Stricken With Cancer And THIS Close To Dying, Guelph’s Steve Neville Is Brought Back To Life And Releases “Don’t Say A Word”

With the past, present, and future in full view, out of Guelph, Ontario—the traditional territory of the Mississaugas of the Credit, First Nation of the Anishinabeek Peoples—comes Métis singer/songwriter Steve Neville with his most vulnerable performance yet on a song about the silent company we sometimes need on the melancholy new single “Please Don’t Say A Word” https://youtu.be/fq0lwzVbyoo

As if the Covid pandemic wasn’t enough, Steve Neville suddenly became incredibly sick and was subsequently diagnosed with leukemia in February 2021. Neville’s emotional tale on “Please Don’t Say A Word” comes from the solemn new album “Off Track,” a record that poignantly documents his life-threatening illness and leads audiences through his perilous journey to recovery.

All the more stressful as he thinks about his partner’s future and the life of their newborn son. The feeling of leaving behind a newborn is captured on the B-side single “Forever Yours,” also off the new record.

The album “Off Track” captures the treacherous nature of Neville’s experience with chemotherapy and stem cell transplant and the uncertainty of the future.

https://open.spotify.com/track/6K6VumHCcjQ1CzLdMYeLv0?si=a27f75f8edf34623&nd=1

“Throughout the album, there are moments when I slip between states of lucidity – moments where I’m awake and fully aware of my situation and other times when I feel caught between dreams and nightmares about my past, present, and future,” says Neville.

While the subject matter can seem heavy, the rhythmic composition of the record compliments the sense of hope that arises from such a harrowing experience. As Neville puts it, “Ultimately, the album is about moving on in life and accepting that maybe there’s something bright and beautiful beyond the horizon of what initially feels like an accursed departure.”

“Please Don’t Say A Word” is a song that focuses on the contemplative nature of life-altering events and the need for companionship through hard times, but more specifically, about the appreciation of silent company. “When I was going through cancer treatment, it felt burdensome at times to constantly narrate to others what I was going through. Sometimes I didn’t feel like talking and explaining how I felt or how I was coping with everything.”

Neville explains that the high-energy support of friends and family was vital to his recovery effort, but he benefited greatly from the quieter moments with loved ones. “I did a lot of personal reflection and soul searching during this time, and it helped me deal with a lot of difficult thoughts and feelings concerning my past, present, and future.”

Neville would fully recover after multiple rounds of chemotherapy before receiving a stem cell transplant in May last year from his sister, Jacquie.

Originally born in Ottawa, Neville belongs to the historic Georgian Bay Métis and Environs community, where many of his relatives still reside. The gift of music has been a part of Neville’s life, having studied both popular and classical music at the Ottawa Youth Orchestra Academy and the University of Ottawa. Neville would form The Balconies with his sister, a band that would bring them throughout North America and across the pond to the UK and Europe, opening for bands like City & Color, Bad Religion, Sloan, Our Lady Peace, July Talk and more.

Neville now takes his act solo with a renewed sense of life. “The music is dedicated to everyone who has been touched by cancer, be it patients, survivors, friends, family, and healthcare providers.”

https://stevenevillemusic.com/