Showing posts with label matt mclaren. Show all posts
Showing posts with label matt mclaren. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Recording: Marker Starling

Artist: Marker Starling

Song: Diamond Violence

Recorded at Dina's Tavern, February 21, 2026.

Marker Starling - Diamond Violence

Some (such as myself) might have been attracted to this evening as a chance to see Chris Cummings perform some "melancholy party jams" backed by his full band, though as the night's opener, he was happy enough to act (in his words) as entertainment for the filling-in crowd while they perused the headliner's merch table. There was definitely an affinity with Rapallo's headlining yacht rock set, and the group presumably made some new converts. The only thing to be sad about for longtime Mantler-heards is that the catalogue is so deep now that there's no time to reach back and dust off the "classics" — with a couple new ones in the setlist, tracks like this from the group's next-to-most-recent album are already being given a retrospective cast.

Friday, November 22, 2019

Recording: Marker Starling

Artist: Marker Starling

Songs: Move it On + Strong Suit

Recorded at The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge), September 29, 2019.

Marker Starling - Move it On

Marker Starling - Strong Suit

This Sunday afternoon special managed to tick off several agenda items all at once. It was an opportunity to draw out a crowd you wouldn't see at night, and the room was filled with happy parents and kids of all ages. But the show served primarily as an opportunity for Chris Cummings and band to get in a dress rehearsal before a primo opening slot for the reunited Stereolab in Montreal — a pairing that makes additional sense when you know that Cummings and the groop's Lætitia Sadier have appeared on each other's albums. That meant the band's set was a tight and punchy affair, focused on the hits that might win over unfamiliar ears. (Before that, the afternoon started off with a solo set from Cummings, and some new material did manage to slip into both.)

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Recording: Marker Starling

Artist: Marker Starling

Songs: Fly Away/Silver Morn + Conundrum

Recorded at Burdock Music Hall, February 16, 2019.

Marker Starling - Fly Away/Silver Morn

Marker Starling - Conundrum

That long wait for Rosy Maze seems a distant memory now, with the new Trust An Amateur marking Chris Cummings' fourth album in a four-year span. Although after the "asides" of I'm Willing's covers and Anchors & Ampersands' re-evaluation of older songs, the new one is the first "proper" album in a while. A real songwriters' showcase, the focus is really on Cummings' words here, with the music stripped back to an old-school Wurlitzer and drum machine approach.

This album release celebration had a stripped back "classic lineup" vibe as well, with Cummings backed by longtime collaborators Jay Anderson, Matt McLaren and Andrew Scott giving a bit of a different feel to the new album's material. One interesting wrinkle in Trust An Amateur is the increased use of suites linking shorter songs together (for an avid film buff like Cummings this is surely akin to the use of montage to comment on characters and situations) and the live show gave a two-fer that's not on the album with "Fly Away" and opener "Silver Morn" joined together. The mid-set dip back through the hits included this take on "Conundrum", reduxed on last year's Anchors & Ampersands but with its origins all the way back on Cummings' first album Doin' It All back from when he was also a Wurlitzer-and-drum-machine-only guy.

Thursday, February 28, 2019

Recording: Katie Sketch

Artist: Katie Sketch

Song: unknown*

Recorded at The Gladstone Hotel's Ballroom (Long Winter, Vol. 7.3), January 4, 2019.

Katie Sketch - unknown

Though she's popped up playing in Vag Halen, it'd been over a decade since I last saw Katie Sketch playing her own material. After a debut at the Basement Revue late last year, this was the second outing for this new five-piece band, sharing a short but elegantly-constructed set of ace stuff. The presence of a new website and instagram account add some momentum to the claims that some long-awaited solo material will officially surface this year.

[Long Winter Vol. 7.5 will be at Workman Arts on Friday, March 29th. Lineup Announcement Coming Soon!]

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

Friday, February 9, 2018

Recording: Marker Starling

Artist: Marker Starling - I'll Be Around

Songs: I'll Be Around [The Spinners cover] + Shadows and Counterparts

Recorded at The Tranzac (Main Hall), January 13, 2018.

Marker Starling - I'll Be Around

Marker Starling - Shadows and Counterparts

Chris Cummings' artistic ascendance continues with the release of his new Anchors & Ampersands album. Like its predecessor, a lot of the achievement here is in the selection of materials and the arrangements, but whereas I'm Willing fits into the classic "covers album" mould, its new companion is something more akin to a self-reappraisal, with several reduxed versions of older songs, now presented in all their widescreen glory with lusher arrangements and more confident vocals.

