Yes, people of Toronto, this amazing Canadian band is still together

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The Cowboy Junkies have one of the best music catalogs of the last 40 years, filled with more a dozen studio albums that have only grown more intriguing and impressive over time.

The Canadian band remains best-known for the 1988 major-label debut “The Trinity Session,” a lo-fi gem that mixes country, rock, folk and pop in ways that absolutely astound, and includes the album’s signature cover of Lou Reed’s “Sweet Jane.”

The Junkies went on to release a number of popular offerings in the ‘90s — including “Caution Horses” and “Lay It Down” — but then began to fade from the public’s eye as they rolled into the new millennium.

That did not, however, stop them from putting out great music. Indeed, their post-‘90s material — from 2001’s “Open” to 2007’s “At the End of Paths Taken” to 2018’s “All That Reckoning” — have arguably been the strongest of their entire career.

The run of amazing artistic success continues with the band’s newly released full-length album “Such Ferocious Beauty,” which the band — siblings Margo, Michael and Peter Timmins and lifelong friend Alan Anton — will support with two shows, July 18-19, at the Freight & Salvage in Berkeley. Showtime is 8 p.m. and tickets are $46-$50; thefreight.org.

I recently had the chance to chat once again with guitarist-songwriter (and fellow massive hockey fan) Michael Timmins and catch up on the latest developments with the amazing Cowboy Junkies.

Q: We’ve spoken to each other numerous times over the decades, so I feel like I can just skip over some of the small talk and go straight to the really big question: Do you think Connor Bedard is going to be a huge game changer for my Chicago Blackhawks?

A: I don’t know. The people who seem to know these things, say he is. I find he’s a little small, you know? That’s my only concern — is he big enough to enforce his will? He’s got the skill — like phenomenal crazy skills. But there are a lot of guys with great skills, but when it gets down to crunch time — like the playoffs — are they big enough to just impose themselves? We’ll see.

Q: Patrick Kane was kind of small, but he worked out pretty great for the Blackhawks.

A: There you go! You’ve got the template right there. You’re right.

Q: OK, enough about hockey — at least for now. I think you also make music, right? And you have a band?

A: Yeah, apparently. I get asked that a lot up here in Toronto — “Oh, are you guys still together?”

Q: No way! Do you really get asked that question?

A: I do — in Canada only. All the time. “Oh, yeah, Cowboy Junkies, I use to listen to you guys when I was in college. Are you guys still together?” (Laughs).

Q: Oh, wow. Not only is the band still together, but it continues to make excellent music. I love newer CJ albums like “All That Reckoning” as least as much as I do the bigger sellers from the ‘80s and ‘90s.

A: Oh, thank you. That is nice to hear. I appreciate that.

Q: The new album is also great. And it might just have the most appropriate title of any Junkies album, because that is what you are — your band is indeed “Such Ferocious Beauty.”

A: People have asked me about the title and I’ve been deflecting it, (saying that) “one of the themes throughout the lyrics is sort of the ferociousness of life — and even in the midst of that ferociousness, there’s beauty.” But in the back of my head, I started saying, “It kind of describes our band, too.” I hadn’t said that out loud yet, so I’m glad you said it.

Q: When most people think of the Cowboy Junkies they think of the soft, folk-oriented material. Yet, that’s only one side of the equation — and one that seems to be growing smaller, at least in concert, over the years in favor of more aggressive, electric-guitar-driven rock.

A: I agree — certainly live. We try to have that reflect in the studio as well. But it’s a lot more obvious live.

You know, I am very conscious and aware of not losing the earlier stuff, because it’s a big part of who we are and, obviously, it’s a big part of what turned people onto the band in the first place. But even that stuff — “Sweet Jane” in concert now can get a little raucous and a song like “Working on a Building” now is really a 10-minute psychedelic workout. So, even those songs have really evolved in many ways.

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