Showing posts with label Laura Barrett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laura Barrett. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

#mfs15 playlist: Mira Martin-Gray

MFS has turned fifteen! My introductory thoughts on this landmark can be found here, but long story short: I asked some folks from the MFS community to help me celebrate by picking some selections from the archives, and possibly sharing some thoughts or stories.

Today's list is from Mira Martin-Gray.

I met the blogger behind this venerable operation in October 2017 at a show at the gone-but-not-forgotten Dupe Shop. But I first saw Joe about ten years earlier, at one rock club or another. Rancho Relaxo? Silver Dollar Room? Surely not The Reverb? I was an underage indie rocker sporting skinny jeans and oversized glasses gigging with my high school band, and often as not, that guy was in the crowd again, messenger bag in tow. Ah, 2007. Somehow all these years later Joe and I have found ourselves in the same-but-different music scene, and again, at least as often as not, we find ourselves at the same concerts – now friends and peers.

What a pleasure to dig through the Mechanical Forest Sound archive, a delicious mixture of nostalgia and discovery. I’ve chosen to focus on older stuff. Some of my selections represent cherished memories, and some offer glimpses of moments I wish I could have witnessed.


Laura Barrett - Sorting Hat

Recorded at Rolly's Garage (Daps All-Ages & No Shame Afternoon Extravaganza), June 20, 2009.

It was June 2009, the Ossington strip was newly "happenin," and I was a couple months shy of 19. Hooded Fang’s Dan and April ran a much needed series of weekend afternoon all-ages shows, often showcasing young bands and cheap eats. I came to this particular gig to hear percussive powerhouse Pick a Piper, with whom I’d shared a bill at the PWYC Pitter Patter Festival the year before (with DAPS side project HUT, IIRC). I was also happy to hear surprise guests Spiral Beach, the ultimate art rock teen idols. But the performance that I remember most fondly was Laura Barrett’s, and it seems she was the highlight for Joe as well. Barrett’s songs were quirky, feminine, complex – just what I needed to hear as an androgynous wannabe-intellectual indie kid. Soon after, I went out and bought a kalimba at African Drums and Arts Crafts in Kensington Market, and carried it around in my messenger bag.

Weaves - unknown

Recorded at Clinton's Tavern, September 12, 2012.

I started working at the same restaurant as Jasmyn Burke about a year after this sparkling clip was recorded. She was so cool, I wasn’t, and we talked music in the dish pit. Sadly I never saw her perform as Weaves in solo project form, but later went on to catch the full band incarnation at Wavelength a few times, and proudly wore their T-shirt and pinback button. I even wrote a little blurb about their record for the dearly departed Weird Canada. Damn, they were good. They made rock cool again. But 2012 was very much the peak era of the solo loop pedal artist, and this version of Weaves is a shining example. Jasmyn’s voice just does things to you.

Les Mouches - Winter = Dead Time

Another one to file under local indie hero whose career skirts the weirder edge of things. I recently gushed about Owen’s first solo album on a podcast. Pallett’s music has been close to my heart since high school, but I hadn’t heard of this sui generis post-rock outfit until Orchid Tapes reissued their old Blocks Recording Club album. Sadly I didn’t hear about this show at the time, but based on the blog entry, it was an under the radar affair. Luckily the man with the recorder whom we all know and love was in attendance!

c_RL - [fourth piece]

Recorded at Ratio, May 8, 2015.

This is not the same c_RL show in my memory bank, but it’s close enough in the space-time continuum to stand in for it. It's a vivid memory because it was the first time I had ever seen free improv. In 2012 I was playing loop pedal-core in a guitar-drums duo. We had a gig at the Tranzac in the late slot and as we were loading in, I was lucky enough to witness Germaine Liu doing unspeakable things to a snare, shaking it like she was rousing the drum from a dream. It was almost certainly upside down at one point. I had no idea what was happening and it was wonderful. It took me several more years to rediscover the door to Narnia that is our local experimental music scene, but that was my first peek into another world.

Kyle Brenders Ensemble - Grasslands [4th mvt]

Recorded at The Tranzac's Main Hall (Somewhere There Creative Music Festival – Show 3), February 27, 2016.

I wanted to choose a recording that reveals what I was missing out on before fully cluing in to the scene. This blog affords the rare opportunity to dig into ongoing history. Some of the players in this large group are now well-known to me, others I have only heard of, and a few names are totally unfamiliar. Calling to mind Otomo Yoshihide’s New Jazz Orchestra, I love this style of electroacoustical comprovisational big band music. It would be great to hear more of this kind of thing, but goodness knows it’s not always easy to get so many talented people in one place. It takes a special combination of creative vision and organizational skills, traits that don’t always arise as a pair. Thank goodness we now have Women From Space’s Big Bang to fill the void!


You can always click on the tags below to look for more stuff from these artists. Has there been five or so 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.

Saturday, September 21, 2019

Recording: Laura Barrett

Artist: Laura Barrett

Song: Who is the Baker?

Recorded at Monarch Tavern, August 8, 2019.

Laura Barrett - Who is the Baker?

Laura Barrett's Who is the Baker? comes a decade after her first album Victory Garden, so perhaps it's no surprise that several of the songs are themselves concerned with the passage of time. Never totally absent from music-making as other parts of life moved to the fore, several of these songs have been floating around for a while, though they gain some gravity when presented as a considered whole. And as Barrett reflected upon the person she was, though her trusty kalimbas were close at hand, most of the set was played at the piano (both solo and with a shifting cast of collaborators), reminding herself and the audience that the next chapter can always be new and different.

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Recording: Laura Barrett

Artist: Laura Barrett

Song: Where I'm From

Recorded at Junction City Music Hall (Pickles Aid), January 17, 2017.

Laura Barrett - Where I'm From

Faced with an xmas eve layoff, Duncan "Doc Pickles" MacDonell was facing some financial and existential roadblocks — so in a "get by with a little help from my friends" gesture, Young Doctors in Love's Clay Puddester got the ball rolling for this benefit show. With the General Chaos lights swirling behind the stage, there was a strong old-school Wavelength vibe in the room. Laura Barrett came prepared for that, with a Year 2000 shirt and kalimba at hand to remind everyone in the room how awesome Deception Island Optimists Club is. Most of the set was dedicated to her slowly-building stockpile of new tunes though, including this song about a sort of nostalgia that is somewhat specific to Toronto: feeling the persistence of self through time as the city around you is torn down and rebuilt with condos and chain stores.

