Showing posts with label guest bedroom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guest bedroom. Show all posts

Monday, May 29, 2023

Monday Roundup #124

Concert announcements:

Music and the Shadow People [sneak peak of a live radio play performance written by William Parker with immersive multi-channel sound design by Andrew O’Connor] (feat. William Parker/Bea Labikova/Kayla Milmine/Anita Katakkar/Mike Rinaldi/Trent Pardy/Gary Kirkham/Rosina Kazi) / Array Space 2023-06-08 (Thursday). $20 or PWYC (cash only).

Audiopollination (feat. Zoë Alexis-Abrams/David Sait/Marilyn Yogarajah / Luke Roberts/Rod Campbell/Rosie Cochrane / Grace Scheele/Martin van de Ven / Michael Palumbo/TBA) / Array Space 2023-06-09 (Friday). $10 or PWYC. [FB event]

Spore Wind [compositions by Raven Chacon, Rohan Chander, Clara Iannotta, Bekah Simms, Christina Volpini] (feat. Continuum Contemporary Music / chik white) / The Music Gallery 2023-06-09 (Friday). $20 regular ; $15 seniors/MG members/arts workers; $10 student. [FB event]

Jessie Dara (Emilie Mover) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-06-11 (Sunday) [FB event]

Emergents Series (feat. Jairus Sharif / Mustafa Rafiq) / The Music Gallery 2023-06-14 (Wednesday). $10, all ages [more info]

Music By Harry and Furlong (feat. Daniel Wyche [solo] / The Search For Eternal Happiness [Alex Samaras/Laura Swankey/Harrison Argatoff/Patrick Smith/Jeff LaRochelle/Madeleine Ertel/Kae Murphy/Andrew Furlong/Caleb Klager/Chris Pruden/Patrick O’Reilly/Aidan McConnell/Harry Vetro]) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-06-14 (Wednesday). $pwyc [FB event]

You in Mind (feat. Duo Cichorium / Jaz Tsui & Louis Pino) / The Music Gallery 2023-06-16 (Friday). $15; $10 for MG members, students, arts workers. [FB event]

DIG presents (feat. Hot Garbage / Burner / Scooter Jay) / The Horseshoe 2023-06-22 (Thursday). $25.29. [FB event]

Intersection Festival 2023 Day 1: "The Last Symphony" (feat. William Basinski / Kuuma) / St. Anne's Anglican Church 2023-09-01 (Friday). $39.02; $28.27 student/senior/arts worker. [FB event]


Shows this week:

Rob Clutton Trio [Karen Ng/Nick Fraser/Rob Clutton] / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-05-30 (Tuesday)

Not A Band / Houndstooth 2023-05-31 (Wednesday). $free. [FB event]

Martin Rev (Scarlett Rose) / The Garrison 2023-06-01 (Thursday). $42.35, 19+. [FB event]

Sunglaciers (No Frills / Pretty) / Monarch Tavern 2023-06-01 (Thursday). $14.50, 19+. [FB event]

Tania Gill Presents (feat. Susanna Hood Trio [Susanna Hood/Tania Gill/Kayla Milmine] / Tania Gill/Heather Saumer/Blake Howard) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-06-02 (Friday – early). $pwyc. [FB event]

TONE Festival (feat. RAWL [Jack Wright/Ben Bennett/Evan Lipson/Zach Darrup] / Naomi McCarroll-Butler / Unguent) / Tibet Street Records 2023-06-02 (Friday). $14.29, all ages. [FB event]

Liquid Architecture - An evening of solo acoustic guitar (feat. Brian Abbott/Ryan Kinney/Kurt Newman/Patrick O’Reilly) / Mischief Makers 2023-06-03 (Saturday). $10 in advance/$12 at the door. [FB event]


Bandcamp corner:

  • A slice of essential local music is back in circulation with a new resissue of One Hundred Dollars' debut album Forest of Tears, with both a vinyl repress and digital/bandcamp version available. The first flowering of Simone Schmidt's emerging songwriting prowess and a crack band using country music forms to explore hard times in the big city and beyond. I recommend reading Schmidt's recollections here. (And meanwhile, it's hard to understate how much this album, this band, these songs were a foundational element of this blog — this was the sort of thing that I wanted to hear, wanted to document, wanted to share.)
  • And as a tasty companion to that, here's a hitherto-unreleased single from the folowing year with One Hundred Dollars and Rick White (who produced Forest of Tears), with Schmidt taking the vocals on a cover of White's "Pain" while the band backs White on a cover of "Nights in White Satin" on the flip.

