Showing posts with label muskox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label muskox. Show all posts

Monday, October 2, 2023

Monday Roundup #142

Concert announcements:

a Josh Cole Quartet [Josh Cole/Nick Storring/Blake Howard with Lina Allemano] / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-10-10 (Tuesday) [FB event]

Behaviours I: Interfaces [curated by Zoma Maduekwe, featuring "artist-musicians who boldly integrate digital technology and interactivity into musical production and performance"] (feat. Danny Shaddick / Jason Doell / Aida Khorsdandi) / Array Space 2023-10-12 (Thursday). $20.00 (or PWYW), livestream available. [more info]

Freesound presents: Shadow Mudras (feat. Ken Ueno/Karen Yu with Jason Doell) / Array Space 2023-10-15 (Sunday) [FB event]

Happy Sundays (feat. Constant Smiles / Fortunato Durutti Marinetti / Merival) / The Baby G 2023-10-15 (Sunday). $free, 19+. [FB event]

Vinyl Williams (Zones) / Monarch Tavern 2023-10-29 (Sunday). $19.48, 19+. [FV event]

Jiants [LP release!] (Beams / Fjord Mustang) / Monarch Tavern 2023-11-11 (Saturday). $16, 19+. [FB event]

Is your show missing from this list? Submit it via this form!


Shows this week:

Track Could Bend #84 (feat. Tomasz Krakowiak & Michelangelo Iaffaldano / destroya and friend(s)) / Wenona Lodge 2023-10-03 (Tuesday). $pwyc. [FB event]

Tribute to Nanci Griffith (feat. The Holy Oak Family Singers) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-10-04 (Wednesday – early). $pwyc. [more info]

Ligeti at 100 (feat. U of T Percussion Ensemble with guest performers Lindsay McIntyre and Matti Pulkki) / Walter Hall 2023-10-04 (Wednesday). $free. [FB event]

CMC Presents (feat. Olivia Shortt & Nicole Rampersaud) / Canadian Music Centre 2023-10-05 (Thursday). $15 Advance, $20 at the door; CMC Members and Arts Workers: $12 Advance, $15 at the door; Students. $10 anytime. [more info]

Project Nowhere presents (feat. Mother Tongues [Love in a Vicious Way record release party!] / Jane Inc. / Roach) / The Garrison 2023-10-05 (Thursday). $17.31, 19+. [FB event]

Project Nowhere x RANGE presents (feat. Gloin / Grim Streaker / Only God Forgives) / The Baby G 2023-10-05 (Thursday). $17.31, 19+. [FB event]

Project Nowhere presents (feat. Not A Band / Corpusse / TFA) / Bar Orwell 2023-10-05 (Thursday). $17.31, 19+. [FB event]

David Occhipinti Camera Ensemble [David Occhipinti/Michael Davidson/Aline Homzy/Dan Fortin/Virginia MacDonald] / Hirut Café 2023-10-05&06 (Thursday & Friday). $20. [more info]

Audiopollination and Michael Palumbo present (feat. Maria Moles/Laura Swankey/Arnd Jurgensen/Mickle32 / Maria Moles/Sarah Constant/J. Moone/Michael Palumbo / Maria Moles [solo]) / The Tranzac (Living Room) 2023-10-06 (Friday). $10 (card or cash). [FB event]

Project Nowhere presents (feat. Moon King / Zones / Vespre / Lee Paradise) / The Baby G 2023-10-06 (Friday). $17.31, 19+. [FB event]

P?roject Nowhere presents (feat. E-Prime / Phèdre / World News) / BSMT 254 2023-10-06 (Friday). $17.31, 19+. [FB event]

Sean Nicholas Savage (Koza / WEBB) / Nineteen Seventy Eight 2023-10-07 (Saturday). $17, 19+. [FB event]

Project Nowhere presents (feat. Weird Nightmare / Breeze / Sham Family) / The Garrison 2023-10-07 (Saturday). $17.31, 19+. [FB event]

The Nilan Perera Trio [Alex Fournier/Rick Sacks/Nilan Perera] / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-10-08 (Sunday) [FB event]


Bandcamp corner:

  • Another Bandcamp Friday coming up this week! Here's a couple things I'll be grabbing:

It happened this week...