[Rolling with the psychic vibes from this show, Doc Pickles is reviving his Crosswires series, which will be moving to the Baby G with shows on Mondays once the sun crosses the vernal equinox. Information on the first couple shows is already posted on the Crosswires facebook page.]

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Recording: Lockbox

Artist: Lockbox

Song: Just The Same as Always

Recorded at Smiling Buddha (Silent Shout Festival – Night 1), December 4, 2014.

Lockbox - Just The Same as Always

Although they'd stepped away from presenting live music, Silent Shout returned for a two-night celebration to mark their fifth anniversary. Taking over the Smiling Buddha for two nights gave the site's designer Roxanne Ignatius a chance to re-imagine the space, with a deconstructed disco ball twirling above clouds and webby fabric tendrils. Plus, downstairs there was a gallery of her consistently-excellent show posters, going right back to the series' beginning when it had to spell out its mandate of "EVIL DISCO / GLOOMY ELECTRO / DEATHLY SYNTHPOP". And though there was a retrospective element to the whole affair, the music was decisively forward-looking, including a couple bands making their debuts.

This Laura Barrett-fronted group technically played its first show back in February, playing a mini-set of Owen Pallett songs at Wavelength's anniversary show. One of those was carried over, but this was otherwise the first airing out of some new material — and a new, synth-oriented direction from Barrett. Joined by Sarah Buchanan on drums and Jeff DeButte on bass, the trio was bopping in 5/8 time and reminding the audience to put their socks on just so they could get rocked off. There's still some refinements to be worked out on getting the balance between laptop tracks and the live band parts (as exhibited on the the confrontationally jaunty "What Kind of Person Do You Think You Are?") but there's an exciting new sonic template at hand for Barrett to apply her songwriting skills to. This one, with its piano-based sound, hews a bit closer to the "old" Laura Barrett sound — I suspect the next thing I post from this group will be more electronic and squiggly.

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Gig: Wavelength FIFTEEN - Night 1

Wavelength FIFTEEN – Night 1 (feat. Skeletones Four / More Or Les / Lockbox / Hervana / Delta Will / Most People / Art Bergmann / controller.controller)

Sneaky Dee's. Friday, February 13, 2015.

Dividing this year's three festival nights into past, present and future, the opener saw the band returning to Sneaky Dee's, home to the series for the bulk of its lifespan as a weekly series. It's not a venue I find myself at much these days, so there is a faint hint of nostalgia in being there. Upstairs, not much has changed. The paint on the ceiling is peeling a little, adding to the sensation of stepping into a dusty memory. But the drinks are still cheap.

The evening was split into two distinct parts, the first of which was a series of cover sets which saw the sorts of bands you might see at a Wavelength nowadays covering the sorts of bands you might have seen onstage in the series' early times. This turned out to be a great success, with all of the bands pulling it off — some even managed to impart their own spin on the material. And even with three-song mini-sets, quick turnovers managed to keep the momentum up.

Skeletones Four started the night off by paying tribute to WL's Guelph connections, covering the songs of Jim Guthrie (who just happened to be in the crowd). "Evil Thoughts" could have passed as something from the band's own catalogue and the band brought a nice menacing undertone to it; "Virtue" and "So Small" had a bit more lightness to them.

Listen to a song from this set here.

That got things started, but the still-growing crowd was really fired up by More Or Les, who gave a quick history lesson in T.O. hip-hop, pulling out tunes from Saukrates and Kardinal Offishall before calling up some of the all-stars of Hip Hop Karaoke (including Kryptonite, Mr. Mischief, June & Pilaf, Dirty D) to bring Rascalz' posse cut "Northern Touch" to life. The coup de grace here was getting Thrust, who appeared on the original, to join in.

Listen to a song from this set here.

Keyboardist/vocalist Laura Barrett was later heard asking around if anyone could identify what genre Lockbox fell into, a fair question given the range of sounds they had to tackle to play the songs of Owen Pallett. Playing the songs without a violin would give them a different sound, but doing so without the use of Pallet's loop pedal meant having to reconstruct them from the ground up. The recent "Song for Five & Six", with its squiggly Abba-esque synth line required the least re-jigging. "Keep the Dog Quiet" registered as jittery new wave while "Many Lives → 49 MP" (with a Tubular Bells kind of vibe) progged out — "be prepared to dance in a bunch of different time signatures," was the warning at the outset. Barrett, a fine singer, sometimes seemed a little unsure whether to go high or low to match Pallett's vocals, but on the whole the re-constructions came together rather well. This was the début for this new unit (with Sarah Buchanan on drums, Jeff DeButte on bass and Niall Fynes on guit), and hopefully we'll be getting a chance to hear them tackle some original material.

Listen to a song from this set here.

Hervana (who are, as their name implies, an all-female Nirvana cover band) tackled Constantines, a rather different sounding band, theoretically united by the fact that both were briefly on Sub Pop. The fact that the band's re-interpretations felt a bit less "lived in" than some of the other covers could have made them the superficial work of, well, a cover band. But the Cons were at their best when things were fiery-fresh and uncertain, so Hervana's sense of newness worked in their favour. "Soon Enough" felt a bit inert to start, but "Young Lions" and "Shine a Light" had the right sort of raw energy.

Listen to a song from this set here.

Delta Will gave a historical overview of Manitoba/Caribou, leading off with "Hendrix With Ko" from Dan Snaith's artistic breakthrough Up in Flames. The band, this time out a four-piece with Sexy Merlin's Sean Dunal on drums, caught that song's reconstructed psychedelic vibe quite nicely before moving forward to "She's the One" and "Can't Do Without You", each a bit more dance-floor focused than the one before. Frontman Charles Tilden brought a particular sense of detail to matching up some of Snaith's sampled sounds.

Listen to a song from this set here.

