Showing posts with label four corners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label four corners. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Recording: Four Corners V

Artist: Four Corners V*

Song: Hey! Bo Diddley [Bo Diddley cover]

Recorded at Steelworkers Hall ("Four Corners V"), August 8, 2015.

Four Corners V - Hey! Bo Diddley

A benefit for Girls Rock Camp was the impetus for the revival of this beloved concert series that originally ran for a conceptually-elegant four instalments from 2010 to 2012. As before, the Steelworkers' multipurpose room was the scene for this quadraphonic jam, with bands set up in each of the room's colour-coded corners and alternating two-song bursts for a no-dead-time rock jam. With cans of beer for sale instead of easily-slopped cups of cheap draft from a keg, the floor was less dangerously slick at night's end, but it was still an immersive, joyfully-exhausting experience. Whether this means that the series is back for another set of four remains to be seen, but it's a concept that I was glad to experience once again.

I was also glad to see that the night's performers also decided to revive the tradition of finishing off the night with a four-bands-at-once cover song blowout. In fact, this might have been the best of the ones attempted, with the groups wisely deferring lead vocals to Surinam's Matt Mason, which gave things a bit more of a centre as everyone hammered away on that Bo Diddley beat. Of course, things pulled apart as the bands forged ahead, but in the centre of the room it sounded like a rather fantastic mess, pulling itself in and out of focus before ending in a feedback haze as each of the bands tried to figure out how to finish — or if they wanted to finish.

* To be precise, this was a simultaneous jam featuring Surinam, HSY, New Fries and Cellphone all at once.

Recording: Cellphone

Artist: Cellphone

Song: Steal/Sell*

Recorded at Steelworkers Hall ("Four Corners V"), August 8, 2015.

Cellphone - Steal/Sell

A benefit for Girls Rock Camp was the impetus for the revival of this beloved concert series that originally ran for a conceptually-elegant four instalments from 2010 to 2012. As before, the Steelworkers' multipurpose room was the scene for this quadraphonic jam, with bands set up in each of the room's colour-coded corners and alternating two-song bursts for a no-dead-time rock jam. With cans of beer for sale instead of easily-slopped cups of cheap draft from a keg, the floor was less dangerously slick at night's end, but it was still an immersive, joyfully-exhausting experience. Whether this means that the series is back for another set of four remains to be seen, but it's a concept that I was glad to experience once again.

After a couple spins around the room, it was during Cellphone's turn that I realized I had to back up a bit to stay out of harm's way. The room's jury-rigged PA ate up most of the synth in their tunes, but there was metallic intensity aplenty. Colin (from Blonde Elvis, Vallens, Lee Paradise) was on the skins this time out.

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

Recording: New Fries

Artist: New Fries

Song: Jazz

Recorded at Steelworkers Hall ("Four Corners V"), August 8, 2015.

New Fries - Jazz

A benefit for Girls Rock Camp was the impetus for the revival of this beloved concert series that originally ran for a conceptually-elegant four instalments from 2010 to 2012. As before, the Steelworkers' multipurpose room was the scene for this quadraphonic jam, with bands set up in each of the room's colour-coded corners and alternating two-song bursts for a no-dead-time rock jam. With cans of beer for sale instead of easily-slopped cups of cheap draft from a keg, the floor was less dangerously slick at night's end, but it was still an immersive, joyfully-exhausting experience. Whether this means that the series is back for another set of four remains to be seen, but it's a concept that I was glad to experience once again.

The night's format meant that New Fries couldn't lead with their usual fool-you/fake-out slow start intro, but they still managed to inject a certain amount of practical chaos into their segments, including, oh, y'know, a guitar being smashed and ending with all of their gear in a heap. But while everything was intact they reeled off a bunch of old and new material, including this one from their new single.

Recording: HSY

Artist: HSY

Song: Feeder

Recorded at Steelworkers Hall ("Four Corners V"), August 8, 2015.

HSY - Feeder

A benefit for Girls Rock Camp was the impetus for the revival of this beloved concert series that originally ran for a conceptually-elegant four instalments from 2010 to 2012. As before, the Steelworkers' multipurpose room was the scene for this quadraphonic jam, with bands set up in each of the room's colour-coded corners and alternating two-song bursts for a no-dead-time rock jam. With cans of beer for sale instead of easily-slopped cups of cheap draft from a keg, the floor was less dangerously slick at night's end, but it was still an immersive, joyfully-exhausting experience. Whether this means that the series is back for another set of four remains to be seen, but it's a concept that I was glad to experience once again.

