Showing posts with label silver dollar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label silver dollar. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Currente calamo: Wavelength FOURTEEN Festival (Night 1)

FOURTEEN: The Wavelength 14th Anniversary Festival

While it's all fresh in my mind, a few notes from this year's WL Fest. Longer, more comprehensive reviews will follow down the road a piece in some far, theoretical future.

Wavelength's annual February festival was a window to the change and continuity from the evolving institution, whose adolescent years are seeing it shift from volunteer collective to professional non-profit organization. The months following last summer's final ALL CAPS! festival saw some long-time organizers stepping back from the group while co-founder Jonny Dovercourt (thanks to a grant from the Ontario Trillium Foundation) remains to steer the ship in a full-time capacity.

The extra resources mean that the festival was a smooth-running affair, though at a few points I missed the rough-around-the edges scrappy spirit of the series' DIY days. (Where have you gone, Doc Pickles? Wavelength nation turns its lonely eyes to you, ooh-woo-woo.) But this was still an essential weekend of presenting some of the city's best emerging talent to a larger audience.

Night 1 — Thursday, February 13, 2014

The Silver Dollar Room — feat. Phèdre / TOPS / Zoo Owl / Alden Penner / You'll Never Get To Heaven

The Venue & the vibe: The festival's last couple years got started in the bomb shelter/rec room basement of The Shop under Parts and Labour, and a similar "beloved dive" feeling was achieved by taking the show to the Silver Dollar. Wavelength had its first show in local legend Dan Burke's realm earlier this year, and this has proved to be a good combo. The night was presented by the Silent Shout blog, and while their dark disco vibes were on display for some of the night's acts, there was some counterprogramming in true Wavelength fashion.

The show:

London, Ontario duo You'll Never Get To Heaven have certainly played Silent Shout before, and their languid electro-dreampop was more a soothing transition into the festival than an in-your-face call to arms. The pair also elevate what could be mere sonic wallpaper into something more like a dreamscape, and the background visuals by General Chaos complemented that very well. As Alice Hansen sang, Chuck Blazevic added a performative element, with his visual sequencer tilted toward the audience who could witness him controlling the shifting sounds with his fingers dancing over a grid of glowing buttons, conjuring a mysterious sort of semaphore. (Bonus DIY touch: I was pleased to note that the low-tech solution to give the audience that view was to set the thing on the side of a three-ring binder.)

Listen to a song from this set here.

Montréal's Alden Penner also presented a fairly low-key stage presence, playing tunes from his just-released Exegesis album. With just violin and drums backing his guitar and vocals, the set started off on the quiet side, but the audience was surprisingly attentive. Perhaps it helps that Penner is fondly regarded in some quarters for his past work in Unicorns and Clues. (One song from the latter's catalogue even popped up in the set.) The quality of the new material helped as well, tuneful and yearning without being too obvious or pedantic.

Listen to a song from this set here.

When I last saw Bryan Sutherland's Zoo Owl project, I was as struck by his visual presentation as his tunes. That element has been refined even further with the beams of his "photoreceptor lenses" and lasers cutting through the thick smoke machine fog. There are some good tunes in his warped electronic one-man-band as well, but it's as a live spectacle that this really excels. Also: lasers!

Listen to a track from this set here.

Montréal's TOPS (affiliated with Arbutus Records) couldn't compete with that in terms of spectacle or intensity, but still held the crowd with their soft-edged variety of mellow rock music. There's a new album on the way to follow up 2012's Tender Opposites, and the band seemed eager to road-test some of the material.

Listen to a song from this set here.

I'd had a really bad stretch of missing shows by Hooded Fang side project Phèdre, so I was glad to finally have a chance to see how the live show has evolved. Although it began as a self-consciously ostentatious glitz-fest, this is now a more stripped-down affair, with vocalists April Aliermo and Dan Lee backed by Beta Frontiers (acting as beat provider) as well as a dancer and electro-percussionist. Their thrift-store approach to R&B synthpop borrows a bit from Hooded Fang's shambolic rollercoaster ride, but is here wrapped in a mellow haze. Which is to say that if the songs occasionally lurch along on the verge of falling apart, that remains a feature rather a bug in providing the entertainment.

Listen to a song from this set here.

Bonus! Check out some more photos from the festival over at the MFS Facebook page.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Currente calamo: CMW 2013

CMW 2013*

While these shows are fresh in my mind I want to get some quick notes down. There will eventually be a fuller accounting by and by.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

9 p.m.: DIANA @ Mod Club1

Falling somewhere between club-level showcase and one of the big-ticket "event" shows that CMW attaches its name to for unearned cachet, my first sight at this show was of one of the city's more esteemed music writers being told by a functionary that because this was a "key" show — a designation that no one had previously heard of — photographers would not be allowed if if they weren't on a pre-cleared list. I guess at the last moment the international paparazzi didn't show up, and it was begrudgingly deigned that the locals could take their place.

Anyways, inside, there was a decent crowd on hand to check out DIANA. I'd last seen them at their very first live show and was curious to see how things were coming along. Given that their sonic identity was pretty well-established right out of the gate, I wasn't surprised that the changes here were more refinements than transformations. With a lot more miles under their belts (the band had just come off a string of dates opening for Tegan & Sara), everything was smoother on stage. Paul Mathew (on bass + guitar), who had been tucked away at the back in that first show, especially seemed more integrated into the group, now up front and flanking singer/guitarist Carmen Elle. Front and centre, her vocals remain the centre of attention here, but with the band's generally mellower stylings, she does sometimes look at a bit of a loss for how to channel her on-stage energy. While in her other project Army Girls2, she's free to range across the stage, firing off guitar solos and rockstar poses, she paced around more tentatively here. It didn't affect her performance, but it did lend it a more contained vibe. Meanwhile Kieran Adams (drums) and Joseph Shabason (keybs/sax) masterminded the sonic textures.

It felt like the crowd was mostly unfamiliar with the band, but they were mostly willing to be impressed by the 80's-informed jams — Shabason's first sax solo garnered plenty murmurs of approval, though by the set's end there was a lot of background chatter building up. But this was good work, and the band is clearly prepared to start taking rooms by (quiet) storm.

