
Strange Trip Ahead
Mariel Buckley’s Strange Trip Ahead is the much-anticipated follow-up to her Polaris-nominated Everywhere I Used to Be . The record finds Buckley leaning further into alt-Americana and indie rock, with jangly acoustic textures, gritty pedal steel, and her signature melancholy tone. Lead single “Vending Machines,” produced by Jarrad K (Ruston Kelly, Wild Rivers), introduces this new chapter with cinematic detail and swaying rhythm, capturing the disorientation of life in transition with striking honesty.
Strange Trip Ahead is Buckley at her boldest — raw, real, and unafraid to blur genre lines. From the pedal steel hook of “Vending Machines” to the heavy-hitting album closer “Anvil,” her grounded voice and off-centre charm bring a fresh energy to contemporary Americana. It’s a compelling step forward from a songwriter who’s quietly become one of the most respected voices in Canadian roots music.
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$6.00Strange Trip Ahead
Mariel Buckley’s Strange Trip Ahead is the much-anticipated follow-up to her Polaris-nominated Everywhere I Used to Be . The record finds Buckley leaning further into alt-Americana and indie rock, with jangly acoustic textures, gritty pedal steel, and her signature melancholy tone. Lead single “Vending Machines,” produced by Jarrad K (Ruston Kelly, Wild Rivers), introduces this new chapter with cinematic detail and swaying rhythm, capturing the disorientation of life in transition with striking honesty.
Strange Trip Ahead is Buckley at her boldest — raw, real, and unafraid to blur genre lines. From the pedal steel hook of “Vending Machines” to the heavy-hitting album closer “Anvil,” her grounded voice and off-centre charm bring a fresh energy to contemporary Americana. It’s a compelling step forward from a songwriter who’s quietly become one of the most respected voices in Canadian roots music.
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Description
Mariel Buckley’s Strange Trip Ahead is the much-anticipated follow-up to her Polaris-nominated Everywhere I Used to Be . The record finds Buckley leaning further into alt-Americana and indie rock, with jangly acoustic textures, gritty pedal steel, and her signature melancholy tone. Lead single “Vending Machines,” produced by Jarrad K (Ruston Kelly, Wild Rivers), introduces this new chapter with cinematic detail and swaying rhythm, capturing the disorientation of life in transition with striking honesty.
Strange Trip Ahead is Buckley at her boldest — raw, real, and unafraid to blur genre lines. From the pedal steel hook of “Vending Machines” to the heavy-hitting album closer “Anvil,” her grounded voice and off-centre charm bring a fresh energy to contemporary Americana. It’s a compelling step forward from a songwriter who’s quietly become one of the most respected voices in Canadian roots music.