(And if you hadn't realized, the whole Blue Fog Recordings discography is now on bandcamp, so you have no excuse to be listening to essentials like Wyrd Visions' Half Eaten Guitar and hard-to-find rarities like his shared 12" with Castlemusic.)


It happened this week...

  • ...on May 31, 2011 at Soundscapes.

Doug Paisley - Always Say Goodbye

  • ...on June 3, 2011 at The Garrison.

The Guest Bedroom - Magical Thinking

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

Friday, December 7, 2012

Recording: The Guest Bedroom

Artist: The Guest Bedroom

Song: Please Please

Recorded at The Garrison (front room), December 6, 2012.

The Guest Bedroom - Please Please

Full review to follow. Except for digitally issuing their Hunter EP a couple months back, things have been on the quiet side from Sandi Falconer and The Guest Bedroom. Nice, then, to a have a little reminder that they're still among us, even if it was just for a relatively brief six song set. Fortunately, there weren't many signs of rust on the band's tricky prog-punk constructions.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Recording: The Guest Bedroom

Artist: The Guest Bedroom

Song: Magical Thinking

Recorded at The Garrison, June 3, 2011.

The Guest Bedroom - Magical Thinking

My notes for this set can be found here.

Gig: Rival Boys

Rival Boys (The Guest Bedroom / Wax Mannequin)

The Garrison. Friday, June 3, 2011.

Heading up from an early show, I was sad to have missed an opening set by Planet Creature, but I've had my chances otherwise.1 As it was, I arrived with Chris Adeney, who operates under the bandonym Wax Mannequin, just finishing his setup.

I didn't really get it the first time I saw him play, but given the technical troubles he was fighting through then, I figured it'd be sporting to see him again. Just like that last time, Adeney presented himself musically with a stripped-down, vaguely old-timey presentation — though technologically, he'd mix old with new: dressed like a Depression-era troubadour, but with a laptop concealed in a beat up old suitcase, which'd add basic rhythm tracks under his songs. And his giant cocoon.

"I've got a very large crystal," he said, referring to the chrysalis-like thing on stage to his right. "Would you like some crystals?" With that, he tossed what turned out to be, on closer inspection, decorative glass beads into the crowd.

There's an entirely subjective line between "entertainer" and "guy with gimmicks", and in the early going, I was admittedly assigning Adeney to the latter camp. Especially when some of his songs also seemed a bit gimmicky as well. That said, the songcraft of "Volcano God" and "Everything and Everyone" did reach me somewhat. And it's hard not to be at least somewhat entertained by a guy who is maniacally working himself up to some sort of weird ceremony.

"Once things get really randy, I'm going to invite the most excellent person in the room — I don't know who it is yet, but I'm gonna figure it out — the most excellent person in the room is going to come up and open the chrysalis. They're gonna extract the contents and get it all over everybody in here. So I hope you're ready for that — we're really gonna get this party started." He tried to start a dance competition during "Tell the Doctor" to find that most excellent person, and once she was selected, during "The Log Driver's Waltz" (which turned into a spontaneous singalong), she tore open the chrysalis — which was, in fact, a repurposed blanket filled of balloons — and unleashed them upon the crowd.