The perfect Broken Social Scene cover set would probably involve someone rambling onstage for fifteen minutes about hugs, the power of forgiveness and the existential consequences of feeling fucked up inside while a dozen people milled around behind them tuning endlessly. Instead, Most People focused on the songs, doing a superior job of re-interpreting them in their own voice rather than slavishly copying them. They slid further in that direction over their trio of songs, with "Sweetest Kill" coming off the closest to the original while treating "Lovers Spit" and "7/4 (Shoreline)" more like Most People tunes — instead of finding a Feist fill-in on the latter, Paul McEachern handled the high vocal parts. Closing out the first half of the night, this definitely had a headliner vibe.

Listen to a song from this set here.

Even after half-a-dozen short sets, the night was only halfway over. Celebrating the past in a different way, Can-rock icon Art Bergmann made his Wavelength début. Ever since forming the K-Tels in 1978, Bergmann has been a voice in the wilderness and a cog in the machine, trying to slip his raw testimonials into the prevailing discourse. Fighting health troubles and a depleted muse, Bergmann has been living in Alberta for the past decade, mostly off the radar (save for an occasional special appearance), and it was a pleasant surprise last year to hear of his return with a new EP. The four tunes on Songs For the Underclass are as pointed as the disc's title in their last-chance lamentations for a world gone wrong.

Whether all that would be appreciated by the large segment of the crowd that looked too young to remember his cultural presence looked uncertain. "Yeah, we're covering something named Art," Bergmann off-handedly muttered near the start of his set, picking up on the vibe. That double joke sailed over the audience's heads, and Bergmann seemed a little disappointed at these modern audiences that don't boisterously rise to the occasion, or even heckle more than half-heartedly.

He was definitely not disappointed with his "Toronto band", who were in fine form. Powered by Chris Wardman on guitar, Bergman was soon swapping grins as the band powered through his back catalogue. There's an embarrassment of riches in his songbook, and it was a thrill to hear high-powered versions of "Remember Her Name", "Beatles in Hollywood", "Bound For Vegas", "Contract" and more. "Drones of Democracy", the first track from the new one provided the set's climax, a sweeping song that owes more than a little something to the slow-burning lament of Neil Young's "Cortez The Killer."

Some of that goodness was definitely lost on the crowd, who started to drift away as the set wore on. After the short, sharp bursts of the cover sets, the hour-and-a-quarter here felt a little long in the context of the night, and too much perhaps to engage the casually interested. But I was glad to have seen Bergmann put on an impressive show that maintained its power and focus throughout.1

Listen to a couple songs from this set here.

The crowd was listing a bit and the hour was growing late as the night's last act took the stage. Still, given it was about seven years since controller.controller last played a proper gig, waiting up past one in the morning probably wasn't too much of an extra burden. Precisely of their moment with that mid-aughts hi-hat riding death disco sound, it's probably been long enough for them sound to feel fresh again, and the band hit the stage with a jolt-you-awake groove, launching the slashing dual guitars of signature song "History" into a suddenly-heaving dancefloor.

A couple missed cues and other signs of rustiness couldn't spoil the celebratory vibe, though a bass malfunction after the second song momentarily brought the energy back down. (Ironically, it happened right around when Basnayake was singing "if things can go wrong, they'll only go wrong" during "Silent Seven".)

Once Ronnie Morris secured a replacement (courtesy of Most People), he did his best to bring things back up, mugging expressively, dancing as he played, and eventually taking to the crowd. Meanwhile vocalist Nirmala Basnayake was all smiles as she made the obligatory getting-older jokes and cajoled drummer Jeff Scheven to try and approach the tempos they could tackle in their heyday.

A new twitter account implies this reunion wasn't a one-off and the reaction from the crowd implied that some of the folks that missed them the first time around were taking notice. Stay tuned.

Listen to a song from this set here.


1 After the set, I saw Bergmann popping out of the off-stage area with a cigarette in his hand, which he proceeded to light and take a puff from as he stepped down from the stage. While I was amused at the punkrock disregard for the rules that was more evident in the sixty-two year old singer than in the audience, I didn't realize 'til after the fact that that transgression was enough to get Bergmann bounced from the venue. When's the last time any of the would-be young badasses you saw perform manage to get turfed from their own show?

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Recording: Lockbox

Artist: Lockbox

Song: Many Lives → 49 MP [Final Fantasy cover]

Recorded at Sneaky Dee's ("Wavelength FIFTEEN - Night 1"), February 13, 2015.

Lockbox - Many Lives → 49 MP

My notes for this set can be found here.

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, November 11, 2012

Recording: Laura Barrett

Artist: Laura Barrett

Songs: The Sharper Side + The Humble Fawn

Recorded in Stuart's Living Room (OOTS House Show #3), November 10, 2012.

Laura Barrett - The Sharper Side

Laura Barrett - The Humble Fawn

Full review to follow. Higher education's gain has been the music scene's loss, and it's been too long since I saw Laura Barrett playing her own material. Hopefully that situation's not going to last forever, and it was exciting to hear a couple new songs being played on the piano. Barrett is joined here by Patti Cake's Kritty Uranowski, adding her pipes — and leading the singalong on "The Humble Fawn" — which also features some guest piano from Chris Cummings. Update: you can now see some footage from this set on OOTS' Vimeo page.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Sunday Playlist #32

Sunday Playlist #32

Volcano - No Signal In the Valley

Torngat - Minute by Minute

Laura Barrett - Chidiya

Béla Fleck - unknown

Muskox - Ghost Ride

Muskox will be playing their final show tonight (October 14, 2012) at The Tranzac. Come on out and help give 'em a proper sendoff.


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.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Gig: Rebekah Higgs

Rebekah Higgs (Tasseomancy / Laura Barrett)

Rivoli. Saturday, February 12, 2011.

It was surprisingly well-lit when I walked into the Rivoli's backroom, finding a couple dozen people on hand, most filling up the tables along the room's west wall. As a compilation of reggae covers of popular hits played over the sound system, I saw the night's headliner and opener wandering the dancefloor, conspiring on how to create the right sort of atmosphere for the show. In the end, they grabbed some extra tables and set them up in front of the stage, reinforcing the notion that this was going to be a sit-down-pay-attention sort of gig. I stepped forward to help pull the tables in place — not so much out of gallantry as to be able to plunk myself down in a prime spot.

