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 FEATURE: IT’S OUR BOLDEST RECORD – A CONVERSATION WITH GARY JARMAN OF THE CRIBS
SPILL MUSIC PREMIERE: JULIA GREENBERG – “SOMETIMES THE SEA”
SPILL NEW MUSIC: THE CHOVIES (NYC/INDIEROCK/POWERPOP/JEFF BERNER) DEBUT LP + FOCUS TRACK OUT MAY 15
SPILL FESTIVAL FEATURE: NXNE 2026 – SPILL MAGAZINE PRESENTS 5 QUESTIONS
SPILL NEW MUSIC: 5TH PROJEKT RELEASE FIRST LIVE EP ‘LIVE IN LONDON’
SPILL CONTEST: WIN A PAIR OF TICKETS TO SEE CHAPTERHOUSE PERFORM THE ALBUM ‘WHIRLPOOL’ AT THE CONCERT HALL ON MAY 21!
SPILL MUSIC PREMIERE: PRIMITIVE RING – “THE CALLOUS MAN”
SPILL NEW MUSIC: TRASHCAN SINATRAS EXPLORE THE MIND AND BODY MYSTERY ON “MELODRAMATIC”
SPILL NEW MUSIC: NEW RELEASE FROM THE LAST DINNER PARTY “BIG DOG”
SPILL NEW MUSIC: NEW RELEASE FROM JON BATISTE “ALLA BLUES/ALLA TURC MOVEMENT”
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PETER FRAMPTON – CARRY THE LIGHT
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SHAKEY GRAVES – FONDNESS, ETC.
SPILL NEW MUSIC: SOFIE ROYER – “COWBOY MOUTH” OUT NOW VIA STONES THROW RECORDS
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SHHE – THALASSA
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CROWN LANDS – APOCALYPSE
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: RESTHAVEN – PRELUDE
  • 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
990
previous article
SPILL ALBUM PREMIERE: ALEXANDRA BABIAK - IMPATIENS
next article
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SHARON VAN ETTEN - REMIND ME TOMORROW

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CRANE LIKE THE BIRD – CRANE LIKE THE BIRD

Crane Like the Bird

Crane Like The Bird
Crane Like The Bird
Independent

After years of stacking up his resume, Kyle Crane has the spotlight. After touring with artists such as Neko Case and M. Ward, as well as appearing in the film Whiplash as the drum double, Crane—like the bird, as he notes—is finally releasing music under his own name. On his debut album, he takes the listener inside his brain in an examination of nostalgia and innocence, better times, and worse.

On Crane Like the Bird, Crane revisits the loss of his father Jeff, a Coast Guard lieutenant from Humboldt Bay, CA, whose helicopter went down in a 1997 search-and-rescue mission. Throughout the album, Crane revisits old memories and explores how the loss affected his family. On the album cover, we see Crane’s mother throw a rose out to sea, at the crash site on the cliffs of Mendocino.

Crane is joined by a plethora of names, including Peter Moren (Peter Bjorn and John), Conor Oberst, and jazz pianist Brad Mehldau, in a collection of songs as diverse as the names on the album. The album opens with the fast, atmospheric “Wishing Cap’, where we’re offered nostalgic treats in lyrics such as “found a shoebox/in your room” and “filled with letters/anything to feel close to you forever”. We’re digging through a personal tragedy, and while the music is energetic and happy, the lyrics tell a different story. It’s as if Crane is telling us he’s okay, while he’s suffering inside.

Later, this juxtaposition becomes more defined with the album’s highlight, “Glass Half Full”, where Moren sings “Every morning I wake up/I’m not the same as I was before”, in contrast to the catchy synth beat. The backing vocals also belie the lead part, with Crane’s declaration that “You’re talking to a glass half full”. The sensation of losing part of yourself, and trying to live without the missing piece, is prevalent throughout the album.

Crane is able to balance the more poppy tracks—including an honest and touching tribute to his sister in “Nicole”—with the slower, more melancholy ones. ”Now” sounds like it could have been made by Brian Wilson and Phil Spector. At this point, the album begins to evoke the sense of nostalgia that an adult would feel while reading a childhood diary. For a brief moment the song stops and the key changes, as if to ponder the current moment, and the innocence that is lost to time.

There is a wide variety of instrumentation. The aforementioned “Now”, for example, contains lush horns and vibraphones, while “Grizzly Creek Redwoods State Park” feels like a trip up north, telling its story with a guitar and bass reminiscent of Gordon Lightfoot which reminds the listener of the park’s tall trees and endless canvases of leaves. This song has no lyrics, because they are unnecessary. “Kaleidoscope”, which is almost ten minutes long, transitions from a tribal dance into an emotional coda led by Mehldau’s keys.

