Little Kid release “John Arnott,” their first new music in years.

Photo by Becca Howes

The career of the Toronto band Little Kid, the long-running project of songwriter Kenny Boothby, has taken a path as unlikely and idiosyncratic as their gorgeous, and intricately arranged songs. Formed in 2011, the band spent most of a decade accruing a cult audience as a DIY band, self-releasing 5 albums and numerous unusual releases (perhaps most memorably a run of made to order cassettes on which Boothby recorded songs chosen by the purchaser), before signing to Solitaire Recordings for their 2020 album Transfiguration Highway. The album was a massive success for the band, precipitating an explosion of critical appreciation that included earning comparisons to Damien Jurardo, Sufjan Stevens, Neil Young, Alex G, and Bon Iver in a Stereogum Album of The Week piece and high praise from outlets like NPRThe AV ClubPasteDIYSecret MeetingExclaimWorld Cafe, Loud & QuietNo Depression, and The Line of Best Fit among many others. Today the band are sharing their first new music since the LP, a single entitled “John Arnott” to celebrate ten years as a band and to mark the release of the Solitaire Recordings reissue the band’s fan favorite 2017 LP Sun Milk.

LISTEN: to Little Kid’s “John Arnott” on YouTube
(Lyrics can be found here)

In keeping with the Christian themes that are often central to Boothby’s songs, “John Arnott” is a song about Pastor John Arnott, a central figure in a ’90s charismatic Christian revival centered around the Toronto Airport Vineyard Church known as the Toronto Blessing, as Boothby explains.

The song is inspired by Pastor John Arnott, who started the Toronto Airport Christian Fellowship in Toronto, the site of the so-called Toronto Blessing – a charismatic Christian revival in the 90s and early 00s,” says Boothby. “I actually traveled up from Petrolia with my family to attend a service there, and later learned my partner was attending at the same time (though we didn’t meet until about 15 years later). Most of the churches I attended in my teens and early adulthood were led by pastors inspired by the movement that started at TACF: focused on performing miracles, receiving the Gifts of the Spirit, having direct spiritual experiences with God – frankly, they were all a bit ‘out there.‘”

Keep your mind open.

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[Thanks to Tom at Hive Mind PR.]