There were a few more bodies on hand as the lights went down, but not a huge crowd. Billed as a pre-Valentine's Day special, this was a rather under-promoted event. In fact, I came across it only by chance while flipping through the show listings, and no one that I mentioned it to had heard of it — not even those who would have been eager to have a too-rare opportunity to see expat Laura Barrett back in town. Temporarily relocated to Vancouver, Barrett led off some questions about dislocation in "Wood Between Words": "So, where are you bound this fall? Will I see you around? Where will you be moving on to?"1

After that, though, came some interesting surprises, with Barrett putting down her trademark kalimba and switching over to autoharp for a new song that might be called "No Money at All". Although the same voice and smart songwriting shone through, that certainly brought a different edge to the song. She then moved over to the keyboard for another new one — this is less of a surprise for anyone that's seen her playing in The Hidden Cameras and so on, but unusual for her own set. Having adapted the kalimba partially as a means to stand out amongst a crowded field of singer-songwriters, it was a heartening sign to see that Barrett won't allow herself to be limited to her most identifiable shtick.

And thank goodness for that confidence on stage, for between the extra instrument swapping and the new songs, things were a bit awkward with some technical gremlins poking their heads out. That led to the tantalizing tease of Barrett teaching the crowd the refrain of "The Humble Fawn" (then unreleased, now available on the National Parks Project) before realizing there was a tuning problem and not being able to undertake the song. That leaves it as one to wait for.

The crowd stayed on-side despite the problems, or maybe even to some extent because of them — when an artist has such an easy rapport with their audience, things-going-awry feel less like gaffes and more like the sort of shared experiences between friends that you can laugh about and bond over. And here the seated, easygoing crowd was attentive throughout, praised by Barrett as "the best audience of the year".

There was a lot of banter about Valentine's day — Barrett had called "Ferryland" her only love song, but the set ended with "Deception Island Optimists Club" which has something of a Valentine's wish embedded in it.

"We're Tasseomancy... we're playing a Valentines Day show," said Sari Lightman (or, possibly, her twin sister Romy). "We played one before. [beat] It didn't go so well."

"No, it didn't go over so well," said Sari (or, possibly, Romy), completing her thought in that mildly-unnerving, possibly-telepathic we're twins! way that the sisters speak. Still, they did their Valentine's Day best, trying to relate the holiday to songs like "Anubis", which deals with hearts in a more visceral way. Think organ-consuming gods ripped from the pages of The Book of the Dead.

In fact, if some bands write songs that are like snapshots vividly capturing one instant of day-to-day life, think of the Lightmans' efforts as being more like rambles through dusty old books of arcane lore and soul-menacing occult secrets. Taking the stage with a spooky moan issuing from a record on a turntable, the band asked for the lights to be lowered until they were nearly in complete darkness before launching into the the expansive "Diana", a sort of song that exists inside its own elaborate world and pulls you into it, like a series of illustrated tableaux coming to life.

Stretching more than seven minutes, the song requires a bit of investment on the listener's part. "Ashkelon", running a bit longer, works on similar principles, but with less of a sing-song motif to cling to, it's dronier in a way that you're either going to have to surrender to, or possibly otherwise tune out. Still, despite the heavy motifs and unsprightly pacing, the Lightmans' magnetism pulled me into the songs. And in between, they maintained their chipper sense of humour, finding ways to relate the rest of the songs to Valentine's Day.

Although they've experimented with more expansive lineups, here it was just two voices, guitar and mandolin, and as they finished with one look to their older material (back to when they were known as Ghost Bees), "Erl King" was accompanied only by heavily-delayed mandolin. Even with only four songs, it was still a half-hour set, and quite arguably the strongest I have seen from the pair.2

Listen to a song from this set here.

More in line with ever-popular music and V-day topics of love and heartbreak, Rebekah Higgs, now based here in T.O., showed off her Halifax roots in leading off with a cover of Eric's Trip's "Behind the Garage". And though that's sure to warm the dusty cockles of any indie-loving Canadian heart of a certain age, that song, with a straight-ahead rock arrangement (Higgs on guit backed by bass, drums and keyb) didn't particularly show this unit in its best light. As I'd noted when I saw Higgs a few months previously, she's taken big steps forward from the pleasant-but-undistinguished work on her 2008 debut. The biggest strides have come sonically, especially in the manner she's appropriated some of the tricks from her Ruby Jean and the Thoughtful Bees dance-pop side-project. But without the extra textures, the more straight-ahead songs feel a little generic.

The contrast was made clear on the following "Lazy Morning", which slowed things down and embraced some more nuanced flourishes, such as bowed glockenspeil and effective vocal layering with the use of a looping pedal. The latter would be the key element of the bulk of the set, filled with songs from her now-released sophomore Odd Fellowship album. And there were some interesting variations in the arrangements — "Stick & Poke" ended in an accelerating spiral, like a teenager heading home drunk from the bar and trying to recreate the giddy childhood sensation of twirling around 'til you fall over.

Higgs seems to be aware of the delicate balancing required here: too much of the straight-ahead rock can be unremarkably same-y, but too much of the looping pedal and so on can get precious — but at the sweet spot in between all that, Higgs shows definite talent. Plus, she has an ear for no-doubt pop hooks, displayed on the fab "Little Voice" or "Gosh, Darn, Damn", which is a simple trifle of a thing, but with a chorus that can get stuck in your head all day. As long as Higgs can keep working out the mechanics of combining catchy-simple and intriguingly-textured — and perhaps upgrade to a drummer who can provide the material with the oomph it deserves — she'll definitely be doing work worth listening to.3

Listen to a song from this set here.


1 As of this writing, it appears that Barrett has returned to T.O. There's no word right now on any pending shows of her own stuff, but I do note that she will be alongside her friends in Sheezer when they reprise their annual Hallowe'en party — this year at Lee's Palace — on Friday, October 28, 2011.

2 Indications that the band have truly hit their stride abound on their Timber Timbre-produced full-length Ulalume, out now from Out of This Spark. The band will be playing an album release show at The Great Hall on Thursday, October 20, 2011 and will also be opening for Austra (with whom the Lightmans are touring members) at The Phoenix on December 1, 2011.

