Showing posts with label morgan waters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label morgan waters. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Recording: Hank the Kid

Artist: Hank the Kid

Song: Ride Alone

Recorded at Dina's Tavern, November 23, 2025.

Hank the Kid - Ride Alone

Shit be weird, was the first thing that I wrote in my notepad as I soaked in the environs of Dina's Tavern, a new venue located on the former location of — and in the image of — beloved local dive The Silver Dollar Room. Weird, or, perhaps more precisely, uncanny. Walking up from Spadina, there were familiar faces out front, smoking and hanging out under the big Silver Dollar sign, just like there should be. Stepping in brings some disjunction, as there's now no flight of stairs to climb up (and no Comfort Zone looming below) — but once inside the doppelgänger effect kicks in, the room looking pretty close to what one's memory might hold. Looking closer tears at the illusion a little, as some of the details sink in — the whole side of the room behind the bar that held the pool table and booths hasn't been recreated, and the bathrooms are up a flight of stairs, through a door that suddenly reminds you that you're now in a 21st century condo-style building.

But still. Most of the virtues and drawbacks are intact. That weird layout, with the stage along one of the long walls, instead at the end of the space, squaring off against the bar — and the sonic oddness that that entails. (And to help maintain the feel of the past, there was a part of the crowd just hanging out along the bar, chatting away through the show.) Once I found my old spot, the new PA sounded decent enough.

In this city, we've gotten so used to things being torn down and taken away, and the only replacement seeming to be unending construction. So to have something like this venue exist — do recall that it was a "heritage feature" basically forced upon the developers by the city as a condition of being allowed to redevelop the site — feels like a minor triumph. So far, it seems like there's some decent programming happening there, so hopefully it will endure for a spell.

Henry Fletcher's ongoing art concept/parallel fictional life as Henri Fabergé has allowed him to approach the project's musical side from a variety of angles, but this long-simmering side-project — here celebrating the release of a debut E.P. — signals a different approach. Perhaps one could say it exchanges youthful insouciance for a more grown-up melancholy, although it's not a cavalcade of downers or anything. Perhaps it's also apt to say that it exchanges the glamourous HFab sensibility of "let's put on a show!" with a more workmanlike rock-band attitude — and the truly-impressive band here collectively hearkened back to what some might consider a golden age of T.O. indie rock, with bands like Bicycles, Weaves, and Hooded Hang being represented by Drew Smith, Morgan Waters, and Jonathan Pappo.

Sunday, November 5, 2017

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Songs: Walkaway + My Generation [The Who cover]

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

Weaves - Walkaway

Weaves - My Generation

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

It'd been more than a year since I last saw Weaves in action, then on the cusp of their first album's release just as this show served as a preview of their second. Those months in between not only saw them spending a lot of time touring the world, but somehow also gave them enough time to turn over their setlist. Besides all the new songs that the band unleashed, it was interesting to see a few incremental changes in their live approach, including an extended cameo by Fake Palms' Michael le Riche on second guitar as well as increased backing vocal duties for Zach Bines. In the blistering set-closing Who cover, he got to play Lenny Kaye to Jasmyn Burke's Patti Smith, providing the sturdy bones of the song as Burke took to the crowd with a monologue that re-positioned the song as an anthem for her generation.

[Weaves will be performing alongside the likes of Feist and Lido Pimienta at the New Constellations Tour's closing stop in town at The Opera House, Wednesday, December 20th.]

Saturday, April 16, 2016

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: One More

Recorded at Toronto Reference Library (Make Some Noise 10th Anniversary), April 9, 2016.

Weaves - One More

Collecting and showcasing music by local, independent musicians, Make Some Noise has celebrated the shared spaces of the city's libraries with free, all-ages concerts for nearly a decade now. (I have rather fond memories of seeing Shad, The Old Soul, Great Lake Swimmers, Elliott Brood and LAL at the Reference Library at one of the series' launch shows back in November '06.) For this birthday party, the Make Some Noise crew teamed up with Buzz Records to bring some music to the warmly rounded contours of the library's cavernous atrium.

The crowd took in Twist's opening set fanned out across the wide arc of the atrium's floor as if they were enjoying a casual day in the park, but it only took a word of suggestion from Jasmyn Burke to get them on their feel and pressing in as Weaves got going. Just back in town from some time on the road, the band were telepathically tight and it felt like a real treat to see 'em at just this moment, poised for something on the cusp of their first full-length's release. That's gonna take the band away from T.O. for a good stretch of time, so it felt nice to see 'em lurching on their home turf before the rest of the world claims them.