Anna Mayberry takes the mic for this rant ("you can't even feeeeeeeeeed yourself!") as the band offers up a punishing assault of abrasive noise. It's tantalizing to note that the release of the band's first album is close enough that the bandcamp pre-order is up, so expect news of release celebrations to surface soon. (In the meantime, the band has a couple support slots coming up, with Old Man Gloom at Lee's on Monday, September 7th, and at a Wavelength spectacular on Thursday, September 17th at The Garrison celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Nihilist Spasm Band.)

Recording: Surinam

Artist: Surinam

Song: Auctioneer

Recorded at Steelworkers Hall ("Four Corners V"), August 8, 2015.

Surinam - Auctioneer

A benefit for Girls Rock Camp was the impetus for the revival of this beloved concert series that originally ran for a conceptually-elegant four instalments from 2010 to 2012. As before, the Steelworkers' multipurpose room was the scene for this quadraphonic jam, with bands set up in each of the room's colour-coded corners and alternating two-song bursts for a no-dead-time rock jam. With cans of beer for sale instead of easily-slopped cups of cheap draft from a keg, the floor was less dangerously slick at night's end, but it was still an immersive, joyfully-exhausting experience. Whether this means that the series is back for another set of four remains to be seen, but it's a concept that I was glad to experience once again.

Surinam's predecessor band Anagram played the very first Four Corners — along with now-Surinam bassist Cory Wells' old band Ancestors — so it was sweet to see them on hand and leading off this show. Their surging tunes were the first to get some bodies bouncing off each other as the heat in the room intensified.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

1000 Songs: Richard Trapunski

1000 Songs: Richard Trapunski

I have now posted one thousand songs from my live recordings to this blog. My introductory thoughts on that 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 comes from local music scribe Rich Trapunski, who manages to get a lot of cool bands some exposure in NOW magazine, but can also investigate a trend when the situation calls for it. He's making a valiant effort to add a layer of scuzz and confusion to CMW in helping put together this Resonancity showcase, co-presented with Dan Burke.


Congrats on the milestone, Joe!

Constantines - Dirty Business

This is from the Constantines’ secret show at the Garrison in 2009 as part of their 10th anniversary celebrations (otherwise centred entirely at Lee's Palace). It was cool to see the now-defunct IndieCanRock institution in such a small room – likely the first, last and only time I’ll ever see them – but this was back when the Garrison was the loudest venue in the city, so it's nice to hear a recorded version that won’t give me tinnitus.

I wrote a review of the show for my blog, Resonancity (in my pre-NOW days) and posted it on Stillepost, where the one of the late forum’s lovable curmudgeons predicted something along the lines of this: "the writer seems destined to churn out infotainment pieces for Eye Weekly." Close, but no cigar.

Broken Social Scene - Sweetest Kill

This was the "legendary" free Broken Social Scene gig at the Harbourfront Centre, a makeup gig for their cancelled Olympic Island Gig in 2009 (depending on who you asked, it was either due to the garbage strike, noise from the Molson Indy or low ticket sales). Having failed to get there before the masses, I ended up stuck behind a couple of older patrons who spent the entire concert standing on their seats. Despite my seething annoyance, I was still seduced by the love-in vibe at this two and a half hour marathon, complete with all the "special guests" that now garner their own marquees (i.e. Feist, Metric, etc), but the only way that I’d ever be able to actually see the gig would be to rent Bruce MacDonald's This Movie Is Broken.

Fucked Up - Year of the Ox

Fucked Up's epic "Year Of..." songs rarely get played live, so I’m lucky to have witnessed "Year of the Ox" twice. Having caught the band's soundcheck earlier in the evening (I interviewed Ben Cook about one of his many other bands, the Bitters, before the show), I knew we'd be in for the whole strings/guest female vocalist treatment, but it sounded even more incongruous in front of a wild – but strangely civilized – all ages crowd... at the Toronto Reference Library, of all places.

