Showing posts with label paul banwatt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paul banwatt. Show all posts

Friday, May 24, 2019

Recording: Woodhands

Artist: Woodhands feat. Mamarudegyal

Song: I Should Have Gone With My Friends/Straighten The Curtain

Recorded at Workman Arts – Main Hall (Long Winter 7.5), March 29, 2019.

Woodhands - I Should Have Gone With My Friends/Straighten The Curtain

With drummer Paul Banwatt already on the scene to play with secret guest headliners The Rural Alberta Advantage, this reunion set made good logistical sense. I could be wrong, but I think their last show was in fact the last time I saw 'em, but from Dan Werb's first "oh shit!" it felt like old times. As ever, the pair took the opportunity to stretch out their songs into live 12" dance mixes, injecting their awkward anthems with manic energy.

Recording: The Rural Alberta Advantage

Artist: The Rural Alberta Advantage

Songs: Beacon Hill + Terrified

Recorded at Workman Arts – Main Hall (Long Winter 7.5), March 29, 2019.

The Rural Alberta Advantage - Beacon Hill

The Rural Alberta Advantage - Terrified

In the rather long stretch since I last saw 'em, The RAA has released a couple albums (2014's Mended with Gold as well as 2017's The Wild), lost and reacquired vocalist/keyboardist Amy Cole, and has played a bunch of festivals. This summer they'll be out on the road some more, shaping new material (some of which was previewed at this show).

Friday, September 28, 2012

Recording: Woodhands

Artist: Woodhands

Song: unknown*

Recorded at The Great Hall (PBR10 – Night 1), September 27, 2012.

Woodhands - unknown

Full review to follow. "I never said that I would give up!" It's been awhile since there's been a chance to catch Woodhands, which made this set — filled with brand new material — all the more special. In places that these works-in-progress felt more like "grooves" than "songs", but given their live M.O. and propensity to stretch things out, that's really nothing new. Snafus, Paul Banwatt's intense drumming, and Dan Werb rolling up his sleeves to declaim his intentions in shouted lyricbursts — this is why one goes to see Woodhands and it was all there in abundance.

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

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Recording: Woodhands

Artist: Woodhands

Song: Dissembler [Studio Session]*

Recorded at Wavelength Studio Session #1, The Tranzac, February 19, 2011.

Woodhands - Dissembler [Studio Session]

My notes for this session can be found here.

* This is a bit of an amalgamation and condensation of the demonstration that the band made, combining an excerpt from the instrumental piece that was the inspiration for the song with the band's acoustic demonstration of how that became "Dissembler".

Festival: Wavelength Studio Sessions #1

ELEVEN! Festival (Wavelength 515 – Studio Session #1) (feat. Not The Wind, Not The Flag / Woodhands)

The Tranzac (Tiki Room). Saturday, February 19, 2011.

An adjunct to the Wavelength Festival's nightly shows, the first Studio Session took musicians and audience alike out of the clubs to sit down and get inside the creative process.1 Taking place in the cozy Tiki Room at The Tranzac, this session (hosted by Wavelength's Ryan McLaren) had a small-ish turnout that actually felt like a boon, lessening the separation with the performers and making the whole thing feel like a really cool time just hanging out with a pair of duos who create rather different kinds of music.

The first half was given over to Brandon Valdivia and Colin Fisher of Not The Wind, Not The Flag, who treated their segment as they do their music — loosely structured and open to improvisation. They started by giving a sort of statement of purpose for the band: inspired by explorers like Don Cherry and Ed Blackwell, playing musics from all parts of the world filtered through their own experiences ("growing up, I played in a hardcore band," Fisher commented) in order to try and find the folk music of the place where they live.

To make things more concrete, they then played a short version of their current mbira-based set, starting with Valdivia on thumb piano and Fisher on drums, spending several minutes playing off each other. In a particularly sweet transition, with Valdivia adding a reverse loop effect on the mbira as he moved over to the drum kit, Fisher took his spot and picked up his guitar, introducing it by using the same reverse pedal before amping up into a guitar and drums duo. They played about thirteen minutes — a sentence instead of a paragraph by their standards, but sufficient for everyone to hold in their heads for reference in the enjoyable question-and-answer session.

