Showing posts with label Andre Ethier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andre Ethier. Show all posts

Monday, January 15, 2024

Monday Roundup #157

Concert announcements:

Not A Band (Output 1:1:1 / Animal Party) / BSMT254 2024-01-25 (Thursday). $pwyc, all ages. [more info]

CMC Ontario Artist in Residence Showcase (feat. Backlined Quartet [Erich Barganier/Emmanuel Lacopo/Andrew Noseworthy/Patrick O’Reilly] / Paolo Griffin / Arie Verheul van de Ven) / 918 Bathurst 2024-01-26 (Friday). $free with RSVP. [FB event]

Happy Sundays (feat. Hieronymus Harry / Picastro / Avalon T.) / The Baby G 2024-01-28 (Sunday). $free, 19+. [FB event]

Array Ensemble III: New Encounters [curated by Bruce A. Russell, featuring four World and Canadian Premiere performances of works by Russell, Hanna Benn, Anthony R. Green and Kathryn Patricia Cobbler] (feat. Array Ensemble) / Array Space 2024-02-01 (Thursday). $20 (or PWYW), livestream $10 (or PWYW). [FB event]

The Music of Paul Motian (feat. Patrick Smith/Lowell Whitty/Dan Pitt) / Sellers & Newel 2024-02-02 (Friday). $20 Minimum donation. [more info]

Ben Shemie (Carl Didur / Blue Light) / The Baby G 2024-02-07 (Wednesday). $23.57, 19+.[FB event]

Dave Clark / Sellers & Newel 2024-02-22 (Thursday). $15 Minimum donation. [more info]

Dave Bidini / Sellers & Newel 2024-02-23 (Friday). $20 Minimum donation. [more info]

TONE presents (feat. Horse Lords / Ka Baird / Bile Sister) / The Baby G 2024-03-15 (Friday). $22.24, 19+. [FB event]

Is your show missing from this list? Submit it via this form!


Shows this week:

Toronto Electronic Music Open Mic: First Anniversary Celebration / Handlebar 2024-01-15 (Monday). $free.

Max Donaldson/Aline Homzy/Aidan McConnell / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2024-01-15 (Monday). $pwyc. [more info]

Music Hosted by Karen Ng (feat. Karen Ng/Ben Dwyer/Ted Crosby/Phil Melanson / Adrian Russouw) / Wenona Lodge 2024-01-16 (Tuesday)

Dr. Purgatory [David Riddel/Colleen Allen/Conrad Gluch/Noam Lemish/Andrew Downing/Aline Homzy/Stefan Hegerat] (Kae Murphy & Madeline Ertel) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2024-01-16 (Tuesday) [more info]

Sarah Greene Presents (feat. Kat McLevey / Sarah Greene/Tania Gill/Michael Herring) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2024-01-17 (Wednesday – early). $pwyc [FB event]

Welcome To Hell – live! (feat. Joseph Shabason with Felicity Williams/Robin Dann/Kieran Adams/Phil Melanson/Hugh Marsh/Josh Cole/Thom Gill/Vince Spilchuk / Still Boys) / The Tranzac (Main Hall) 2024-01-18 (Thursday). $27.96. [FB event]

FAWN Chamber Creative and Arraymusic present: Belladonna [A Co-Composition Opera In Concert, Process Discussion & Workshop Presentation] (feat. Teiya Kasahara/Hillary Jean Young/Rebecca Gray/Vanese Smith/Sara Constant/Morgan-Paige Melbourne/Yang Chen/Adam Scime) / Array Space 2024-01-18&19 (Thursday&Friday). $25 suggested donation. [more info]

Sandro Perri & Friends [Sandro Perri/Blake Howard/Josh Cole/Thomas Hammerton/Nick Zubeck/Ryan Driver/John Jowett/Ted Crosby] (Marker Starling & Dorothea Paas) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2024-01-19 (Friday – early). $pwyc, suggested donation $20 [more info]

Class of 2024 (feat. Sunnsetter / The Royal Family / Westelaken / Burs) / Monarch Tavern 2024-01-19 (Friday). $17.50, 19+. [FB event]

DAS RAD (Crying High / Troglos / 60 Bux) / BSMT 254 2024-01-20 (Saturday). $pwyc. [FB event]

Happy Sundays (feat. Ace of Wands / Idious Carrie / Rosie Wyse) / The Baby G 2024-01-21 (Sunday). $free, 19+. [FB event]


It happened this week...