  • ...on October 4, 2009 at SPK.

Not the Wind, Not the Flag - [excerpt from an improvisation]

  • ...on October 8, 2009 at Teranga.

Muskox - Humphries' Tide

[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.]

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Six years/Six pack: Anni Spadafora

MFS has turned six! My introductory thoughts on this 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 is from artist/DJ/musician Anni Spadafora, who plays no wave-esque rock in one of the city's best new bands, but who also has the name PAULINE OLIVEROS emblazoned on her guitar.


It was really difficult choosing only 6 recordings. So grateful for this archive, this wild attempt at throwing a net at this mess of a city. These are songs from shows I was at or wished I had been at. And a hint at some of the core people whose music urges me to listen deeper around these parts.

Nif-D - Centre of Gravity excerpt

Muskox - Buff Stop

AND THIS (sorry, I'm a cheat and a glutton)

Anagram - What a Mess

THOMAS - unknown

Alex Lukashevsky - Back to the River

Jesse Laderoute - Cassette Store Day [excerpt]


You can always click on the tags below to look for more stuff from these artists. Has there been a half-dozen 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.

Monday, February 16, 2015

Six years/Six pack: Karen Ng

MFS has turned six! My introductory thoughts on this 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 is from Karen Ng, who I know as fantastic saxophone player (and also as a member of the Somewhere There collective, about whom you'll be hearing some more later today).


The disclaimer found in the introduction is absolutely correct, this is blog completely about Joe Strutt. About a guy who loves his city and the music in it. A guy who will always pick the smaller venue when having to pick between several shows happening on the same night. A guy that we are so very lucky to have, someone with a huge heart and open ears. Happy b-day MFS, here's to many more. Thanks for being such an incredible human being. If only more of us were like you!

Eucalyptus - Windmill Will

Isla Craig - Messages

Thom Gill - Single Girls

The Cluttertones - Lion and Ant

Muskox - Muskox Jr.

Monk's Music - Pannonica


You can always click on the tags below to look for more stuff from these artists. Has there been a half-dozen 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.

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Recording: Famous Wildlife Movies

Artist: Famous Wildlife Movies

Song: Landscape Agate

Recorded at The Tranzac - Main Hall ("The Second Annual Somewhere There Creative Music Festival" - Show 3), February 22, 2014.

Famous Wildlife Movies - Landscape Agate

Full review to follow. In some recent gigs, Mike Smith has been adjusting his ensembles to fit the needs of his new compositions. This time out, the group felt — both in personnel and sound — pretty close to Muskox, preserving the spirit of that now-defunct unit. For the record, the group here is: Mike Smith (guit), Ali Berkok (clavinet), Jay Hay (bass clarinet, flute), Jeremy Strachan (bass clarinet, flute), Pete Johnston (double bass).

Monday, October 15, 2012

Recording: Muskox

Artist: Muskox

Song: Muskox Jr.

Recorded at The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge), October 14, 2012.

Muskox - Muskox Jr.

Full review to follow. Like Chipper Jones bowing out after a 124 OPS+ season, Mike Smith has decided to retire his chamber-prog ensemble while they are still a formidable force. That left an undercurrent of sadness to this wrap-up show at The Tranzac, but it was still a light-hearted and spirited time. Mars' mountains were listed, Joni Mitchell's spirit was called upon (in a room just a stone's throw from her old digs!) and the band's friendly competition with Rush was finally brought to an end. After the fact, the music still lingers.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Sunday Playlist #32

Sunday Playlist #32

Volcano - No Signal In the Valley

Torngat - Minute by Minute

Laura Barrett - Chidiya

Béla Fleck - unknown

Muskox - Ghost Ride

Muskox will be playing their final show tonight (October 14, 2012) at The Tranzac. Come on out and help give 'em a proper sendoff.


