Artist: The Davey Parker Radio Sound
Song: The Living City
Recorded at The Garrison, May 27, 2011.
The Davey Parker Radio Sound - The Living CityMy notes for this set can be found here.
Artist: The Davey Parker Radio Sound
Song: The Living City
Recorded at The Garrison, May 27, 2011.
The Davey Parker Radio Sound - The Living CityMy notes for this set can be found here.
The Davey Parker Radio Sound (Revolvers / Broken Bricks)
The Garrison. Friday, May 27, 2011.
Classic rock skirts in and out of style to some degree. As the 60's and 70's recede further into the past, I think that younger bands can appropriate this stuff with a lot less baggage than there would have been fifteen or twenty years ago. So what's the difference he he classic rock-referencing bands playing, say, The Garrison and the ones playing at the Hard Rock Café? Well, it's unjust, but who your friends are and where you play are themselves have a lot to do with how bands are perceived. Plus, I think bands like the ones at this show are going a little deeper than just the most obvious rehashing — the night's headliners, for one, are indebted to the psych and blues traditions, but also exist in a universe where Nuggets is equally influential.
And while Broken Bricks wear their influences on the sleeves of their Mod jackets, the youthful energy they infuse in their music lets you know that they know that punk has happened. It was that energy that marked them as a band I'd been meaning to check up on again for awhile. And I was glad to see it was still in place, co-existing nicely with a rehearsed professionalism.
On the stage, an elaborately striped stand for Luke Kuplowsky's keyboard drew the eye. He fronts the band with guitarist Marlon Chaplin, and the pair switch pretty freely back and forth on vocals. They've had a rotating rhythm section behind them, though right now drummer Matt Duncan is listed as the third permanent member.
The started out bang-bang-bang with three quick songs, leading with statement-of-purpose "Pop Song" before letting things stretch out a little with a little bit of excitability and wheeling around that ended with a mic stand getting knocked down. (In my notepad: "good finish!") From there, focusing on songs from their Little Fugitives EP1, they mixed spiky rockers with more laidback balladry on tunes like "Jigsaw". They also threw in a couple from their previous Pasquale and even a couple new ones.
Everything was delivered with that energetic kick, and there's quite a lot here to like. Not every song of theirs nails it for me, but they come off as such an accomplished young band it's hard not to want to project where they'll be if they can maintain their development. The set finished with a rollicking combo run through "Tomorrow Never Knows" and "Within You Without You", which they tore into with even more gusto then they showed for their own stuff. They also showed a bit more of a penchant for psychedelic skew in these that hopefully will rub off on their songs.
Listen to a couple tracks from this set here.
I suppose it's continuing a trajectory that I've noted before (and maybe the sheer volume of The Garrison's sound system helped), but Revolvers hit with the most muscular wallop I'd ever heard from the band. The fact that the music's increased crunch is being carefully integrated so as to not flatten out the band's attention to sonic detail is a testament to drummer Lavien Lee, who alongside bassist Gabi Mezzetti keep a litheness underneath the guitars up front.
Revolvers' second full-length is getting closer — a recent dispatch indicates it's been sent off for mastering — and there was a lot of that newer material being played here. Of eight songs, there were only a couple from Apocalypse Surfin', including a nice take of the title track that nicely illustrated how they've toughened up their sound without undercutting what is, at its heart, an earnest little ballad. There were a couple songs that were brand new to me, but some of this second-album material has been kicking around their setlists for awhile.
Another sign of a a band that'd clearly stepped it up: some of the songs that I'd thought were a little trite and undercooked before — like closer "I Love You" — now got over on virtue of a slide and a swagger. That's a useful tool for a rock'n'roll band to have at hand, and I'm looking forward to see how things are sounding when that new album comes out.2
Listen to a track from this set here.