So, there was definitely a bit of a spectacle afoot. Which was a welcome diversion, as the set, running past forty-five minutes, was a bit on the long side. Still, I did like some of the songs — like closer "Thing Game", filled with absurd bee/bird imagery. I guess the persona is just part of the package, but there is some element in Adeney's presentation that rubs me the wrong way a bit. It doesn't put me off so much that I think I would become counted among the "enemies" that he sings several songs about, but I wouldn't consider myself a fellow-traveller.

Listen to a track from this set here.

I was more eager to get another chance to hear The Guest Bedroom, who led off with "Magical Thinking"2, one of the new songs the band had played the last time I'd seen 'em. That the next song was "Curses" might imply something supernatural in vocalist/guitarist Sandi Falconer's worldview but on the whole, her concerns seem more grounded. Or at least the music is, the steady pulsations of the rhythm section providing a framework for snaky guitar work and Rob Castle's keybs. The playing is taut and well-paced, and the quartet play with telepathic, no-look pass certainty.

Even at this point, the band was certainly stocked with new songs on a par with the tasty Year's Supply Of Rabbit's Feet, including "Fine Lines"3 So hopefully we will be hearing more soon about getting a chance to engage with the new material.

Listen to a track from this set here.

Bringing a cake and everything, Rival Boys were celebrating the release of their debut full-length Mutual Feelings of Love. Leading with "Recovery" (with its "we're calling out" refrain), they managed to elicit some call-and-response action from the crowd — an early sign that this was a fully-engaged audience. And a good-sized one, to boot, very enthusiastic for the material, clapping along and, um, reacting to "React To It". Over the course of the set, the band would play the whole of their new album, moving quickly and efficiently from song to song. (They did shuffle up the order, though, for better stage dynamics.)

The trio is led by siblings Lee and Graeme Rose (bass and guit respectively), backed by Sam Sholdice on drums. Lee handles the lead vocals, showing quite a range from the yearning "Bow and Arrow" (showing off an affecting pop sensibility) to a bit more of a yalp as required. Graeme, meanwhile, acted as the rougher contrasting sandpaper with his backing vox. The trio format gives them a stripped-down lean edge, but the music often leans to "pop" more than "power". It also makes for an engaging tension between a scrappy tendency and the more restrained dynamics they seem to be growing into. One upshot of that is that while they do a good job at the slower stuff like "Dream of Stones", it's harder to hold a crowd who are going ape for the upbeat stuff.

That was especially evident as they closed things out with "Construction Work", a song from their earlier EP. With Graeme leading the crowd in a raggedy singalong, at first I thought it was a cover, the band playing a song that everyone on hand except me seemed to know. And while that went over very well with their friends up front, it didn't have anywhere the impact on me of the newer, more sophisticated stuff. It will be interesting to see how the band navigates this as they go on. But even at this point, there was no doubt they could put a charge into a room — as they wound up, they left the crowd chanting for more.4

Listen to a track from this set here.


1 The connections between Planet Creature and the headliners would subsequently get even closer with Rival Boys' Lee Rose becoming Planet Creature's bass player.

2 Their mix of groundedness and, um, magical thinking and is evident in the song's rather nifty video (directed by Ryan Mounsey), which contains both mythical wizards and all-too-real transit woes. This song is due for inclusion on a forthcoming EP now due "sometime in 2012".

3 This one also has a video, and, in fact, there has been talk about all the songs on the new EP getting clips, so stay tuned for more.

4 Rival Boys are playing Hillside at the end of this month, and they'll be getting ready for that with a warmup gig at Clinton's on Thursday, July 26, 2012.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Festival: Wavelength 515 (Night 1)

ELEVEN! Festival (Wavelength 515 – night 1) (feat. The Jim Storie Juniors / The Guest Bedroom / Bruised Knees / Anagram)

The Boat. Wednesday, February 16, 2011.

For anyone that truly loves local music, Wavelength's annual festival has become one of the most exciting events of the year. This year's event (titled ELEVEN!, numbered 515), didn't have the grab-ya cachet of last year's rather excellent Wavelength 500 blowout, which was something of a grand summary of ten years of the series' weekly shows, with plenty of reunions and spectacle. This year's was more of a snapshot of what's going on now — there were some old hands around, but just as many bands making their WL débuts. Less flashy, but a superb overview of some of the best music at hand right now.