In a wonderful flowering of the format's potential dynamic, perhaps the most curious interlocutors were the members of Woodhands. Vocalist/keyboardist Dan Werb, whose music generally works with a "time-signature-centric" 44 beat, asked about the theoretical underpinnings of "free" percussion — how does it work without a steady beat? Valdivia talked about finding the music's flowing, undulating pulse and rhythms within it, while Fisher compared it to microtonality (the notes that are between the notes in our do-reh- me scale), in that we are "trained" to hear tones in a rigourously-constructed system (whole notes, half-notes, quarters and no on) but there are beats in between.

That led to a discussion on how the band's practice relied on their substantial technical vocabulary — perhaps the crux for any improviser who is aiming for something more than noise. "I don't think what we do is academic," said Fisher, and both talked about playing with feeling without explicitly referencing all the theory underlying it.

There was a lot of other fascinating stuff — Woodhands' Paul Banwatt was curious about what it means to make a "mistake" in NTW's sort of music, where hitting the right note is less of a zero-sum game than in more regimented styles. "In our band, we actually make a lot of mistakes," Dan Werb would later comment later in reaction to this musing; Valdivia and Fisher concurred the biggest "mistake" they can make is not listening and reacting to each other. On the whole, the thoughtful answers came with the same generosity of spirit and positivity that the pair put into their music.

Listen to an extract from the musical portion of the duo's segment here.

After that, while NTW,NTF took their gear down and Paul Banwatt set up his drums, Dan Werb sat at the piano and played to himself as people in the room chatted. Woodhands' segment took the concept in a different direction, leading the audience on a more-structured guided tour through their creative process. They explained that while some of their songs emerge from jamming, quite often the base material comes from Werb's piano playing — taking "ambient, contemplative music" like he'd been warming up with and using that as the basis for something else.

Werb then played a rolling solo piano version of the melodic kernel of "Dissembler", then sped that up, revealing something suddenly recognizable as a Woodhands song. Banwatt talked about his role both as creative foil and in adding his drum parts (here, they developed from his having written a drum machine part for the song first).

They also led the crowd through the evolutionary stages of "Victory Nap", which had received its live debut the night before. Even though it was such a new song, it had changed so much from the original concept that it was a struggle for Werb to go all the way back to the waltz-y 68 ballad he had started with. Showing a few intermediary changes, they showed how the song had transformed into a four-on-the-floor rocker powered by Banwatt's pounding drums — and ending with a full "unplugged" version of the song. Rather fascinating!

That was followed by a Q & A facilitated by Ryan McLaren, with more commentary on process before talking about the band's origins: Werb playing alone on an MS-10 in Montréal in an effort to create "solo" music not reliant on unpredictable bandmates, and going through some different incarnations before meeting Banwatt after moving to Toronto2 and ending up as a duo.

As the band talked about developing the concept of Woodhands, it was intriguing to reflect on the sheer amount of thinking put into so many of the elements that just look natural on stage — it's a rock'n'roll myth that every gesture and every note comes from some burst of spontaneous creativity, when in fact personas are crafted just like songs are meticulously assembled to give that "in the moment" feeling.

The band also talked changing their approach for an in-the-works EP — "more side to side than up and down," Werb commented on the new stuff, hoping to take advantage of Banwatt's skills to layer more drums on recordings. When the floor was opened for further questions, the band was asked about their relationship to music outside of what they play (Werb, obsessed with lyrics, is totally devoted to Bill Callaghan and Vic Chesnutt), but it was musings on "dance music" that were most interesting. Werb talked about the band's self-imposed technological constraints: looper and drum machine yes, pre-recorded midi no. And when asked about the possibility of going further with the tools of "orthodox" dance music, Werb commented, "I don't know how to do that... I'm on a computer all day anyway, I don't want to go on a computer when we're playing music."

Added Banwatt, "everybody at a live show likes to see things go wrong, and we offer that at every show," bringing around full circle the earlier commentary on mistakes.

Listen to a snippet of the band sketching out a song's development here.

This was an excellent concept, and a superb addition to the festival. Hopefully there will be more like this to come — there's so many musicians that I would love to hear talking about their craft like this, and it's always a treat to have shows that fall outside the narrow parameter of the usual late-night bar gigs.


1 There was also, on the following afternoon, another new presentation with the "Speaker Series", featuring authors Liz Worth and Stuart Berman talking about the history of T.O.'s music scene and their documentation of it. That was the only WL515 activity I couldn't make it out for.

