The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
The Spill Magazine The Spill Magazine
  • Reviews
    • Album Reviews
    • Features
    • Live Reviews
    • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • Headlines
    • News
    • Contests
    • Events
    • Entertainment Headlines
    • Concert Listings
    • Toronto Concert Venues
  • New Music
    • Premieres
    • Track Of The Day
  • Track Of The Month
  • Books + Movies
  • About
16
new
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: ORBITAL ENSEMBLE – CONTINUA
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: JEFF MILLS – THE TRIP TO VEGA
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VARIOUS ARTISTS – JUST LOOK INSIDE THE COVER – SONGS OF PETE HAM
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VARIOUS ARTISTS – STANZE FREDDE VOL. 3
SPILL NEW MUSIC: RESA SAFFA PARK UNVEILS HAUNTING NEW SINGLE “LOVE IS A LONELY FEELING”
SPILL NEW MUSIC: NEW VIDEO BY ETHEREAL DREAM POP ARTIST SHIPS IN THE NIGHT “INSIDE” | FROM ‘PROTECTION SPELLS’ ALBUM OUT NOW ON METROPOLIS RECORDS
SPILL NEWS: QUICKSAND CHANNEL MINOR THREAT & NEGATIVE APPROACH ON OG DISS TRACK “COOL GUY” | FIRST LP IN FIVE YEARS ‘BRING ON THE PSYCHICS’
SPILL NEW MUSIC: PICKLE JUICE – “BACK 40”
SPILL VIDEO PREMIERE: MICHELLE OWEN & THE WORKS – “A MOUTHFUL OF CAVITIES”
SPILL NEWS: MADDIE ZAHM ANNOUNCES NEW ALBUM ‘EVERYTHING ALL THE TIME’ OUT SEPTEMBER 25 | SWEEPING TITLE TRACK OUT NOW | TOUR DATES
SPILL FEATURE: KINGSTON CELEBRATES THE TRAGICALLY HIP
SPILL NEW MUSIC: AMY MILLAN TEAMS UP WITH THE ACCLAIMED MARTHA WAINWRIGHT TO RELEASE “CALLING ALL ANGELS” | A COVER OF A JANE SIBERRY ORIGINAL FEATURING K.D. LANG
SPILL NEW MUSIC: 19-YEAR-OLD 7-TIME CANADIAN FOLK MUSIC AWARD NOMINEE IRISH MILLIE RELEASES “ALLISON” | A FIDDLE TRIBUTE TO THE TEACHER WHO SHAPED HER
SPILL NEW MUSIC: LARS – “NO STRANGER”
SPILL NEW MUSIC: 50 YEARS OF PUNK AND THE DICKIES ARE STILL OUT TO GETCHA | THEY’VE EVEN BROUGHT GIGANTOR ALONG WITH THEM
SPILL NEWS: 2026 POLARIS MUSIC PRIZE ALBUM LONG LIST NOMINEES REVEALED
  • Reviews
    • Album Reviews
    • Features
    • Live Reviews
    • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • Headlines
    • News
    • Contests
    • Events
    • Entertainment Headlines
    • Concert Listings
    • Toronto Concert Venues
  • New Music
    • Premieres
    • Track Of The Day
  • Track Of The Month
  • Books + Movies
  • About
  • Spill Menu
    • Reviews
      • Album Reviews
      • Features
      • Live Reviews
      • Festivals
    • Portraits
    • Headlines
      • News
      • Contests
      • Events
      • Entertainment Headlines
      • Concert Listings
      • Toronto Concert Venues
    • New Music
      • Premieres
      • Track Of The Day
    • Track Of The Month
    • Books + Movies
    • About
Album Reviews
221
Editor Pick
previous article
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SAY SUE ME - WHERE WE WERE TOGETHER
next article
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: JOSH ROUSE - LOVE IN THE MODERN AGE

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: LAURA VEIRS – THE LOOKOUT

Laura Veirs
The Lookout
Raven Marching Band

By the time an artist puts out their tenth album, they’ve usually either flattened out creatively, or they produce a record that allows them to explore their musical interestsbut is too idiosyncratic to keep a majority of their listeners’ attention. Laura Veirs’s recent release, the sublimely intricate The Lookout, escapes either fate and unfurls in ways that will both please and excite long-time fans. 

