Artist: Neck
Song: At the Same Time
Recorded at The Garrison (Wavelength 500 – Night 5), February 14, 2010.
Neck - At the Same TimeMy notes for this gig can be found here.
Artist: Neck
Song: At the Same Time
Recorded at The Garrison (Wavelength 500 – Night 5), February 14, 2010.
Neck - At the Same TimeMy notes for this gig can be found here.
Gig: Wavelength 500 (night 5) (feat. Kids on TV, The Barcelona Pavilion, Mean Red Spiders, Neck, Boars plus Thomas, Owen Pallett and The Hidden Cameras)
The Garrison. Sunday, February 14, 2010.
The grand finale of the Wavelength 500 celebrations was the only pay-what-you-can, no tickets up front night of the bunch. And though I had my wristband to guarantee my entry, I figured there'd be an early rush, so I was waiting in line a bit before doors opened. With a busy night in the offing, I didn't want to be stuck waiting outside with the first act on stage, though I was mildly cynical that things would start on time. In fact, just as I was pronouncing that to the folks I was chatting with, Doc Pickles took the stage, right on the tick, to get things going. That's okay — no one like a Cassandra, right?
Pronouncing "we're gonna kick off the Olympiad of indie rock tonight", Duncan inaugurated a torch run, inveighing someone in the back to grab a bar candle to carry overhead to the stage, so it could be passed around the room.
And then we were into Boars, the night's first act. Although a relatively new band, the duo of Alex Durlak and Damian Valles have played their part in the Wavelength saga as members of volume rockers I Can Put My Arm Back On You Can't.1 The set started with a rising ambient wave that coasted for a couple minutes before a mean rock groove kicked in that worked up to a controlled — but not mannered — racket. With a table full of electronics to shape his sounds, Durlak sometimes sounded like Roger Miller and Martin Swope sharing one body. Meanwhile, Valles' pounding insistence kept the all-instrumental songs moving fairly fluidly under Durlak's brooding post-hardcore-ish guitar. Though not fast-moving, this was engaging live stuff, with a nice tension between the "played" and "shaped" guitar tones.
And then, as a sort of bookend to the weekly series, the next pair of bands were the same ones that had played at the very first Wavelength. "One of the reasons we started Wavelength was so people could go to Neck and Mean Red Spiders shows," explained Doc Pickles. His description of Neck2 as being "like Burt Bacharach fucking Deathtöngue"3 turned out to be somewhat apt, as the band did reveal a musical compromise of catchy and rough textures. There was a pop sensibility at play here, though one that acknowledged the historic import of Hüsker Dü's power-chord ethos. It made for a pleasant surprise, like discovering a time-capsule filled with unheard early 90's alt.rock classics. The short, melodic songs lasted no longer than required to make their point, and the band reeled off fifteen of them in their half hour. They were mostly powered by Dave Rodgers' slightly yelpy vox, though a couple were sung by Andrew McAllister.4 The band was well-rehearsed5 and seemed to generate quite a thrill from those who were there the last time around — not in the least Doc Pickles, who shouted off titles between songs and got to leap up to throw in some backing vox towards the end.
Listen to a track from this set here.
With a more continuous (though not uninterrupted) existence since that first Wavelength, Mean Red Spiders6 took to the stage, opening with the lengthier "Places You Call Home", the title cut from their '98 album which, just maybe, they performed at WL1. That led to a series of shorter songs like "iiieves cove" (with some abrasive sax) and "I Am The Sea" (the title track from their still-forthcoming new album). And though MRS have a repertoire of good songs, their live sets are more focused on their overall immersive sound — an aural bath of noise, as if the band had thought things through and realized there's no problem that couldn't be solved with an additional layer of steel-wool guitar. And the music does seem to be rigourously thought through and carefully constructed. But though that might be an indication of staid fogeyism7 the band is not going gently into the night. In fact, the set was certifiably Loud (in the sense that the music physically shakes you up a bit), with the guitars all piling up like blankets on Lisa Nighswander's vocals.8 The set finished with a lengthy excursion through "Azimuth of Panama", the whole being a hazy stagger of a good time.9
Listen to a track from this set here.