10 p.m.: Chvrches @ Mod Club

This is the sort of act that festivals are useful for, as there's little chance I'd've gone out of my way to see something like this at a normal show. Glasgow's Chvrches have only a few released songs to go with a boatload of hype, though I came to this without having paid much attention to either. The drummerless trio presented with two sets of synthesizers (played by Iain Cook and Martin Doherty) flanking vocalist Lauren Mayberry. Launching with the electro-pop of "Lies", the initial impression was perhaps something like Ladytron covering Samantha Fox. Mayberry's vocal approach was generally light and airy, and the venue's big sound system provided the crunch via plenty dB's. The variations between songs mostly came on how far the band pushed them down the dance-y axis — my personal inclination had me enjoying things less the further they went in that direction. At it's furthest reaches down that path, it sounded like a bad dance remix of a Sundays tune.

All the bandmembers have served in other groups before this, and they were definitely seasoned stage performers, keeping the show moving. But they also weren't particularly engaging — as a frontwoman, Mayberry entertained with some chipper banter about Canada's contributions to the wider pop culture (she came up with Rush and Ryan Gosling) but didn't have much captivating to do during the songs. That was sort of taken care of for them at the set's climax when a cascade of bubbles sprayed across the audience, which seemed to surprise and delight Mayberry as much as anyone else.

I was neither overwhelmed nor underwhelmed by the set. (Does a straight-up "whelmed" count as a sort of state of generic neutrality?) I was mildly rankled to note that the club was well-packed for this with excited patrons who'd never bother to come out to any number of local dance-pop units who are generically as good as this, but I guess that's the way of things.3

Listen to a track from this set here.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

[I skipped CMW on Thursday to celebrate Spring with Wavelength instead.]

Friday, March 22, 2013

9 p.m.: Maica Mia @ The Silver Dollar Room

Friday was my one full-on night for CMW, but instead of roaming too far, I planned to mostly stick close to the Dollar. It had been a year since I saw Montréal duo Maica Mia, but they'd left a good impression and I was eager to see what they were up to. Playing a bar rather than a loft was probably one reason that they were louder than I remembered, with drummer Jonny Paradise giving the music some forward thrust. But Maica Armata's voice and guitar still had a languidness that defied any attempts at too much propulsion. The upshot was that the band was a bit more Picastro (and less Mazzy Star) than I recalled — but that's definitely not a complaint. Given how long Armata was willing to crouch in front of her amp holding a single chord, it would be very interesting to hear just how much they could stretch things out outside of the constraints of a short festival set. This reaffirmed that they're worth seeing whenever they venture down the 401 to visit us.

10 p.m.: Patti Cake @ Velvet Underground

My one excursion from the Dollar took me down to Queen Street to see a set that was a striking counterpoint to the glacial sombreness I'd just witnessed. Locals Patti Cake traffic in something closer to exuberance — or at least that's the spirit channelled by frontwoman Kritty Uranowski. The recent fashion cover model sings with a smile and a brassy tone that tugs the whole band into a more cheerful, kodachromed landscape. That fits with plenty touches of classic 60's songcraft — including a pair of swaying backing vocalists. But the retro flourishes were countered by some more modernist signifiers, including one song's paean to Lindsay Lohan. Most of the songs here were quite fab, and the overall spirit was bright and welcoming, just right for a sunny day.

Listen to a track from this set here.

11 p.m.: Filthy Haanz @ The Silver Dollar Room

I didn't see anything else on the schedule grid to call me further afield, so I simply ducked back up to the Dollar to see what was going down. Made it back just in time to catch the start of the set by Filthy Haanz, another Montréal combo. This trio would do a lot of switching around between instruments (bass, guitar and keyboards getting swapped around from song to song) and the music reflected that changeable spirit, moving from mildly angsty rock to squelchy funk to sluggish reggae. I think the band was aiming at a sort of insouciant loucheness, but they projected closer to slacker-ish dilettantism. There was a point or two where they settled into an appealing groove, but they were never quite as funky as they aspired to be.

Midnight: Invasions @ The Silver Dollar Room

These locals brought with them the night's largest crowd, and there was no doubt that the raucous crew of friends were out to dance and shout along. There was a lot of energy in the music, but it never quite worked for me. In one of those totally subjective reactions, guitarist Alex Zenkovich's vocals just didn't appeal, and while I could sense where they were trying to take their music beyond basic surf rock clichés, the parts that didn't sound like they were on the verge of becoming "Stray Cat Strut" seemed like they were on the verge of becoming "House of the Rising Sun". Those are hardly unworthy antecedents to chase after (and neither were the Kinks, whose "Dead End Street" was essayed here) but for now I wouldn't say the band has found a satisfactory synthesis. Still, you might prefer to trust the packed-in crowd jumping and singing along here to my notions.

1 a.m.: Xray Eyeballs @ The Silver Dollar Room

Most of that crowd departed before the night's headliner took the stage, though this was the band the I was basing my night around. Silver Dollar booker Dan Burke can usually be counted on to make a canny choice for his festival hat-trick headliners, and I was all the more interested to hear 'em on finding out they were an offshoot of reverb-surfers Golden Triangle.4 This band foregrounded singer/guitarist O.J. San Felipe, backed by bass, guit/keybs, and a stand-up drummer. Armed with a drumpad alongside his Mo Tucker-ish setup, that hybrid percussion sound brings to mind locals Odonis Odonis, and there are a few appealing points of comparison here in terms of scrappy catchiness. But if OO's surfgaze draws something from the Mary Chain, then Xray Eyeballs have more of a Martin Hannett/early New Order chassis underlying their party rock as well as some art in their rigourously stripped-down aesthetic. That intriguing mix of sounds was enough to have me enjoying this quite a lot.

Listen to a track from this set here.

2 a.m.: The BB Guns @ The Silver Dollar Room

I was starting to wear down, enough so that I was wondering if I should just head home and miss a band that I'd seen on this same stage just a couple weeks ago. But it's hard to slip out on The BB Guns right now, given how they've really hit their stride. The "girl group garage" gang (with their début EP on the way) are pretty confident in their balancing of sock-hop sass and punkish attitude. On stage, that split can be seen in the way guitarist Alana deVee (all kinetic verve) works alongside vocalist Laura Hermiston and keyboard player Charlotte Marie's slightly more demure presence. Playing near the end of a cavalcade of festival acts meant that the vocals were a little buried, so the whole set came out a little more rangy and fierce than usual — but that's a good way to keep people's attention as the hour grows late. This is a band that's thriving in the local dives while playing at a really high level right now — you should see 'em while the moment lasts.5

Saturday, March 23, 2013

7 p.m.: Giant Hand @ Cameron House (Back Room)

My Saturday night was devoted to the final Long Winter show at The Great Hall, but en route I stopped in for one last CMW set — it's always good to try and show support for the folks who get stuck with the early time slots. Kirk Ramsay has been "half hiding, half writing new music," and hasn't been manifesting as Giant Hand much in the past year. That also made this a chance to hear a few of his new songs. On a first hearing, they weren't radically removed from his previous material — the guy who famously decided to take up the guitar after seeing a Daniel Johnston documentary is still working in the same vein of mining internal/external dread and investigating the spaces where the two overlap. A song on the piano, played with one-handed, two-fingered clawed chords was a new touch and a demonstration that just as you don't need more than a flashlight held up to your chin to tell a horror story, you don't need ornate musical backdrops to tell a story in song. Hopefully the next sighting will not be so long in coming.