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.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

1000 Songs: Matt Cully

1000 Songs: Matt Cully

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 courtesy of Matt Cully (Bruce Peninsula / EONS)


Going over your catalogue is daunting. Here are my picks (some selfish, some not). All my picks are selected based on people, events and music that have shaped my life over the last few years. Congrats to Joe on his 1000th rescue mission (saving songs from oblivion from his tapes to your ears.) Support local music! (a possible tattoo? Hm.)

Not the Wind, Not The Flag - Centre Island Pier Improvisation [excerpt]

I'm happy to announce that there will be another Poor Pilgrim Island Show July 2012

Muskox - Humphries' Tide

Jennifer Castle - Poor as Him

Deep Dark United - Sex and Death

Snowblink and Friends - Crabapples/Satisfied


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 (it's up in the top right corner of this page).

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Recording: Muskox

Artist: Muskox

Song: Buff Stop

Recorded at ALL CAPS! Island Festival (Artscape Gibraltar Point), August 14, 2011.

Muskox - Buff Stop

My preliminary notes for this set can be found here. The new Muskox album Invocation/Transformations is out on September 6th, and it'll be welcomed to the world with a release party at the Tranzac on Wednesday, September 14, 2011.

Currente calamo: The ALL CAPS! Island Festival

The ALL CAPS! Island Festival — Artscape Gibraltar Point

While it's all fresh in my mind, a few notes from this year's ALL CAPS! Festival. Longer, more comprehensive reviews will follow down the road a piece.

Now in its third year on the Island, the ALL CAPS Festival is truly coming into its own as a remarkable event. The past two years were completely enjoyable experiences in themselves, but with a boost from the folks at Whippersnapper Gallery, the art quotient was boosted up here and everything felt a little bigger in scale.

Saturday August 13, 2011

Day 1 — feat. Moon King / Jen Castle & Yuula Benivolski / Monogrenade / Evening Hymns / Julie Doiron / More or Les. Host: Laura Barrett

Also bigger than ever (thanks to some very nice publicity) was the demand — from what I heard, there was a large lineup waiting for the doors to open, snapping up the remaining tickets instantly. When I arrived about an hour later, there was a "SOLD OUT" sign on the door and sad people being turned away.

Knowing it was going to be a busy evening, I arrived with some extra time to wander around a bit. One of the cooler elements of the festival is the facility itself — set in the old island elementary school, Artscape Gibraltar Point is now an artists' retreat, and several were kind enough to open the studios to the visiting public. I ducked into a couple and had some nice conversations with the artists about the stuff they were working on. I dug Chris Gardiner's collage-y works and just adored Pat Jeffries' project of painting portraits of the Island's hundred-year-old black willow trees, closeups of the gnarled trunks showing each one's uniqueness and personality.

Right at six, things got started in the Fireplace Room, with Laura Barrett, the day's special guest host, telling the crowd the secret and arcane origin story of the Moon King. The latest project from Daniel Woodhead finds him and his stand-up drumkit joined by his one-time Spiral Beach bandmate Maddy Wilde on guitar. With some added parts from an ipod, the music was thumping, rollicking fun — catchy pop presented with a shambling DIY edge.

Listen to a track from this set here.

After that burst of energy, it was outside to the beach behind the school for something altogether more meditative. Billed as a collaboration between musician Jennifer Castle and visual artist Yuula Benivolski, this inverted the usual order for these sorts of things where the visual component is sort of a backdrop to the musician playing. Here, instead, Castle, though present, was involved with the use of pre-recorded music soundtracking the ritual unfolding on the lakeshore. Symbolically suggestive without being to overt in its motives, the piece involved two women covered (like priestesses — or sacrifices) in thin sheets walking into the water and, at a distance, flanking an effigy-woman in wire, arms upraised. With ritual precision, the effigy was set on fire as the waves washed over the figures in the lake. With Castle's haunting voice in the background, the scene was static, with only the ungoverned fire and water breaking the stillness. As the effigy burned itself out, the figures in the water moved back to the shore, slowly following the waves to cloak their movement.