Four Corners II - Losing Touch With My Mind

If you haven't been to a Four Corners show at the United Steelworkers Hall, here’s the concept in a nutshell: four bands each set up in a corner of the room and alternate playing songs, while the crowd stands in the centre of the action. The song captured here is all four bands – Rituals, Sun Ra Ra Ra, Quest For Fire and Lullabye Arkestra – all playing together on a chaotic, Zaireeka-style cover of Spaceman 3's "Losing Touch With My Mind". It's a "chaosbomb", to quote Joe himself, but this recording is an apt reconstruction of the maelstrom of barely coherent noise that was the grand finale. Bonus: I’m pretty sure that’s my voice asking "do you know what song this is?" at the 2:48 mark.

Ty Segall - Standing at the Station + Girlfriend

Ty Segall's Toronto shows tend to be louder, sweatier, more bruise-inducing shows than his melodic garage-pop nuggets would have you believe, and this CMW performance at Wrongbar was certainly no exception. After being knocked around and distracted by the energetic, beer-swilling crowd, Joe's recording is a helpful reminder that there were actual songs under the madness... and damn good ones, too.


You can always click on the tags below to read more about the shows these songs came from. Have there been four or five 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.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Recording: Four Corners II

Artist: Four Corners II*

Song: Losing Touch With My Mind (Spacemen 3 cover)

Recorded at Four Corners II (Steelworkers Hall), January 14, 2011.

Four Corners II - Losing Touch With My Mind

My notes for this set can be found here.

* This is, in fact, the four bands at Four Corners II (Rituals, Sun Ra Ra Ra, Quest For Fire and Lullabye Arkestra) playing simultaneously. It's a bit of a chaosbomb, but it's presented here for those who are interested.

Recording: Quest For Fire

Artist: Quest For Fire

Song: The Greatest Hits By God

Recorded at Four Corners II (Steelworkers Hall), January 14, 2011.

Quest For Fire - The Greatest Hits By God

My notes for this set can be found here.

Recording: Sun Ra Ra Ra

Artist: Sun Ra Ra Ra

Song: unknown*

Recorded at Steelworkers Hall (Four Corners II), January 14, 2011.

Sun Ra Ra Ra - unknown

My notes for this set can be found here.

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

Recording: Rituals

Artist: Rituals

Song: unknown*

Recorded at Four Corners II (Steelworkers Hall), January 14, 2011.

Rituals - unknown

My notes for this set can be found here.

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

Gig: Four Corners II

Four Corners II (feat. Lullabye Arkestra / Quest for Fire / Sun Ra Ra Ra / Rituals)

Steelworkers Hall. Friday, January 14, 2011.

The initial Four Corners show was such a success that it seemed inevitable that there'd be sequel. In fact, the concept is so wonderful (and, ex post facto, so obvious) that it's a wonder that this hadn't happened sooner. Basically, instead of having one stage where four bands take turns playing their sets, these shows get rid of the stage and have four bands set up in each of the corners of the room, letting them take turns playing one or two songs. The outcome is a non-stop stream of music, with all of that deadtime for set breaks and changeovers suddenly eliminated as the bands power onwards.

There was also the chance to apply some lessons learned from the first incarnation — this time out in the Steelworkers Hall, there was one more section of the multipurpose room open, creating a slightly bigger space. And besides colour-coded spotlights, each corner was also decorated with a matching light sculpture. And just as importantly, the slow-pouring draft keg was replaced by bottles of beer this time, keeping the queue moving faster.

The advantage of the January version was the the room was less stiflingly hot — at least at first — but it also made hanging out in the patio area less enticing. Speaking to the sense of community these shows foster, I noted members of all four bands from the first Four Corners in attendance — including, of course, the guys from Ancestors, who once again set things up.

While the room filled, the DJ was spinning a variety of dancefloor-friendly stuff (from reggae to ELO) that'd be unlike anything forthcoming from the night's bands. In fact, the overall net vibe of these four bands would be "less punk, more metal" than the previous show. There's still a fair amount of musical terrain covered by the four bands, but definitely a shared love of volume — a fact I regretted as I realized that for the first time in ages I'd forgotten my earplugs.

The room was pretty full by the time things got started, with Rituals, in the red corner, leading off. Of the four, this was the only band I had no familiarity with1, but they were speaking my language with a sort of gloomy, reverb-laden post-punk sound. I liked the ingredients, but at first I was somewhat unsure if I liked how they mixed them. There were shades of, say, Crystal Stilts, but Rituals brought something darker and harder-edged to it — like angry stoners on acid out to recreate half-remembered metal jams.

