‘A family camping trip . . . with a lot more guitars’

CMU students use time off from school to record new EP

November 19, 2014 | Young Voices
Aaron Epp | Young Voices Co-editor
Winnipeg
Formed in 2009, Pocket Change solidified its current line-up in 2012. Pictured from left to right: Nolan Kehler, Brandon Letkeman, Jonas Cornelsen and Mike Wiebe. (Photo by Matthew Ryan Photography)

Most university students use reading week to study or go on a quick vacation, but not the members of Pocket Change, a Winnipeg rock band. While their peers were hitting the books or the ski slopes this past February, the band members were busy recording their new EP, Party Culture.


Pocket Change’s second EP. 

Made up of four Canadian Mennonite University (CMU) students—singer-guitarist Mike Wiebe, pianist Brandon Letkeman, bassist Jonas Cornelsen and drummer Nolan Kehler—Pocket Change spent six days this past February at Private Ear Recording, a popular studio in downtown Winnipeg. Each day, the band worked from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. on its music. It was an intense schedule, with some recording sessions stretching until after midnight, but the band looks back on the time fondly.

“It was like a family camping trip, just minus tents and with a lot more guitars,” Wiebe says. “We were all pretty inundated with school work, so we kind of said we’ll do less school during reading week and then hit the books hard when school starts up again.”

There’s no telling what impact this had on their grade-point averages, but one thing’s for certain: It resulted in a solid EP. Party Culture is an engaging collection of five experimental rock songs reminiscent of three other Winnipeg bands, all with Mennonite members and connections to CMU: The Liptonians, The Waking Eyes and Royal Canoe. The melodies are strong and the music is firmly rooted in the rock genre, but certain production choices, be it the electronic flourishes, ethereal keyboard lines, stacked vocal harmonies and occasional distorted vocals, give Pocket Change’s music an out-of-this-world sound.

Wiebe credits John Paul (J.P.) Peters, the EP’s lead recording engineer and producer, with helping the band realize its vision. He likens Peters to Willy Wonka. “J.P. was the Candyman,” Wiebe quips, “except that instead of making chocolate, he made our musical dreams come true.”

Peters helped Pocket Change strengthen its songwriting. His knowledge of the studio and experience with the recording process were also assets to the young band.

“His mind is a well-oiled machine,” Wiebe says. “We learned how to make very quick decisions about our music and our arrangements, and get things done very quickly, but still with great quality.”

The result is light years beyond the three-song debut recording Pocket Change released in 2011, some two years after Wiebe formed the band while he was a high school student at Mennonite Collegiate Institute in Gretna, Man.

Wiebe says the band’s lyrics are his observations of everyday events. The EP takes its name from the first song on the disc.

“Nothing we write about is terribly profound in the sense that I don’t think we’re trying to change the world with our poetry,” Cornelsen says. “It’s a collection of experiences and a light-hearted spin on the everyday, and I think the idea of a ‘party culture’ captures that.”

Wiebe says that watching the career trajectory of certain Winnipeg groups has given him an idea of what is possible for rock musicians who come from a Mennonite background. “Seeing local bands like The Waking Eyes and Royal Canoe, and even Alanadale and other bands who have come out of CMU, has enabled me to . . . have more respect for what Mennonites can do, and how our entrenchment in the musical world has so many more possibilities than singing four-part harmony in church,” he says. “Now, we sing four-part harmonies on stage.”

Growing up in a community that values thoughtful music-making has also been important to the band’s development, Cornelsen adds. “It’s a community that cares about music itself, and that cares about what its members are doing,” he says. “People [we know] like to keep up with us because they care about who we are. It’s really good to have that kind of support.”

The band members are excited for people to hear Party Culture. They are also in the midst of contemplating their next move as a band. Just like earlier this year, band commitments may take up their reading week this coming February.

“We’ve batted around the idea of taking the EP on tour during reading break, maybe three to five shows in Saskatchewan and Alberta,” Wiebe says. “Can we handle each other for that long? We did it in the studio. Let’s see if we can do it on the road.”

Pocket Change will release Party Culture on Friday, Nov. 28, 2014. Download the lead single, "Wonderful Time," for free by visiting pocketchangemb.com.

—Updated Nov. 21, 2014
 


Pocket Change—pictured from left to right: Brandon Letkeman, Nolan Kehler, Jonas Cornelsen and Mike Wiebe—has just released its second EP, Party Culture. All four band members are students at Canadian Mennonite University. (Photo courtesy of Pocket Change)

 

Formed in 2009, Pocket Change solidified its current line-up in 2012. Pictured from left to right: Nolan Kehler, Brandon Letkeman, Jonas Cornelsen and Mike Wiebe. (Photo by Matthew Ryan Photography)

Photo courtesy of Pocket Change

Pocket Change—pictured from left to right: Brandon Letkeman, Nolan Kehler, Jonas Cornelsen and Mike Wiebe—has just released its second EP, Party Culture. All four band members are students at Canadian Mennonite University.

Photo courtesy of Pocket Change

Pocket Change’s second EP, Party Culture, includes five songs. The band is firmly rooted in the rock genre, but certain production choices give their music an out-of-this-world sound.

Share this page: Twitter Instagram

Add new comment

Canadian Mennonite invites comments and encourages constructive discussion about our content. Actual full names (first and last) are required. Comments are moderated and may be edited. They will not appear online until approved and will be posted during business hours. Some comments may be reproduced in print.