And once again, the festival moved through five different venues in five nights, each show featuring a variety of bands but also a well-curated unity. Kicking things off with an excursion to The Boat in Kensington Market1 gave Night 1 a dive-y, frills-free-but-gloriously-ragged vibe, rather well-suited to the bands at hand. Like virtually all Wavelength shows, this featured lighting from General Chaos, multicoloured swirling projections behind the bands that always change to reflect each act's personality. And this festival also introduced the efficient stage-managing of Adham Ghanem — now a Wavelength fixture — who did an excellent job of keeping five busy nights running on schedule.

Another WL fixture wasn't in place as the first band was introduced by Jonny Dovercourt. But that would be because Duncan "Doc Pickles" MacDonell, the series' longstanding MC, was getting ready to perform as the lead vocalist for The Jim Storie Juniors. Anyone that's witnessed MacDonell's unique verbal dexterity — blindfolded tightrope walking over the abyss of randomness and nonlinearity, sometimes pausing to dip a toe into the roiling chaos below — might think they know what to expect from him in his musical pursuits. That turns out to be halfway right — but along with an occasional propensity to sing off the mic and occasional digressions from digressions there's also a reined-in musical craft on display.

Even after having checked out some of his "Audiozines"2, I was still surprised to see MacDonnell — in a strangely nostalgia-inducing Chip + Pepper shirt — actually singing (and not, say, sing-speaking). In fact, he was totally into it, eyes closed, double-fisting the microphone — no surprise given his attitude that everyone should be fully and unironically into whatever it is you're gonna be into. All the times he's ended WL shows telling the audience that now it's their turn to go and start a band weren't just rhetorical flourishes.

A lot of the songs from this set came from recent JSJ album What's It Going To Take To Get This Fight Started?, but it was illuminating to hear them in more fleshed-out rockin' versions, backed by Matt Robinson and Chad Storie (of 122 Greige), along with the titular Jim Storie on drums. There was good stuff like "Don't Take My Shortwave Away" and the sticks-in-your-head "Girl on the Green", and a few subtle political messages ("Who's gonna pay for Afghanistan? Poppies only cover half of the bill," asks "Goods and Services") amongst the narratives of economic disaffection. The setlist didn't touch on any of the album's witty blues deconstructions, but MacDonnell did manage to tie the songs to the larger event by dedicating each song to a different year of Wavelength's run.

Listen to a track from this set here.

Though still a relatively new band making their Wavelength début, this wouldn't be the first brush with the series for some of the Bruised Knees's members. They were hitting the series at the right time, though, with their material still sounding fresh even as they're definitely settling into it on stage. Natalie Logan (vox/keyb/perc) looked more relaxed, interacting with the crowd more than previously, giving the indication that she could become the de facto mediator with the audience. Fellow vocalist/guitarist Chuck Skullz (ex-Creeping Nobodies) looks more focused on the work at hand, like an alchemist in the final stages of some intricate transmutation, creating tasty Sonic Youth-y textures on songs like "Inside Eye".

That contrasted with the pounding rhythms of "F LK T PE", Logan complementing Dennis Amos' drums with her own drumpad work. There are some good hooks here, but rhythmic interplay is the band's strongest calling card, and songs like "Holy See's Horror" are getting more textured with time. There were some bracingly good blasts here, as invigorating as the February winds outside.

Listen to a track from this set here.

The Guest Bedroom were a band I'd been meaning to see again for awhile. In fact, it had been nearly a year-and-a-half since I'd seen the veteran crew, during which time they'd released the full-length A Year’s Supply Of Rabbit's Feet. While I'd previously been only been semi-won over by the band, everything here felt a little more in focus for me, with Rob Castle's keyb work acting as an effective foil to Sandi Falconer's guit and vox, winding their way though tough-but-shifty sounding songs. I was definitely taken with "Ugly Thoughts", which lasted as long as the preceding two songs combined and earned the length. The keyb line was grinding up against Allan Toth's bass while Falconer's guit moved nimbly between them — all while the song geared up to a gallop for the shouted refrain, "this is a warning that you're underperforming / and you should show up a little more prepared / This is a warning that you're underperforming / you're not standing up to our evaluation!"