  • ...on January 17, 2018 at Burdock Music Hall.

Kamancello - [set 2, 2nd piece, part 1]

  • ...on January 19, 2018 at The Baby G.

Andre Ethier - Parallel Highways

[Do remember that you can click on the tags below to go back and find the original posts (and often, more stuff) from these artists.]

Monday, September 13, 2021

Monday Roundup #35

In the absence of concert listings, my regular Monday dispatches have fallen off. After bringing some life to the blog with the "bumping into" series, I figure I should get back in the groove. I'm guessing that this will be a bit like what used to get shoved into the end of the post when I was doing listings — some bandcamp suggestions, nods to a few livestreams, and sundry community notes (email me if you have anything that needs broadcast in the latter category!). Plus maybe a look back through the MFS archives.


Community notes:

  • By the way, did you happen to notice that I posted my first live recording in nearly eighteen months yesterday?

Video hits:

  • This Wes Anderson-esque video (matching group coveralls!?) gives us a peak ahead at Charlotte Cornfield's forthcoming Highs in the Minuses:

Bandcamp corner:

  • Rick White's bandcamp page continues to be a sterling mix of new material and archive digs, and this new one album is a sweet addition. More lush than you might guess from its solo, home-recorded description, this is mostly filled with short'n'sweet gently-psychedelic bursts — but the extended coda of closer "Where It's Fine" sticks around and rocks out in a most satisfying manner as well.
  • Heidi Chan's Bachelard project has been releasing a steady stream of music during pandemic times, often in the form of EP's and singles that don't stick around any longer than necessary to explore a modular synth patch or other sonic idea — and there's an admirably minimal (or ascetic?) principal in place for this pairing of tracks:

It happened this week...

  • ...on September 17, 2010 at The Piston (The Pigeon EP release show).

Planet Creature - Ramona

  • ...on September 16, 2011 at The Horseshoe Tavern.

Andre Ethier - Pride of Egypt

[Do remember that you can click on the tags below to go back and find the original posts (and often, more stuff) from these artists.]

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Recording: Andre Ethier

Artist: Andre Ethier

Songs: Banana Grove + Parallel Highways

Recorded at The Baby G, January 19, 2018.

Andre Ethier - Banana Grove

Andre Ethier - Parallel Highways

After nearly a decade without a new album from Andre Ethier, there was a lot of anticipation for the release of Under Grape Leaves (put out by Telephone Explosion) and a full room for this release celebration. Holding the room's attention in a set that hewed to the quieter side, the focused selection featured a lot of the new tracks as well as a few of his older mellow groovers. Ethier was backed by Paul Mortimer on guit and and Nick Kervin on drums throughout with Joseph Shabason's flute and sax touches as the only guest appearance. Visual art has been Ethier's main focus for the past while (and this album corresponded with a show of new paintings) so it remains to be seen if there'll be a quicker musical follow-up this time 'round.

Friday, January 12, 2018

Recording: The Highest Order

Artist: The Highest Order

Songs: Carry On Warm [Fiver cover, feat. Michelle McAdorey] / Something On Your Mind [Karen Dalton cover, feat. Bria Salmena] / Working Man Blues [Merle Haggard cover, feat. Dallas Good and Andre Ethier] / Stop the World and Let Me Off [Waylon Jennings cover, feat. Dallas Good] / Shake The Dope Out [The Warlocks cover, feat Dan Burke, Calvin Brown + Richard Gibson]

Recorded at Lee's Palace (Dan Burke: 60 plus 20), December 8, 2017.