Veirs’s talents as a songwriter and storyteller, from The Triumphs and Travails of Orphan Mae (2001) through Year of Meteors (2005) and on, have, strangely enough, relied on her ability to pile on the adjectives. The Lookout is no different. In contrast to the advice anyone who has ever taken a creative writing class has ever received, Veirs refuses to strip adjectives from her writing. In defiance of these writerly rules, she’s built a career on making descriptive thickness necessary instead of gratuitous. Few songwriters can manage this quite like Veirs; she is nothing if not a seasoned naturalist cataloging the landscape with a precision that demands three words when one will definitely not do. If as a lyricist Veirs has always excelled in excesses that manage not to overwhelm, on The Lookout she has perfected this density musically.

It is this musical complexity that makes each of The Lookout’s 12 songs a miniature archive, and each song has a specific agenda that asks us to listen for its musical referents. The instrumentation that accompanies her stripped-down guitar playing across the album is a testament to the broad repertoire from which Veirs draws. That rich history informs The Lookout, but this is no throwback folk album. Veirs reckons with the past mightily but refuses to shy away from what she is in the present or might yet be in the future.

As fans of Veirs would expect, she does this by examining our interactions with the natural world. “Seven Falls,” the album’s third track, takes us deep into the woods, pairing the comforting Midwestern Ohio piano twang of bands like Over the Rhine with the breezy hopelessness of Otis Redding’s “Sitting on the Dock by the Bay.” The results stop you in your tracks. You’d be hard pressed to find another song that sounds so lazily, sunnily comforting but with such dark lyrics:

“Up past the Seven Falls
Beyond the moody peak
I dove into the lake and called
An icy command for you to join me
How can a child of the sun be so cold?

So cold
Like a planet with no sun floats in the black
I’m old now
And I try to be kind but still sometimes
I’m as cold as that.”

Immediately following “Seven Falls,” “Mountains of the Moon”, a Grateful Dead track, presents us with another twist, giving us with what seems like a traditional English folk ballad. If you’re not listening carefully to the words, you might assume Veirs is singing about maidens and knights and magic. And she is. But as the name of the track makes obvious, Veirs is describing a scene on the moon. This is the deep future rather than the deep past, viewed through the lens of a Ray Bradbury novel that hasn’t been written yet.

The title track serves as The Lookout’s apex. The shortest song on the album, its brevity allows it to operate as the point upon which the album pivots, in an album full of songs that delights in setting up unexpected relationships between objects and subjects. Veirs has described The Lookout as a concept album concerned with fragments and objects and fleeting moments—the kind of ephemeral and transitory bits that we mistakenly and even stupidly ignore. Veirs insists on this album that we pay attention and look closely, and “The Lookout” gives her a companion for her efforts.

Indeed, our salvation as a human race might depend on Veirs’s form of devotional looking, of making the seemingly small and insignificant matter, both physically and symbolically. She achieves this masterfully on the album’s third-to-last track, “Lightning Rod.” “Lightning Rod” sounds most like “Laura Veirs Plays Laura Veirs,” but the echo chorus of children (her own, and a niece) and the synthetic drum track builds up static in the song and gives it friction. Musically, the track conjures older songs, like “Drink Deep” and “Spelunking.” If those songs were about diving in deep into the earth with a beloved by our side, however, “Lightning Rod” looks upwards and outwards, asks us to channel the potential of God and Science, and begs them both to wrack our bodies with energy and force: “You take the heat on the rooftops / You make it sweet oh please don’t stop.” It’s the perfect near-ending to a magnificent and aptly-titled album. A lookout is, after all, a vantage point and a sentry, a warning and a field guide, and Veirs has given us all of these things.



Artist Links

website_flat_2016 facebook_flat_2016 twitter_flat_2016 instagram_flat_2016

Editor Pick
Item Reviewed

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: LAURA VEIRS – THE LOOKOUT

Author

Michelle Morgan

Here's what we think...
Spill Rating
Fan Rating
Rate Here
New Criteria
10
—
9.0
Total Spill Rating
—
Total Fan Rating
You have rated this
Album Reviews
album reviewalbum reviewslaura veirsraven marching bandseven fallsthe lookout
album review, album reviews, laura veirs, raven marching band, seven falls, the lookout
About the Author
Michelle Morgan
Michelle Morgan is a queer ENFP living in New Haven CT, USofA. By day she works in digital accessibility. By night/weekend, she is an embroidery artist, DJ at 89.5fm WPKN, and purveyor of too muchness. She takes being a Gemini seriously.
RELATED ARTICLES
album reviewalbum reviewsthe lookout
 
8.0
Orbital Ensemble

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: ORBITAL ENSEMBLE – CONTINUA

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on June 19, 2026
ORBITAL ENSEMBLE CONTINUA WE ARE BUSY BODIES Toronto was always a sort of musical melting pot, so it is no wonder that the core trio of Toronto-based, Brazilian native multi-instrumentalist Felipe Sena with co-writers Artu Bastos and Dan McLay [...]
 
