44 is the sixth solo album by Canadian indie rockmusicianJoel Plaskett, released on April 17, 2020. Dubbed the "spiritual successor" to Plaskett's prior triple albumThree, the 44-song, quadruple album was released the day before the artist's 45th birthday. Plaskett recorded the album across Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Memphis, Nashville and Toronto, having worked with 33 other musicians over four years.
Background
Each of the four records in the album contains 11 songs, with their own title and theme. The first record is centred around travelling, the second collection turns to finding a homecoming unfamiliar, the third set tackles transitioning from lost to found, and the last record deals with arriving at a personal destination. Collaborators include Plaskett's band the Emergency, as well as his former group from the ninetiesThrush Hermit; members of Sloan and Local Rabbits; fellow Maritimer and mentee of Plaskett Mo Kenney; Dave Shouse of past bands Grifters and Those Bastard Souls; Nashville-based Canadians Rob Crowell and Steve Dawson; the vocalist trio Reeny, Mahalia and Micah Smith; East Coast songwriters Al Tuck, Rose Cousins, and Erin Costello; folk singer-songwriters Charlotte Cornfield and Ana Egge; and Plaskett's son, Xianing. The cross-Canada album tour for 44 had been scheduled for April–May, 2020 but was pushed back to October–November, 2020 due to the 2019-2020 coronavirus pandemic.
A hometown review in Halifax's Chronicle Herald summed up the album as, "autobiographical, philosophical, psychoanalytical and spiritual." Another review called it a mix of everything, an eclectic collection from a prolific artist full of multitudes: "rock and pop, country and folk, loud and quiet, electric and acoustic, earthy and spacey, sincere and silly, gems and duds, studio and live, full-band productions and lo-fi solo fare." One critic described the title single from the third record, If There's Another Road as "comfort food." The expansive album was said to be a "massive, eclectic" reflection on the depth and breadth of the artist's life journey; "an impressive retrospective." Also focusing on the reflective nature of the album, a Globe and Mail review noted how the album was a labour of love to Plaskett's family and friends, and the years-long effort displayed "the value of slowing down to enjoy the moment."