Lance Canales & the Flood
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Lance Canales & the Flood

Fresno, California, United States | SELF

Fresno, California, United States | SELF
Band Americana Blues

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Music

Press


"The big buzz at Folk Alliance International"

"The big buzz at Folk Alliance this year was around Lance Canales, who had us all on the edge of our seats as he stomped across the stage delivering a stark blues twang-and-thump set that sounded like it had been born somewhere between a back alley and a field worker's camp. If this isn't authentic roots music then I don't know what is." Eliza Gilkyson - Eliza Gilkyson


"Brilliant"

"Lance Canales's songs about his Grandmothers 1973 Cadillac,
his cat mojo and his ancestors are brilliant"
- Thomas w. Catchpole the Mountain Press


"Soul of a Native Poet"

"Canales revealed the soul of a native poet perhaps inhabiting John Mellencamp's
conflicting odes to simple Americana tinged with sorrow,
and the powerful physicality of Bruce Springsteen's voice,
as though The Boss were Channeling ancient spirits".

Aaron Collins Visalia Lifestyle Magazine - Aaron Collins Visalia Lifestyle Magazine


"Weekend Rewind"

It was my first time seeing Lance Canales and I dug his earthy rock/blues/country hybrid. - Mike Oz Fresno Bee


Discography

Still working on that hot first release.

Photos

Bio

Lance Canales & The Flood are a roots-blues influenced Americana trio from Californias breadbasket, where Canales lived the life that so many songs have been written about since the birth of roots music hard labor, one room shacks and taunting ghosts whispering of a better life. Canales guttural vocals combine a hard-edged storytelling approach beneath a stripped down, foot-stomping, acoustic instrumentation. The Flood are made up of stand up bassist, David Quinday (whose mournful bowing can be found on tracks such as Hummingbird Blues on the bands most recent album Elixir) and multi-percussionist Chris Estep. Using an old railroad tamp or playing a stomp box with his bare feet Estep keeps the rhythm along with the crowd, as Canales, described on the blog Bound for Glory by music Journalist, Robin Wheeler, plays hollow-bodied, anger-fueled blues guitar. He growls and stomps with his feet clad in the heavy work boots of his grandfather
Canales garnered a reputation as a child of being able to train wild horses and for years was forced to take his lumps in order to help his family make ends meet. It wasnt until he confiscated an older sisters beat up guitar and combined it with vocals hed discovered in his mothers fire and brimstone church that he was able to slowly carve a way out of the hard toil life with his music. While Canales may have left that life behind that life has never left his music. The bands 2012 released album Elixir is no exception. In the song Digging a desperate man enters a church house where he finds a, preacher screaming fire and hell. People screaming, running, crying, but still I felt no soul.
Canales played solo for years until he began craving a fuller sound and energy to his music and enlisted The Flood. Theyve been together since 2009. After playing a gig at the Queens University in Belfast Ireland in 2009 the band was asked to play an impromptu set on the main stage of the Belfast Blues Festival. When they are not traveling, their music is making its way via radio on European stations and XM radio, as well as being featured on several stations at home in the states, including NPR.
In 2012 Lance Canales & The Flood did the soundtrack for the documentary Dancing the Salmon Home which is currently being featured at film festivals across the country.
At present, Canales is most passionate about the bands February 2013 release of the single Plane Crash at Los Gatos: Deportee written by Woody Guthrie in 1948 and labeled by Saint Louis Magazine as a, gut-wrenchingly beautiful rendition. The song has been covered by many stellar musicians, but what makes this version so important is that it reveals the names of the Mexican nationals that were simply dubbed as deportees in the original news article. After first performing the song with the names at the 2012 Steinbeck Festival, Canales decided he wanted to do more for the deportees whom he discovered were buried in a mass, unmarked grave in Fresno, California, where the band now resides. In August of 2013, Lance Canales & The Flood are, in collaboration with Nora Guthrie and the Guthrie Foundation, putting on a concert to raise money for a historic memorial headstone for the deportees.

Band Members