Barcelona Pavilion presented an interesting shift in the tone of the night's celebrations. Unlike the previous two bands, whose ethos was reflected in the very creation of Wavelength, BP came partially out of the creative ferment that the series engendered. Bursting out of the early aughts' "Torontopian" spirit, the band arose out of pure DIY enthusiasm, fashioning themselves out of the elements at hand: a bass or two, beats played via iPod, and an interest in semiotics.
As Doc Pickles ambled through a monologue concerning the frequency of the vibrations of the stars and tomatoes growing in crystal pyramids ("I know that's awkward for all of you to think about," he comforted the crowd), he momentarily lost his train of thought and was interrupted by Steve Kado. "This is amazing," Duncan said, "it's like 2005." The crowd whooped and then, with sitcom precision, Kado and Maggie MacDonald replied, in unison, "it's more like 2003", as if this whole thing was running according to some strange script, or the performers were acting from some Torontopian muscle memory. This is, in fact, a difficult show to say anything substantive about, as there's a gigantic temptation to simply present a transcript of the band members' running banter. That banter, in fact, would take up no small percentage of the set's running time, but the very idea of a running meta-commentary of the show taking place was wholly compatible with everything else going on. In this case, singer/bassist/theorist Steve Kado10 missed no opportunity to reflect on the passage of time and his uneasy relationship to rock'n'roll nostalgia, noting, "this is the dinosaurs of rock outing... There is absolutely no development or improvement in any of our songs. We have not grown as musicians. Nothing has changed, except that we are now fat and old... Let's let the weepy theatrics start, then!"
And thus launched the set of rock as performance theatre, beginning with "Die Welt Ist Schlecht" and moving through pretty much everything in the band's brief catalogue. Other bassist Kat Gligorijevic's t-shirt read "Chaos reigns", but the band was relatively together — at least as much as they wanted to be — the music reflecting the creators' interest in the tensions between the 'amateur' versus the 'professional'. And, I suppose, between art and artlessness. Provoking the crowd is central to the band's raison d'être11, so it's no surprise that the centrepiece of the set was "How Are You People Going To Have Fun If None Of You People Ever Participate?" which is perhaps the band's most subtly nuanced provocation — does participation mean "shut and and dance", or are they telling you to stop watching, leave the venue and go start your own band?12
Amongst all the other self-reflective elements in the set was the sense from the stage that this was merely a lark, a revisitation of something that has been done, and is done with. In lieu of an encore — MacDonald asking, "do we even have any songs left?" — they simply played someone' else's song on the iPod, while MacDonald danced and sang along and Kado packed up his bass. And what did it all mean? It was quite fun, but to me — who hadn't been there the first time around — it wasn't the highly-charged emotional experience it looked to be for some.
Listen to a track from this set here.
Not counting secret special guests, the last band to play the Sunday night stage at Wavelength was Kids on TV, well-loved in these quarters. Easing into their set, the band started off with the slightly more sedate "We Are the New Keith Cole" before kicking into "Dazzler", and that basically broke the ice and got a good chunk of the crowd dancing. It certainly looked like some people who had no idea who KoTV were were starting to get into them. As always, the band put on a visually exciting show, with the ever-energetic Wolf bringing along a new supply of masks.
KoTV were a nice choice to end the "formal" portion of the night, as these indie-culture stalwarts represent a lot of what is good about Wavelength. And, in their ever-forward style, the band chose not to use this a chance to look back at the stuff they were playing last time they were at WL, back in '05, instead focusing on their newer material. This included the excellent "Dazzler" and "Poison", as well as the still very new "City of Night", perhaps the most new-wave-y thing they've done13, now complete with its own visual backing and sounding more confidently fleshed out than when last heard. Only with the last couple songs did they look back, ending on "Breakdance Hunx", complete with Maggie MacDonald taking the stage to drop a verse. As always, a real blast, and after a long night, revivifying stuff.
