Showing posts with label Brides. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brides. Show all posts

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Six years/Six pack: James Lindsay

MFS has turned six! My introductory thoughts on this landmark can be found here, but long story short: I asked some folks to pick some of their favourites to help me celebrate.

Today's list is from James Lindsay, who I know as a well-dressed man and co-proprietor of beloved local label Pleasence Records.


Black Walls - PTSD

Beautiful recording of what's become Black Walls' signature piece. In the right environment "PTSD" is intensely affecting, silencing the crowd as guitar and vocal loops build on top on themselves until reaching a climatic, otherworldly wall of sound. I've seen people publicly cry during this song.

New Fries - Fix Touch

I can't think of another current band I enjoy watching live more than New Fries. I also love this song and was disappointed it didn't make the Fresh Face Forward EP, though you can find it on the Mechanical Forest Sound compilation I put out with Reel Cod. I think this recording nicely captures their live show, where their jagged post-punk teeters, at times assertively awkward, on slipping into performance art.

Moonwood - Sack of Blood

This was my first time seeing Moonwood as a four piece, at Feast in the East's short-lived home in Little India. The band had a lot of energy that night. I, along with everyone else I spoke to, was completely gobsmacked by this set, which never seemed to let up, charging from one motorik voyage to the next without interruption.

Nature - Heater

Toronto supergroup comprised of Sexy Merlin, Man Made Hill, Jesse Locke (Century Palm/Tough Age), and Brandon Hocura (Polyphasic Recordings and Studio). They firmly capture the mutant-disco of '80s NYC, invoking flavors of Arthur Russell, ESG, and Liquid Liquid. This is from their first public performance, jamming on Sexy Merlin's "Heater", and by the crowd's reaction, you can tell people were feeling it.

Brides - Sinatra

Brides blew many a mind in their brief existence. Channelling the controlled chaos of the Contortions, but much darker, they helped pave the way for much of the no-wave inspired art-punk in Toronto right now. I saw them every chance I got.

Not The Wind, Not The Flag - [guitar excerpt]

The free-psych of Colin Fisher and Brandon Valdivia must be seen live to be fully experienced. At this point is safe to say that they are two of the city's best players, with jazz-tight chops, who are associated with countless, diverse artists, and have their own notable solo projects as well. They come from the tradition of explorative guitar and drum duos, yet every time I catch NTWNTF my mind struggles to grasp that human beings are capable of making this music. Intensely meditative. Vociferously introspective.


You can always click on the tags below to look for more stuff from these artists. Has there been a half-dozen songs posted here that made an impact on you? If you'd like to get in on the action and make a list, feel free to send me an email: mechanicalforestsound@gmail.com.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Gig: Brides

Brides (METZ / Tropics / Actual Water / Young Mother)

The Shop under Parts & Labour. Saturday, December 11, 2010.

A bit of an event down in Parkdale, with local No Wave noisters Brides playing their final show together. Although their recorded legacy is thin, they were well-beloved as a live unit, and went out in style by bringing no less than four like-minded bands to play with them. I was more of an admirer than a fanatic, but I felt like I should be on hand for this.

Knowing this was going to get jammed, I took care to get to The Shop in good time. My feelings for the venue continue to be a bit up and down — I rather like it when there's about fifty people in the long, low-ceilinged bomb shelter-like space; but when there's a couple hundred people on hand, it feels like a claustrophobic sweatbox and it gets hard to see and hear the bands. Weighing my options for the night, I decided to forgo my usual spot right up front (where at least you can see who's playing) and park myself on the back of the tiered gym benches along the long wall opposite the bar. From there, I was as elevated as could be over the crowd, so I could make out some of what was going on up front — though not a good spot for a bad photographer like me. It takes you out of the action a bit, but at least it generally sounded good and kept me out of harm's way.