2 The pair actually met at the Henry Faberge & The Adorables CD release show at Palais Royale at the end of summer '06. Banwatt was there as part of a then-unheralded band named Rural Alberta Advantage who were playing near the bottom of the bill. That show also featured sets from Gentleman Reg, Laura Barrett and The Bicycles. Looking back at gigs like that I can see why I came to be interested in documenting the shows I went to — I'd love to have some recordings from that day.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Gig: Woodhands

Woodhands (Bonjay)

Lee's Palace. Friday, November 19, 2010.

A Friday night show suitable for those with dancing in mind. As the crowd filled in, Grahmzilla (ex of Thunderheist) was playing a Wu-heavy DJ set, although there wasn't yet a critical mass to get too many people moving. Things were improving by the time Bonjay took the stage. A good pairing here — like the headliner, Bonjay appeals to several not-quite-overlapping crowds, with the dance imperative being the main intersecting point. So, a chance for the duo to introduce themselves to some new fans predisposed to movin' it a little.

Perhaps to get the crowd's attention, they led off with "Stumble" and a high-octane medley of older, more dancehall-y stuff, with vocalist Alanna Stuart showcasing her pipes and magnetic stage presence.1 She also acknowledged the contingent of fans and friends up front, clearly relishing the chance to get back in front of a home crowd after a string of road dates.

And just as Stuart was engaged in a quixotic battle to have the stage lights lowered, the band also took down the intensity on stage. Saying how they felt comfortable experimenting a bit in front of the home side, they showcased some of their more restrained material. For a band like Bonjay that emerged from the high-octane dancefloor world, it's probably a bit of a dilemma to find the best way to integrate their slower side along with the bangers. And here, with the quieter "Creepin", the pair indeed lost the crowd somewhat. Following that with their cover of Caribou's "Jamelia" and "Want a Gang" made for an oddly muted middle portion of the set.

It took another cover (their melding of Feist's "How My Heart Behaves" and "Honey Honey") to bring the energy back up, and "Shotta" (from their fabulous Broughtupsy EP) put them back in the zone. By now, the dancefloor was pretty full with people getting ready for the headliners, and the set went out with the powerhouse one-two finishing move of "Frawdulent" and "Gimmee Gimmee", which showcased the band at their best. I'm glad that Bonjay are trying things out and seeing how they can mix things up live — so even if the lull in the middle of this set didn't quite work out, the strength they saved for the finish helped to leave a positive impression.

And then, though it had been fairly full already, the floor got well and truly crammed with the diverse branches of the Woodhands fanbase. Besides rock nerds who have come to know the band as a reliably exciting live experience, there were Club People, Fratboys and who knows what else.

There's a stirring alchemy in seeing a band — perhaps especially an "electronic" band — work this hard on stage, vocalist Dan Werb frantically twisting knobs and attacking his keytar, to say nothing of the awesome drumming machine known as Paul Banwatt. From "Pockets" at the outset the band were extending their grooves and pushing the songs far beyond their recorded versions. And if watching the pair weren't enough, there was more: "we brought some lasers," Werb commented, referring to the dancing lights spraying green vector-y fx across the ceiling — for a moment, I thought a Battlezone game was going to break out.2

All of which was backdrop to a walloping run through "Can't See Straight", which was joined to "Under Attack" as Banwatt took the mic to toss off some reappropriated pop lyrics, chanting out "I whip my hair back and forth".3 He also interjected the chorus of Rockwell's "Somebody's Watching Me" into "Talk" — though Werb took the song in a different direction at the end, telling the crowd, "we're going to get real proggy," adding a blurting synthscape to an extended coda. There was also a winning new song in the mix ("Gonna march you down the street") designed to take advantage of Banwatt's thunderous drumming.4

Mixing things up, they brought up friend and frequent collaborator Maylee Todd for a set-closing hat trick. "Dissembler" and "Sailboats" were both well-received, but the place went quite totally nuts for "Dancer", with lots of people singing/shouting along. The song stretched out for well over ten minutes with several extended instrumental breaks — "I feel ripped off," Banwatt said after the first one, "I wanted a much longer keytar solo", egging Werb on for another round. By the end, Werb (shouting out the chorus to Biz Markie's "Just a Friend") was drenched with sweat, and it seemed like everyone in the crowd was pretty damp as well.

Though that was the last song of the main set, the band didn't make the crowd wait too long before bounding back on stage, even though Werb came back with a perplexed "Really?" as if he wasn't expecting such a reaction. It would be understating the case to say that this was a positive, supportive crowd. And the band was earnestly grateful in return. So the band played "CP24" and "I Wasn't Made For Fighting", and after that it looked like they were done. The house music came up, but the chanting audience brought them out one more time. "This was unexpected," Werb commented as they busted out "Be Back Soon" (from first album Heart Attack) as an appropriate last gesture.