The first real wildcard of the weekend came on returning to the fireplace room. Montréal's Monogrenade don't have much profile in the anglosphere yet, but there's no reason that the language barrier should be too much of an impediment for the quartet. Showing quite a musical range, the set started with slower, moodier stuff featuring keybs and cello instead of guitar. By set's end, though, they were showing off a dancier, more aggressive sound. If bands like Karkwa and Malajube can gain notice outside la Belle Province, there's no reason Monogrenade can't follow in their footsteps.

As the sunset grew closer, it was back out to the beach for a set by Evening Hymns. What was originally going to a special presentation with Jonas Bonnetta providing a live soundtrack to a new 3-D film he's working on didn't come together, but in this environment the band's "regular" music cast a spell nonetheless.

As the audience gathered on the beach, I spotted a bearded figure and a woman out swimming in the middle distance — and for a moment I was convinced that Bonnetta and bandmate Sylvie Smith were reenacting their video for "Dead Deer". But as the actual Bonnetta and Smith stepped out to tune their instruments, I turned and saw their doppelgangers swimming back to the shore. From there, it was all quietly amazing, with the first lines of "Spectral Dusk" ("You would sit by yourself / at the end of the day / watching spectral dusk / settle in on Ontario Lake") feeling so utterly right as the evening's pink tendrils reached across the horizon. The set included several of the new songs from the band's forthcoming second album, as well reaching back for a beautiful version of "Cedars". The set ended with Bonnetta's solo version of "Mountain Song", slowly building loops of keyboards and vocals, finally getting loud enough to drown out the sound of the waves hitting the shore.

On the way back from the beach, the full moon was hovering over the lake to the east, its reflection creating a golden path across the waves. For just a second, it felt like I could have climbed on and walked down it to some more ethereal place.

Listen to a song from this set here.

Back inside (and feeling more grounded), as Julie Doiron finished setting up, the thing that fascinated me most about her set was considering how she would be able to contain herself to the strict half-hour time limit. Doiron's shows are usually free-flowing affairs, with no setlist so much as a series of songs flowing in accordance with Doiron's mood, and as many audience requests as she can cram in. Doiron also has a particularly charming way of getting caught up in her avenues of banter, and even though she resolved at the outset to talk as little as possible, she still managed to get sidetracked chatting about the features of her new iphone.

But there was still a cavalcade of songs, including a couple brand new ones — one was described as having been written immediately after SappyFest, just a few weekends ago. Plus a few interesting requests — I'm not sure when I last heard her play "Sweeter", for example. And never afraid to discover she no longer remembers all the chords and words in the middle of a song, there was also a somewhat haphazard run through The Dinner is Ruined's "Sleep Little Willie" as a nod to Dale Morningstar, whose studio is right next door. The room was packed tight for this and extraordinarily hot and sweaty, but I would have happily had this go for twice as long.

Closing out the night was brunch-loving rapper More or Les. Performing with two DJ/beat controllers on a table behind him, Leslie Seaforth brought a playful edge to his wordplay. Focusing on the daily ups and downs in life might seem old hat in the shadow of Shad, but do recall that Seaforth has been developing his style for more than a decade. It showed in his poise on stage as he ran through a rapid succession of cuts. With some people opting to grab an early ferry back to the mainland, there was enough space for the crowd to move around a bit. A fun way to end the day.

Sunday August 14, 2011

Day 2 — feat. Muskox / Dog Bus / Steamboat / The Wooden Sky / DD/MM/YYYY / Rich Aucoin. Host: Doc Pickles

Sunday's weather report brought with it the threat of thundershowers, though in the cloudy afternoon, that mostly meant it felt a little cooler. That overcast sky meant that the island felt a little less over-run, and the vibe at Gibraltar Point was a little more relaxed overall. Made sense, then, to ease into the day with the mellow-ish sounds of Muskox.

