Showing posts with label gabe levine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gabe levine. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2013

Recording: Gabe Levine

Artist: Gabe Levine

Song: Where the Light Falls

Recorded at The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge), June 1, 2013.

Gabe Levine - Where the Light Falls

Full review to follow. Gabe Levine hasn't been playing many shows of late, but he brought a few new songs along for this solo set. There were occasional bursts of joyful noise leaking through from the Main Hall, where a boisterous crowd was enjoying some sort of of musical comedy show, but as if on cue things quieted down just in time for this, which was appropriately delivered with the evening's light beginning to dim outside the windows.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Sunday Playlist #36

Sunday Playlist #36

Field Music - Rockist Part 4

The Wave Pictures - Kiss Me

Gabe Levine - Shake Out Your Shoes

Imaginary Cities - Temporary Resident

Jim Guthrie - Wish I Were You


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.

Monday, December 17, 2012

Recording: Kith & Kin

Artist: Kith & Kin

Songs: Song of Simeon [traditional] / Shepherds, Arise! [traditional] / Take The Long Way Around The Sea [Low cover]

Recorded at The Music Gallery, December 16, 2012.

Kith & Kin - Song of Simeon

Kith & Kin - Shepherds, Arise!

Kith & Kin - Take The Long Way Around The Sea

Full review to follow. You can come to your traditions in a lotta different ways. Even as someone who mutters a lot about leaving xmas to the xians, my small heart still grows three sizes when I head down to see Kith & Kin's Annual Holiday Wassail.

We tend to get caught in the loop of those same carols over and over, so it's partially a relief to see someone drawing deeper, from seventeenth century canticles, to Appalachian folk hymns, to even include a song from slowcore vets Low. It's also an occasion to hear beautiful voices in action, starting with the familial trio of Kathleen, Martha and Ivy Mairi and then expanding to include their choir (Gabe Levine, Isla Craig, Frank Griggs, and D. Alex Meeks). Every year, this is an evening that leaves a lingering warm feeling — what more d'you want from your traditions?

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Recording: Gabe Levine

Artist: Gabe Levine

Song: Believe Me

Recorded at The Music Gallery, October 1, 2010.

Gabe Levine - Believe Me

My notes for this set can be found here.

Gig: Gabe Levine

Gabe Levine (Mantler)

Music Gallery. Friday, October 1, 2010.

A Friday night album release party at the Music Gallery, and an upbeat crowd of friends and family on hand for Gabe Levine, the night's headliner. In the night's spirit of bonhomie, he was on hand to introduce Mantler, who opened things up.

Having Chris Cummings' pop project to start was definitely a selling point for this show, as Cummings always guarantees the crowd a good time, both in deed and in literal song form. Sitting at the electric piano, he was joined throughout the set by Jay Anderson and Matt McLaren on drums and bass, effortlessly giving the material an unassumingly funky boost. Despite the relative freshness of his last album — Monody had been released back in the spring — Cummings was playing a bunch of new material, including "Flower of Laughter", this new father's song to his recently-arrived daughter. "Husbands", another new one, was a discourse on watching the Cassavetes flick of the same name1, a subject that foregrounded Mantler's longstanding cinematic interests.2

After "Uphill Battle", another yet-unrecorded song that's been in the repertoire for awhile, the set closed out with a couple tracks from Monody, including the smooth anthem "Childman". As always, this was a top-notch set, and, yes, a guaranteed good time.

Listen to a track from this set here.

The last time I saw Gabe Levine was in the same venue, but otherwise, this was a considerably different show. Whereas that set back in June had been performed with a stripped-down trio, there was a big band this time around, reproducing the lush arrangements found on his new Long Spun Thread. Although this is Levine's first "solo" album, he has been active on the Montreal experimental scene with several bands in the past, including Black Ox Orkestar. As with that previous show, I was interested in how that past, more "avant" work might be informing the songs and arrangements here, which hew closer to the singer-songwriter path.

After starting off solo with album closer "Friends In Bed", a half-dozen musicians emerged to strike up the album's title track. The band included — deep breath here — Jay Anderson and Dan Gaucher (trading off on drums and percussion), Mike Smith (bass), Sandro Perri (keys and percussion), Jesse Levine (piano and keybs), Jessica Moore (backing vox) and Jeremy Strachan (sax/flute/guitar). If you keep your eyes on local stages, you might note that's a bit of a who's who right there, excellent musicians all, most of whom had also played on the album.