Getting set up while last call at the bar went out, Thomas took the stage for some after-hours jams. After the high-energy of Kids on TV, this was a quick and sudden slowdown, and at this point in the night, I was probably looking for something to keep my energy up. With the titular Thomas Gill — now also a sideman with Owen Pallett — trading vox with Felicity Williams, the band covered a Kim Burrell track, "Love is What You Do". With the God-y vibe and the very smooth delivery, it evoked those lite-rock bands that you sometimes flip by on the evangelical television shows — at one point I half expected a 1-800 number for a prayer line to flash in front of me. All the mellowness and flutes and whatnot also brought to mind, say, "Always" by Atlantic Starr. Really not my thing — this is a quiet storm that I'd probably rather stay inside and avoid.
It did set me to thinking though, about how this music fits in the little indie-rock bubble we were celebrating. If Wavelength was set up to give bands like Neck and Mean Red Spiders a place to play, that was partially because other avenues of getting music to people were clogged up by music that sounded a lot like what Thomas was playing here. On the other hand — and this is where it gets kinda interesting — to the extent that Wavelength was successful and helped move the aesthetic goalposts, as it were, then what Thomas is playing could be seen as a challenge to that new prevailing orthodoxy. Admittedly, I was finding that mulling this over in my head was more interesting than the music.
Meanwhile, Doc Pickles called up the whole Wavelength crew to the stage for an SNL moment/group hug. As is usually the case for Owen Pallett's very cool but complicated equipment, there were a lot of patch cords to plug in and so forth, so there were a few more moments before Pallett, now playing in his new duo format, was ready to go. Backed by Thomas Gill on drums and guitar, the pair played a short set of mostly Heartland material, starting with "Keep The Dog Quiet" and "The Great Elsewhere". After a nod to the past with "Many Lives → 49 MP", Pallett tipped his hand, noting "there's actually a secret secret guest waiting backstage, so bear with it." He called up Steve Kado to throw some guest vox down on "Independence is No Solution", a crowd pleaser that I'm guessing Pallett learned from Kado, who covered the song in his guise as The Blankett. True to form, Kado lent the song a more rough-hewn edge than it sounds with Pallett playing it on his own, but it certainly felt like a fitting pairing on this night.
And then, speaking of rough but right, Pallett said, "for the first time since 2003, we're going to have the Hidden Cameras play with the lineup from that beautiful era that brought us all together." And so, in lieu of an encore, a family reunion of sorts, with a large number of current and past members of The Hidden Cameras taking the stage.15
Once everything was ready to go, the mass of people on stage launched into a ragged version of "I Believe in the Good of Life". There were indeed quite a few alumni of the '03 version of the Cameras — I noted Magali Meagher, Lex Vaughn, and Gentleman Reg up there, plus some friends like Kevin Drew. And soon, folks from the audience were getting pulled up on to the stage to dance, crowding it still further and adding a hint of chaos to the music. The vocals were unbalanced, and things were getting unplugged here and there, and I'm guessing the band couldn't hear what they were playing very well, but it was pretty fantastic nonetheless. And I could think of no better song to sum it all up.
With the staff eager to clear out the room, just time for one last outro from Doc Pickles, once more telling the members of the crowd that it was their turn to start a band and get themselves on stage16, and wound his way around to close with the cautionary, "but don't worry... for the next decade, you'll have Jian Ghomeshi," before hopping off the stage. He happened to land right next to where I was standing, and noted brightly, to the general vicinity, "What a way to go out!"
1 Beyond playing music, Durlak is also an asset to local music fans through his proprietorship of Standard Form publishing, purveyors of many of the finest CD packages around — a blessing to those who still enjoy having a well-hewn physical thing to contain their music.