Listen to a track from this set here.


* A note on nomenclature: for years both the industry showcase and music festival components were known as Canadian Music Week. But as of 2009, this was deemed to be too simple and straightforward, and the music portion was "rebranded" as Canadian Music Fest, under the aegis of the larger Canadian Music Week. I see no reason to put up with this and will simply refer to everything as CMW.

1 It has been a fair while since I've been to the Mod Club — in fact, I don't think I've been since they've had some corporate sponsor glommed onto the front of their name. I have no plans to acknowledge that, and unless said company is cutting you a cheque, I suggest you don't either.

2 DIANA's recent success has meant things have been quiet in the Army Girls camp as of late, but there's some upcoming dates promised to make up for it. So far, the only one announced is a knock-out of a gig, with the band opening up (alongside Absolutely Free) for Moon King at The Drake Underground on Wednesday, April 10, 2013. Mark that one down as a must-see.

3 Anyone who wants to see some dance-y electronic musicians who are actively pushing things forward should come out for Silent Shout's showcase at The White House on Friday, April 19, 2013, featuring the peerless Tenderness and the rising force of Petra Glynt alongside Violence and Vierance. [FB event] And for those who are swept up in the hype, Chvrches have already announced their return on June 12, 2013.

4 Based on their various internet presences, it looks like Golden Triangle are definitely inactive, if not altogether defunct.

5 The BB Guns will be returning to the Dollar in support of Bleached on Thursday, April 25, 2013 — by which time we'll probably have clearer release details about their EP.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Gig: Quest For Fire

Quest For Fire (Shooting Guns / Holy Mount)

The Silver Dollar Room. Friday, July 15, 2011.

As I think I've said before, I've never been especially partial to straight-up metal. But add something hyphenated in front of it — especially "sludge" — and it's closer to my zone. There's just something I like in using the slow drone of creeping heaviosity as an alternate route to psychedelic bliss.

That'd be enough to draw me out for a Friday night that might be a bit tangential to my normal fare, but it was pretty quiet in the room as Holy Mount led off the night. Their evolution took them ever-closer to a pure, elemental primordial tar pit of sound, their ultimate three-piece configuration (with Brandon McKenzie on bass, Troy Legree on drums, and Danijel Losic on guit) really honing in on a befitting terrain of heaviosity.

Featuring lyrics pitched somewhere between suburbia and Ragnarök (see, respectively, "Meadowvale" and "Garm of Hounds"), Losic's workmanlike vox never upstaged the effortless muscular crunch, and even if they didn't offer much in the way of presentation, it meant there was less to distract from the tasty presentation of songs like "Breeze Blows West". This time out, they were playing a slightly-longer set than I'd seen from 'em before, but given their preferred speed, that still only meant seven songs in forty minutes, presented without deadtime in between — or much in the way of chatter, besides reminding the crowd to check out their 7".1

Listen to a track from this set here.

I didn't know anything about out-of-towners Shooting Guns, but from their first sludgy riff from their Gibson SG's (Satan's own guitar) I could tell the Saskatoon quintet would fit right into the night. The band would subsequently get some Polaris attention for their then just-released Born To Deal In Magic: 1952-1976, but even as they were making their first foray across the country, they had a few enthusiasts on hand.

Stereotypes are a terrible thing, but I must confess that, at some level, the band played right into my preconceived notions about Saskatchewan. Which is to say that this crew — some with beards, some with long hair, and some with beards and long hair — looked like they could have bonded while hotknifing after a fight in a parking lot. But that's probably a narrow view to take of a whole province.

The set opened with "Sky High & Blind", a grinding instrumental heavy enough to curdle your Vi-Co — and it slowly become apparent that that was the band's predominant mode. "Harmonic Steppenwolf", another song here, could act as a genre tag or statement of purpose. Without vocals, the riffs sometimes blurred together from one song to the next, but the songs usually managed to have unique sonic personalities. "Cheater's Justice", the last one in the set, came with with a cymbal-riding groove and shimmering keyboard line that approached, say, Moon Duo. Steven Reed's double-decker keybs set the five-piece apart and added a bit of a cosmic edge — rarely playing melodically, their function was sort of phased-out whitenoise wheedling underneath the grind, biting and hissing like a prairie wind on a minus forty winter day.

Listen to a track from this set here.

Another band whose members were sporting long hair, beards, or both, it was surprising to hear Quest For Fire singer/guitarist Chad Ross note that this was the band's first time playing the Dollar. And, given their fairly large fanbase, it was even more surprising to observe that they were playing to a half-filled room on a Friday night.

After the slow lurch of opener "Sessions of Light", the band switched over to their faster gear for a couple songs (including "Bison Eyes") before really settling back in at their optimal speed with "Hawk That Hunts the Walking". As they wandered into "The Greatest Hits By God" — arguably their best song — I suddenly felt like I'd found a Golden Ticket for a lifetime supply of cough syrup. I was so relaxed that a few minutes later I realized I was almost drooling on myself. I don't know the details of the physics behind it, but I'm given to understand that something this gravitationally heavy has a propensity to dilate time in its immediate area, manifesting in a sort of blissed-out state where the forty-five minute set (just enough to tackle seven songs) felt like it passed in a mere thousand light-years or so. They actually came back to encore with "Strange Waves", wherein Mike Maxymuik's floor tom tumbled over, but they managed to ooze through it with no more damage than flowing lava leaves on a mountainside.2

Listen to a track from this set here.


1 Holy Mount have since disbanded. Losic is now playing with a new unit called Surinam, which features members of Anagram and Town Ship. They'll be opening up at tomorrow's QFF show.

2 Quest For Fire have recently announced their dissolution. Their last gig will be tomorrow (February 15, 2013) at The Horseshoe.