After a couple songs with that configuration, the band was joined by a three-piece string section (Julia Collins, Jane Levitt, Erika Nelson) to fill things out even more, including a tasty run through "Cruel Youth". In terms of lushness and orchestration, Lambchop comes to mind a bit here, if you filter out that band's more countrypolitan leanings. Levine did reach back to his old "experimental-country" band Sackville to play "This Machine".

It looks to be a fertile time for Levine, with a couple newer-than-the-album songs included in the set, both of which were highlights of the night — "Holy Relics" had a bouncy rhythm and tasty vocals from Moore, while the knockout sprawling gallop of the excellent "Where the Crown Don't Reign" was a rush of internal rhymes and instrumental swagger. The set ran just over an hour, finishing off with "Believe Me" — the first track on the album in a nice parallel to close things out.

The big band definitely brought these songs to life in a more vivid way than when I'd seen them before, so Levine's encounter with these local musicians — many of whom also skirt back and forth between "experimental" and "pop" in their other projects — can definitely be counted as a success. Long Spun Thread stands on its own as an album, and is worth checking out3, but seeing these songs played like this made them even more exciting. Levine is still playing around town with most of these musicians, so do keep your eyes out for a chance to catch him.

A couple selections from this set — check out one that's on the album here, and one that should be on the next one here.


1 "Songs about Cassavetes" must count as its own sub-sub genre by now.

2 This will also be on display at "Mantler's Visual Music", a free event at the TIFF Lightbox billed as "an exploration of the common ground between avant-garde film and music" including a screening of a series of shorts followed by a musical performance.

3 The album is digitally available on a "name your price" basis at Levine's bandcamp page.

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Recording: Gabe Levine

Artist: Gabe Levine

Song: Where the Crown Don't Reign

Recorded at The Music Gallery, October 1, 2010.

Gabe Levine - Where the Crown Don't Reign

My notes for this set can now be found here. Full review to follow — but I do consider it a good sign when an album release show setlist contains multiple songs that are newer than the ones on the album being celebrated. Levine's songs were fleshed out with some of my favourite local musicians — maybe they're some of your favourites, too.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Recording: Gabe Levine

Artist: Gabe Levine

Song: Shake Out Your Shoes

Recorded at The Music Gallery, June 3, 2010.

Gabe Levine - Shake Out Your Shoes

My review of this show can be found here.

Gig: Lisa Bozikovic

Lisa Bozikovic (Gabe Levine / The Silt)

The Music Gallery. Thursday, June 3, 2010.

On a pleasant June night it was slightly stuffy and warm inside the Music Gallery — a reminder that it was near the end of the indoor music season. Though that would bring with it the promise of upcoming outdoor shows, there was still some music to hear in this lovely space. I was rather glad to have seen this show announced, as I'd missed Lisa Bozikovic's album release show at the same location a few months prior. On this night, she'd be a most gracious host, surrounding her set of direct songs with a couple more, um, tangential avant-folk acts.

The first of those was Gabe Levine1, starting off the evening. Best-known for his work with Constellation-affiliated Black Ox Orkestar, his past efforts were linked to Montreal's experimental-type scene. Currently Toronto-based, he was playing material from his forthcoming solo album Long Spun Thread2, produced by Sandro Perri, who is no stranger himself to working in the different worlds of experimental/non-experimental musics. bearing that in mind, it's interesting to see what he brings to this more song-based music.

And, indeed, to the casual observer, the net effect here leans more towards conventional song structures and arrangements, but with a subtle undertow of sonic complications. The music was mellowish overall and in a singer-songwriter kind of mode, and even gave an impression not unlike some of the Mountain Goats' stuff at their most folk-poppish. Levine sang with a steady confidence in a smooth voice, backed by Jessica Moore (banjo, backing vox) and a drummer as a unit "for the first time, ever". Perhaps one of the ways in which those experimental music backgrounds came out was how seamless the players were together.

Given that Levine's music is decidedly non-forceful, perhaps it's no surprise that it didn't immediately knock me down. But it was an intriguing half-hour and left a pleasant aftertaste. Given the cast of local notables contributing to his forthcoming album, it should definitely be worth looking for.

Listen to a track from this set here.

It's arguable that Lost August, the debut album from Lisa Bozikovic, hasn't yet gained the renown it deserves. With a fabulous voice and sympathetic backing from a large supporting cast (including members of the Ohbijou and Steamboat camps), the album wraps a good set of compositions in even more-impressive arrangements, adding texture and depth to what could have been a too-plain, folkie affair. I was interested in seeing how much of that aural expansiveness would be brought to the live show. Unsurprisingly, things were a bit stripped down, but Bozikovic (herself fully capable on keybs, guitar and accordion) had the sympathetic backing of Mike Brooks (electric guit, pedal steel) and Tyler Belluz (also of Kite Hill, on stand-up bass) with Jessica Moore and Gabe Levine returning from the opening set to add additional colour.