I appreciate how there's a slightly herky-jerk sensibility to the rhythms that isn't quite given free reign in the face of the band's punk spirit, leaving the whole thing just unsettled enough. The songs from the album were punctuated with a couple new ones, including an agreeable one that might someday end up being called "Sympathetic Magic". As the band closed with "Tough Luck", I felt that the set ended with me liking them more than I did at the start — and now I'm rather more eager to catch 'em again.

Listen to a track from this set here.

Closing out the first night was Anagram, a band with which I'd become quite familiar over the preceding year. The band's usual singleminded thrum was on display right at the outset with "Done Yet" and a fiery "Evil", both from the superb Majewski. Vocalist Matt Mason sings as if he's consistently too-aware that there's a meanness in this world, and the musical attack behind him hits like a fierce blow intent on inculcating that rough lesson.

As sometimes happens when the band plays, for the first couple songs people were just sort of standing around. But the music has a sort of hypnotizing effect on audiences, as if awakening a vague sense of dread that makes people want to escape the room or escape their bodies in some sort of unknowing lowlevel panic. Soon enough, there was a typical Anagram "pit" — not so much people slamming into each other as bumping with a sort of brownian motion, stirred up by something outside their control. This wasn't entirely the usual Anagram crowd, so it was even less aggressive than usual — Doc Pickles would later refer to it, with fond satisfaction, as the "gentlest moshing ever".

"I've Been Wrong Before" found the band getting so wound up that guitarist Willy Mason and bassist Jeff Peers were starting to get a little out of sync, though that mostly just added to the dissociative effect. That raggedyness carried forward into their cover of Leonard Cohen's "The Butcher", which lurched around like an angry, confused junkie searching for redemption. After that, though, the band snapped back into focus, and closed out the set with awesome precision. Toward the end of the set, a couple songs got stretched out as Matt Mason wandered into the crowd. Even with his mic cord being guided behind him, sometimes he simply seemed content to not sing and just let people bounce off him, the resulting lockgroove chugging was highly excellent stuff.

At forty-five minutes, this was the longest set of the night. An excellent start to the festival, even if it meant for a late Wednesday night.

Listen to a track from this set here.


1 Originally scheduled to be held across the street at Terenga, the show had to be relocated with that venue's closing.

2 A rigourous music give-away-er, you can find a whole bunch of his material, in several styles, available for free download on the internet archive.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Recording: The Guest Bedroom

Artist: The Guest Bedroom

Song: Ugly Thoughts

Recorded at ELEVEN: The Wavelength 11th Anniversary Festival, The Boat, February 16, 2011.

The Guest Bedroom - Ugly Thoughts

Full review to follow— My notes for this set can now be found here.. An efficient start to the festival, four bands getting set up and rocking with remarkable precision.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Festival: Wavelength @ P.S. Kensington

Wavelength @ P.S. Kensington Feat. Lullabye Arkestra / Cloak'ed Claw (a.k.a. Hooded Fang) / Mindbender / The Guest Bedroom / Danger Bay / Isla Craig

P.S. Kensington. Sunday, July 26, 2009.