Monday, December 17, 2012

NXNE 2011: Friday

NXNE — North by Northeast Festival, Toronto, 2011.

Friday, June 17, 2011. Featuring: Persian Rugs, The Young Things, The Vandelles, New/France, OFF!, Heavy Cream, No Joy

N.B.: I had written some contemporaneous notes about the festival here. This redux version comes with a few additional observations as I have now had time to properly go through my recordings.

8 p.m.: Persian Rugs @ The Silver Dollar Room

"Thanks for coming early. Or loading in, or whatever you're doing." It felt a little jarring to roll into the Silver Dollar so early, with daylight leaking in through the back door out to the smoking area — it's like seeing Joan Rivers without makeup or something like that. And indeed, it was pretty quiet in the room as the band took the stage. Drummer Matt Rubba faced the situation with humour, calling out the band's name and inventing a fictional new hometown for Persian Rugs after almost every song.

The band's amiable, low-key stage presence endears me to them, but really, I broke my informal embargo on seeing bands that I'd seen before more to see how their songs and stagecraft were evolving. The vocals were passed around some, but keyboardist Kaye Hamilton is the best of the band's singers and rightfully had the most leads. But the variety otherwise generally works when deployed correctly: guitarist Ian Jackson has a serviceable range that gave a sleepy edge to "Phone Call From the Lake" and Matt Rubba's plainspoken vox powered "It's What You Think", complete with a suitably fun fakeout ending.

It's easy to underestimate the talent required to pull off unassuming modesty, but Persian Rugs have a fuzzy, jangly line on a very cardigan sort of sound, just like the light blue one Jackson was wearing. Seeing them live felt like time well-spent with some previously undiscovered Sarah Records band.

Listen to a track from this set here.

9 p.m.: The Young Things @ Comfort Zone

After that, ducked downstairs to the much-less daylight-afflicted Comfort Zone to check out The Young Things, a NYC quartet with a scrappy, somewhat-retro garage sound. Showing a bit of "industry" ambition, they had a friend passing out copies of their debut EP ... is the killer, to the crowd while they knocked out the songs from it nearly in order.

There were hints of a Beatles-y melodic sense, and that would come out a couple more times — as would a decent talent at arranging harmonies. That would be tempered by an equal enjoyment for a scuzzier kind of rock, as evidenced by "All My Friends Are Junkies" — although, to be honest, they didn't quite make me believe that claim. That back-alley tendency in their sound was faced head-on with a Strokes cover — which was perhaps a bit too on the nose.

This was all enjoyable enough, though when the band left the retro-y sensibility behind, like on "Talking Too Loud" (or on the warmed-over blues-isms of "It's So Easy For You To Lie") they veered too much toward a safe, homogenized radio-ready pop sound. Obviously, that's no more or less original than the garage-y stuff, but for me it's nowhere near as compelling. My prognosis was that this is a band that needed to get more primitive in order to progress.

10 p.m.: The Vandelles @ Comfort Zone

The Vandelles were also up from the Big Apple, and one could tell that they had that palpable buzz that The Young Things were clearing coveting. All at once, the area in front of the stage was suddenly filled with photographers staking out space.

And I could get what the excitement was about when they started playing, a blast of reverb and "Be My Baby" drumbeats. Leading off with "Way Through You" (which their bandcamp cheekily suggests was "released 06 June 1966"), the band was showcasing some tracks they were getting ready to record (and which have now been released on their Strange Girls Don't Cry album).

No complaints with what they were doing, but I couldn't help comparing the band to Chains of Love, who I'd seen the night before — a comparison that illustrated The Vandelles' limitations. Chains of Love dove more forcefully into the pool of their musical influences and went deeper into their shtick, going full-out in their stage appearance. Here, however, Vandelles vocalist Jason (no last name given) played in sandals and cut-off jeans, though bassist Lulu (also no last name given, and fighting a bad back by playing while braced against a tall chair) looked more the part.

And musically, the band were willing to get a little sloppy and could even hint at some Jesus and Mary Chain velocity, but it felt too much like these were ill-fitting sheets draped over songs that really didn't invest themselves fully in the sensibility they were playing at. The fact that they would more recently be selected to open some touring dates for JAMC implies that maybe they're a better fit with that sound than I was giving them credit for, and as they closed with a trio of songs from their Summer Fling EP I was certainly willing to give them the benefit of the doubt.

Listen to a track from this set here.

11 p.m.: New/France @ El Mocambo

Crossing the street, I went to this on a hunch, finding something interesting in a blurb mentioning that the band featured "ex and present members of local stalwarts Groovy Religion and La Casa Muerte". Besides the notion of a band mixing together musicians from different generations, the Groovy Religion connection intrigued me.

And, indeed, this band would have no less than Groovy Religion's William New on vocals. Perhaps this linkage of players (who didn't immediately look like they all belonged in the same band) arose from the same ethos New has displayed as a founder of Elvis Mondays — an essential community-building role in T.O.'s indie scene stretching from the 80's to today. Guitarist Roy Pike looks to be of the same vintage, but I can't dig up much about him — and he lacks an index entry in Have Not Been The Same.

Regardless, he did an ace job trading corrosive riffs with Bo Frantz (the Casa Muerte connection, making the band's moniker a bit of a play on words on its two founders' last names) in a stereo back-and-forth of bracing minimalism. The sound was tied together by Jenny Charlton's Mo Tucker-ish drums, played standing up with mallets. There were some superb moments here, with that guitar give-and-take and New tersely sing-speaking his lines in a voice somewhere between Art Bergmann and Iggy Pop while staring down the crowd with a thousand-yard stare beaming out from under his wild nest of hair.

New clearly didn't always feel the need to be the focus, and when not singing, he'd sometimes simply wander to the back of the stage, facing away from the crowd, while the guitars duked it out. And while there were a couple points where things were a bit out of sync and the drums skipped a beat, on the whole this was a rewarding moment of no wave-ish menace. "Moment" is key here — although I did get another chance to see this unit, my understanding is that it was not built to last and is no longer active. Bo Frantz has shifted gears to the promising new Das Rad, while William New endures as William New.

I'd posted one track from this set here — but given that it seems like you won't be able to hear these songs anywhere else I've added another one here.

12 a.m.: OFF! @ The Horseshoe

As the New/France set moved along, there was a shifting dynamic in the crowd at the El Mo, with a different cadre of folks building up at the front anticipating a reunion set by Rusty. That wasn't my scene, so I headed out and ducked down Spadina to Queen Street.