The Highest Order feat. Michelle McAdorey - Carry On Warm

The Highest Order feat. Bria Salmena - Something On Your Mind

The Highest Order with Dallas Good and Andre Ethier - Working Man Blues

The Highest Order with Dallas Good - Stop the World and Let Me Off

Party Wallet - Shake The Dope Out

Although things didn't feel exactly right, taking over Lee's Palace instead of packing The Silver Dollar, there were good vibes and all-star jams a-plenty at this night dedicated to Dan Burke, celebrating his 60th birthday as well as twenty years of promoting shows. Headliners The Highest Order went brought the biggest contingent of guest performers, enlisting a large roster of friends and collaborators (as well as an expanded band with Stew Crookes' pedal steel, Nick Kervin adding percussion and Vallens' Marta Cikojevic on keybs throughout the night). Michelle McAdorey added some backing vocals on a Fiver song that's been brought over to The Highest Order, as well as being backed by the band on her own "Disappearing Things". Jen Castle reprised her Gerry Rafferty jam with the group while Andre Ethier and The Sadies' Dallas Good sat in for a mini-set-within-the-set. With B-17's Calvin Brown and Richard Gibson joining in with Dan Burke for the grand finale, the band morphed into their alter-ego Party Wallet to close out the night.

Recording: Comet Control

Artist: Comet Control

Songs: The Cloud [Elevator cover, feat. Matt Mason] + The Love You Save [Joe Tex cover, feat. Andre Ethier + Yuri Didrichson]

Recorded at Lee's Palace (Dan Burke: 60 plus 20), December 8, 2017.

Comet Control feat. Matt Mason - The Cloud

Comet Control feat. Andre Ethier + Yuri Didrichson - The Love You Save

Although things didn't feel exactly right, taking over Lee's Palace instead of packing The Silver Dollar, there were good vibes and all-star jams a-plenty at this night dedicated to Dan Burke, celebrating his 60th birthday as well as twenty years of promoting shows. The special guests definitely made this set memorable, with Anagram/Surinam's Matt Mason adding a menacing edge to a driving version of Elevator's "The Cloud". And after that, things got as close to a Deadly Snakes reunion as you might be likely to see, with Comet Control's Chad Ross and Andrew Moszynski being joined by old comrades Andre Ethier and Yuri Didrichson, dedicating the Stones' "Hand of Fate" to Dan Burke as well as tackling this Joe Tex number.

Friday, June 10, 2016

Recording: The Highest Order

Artist: The Highest Order

Songs: Warmfront + Closed Casket (with Andre Ethier) + Right Down the Line [Gerry Rafferty cover] (with Jennifer Castle)

Recorded at Comfort Zone, June 4, 2016.

The Highest Order - Warmfront

The Highest Order with Andre Ethier - Closed Casket

The Highest Order with Jennifer Castle - Right Down the Line

Forgoing the trendy one-information-morsel-at-a-time promotion m.o., The Highest Order dropped sophomore album Still Holding with a minimal gap from announcement to celebration. With the lasers and abstracted visuals (and a New Chance opening set!), this release show was a sort of re-mounting of last summer's basement jam — but this time, down in the depths of the Comfort Zone, the sound was quite fab and the visuals looked even more striking stretched across the wide arc of the stage.

The group ran through the album (including this one with a cool new video), tossed in a couple old faves, ceded the floor to a dance piece and then called up some friends to celebrate with them, bringing out Andre Ethier to amp things up with a Deadly Snakes number and Jennifer Castle to tackle a prime bit of classic-rock FM smoothness.

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Recording: Sunset Pig

Artist: Sunset Pig

Song: Cocaine [JJ Cale cover]

Recorded at Comfort Zone ("DEATH TO T.O. IV: A Halloween Covers Show"), October 30, 2014.

Sunset Pig - Cocaine

Once again Dan Burke and Elliott Jones celebrated Hallowe'en by turning the Silver Dollar and Comfort Zone into a giant, non-stop musical frenzy, with nearly twenty bands doing mini cover sets. The bands — several of which were constructed just for the occasion — all took the task seriously, putting a lot of work not only into the music but also costumes and all the little things to enhance their tributes. The only downside of the night was that with so many bands on the bill, it was impossible to stage-manage a consistently efficient staggering between the stages, so that it didn't take long for bands upstairs and downstairs to be playing simultaneously, forcing the crowd to make hard decisions on who to see and who to miss. Otherwise, it was a fabulously fun rock'n'roll marathon of a night.

Nom de guerre notwithstanding, this was essentially a beefed up version of Andre Ethier's Cut Flowers, with The Highest Order's Paul Mortimer and B-17's Calvin Brown on guitars. One of the night's highlights, this set came off like bacon-fried goodness — I woulda been content to just let these jams simmer on at length.