I was also eager to be there early to catch Young Mother, who had impressed me when I'd seen 'em before. And though their first song was titled "No Straight Lines", I think that they were a bit less single-mindedly monochromatic in their presentation than when I'd seen them before — the songs were a little shorter and punchier this time 'round, and singer Jesse James Laderoute even cracked a joke, telling the crowd, "I promise I didn't match my guitar to my turtleneck intentionally." Still, underneath all that, the band was still manufacturing a calculated squalor with occasional bursts of rapidly babbled sing-speak lyrics breaking out into howls and no-wave sax bursts1. After four relatively concise songs — a couple in the two-minute range — the band closed with the relatively expansive "The Well-Tempered Male". Impressive once more, it was nice to bookend a show demarking one band's denouement with another really on the cusp.

Listen to a song from this set here.

Meanwhile, the night's between-sets entertainment was handled by Doldrums, with Airick Woodhead doing something in the slippery zone between conventional DJing and his standard one-man-band chop/copy/loop routine. Perhaps best to say that he "Doldrumized" the music he was playing in the same manner he creates his own, tweaking sounds in real time, dropping in treated samples of the music from just-completed sets all while bopping away as if he were there primarily to entertain himself. Later on in the night, Woodhead would test the goodwill of the crowd by playing some of the most diametrically opposed tunes imaginable to the evening's bands, including dropping Cher's "Believe" — and then deconstructing it in real-time, talking over the music to ponder on the lyrics and ask the crowd if, in fact, they really do believe in life after love.

I'd been curious for a while about Actual Water, who'd originally had a rep for noisy squalor. But that's been torqued with the release of The Paisley Orchard, their third album, which promised something else entirely. Apparently a core duo of Tony Price (guit/vox) and G.P. (drums), they were rounded out with bass and second guitarist. Laying down a loud rock racket crossed with twelve-string jangle could go wrong, and when the first song kinda muddled along, I wondered if this was going to be any good. But suddenly it all clicked together gloriously and all at once the band's sound was in focus — flower punk with no lack of heaviosity.

As others would throughout the evening, Price mused on their connection to the night's headliner: "The first show we ever played was with Brides," he noted. And, as if eager to get to their set, the band kept things concise, cramming in seven songs in just over twenty minutes. Intriguing stuff, and a band worth checking out.2

Listen to a track from this set here.

From there, the rest of the bands were more familiar to me, including Tropics. "I want to welcome you to the Battle of the Bands, 2010," joked singer/guitarist Slim Twig after leading off with one that might be called "Holy Water", which worked in the basic Tropics template of hammering drums from Simone TB countering Slim's slashing guitar and slurred screeches. But their sound is evolving a little, I think. The guitar is a bit less thin/harsh than is used to be, mediating the abrasiveness of the sound. That's relative, of course — the music is still way more Alan Vega than Buddy Holly, and still feels like a cauterizing wallop in the band's usual quick bursts.

Joking about the quick twenty minute sets the bands were playing, Slim Twig noted, "most bands have to shorten their sets — we're lengthening ours." In fact, they still came in as the shortest burst of the night, but there was some definite gems in there, including "Pale Trash", now out on a 7".

With METZ taking the stage, the room seemed as full as before, but now there were twice as many people trying to cram themselves right up against the band, making the back half of the room look quite empty by comparison. As loud as it was, people obviously wanted to get face-to-face with the band's riff-y ferocity. As usual, the stage area was dark, the illuminated bass drum the only source of light. Once the band's spazz-grunge attack was underway, I couldn't see much of anything going on past the pulsating crowd, but there must have been some bodies bouncing off the gear, as the microphones kept getting unplugged every once in a while.

Still in the process of recording their debut long-player, for this set unreleased material would outweigh the stuff from their singles — I recognized "Dry Up" and "Negative Space", and there were a couple familiar from past shows. There were also a couple brand new songs, including one with a snappier-than-usual tempo: "this is the only song that we can honestly say is a dance song," commented bassist Chris Slorach. I've now seen the band enough to be past that initial shocked-and-awed stage, but I still found it to be a bracing experience.3

Listen to a track from this set here.