Listen to a song from this set here.


1 Beat provider Pho, meanwhile, kept his customary lower profile behind his table of gear. Despite the increasing warmth of the room, he was clad in a sweater that made it look like he might have a bonspiel to head to after the gig.

2 Another most welcome distraction was the free samosas being distributed at the merch table, courtesy of Banwatt's proud family.

3 This is apparently from "Whip My Hair", a pop song sung by Will Smith's daughter, which seems pretty bizarre. Who knew this was a thing?

4 This song was subsequently revisited at their more recent Wavelength Festival show in February.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Recording: Woodhands

Artist: Woodhands

Song: unknown*

Recorded at ELEVEN: The Wavelength 11th Anniversary Festival, Steam Whistle Brewery, February 18, 2011.

Woodhands - unknown

Full review to follow — My notes for this set can now be found here. I saw a woman at this show wearing a t-shirt that said "DANCE!" — and that happened. I saw a dude at this show wearing a baseball cap that said "OH S#?T WOODHANDS" — and that happened.

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

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Recording: Woodhands

Artist: Woodhands

Song: Can't See Straight/Under Attack

Recorded at Lee's Palace, November 19, 2010.

Woodhands - Can't See Straight/Under Attack

My notes for this set can be found here.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Recording: Woodhands

Artist: Woodhands

Song: CP24

Recorded at Pride Toronto (South Stage), July 3, 2010.

Woodhands - CP24

My notes for this set can be found here.

Festival: Pride 2010 (Saturday)

Pride Toronto 2010 (feat. Woodhands / Cyndi Lauper)

South Stage / Queen's Park. Saturday, July 3, 2010.

Time for Pride — the festival for all things LGBTTIQQ2SA1 — once again, and notwithstanding a controversy here or there, out on the streets it was the usual party vibe. Met up with A., and we spent some time exploring the booths while he queued up to get his picture taken with a variety of well-crafted dudes. I'm sure at some point in my past that I wouldn't have thought that I'd be regularly pressed into service to take photos like this.

We had planned things out to get over to the South Stage (the parking lot on the other side of Church Street from Maple Leaf Gardens) a bit early, as it's usually a terrible time getting into the licenced areas, but this time it wasn't so bad — and rather empty inside. Even J. came down for this one, so we at least had company as we waited for the show to start.

We were here to check out local DOR duo Woodhands. Somewhat amusingly, as the show started I realized that in this sea of a million partiers, I actually recognized a good percentage of the small-ish crowd that was up front and dancing. But then, Dan Werb (keybs, vox) and Paul Banwatt (drums) do have a contingent of highly-committed fans. I suppose I'm not amongst their number, but I was first convinced of their merits upon seeing them in performance. Especially live, there's an interesting tension between the sexual desperation of Werb's lyrics and the dance-y release of the music, evident here right off the top with "Pockets" — the lead-off track to this year's Remorsecapade — which has all of the band's strengths on offer. Throughout, Werb would play with a scrunched-up face, as if birthing this music was a pain, while Banwatt smoothly kept the beat as the songs stretched out.

That was followed by the slower tempo of the entirely-appropriate-for-Pride "Can't See Straight" — one of the highlights of their '08 debut, Heart Attack. Banwatt threw down with some rapping, slipping into a verse from Run DMC's "It's Tricky".2 Following a "remix" version of "CP24", Maylee Todd came on stage — wearing a Kids on TV "BRING BACK GAY" shirt and what I guess could be described as a jim-hat — to add her voice to "Dancer", with her silky smooth vocals on the verses punctuated by Werb's awkward-pickup-line chorus: "You're a very good dancer! Whatisyourname?" This one, too, stretched out with an extended outro groove. With the songs coming at 12" dance mix lengths, there were just four titles in the half-hour set. But really good fun — enough to leave a body wanting more.3

Listen to a track from this set here.