I had something more ambitious in mind, and for once I was going to see one of the more-hyped bands at the festival — which meant, of course, that I was dubious that I'd be able to get in. But with a plethora of good bands playing at midnight, I figured I'd be okay in settling for one of my Plan B's — so much so that I was more than mildly surprised when I managed to get into a packed, sweaty 'Shoe just minutes before OFF! took the stage.

Though I don't have an immense background in hardcore, I do like to feel the energy of it every once in a while, and this new group of veterans seemed like a can't-lose proposition. Fronted by Keith Morris — original Black Flag vocalist and founder of the Circle Jerks — the band includes Burning Brides frontman Dimitri Coats on guitar and Rocket From The Crypt/Hot Snakes drummer Mario Rubalcaba. Rounding out the lineup is bassist Steven McDonald (of Redd Kross fame), younger than the others but emerging from the same Californian milieu.

"Stephen and I go back to a place called The Church in Hermosa Beach," Morris told the crowd. "And we hope that we can transport some of you back there tonight." Evoking the golden age of west coast hardcore (right down to the Raymond Pettibon cover art on the albums) is the band's stock-in-trade.

Even with a slim catalogue of songs to their name, the band had no problem filling out their timeslot when Morris' raps and introductions were considered. Highly entertaining (if a little erratic), Morris discoursed on post-9/11 politics with as much direct intensity as he welded in considering what to do with the errant shoe that had been flung onto the stage. The two things, it turned out, didn't have anything to do with each other, though the possibility was discussed. It also provoked some audience interaction:

Dude in crowd: Play a song!

Morris: Dude, what's your hurry? It's fuckin' Friday night. Where ya goin'... mom and dad gonna show up in the SUV?

When they did focus on the music, the band started at the beginning of the first of their EP's with "Black Thoughts", following it with a couple more of its mates (including an excellent "I Don't Belong") before pausing for a break for Morris to offer forth some more discourse. That set the pattern of two-three song rapidfire bursts followed by pauses for Morris to banter. Both parts of the performance — banter and music — were equally entertaining and just standing back in the crowd watching (I didn't need to be near the frothing moshpit) drained me. But still, great fun.

Listen to a couple quick songs from this set here.

1 a.m.: Heavy Cream @ Comfort Zone

Headed back up the street for another band that I'd seen before, mostly because when I'd first seen bouncy Tennessee crew Heavy Cream at CMW they were suffering through a set with terrible sound. I was able to get the impression that this was my kind of thing, but it was hard to really appreciate them. And though they were battling with some issues here as well — as the last band of the night, they were suffering from a drumkit that was coming apart at the seams — this was a much better showing.

It took 'em a couple songs to get warmed up, but the one-two punch of "Watusi" and "I Know This" was quite fun — sorta like a meeting of the minds between Be Your Own Pet and The Ramones. The band was a constant blur of energy, especially from vocalist Jessica, who exhibited classic frontwoman magnetism, bouncing and shimmying without missing a note.

They played a fair number of songs that would later turn up on this year's Super Treatment, which was produced, notably, by Ty Segall with a lot more oomph than their earlier recordings. And even when the songs might have sounded a little silly ("Summer Bummer" was one title here) the band was seriously into it. The set was over in a flash, leaving a most pleasant aftertaste.

Listen to a track from this set here.

2 a.m.: No Joy @ The Silver Dollar Room

And, making the night close out full circle, it was back upstairs to see another "secret guest" that was pretty widely advertised in advance. I was pretty eager to get a chance to see Montréal's No Joy, whose Ghost Blonde album had really impressed me. Live, the four-piece brought a bit more animation to their shoegazey tunes than I was expecting — the title track, which lead off the set, got some more "push" that isn't there on the album from the drummer.

That wouldn't be expressed with much physical animation, mind you — singer/guitarists Jasmine White-Glutz and Laura Lloyd (the co-founders of the band) were shoegazers in the most literal sense, playing doubled over, their long blonde fair almost constantly obscuring their faces. Sort of the Thurston Moore school of guitar playing, just as there was certainly a bit of Sonic Youth in the band's music. They weren't much for banter, coming and leaving the stage without saying a word, preferring to build up segues between songs (on a couple occasions with sampled film dialogue) instead of creating dead time that might encourage audience interaction.

The set was mostly material from the album, though it did closing out with an extended run through The Shangri-Las' "He Cried", the bassline holding steady to anchor a few minutes' guitar noise to close things out. The musicians weren't inclined to acknowledge the audience but the set definitely made a solid impact on me.

Listen to a track from this set here.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Gig: Your 33 Black Angels

Your 33 Black Angels (Pow Wows / HotKid)

The Silver Dollar. Saturday, January 29, 2011.

Making for a non-stop day of music, my evening show ended early enough that I could hustle from the Music Gallery to the Silver Dollar in time to catch three jolts of rock'n'roll energy hosted by the always reliable Optical Sounds crew. I'd dug Pow Wows when I'd seen 'em at the Spacemen 3 tribute night, so I was glad to have a chance to see them doing their own thing. Not too surprisingly, their hazy-but-amped-up garage nuggets weren't too far from what I'd seen before. Jazzy Jimenez and Jay Holi traded guitar and bass back and forth, as well as sharing vocals (into a pair of nifty vintage microphones) that whiplashed from slurring to aggressively howled. They also kept things lively on stage while Jay Share-It (guit) and Matthew Michael (drums) kept the songs moving forward.

There were some summer of love harmonies, but the band's outlook wasn't particularly peace and flowers — besides a song about John Wayne Gacy, during "No More Light" Jazzy Jimenez shot off a capgun into the crowd. Then, toward the end of the set, the band handed out a bag of 'em to the audience, asking, "who wants to have a gun fight?"

"Now you guys wait for an appropriate moment to start firing at each other," warned the band, but the snap snap of caps exploding was already drowning him out, and by "Seeing Black" the acrid smell of gun powder filled the air.1 The band closed out the set with a hi-speed lurch through "The Last Time", which could be considered to be a revealing cover choice. Good scrappy fun.2

Listen to a track from this set here.

