Artist

Spencer Burton

Genre: Country ,Americana ,Neo-Traditionalist Country ,Indie Rock
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
Spencer Burton emerged from Canada's indie rock scene yet established his individual path as a singer-songwriter drawing on country and folk traditions. During the mid-2000s, he served as guitarist in the expansive Ontario group Attack in Black prior to launching his independent work in 2010. Following two atmospheric solo efforts issued as Grey Kingdom, he adopted a warmer, rural aesthetic for Don't Let the World See Your Love in 2014. This project, the first under his own name, signaled a move toward the country-infused approach heard on later records including The Mountain Man from 2019 and Coyote in 2021. His fifth album, North Wind, captured in Nashville, appeared early in 2024.

Born in Welland, Ontario, close to Niagara Falls, Burton joined forces with Daniel and Ian Romano to create Attack in Black during 2003. Bassist Ian Daniel Kehoe joined later, and the ensemble evolved from hardcore punk origins toward a broader, tuneful indie rock sound. As one of Dine Alone Records' initial signings, they issued three albums on the imprint throughout the late 2000s. After the group's dissolution in 2009, Burton stayed with Dine Alone and initiated solo output as Grey Kingdom. The pair of recordings under that alias—Eulogy of Her and Her and Her from 2011 along with Light, I'll Call Your Name Out "Darkness" in 2012—leaned into reflective indie rock incorporating atmospheric layers and folk touches. The 2014 release Don't Let the World See Your Love, credited to his real name, represented a focused turn to acoustic roots material steeped in country and Americana. Songs Of followed in 2017 with comparable character yet greater experimental leanings reminiscent of former bandmate Daniel Romano. Like all earlier projects, The Mountain Man from 2019, distinctly folk-oriented, came out via Dine Alone.

At the outset of the following decade, Burton and his family had settled on a rural Ontario farm, an existence mirrored in the grounded atmosphere of 2021's Coyote. Subsequently he faced a challenging stretch of solitude during which he composed minimally and attended to domestic matters. Upon resuming songwriting, his perspective turned more tranquil and optimistic, prompting a trip to Nashville for the recording of his fifth album. North Wind, issued in January 2024, explored the rustic country-folk direction of his recent work even further.