2 Neck were/are also known as Christiana, essentially changing their name along with a lineup shift in 1999. Although the players for this reunion show (featuring Jonny Dovercourt on bass) corresponds to the Christiana-era lineup, they were generally referred to by all involved as Neck. You can sort this out further on the band's chronologically divided myspace pages, referred to as 'neckchristiana' and 'christiananeck'
3 Though a cover of "Let's Run Over Lionel Richie With a Tank" was not included, sadly.
4 Extending the past to the present day, McAllister and Christiana drummer Paul Boddum now ply their trade in the group Soft Copy, who have just put out the well-reviewed Vicious Modernism and are said to be well-worth checking out, and those wanting to do so will have a chance on April 9th at Teranga.
5 And in a sure sign that these guys are older, more together types, they brought to the stage a crisply-printed setlist pulled from a laser printer — not just some fragments of titles scrawled on the back of a random scrap of paper. With luck, the organizational advantages of maturity will keep us in the game against the scrappy youths nipping at our heels.
6 I tried to consider their historical import the last time I saw 'em.
7 During the set, guitarist Greg Chambers said, "someone has to pick up the torch and start a new Wavelength. Keep it young — forget about us old guys and start again."
8 Within the band's deliberately murky mix, the sax was perhaps a bit too much on top of everything else, cutting cleanly like a scalpel while all the other sonic elements worked more like a lead pipe wrapped in velvet.
9 MRS are always worth checking out, and look to have a show coming up on April 2nd at Rivoli.
10 Kado, previously omnipresent at local independent culture events, is now located in California doing grad work in the visual arts. In his time here, he was both a powerful instigator on the local scene — helping, for instance, to found the Blocks Record Club — while at the same time acting as an gadfly of self-criticism towards performers and audiences alike.
11 "Well, I noticed none of you guys were dancing all that hard either. And I know why — it's 'cause you're old now. Or you're too young to remember why this would have been fun before."
12 If my reaction to all of this were to be rendered as a New Yorker-style cartoon, it would show me standing in the crowd, head tilted, with a caption like, "Well, I think I'm participating —— but am I participating enough?"
13 Although the musical vibe here follows logically from the "original mix" of "Poison" (check it out on the Friends in Bellwoods 2 comp), which differers from the Siquemu remix that forms the basis of the live version, so maybe "City of Night", too, will also gain an extra dancefloor backbeat in time.
14 Because, frankly, busting out CCM tunes to the Garrison crowd is a sort of subtly audacious move.
15 Helping to kill time as everyone got set up, Dave Meslin, always one to dream of the fate of democracy, managed to get a pitch in for the Better Ballots initiative, citing his hopes that it could "do the same thing for politics that Wavelength did for music" — and replace the same old top 40 mentality with something fresher and more representative.
16 Which, I must confess, I have not done. But if there are any other practitioners of musical laienmalerei out there interested in working out some of the implications of the Vulgar Boatmen and Tom T. Hall, do drop me a line, and we can get prepared to entertain Doc Pickles at Wavelength 1000, which he promised would be held in SkyDome.
Founded as a blog about one curmudgeon's love affair with the em dash, Mechanical Forest Sound has grown to become a community-based archive of local musical culture. Assuming that "independent music" isn't just boys with guitars and "culture" isn't just some sort of pageant, MFS is an investigation of a wide range of artists, reflecting on concerts as shared experiences, acts of citizenship and a chance to get down — fuzzy photographs and clear-sounding original live recordings a specialty.
Current manifestations of this project include Track Could Bend, a monthly concert series featuring "improvised music and weird rock offshoots", presented in a casual environment.
At one point I wrote full-on concert reviews, and for longer I thought I would catch up and write about shows in the past. But these days, because of, y'know, life, do not expect much in the way of full show reviews — but live recordings with blurbs will be posted as quickly after the fact as is feasible.
Check out my original live recordings from many of the gigs discussed here.