Headliners Your 33 Black Angels were up from NYC to celebrate Optical Sounds' release of the ace new Songs from the Near Bleak Future. Heading up over the border often necessitates some personnel shifting for the band, and there was a five-man lineup on this night, with three guitars (including vocalist Josh Westfal) plus bass and drums. No keyb this time 'round, so even with five players the sound was stripped down from the more elaborate productions on the album. The band was clearly eager to showcase the new stuff, leading off with the album's first couple songs. Opener "Heart Stone Metal Bone" came complete with an instrumental introduction that at first seemed like a continuation of the soundcheck before it began to cohere and expand.

Celebrating the dark age ahead — or merely the already-prevalent hollowing out of ye olde American Dream — the album reimagines the end times as being something like last call at a particularly dank bar. Actually, the Silver Dollar stood in well for the latter, the floor filled with plenty drunk folk on hand, amiably staggering around and bumping into people — though not being overly aggressive about it — all with the occasional cap gun still popping in the background. The scene at hand actually felt like an apt setting for the narcoleptic Stones-y groove of "The Trouble King".

The band are prodigious writers, and their sets are always forward-looking — a few of the songs from the new album that they'd been playing for awhile (like "A Song About a Car") were already being supplanted — and instead there was one brand new song "from the next one". About the only look over the shoulder came with closer "I Want Something I Can Hold in My Hand" (from '09's Pagan Princess), with Calvin Brown (of Optical Sound brethren The Hoa Hoa's) joining in on some extra guitar action that stretched the song out to the longest thing in the set.

Your 33 Black Angels might feel right at home in a dark bar on Saturday night, but their music is good enough to stand scrutiny in the light of day. Do check out their albums if you get a chance.3

Listen to a track from this set here.

Closing out the night was two-piece rock attack unit HotKid. Singer/guitarist Shiloh Harrison founded the band in Cambridge in '05; drummer Robbie Butcher is a more recent addition. The pair brought a formidable live presence, even taking the trouble to set up a more elaborate lightshow than usual, with long bar-shaped LED's set up on the floor to add some visual flair.

"My number-one pet peeve is when drummers talk," opined Butcher, "but thank-you for sticking around." His presence was definitely one thing that made it worthwhile, given his tendency to play in a full-on limbs-flying style — until he'd freeze in place while waiting for the next song to begin. Included in the package was a pair of pink pants — later on, with self-knowing mocking, he'd ask in his best Spinal Tap accent, "how much more tight could pink pants be? I answer is, 'none more tight'." This would be a theory he'd put to the test later on while climbing on top of his kit toward the end of the set.

Harrison, meanwhile, had one of Pow Wows' cap guns tucked into her cowboy boot — and when, after a few songs, she switched to a Flying V, it felt like the equivalent of le mot juste — this is very much a Flying V kind of band, playing riffy no-bullshit rock. Unsurprisingly, the bottom end was a little thin at times, but otherwise, there was plenty of crunch.

Though mostly sticking with the blazing, rollicking stuff, there were a few departures — one song had a bastard-son-of-country vibe. The music didn't particularly stick in my head after, but it was rather entertaining while it was being delivered.4

Listen to a track from this set here.


1 In my mind I was pretending it was the smell of cordite wafting over the crowd, but that's probably because part of my brain wants to believe I'm a character in an old pulp gumshoe story.

2 Pow Wows will be playing with Bloodshot Bill (and Hellaluya, Odonis Odonis and New/France) at The Academy of Sciences on Saturday, August 20, 2011.

3 The precise date and venue aren't nailed down yet, but expect to see Y33BA make an appearance during the upcoming Optical Sounds weekend-long celebration, August 25-27. Edit: Y33BA are now listed to be playing The Boat on Friday, August 26, 2011. And if you don't already have these dates circled in your calendar, do it now!

4 HotKid would go well with beer, so it sounds like an appearance at Beerfest this Friday (Exhibition Place, August 5, 2011) is a natural pairing. They'll also be playing the next night (Saturday, August 6, 2011) at 36 Chambers. Also, keep an eye out for a new video, which is apparently coming soon.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Gig: Dentata

Dentata (Anagram / Bruised Knees / Holy Mount)

The Silver Dollar. Friday, January 21, 2011.

After hanging out at an entirely different kind of show, I headed down Spadina and climbed up to the Dollar just as Oshawa's Holy Mount were taking the stage. Although their thick sludge (heavy in the way that "heavy metal" meant forty years ago) is a bit out my musical sweet spot, I had been favourably struck the first time I had seen 'em. Now streamlined down from a quartet to a three-piece, Brandon McKenzie has slid over from guit to bass, joined by Troy Legree on drums and Danijel Losic on guit and vox. The band led off with both sides of their new 7", "The Rain The Might" and "Breeze Blows West".1 When I'd seen 'em before, I'd noted that with their talent for heavy sludginess, they got better the slower they played, but "Breeze Blows West", with its pummelling hook is quite fabulous, and shows that they can nail it at a (relatively) higher tempo.

Losic's vox are flattened — sometimes a little too much so — but when he hits his sweet spot, like on closer "Meadowvale", it fits quite well. Stretching things out, they only played five songs in their half-hour set. "Heavy mellow" might be the most apt descriptor for the band, and they're doing it very well right now.

Listen to a track from this set here.

Bruised Knees had also impressed when I'd first come across 'em, so I was glad to have another chance to hear how things were coming along. With some time to gel under their belts — that last show I'd seen had been the first with a new lineup — and on the Silver Dollar's sound system, they sounded very good. From opener "Inside Eye", the band's main elements were on display — and occasionally interestingly juxtaposed. With his singleminded droning guitar lines and stoic glare, Chuck Skullz (ex-Creeping Nobodies), brings a Sonic Youthfulness to the table, which is contrasted with Natalie Logan's brighter demeanour and enthusiastic percussion. Their vocal styles are similarly contrasting, which brings a pleasing frisson, undermining and animating what could otherwise just be deadpan atonal art-punk.

With Chuck Skullz and bassist Graham Hancock creating treated sounds, Logan boosted the energy with some driving percussion, even on the quieter "Folk". That one brought with a singsong-y tunefulness that, indeed, could have been ripped from a folksong, as could its refrain of, "we are ghosts, we are ghosts". Closing with the tasty "Ethio", this was a fine-sounding set showing that the band has moved along well in their process of becoming-who-they-are.

Listen to a track from this set here.

I'm not sure that headliners Dentata are quite at that stage yet. Which is to say that despite being gifted with no shortage of distinctive signifiers, their musical identity seems to be an unfinished work. Put another way: they have a look and an attitude which says far more about who they are as a band than their music does.