For a band I like a lot, it's just been bad luck that I haven't made it out to see 'em since they released their last album in October '09. Now, with a new album in the wings — look for Invocation/Transformations on September 6 — there was all the more reason for a revisiting. Sporting a slimmed-down five-member lineup, there was also a subtly different element to their sound — less the "progressive chamber jazz" that I identified when I saw 'em last and not even the old avant-bluegrass tag that I think I've also used before. Which is all to say, of course, that genre distinctions aren't entirely helpful in pinning down Mike Smith's compositions. With no harmonium, horns or extra percussion, this was a more agile beast than in the past, and the music a little more sleek. Perhaps best to just say that Muskox are taking their prog-Americana sound into a never-quite-happened version of the past's future, with flying cars leaving coloured trails across a post-industrial sky — but also with banjos. For some reason, they never used to think the future would include banjos.

Listen to a track from this set here.

Sunday's wildcard also represented the strong commitment that ALL CAPS has to its all-ages roots, stressing the importance of having an environment conducive to under-18's not only in the audience but also on stage. Waterloo's Dog Bus brought the day's youngest musicians, with rapper Jules Mkools (age 19) supported by his brother Jakey MkSpanky (age 13). For most of their set, the pair were backed by two-thirds of K-W pop-punk unit Courage My Love. Taking the stage in matching tracksuits, the pair of MC's proceeded to throw down on topics like space ships, ice cream and robots.

Their sound included no few nods to what I'm assuming are current trends in teenage mersh pop, which is admittedly the sort of thing I avoid by instinct, but there's no doubting that everyone on stage is talented and brimming with youthful energy. In the end, this was goofy fun, and at any rate, it's nice to know that in 2011 that the next generation of rappers are still urging people to throw their hands in the air — and subsequently to wave them like they just don't care.

Some older hands of the old school were up next as soul-rockers Steamboat took the stage. This is another band that I had some difficulty imagining in being contained to a half-hour set, given that they tend to prefer more sprawling shows where they can groove for long enough to get people up and dancing — and then exhausted, and then dancing again. Keeping things relatively straightforward for the festival set, this was just the "core" six-piece version of the band, sans driving horn section or other accoutrements they use to mix up their sets.

They still managed to get a good groove going early, leading off with "Bread and Butter", one of many cuts that the band has perfected on stage but not yet released as a recording. In fact, most of the set was dedicated to songs newer than the bands two EP's, but there was nothing "brand new" ready to be played. Still, plenty to dig in songs like "Right Back in Your Heart" and the set ended with a guest turn from Maylee Todd.

After that sweaty experience, heading outside for the next set was a more-than-welcome idea, even if the overcast skies of a couple hours previous were now looking a little more threatening. Introducing a new outdoor location for the festival, there was a stage set up right beside the pond between the Lighthouse and the water filtration plant. The clearing was home to a boat graveyard, with a matching stage constructed by the Whippersnapper crew. The faded sign reading "Paradise Falls" completed the noir-ish environment for The Wooden Sky to play against.

Gavin Gardiner's band can play it roadhouse rough when required, but can also tone it down to perform with nuanced atmospherics, and that was largely what they did here, keyboards acting like a protective blanket against the dark clouds overhead. There were a couple new songs in the mix, and during one of them, in time with the instrumental break there were suddenly fireworks bursting overhead — a very delightful surprise. As if that was too much for the sky to take, however, as the smoke cleared, the first drops of rain began to fall. A whole lotta tarps were hurredly pulled over gear as the band finished their set, the last song gaining an even larger fanfare of fireworks dazzling against the quickly-darkening sky. Truly the sort of stuff that memories are made of.

Listen to a song from this set here.