3 Celebrating her new album, Higgs has a couple local dates coming up, including a return to the Rivoli on Thursday, September 15, 2011 as well as a show at The Drake Underground with Katie Moore on Sunday, October 2, 2011.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Gig: "Heavy Head Residency", Week 3

"Heavy Head Residency", Week 3. (Gentleman Reg / Sheezer / Dance Yourself to Death)

Drake Underground. Wednesday, February 17, 2010.

You can't keep me away, I guess. Despite having hit the first instalment of Gentleman Reg's Wednesday night "Regidency" at The Drake, here I was again, just a couple weeks on. It turned out to be quite a study in contrasts with that first go-round, ending up with an altogether different crowd and ambiance.

Leading off the night was Dance Yourself to Death. They were unknown to me, but the band brought along a large contingent of friends and admirers who filled up the area in front of the stage, dancing energetically throughout. With this enthusiastic (and slightly chatty) crowd in place right from the get-go, I knew this was going to have a different vibe than it was a couple weeks previous. The first song was a tight rocker, with "Can't Explain" power chords, the second a bit more of a dreamy, mid-tempo could-have-been John Hughes soundtrack number with Johnny Ryan's Korg set to Fairlight-styled sounds. Strong lead vox from bassist Jen Markowitz, showing off a warm contralto voice, up in front of the propulsive Maya Postepski on drums. Clearly a unit with a well-defined, well-thought-out aesthetic — one that would encompass a very 80's sound.1 Undoubtedly a talented band — just not entirely my thing. I wish 'em well and certainly wouldn't be surprised if they found themselves an even larger audience.

Having missed them on New Year's Eve, I was glad to have a chance to catch the second show of Sheezer, the local all-star "all-girl Weezer cover band"2 — sticking (with rigourous revisionism) to the first two albums. Starting off with Laura Barrett testing out a vetoed inspirational chant ("Weezer, theyzer, heezer, sheezer!") the band kicked off with "Tired of Sex", Robin Hatch (ex-Sports: The Band) handling the vox. Throughout the show there was a pass-the-mic approach to lead vocals, which worked to generally good effect3 Part of the fun of the "everybody knows these songs" element is that it's like a big singalong, which worked out well on "Undone - The Sweater Song" (which was presented complete with onstage party banter) and had pretty much everyone in the room joining in on the choruses. There was a pleasantly rough-around-the-edges feel to the whole thing, as if the band members were all at a party, and someone had dared them to jump up and bash out a few of these songs.

With pros like Dana Snell and Magali Meagher on hand, there were pop smarts aplenty on hand to know how to navigate this stuff. With the other members being known qualities, the real surprise here was Alysha Haugen, doing a fab job on lead guitar — anyone know where we can catch more from her? Rocking out in their uniform jeans and black shirts, the band was having a great time, laughing on stage, giddily thrilled that they had buttons to sell.

For me, I guess I had slightly mixed feelings about the whole affair. Fun, yes, but it just kinda felt like a lark. Frankly, I'd be ten times more excited to see these same five musicians playing some power pop confections of their own creation. Although, to be sure, when I related this concept to A. after the set, he gave me a look like I had the crazy plague, so it's clear that they're reaching some people with this that would otherwise probably not pay such close attention to them.

By now, the room was pretty much full and worked up into some excitement by the opening bands. As with the first of the Regidency shows, Reg emerged on his own to lead off with a solo track, which was buried a bit in the chatter. Things were on a more solid footing when the band came out and ripped into "Coastline", which did more to get the crowd's attention, including some loud hoots of approval from entertainer/man-about-town/mayoral candidate Keith Cole, who was on hand for the show — definitely someone who makes his boisterous presence felt when he's enjoying something. In tribute, Reg dedicated "Wild Heart" to him.

Meanwhile, a chance to see how the new material is developing and growing. "Make It Better" had certainly come along from a couple weeks previous and was sounding like a crackerjack. Another — called "Driving Truth"? — was sharp, too, with new wave-y keyboards from Kelly McMichael. After the new material, the band was joined again by Jess Tollefsen on some extra keybs, for the hits, including a driving "How We Exit" and the always-fabulous "We're in a Thunderstorm" to close out the main set.

More new material in the encore, including yet one more getting its debut. How exciting is it to see this rush of new material — and good new material at that — right up close like this? For me, that was even more of a thrill than "The Boyfriend Song" — the one that the crowd was waiting for. That one was good fun, too, of course, especially seeing the band throw themselves into it, especially during the Hidden Cameras-inspired "bring it down" section, everyone crouching right down to the floor as the song got quieter. Tollefson and Dave Meslin, on stage playing tambourine and throwing in their voices, ended up right on their backs before the song picked up again. A good end to the night, sending me away from the Regidency with a smile. Let's hope Reg does it all again next year.


1 They closed with a revealing cover of Londonbeat's "I've Been Thinking About You".

2 This is the band's own self-description from their myspace page. Under normal circumstances (unless looking at things on a macro level), I wouldn't think to comment on the gender make-up of a band, because how good/interesting an artist is doesn't depend on that. But given that we are all resolving to be thoughtful about how we are using language, I'm somewhat curious. Does the fact that the band is bringing it up — is making it fundamental to their shtick, in fact — put it "on the table"? Am I still better off to avoid the topic? It would seem to be the height of assumption for me to presume I know something that these smart, talented women don't — wouldn't me trying to hold them to a standard that they're eschewing be tantamount to accusing them of the crassest sort of false consciousness? Discussion, please.

3 Barrett, widely known as a helluva singer, came off a bit below her peak form in this setting. Maybe a touch less confident on bass than her usual instruments, she had to lean back a lot to keep an eye on her hands, which pulled her off the mic while singing. This should be self-correcting in time, though.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Recording: Laura Barrett

Artist: Laura Barrett

Song: Chidiya

Recorded at Wavelength 500 (night 3), Sneaky Dee's, February 12, 2010.

Laura Barrett - Chidiya

My notes for this set can be read here.