Walking over from the streetcar, I took my eyes off of the grey, threatening sky only when I had to wind my way past the phalanx of firetrucks. The smoke had cleared, but apparently Massimo's had gone up — though as I went by, I wasn't sure if they were in there or Rancho. Had a few minutes to wander, which, of course was the point of the day, Kensington being closed off to cars for Pedestrian Sunday. Despite the full morning of rain with the assurance of more to come, there were good crowds about taking it in, and the usual variety of small spectacles to behold. I was, however, down here with a purpose, to take in the activity under the Wavelength tents. So I found myself the least possibly befouled spot on the stairs in front of Neutral, somewhere between the cigarette butts and the discarded phone book on the sidewalk slowly being pulped into a mushy maché.1 Settled down and took in the Faceless Knifefighters stage, hugging the side wall of the convenience store at the top of Augusta as the Wavelength folks finished setting up.2

Isla Craig's soundcheck ambiently rolling over the streetscape melded nicely into her short set. Accompanied by backing tracks and a beat-conductin' companion, Craig lists her genre as "Gospel / R&B / Trance" which is a start. I'm guessing that this particular set was a bit more spare than her usual (if the tracks on her Myspace are anything to go by) but they provided an elegant soundtrack to the streetscape. The first number, with a slightly-wheezy, accordion-like keyboard was the most intriguing, enfolding itself on random chord-stabs by the end. The following songs, one with Craig on guit and the final one with just her vox + beats were pretty fair too. It was a quick set, but certainly left me wanting to investigate further.

And then a super-quick changeover for Danger Bay, playing their second gig. This is a new project for Jonny Dovercourt — who, frankly, you probably owe a hug to for all of the good work he's done — and his cohorts.3 Choosing such a nostalgia-inducing name might be seen a signpost pointing to a backwards-looking aesthetic, and, indeed, you could take your pick of art-punk signifiers to describe their sound.4 This could just be my read, of course, but one gets the sense that unlike a bunch of strutting young kids trying to "make it", this looked like a group that were celebrating the music they love, making a racket and having a good time, which are surely rock'n'roll values worth celebrating.5 As part of this process, joy, pleasure, and attraction are giving way to strength and creativity. All four members were contributing here, Howlett's bass tugging nicely against the guit, and O'Sullivan's frontwoman hoodoo, if not yet overpowering, was not being overshadowed. Perhaps as much a product of having newer and fewer songs, the band came out swinging with a series of punkish run-and-gun force bursts, but there are signs — such as on "Prince of Gauntness" — of some more complex dynamics to come. After the five-song set was over, I was surprised to note that it had all zoomed by in a sprightly twelve minutes and change. A fun performance from a band just getting wired up — keep your eyes on this bunch, there's undoubtedly interesting things a-comin'.

Listen to a track from this set here.

After a leg-stretching jaunt round to see the sights, came back with The Guest Bedroom already on stage. After seeing them a couple months ago, my notes included the slightly underwhelming "generally agreeable" as a summing up, which might say as much about my mood at the time. Of course, it could say something about my mood on this afternoon that I was much more into their sounds. Some nifty keyboard moves behind Sandi Falconer's guit subvert things enough to keep them interesting. This band is starting to sink in with me — once more ought to do the trick.

If you're of the opinion that a bit of chaos and unpredictability can make a gig better (a notion to which I am not entirely unsympathetic), then a cloudburst at an outdoor show might be just the ticket. It certainly added a unique flavour to Mindbender's set. Completely unknown to me save for the spraypainted stencil reading "MINDBENDER LOVES YOU" I saw as I was walking to the show. Turned out to be the nom de geurre for M.C. Addi Stewart, who came solo, rhyming over pre-recorded tracks. Just as he started his set, a few drops came down from the sky. Which turned into a steady rain, and soon a downpour. Refusing to bow to the elements, Mindbender increased his flow to a torrent and kept plowing through, and when he said he'd sooner be electrocuted than stop, I believed him — even if he was playing onto to a thin line of listeners hugging the building across the street and a few foolhardy passers-by. He came across as someone putting his guts on the line, so dedicated to his craft that he was willing to challenge the storm. Fighting not only the rain but a slightly glitchy sound system, he managed to deftly toss out dense clumps of accomplished rhymes. Eventually someone thought to hand him an umbrella, which he used as much as a prop as protection. It can't have been an ideal show from the artist's perspective, but it was captivatingly memorable stuff. Kudos. Look up "weatherproof" in the rhyme dictionary and there'll be a picture of Mindbender.