The set opened with "This Whole House", one not on her album. Bozikovic, on guitar, fought off a little bit of feedback at the start of "New City" but overcame that to present a delicate interplay with the pedal steel. An enthusiastic collaborator, Bozikovic seemed less at ease being the centre of attention — a bit nervous-looking throughout, and tuning at length, almost as if to steady herself down. She was also very time-conscious, cutting a song from her own setlist so as to not cut The Silt short. Anti-diva, perhaps — or perhaps some of the aching vulnerability hinted at in her album was just floating up to the surface.

But that certainly didn't subtract from her ability to express the emotional undercurrents in her songs, getting at the feelings that are more complicated than the words could convey. After describing her ex-lover's lips with an unabashed sensuality at the start of "Wanting the Wanting" — shades of Lucinda Williams at her best — it felt like a knowing, self-deceiving lie when she sang "I feel nothing for you now/ maybe I felt nothing for you then," on the chorus. These are the layers of self-undercutting contradictions that real people feel and that songs don't normally grasp at.

Bozikovic looked more at ease when she moved over to the piano, leading off there with a forceful "Take and Take". She was joined by Felicity Williams3 who added her admirable voice to another unreleased tune, possibly called "Waterfall", their intertwining voices adding a lovely hue to the song — the lilting "whoa-oh-oh"'s more gentle brook than waterfall, bringing locals Snowblink to mind. Very good stuff, so it felt sad that the set, just seven songs, zipped by in a too-quick half-hour.

Pared down that much, some of the album's standouts — like the sublime "New City" — were left unplayed. What we got was very good, though, and it's worth noting that Bozikovic is not out of songs after her stellar album, with three of the selections here not coming from that release. Bozikovic has the talent to justify both a more assertive presence on the stage and a longer set length — hopefully these will be the rewards of some more exposure and more shows.

A couple tracks from this set: you can hear one from the album here and one that isn't here.

The final set of the night was from The Silt, another one of those recombinant forces from the local improvised/experimental scene. This unit consists of Marcus Quin, Ryan Driver and Doug Tielli. Each of these guys serve in a number of other formal and ad hoc music groups — I've seen the latter two in multiple capacities, both playing their own stuff and backing others, as well as playing together in mouth-speaker soul-weirdos The Reveries. Those who know that band would have one means of comparison, as The Silt occupies different coordinates on the same terrain, less self-consciously "weird" and more straightforwardly song-based. But relatively so, of course. Like Gabe Levine in the opening set, what we have here are capable improvisational musicians playing around with song forms. But this crew was a quite a different angle, their music more strongly abstracted.

There's also an oblique sort of rootsyness here, some songs coming off like right-angle encounters with the blues. Which is to say if you were constructing a continuum of weird-rootsy/experimental music, you could put this left of the dial to acts like FemBots (y'know, a little weird) or Rock Plaza Central (a bit more off-kilter) — but still capable of occasional bursts of poppish ebullience.

Anyways, these guys have been playing together as The Silt for a decade (releasing three albums in the process) giving them an intuitive ease. As Driver and Tielli swapped off lead vocals, each in their own high, keening manner, Driver moved between piano and an old analog synth. Quin spent most of the set doing double duty on simultaneous bass and percussion, but sometimes just limited himself to playing his bass with a slide. Tielli added guitar lines that could slide quickly in and out of abstraction.

Perhaps appropriate to this band's round-about-ness, I can say that I didn't not like this. But I wouldn't be so bold as to remove that double negative. I get a certain sense on listening to music like this similar to what I get after watching a certain kind of arthouse cinema — the experience is more edifying that pleasing, perhaps I could say. Or interesting without really grabbing me emotionally. It is fascinating to sort of mentally reverse-engineer these songs to see the crazy way they constructed them — almost like one of those shows where engineers have to build a car out of junkyard debris.

Listen to a track from this set here.


1 Those looking him up should look here, and not confuse him with the other Gabe Levine, who is in a Brooklyn indie band called Takka Takka.

2 The album release show for this is now listed on Friday, October 1 at the Music Gallery, and promises a very tasty-looking group of supporting players. Plus, the always-fabulous Mantler is opening.

3 Williams, perhaps best-known right now for her work in THOMAS, is also a notable frequent collaborator with many local artists.