As in the past, Cummings returned to The Tranzac's Main Hall to use the floor to accommodate an extra-large ensemble — there were no fewer than sixteen musicians throughout the night (if I was able to keep track correctly!) with up to fourteen of them on stage at once. That meant augmenting the core unit (of Jay Anderson, Matt McLaren and Andrew Scott) with lush backing vocals (from Robin Dann, Ben Gunning and Alex Samaras, as well as special guests Ryan Driver and album producer Zack G) and a horn section (Jay Hay, Jeremy Strachan, Lina Allemano). And then to complete the spectacle, the members of opening band Bunny joined in for the set's last songs. All told, a worthy celebration of one of the city's best songwriters — and now with his back pages thoroughly re-examined, it's exciting to anticipate what's going to come next.

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Recording: Marker Starling

Artist: Marker Starling

Songs: Heed the Call + Searching For A Song

Recorded at Lula Lounge ("Wavelength 659"), May 10, 2015.

Marker Starling - Heed the Call

Marker Starling - Searching For A Song

A fine night out to celebrate the long-gestating Rosy Maze album started with Chris Cummings playing solo and in his customary trio format with Jay Anderson and Matt McLaren before being joined by a full band (including four backing vocalists), filling up Lula's large, tiered stage. The bulk of the new album was tackled along with some tasty dips into the back catalogue, such as an especially tasty "Fresh and Fair" and a new arrangement of "I've Been Destroyed" with a guest appearance by Cummings' long-time producer Zack G. Great sound in the room, though the vocals came out a little low in my vapture.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Recording: Matt McLaren / Mike Smith / Chris Cummings

Artist: Matt McLaren + Mike Smith + Chris Cummings

Song: The Bridge [excerpt]

Recorded at TIFF Lightbox Cinema 3 (Nuit Blanche), October 5, 2013.

Matt McLaren + Mike Smith + Chris Cummings - The Bridge [excerpt]

A field recording from my Nuit Blanche wanderings. With patches of rain starting to dampen the streets outside, I ducked into the Lightbox and managed to catch "City Symphonies", an entire programme of silent films with musical accompaniment by these three familiar faces. Rather than traditional piano associated with silent film, this was a more of smooth'n'slinky ride. With Chris Cummings' Wurlitzer front and centre, this sometimes sounded like extended, abstracted riffs on the material you would hear on a Marker Starling album, but Matt McLaren and Mike Smith each added their own ideas, pushing and pulling the music from soulful to sci-fi. This extract is about the first two-thirds of their soundtrack to The Bridge (dir. Joris Ivens, 1928) so you can get a feel for the vibe if you watch it on youtube while you listen.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Recording: Steamboat

Artist: Steamboat

Songs: Chains + Sea of Whisky

Recorded at Sneaky Dee's, April 27, 2012.

Steamboat - Chains

Steamboat - Sea of Whisky

Full review to follow. A celebratory evening and a full stage at Sneaks to celebrate the release of Steamboat's fab new Rules album.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Recording: LAST

Artist: LAST [Lullabye Arkestra & Steamboat Superstars Anniversary Band]

Song: Fog Machine

Recorded at The Garrison (ELEVEN: The Wavelength 11th Anniversary Festival), February 20, 2011.

LAST - Fog Machine

My notes for this set can be found here.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Recording: Steamboat

Artist: Steamboat

Song: Not an Omen, Just a Warning*

Recorded at The Horseshoe, February 11, 2011.

Steamboat - Not an Omen, Just a Warning

My notes for this set can be found here.

* Thanks to a commenter for providing the title to this one.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

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.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Recording: The Old Soul

Artist: The Old Soul

Song: Let's Neck

Recorded at The Dakota Tavern (The Old Soul's 8th Anniversary Christmas Show), December 16, 2009.

The Old Soul - Let's Neck

My notes for this show can be found here.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Recording: Rodriguez

Artist: Rodriguez

Song: Rich Folks Hoax

Recorded at Harbourfront Centre, July 3, 2009.

Rodriguez - Rich Folks Hoax

My notes from this gig can be found here.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Recording: Steamboat

Artist: Steamboat

Song: Can You Picture That? (Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem cover)

Recorded live at Sneaky Dee's, Toronto, May 16, 2009.

Steamboat - Can You Picture That?

My notes from this gig can be found here.