Mind you, a look and an attitude can get you pretty far these days, and goes a good distance in describing how in a pretty short time the band was able to marshal a young-skewing crowd that filled up the Dollar.2 There's a bit of a grind and shout to their sound, more Sabbath than Riot Grrrl, and given the exacting care that founders Dana Wright and Tamsen Fields bring to the stage (before playing, they were busily tying undressed barbies to the drums and mic stands) the Joan Jett/Lita Ford sort of vibe they were rocking seems by no means accidental.3

A figure dressed as the Grim Reaper bowed a cage-like implement to create some atmosphere at the outset before the quartet launched into "Earwig", subject of the aforementioned video. That one, as well as some of the more-effective songs came in short bursts while some of the more extended ones churned away in a less-compelling matter. There were lyrics that lived up to the band's name ("I will crush you / in between my legs") and plenty of don't-give-a-fuck attitude on stage. All of which meant that this was a reasonably-entertaining show, though perhaps not yet quite worth the excitement the crowd showered on them. To what extent their musical attack can be sharpened — and to what extent that can be conveyed on their forthcoming debut album4 — will go quite a ways in revealing whether or not this band will grow the teeth that they're bragging about.5

Listen to a song from this set here.

A lot of the crowd melted away after that, but there were still quite a few on hand for Anagram, still carrying the momentum of a good year that had been capped by the release of the fantastic Majewski.Without too much fanfare, the band launched right into the slashing "Good Idea at the Time". Vocalist Matt Mason, unshaven and with a new moustache, looked a little manic as he tore into "Those Were the Days" with gruff gusto, the band's taut snarling chug in lockgroove behind him. With the glorious fuck-you energy of "Fish" (a song by Whitby's Cleavers that Anagram have made into a staple of their live sets), the front of the stage was was filled with bodies bouncing around, plus one or two guys drilled into their own place and doing their little crazy psychedelic dances.

The intense volume and energy papered over the cracks of the band getting mildly unwound during an extended run through "I've Been Wrong Before", and as they played their cover of Leonard Cohen's "The Butcher" towards the set's end they were a bit more detuned than usual, but that's not a big flaw in the middle of it all. Indeed, given how the end of an Anagram set feels a bit like coming out of a hypnotic trace (with furtive gazing around, wondering if you did anything that runs against your basic moral nature), the little details are less important than the state of mind they create.

Listen to a song from this set here.


1 Recorded by Anagram's Clayton Churcher, you can find it on their bandcamp, but you might also want to grab a copy on stylish white vinyl while they're still around.

2 That might be helped out with sexy perhaps-NSFW videos like this one, which was shot by "cinema of transgression" photographer/filmmaker Richard Kern.

3 They seem to be the dominant forces in the band, though the drum chair is notably filled out by local artist Alexandra Mackenzie, also of Romo Roto. In this company, guitarist Neil Cavalier is mostly shunted to "generic token male" status.

4 Word is that album is going to be coming out on local imprint Blue Fog.

5 Dentata play tonight (July 22, 2011) at the Four Corners III show at the Steelworkers Hall.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

In-store / Gig: Action Makes

Action Makes

Sonic Boom Records/The Silver Dollar. Friday, December 10, 2010.

As garage rock aggravators with as much Stones-y mojo in their DNA as Stooge-y coiled aggression, Action Makes are a natural fit for the local Optical Sounds label. And with the label issuing their long-gestating debut album, the band was ready to celebrate. In fact, they had a double-shot lined up, with an evening in-store appearance in the basement at Sonic Boom as an appetizer for their main set later on at The Silver Dollar.

Not the sorts to play a mellow, stripped-down set for their in-store appearance, the band brought a more concise version of their regular set, leading off with "Buddies", one of the album's best tracks. It's a good attention-grabber, designed to slash like a set of jaws to the throat, with an attacking bassline from the above-replacement level Andrew Stoeten1 and stabs of harmonica from vocalist Clint Rodgerson. And even if the band was not quite at their most feral — Action Makes seem to thrive on dark bars and late nights, getting energy from a rowdy crowd — it was rather interesting to see them in this environment. Here, there wasn't that kind of atmosphere to draw on, so it took a few songs for them to get worked up. The band played a couple non-album cuts before the bracing "Let Them Go", where it felt like they were getting up to full speed. To the good, though, if this wasn't as bracingly electric as I've seen the band before, it might have featured the most sonic clarity I'd ever hear 'em playing with.

By the time they hit "Berlin", it felt like a poke in the eye with a near-sighted hurricane. That energy ended the twenty-five minute, seven-song burst on a good note of anticipation for the night's main set.

Listen to a track from this set here.

With the taste of that on my tongue, I had to hustle down the street to another gig, so sadly I'd missed The Two Koreas and Owl Farm who'd started things up at The Silver Dollar. But in a sweet bit of timing, I stepped in to the sweaty room just as the band were getting ready to start their set. It was pretty full, but not uncomfortably cramped as the band led off again with "Buddies". And this time, there was no need to warm up — it felt pretty electric from the get-go.

A few songs later, after "No Matter", there was a birthday celebration for Silver Dollar booker Dan Burke, who got a rendition of "Happy Birthday" and was called up on state to blow out the candles on a cake. Not surprising that the band would make this fond gesture, as Burke has put Action Makes — exemplars of the sort of no-bullshit, high-octane rock'n'roll that Burke champions — on his stages many times.

From there, the band tore into the heart of the set, with album highlights "Berlin" and "Let Them Go". Then a couple non-album tracks, the raging "I Get Up" and "Little White Rooster", which led with a bit of a new wave edge thanks to Jay Lemak's keybs. It was also a little bit rougher than some of the others, lurching over the finish line, with Rodgerson commenting, "that was not supposed to end that way," as drummer Ryan Rothwell had to catch his breath and fix a kickdrum that kept coming loose. The set ended with the entertainingly profane "Pleasant Hymn Pt. II" (what happens at the cemetery stays at the cemetery), a frequent closer that the band can stretch out into a frenzified rave-up, pulling the song home just before the cables get forcefully torn loose and the drum kit gets knocked over.2

Listen to a track from this set here.


1 When not rock'n'rolling, Stoeten also muses on baseball at Drunk Jays Fans, which is much more smartly analytical and well-written than the name might at first indicate.