[photo by Vincent]

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Recording: The Flowers of Hell feat. Andre Ethier

Artist: The Flowers of Hell feat. Andre Ethier

Song: Charley's Girl [Lou Reed cover]

Recorded at The Silver Dollar Room ("Lou Reed: Live Tribute"), November 21, 2013.

The Flowers of Hell feat. Andre Ethier - Charley's Girl

Full review to follow. Lou Reed, in his work in the Velvet Underground and as a solo artist, created an entirely new lineage in the great tree of rock'n'roll. Any band that embraces some combination of darkness, bad vibes, unrepentant vice, noise and art can probably trace their roots back towards Lou Reed, and in Toronto, it seemed exactly right that the Silver Dollar (home, most nights, to some combination of the above) should be the place to host a night of music in tribute. A full night saw a wide variety of Reed's heirs celebrate some good songs, ranging from quiet moments of beauty to noise freakouts.

Tackling a couple less-obvious selections, Greg Jarvis and his Flowers of Hell showed both the reach of their ambition (in choosing to tackle mini-suite "Street Hassle") and their will to rock, as seen in this groover with ex-Deadly Snake Andre Ethier on vocals.

Bonus! If that's not enough for you, I've made the entire tribute night available to download.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Recording: Andre Ethier

Artist: Andre Ethier

Song: unknown*

Recorded at The Great Hall ("Long Winter, Vol. 5"), March 23, 2013.

Andre Ethier - unknown

Full review to follow. Showing their true clout, Fucked Up managed to extend the winter a few days past the equinox to fit in one last instalment of their curated series, filling the Great Hall with energy pyramids, tiny street meat vendors, ladders to nowhere, piano crooners and a whole heap o' music. This was an admirable experiment in throwing together different kinds of bands (and different crowds), and everyone that helped put it together deserves our heartfelt thanks.

I saw Ethier debut this song in a solo acoutic setting at his Wavelength Festival in-store show, but here is has some pleasingly subtle backing by a hybrid crew that looked on this night as much like Cut Flowers as his "name" band.

* Does anyone know the title to this one? Please leave a comment!

Monday, February 11, 2013

Sunday Playlist #38

Sunday Playlist [Monday Edition] #38: Wavelength THIRTEEN Live Preview

Well folks, it's the best week of the year! Continuing their mandate to nurture the best bands in our city and beyond, it's time once again for the music festival so good that there was a long weekend created just to contain it. Once you've gotten all the details on the festival, read interviews and met the bands on the WL tumblr and listened to the offical mixtape, you might be asking yourself: "so what do these bands sound like live?" Well, here's a partial answer.

In-store All-Stars

All in-stores are FREE and ALL-AGES

Absolutely Free - Clothed Woman Sitting

Playing @ Sonic Boom, Wednesday, April 13.

Dusted - Long It Lasts

Playing @ Sonic Boom, Wednesday, April 13.

Andre Ethier - Soldier On

Playing @ Soundscapes, Saturday, April 16.

Laura Barrett - The Humble Fawn

Playing @ Soundscapes, Saturday, April 16.

The Soupcans - The Simulant

Playing @ Grasshopper Records, Sunday, April 17.

Thurs Feb. 14 @ The Shop under Parts & Labour

Lullabye Arkestra - We Fuck the Night

Ell V Gore - Scandals/Her Vicious

Fresh Snow - BMX Based Tactics

This Mess - No Sleep

Fri Feb. 15 @ Black Box Theatre/The Great Hall Downstairs

Doldrums - Anomaly

Blonde Elvis - unknown

THIGHS - Russ

Sat Feb. 16 @ The Great Hall

Do Make Say Think - End of Music

Evening Hymns - Asleep In The Pews

Doom Squad - Born from the Marriage of the Moon and a Crocodile + Eternal Return

Sunday Feb. 17 @ The Garrison

The Magic - No Sound

Castle If & Cell Memory - unknown

Legato Vipers - two unknown songs


Sunday Playlist is a semi-regular feature that brings back some of this blog's previously-posted original live recordings for an encore. You can always click the tags below to see what I originally wrote about the shows these songs came from.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Sunday Playlist #31