Gig: Wavelength 500 (night 3)

Wavelength 500 (night 3) (feat. From Fiction, The Bicycles, Laura Barrett, Magic Cheezies, Young Mother)

Sneaky Dee's. Friday, February 12, 2010.

The third night of the Wavelength Festival returned to the series' spiritual home base, where nearly three-quarters of the Sunday night shows had taken place. Showed up shortly after doors to find a bit of a lineup outside, but it was only a few minutes' wait to get in. Word was, after the fact, that some people showing up later had had a dire time getting in, so I guess I'm glad I was there in good time. Climbing up the stairs, it felt good to be in Sneaky Dee's, just something comforting and right about that space. All the more so with the swirling General Chaos lights feeling like they were back home, too. Like a "regular" Wavelength night, it was a little thin in the early going, even as things got started at about ten to ten.

A five-piece band on stage, with drummer, two saxophonists, bassist, and a guy with a bunch of electronics and a beat-up, old TV, the tube pretty much blown, emitting just a single, failing blob of light on the screen. This was Young Mother, who, on their myspace, pretty much swathe themselves in anonymity, though some searching does indicate that it's the project of one Jesse James Laderoute.1 Commenting, "we're going to play one song, how's that sound?" the band launched into a nearly five-minute introductory segment, with rising saxes and bursts of TV static before a regular bass line and drum rhythm kicked in. Suddenly, there was a bit of a jaunty, dark pop song here, Laderoute singing about being "a million miles away" as the band chugged behind him. And then back to the squall of static and bleating saxes, and the set ended with the speaker of the TV fuzzily spitting out one of those propagandistic messages from the government about "Canada's Economic Action Plan". One song, yes, but a bit more than fifteen minutes overall.

Quite good stuff, reminiscent of the avant-punk music coming out Cleveland in the mid-70's — this band wouldn't sound out of place next to some stuff by the Numbers Band or groups of that ilk. And as I was standing there at Sneaks, the General Chaos visuals roiling behind, a thin crowd up front, and a band working out some unconventional rock moves, I was happily thinking to myself, "this is Wavelength!"

Listen to an excerpt from this set here.

Still a lot of room on the floor as the From Fiction people started settling in (about whom, more anon) and Magic Cheezies took the stage. Shouting out her mic check in about three seconds flat ("Check-check-check! W-w-w-woah ah-hurgh ah-ah-ah! Okay, we're good.") singer/guitarist Heather Curley gave a hint of the conciseness to come. A rough start to the set, the first song going about thirty seconds before Curley waved it off, making some amp adjustments and calling for a do-over. A bit of roughness even after that, with Mark McLean's bass2 dropping in and out a little. By about their third song (which, given their song lengths, was about four minutes along) they were settling in, though from those original sound issues on forward, you could get the sense that the band wasn't entirely happy with how they were sounding. From the floor, though, it was good stuff, and rough edges wear well with this music — fast, brash punk, Kleenex-via-riot grrrl style. Curley led with her buzzsaw guitar and a roll of her eyes, her vox and body language suggesting, "oh, I'm bored with you." The set went nine songs with an average length less than ninety seconds, and if this was the band on an "off" night — though it sure didn't seem that way to me — by the end I was eager to see 'em with all cylinders firing.

And then, an object lesson in how an audience can have an effect on an artist. Right up front, against the stage, there was a small group of young people3 that had clearly come down not to celebrate Wavelength and see a bunch of cool bands, but to come to a From Fiction show — a different sort of conceptual mindset altogether. Looking them over, I was mildly apprehensive that they might be a tad, um, insensitive to the other patrons who were there for the other bands, and talk loudly amongst themselves until their band came on.

Especially in the face of the decidedly delicate creations of Laura Barrett. As Jonny Dovercourt took the stage to introduce her, they were rather boisterous. Again explaining to the crowd that he was substituting for Doc Pickles, one shouted, "I like you! You're awesome!"

"I like the cut of these guys' jibs," said Dovercourt.

Which set them to chanting, "Yeahhhh! Jibs!" — they were a bunch that could be described as 'easy to get to chant'.

"Yes... the future..." Dovercourt half-muttered, gesturing at the group in front of him, not quite keeping a laugh out of his voice, "is right here."

"Jibs!" shouted another, a step behind the conversation.

Getting back on track with the intro, he noted, "this musician plays an amazing instrument called the kalimba..."

And this was immediately take up by the group, shouting "Kalimba!" at each other, as Laura Barrett took the stage. Playing solo to start, she was just hitting the first notes of the intro as one shouted, "more kalimba!".

Much to my surprise, though, the group didn't immediately start talking to each other — they actually paid attention, and when Barrett hit the instrumental break with a flourish, there were again appreciative shouts of "kalimba!". They continued after the song as the rest of the band took the stage, and as Barrett was switching instruments and checking her monitor levels, she reported back to Chantal the sound tech, "all I can hear is these guys saying 'kalimba'."

Playing on this night with a three-piece backing band of Ajay Mehra on banjo, plus the double-duty-doing duo of Randy Lee (violin) and Dana Snell (flute and vox), both of whom'd be back on stage with The Bicycles. In the midst of a string of rather high-profile gigs opening for The Magnetic Fields, the band was in awfully good form, even if mildly discombobulated from facing a crowd probably quite unlike any they'd encountered lately in the soft-seaters.

"Somebody learned a new word today," Barrett commented after the now-obligatory shouts of "kalimba!" at one song's end. Running with it, Mehra commented to the group in front of him, "you know, usually the kalimba goes inside a calabash shell," eliciting some shouts back of "Callllllllllabash!", and "where's the calabash?" but that didn't prove to have as much sticking power. Throughout, Barrett managed to maintain an air of bemusement at this, and in turn, the group were surprisingly into it, clapping along to "Consumption".4

As Lee and Snell departed for the final song, Mehra remained on stage for "Robot Ponies", and in the spirit of the set's oddity, she called to him, "act it out!" and showing off some expert improv chops, he did just that, pantomiming the entire song, with Barrett just able to maintain her vocal momentum without breaking out into laughter. A rather unusual time, all things considered. Goofy as all hell, but fun. I've seen Barrett play in bars before, and sometimes it can be pretty dicey — I've seen her try to play to far worse than this lot. And it even seemed to have an effect back on them — "That was so good!" one of the guys said to his friends after. So I nodded to myself, thinking that maybe these kids are all right.

