA @ Troubadour
- 04/25/20 – San Diego CA @ Soda Bar
- 04/29/20 – New York NY @ Mercury Lounge
- 04/30/20 – New York NY @ Mercury Lounge
- 05/01/20 – Philadelphia PA @ Boot & Saddle
- 05/02/20 – Philadelphia PA @ Boot & Saddle
- 05/03/20 – Somerville MA @ ONCE Ballroom
Trust The River is available for preorder here. “Believe” will be available on all DSP’s on Friday, January 24. Pre-sale tickets for the tour will go on sale today at 11am ET here, with all tickets going on sale Friday, January 24 at 12pm local time.
When it comes to his long and fruitful career in music, Jim Ward is not guided by vanity or money or some grand narrative in which he’s the central player. It’s all about the song, the melody, the lyric. So in late-2017, when he began making heavier, more riff-laden music, he rang his Sparta bandmate of more than 20 years, bassist Matt Miller, and began work on Trust The River, the band’s first album since 2006’s Threes.
Of their absence Ward notes, “I’ve made a real point to never break up a band, mostly because if you look at my history it’s filled with on-and-off-again projects. As much as I can control it, I don’t want there to be permanence.”
Making the album was a multi-month songwriting process that culminated in some of the most inspired recording sessions of his career, with help from Miller, drummer Cully Symington, and guitarist Gabriel Gonzalez. Also joining them was Austin-based musician-producer, David Garza.
Beyond Sparta, Ward has performed in various bands and under several monikers over his long and winding career— from the iconic post-hardcore band At The Drive-In, to a slew of solo albums and, recently, his alt-country project, Sleepercar.
Having been a member of heavy bands but also showcasing his more melancholic side via his solo work, Ward says the new Sparta album feels like the logical meeting point of his influences. “Naturally it’s coming to this unity,” he says. “Those two worlds have always been on a path towards unity. And I knew in my heart that it was coming.”
“I’m super excited because we get to do this all in a way we want to,” he says of playing small clubs for multiple-night runs, stripped down and intimate, and then exploring whatever city he might be in. “When you’re 23 and you’re on tour you want to play the show and go to a bar and have a crazy night. I would much rather play the show, go to bed and then spend the next day in the city going to a museum or a really good lunch,” Ward explains. “Patti Smith talks about how she plays shows where she wants to go. I find that really cool.
“All the other stuff — fame and fortune — is nothing but a bummer,” Ward says. “It doesn’t do any good for me. And the way I see it, life is way too short to be unhappy.”