You can also check out full sets uploaded to the Live Music Archive. [not currently active]
N.B.: All recordings should be available & playable. If you come across any broken links, invisible or non-functioning players, etc, please leave a comment and I will tend to it ASAP.
ALSO N.B.: I'm perpetually on the lookout for a new place to stash my MP3's online. If you know of any place that allows a couple gigs of stuff to be openly linked to for streaming, drop me a line!
All comments are welcome, or you can reach me at mechanicalforestsound@gmail.com.
All MP3's on this blog are audience recordings shared as a reminder of the excitement of seeing live music. If you are an artist who doesn't want their music shared in this way, please contact me and I shall remove it forthwith.
If you're so inclined, you can also follow me on Bluesky @mfs-toronto.bsky.social
Is your show missing from this list? Submit it via this form!
Jazz Rat Monday (feat. Patrick Smith/Alex Fournier/Dan Pitt/Aaron Blewett) / Dina's Tavern 2026-05-04 (Monday). $pwyc. [more info]
Chris Banks presents (feat. Chris Banks/Dafydd Hughes/Rob Cruickshank) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-05-04 (Monday)
Track Could Bend #116 (feat. the rest [Joe Sorbara & Jonathan Kay] / Wobbly + John Oswald / Red Trillium [Andrew Finlay Stewart/Matt Nguyen/Justin Caporuscio]) / Wenona Lodge 2026-05-05 (Tuesday). $pwyc. [FB event]
Holy Oak Family Singers presents: Our Parents' Tapes (feat. Luka Kuplowsky/Tiffany Wu/Isla Craig/Justin Orok/Edwin De Goeij/Fan Wu/Aiden McConnell/Ivy Mairi/Carlyn Bezic/Robin Dann//Ben Gunning/Bram Gielen) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-05-06 (Wednesday – early) [more info]
Potions & Strings (Dun-Dun Man) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-05-06 (Wednesday). [more info]
What Is: noncompliance: The inputted value is unusual [workshop & performance] (feat. Rrose / Auto Feeder / Parkdale Pirate Radio) / Sandbox 2025-05-07 (Thursday). $20/$25/$30 PWYCA. [more info]
Longing and Belonging: Music for Piano by Armenian Composers (feat. Eve Egoyan) / University of Toronto (Walter Hall) 2026-05-07 (Thursday). $free. [more info]
More Noise Please! presents: Cacophonyous Cataclysm (feat. V. Vecker / Unfeeling / THRTDSPLY / Jania K / Dept of Loss / Emergency Euphoria / Humbucker Music [Nick Storring/Jason Doell/Mira Martin-Gray/Colin Cudmore] / Del Stephen's Glib Trot Gleaning) / BSMT 254 2026-05-07 (Thursday). $15/PWYC. [FB event]
Mayme Joach [Alex Lukashevsky & co.] / Grossman's Tavern 2026-05-08 (Friday – 6:30)
What Is: noncompliance: No memories available (feat. Qiujiang Levi Lu / Aliyah Aziz / Husna Farooqui) / Sandbox 2025-05-08 (Friday). $20/$25/$30 PWYCA. [more info]
Hooper (No Frills) / Dina's Tavern 2025-05-08 (Friday). $17.31. [more info]
Musica Universalis (feat. C'est la fête Large Ensemble [William Hunt/Adrian Rossouw/Mateos Labbes-Phelan/Maxwell Stover/Colin Fisher with special guests Karen Ng & Mark Hundevad) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-05-08 (Friday) [more info]
What Is: noncompliance: Confirm humanity [workshop & performance] (feat. Shara Lunon / Nidus / Christina Dovolis) / Sandbox 2025-05-09 (Saturday). $20/$25/$30 PWYCA. [more info]