After that, we had plenty of time to make a relaxed walk over towards Queen's Park. I had heard some grousing about Pride moving the big concert stage away from the village, but I was cautiously optimistic as we headed over, thinking back to a fair number of shows that I'd enjoyed there under the tree canopy. Sadly, the same cattle-pen approach that Pride uses at their other stages was in force here as well — instead of letting people have the run of the park and creating a hassle for anyone wanting to drink at a beer garden, the whole area was licenced and fenced-off, meaning there a monumentally long queue to get in as we approached.4

The line was so long — almost stretching around the circumference of half the park — that we really didn't feel like standing in it. We wandered and ended up just sitting in a spot outside the fence, figuring we'd try our luck with seeing/hearing out here. But just by chance, we were settled down by what was quickly turned into a second entrance (why weren't they planning for this all along? Weren't they expecting a crowd?) so we joined that rapidly-forming line and got in without too much trouble. There was already a large crowd inside, and we weren't going to get too near the stage without pushing our way there. We weren't that keen. So as the nine o'clock start time approached, and then passed, we waited, as the crowd kept filling in, soon making it tightly packed around us in all directions.

Now, most of the time I'm pretty anti-nostalgia — I prefer it when musicians aren't just stuck replicating moments of past glory. That said, unusually for me, I was here expecting something of a warm hug of fondly-remembered greatest hits. It's a big, festival-style crowd, not a collection of hardcore fans, so I figured there might be a smattering of new material to show artistic determination in amongst the crowdpleasers.

Nope.

Once things got started, at about twenty after, Cyndi Lauper came out and burst right into material from her new album Memphis Blues, which is exactly what the title implies — Lauper's interpretations of some classic blues sides. For the first couple songs, we were politely impatient and figuring she was getting this out of the way early on. But by the third or fourth song, A. was hitting the limits of his patience, eyes darting around as if there was some sort of gigantic practical joke being played on him.

Long story short, it turned out to be pretty much a full set of "new material". Well — ecch. It didn't help that it was particularly insipid sub-late-night-talk-show-band blooze, really smooth and watered down like a casino cocktail. By the time of about the fourth song, we bailed from where we were and moved back to find, at least, some elbow room. Soon, the greatest source of entertainment was watching A.'s reaction after each song, as he waited for something he recognized. When Lauper led in to a song saying, "here's one by B.B. King!" he threw up his arms in theatrical defeat/disgust. We went and found the beer line.

And then we just wandered the perimeter for a spell, walking past merch stalls and hanging out, which was much more fun than the concert we were now largely ignoring. Oddly though, the further away we moved, the better the view and the sound were, and eventually we found an open area near the back with a nice sightline and not too many people around and A. just grimly waiting, realizing by now that any "hits" were going to be reserved for the finale/encore part of the show. And, indeed, eventually we did get "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun", in a blues-band arrangement well-suited to throw off anyone who'd want to actually sing along. After the long leadup to that, it didn't feel cathartic or rewarding so much as, "I waited all night for this?"

Truth be told, I'd've probably gotten the effect that I was looking for at this show if I'd just stayed at home and watched the ending to Romy and Michele's High School Reunion three or four times. The burden of the nostalgia-seeker, I guess. Backhanded kudos are due to Lauper for, like, sticking with her artistic vision and all, but it really felt like the wrong set for this kind of crowd.

I guess all of this — especially dealing with artists proving they're still relevant while waiting for some fondly-remembered songs — is what "concert-going" is like for most people. At least it was a freebie, and I didn't complete the mersh experience with fifty dollar tickets and highway-robbery service charges, but there was definitely with a "Get to the 'workin' overtime' part!" vibe.

With such a crummy experience — company notwithstanding — as we got out of the caged-in zone, I was definitely ready for something less corporate — like standing under a bridge at midnight and hearing some abrasive noise.


1 And yes, this hard-to-remember mouthful deliniates the communities that Pride is serving — in full: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transsexual, Transgender, Intersex, Queer/Questioning, 2 Spirited, Allies. Note that last one, giving official sanction that Pride is officially for straight people now, too! I think I'm going to try and remember it from now on by pronouncing it "legbittikwakwatoosa" — useful for any occasion where you want to say "queer" but feel that seven syllables would work better than one.

2 "This is where I tell that story about that girl I met last year at Pride," he said by way of introduction to the verse. That's actually an under-advertised but generally acknowledged side of Pride — plenty of those "Allies" are out to hook up, too.

3 Woodhands will be playing at Lee's Palace on Friday, November 19th at what will almost certainly be a sweaty good time.

4 Obviously, the bigger problem here is the archaic liquor laws that Pride has to operate under. But there are other solutions that don't punish the young and the part of the crowd that doesn't care to drink anyway.