Sunday Playlist #31: Give Thanks for Rock'n'Roll

Action Makes - Berlin

Japandroids - Art Czars

Andre Ethier - Cop Killer

Teenanger - Louisiana Lounger

Useless Eaters - Telepathic


Sunday Playlist is a semi-regular feature that brings back some of this blog's previously-posted original live recordings for an encore. You can always click the tags below to see what I originally wrote about the shows these songs came from.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Recording: Andre Ethier

Artist: Andre Ethier

Song: Soldier On

Recorded at Lee's Palace (The Newman Boys Benefit Concert), April 20, 2012.

Andre Ethier - Soldier On

Full review to follow. This was part of a great evening at Lee's, which was a benefit for the Newman Boys' Trust Fund. You can read about how this show came together here — please consider helping this worthy cause if you are able. This song featured an interesting ad hoc backing band, with Sandro Perri (guitar) and Nathan Lawr (drums) joining Andre on stage

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Recording: Andre Ethier

Artist: Andre Ethier (with special guest Chad Ross)

Song: Pride of Egypt

Recorded at The Horseshoe Tavern, September 16, 2011.

Andre Ethier - Pride of Egypt

Full review to follow. A stellar night at the 'Shoe with three bands united by the fact that they've all been hard to find playing recently. What I hear though, is that we can expect to see Andre Ethier playing more around town in the next months, as well as openers Sandro Perri and Deloro. And as a bonus, for this set-closer, Ethier was joined by fellow former Deadly Snake Chad Ross.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Recording: Andre Ethier

Artist: Andre Ethier

Song: Cop Killer

Recorded at the Blue Fog Revue, Lee's Palace, May 14, 2010.

Andre Ethier - Cop Killer

This is not a Body Count cover. My notes for this set can be found here.

Gig: The Blue Fog Revue

The Blue Fog Revue (Feat. Rick White, Eiyn Sof, Wyrd Visions, Andre Ethier, Nordic Nomadic, Castlemusic, $100)

Lee's Palace. Saturday, May 14, 2010.

A couple inneresting-looking gigs on this night to choose from, but I decided to go with this showcase of acts on local record label Blue Fog. Well, "record label" in the loosest sense, anyways, inasmuch as they put do put out albums. But in terms of structure and ambition, it seems that Blue Fog has no desire to operate within established music industry rules, just to create a space for friends to make music for each other. And, on a night like this one, to combine forces and play some music together.

Heading into Lee's, Gram and Emmylou were singing to each other over the sound system and the stage — normally a literal "black box" — was covered in silvery foil. Add to that a thematically correct fog machine and blue spotlight shining up from the foot of the stage.

Starting things off, Rick White came out to greet the crowd and play one solo song — "You're a Deep, Dark Hole", the first track off the first Blue Fog release. "It's hash, too, so breathe deeply," White commented, looking at the fog unfurling over the stage. "It's not, really." [beat] "I think there's LSD in it though." [inhales] "Oh yeah, there is!"

And then, a quick taste from Eiyn Sof, Melissa Boraski's electric rockin' band. Playing just a quick pair of rootsy songs, "Weight of the World" was especially catchy. I'd been meaning to catch Boraski playing in a band format ever since seeing her playing a solo acoustic show last summer, and the taste here indeed indicated that a full set would be worth looking for.

Listen to one of Eiyn Sof's tracks from this set here.

Seeing Wyrd Visions on the bill at this show was definitely a selling point, given how I've been impressed by Colin Bergh's rigourously-structured folk rambles in the past, but I had been worried about how his intensely inward-looking music would go over in this kind of crowd. And indeed as he began playing, there was no shortage of chatter — though thankfully, at least, not very much right around me near the stage.

"Can I get less light and more fog?" asked Bergh, playing his double-necked guitar while seated on a stool. His music provides exactly that. And then things got even more interesting a few minutes into "Bog Lord", his second song, when he was joined by the first set's house band — composed mainly of members of Steamboat — who unobtrusively started adding extra colour to the song. There was some keybs, guitar from Andre Ethier and subtle sax from Joseph Shabason. This gave a bit of volume to cover over the chatterers, though it wasn't all blasting or anything. But it definitely added an extra dimension.