Listen to one of Rituals' songs from this show here.

Rituals played two songs, then over to the green corner, where Sun Ra Ra Ra sounded ragged right off the bat — like they'd been standing out in a parking lot screaming all night just to be ready for this. Raging garage punk sizzling in all directions, this is a band that takes "Psychotic Reaction" to heart as much as a manifesto as a sonic template — inspirational lyric: "you really can't control what's on the other side of your mind."

Check out of of Sun Ra Ra Ra's songs from this show here.

Quest for Fire were a literal change of pace, with their first song coming out at about a third of the speed of Sun Ra Ra Ra's frenzied spasms. The band was beefed up for the night with extra guitar from Holy Mount's Daniel Losic, and they were deliciously sludgy in a bliss/drone sort of way — "it's a very blue scene right now," quipped the guy standing behind me, correctly noting that their colour fit their vibe just fine. The only other time I'd seen the band, quite early on in their run, hadn't done a thing for me — but this was going down just right.

Listen to one of Quest for Fire's songs from this show here.

Unsurprisingly, Quest For Fire played one song in about the same time the other bands had played two, and then the action moved across the room to Lullabye Arkestra. For their own regular sets, the husband-and-wife duo of Kat Taylor and Justin Small have developed a theatrical build, with smoke machines and rising keyboard drones. But here, it was right into it, and as their musical fury burst out in frenzied bass and pummelled drums, the guy in front of me set to some honest-to-goodness headbanging. That's the sort of intensity that Lullabye Arkestra can bring, and when they're raging full-force, they're something to behold.

Listen to one of Lullabye Arkestra's songs from this show here.

And then it was back to Rituals as the second lap began. It's worth noting once again how effortlessly everything flowed, with no sound problems and bands striking it up as the last notes from the band before them were still fading. Quest For Fire hit their faster gear, which is still a much slower chug than anyone else on hand and Lullabye Arkestra broke out a pair of new songs — one of which, with Taylor's vox and a chorus of "set it on fire!" was pretty, um, inflammable.

By the third time around, the bands were really hitting their stride, especially Rituals, who, all at once "clicked" with me. The crowd that had been surging from corner to corner as bands switched off were starting to list now, some people fading back to grab a beer or marshal their strength while Sun Ra Ra Ra were playing like Thirteenth Floor Elevators on meth. Meanwhile, as Quest For Fire played, I was half-drunkenly convinced for a minute they were pulling out an Alice in Chains cover, or something vaguely familiar that I couldn't pin down. It was only after the fact that I realized it was, in fact, Pink Floyd's "Fearless" — a non-classic that went down well with some ragged extra heaviousity.

At the start of the fourth and final lap around the room, it's called out that the bar is closing in a half-hour. By now, the floor was slick with spilled beer, and the room had indeed heated up, the windows now fogged over. As Rituals completed their last pair of songs, there were lots of people staggering around with two or three beers. Sun Ra Ra Ra launched into a bad-vibe version of Spacemen 3's "Rollercoaster" that seemed to be more to call for damaged schizophrenia than liberating mind expansion.

That would give a peek ahead to the grand finale, when all the bands combined for a four-cornered version of "Losing Touch With My Mind", another Spacemen 3 cover, with all four bands simultaneously raising as much cacophony as they could muster while trying to stay in sync. Quest For Fire were the loudest, and hence the best to use as a guide. But once they all got going, it was like a sonic apocalypse — or at least some kind of Dionysian mindmelt, and the room broke out into clumps of people dancing, with groups of friends wandering around high-fiving each other, and people making out along the scarce available wall space. The "song" lasted about six minutes, the bands shifting in and out from each other, and then ended as each of them fell into a long squall of feedback for another couple minutes.

Listen to the intense madness of the finale here.

Quite exhausting, but also a helluva ride. Slightly more than an hour-and-a-half, all told. After that, the outside cold felt rather bracing, although the conditions were less conducive to people simply collapsing outside on the lawn to recover.2

Once again, if you noticed that the pictures here are way better-looking than they normally are in these parts, that's because I've borrowed a few shots with the kind permission of Ivy Leah. Ivy captures the passion of bands because she's passionate about them as well — and can be found right up in the thick of it at many of the city's finer no-bullshit rock'n'roll shows. Check out her stuff here.