7.0
Jeff Mills

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: JEFF MILLS – THE TRIP TO VEGA

by Paul van der Werf on June 19, 2026
JEFF MILLS THE TRIP TO VEGA AXIS RECORDS Few figures have shaped Detroit’s pioneering electronic music scene in the 1980s as profoundly as Jeff Mills. Among other things, Mills developed a distinctive artistic vision that fused minimal techno [...]
 
9.0
Pet Ham

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VARIOUS ARTISTS – JUST LOOK INSIDE THE COVER – SONGS OF PETE HAM

by Aaron Badgley on June 19, 2026
VARIOUS ARTISTS JUST LOOK INSIDE THE COVER – SONGS OF PETE HAM Y&T MUSIC Over the past two years, Y&T Music has done an incredible job honouring the memory and legacy of Pete Ham and Badfinger. They released two albums of his demos [...]
 
8.0
Stanze Fredde

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VARIOUS ARTISTS – STANZE FREDDE VOL. 3

by Aaron Badgley on June 19, 2026
VARIOUS ARTISTS STANZE FREDDE VOL. 3 STANZE FREDDE RECORDS Stanze Fredde is an independent label based in Turin, Italy, and this particular album, Stanze Fredde Vol. 3, is a sampler featuring some of the artists who release music on the label. [...]
 
8.0
St. Divine

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: ST. DIVINE – THE DEVIL YOU KNOW

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on June 12, 2026
ST. DIVINE THE DEVIL YOU KNOW REEL TO REEL RECORDS Whether some genres or sub-genres are supposed to go together or not is often a moot point, and in more cases or not, depends on whether a band or an artist have the ability and inventiveness to [...]

Latest Album Reviews
View All
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: ORBITAL ENSEMBLE – CONTINUA
8.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: JEFF MILLS – THE TRIP TO VEGA
7.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VARIOUS ARTISTS – JUST LOOK INSIDE THE CO...
9.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: VARIOUS ARTISTS – STANZE FREDDE VOL. 3
8.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: ST. DIVINE – THE DEVIL YOU KNOW
8.0

STAY UP-TO-DATE
WITH OUR WEEKLY NEWSLETTER!

SPILL MAGAZINE MENU
  • Home | The Spill Magazine
  • Newsletter
  • Premieres
  • Track Of The Month
  • Album Reviews
  • Books + Movies
  • Features
  • Live Reviews
  • Festivals
  • Portraits
  • News
  • Events
  • Entertainment Headlines
  • Concert Listings
  • Toronto Concert Venues
  • About Us
  • Contests
  • New Music
  • Contributors
  • TOTD
  • Privacy Policy
  • The Scene Unseen
  • Newsletter

Copyright © 2026 | The Spill Magazine
All Rights Reserved.

TRENDING RIGHT NOW
   
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SOCIAL DISTORTION – BORN TO KILL
1217
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: BRIAN WILSON – ON TOUR 1999-2007
801
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: TORI AMOS – IN TIMES OF DRAGONS
748
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: JOE JACKSON – HOPE AND FURY
655
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CODEFENDANTS – LIFERS
597
 
SPILL MUSIC PREMIERE: IAMX – “INFINITE FEAR JETS {MIMETIC HEXES REWORK}”
588
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: NOAH KAHAN – THE GREAT DIVIDE
582
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: NINA HAGEN – HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN
574
 
SPILL FEATURE: WE ARE TRYING TO KEEP THINGS INTERESTING FOR OURSELVES – A CONVERSATION WITH JOHN LINNELL OF THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS
539
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: HISS GOLDEN MESSENGER – I’M PEOPLE
487
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: FLEA – HONORA
418
 
SPILL NEW MUSIC: NEW RELEASE FROM THE TRAGICALLY HIP, CITY AND COLOUR, RUBY WATERS, BOI-1DA & CANADA SOCCER “AHEAD BY A CENTURY”
415
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: MODEST MOUSE – AN ERASER AND A MAZE
413
ENTERTAINMENT HEADLINES