The next set had originally been slated to be on the outdoor stage as well, and though it looked as if the rain wasn't going to have a lot of staying power, the prudent decision was made to move DD/MM/YYYY back inside. That led to a bit of a scramble to keep things on schedule — this was one show that could not run late — so the band started playing while still sorting out the aftermath of a blown fuse. Admittedly, though, gear failure sorta feels like an organic part of the band's sound, given their propensity for creating a glitchy herky-jerk tapestry of noise. They managed to ride out the roughness at the start and keep flowing along. It had been more than a couple years since I'd seen a full set from the daymonths, and it seemed to me that some of the increased musicality that has found its ways into their recordings (there was a palpable shift with '09's Black Square) is coming out in the live show. Which isn't to say they're mellowing out, by any means, they're just a bit less aggressively/shiftingly noisy.

I came back from a cooling break outside to note a pair of lecterns set up at the end of the room, covered in electronic gear while a single lightbulb dangled from an extension cord overhead. The movie screen behind the stage was pulled down as Rich Aucoin hurredly got his equipment ready to go. Projected visuals are a big part of Aucoin's live presentation, and as everything wrapped up, he began running the video, which even included a segment for the sound check. As the room filled back in, the set began with a wonderful prelude — Aucoin had obviously been carefully making observations all day, and as the music slowly built, a slideshow of messages about the day's events and performers flashed on the screen.

If Aucoin has one great talent beyond his technical gifts, it's that he knows how to do lift in a way that can elevate even the most jaded heart, his simple messages cutting through to the immediacy of the now, where we're all in this together.

The performance itself was — and was probably engineered to be — a dancey blur. Each song came front-loaded with instructions for the chorus and then burst by, with explosions of confetti and dance circles and Aucoin — with his cordless microphone — working the crowd at the centre of it all. The set ended, as is usually the case, with most of the crowd gathered together under a rainbow parachute fluttering aloft just under the ceiling — which felt perfectly suited in this former elementary school lunchroom. Exhausting but kinda exhilarating, it felt like the perfect way to end the festival.

On the whole, the Festival was a triumph, and well-done by everyone involved. Given the massive good vibes engendered and what was already a demand-outstripping-supply situation, it looks like the biggest problem for next year is going to be accommodating everyone who wants in.

Addendum: I have more photos from the weekend posted in an album over at the MFS Facebook page.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Recording: Doc Pickles

Artist: Doc Pickles (feat. Muskox)

Song: Boat of Mine

Recorded at The ALL CAPS! Island Festival (Artscape Gibraltar Point), August 14, 2011.

Doc Pickles - Boat of Mine

This was Duncan's musical introduction to the second day of the ALL CAPS festival. Happy birthday wishes to Doc Pickles. My preliminary notes for this day can be found here.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Recording: Muskox

Artist: Muskox

Song: Ghost Ride

Recorded at the Music Gallery, October 29, 2009.

Muskox - Ghost Ride

My notes for this set can be found here.

Gig: Muskox / Canaille

Muskox / Canaille / Damian Valles

The Music Gallery. Thursday October 29, 2009.

Out to the Music Gallery for a triple album release spectacular from the fine folks at Standard Form. Perhaps befitting an operation that runs a music imprint as an adjunct to its print shop and bindery, SF create albums that exist as exquisite physical objects. The packaging for the albums being released on this night were visual and tactile delights, a joyful counterargument to people who want their music only in some intangible form. Similarly, the three musicians playing at this show were also exploring the tensions between the tactile and the intangible, the arranged and the improvised, and the composer's craft and ensemble's skill.

Opening the night was Damian Valles, whose new Rural Routes, an EP on 3" CD, examines his move from city to country. Live, Valles presented his music with solo guitar processed through laptop and pedals, plus a gently brushed cymbal.1 Starting with birdsong in the background, he added gently-picked loops of guitar, always keeping things intelligently layered and not merely piled one on top of another. When the later section swelled into a louder wave, Valles standing to conduct the building sounds with his array of pedals, it felt earned. Tidily executed in twenty minutes, this was a fine entrée for the evening.