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Birds and Bees

Recorded at Artscape Gibraltar Point (WL 614: "Wavelength Island Show"), September 7, 2014.

Weaves - Birds and Bees

A fine day out on the island brought one last burst of that summer feelin' — and a reminder of times gone by. There was the formal announcement that Wavelength would be returning to the island for a full-fledged festival next summer, but the here-and-now was well-served by the bands on hand. Weaves was a definite highlight of the day, clicking on all cylinders performance-wise and sounding particularly on their game — and the newer tunes like this one are really integrated into the set by now. (A special nod should also be given to sound tech Dwayne Slack, who made AGP's backyard sound better than most clubs.)

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Closer

Recorded at SummerWorks – Lower Ossington Theatre Mainspace ("Weaves Through Time"), August 10, 2014.

Weaves - Closer

Full review to follow. Weaves' shows have been building up in spectacle and theatricality, so it was rather exciting to see things kicked up to the next level for this SummerWorks event, thanks to work by choreographer Allison Cummings and set designer Hanna Puley. With flower-creatures dangling from the ceiling, the environment suggested an earthy fecundity, while the strands extending from Jasmyn Burke's luminescent hoop-dress were like the hands of a giant timepiece — a biological clock, if you will, the stands getting just as entwined and wrapped up in each other as they do in our own lives. The accompanying dancers' motions suggested death and rebirth and by the end, the audience was called down from the stands to mix in freely with them.

Musically, the night was equally impressive, with the band mixing in even more new material than we've been hearing at recent shows. Guitarist Morgan Waters impressed as always, pulling out funky squawk-bursts that often doubled Burke's vocals. Perhaps appropriate to the environs, this felt like the birth — or the blooming — of something very vital. (And for those who like to track the growth of our local artists through time, this was a wonderful chance to compare how much things have changed since the previous time Burke played this very same room at SummerWorks, four years ago.)

[N.B.: Weaves will be playing Wavelength's free Island Show, this Sunday (Sept. 7th) at Artscape Gibraltar Point.]

Bonus! Here's some video footage to give you a sense of what was going on here beyond the musical element:

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Buttercup + Candy

Recorded at CineCycle, April 26, 2014.

Weaves - Buttercup

Weaves - Candy

Full review to follow. When you're in the middle of it all, you don't always notice a band's constant transformation as much, but when you step back — when they put out an album, say — it's sometimes really striking how much growth there has been. Kudos, then, to Jasmyn Burke who has raised her game in so many areas, matching songwriting innovations with a captivating emergence as a frontwoman. This packed-in night at a boiling hot CineCycle felt like a joyful culmination of the past months — and even hinted that there's more to come, debuting some new songs and thickening their sound with the addition of Bram Gielen on keybs for a few songs.

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Know About It

Recorded at Adelaide Hall ("Wavelength FOURTEEN" – Night 2), February 14, 2014.

Weaves - Know About It

You can read my notes for this show here.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Take a Dip

Recorded at The Great Hall (Long Winter: Year 2, Volume 3), January 10, 2013.

Weaves - Take a Dip

Full review to follow. With jam-packed rooms and three stages going at once at a few points, there's just no way you can see everything at a Long Winter any more. You just have to sorta dive in and see where the current takes you.

Playing to a sardine-packed Conversation Room, Weaves blasted and rumbled the crowd with their wriggly popsongs, each received like an old hit. "It's, like, noise-soul!" shouted the dude behind me to his friend.

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Crumble*

Recorded at Daniels Spectrum ("Wavelength 570: The Regent Park Courtyard Session"), July 26, 2013.

Weaves - Crumble

Full review to follow. Wavelength is at its best when it takes its shows to new places and broadens the audience's musical perceptions. Both of those were in play at this outdoor show in the beautiful new courtyard behind Regent Park's Daniels Spectrum. That made it a good night for the "Wavelength crowd" to head to a spot that's off the regular show-going grid and for the locals to wander through and find some music in their backyard. Hopefully there'll be more chances to return to this vital new cultural hub.

Jasmyn Burke and co. are settling into their artfully-bent grooves — like an elastic band, they can go from stretched out to wobbly right in before your eyes, rocking a groove at either extreme. The warbling noises at the start of this one come from Burke "playing" her microphone like an instrument, generating feedback warbles by fluttering it in front of the PA as she paced around the front of the crowd.

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