1 With the crowd rushing from corner to corner while I held my spot at the centre of the room, I didn't realize during the set that it was the multitasking Leon Taheny (a member of Germans, and seen on stage recently with Bruce Peninsula — as well as a producer of many fine records) behind the drumkit.

2 And just to catch up with the bands involved, it should be noted that Rituals have a gig at Parts & Labour on Saturday, July 23, 2011, and Quest For Fire is playing at The Silver Dollar this Friday (July 15, 2011). And, most excitingly, Four Corners III (featuring Dentata, Tropics, Boars and The Soupcans) goes down at the Steelworkers Hall on Friday July 22, 2011.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Recording: Lullabye Arkestra

Artist: Lullabye Arkestra

Song: new song*

Recorded at Four Corners II, Steelworkers Hall, January 14, 2011.

Lullabye Arkestra - new song

Full review to follow My notes for this set can now be found here. Four Corners II had the same number of corners as its predecessor, and about 100% more metal.

* Does anyone know the title to this one? The obvious guess would be "Set It On Fire". Please leave a comment if you have heard anything!

Friday, November 26, 2010

Recording: Four Corners

Artist: Four Corners*

Song: Ann [Stooges Cover]

Recorded at FOUR CORNERS, Steelworkers Hall, July 23, 2010.

Four Corners - Ann [Stooges Cover]

My notes for this show can be found here.

* This grand finale of the FOUR CORNERS concert features Teenanger, Ancestors, No No Zero and Anagram playing simultaneously.

Recording: Anagram

Artist: Anagram

Song: Leads to Nowhere

Recorded at FOUR CORNERS, Steelworkers Hall, July 23, 2010.

Anagram - Leads to Nowhere

My notes for this show can be found here.

Recording: No No Zero

Artist: No No Zero

Songs: Colossal Penetrations + Eurosleaze

Recorded at FOUR CORNERS, Steelworkers Hall, July 23, 2010.

No No Zero - Colossal Penetrations + Eurosleaze

My notes for this show can be found here.

Recording: Ancestors

Artist: Ancestors

Song: two songs*

Recorded at FOUR CORNERS, Steelworkers Hall, July 23, 2010.

Ancestors - two songs

My notes for this show can be found here.

* Does anyone know the title to these ones? Please leave a comment!

Gig: FOUR CORNERS

FOUR CORNERS (feat. Anagram / No No Zero / Teenanger / Ancestors)

Steelworkers Hall. Friday, July 23, 2010.

Some ideas make so much sense, you wonder why they haven't already happened. What if instead of four bands playing one full set after another, the bands took turns each playing a song or two. Setup would be an issue — a stage wouldn't work for the turnovers. But what if you had all four bands set up at once in four corners of a room? Aha.

And so it was, down at the temple of labour on Cecil Street. A union hall isn't too different from a legion in its setup — plaques and trophies adorn the walls, giving a sense or organizational regimentation. Just substitute a different set of kitschy-cool photos and posters reflecting past glories and you're most of the way there. Both are places for organizing of different sorts, including the kind of organizing that means you need to have a bar on site. Here, we had a keg being tapped, selling gassy, foamy cheap beer.

This would, in fact, be the money-maker for the night as this was, quite incredibly, a free show. There was also a barbeque in action outside, dispensing hamburgers. A pretty sweet setup, and a nice little space outside to hang out in as the crowd gathered.

As the eleven o'clock starting time rolled around, I roused myself and headed into the multipurpose room set up for the gig. Not a big space, maybe ten yards by fifteen, and lots of gear occupying the fringes. The band setups were as blue-collar as the surroundings, guit/bass/drums all around and no fancy frills.1 There was still a big lineup at the beer station for the slow-pumping keg, so it was a little while longer before bandmembers started filtering in, turning on amps and getting ready to go. If one hadn't figured it out already, it could now be observed that the people putting on guitars and so forth were the same ones who had been doing everything else out front — straight-up DIY and no division from the masses here, as you could buy a drink ticket and get your beer poured by the same guys who'd soon be cranking out the tunes.