In his lyrics, Crane doesn’t rely on clichés, instead taking a confessional tone, going through childhood memories, different emotions, and different times. We’re given a window into a time when everything was okay, the tragedy, and the aftermath. We’re given vivid hints of this story, this tragic moment from Crane. And yet the album is a way of coming to terms with it. I can’t comprehend what Crane and his family went through, but this is the closest I’ll get. The drums echo on the grand finale of this journey into Crane’s subconscious, these memories he’s stored away for some time, given a front seat to the show.



Artist Links

website_flat_2016 facebook_flat_2016 twitter_flat_2016 instagram_flat_2016

Item Reviewed

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CRANE LIKE THE BIRD – CRANE LIKE THE BIRD

Author

King Dawit

Here's what we think...
Spill Rating
Fan Rating
Rate Here
New Criteria
10
10
8.0
Total Spill Rating
10
Total Fan Rating
5 ratings
You have rated this
Album Reviews
album reviewalbum reviewsband of horsesben bridwellcrane like the birdjames mercerkyle cranenew musicnicolethe shinstim liermanwishing cap
album review, album reviews, band of horses, ben bridwell, crane like the bird, james mercer, kyle crane, new music, nicole, the shins, tim lierman, wishing cap
About the Author
King Dawit
King Dawit considers himself the Psychedelic Cowboy. Raised on The Beatles, Queen, The Rolling Stones, and Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young, you will never find Dawit listening to the same thing two days in a row, whether it be '70s progressive rock or late '60s Baroque pop. Dawit is also a Toronto-based writer, filmmaker, and music producer. Among his favourite writers are Hunter S. Thompson, Terry Southern and Lester Bangs.
RELATED ARTICLES
album reviewalbum reviewsband of horses
 
9.0
Peter Frampton
9.0

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PETER FRAMPTON – CARRY THE LIGHT

by Aaron Badgley on May 15, 2026
PETER FRAMPTON CARRY THE LIGHT UME It is a good idea to forget what you think you know about Peter Frampton before you listen to his new album, Carry The Light. This is an extremely important album for Peter Frampton. Not only is it his first [...]
 
8.0
Shakey Graves

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SHAKEY GRAVES – FONDNESS, ETC.

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on May 15, 2026
SHAKEY GRAVES FONDNESS, ETC. DUALTONE RECORDS When you decide to go lo-fi, make a DIY record, and make it work, there has to be a set of very solid musical reasons (unless it is a question of being forced to go cheap) behind it, and those [...]
 
8.0
Shhe

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SHHE – THALASSA

by Ljubinko Zivkovic on May 15, 2026
SHHE THALASSA  ONE LITTLE INDEPENDENT RECORDS Your personal background comes into play at some point when you create music, and for the Scottish-Portuguese sound artist and producer Shhe (Su Shaw), for her new album Thalassa she references her [...]
 
9.0
Crown Lands
8.2

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CROWN LANDS – APOCALYPSE

by Gerrod Harris on May 15, 2026
CROWN LANDS APOCALYPSE CENTURY MEDIA Following a pair of experimental interludes released last year – Ritual I & II – Canadian progressive rock duo, Crown Lands, has returned. For their third studio record, and their first full album since [...]
 
9.0
Resthaven

SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: RESTHAVEN – PRELUDE

by Jasmine Bhoodwah on May 15, 2026
RESTHAVEN PRELUDE DYSTOPOLIS ARTS Toronto is a place where local music can be found in abundance. Throughout the city, nearly every night, there’s a local performance or show that can be found if you know where to look. Metal music in particular [...]

Latest Album Reviews
View All
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: PETER FRAMPTON – CARRY THE LIGHT
9.0
9.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SHAKEY GRAVES – FONDNESS, ETC.
8.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SHHE – THALASSA
8.0
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CROWN LANDS – APOCALYPSE
9.0
8.2
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: RESTHAVEN – PRELUDE
9.0

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 FEATURE: IT’S ABOUT THE CLIMB – A CONVERSATION WITH GORILLAZ
3512
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SOCIAL DISTORTION – BORN TO KILL
1091
 
SPILL TRACK OF THE MONTH: DAYS OF SORROW – “WHO WE ARE”
949
 
SPILL LIVE REVIEW: TENILLE TOWNES @ RICHMOND HILL CENTRE FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS, RICHMOND HILL
913
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: MOBY – FUTURE QUIET
904
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: BRIAN WILSON – ON TOUR 1999-2007
770
 
SPILL NEWS: THE AFGHAN WHIGS RELEASE NEW SINGLE “HOUSE OF I” | THEIR FIRST NEW MUSIC SINCE 2022
743
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: TORI AMOS – IN TIMES OF DRAGONS
669
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: SQUEEZE – TRIXIES
610
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: JOE JACKSON – HOPE AND FURY
607
 
SPILL MUSIC PREMIERE: IAMX – “INFINITE FEAR JETS {MIMETIC HEXES REWORK}”
548
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: BILL ORCUTT – MUSIC IN CONTINUOUS MOTION
539
 
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: CODEFENDANTS – LIFERS
538
ENTERTAINMENT HEADLINES