I have a pet theory that states that album release shows are often not the bands' best gigs. Celebrating the culmination of a lot of hard work, they're an "event" and often saddle the band with having to deal with a lot of tangential issues, from (hopefully) dealing with a little more press than usual to making sure parents are on the guest list. And while this was a noteworthy occasion for The Davey Parker Radio Sound, celebrating the release of their first full-length In A Land Of Wolves And Thieves3, it was an un-glam sort of night — well-befitting a band with a blue-collar, no-frills approach.
At first, it looked like some of those tangential complications might undermine their release show, with Ben Quinn fighting a balky bass amp for the first couple songs. But once that was sorted out, the band was in a good groove, pumping out a series quick songs — and in fine album-celebratin' fashion, they started off by reeling off Wolves' first half-dozen songs in order.
That gave a chance for the quartet to show off their main elements: the sound features guitar lines and vocals bouncing back and forth between Jason Fitzpatrick and Graeme Jonez, powering their old-school garage rock with a hint of nugget-y psychedelia and a taste of the blues. Separating them from a lot of similar bands, they also have a hard rockin' undertone that suggests they come from a lineage that includes, say, Steppenwolf and Deep Purple more than some more fashionable antecedents. Those classic rock tropes are especially up front when they stretch out a bit on the likes of "Downtown Night Owl", but there's still a fuzzy stomp that drives the songs forward.
The band broke from the track-by-track presentation of album to introduce the brand-new "Gypsy Ring", which was one of the best of the set — a good sign they've got songs aplenty in 'em yet. The endgame was a little muddled, and for a moment it looked like the set was sort of just going to stumble to a halt with the band suddenly declaring they were done — mostly out a egalitarian desire to get final band Speaking Tongues up on the stage. But the crowd made sure they stayed up for a couple more and that allowed them the shot at the Big Rock Finish, concluding with a triumphant take of "The Living City".4
I had previously posted a track from this set here, but you can also check out another one here.
1 It was recorded with John Critchley — and it makes me feel particularly superannuated these days when I see him identified with reference to a bunch of production credits instead of merely saying "... of 13 Engines".
2 Revolvers will be playing with Two Green Cats at The Piston on Thursday May 24th. No word yet on when that album will be coming out.
3 "We released an album," the band announced from the stage. "It's for sale and it's for free." And, indeed, it's still available as a free download on their bandcamp — but I'm sure it'd be appreciated if you could kick something in to support the band's DIY efforts.
4 The DPRS will be playing a Pop with Brains showcase on July 20 at The Rivoli.

Out Of The Box Music & Arts Festival
While it's all fresh in my mind, a few notes from this weekend's Out of the Box Festival. Longer, more comprehensive reviews will follow down the road a piece.
There were definitely some things to celebrate in these three days and seven shows. First and foremost, there was a chance to see a whole lotta local talent on display in generally well-curated shows. For that, Randal Harris and his fellow organizers deserve congratulations. Unfortunately, each of the shows I was at were rather under-attended — with two large spaces to fill (simultaneously on two nights to boot) there just weren't enough bodies on hand to give the events the critical mass required for an exciting show. And, as K. adroitly noted, most of the time it felt as if there was a different crowd for each band, but too few people who just came out to experience each night as a whole.
Friday, July 29, 2011. Toronto Underground Cinema
Each of the shows were presented as a themed night, and the first two evenings at the Underground were billed as "3 Dimensions of Rock And Roll", with 3-D glasses being handed out at the door to watch the films being projected on the big screen behind the bands. Now, I'm no big fan of cinematic 3-D — I began to suspect it was a scam after the likes of Jaws 3-D and Spacehunter: Adventures in the Forbidden Zone — but the implementation here didn't really win me over. The projections included a repeating series of random clips that looked as if they were sourced from some 3-D version of youtube — hi-def they weren't. The visual quality was often pretty lousy once blown up to movie-screen size. But it was what it was, and at any rate it was usually a harmless diversion that didn't distract from the bands.
And this was, by my standard, a pretty decent lineup, with bands familiar to anyone who dabbles in the garage-ier end of the local scene. I only got down just in time to catch the last couple songs from The Cheap Speakers, which was a little sad as they were the only band on the bill I hadn't previously experienced. I was just starting to appreciate their groove when a song clattered to a halt, the set ending abruptly, it appeared, with an amp conking out.