All of which was just prelude to a full-length set from Andre Ethier, whose last couple albums have been released by Blue Fog.1 With acoustic rumination lately superseding the garage rock frenzy he had worked in his old band, the Deadly Snakes, it was good to see him quickly setting up with the full band behind him for this set. And indeed, his Dylan-ish lyrical sensibility was very well complemented by Steamboat's musical muscle, and nicely goosed by some some smoky saxophone from Shabason.

Ethier, not bogged down by any sort of music industry obligations (his main gig is currently his work as a visual artist), gave a notion of what's he's been up to since his last album in 2008, playing some new songs ("English for Flamingos", "Wax Candle") and a cover of Donovan's "Get Thy Bearings". The set started off on the softer/more melodic side, but gained energy as it went on, really hitting hard on the garage-ier stuff like "Nothing is Written in Stone" and "Cop Killer".2 I suppose I would describe myself as a fairly casual devotee of Ethier, but this set served as about the most potent argument for his merits possible.

Listen to a track from this set here.

Chad Ross of Quest for Fire, who records for Blue Fog as Nordic Nomadic, came out to play some guit and sang lead on a song. Then, a couple more from Ethier. All told, that was an hour and forty minutes worth of music — and that was just the first half of the show.

Starting off the second set in quiet fashion was Castlemusic, with Jennifer Castle accompanied by some basic percussion as she spun out her real folk-blues. Just sort of taking the stage and launching into it, Castle, like Wyrd Visions before her, plays music that unspools in its own dreamy manner, so a pair of songs was no quick hit'n'run set. Crowd noise was again a problem, but the performance was top notch. Transitioning into the heart of the night's second half, she was joined on stage by Simone Fornow, and they did an a capella duet of what sounded like an old folk song.3

The band took the stage while that was going on, and $100 launched right into their set, leading off, with what I think is a new one (the refrain was "if you got no ties that bind you")4 that was followed by a superb version of "Fourteenth Floor". Indeed, the full band sounded excellent, playing what sounded like definitive versions of several songs, including "Black Gold". One of our best local acts, $100 are a delight in any configuration, but it was a real treat to hear the robust, full band arrangements, with Stew Crookes' pedal steel and Jonathan Adjemian's keybs rounding out the sound.

Jennifer Castle came back out to join the band for a pretty run through Neil Young's "Old Country Waltz"5 and the main part of $100's set climaxed with "No Great Leap", before segueing into the next part of the night with the Rick White-penned "Pain" — the gateway to a several numbers of a subset of $100 backing Rick White.

It's always neat to see a group of musicians suddenly flip over into suddenly playing a different sound, and backing White the band was now much heavier and more psychedelic. And rather excellent, to boot. Admittedly, I'd fallen off from regularly picking up White's albums, but this was a kick-in-the-pants reminder how good he is when he's on his game.6 Quite a thing.

Listen to a song from this set by $100 on their own here, and one with them backing Rick White here.

The second set was just shy of ninety minutes, so by the time it wrapped up it was about quarter to two, and unsurprisingly, the crowd had thinned out quite a lot. And it looked like that was going to be it. A lot of people were getting ready to split, though a few were still applauding, and the music started over the sound system. I started to pack up, when, at Rick White's invocation, the band came back out. With some friends on stage, they played "Forest of Tears". A welcome closer, though by this time I was feeling pretty wiped. Overall, a fine celebration for Blue Fog.


1 Indeed, they are rather descriptively entitled On Blue Fog and Born of Blue Fog.

2 An Ethier original, and not an Ice-T cover.

3 I couldn't place it, but the refrain was "nobody's fault but my own".

4 New material on the night also included "If It Weren't For the Carnations" and "Meet Me Where the Sparrows Drop".

5 It's worth noting that while $100 almost always play a cover during their sets, they almost never play the same one twice. It'd be interesting to see what would be by now a rather extensive list of all the ones they've tackled in concert.

6 The last couple times I'd seen him live were solo acoustic sets, which were less riveting than hearing him blasting it out with the band.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Gig: Steamboat

Steamboat

Sneaky Dee's. Saturday, May 17, 2009.

