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Music: Zweng’s Toronto Tapes Is a Raw, Reborn Ode to Sobriety and Sonic Healing

Entertainment Now by Entertainment Now
May 14, 2025
in Music
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Music: Zweng’s Toronto Tapes Is a Raw, Reborn Ode to Sobriety and Sonic Healing

There’s something unmistakably powerful about hearing an artist come clean—literally. For Zweng, the California-born, London-based singer-songwriter, Toronto Tapes isn’t just an album. It’s a reckoning.

Toronto Tapes is a genre-spanning excavation of identity, grief, and redemption, soaked in the shimmering nostalgia of indie, pop, and rock. Recorded at Kensington Sound Studios with producer Will Schollar, it captures a year of sobriety and soul-searching in Toronto—a city that becomes both backdrop and catalyst for Zweng’s creative resurrection.

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Opening with the anthemic Good To Be Free, the album wastes no time setting its emotional stakes. Inspired by Oasis’ raw live energy, the track is a euphoric proclamation: this is not just a return to form—it’s a return to self. Zweng’s voice, laced with relief and resistance, echoes across reverb-heavy guitars and swelling choruses, evoking the triumph of choosing life over self-destruction.

From there, Zweng reimagines iconic tracks through the lens of someone who’s walked through fire. His haunting take on the Ramones’ Pet Sematary reframes the punk classic as a chilling metaphor for relapse, while Goodbye To You, originally a break-up anthem, becomes a parting letter to addiction and ego.

But Toronto Tapes isn’t only about leaving the past behind—it’s about reprocessing it with grace. On Back On The Chain Gang, Zweng sifts through old memories with Chrissie Hynde’s bittersweet poignancy, packing nostalgia into each note without ever romanticising the pain. Elevation lifts Side A with a buoyant ode to sobriety’s surprising highs—yoga, meditation, and the strange peace that comes with surrender.

Even the lighter moments carry depth. Uptown Girl is retooled into a wry critique of Instagram-era illusions, peeling back Billy Joel’s bubblegum gloss to reveal something darker, more desperate. And then there’s Take On Me, stripped down to a skeletal emotional plea, becoming less synth-pop revival and more midnight confession.

Zweng’s originals are equally arresting. Marianne, a devastatingly tender ballad written in honour of his mother, channels empathy through imagined perspective—a lyrical exercise in healing intergenerational wounds. Jeanette follows suit, paying homage to the grandmother he never met but always felt. “She was guiding me,” Zweng says. “That song is a thank-you to someone I never knew, but somehow always felt was there.”

The final track, Changes, fittingly closes the loop. Ozzy Osbourne’s classic becomes a mantra, transformed in Zweng’s hands into a raw, aching acceptance of growth’s discomfort. It’s not a farewell—it’s a forward march.

Raised in Sacramento and musically baptised by MTV, Nirvana, and The Beatles, Zweng’s path has been anything but linear. From the psychedelic garage rock chaos of the Coo Coo Birds to composing for ABC Television and recording in legendary studios like Ardent in Memphis, his career has been as nomadic as his sound. Now studying at the Abbey Road Institute in London, he’s channelling decades of lived experience into a new chapter of creative purpose.

More than just a record, Toronto Tapes is a roadmap through recovery. It’s the kind of album that doesn’t just sound good—it means something. Fans of Elliott Smith, Tom Petty, and The Cure will find a familiar emotional weight here, but it’s Zweng’s fearless honesty that leaves the deepest imprint.

And he’s just getting started. With two more albums—Virtual Outpatient Therapy and Hampstead Headways—already on the horizon, and a new YouTube channel (The Rock n Roll Animal) launching this June to offer behind-the-scenes insight into his creative world, Zweng is building something bigger than a comeback.

He’s building a legacy grounded in truth, grit, and the belief that music can save your life—one tape at a time.

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