Singer-songwriters Deb Talan & Steve Tannen began
writing together the night they met, and soon formed indie band The Weepies. On
the strength of their simple yet insightful songwriting and distinctive
harmonies, they quietly sold more than a million records, with over 17 million
streams on Spotify, and 20 million views on YouTube. They married and had three
children, rarely touring but continuing to release their music, five records
over seven years.
Just before Christmas 2013, when their youngest son was
17 months old, Deb Talan was diagnosed with Stage 3 breast cancer. She was in
chemo by New Year’s Eve.
In 2014, Deb beat cancer, and The Weepies recorded the
best album of their career. Coming back from the edge sharpened their skills
and focus. At 16 songs and almost an hour long, SIRENS shows a band at the
height of its powers.
The couple was unable to travel while Deb was in treatment,
so they worked at home, inviting guest musicians to record remotely wherever
each musician happened to be, resulting in an unlikely superstar backing band.
Players from across the spectrum jumped in, including: Pete Thomas and Steve
Nieve (Elvis Costello), Gerry Leonard (David Bowie), Rami Jaffee (Foo
Fighters), Tony Levin (Peter Gabriel), Oliver Kraus (Sia) and Matt Chamberlain
(Pearl Jam), as well as veteran Weepies compatriots Frank Lenz, Eli Thomson,
Jon Flaugher, Meg Toohey, and Whynot Jansveld, plus a horn section from New
Orleans.
The prophetic “No Trouble” was written prior to learning
Deb’s diagnosis. “I don’t need no trouble, but sometimes trouble needs me,”
sings Steve; Deb’s vocals were recorded during her first weeks of chemo. The couple
continued to write and record throughout treatment, with Deb providing several
key vocals far into the year, including title track “Sirens,” captured in one
take on a day where Deb really only had one take in her; her vulnerability is
tangible. “We just kept going,” says Deb. “We also have 3 small children, and
were homeschooling, and the effects of chemo blew whole days out of the water.”
The band was able to use their limited studio time
as an escape, leading to some of their most joyful tracks ever, including the
genre-bending “Fancy Things” and the upbeat “Early Morning Riser,” aided
mightily by a fantastic rhythm section and horns. There’s plenty of heart and
comfort for long time Weepies fans too – the deceptively simple “My Little
Love,” the gorgeous “Brand New Pair of Wings” and the straight ahead poetry of
“River From the Sky.”
After The Weepies had officially finished the
album, and Deb was in recovery, they continued to record remotely with their
phenomenal backing musicians for fun, eventually adding a cover of Tom Petty’s
“Learning to Fly” and a version of Irish balladeer Mark Geary’s “Volunteer” to
the final album.
“No one song could capture that year,” says Steve.
“16 seems like a lot to release at once, but each song reflects a different
angle of that long, suspended moment. They hang together like a bunch of
photographs from a certain time. It was intense, but there was beauty and
inspiration, too. Deb made it back. And we’re still here.”