What better way to celebrate the release of a twenty minute EP than with a two-and-a-half hour performance?

Headed down not knowing a lot about Steamboat. I know I've just missed seeing them two or three times in the past. and I knew I had seen various members ably performing in other bands — including, convincingly, The Old Soul. Plus, there was an impressive list of guests slated, so it seemed like a no-brainer. For six bucks cover and a seven dollar CD, it was incredible value for money.

Steamboat on their own roll five deep, such excellent players all that it'd be unfair to single any one out1. Imagine the grease'n'gravy of Booker T & The MG's leavened with a soupçon of The Band, able to provide sympathetic backing across a variety of genres — specialists in all styles, to borrow a phrase. Over the course of two generous sets, the band played a lot of covers, with some of their own material thrown in — and given some of the top drawer stuff they were covering, it's a complement to say the originals, written and delivered by Matt McLaren in a soulful voice, fit in well. If there's any criticism to be made — and its a small one — it's that (at least as of yet, maybe) the band doesn't have as much of its own material to rely on. But besides relying on themselves, they also got by with a little help from their friends.

The first guest up was Doug Paisley, whose name was not immediately familiar to me2 who mixed some country dust into the formula, performing a pair of strong tunes, including the ripping "If I Wanted To". Next up were Ian and Simone from $100, duetting on George Jones/Tammy Wynette's "Golden Ring" plus a roaring take through their own "Tirade of a Shitty Mom", the band bringing the menace to the latter. The first set ended with Alex Lukashevsky joining the band for a couple covers, including a bit of reggae-lite on Jimmy Cliff's "The Harder They Come".3

After a break, the band threw down a few more numbers, before being joined by Sandro Perri and Mantler. I'm familiar with Perri's avant-pop stylings, but had not been exposed to Mantler, wearing a white tuxedo and taking over the electric piano, delivering some smooth, lounge-y tunes, leading off with "I Guarantee You a Good Time". Perri took a turn at the mike for an original (I think) that developed into an extended slinky groove of a coda.

Andre Ethier4 took over and led off with a tune which sounded like "You're a Big Girl Now" in a mellow car crash with "Dress Rehearsal Rag", a sax mourning the scene, and followed up with a powerful Joe Tex cover. Following that, the focus was back on Steamboat themselves, augmented for the rest of the night by an excellent Stax-styled horn section, which was put to good use on a ripping take of Eddie Floyd's "Big Bird" and a few more.

As the set wore on, the original groups of women dancing in front of the stage were increasingly replaced by tall dudes, bro-ing down and reaching over to grab each other's shaggy hair, celebrating some sort of drunken ritual. It was just the sort of night where there was so much music that at one point or another, a break was indicated, and there was a lot of turnover near the front of the room. After being on stage for over ninety minutes for their second set, the band ended with a one-song encore, fabulously tearing through "Can You Picture That?", originally by The Muppet Show's Dr. Teeth and The Electric Mayhem. Matt McLaren admitted that this was a favourite song from his childhood, and, in this context, it felt like a telling formative influence. It was somewhat amazing that the band still had the energy to play with unabated energy all the way through. Added up, it was a thirty-plus song marathon — my second wind needed a second wind to keep me going through it all, but this was totally a lot of fun.

It's worth passingly noting that if a band were to come up with subtle variations on some post-punk group from some bleak Northern English town, they'd be hailed as visionary, but anyone working on subtle variations on some soul band from some bleak Southern American town is usually dismissed as merely retro. This is probably incorrect thinking. Steamboat are working and sweating, generating radiating waves of fun with excellent craftsmanship. There's serious talent in this band, both as sympathetic backing musicians and on their own stuff, so hopefully this EP is just a start. Daunting thought: how long will their release party be for a full-length album?

Listen to a track from this show here.


1 Although perhaps I will single out Christopher Sandes' organ — complete with Leslie Speaker — which really tied everything together throughout the night.

2 Though it turns out that I have seen him perform in his Dark Hand and Lamplight project.

3 Interesting fact: a reggae-lite version of "The Harder They Come" with Alec Lukashevsky on vox sounds not entirely unlike "Two Princes" by The Spin Doctors.

4 Andre was playing one of those... what d'you call those four string guits that are bigger than a ukulele? One of those.