Liquid Architecture (feat. Tomasz Krakowiak / Eric Paglia) / St. Matthew’s Clubhouse 2026-05-09 (Saturday). $10 (cash or e-transfer). [FB event]
Labyrinth Ontario with Efrén López / Aga Khan Museum 2026-05-09 (Saturday). $50 (regular)/$45 (friends of the museum)/$37.50 (students and seniors)/$20 (limited rush tickets). [FB event]
O Sacrum Convivium, Music for Corpus Christi (feat. The Tallis Choir) / St. Patrick's Church 2026-05-09 (Saturday). $35 (general), $30 (seniors), $15 (students). [FB event]
Girma Woldemichael [Nafqoté CD release concert] / The Redwood Theatre 2026-05-09 (Saturday). $20, all-ages. [FB event]
catl. (Kewpie Dolls / Thee Terrible Threes) / Dina's Tavern 2025-05-09 (Saturday). $17.31. [more info]
Toronto Improvisers Orchestra / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-05-10 (Sunday – noon)
Ayal Senior & Friends (feat. Ayal Senior & Kurt Newman / JOYSHAPE / Ryan Dugre / Nick Flanagan) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-05-10 (Sunday – 2:30 p.m.) [FB event]
Wolf Eyes (Knurl / Ayal Senior) / The Baby G 2026-05-10 (Sunday). $33.18, 19+. [FB event]
Jazz Rat Monday (feat. Patrick Smith/Nancy Walker/Eric West/Mark Godfrey) / Dina's Tavern 2026-05-11 (Monday). $pwyc. [more info]
New Works for Improvising Musicians (feat. Nick Fraser's Special Topics [Nick Fraser/Josh Cole/Max Stover/Kae Murphy]) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-05-11 (Monday)
Brodie West presents (feat. Drumheller [Nick Fraser/Rob Clutton/Brodie West/Eric Chenaux/Doug Tielli]) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-05-13 (Wednesday – early)
Not Dead Yet presents (feat. One Leg One Eye / Efrim Menuck) / St. Stephen-In-The-Fields 2025-05-13 (Wednesday). $26.67, all-ages. [FB event]
Never Was [Brandon Davis/Bea Labikova/Patrick O’Reilly/Joe Sorbara] / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-05-13 (Wednesday)
TONE Presents (feat. Eric Chenaux & Ryan Driver / Rafael Toral / Masahiro Takahashi & Brodie West) / Standard Time 2025-05-14 (Thursday). $33.64 advance/$35 door, all-ages. [FB event]
Night Owls (feat. Bob Wiseman / Lily Frost) / Hugh's Room 2026-05-14 (Thursday). $42.85 (General Admission), $27.27 (Student / Arts Worker / Underemployed). [FB event]
AMRITA [debut album release!] [Anita Katakkar & Kayla Milmine with special guests: Jonathan Kay & Zaynab Wilson] (Zaynab Wilson) / Array Space 2025-05-14 (Thursday). $30 [includes a copy of the new CD and a drink]. [FB event]
Pedro Oliveira (Ariel Orah / Earth Punks) / Terrarium 2025-05-14 (Thursday). $15/pwyc. [more info]
Today Versions presents (feat. Ghost Variables [Gary Barwin/Chris Palmer/David Lee/Mike Hansen/Connor Bennett] / Del Stephen's Furtherances [Owen Kurtz/Paul Newman/Jeff Sinibaldi/Jamie Eriksen/Del Stephen] / Woolworm, Ontario) / The Tranzac (Living Room) 2026-05-15 (Friday). $10-$15 sliding scale
Animatist [Shapeshifter Album Release Party] (Miserable Weekend / Paper Hats) / The Baby G 2025-05-16 (Saturday). $20.01, 19+. [FB event]
Garden of Forking Paths VIII (feat. Triio) / Allan Gardens 2026-05-16 (Saturday). $30. [more info]
Cosmic Homeostasis XXXII / The Tranzac (Living Room) 2026-05-17 (Sunday – noon). $pwyc. [FB event]
The Dan Pitt Trio [Dan Pitt/Alex Fournier/Nick Fraser] / Sellers & Newel 2026-05-17 (Sunday). $20 minimum donation. [more info]