By about 11:30 all the bandmembers have filtered into their corners, and the room is feeling pretty full and warming up already from body heat. I grabbed myself a spot more or less in the dead centre of the room, trying to find the sweet spot in a pretty unusual audio setup, PA's set up on all sides. Teenanger, bathed in red light in the room's south-east corner are up first, and the crowd sort of gravitates towards them as vocalist Riley Wild greets them with, "welcome to The Last Waltz!" before the band tore into it. The sound in the room was loud and snarl-y — just right for the music, in other words — though there was some extra feedback shrieks to start with. Playing straight-up garage-y rock'n'roll with scuzzy undertones, Teenanger blasted out a quick pair of songs, and then the lights went down in their corner.

Listen to a Teenanger song from this show here.

Before their last echoing guitar squeal died out, the yellow spotlights in the opposite corner came up and Ancestors flexed their heads playing faster, leaner, hardcore-informed songs. Their two tunes lasted only about three minutes flat, and then the baton was passed to No No Zero in the green corner. Their music had a gothabilly sort of humminahummina swagger, but with a punkrock thrust.2 Shades of The Cramps, or, just perhaps, Deja Voodoo in their vaguely malicious bursts.

Listen to a couple of Ancestors' songs from this set here.

And then, speaking of malicious bursts, Anagram — with whom I was the most familiar of all these bands — doing "Evil" and the crowd-pleasing Cleavers cover "Fish". Though no less roiling than the other bands, Anagram's music was the least inclined to quick blasts of aggression — well-known for settling in on a groove in live performance, they could hold a chord and churn away for a stretch longer than some of the entire songs of the bands around them.

And then back around for the second lap. Teenanger's sound was a bit cleaner this time, the stray feedback howls now tamed. Ancestors sounded angrier, like they were just now getting properly worked up, and No No Zero worked in some more back-and-forth vocals from Sian Llewelyn.

Listen to a couple No No Zero songs from this show here.

Once things were really going, it was about a million degrees in the room — the cement walls were clammy and dripping with precipitation. The floor was slick with spilled beer, sloshed around as the crowd surged from corner to corner. Maybe these bands weren't predisposed to banter anyways, but the format here cut down on that even more. With one band starting up right on the heels of the last one finishing, it cut out that between-song time when the band might chat with the crowd.

There were four cycles through the bands, and like a bottle being passed around, things got more staggery-wayward as things went on. And a helluva lot of songs, even if they were mostly quick. By the time Anagram's last turn trough came around with "What a Mess", I was feeling pretty punchy — and I'd mostly just been holding down my spot in the centre of the room. Some of the people weaving around me were looking downright exhausted.

Listen to an Anagram song from this show here.

And thus the show lurched to the grand finale, with all four corners joining together for a bashed-out rendition of The Stooges' "Ann". The drummers were just out-of-sync enough across the room to lend it a queasy feeling. It was exhaustedly ragged and desperate, which is probably the most befitting way to end. After the noisy crescendo of that, people started staggering out of the room as the DJ started back up, the PA telling us that after laughter comes tears. Outside in the nightcool air, people were sprawling out, collapsing like they'd just finished a 10K run.

Listen to the monumental grand finale here.

It's a brilliant show concept — live without dead time, and all of that — though its sheer unusualness probably added to the excitement of it. I imagine it also took some extra technical work (and extra gear) to pull off four band setups.3 But it worked out pretty well. Kudos to the bands for putting on a show like this for free — it felt less like a regular gig and more like an event to be remembered.


1 There's probably an inneresting investigation to be made by someone cleverer than me into why, in the context of this show, guit/bass/drums are instinctively blue collar while, say, laptops and woodwind sections would be effete and/or elitist.

2 In fact, thrusting would be an apt description for No No Zero's lyrical direction as well, as their album Rough Stuff is thoroughly concerned with all manners of below-the-belt activities.

3 I didn't make a note of who was doing sound at this show, but kudos are deserved there as well — given the unorthodox setup, it was exceptional work.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Recording: Teenanger

Artist: Teenanger

Song: Louisiana Lounger*

Recorded at FOUR CORNERS, Steelworkers Hall, July 23, 2010.

Teenanger - Louisiana Lounger

Review to follow. My notes for this show can now be found here. This show consisted of four bands set up in four corners of a room, taking turns playing songs in a non-stop rock barrage. Quite excellent.

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