Listen to a track — played on kalimba! — from this set here.

Or maybe not. It wasn't long into The Bicycles' set that a member of their group had to be pulled back from getting into a scrap with one of their neighbours, which was defused before it could boil over, but certainly left some bad blood between different groups of people at the front of the stage.5 What precisely was going down I do not know, but it was an odd incident for a band that is perhaps as incendiary as a nice cup of chamomile tea.

It did, however, give the band a chance to make a lot of jokes about how fighting doesn't lead to anything good, and will just cause your band to break up. For this was, indeed, a reunion show, the band having played their last gig nearly a year ago at least year's CMW. Not back in the murky depths of time, I suppose, but I missed the band's heady mix of pop hooks crammed into lightning-quick songs. In more than just a reunion, Randy Lee — who had parted ways with the band as a full-time member several years ago — was back, playing bass for the bulk of the set.6 Otherwise, Matt Beckett has added a moustache, but not too much has changed in the past year.

The band was fairly well-rehearsed, perhaps playing a bit more deliberately than in their prime. Some songs like "Gotta Get Out" were still a giddy rush, and there were a couple missed notes here and there, but on the whole, a very strong set. The first part leaned more strongly from their debut (2006's The Good The Band and The Cuddly), but eased more into its follow-up ('08's Oh No, It's Love) as things moved along. Fourteen songs in a forty minute set covered most of their catalogue's highlights bouncing along in a giddy haze. Whether this is a one-time reunion or not, the band will be missed, but as the song suggests, I know we have to be apart.

Listen to a track from this set here.

And then a bit of a turn-over. As a whole bunch of people were quickly jockeying for positions right up close to see From Fiction, I was among the numbers making their way against the flow. Partially just out of comity, I suppose — I'd gotten to be right up front for the bands I'd most wanted to see, so now best to leave room for someone who was there for From Fiction. Because frankly, I was not. Not my thing, simply put. The only time I had ever seen them play live was at a show where they were quite incongruously slotted as the openers for Wilco at Kool Haus back in aught-and-three, and it just didn't work for me, though even after that I gave their album a spin just to be sure and it wasn't anything I wanted to hear twice. Their not-quite-shouty, math-y stop-start-spasm version of guitar rock has never done anything for me, so this was a one reunion — the band broke up '06 — that I had no emotional investment in.

Taking the stage to Peaches & Herb's "Reunited", the four members of gathered together for a bro-hug before strapping on their instruments and tearing in. Notwithstanding any of my opinions of their music, I could readily see that they were tearing in with gusto and playing the hell out of their songs. The even came with a new material in hand, offering a short-ish, mostly instrumental number.

To my surprise, I enjoyed it more than I thought I might. Some of it was even... okay. Some of their more ponderous stretches didn't do much for me, but I guess I had some appreciation for what they were doing. I liked some of the intricate guitar interplay and the lift from Rob Gordon's drums.7 It was a big hit with the crowd, natch, so obviously in some quarters they'd been missed pretty intently. I left satisfied with my night, and hoped, vaguely, that the Kalimba Kids had a good time, too, and maybe took home something new from this show.


1 I also recognized one of the sax player from Brides, but they're not big on giving names away, either.

2 My understanding is that this was McLean's first Magic Cheezies show on bass, having previously been behind the kit. So that change, and a new drummer in tow, might well explain some of the band's not-quite-smoothness.

3 And it took the most stringent efforts of my inner editor to delete the word "suburban" from that sentence. Not only do I not know where these kids came down from, but I really don't want to be one of those types who effortlessly derides any sort of gaucheness as suburban, as if anyone living on the GO line instead of the TTC, say, is some sort of barbarian at the gate of real culture. Like it's really so simple as that, as much as I'm susceptible to falling into those tropes. Let those of us whose cultural sensibility was born, fully formed, from the forehead of some boheminan, downtown god of cool cast the first stone here.

4 Though she did ask, after, looking sidelong at her bandmates, "is it frosh week?"

5 It's not impossible that the frequent trips to the bar were shifting these kids from sloppy-genial to something further along the boozy spectrum.

6 And, in fact, Lee was the only one who showed up "in uniform", with a small cut-out felt letter B pinned to his shirt. The rest of the band — previously noted for their team-like home-made B-shirts — were all without.

7 Gordon was also on the WL500 stage back on Wednesday night in his new gig with Pony Da Look.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Recording: Laura Barrett

Artist: Laura Barrett

Song: Ferryland

Recorded at Jason Collett's Basement Revue, Dakota Tavern, December 22, 2009.

Laura Barrett - Ferryland

My notes for this gig can be found here.

Gig: Jason Collett's Annual Basement Review (week four)

Jason Collett's Annual Basement Review (feat. Sina Queyras, Alex Lukashevsky, Sheila Heti, Laura Barrett, Grant Lawrence, Gentleman Reg, Taylor Knox and The Ishmaels)

The Dakota Tavern. Tuesday, December 22, 2009.

Back to the Dakota for another dose of Jason Collett's mystery train. Heading in, I can't pretend that I wasn't eager for some figures — oh, say, BSS related — that you'd normally never see in a room of this size. Or, for that matter, something as memorably offbeat as a Michael P. Clive cooking segment. It turned out, as I looked at the merch table and evaluated the artistes milling around the back of the room it looked more like we'd be seeing some of the people I tend to see in rooms like this on a more regular basis. But that's no problem — by luck I got to see a couple of my local faves. It was also more of a story-based kind of night, where there might have been almost as much talking on the stage as music. The format was slightly tweaked from my previous outing, with the musicians earlier on playing slightly longer sets (usually meaning four songs instead of three), with a shorter "long" set at the end balancing things out.

Kicking things off as usual with a stern reminder about cellphone usage and a short set, Jason Collett began by recounting a BSS touring story of a journey home above the Great Lakes, involving a police shakedown and a Sheryl Crow tape. This was the entry into "Lake Superior", which led into the same border crossing tune I'd heard at the previous visit, and then "Vanderpool Vanderpool", about the goings-on at a Chicago brothel at the turn of the last century — the banter stringing his songs into a loosely-connected suite. With Collett's Rat A Tat Tat scheduled for an early March release, I think I'd wager we'll have several chances to hear the new material over the spring and summer.