Jazz Rat Monday (feat. Patrick Smith/Rebecca Hennessy/Max Simpson/Trevor Falls) / Dina's Tavern 2026-05-18 (Monday). $pwyc. [more info]
Playscape Emporium: Paint, Play ["The audience will witness the creation of various painted works, following the story of a painting as told by the brush."] (feat. Duo Cichorium / Constant Yen / Rowan Campbell / Charli/Fahmid/Joe/Mira) / Array Space 2026-05-21 (Thursday). $25.00 (or Pay What You Want); livestream: $12.00 (or Pay What You Want). [more info]
By Divine Right (Casper Skulls / The Will Powers) / Dina's Tavern 2026-05-22 (Friday)
Picastro (Lives Like Skyscrapers / Jordaan Mason) / Annette Studios 2026-05-22 (Friday). $28.25. [more info]
Burn Down The Capital presents (feat. Cole Pulice / SpeariNg [Karen Ng & Charles Spearin] / Grace Scheele) / Collective Arts 2026-05-23 (Saturday). $22.89, 19+. [FB event]
Doug Tielli/Aline Homzy/Michael Davidson/Brandon Davis / Sellers & Newel 2026-05-23 (Saturday). $20 minimum donation. [more info]
Parade [Stefan Hegerat/Chris Pruden/Patrick O’Reilly/Laura Swankey] (Joyshape) / Burdock Music Hall 2026-05-23 (Saturday). $16.95. [more info]
Jazz Rat Monday (feat. Patrick Smith/Nancy Walker/Eric West/Mark Godfrey) / Dina's Tavern 2026-05-25 (Monday). $pwyc. [more info]
Geordie Gordon [River Round release celebration, full band with horn section!] (José Contreras) / Burdock Music Hall 2026-05-27 (Wednesday). $20.34. [more info]
Sook-Yin Lee with Dylan Gamble [72RHR release celebration] / Sonic Boom 2026-05-29 (Friday). $free, all ages
Battute e Pizzicato: Celebrating the 17th-Century Guitar (feat, Musicians of the Egg) / Church of the Redeemer 2026-05-31 (Sunday). $30 (general admission), $20 (students/arts workers). [FB event]
TONE presents: Double LP Release (feat. Glissandro 70 / Khôra & Mas Aya / Sweet Lips) / Standard Time 2025-06-04 (Thursday). $28.27, all ages. [FB event]
The Mike DeiCont Trio [Mike DeiCont/Leland Whitty/Eric West] / Sellers & Newel 2026-06-07 (Sunday). $20 minimum donation. [more info]
Not Dead Yet presents (feat. Fuji||||||||||ta / Evicshen) / The Garrison 2025-06-10 (Wednesday). $30.14, 19+. [FB event]
TONE & Not Dead Yet present (feat. Afrorack / Phèdre / Arc & Texture) / BSMT 254 2025-06-16 (Tuesday). $34.49, 19+. [FB event]
Titanium Riot / Sellers & Newel 2026-06-16 (Tuesday). $20 minimum donation. [more info]
Kahil El'Zabar & David Murray / CONTXT by Trane 2026-06-19&20 (Friday & Saturday). $42.38 (earlybird)/$77.41 (both shows). [FB event]
TONE & More Noise Please present (feat. Lucas 'Granpa' Abela / Death Kneel / Nimmie Amee / Triptych [Colin Cudmore/Kristina Guison/Colby Richardson]) / The Jama 2025-06-21 (Sunday). $17.52 (early bird), $22.89 (general admission), 19+. [FB event]
TONE presents (feat. Setting / High Alpine Hut Network / Shabason/Gunning) / The Jama 2025-06-24 (Wednesday). $22.89, 19+. [FB event]
TONE presents (feat. The Ex / not a band / Andy Moor & Yannis Kyriakides) / Cafeteria Upstairs 2025-06-25 (Thursday). $39.02, all ages. [FB event]
Lavventura [debut live performance and That Particular Charm release celebration! ] / The Piston 2026-07-03 (Friday)
Styrofoam Winos (Eliza Niemi / Roy) / The Baby G 2026-07-19 (Sunday). $20.01, 19+. [tickets + more info]