I was more settled in as Davey Parker Radio Sound took the stage. Playing their first show with a new drummer (welcome to Mike Jacques), the band pumped out a series of snarling nuggets.
The Hoa Hoa's followed up, taking the stage the same day that the bittersweet news came out that the band would be taking an "extended break" after the release of their forthcoming EP. With a lot of friends on hand, the band played some of the songs from that, mixed in with a couple older ones. "We don't often play with the keyboard anymore," noted Richie Gibson before launching into "Modern Men". There's only gonna be a few more chances to see The Hoa Hoa's for a while — mark down August 25 & 26 at The Boat as a must-see farewell party.
After an appealing set from Rival Boys, the night was closed out by Planet Creature. Having finished recording for their forthcoming full-length, the band is playing with a lot of confidence and mastery of their material. Sometimes that shows in an ability to put the foot down on the accelerator and take their songs to previously-unheard velocities. That was a helpful move, as by the end of a long night, I was wearing down some.
Saturday, July 30, 2011. Toronto Underground Cinema
A second night of the 3-D projections made some of the same material feel even less fresh, but that was countered by a lineup with a couple bands that I'd been meaning to catch live. Foxes in Fiction, the bedroom-pop project of Warren Hildebrand, was just getting underway as I arrived. With an ironing board holding up a heap o' electronics as well as guitar, Hildebrand built up a series of warm and slightly-woozy tunes. Though backed by drum-machine steadiness, there was mostly a relaxing, chilled-out vibe to his songs. On stage, the lack of showmanship might have been a drawback, but in a lean-back-and-watch-the-screen environment like this, it worked out pretty well.
Listen to a track from this set here.
There was a visual switch-up for Human Bodies, with the 3-D remake of Night of the Living Dead playing behind the band. That wouldn't exactly be the sort of imagery that their music would bring to mind — with five players, some horns and a propensity to switch instruments between songs, there was a particular indie-pop sensibility at play here, a sort of languid echo of Broken Social Scene with the shoegaze-y sprawl stripped away. Paint Movement came to mind a little, though this crew wasn't evoking the same kind of Yacht Rock signifiers.
There were a reasonable number of bodies on hand at this point of the night, but in the rather large cinema (it could easily fit well over six hundred) it felt a bit like a Tuesday night at the Skydome — whatever crowd there was was simply dwarfed by their surroundings. Still, the band did manage to get a few people up in front of the stage dancing.
They were followed by Kitchener-Waterloo's Trap Tiger, who were broadly in the same genre as Human Bodies — a sort of third-hand Modest Mouse/BSS thing — but with a bit more of a generic, mersh approach. This wasn't my sort of thing — especially a lengthy, shifting "epic" penultimate song — but there was a group of excitable younger folks up and cheering for it.
Better results from Heartbeat Hotel, who have been getting noticed lately for their recordings. Their textured, swoony pop was propelled by a countervailing propensity towards mildly psychedelic noise, which was a pleasant surprise, and though there was a tension between those modes, it wasn't an unfruitful one. The rhythm section (Andy Smith on drums and Matt Mitchell on bass) drove this along nicely in an unflashy way. High on my list for further exploration.
There was some extra-fancy 3-D for closers Papermaps, with new-fangled glassed being handed out, but it wasn't particularly more effective. But I did enjoy the quartet in front of the screen. The band's stock-in-trade hearkens back to a certain strain of early 90's alt-pop — not in-your-face, but generally effective.