The hour growing late, some of the crowd slipped away after that. It would be about ten to two when the last set began. Overall, from the outset Brides went about their business without sentimentality — this was more like a one last mad rush into battle than a victory lap. And despite the finality of the occasion and the reverence paid to them by all of the earlier bands, they didn't play for very much longer than anyone else, preferring to lay out their final testament in a concentrated blast that was done in under half an hour. That didn't mean they were rushing it — the set began with a few minutes of instrumental build. This might be a sign that the band had grown some since I'd last seen 'em — or perhaps my mind tended to remember the blasts of skronk more. Still, all the main elements I remembered were here, with saxophone blats butting up against the thrum of the music, all a backdrop for Elliott Jones' panicked-sounding vocals.

Even if the band seemed relatively reserved, there was certainly more palpable emotion coming from the crowd, and even when the music was syrupy slow, the audience was still seething and slipping around on the beer that had been sprayed around at the set's beginning. I wasn't close enough to really be able to catch what was going on, but there was some antipathy towards the audience from Jones — whether that was part of the band's antagonistic pose or the crowd was getting a bit too aggressive I cannot say. But when Jones commented, "that's it man, I'm not doing any more... everybody's bleeding too much playin' up here," he wasn't speaking metaphorically. Afterward, I spotted guitarist Michael Pytlik washing a bleeding gash in his hand clean. How that came to pass, I couldn't see from my vantage, but it probably explained the "fuck all y'all" that the band closed with. Maybe not the best way to go out, but rather apt, metaphorically speaking, given the band's abrasive vibe. Thus passeth Brides, though some members can already be seen around town in new bands, perpetuating the rock'n'roll circle of life.4

Listen to a track from this set here.


1 I noted that the band had a new sax player in tow, but I have no information on who he was. Apparently savouring the mystery, there's still not a lot of information online about the band and who's in it, but they do have a generous assortment of music to check out on their soundcloud, which is the most important thing.

2 Tropics and Actual Water (plus out-of-town guests White Suede) will be playing June 17, 2011 at the Feast In The East II show at the Dickens Street Theatre.

3 During NXNE, METZ will be playing a free show at Yonge-Dundas Square (June 16, 2011) along such distinguished company as Fucked Up, Descendents and OFF!

4 Though I haven't caught 'em yet, Elliott Jones' new project Ell V Gore — which also features Tropics' Simone TB on drums — has been hotly tipped.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Recording: Brides

Artist: Brides

Song: No Art*

Recorded at The Shop under Parts & Labour, December 11, 2010.

Brides - No Art

Review to follow My notes for this set can be found here. — this was the last show for local skonk-punks Brides, who went out with blood-on-the-floor glory. Do note that there was a bit of a static pop just before the two minute that I did a quick repair job on, so you might notice a little dip in the left channel.

* Thanks to Michael for passing the title along.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Recording: Brides

Artist: Brides

Song: Sinatra*

Recorded at Owen Pallett's 30th Birthday Party, Lula Lounge, Sunday, September 6, 2009.

Brides - Sinatra

My review from this show can be found here.

* Thanks to a commenter for passing along the title to this one.

Gig: Thirty Years of Owen Pallett (Part II)

Thirty Years of Owen Pallett (feat: Everybody Gets Sick, Dan Werb + RRReg, Permafrown, Nick Flanagan, Picastro, Samir Khan, Kids On TV, Alex Lukashevsky, Brides)

Lula Lounge. Sunday, September 6, 2009.

This is the second part of the day. For an introduction and an account of the first part of the day, click here.

6:45 Everybody Gets Sick — A special birthday reunion for Owen's birthday if I understand correctly — poking around, I can't seem to find more than tangential references to them online, so I can't say much more than what I saw first-hand. A four piece, with banjos and slide guitar, but don't let the instrumentation fool you — this group was more no wave than no depression, their songs filled with spasmodic, repetitive lurches, like Butthole Surfers covering "Ventilator Blues". Not particularly suited to my palate, but they had their advocates in the crowd.

7:04 Dan Werb + RRReg — Performing some new material together as a duo in public for the first time, the pairing of Dan Werb (Woodhands) and Gentleman Reg came off as an inspired combo with the peanut butter of Werb's rubbery electrofunk mixing well with the chocolate of Reg's vox.1 While getting the levels checked, Reg was the first performer of the day brave enough in the face of Owen's disinterest in such things to lead the crowd in a singalong of "Happy Birthday". The pair debuted a pair of songs, the second one in an extended dance mix that got stretched out a bit extra mid-tune when something came unplugged and everything went silent. After some brief confusion, everything was hooked back in and we got the song's outro, which got a little bit glitchy by the end, but the pair pulled through. Funky dance entertainment, and I'd say I'm looking forward to hearing more from this pair.