Cue the storm. While Mindbender was persevering, the volunteers were busy behind him, lowering the tents and generally battening down the hatches in an attempt to keep the gear dry. When he was done, it looked like there was gonna be a pause to see if things'd clear up any, so I passed some time looking for dry ground to occupy. I ducked around here and there, and on coming back, it looked like things were gonna be a go. Looking at the musicians milling around, I realized I had once again been slow on the uptake and Cloaked Claw, the next-billed band, were none other than Hooded Fang. Geez, you'd think I'd never done a crossword puzzle in my life. Hooded Fang's deck seems to have been shuffled a bit, this show finding Daniel behind the kit. The band sounded a little thin with the street system P.A., but still managed to get their peppy songs across. A bouncy take on "Circles and Blocks" certainly hit the spot, and left me looking forward to seeing them indoors at this week's Rural Alberta Advantage gig.

It might seem jarring to follow Hooded Fang's cuddly pop with the metallic apocalypse of Lullabye Arkestra, but in the Wavelength spirit, it made perfect sense. Both are part of the same community, and though playing last, the band were hanging around all afternoon, taking it all in. In fact, despite their abrasive music, the duo ooze positivity, and outside a union hall, there are few people who can publicly start a sentence with "brothers and sisters" more sincerely than Justin Small. All of which is to say is I love Lullabye Arkestra's spirit, even if I'm not one hundred per cent behind their musical direction. I do find it bracing, though, and it's hard not to pick up on the energy that these two put across. Under a persistent rain for much of the set, after a white-noise selection of their own stuff, their take on "Summertime" was like a cool breeze. The set ended with some mild chaos. After passing a mic out to the crowd for some collective vocals, the tarp covering the seams between the tents overhead began to give, dripping onto Justin mid-tune as volunteers tried to prevent/cause further confusion. Justin and Kat ended the set in a clinch before being called back for one more, offering a cover by 90's Winnipeg sludge-thrash warriors Kittens. Recently signed to Vice, L. Ark. seem poised to make waves worldwide and will serve as fine ambassadors of Toronto.

Listen to a track from this set here.

Feeling pleasantly exhausted, made my way back to Spadina to catch the streetcar, pausing only to gawk inside the smoke-damaged windows of Massimo's a bit.


1 This was one place where you would most assuredly not want to let your fingers do the walking.

2 In a nice touch, the wall of movie posters behind the bands had been painted over by artist Benjamin Oakley, who supplied a benign-looking cat to watch over the proceedings.

3 Because pedantic tracking of who was previously in what band never loses its appeal, the Danger Bay CV is useful to have on hand:

Jonny Dovercourt (guit, vox, butch moustache) — ex-Republic of Safety, The Magnetars, Currently In These United States, Christiana, Kid Sniper, Secret Agent, A Tuesday Weld

Paul Weadick (drums) — ex-Entire Cities, Forest City Lovers

Brendan Howlett (bass) — ex-Entire Cities, Henri Faberge & the Adorable

Deirdre O'Sullivan (vox, presence) — first band!!

Thanks to Jonny for providing me with this background info.

4 For what it's worth, I heard a certain amount of spiky Sonic Youth in there, but feel free to come up with your own.

5 This has hitherto been a niche in the local music ecosystem filled by The Two Koreas.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Gig: Green Go / Shellshag / Fiasco / The Guest Bedroom

Green Go / Shellshag / Fiasco / The Guest Bedroom

Over the Top festival. Sneaky Dee's. Saturday May 23, 2009.

Celebrity encounter! Coming up the stairs to Sneaky Dee's, I was dying of thirst and made a beeline for the pitchers of water at the back of the bar. And by coincidence, the person that I almost pushed out of the way to get the water turned out to be local music blogger/ listings curator Historyjen. Instead of giving me a glare, she actually introduced herself and noted we'd been at several of the same Over the Top gigs. A class act!