Sunday, July 31, 2011. The Great Hall (and The Great Hall's Theatre Centre Lobby)
Went for different surroundings on the festival's final night. With one of the city's most intriguing acts slated to play ten minutes after the nine o'clock door time, I hustled to get there in time to find a pretty quiet scene. In fact, there wasn't even anyone in sight to work the door as I headed in, but a few minutes later Loom did indeed take the stage to a thin handful of people. On this night, singer/guitarist Brooke Manning was joined by Elaine Kelly (harp) and Thom Gill (keybs), adding subtle touches to her hushed songs. I'm captivated every time I see Manning perform — her songs are like the quiet aftermath of some sort of emotional neutron bomb, but still situate themselves in a world where tenderness is possible. Her Epyllion album (forthcoming on Nevado Records) is going to be a big deal — but instead of waiting for it, I suggest that you seek her out at the earliest opportunity.
Next up were the more sprawling numbers of The Cautioneers. Bringing to mind a couple of the bands I'd seen the night before, this was another example of that sprawling BSS-y thing, taking that sound and severing it from its more unruly precedents and replacing it with a pop-flavoured twist. The band was decent at it, though, and had a reasonable sound, even if the songs weren't strongly memorable. Keyb player Amanda Barroso's vocals stood out on the crowded stage — there seemed to be a half-dozen core members, but there were also some guests on percussion and extra horns. Nothing very unique yet, but there's some potential here.
A sudden shift in the evening after that, as the crowd was led down from the Great Hall to the street-level gallery/café space that acts as the entrance to the Theatre Centre below. At first I thought this was going to be a quick mix-it-up site for a quick set before returning upstairs, but it turned out that suddenly this was the site for the rest of the night. I don't know what happened behind the scenes, but suddenly a totally different crowd was milling around to take over the Great Hall for a DJ night, while the smaller OOTB crowd was consigned to the more intimate room below.
On the one hand, this space felt sized to the crowd that was on hand and gave the rest of the night a not-unpleasant livingroom feel. But the un-airconditioned space was a real sweatbox, which wasn't so pleasant. And the art/theme element of the night ("Planet Earth - An Art Installation celebrating our home. Earth.") was abandoned — a giant globe that someone had put some work into ended up undeployed.
Meanwhile, after the delay of shifting things around, there was a most pleasant set from Lake Forest. This is a new-ish side-project from The Wilderness of Manitoba's Will Whitwam. He was joined for the set by Elaine Kelly (backing vocals and violin), doing double duty on the evening. Given Whitwam's other band and the hardly-less-woodsy name here, I was surprised that the material was less straight-up folks-rootsy here, and hewing closer to a classic singer/songwriter template. Once the lights in the room were replaced by candles and the shifting glow of the Dovercourt traffic lights, the surroundings felt about as cozy and intimate as the songs. Good stuff.
And then something else entirely, courtesy of The Jessica Stuart Few. The quartet played a sophisticated, jazzy brand of pop, with Stuart's nimble guitar work and strong vox at the centre — Joni Mitchell comparisons are the easy route here. She was backed by drums, stand-up bass and glockenspiel — and then, for something even more unique, she played koto on a couple songs. That added an appealing slightly-out-of-kilter element to the music.
Listen to a track from this set here.
There were a couple more bands on the bill after that, but I decided to let that be an agreeable ending to my festival. It had been a long day out in the sun, and I was feeling wiped, and, frankly, the vibe was starting to get a little weird. People looking for the upstairs DJ party were wandering in in increasing numbers, treating the space like a holding chamber for their event, making it feel like the festival was receding into background noise.
Although there were some bumps on the road, everyone behind the festival should be applauded for making a worthy effort. And though the crowds that I saw could have easily accommodated in a smaller, bar-like space — Sneaky Dee's would have felt fine — it's laudable to want to present a different kind of show in a different, er, out-of-the-box environment. If there's going to be a second annual festival a year from now, hopefully there will be some lessons learned here that can be applied to balance music and art and audience.
Artist: The Davey Parker Radio Sound
Song: Gypsy Ring
Recorded at The Garrison, May 27, 2011.
The Davey Parker Radio Sound - Gypsy RingA good night celebrating the release of The DPRS' first album, In A Land Of Wolves And Thieves. This song is too new to be on it, but you can check out the whole thing or download it for free at their bandcamp. Full review to follow — my notes for this set can now be found here.
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)