7:30 Permafrown — Another special birthday reunion, playing their first show in over two years, Permafrown continued the squelchy keyboard tip. I immediately recognized Amy Bowles of Pony Da Look and knew this'd be entertaining, but Robin Fry's Cheeze Whiz/royal court fanfare/funky keyb work certainly sealed the deal. Drummer Mike Leblanc rounded out the trio, who played grand guignol art rock, the songs pitched to dramatic heights by Bowles' operatic gestures and singular vox. If orcs left their damp caverns for a night at the disco, this is what they'd probably want to get down to.

Listen to a track from this set here.

7:51 Nick Flanagan — Nick of Brutal Knights did a ten-minute comedy set. It is widely said that comedy is a subjective thing.

8:03 Picastro — Liz Hysen's ever-mutable Picastro has had its share of notable local musicians — including Owen Pallett — pass through its ranks. On this night, the band played as a two piece, with Hysen seated and playing electric guitar accompanied by a drummer/keyb player. A couple covers (including "Sovereignty You Bitch" by Portland's Big Blood) in Hysen's spare red-wine-and-quaaludes style were heavy but a not unpleasing ride.

8:17 Samir Khan — Reprising his solo turn from the previous week's Friends in Bellwoods show, Khan again played his melodic "sensitive" songs. Feeling mildly apprehensive to be playing a looping pedal in Owen's presence, the songs were, regardless, nicely accented by his efforts.

8:44 Kids On TV — After a ten-minute break2 — pretty welcome by this point — Kids on TV took the stage in their skeleton wear for a slickly-executed four song set. This time through, an especially nice run through "Goodbye Horses" (a one-hit wonder from the Married to the Mob soundtrack) with frequent guest's Julie Faught's vox adding just the right touch.

9:05 Alex Lukashevsky — In a clever tribute to a tribute, Lukashevsky played five-sixths of the songs from Final Fantasy's Plays to Please EP, consisting of songs originally written by... Alex Lukashevsky. So, starting with "Horsetail Feather", we got a quick tour of the unique lyrical sense and fine guitar skills from the man Owen described as "the best songwriter in Toronto". A quiet set slightly threatened by general chatter in the background, but neat to see the songs coming full circle.

Listen to a track from this set here.

9:24 Brides — "This is the cleanest these guys have sounded in a long time," young T. commented after Brides' first song.3 Almost certainly true (though I'd only seen them once before to compare) although it's a relative claim regardless, given the complicated rock attack that Brides bring to the table. A half-dozen deep, with two guitars scrambling for space against driving bass, keyb and sax, it isn't by nature a "clean" sound. But there are degrees of chaos and Brides were a mite more reigned in than what I recalled, whcich essentially meant they were choosing their moments a bit more carefully for when to really spaz it up to eleven. Which I think worked out fairly well for them, as I found these four tracks worked on me all right. Fifteen minutes, though, was about the exact right amount of this, mind.4

Listen to a track from this set here.

The final part of the day should be posted tomorrow.


1 Or is that the other way around? On second thought, this metaphor probably doesn't work here at all.

2 "Why not go and get some gum?" Owen helpfully suggested.

3 There appears to be at least three bands claiming the name, so it might simplify things to mention that "our" Brides' myspace is here.

4 Noted: Minus Smile (of KoTV) was taking in the show at the edge of the stage with evident satisfaction, and when one of the guitarists strayed too far from his amp and managed to pull his cable loose, he had a volunteer guitar tech on hand to get plugged back in and then make sure for the rest of the song that the tautly-stretched cord didn't get pulled out again.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Gig: Wavelength 450 (Saturday)

Gig: Wavelength 450 ($100 / Brides / Hooded Fang / The Luyas / Element Choir)

Polish Combatants Hall. Saturday, February 14, 2009.