2026 Gigs
Tania Gill presents (feat. Victor Bateman/Brodie West/Nico Dann) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-01-02 (Friday)
The Silt / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-01-02 (Friday)
Track Could Bend #112 (feat. Duo BEAK / Vividness Trio) / Wenona Lodge 2026-01-06 (Tuesday)
Toronto Improvisors Orchestra / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-01-11 (Sunday)
Ayal Senior & Friends (feat. Senior & Newman / Nick Flanagan / Aaron Knight / Azaria / Charter of the Forest) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-01-11 (Sunday)
ur audio visual presents (feat. Heraclitus Akimbo / Charter of the Forest) / The Sun Room @ 918 Bathurst 2026-01-18 (Sunday)
Track Could Bend #113 (feat. OH GEE / Ryan Kinney) / Wenona Lodge 2026-02-03 (Tuesday)
Toronto Improvisers Orchestra / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-02-08 (Sunday)
Ayal Senior & Friends (feat. Ayal Senior & Kurt Newman / Destroya / Nick Flanagan / Roya/Marilyn/Ayal / Ayal Senior) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-02-08 (Sunday)
Bad Baby and Mayme Joach (Fan Wu / Colleen Coco Collins) / Burdock Music Hall 2026-02-08 (Sunday)
Music Hosted by Karen Ng (feat. Max Stover/Mateos Labbé-Phelan/Andrew Furlong/Karen Ng) / Wenona Lodge 2026-02-17 (Tuesday)
Rapallo (Marker Starling) / Dina's Tavern 2025-02-21 (Saturday)
Earlobe fundraiser (feat. Many People) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-02-26 (Thursday)
coexisDance #113 (feat. New Chance / Rachana Joshi / Sid Eillers / Brandon Davis / Kayla Milmine / Brendan Swanson / Rowan-Muriel / Joel Lawrence) / Canadian Contemporary Dance Theatre 2026-02-28 (Saturday)
Eliza Niemi (Shep. Treasure / Westelaken) / Dina's Tavern 2026-03-01 (Sunday)
Track Could Bend #114 (feat. Bill Gilliam / Scallions / Tap slap wind and light) / Wenona Lodge 2026-03-03 (Tuesday)
Ayal Senior & Friends (feat. Senior & Newman / Lostworldsounds / Nick Flanagan / Nocturnes / Ayal Senior) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2025-03-08 (Sunday)
International Women's Day (feat. Tania Gill/Aline Homzy/Karen Ng/Brittany Pitt/Mira Riselli) / Sellers & Newel 2026-03-08 (Sunday)
Ben Mike & The Beatles (Down Town) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2025-03-14 (Saturday)
Cosmic Homeostasis XXXI / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-03-29 (Sunday)
Track Could Bend #115 (feat. Brian Abbott & Paul Newman / Ben Mike & Owen Kurtz) / Wenona Lodge 2025-04-07 (Tuesday)
Kurt Newman presents Post-Bluegrass Bluegrass (feat. Isla & The Sorry Brothers) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2025-04-09 (Thursday)
Sonomadic Improv presents (feat. the clearing / Happy Apple) / Annette Studios 2025-04-12 (Sunday)
Josh Cole: new works for improvising musicians (feat. Aline Homzy/Nick Storring/John Oswald/Owen Kurtz/Josh Cole) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-04-13 (Monday)
Sympathetic String Band & Friends (feat. Sympathetic String Band / Gayle Young) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2026-04-26 (Sunday)
Not Dead Yet presents (feat. The Messthetics and James Brandon Lewis / Yr Knives) / 918 Bathurst 2026-05-02 (Saturday)