Listen to an excerpt from this performance here.

With things pretty much set up and ready to go, there was only a quick break before Canaille2, led by ethnomusicologist-about-town Jeremy Strachan, took the stage. Strachan, switching between sax and guitar, has been using this unit as a larger canvas for his compositions than his sax-and-buckets duo Feuermusik. These tunes, from the new album Potential Things3 contain elements of ethio-jazz and spy themes, but always against a swingin' backdrop. By and large the first few songs were more compactly designed — pop song length, revealing Strachan's talent at, and respect for, catchy tunefulness. Things stretched out a bit more on "Summer Hair", giving Nick Buligan on trumpet and Colin Fisher — who looked to be fighting off a cold or some similar malady4 — a bit more room to stretch out in. Anchored by Dan Gaucher's drums and Mike Smith's double bass, the music was vital throughout — smart but never overbearing.

Listen to a track from this set here.

Having seem Muskox just a few weeks previously, I had a good notion of what I was in for. A few changes from last time around, though. Certainly much more elbow room for the players this time — indeed, room enough not just for a grand piano, but also for an extra player joining in on extra marimba and percussion. We were treated to all five pieces from the new album5 , plus encore. What can I add to my previous thoughts on Muskox? For whatever reason, when I closed my eyes and listened, my mind dredged up images of sitting in the back seat of a station wagon, watching snow-covered fields roll by. Evocative, then, I guess. And, natch, impeccably arranged.

Listen to a track from this set here.


1 In a subtly rural touch, Valles' laptop was resting on a trusty, rugged Black and Decker foldable workbench.

2 With my poorly-remembered vocabulary, for months I'd assumed that the band name was French for "cinnamon", but it turns out that it actually means something like "riff-raff".

3 The album's jacket design pays homage to the classic Blue Note look — looking over the back cover, I half-expected to see an Alfred Lion credit.

4 I'm assuming that the bottle of cough syrup that Fisher was taking discreet swigs from between songs was for medicinal, and not recreational, purposes. His playing was exceptional, though, and not affected by whatever he was fighting off.

5 The 5 Pieces album cover is delightfully tactile, a schema of triangles, reminiscent of the Sierpinski fractals that haunted me during my youth.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Recording: Muskox

Artist: Muskox

Song: Humphries' Tide

Recorded at Teranga, October 8, 2009.

Muskox - Humphries' Tide

My notes for this gig can be found here.

Gig: Torngat

Torngat / Muskox / I Have Eaten The City

Teranga. Thursday, October 8, 2009.

Starting the long weekend early, made the last-minute decision to go out for a Thursday-night gig — might as well, I figured, seeing as I didn't have to be up early in the morning. Looking over the listings, there was an embarrassment of riches, three or four things I could have gone to and had a good time. In the end, went with a bit of a left-field choice, eschewing the poppy-boppy usual suspects for a night of instrumental — um — not-pop at Kensington's Teranga. The venue was boasting a new stage and PA system, but having not been previously I can't comment on the extent of the changes.1 Paid at the door and grabbed a spot along the wall as people were trickling in. A long and narrow windowless room, Teranga is an African restaurant as well as a venue, with tables and bar in the back half of the room. A smallish space with capacity listed at eighty-seven which, from a quick guess, would feel a mite crowded. Actually turned out to be a nice crowd out for this one, though mildly thin as things started off.