With this getting a buncha press (incl an eye cover story) I had no idea how early the crowds were gonna show up, but I was having a quiet evening anyway and erred on the side of getting there responsibly early. So I managed to snag a chair and settle in with a dirt cheap drink in the rec hall-type surroundings of the Polish Combatants Hall. Not a bad place to see a gig, even if it sometimes has a bit of a musty basement smell. Sadly, they took down all the unit insignia banners on the upper reaches of the walls for some reason.

It turned out to be a robustly full house, with, I think, a healthy number of folks like me, who appreciate the idea of Wavelength, but can't make it out for shows on a Sunday night. But also some just making the scene, out for something that was "hot" and on eye's cover. Or so I'm guessing — maybe it was that subset of people who were up near the front but still remained committed to talking loudly with their friends. Frustrating.

Based on the blurbs, I wasn't sure that a large improv choir was going to be, well, good, but I was pleasantly surprised. Starting off like the soundtrack of the journey into the monolith at the end of 2001 crossed with a dadaist tone poem, Element Choir's performance branched into a wide-ranging exploration of the range of noises the human voice can make. The conductor ran the choir in a manner that made me think of performers with laptops and looping pedals — picking out one range of the group, giving a gestural signal, and letting them make that noise while turning to tweak the noise that another section was making, and building up various textures playing off each other. It was a rather warm sort of sensation. Felt human.

Stowed my bag and jacket on my seat and went up closer to the stage as each of the bands proper came on. The Luyas were okay. The vocalist was compelling, but the band's sonic approach didn't do much for me, eschewing the easy things (like melodies) for something a bit more adventurous, leaving a sort of spare, deconstructed song-sense.

Hooded Fang were sort of just the opposite, all poppy and happy and dance-friendly. Which disposed me much more towards them. Co-ed and seven members deep with a whole bunch of keybs and horns and tinkling glocks, a facile comparison might be to Los Campesinos!, but without their Cure-ish undertone. Perhaps hitting closer to the mark would be to think of it as something like widescreen A&C-style pop (Stars, or BSS, a little) covering The Bicycles. Regardless, they had good songs and a joyful attitude. I bought their EP at the merch table and would keep my eye out to see them again.*

Brides were enjoyable enough, but any more than the short set they played would have been too much for me. Pick your identifier — post-punk/no wave, probably. Which is to say a rhythm section once-removed from hardcore roots, but tending occasionally to shift into technically tricky shifting time signatures, etc. I liked 'em best when they avoided that, and stuck to less chords. They had a skronky sax player who looked disconcertingly like Gary Busey in The Buddy Holly Story.

$100 was a band that won me over last year, and I ultimately ended up seeing them twice in the full band configuration, and twice more as an acoustic duo. I'd been excited by the fact that some of the best songs I'd heard them play were already moving beyond their fine Forest of Tears album. Perhaps it was the fact that I was starting to wear down, or just my heightened expectations that left me with the sense that this wasn't quite as good as I'd seen them do previously. (Or perhaps the fact that they were playing, I think, with a different rhythm section than I recall.) And by this point, I was surrounded, it seemed, by yappy people. So I wasn't totally feelin' it. But it was going okay enough. Though when they got to the stately, gorgeous waltz of "Nothing's Alright", Simone commanded the crowd to slow dance, and folks all around started to comply. When one of a group of yammering women to my left looked past me to grab a guy on my right to sway together, and her friends started talking even louder, I decided to move back for some peace of mind. But the spell was broken, and all at once I was feeling tired and antsy to go catch the subway, so I kept a moving back to my chair, threw on my jacket and split. I had a bit of wiggle time to catch the train, but I didn't want to miss it.

All in all, though, a satisfying night. One thing that came out in that eye story is that one year hence, with the tenth anniversary, Wavelength will cease as a Sunday night thing and transform into... something else. If that something else is shows like this, then I'd probably end up at more Wavelength overall.


* Weirdly, I managed to be sitting once again right next to a bunch of Band Parents, who were busily sizing up the competition and comparing their offspring to The Luyas. "Oh, they were much better than that first bunch," said one, "they sound like a real band."