Meanwhile, on stage, The Guest Bedroom were already playing, though I think I caught most of their set. After I composed myself, I moved to the back of the crowd to check them out. A nice sort of post-punk sound, a bit herky-jerky, and Sandi Falconer's vox brought to mind, say, Yeah Yeah Yeahs a bit. Some tunes were less hooky than others, but I found their set generally agreeable.

Brooklyn's Fiasco started their set with a hi-hat rocking selection that implied a dancey, post-punk sound, but that was a sly bit of misdirection — the band's true underpinnings turned out to be hardcore. They exhibited a kinetic physicality on stage, guitarist Jonathan Edelstein and bassist Lucian Buscemi lurching back and forth, doubled over their instruments. Edelstein's secret weapon was his rapid-fire fingertapping guitar style, which, to my admittedly limited knowledge, is a bit unique in the hardcore game. It brought a "technical" edge to their songs but never diminished their immediacy. Playing a number of instrumental songs from their new Native Canadians album, Jonathan commented, "we're playing everything really slow tonight for some reason," which makes one wonder what their pace would be like when they were really working at it. Those in the audience who were into this really seemed to dig it a lot.1 I was reasonably entertained, and had a lot of respect for these guys' proficiency and energy. Plus, their final song bore the nobly-titled sentiment of "I Figure It's Better We Do Something Ridiculous Than Nothing At All".

The stage set-up for Shellshag says a lot about the band: Guitar (Shell) stage right, a stand-up, three-piece drum kit (Shag) stage left, and a double microphone in the middle, looking like the frame for a Valentine's Day heart if you squeezed your eyes tight together in the right way. The duo stood facing each other while playing, a sort of he said/she said rock war, fueled by by primitivist riffs and Mo Tucker beats.2 The band careened from one tune to the next, nearly a dozen in a half-hour. A lovely DIY mess of domestic squabbles and everyday gestures, Shellshag looked a bit older and more world-worn then most bands at this festival, but exhibited an admirable amount of belly-fire. When the pace slowed for the lovely "Gary's Note" ("Everybody is a magnet some of the time") it seemed like a bit of well-earned, hard-won happiness. The set ended with the most "rock'n'roll" conclusion that I've seen in some time. After unclipping the mics from the drums, Shell passed them down onto the floor in front of the stage, while Shag stepped down to keep playing among the crowd. Soon, one drum was knocked over, and things went mildly chaotic as Shag mounted one of the drums and began stabbing the head with her stick, piercing it, while Shell was prying at his guitar strings, chanting "One! Two! Three!". Of course, the one time something like this happens immediately in front of me, my camera batteries were dead. My recording, however, ended satisfactorily with the sound of a drumstick clattering to the floor at my feet. This was sweet and rough in all the right ways.

Listen to a track from this set here.

And then Green Go.3 The night's headliners have been an act I've wanted to see, not only from general praise for their live show, but also for the fact that I've seen Jessica Tollefsen and Fez Stenton at the front of crowds at various gigs but not on stage at one of their own shows. Premised as dance music played all live, the five-piece delivered a satisfying experience. For music like this, a good live drummer makes such a huge difference, so give credit to Adam Scott for propelling the songs with the right mix of drum-machine constancy without going overboard. The songs were also constructed with a stripped-down, dance-floor chant sensibility, but again, mostly smart enough to not be too merely repetitive. Fully enjoyable. On the one hand, I'm still slightly worried about hearing this music on headphones as an album — speaking broadly, this kind of dance-y stuff doesn't always translate well.4 But I'm more than willing to go see 'em live again.


1 It was, overall, a kinda thin crowd for Sneaks on a Saturday night, but certainly a there-for-the-music-crowd, and not the unloved we're-here-to-be-seeen yappers.

2 Besides her kit, Shag also had bells on her belt, for some extra jangling as she shook.

3 No matter what I do, some wayward perceptual apparatus in my brain always catches this as "Green Goo".

4 Although who am I kidding? It's pretty certain I'll end up buying the album regardless. That's just, like, what I do.