Up on stage while the audience was still quiet and attentive, the night's poet was Sina Queyras, who read from her "Expressway", with some subtly post-apocalyptic imagery, in a quiet, unforced voice. That stuck a bit more than a couple more domestic ones that followed, but enjoyable in a low-key kind of way.

Alex Lukashevsky was up next, with a solo set with his acoustic guitar. As always, his weirdly dazzling playing was filled with slightly off-kilter runs of notes, well-matched with his slightly skewed lyrics ("I'm too old to be a human / but could I be Canadian?", say, or "without grief there's no gravy"), played with his characteristic casualness, as if playing a gig were slightly less interesting than his previous night's karaoke. The set included a take of Deep Dark United's "Downhill is Downtown" and a couple of his other songs were familiar to me, but I can't place them as DDU songs or tracks from his solo Connexions. As with every time I hear Lukashevsky's music I was a bit delighted, a bit perplexed, and a bit wishful for a few more hooks, but it was, overall, a pleasing re-acquaintance with his tunes.1

Listen to a track from this set here.

The story theme was picked up with novelist and Trampoline Hall founder Sheila Heti, reading with an appealingly bright voice that fit the tone of two short pieces from her collection The Middle Stories. "The Giant" was a little preciously allegorical, but was redeemed some by her explanation afterward, including a sweet sentiment about Toronto — despite the occasional desire to get away, "it's just an impossible place not to want to live in", she explained. She also read "The Poet and the Novelist as Roommates", which had a bit more bite and specificity to it ("one was so gruff and silent and thick – like a real man; and the other was disinterested and distracted and edgy – like a real man.") and spoke more to her talent.

Speaking of sweet preciousness (and, I suppose, of how the line between what what you find delightful and what you roll your eyes at is so precariously subjective) Laura Barrett emerged for the next set. Playing standing up, Barrett started solo with "Senior & the Blob" before bringing out Ajay Mehra and Dana Snell for a couple songs. Showing her characteristic total and earnest commitment to any idea, no matter how goofy, the trio covered Alvin & The Chipmunks' "Christmas Don't Be Late", chipmunk banter and all. The set closed out with "Robot Ponies", which was also, come to think of it, a seasonal choice. Always a thrill to hear Laura Barrett, all the more so when it was quite unexpected like this.

Listen to a track from this set here.

The second half of the night opened with a tale from ex-Smuggler and current CBC3 host Grant Lawrence, who told the next closest thing to the proverbial big fish story, involving an unusual incident with a giant octopus while gathering prawns. "It held up the crescent wrench with one tentacle," was just the beginning of the incredible-but-true tale — soon it had a knife, too, and six more limbs to grab weapons with. Lawrence even had some CBC swag to pass out.

And then, also in the "always a delight" category, Gentleman Reg brought the most rockin' set of the night so far.2 Replicating the opening moves of their recent Opera House show, the band opened with "For Trust", their lovely contribution to this year's Friends in Bellwoods 2 comp — a nice mellow groove that wore well in the room. And then built up from there. The band were joined by Lief Mosbaugh (who was once, alongside Reg, in The Hidden Cameras, apparently now with the Saskatoon Symphony Orchestra) for some extra vox on "Wild Heart". Obviously, I've seen Reg enough times this year that this wasn't essential, but it sounded fantastic. Hopefully someone in the audience — and my impression is that there were no few folks out for these shows with open ears but less likely to go to frequent gigs — was impressed by this and left wanting more.

While picking out musicians from the room to act as the night's poet-backing-band3, Jason Collett was inspired to tell a threat-of-nature story of his own, before Sina Queyras returned. This time reading from her Virginia Woolf deconstruction "The Waves, an unmaking". Interestingly, this one worked a bit in the opposite direction to the usual of the poet-plus-band experiments. Here, the band had already established a groove before she stepped on the stage, and Queyras fit her rhythms into that rather than the reverse. She eased back in her spoken tempo, filling more space with less syllables, sometimes even holding back her words to land on the beat. The slightly tense music from the band (including plucked piano wires and guitar strings scraped against a microphone) suited it well.

Listen to a part of this reading here.

The final act of the night was Taylor Knox and The Ishmaels. In a shorter long-set-to-end-the-night than last time I was around, the band played six songs in about twenty-five minutes. Fronted by Knox, drummer for The Golden Dogs, here playing 12-string electric guit. The band's album was composed of songs inspired by Moby Dick (thus contributing the band's name), and their sound takes some 12-string folk rock jangle, electrified by the power-pop chops that some of the members employ in their day jobs, notably the two-men-one-name rhythm section of bassist Andrew Scott (ex-Bicycles, recently spotted in Germans and Steamboat) and drummer Andrew Scott (Sloan).4 Muscular, slightly retro-minded power pop with, natch, a bit of literary flair. Given the subject matter, maybe they should have gotten Grant Lawrence up and backed him while telling another tale from the briney deep, but as it was, a satisfactory introduction.

Listen to a song from this set here.

And that was that for me at this year's Basement Ruvues. Having gone to my share of gigs, they might have been a bit less musically revelatory for me, and at twenty bones a night an expensive show by my standards. But it's becoming a great tradition, and Collett has put a lot of work into thoughtfully curating these nights, which is something that really sets them apart from just a bill of three of four bands taking turns on stage. Plus, the intimacy of the venue — with an audience that is generally willing to stay quiet and attentive — also help to make these special. It's nice to have some traditions and special events to look forward to in December.


1 During the break between sets, J. voiced his approval, commenting, "I liked that old alcoholic guy."

2 Didactic Reg-trackers — and by this point you should be introducing yourselves to me if I don't already know you — should note that Dave Meslin was handling the bass this time round.

3 This time out including Mike O’Brien and Neil Quinn, though I didn't catch who the drummer was.

4 Or, at least, the rather scanty amount of info online implies that Scott is the regular drummer for this unit — I didn't mark him and can't positively say he was behind the kit for this set.