I Have Eaten The City, normally a trio, were performing on this night without drummer Brandon Valdivia, leaving Nick Storring (cello, laptop, effects, vocal sounds) and Colin Fisher (guitar, pedals) to improvise as a duo.2 The set started of with low frequency rumblings before deconstructed cello fragments put it all into place, followed by some Lanois-esque guitar soundscapes. I found the opening movement the most compelling, pure environmental abstraction that filled the room like a fog of forgetfulness. The loudest, central part of the performance built from glitchy zarps and whipping/thwapping noises that slowly ramped up, though without becoming too busy or just noise, building up in intensity before easing back off. There was a good sense of give and take, and of the players giving each other space. A section with Fisher's guitar accented by cello was spare but highly evocative, creating a very lovely, floating moment. It was followed by the ending suite, dominated more by Storring, with beats created from vocal noises adding form as a percussive bass loop slowly built in volume underneath. This last ten minutes or so was fine, but grabbed me less.3 A couple segments where I was swept into it, a couple where I was less into it, but a nice set on balance.

Listen to an excerpt from this performance here.

In between bands, took the opportunity to grab my chair and move in closer to the stage to get up close to Muskox. I was familiar with the band's work from their series of EP's on 3" compact discs, each an economical and concise musical statement. Six members deep on this night, including banjo, marimba, cello, saxophone and dual harmoniums, the most apt term for Mike Smith's progressive chamber jazz unit might well be "arranged". There's a buttoned-down sensibility behind these compositions, with each musician's parts playing off each other just so. While such rigour could come off airless or academic, the band maintained a deft touch throughout, and a nice contrast in musical approach from I Have Eaten The City. Three of the four pieces in the half-hour set were from their forthcoming debut full-length, including "Ghost Ride" and "'72-'76"4, as well as the standout (and album lead-off track) "Humphries' Tide". Beyond genres, but worthy of soundtracking something complicated and thoughtful.5

Listen to a track from this performance here.

There was a slightly longer switchover with Muskox having more equipment to break down. So had a few minutes to duck out for some fresh air and a stretch and still have time to spare while Torngat got ready. The band was pretty much an unknown quantity to me, but they obviously had some fans out, as a small knot was soon standing in front of the stage. A three-piece from Montréal, I recognized Pietro Amato of Bell Orchestre and The Luyas with his french horn. He was accompanied by Mathieu Charbonneau (on keybs and synth) and drummer Julien Poissant (also playing keyb). The variety of keyboards and electronics gave the band a wider sonic palate than their numbers might indicate, their atmospheric, instrumental songs with a pleasant lushness and enough ideas to maintain momentum. One track had an Aphex Twin music box vibe, with analog synth ululations that, after building up, had Charbonneau playing on a drum and the metal leg of his keyboard. Amato treated his horn sounds in a variety of ways, at some points making it sound like a guitar. The songs mostly stretched out to the six or seven minute mark but never felt bloated or as if the band were repeating themselves. The band was not particularly interested in stagecraft — or banter for that matter, and were content to let their music speak for them. Partially a function of entering without any expectations, I found myself enjoying this set a whole lot. After fifty minutes on stage, the band was convinced to stay for one more,6 making it a solid hour's entertainment.

Listen to a track from this performance here.

On the whole, a very well-constructed and balanced bill, the bands contrasting with each other nicely. Not rip-out-your-throat or jump-up-and-dance music, but the "implied" pleasures of these bands made for a top-notch night out.


1 The sound was, however, quite good throughout the night. Special props are, indeed, due to whoever was doing sound, handling three different set-ups — including a somewhat-complicated one for Muskox — with no hiccups.

2 By coincidence, I had seen Fisher — in his Not the Wind, Not the Flag guise — at the previous gig I'd attended.

3 Not to be confused with "'74 - '75", the '93 semi-hit by The Connells. The Muskox tune is somewhat more expansive. How much more expansive? Well, four, obviously.

4 Interestingly, I found this last segment much more engaging listening to my playback, where the percussion sounded a bit more subtle amongst the other elements.

5 In fact, Muskox will be sharing a CD-release gig with the formidable Canaille at the Music Gallery on October 29th. This is, if I may be so bold, a highly-recommended gig.

6 Not really an encore in the truest sense, as, without any sort of backstage to retreat to, the band just sat for a few seconds, discussing amongst themselves what else they could play.