2 Date and venue aren't set yet, but Action Makes will be playing NXNE, so in a sea of questionable buzz-bands and sanitized mediocrity, keep them in your plans as a corrective tonic to restore your faith in rock'n'roll.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Gig: (weewerk) 8th Anniversary Showcase

(weewerk) 8th Anniversary Showcase (feat. United Steel Workers of Montreal / Elliott Brood / Great Lake Swimmers / Canteen Knockout)

The Silver Dollar. Friday, December 3, 2010.

You don't need to be hitting one of the round numbers to order up a shindig, as local roots-ish label weewerk demonstrated on taking over the Silver Dollar for two nights of shows with current and past bands. I didn't make it out for the Thursday night opener (which featured a lineup including The Burning Hell, Fembots, Jenny Omnichord, Two Minute Miracles, Proof Of Ghosts and The Barmitzvah Brothers) but I was keen on the Friday night showcase. It being a Friday night, though, I managed to miss early acts Barzin and The Village Meat, due to joining K. for some pre-gig refreshments.

In fact, we staggered in to a fairly full room to find Canteen Knockout already on stage, belting out some proper roadhouse country music. My first impression was that if Gram Parsons' Live from Northern Quebec was an actual album, it might sound something like this — a notion that the band duly confirmed as they broke into "Cash on the Barrelhead". There were a fair few other covers in the setlist, including an impressive "Pretty Polly", but also some likeable originals, including "Navajo Steel" (the title cut of their first full-length from '06). Extra marks for pedal steel player Alex Maxymiw, whose tasty licks added some zing. I wasn't familiar with the band coming in, but this the sort of high-energy hoedown that I could get behind quickly.

Up next, Great Lake Swimmers took the stage with a pared-down lineup, perhaps befitting the notion of a stripped-down "showcase" set. There were also some different backing musicians in tow than I'd seen before, including Joel Schwartz (guit) and Bret Higgins (stand-up bass). They were joined by stand-bys Greg Milson (drums) and Julie Fader (backing vox). K. noted the absence of Erik Arnesen, meaning there was no banjo for the banjo-enthusiasts in the crowd, as well as some slightly sad faces among the contingent who consider him to be even more dreamy than frontman Tony Dekker. Dekker, amongst the most prominent of weewerk "graduates", was as humble as always, expressing pride at being here to help celebrate the label.

Though obviously beloved by many in the crowd, the band had to contend with being considerably less shitkicking than the acts surrounding them and there were tensions between those out for a hootin' good time and those trying to soak in Dekker's warm songs — at the start of "Moving Pictures Silent Films" a few women up at the front started shushing everyone, to little effect. So that's going to cut into the enjoyment of anyone looking for folky quietude. As such, when the band cranked it up for "She Comes to Me in Dreams" toward the end of the set, it worked better here.

And as shorter set, it wasn't as adventurously far-reaching song-wise, but it satisfied the cravings — and I was glad to have seen it as Dekker announced that this would be the band's last show "for a while".1 Giving thanks (as many others did on the night) to weewerk's founder Paul Klygo — "the hardest working man in indie rock," said Dekker — the band closed with "I Am Part of a Large Family".

The headlining timeslot was originally announced as a "special guest" but I doubt anyone with much knowledge of the label was too surprised that it turned out to be Elliott Brood, another band whose first release had come out on weewerk. Taking the stage looking much more casually dressed-down than usual, the trio jumped in with "Johnny Rooke" from Ambassador, their first full-length from '05, and the floor in front of the stage was quickly surging with excitement.

Now, this is a band I like, but don't go to see so much these days — not in the least owing to the frat-boy heavy crowd they've been adopted by. And indeed, it didn't take long for a cohort of well-refreshed dudes to start pushing their way up front, obliviously referring to each other as "bruhth" — as in the first syllable of brother. One guy, shoving past me with a pitcher in hand turned back to yell, "Bruhth! Get over here, bruhth!" To these guys — to whom two syllable words are a challenge, I guess — the band is simply The Brood, or, perhaps more of an all caps, exclamation-ed THE BROOD! And of course there was one of them shouting for "Oh, Alberta" after every song, even after vocalist Mark Sasso said they weren't playing it. What was that about it not being the band I hate?

For those not out to spill beer/stomp on people's toes, there was plenty good stuff on stage — the band did manage to preview some new material, including "Northern Air", which looks to be coming out soon on a single. And in weewerk tribute mode, they threw in the rockin' "Only at Home" from their debut Tin Type EP. It turned out to be a too-quick set, just six songs in a half hour. Half of those were new ones, which was cool for me (though not for the guy wanting "Oh, Alberta") but I could have stood for few more overall. Still, good to catch up with 'em.

Listen to a song from this set here.

After THE BROOD!, the place cleared out rather considerably. Those that were left on site maintained the aggregate level of rowdiness, though. Which is probably a befitting audience for United Steel Workers of Montreal, purveyors of a hard-driving roots sound — call it bluegrass/punk with traces of hot music. With a half-dozen members on stage and so much clatter and rhythm, it wasn't til I was I looked more closely that I realized the band has no drummer. But between the stompin' and clappin' and the band's rip-roaring style, it didn't seem like a lacking.

There was a rotating approach to lead vocals, though Gern f.'s gravelly rumble was the most grabbing, working well with Felicity Hamer's slightly-smoother tones. And besides a hell-raisin' ruckus, the band was also capable of a more heartfelt sound, whether in an aching ballad like "Emile Bertrand" or the politick-shit-kicking "Union Man". The small-town ballad "Number Four" — complete with an introduction from Gern that made it simultaneously more mythic, gothic and personal — was probably the best thing in this set. And otherwise, the songs bounced between relating the wages of sin ("Glen Jones") and the glory of redemption ("Jesus We Sweat") before closing with the lurching slow-dance of "My Cat Smells Like Place St. Henri".

I'd seen the band a few years back at a late-night music-festival timeslot, and they didn't do anything for me back then. I was willing to think that might be down to me having been drained and so on, so tried I came to this with a beginner's mind. But that said, my reaction was about the same. There's no doubt that USWM are spirited and entertaining enough that I mostly enjoyed the set, but I wouldn't imagine myself going out of my way to catch them again.

Listen to a track from this set here.

That made for a late ending to the night — an icy cold one that felt even moreso after emerging from the sweaty cauldron in the Dollar. It was also a memorable night because of [incident redacted], which would have worked well as the topic of either a rough-house holler or lamentin' ballad of the sort you might find on a weewerk release.


1 And, indeed, except for a trip to SXSE and a couple one-offs, it looks like things are still quiet in the GLS camp — hopefully a sign that a new album is in process.