Showing posts with label venus fest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label venus fest. Show all posts

Thursday, January 7, 2021

Bumping into... Aerin Fogel

Bumping Into... is a series of mini-chats with a variety of peeps that you might run into in some of our local music communities. (There's a bit of an intro and my thoughts behind the series here.)


How are you? Where are you?

I am riding this wild rollercoaster. Still in my home in Toronto, this year has offered me extremes of both loss and love and everything in between.

What have you been up to since March or so?

The beginning of the pandemic was a catalyst for me to recover from some pretty extensive burnout that's been building over the last five years. I was pushing through and not sure how to make the changes I knew I needed to make. So I've let a lot of things crumble and that's been hard but also deeply relieving. I'm learning how to create better structure for myself as a freelancer, how to love myself more and let go of expectations.

Meanwhile I am still running Venus Fest, and a full time practice with clients through astrology, tarot, and karmic readings. Venus Fest hosted a virtual festival in September which was profoundly strange but also really joyful and I am proud of what everyone contributed.

My client practice has been wonderful and deep over the last year, sharing in really important decisions and transitions with my clients, and also teaching a lot of online PWYC workshops through the different significant astrology events that have come up.

In May I adopted a new cat who is a perfect special angel baby, and in the fall I ended a long term relationship that has opened up space for new parts of myself in ways I couldn't have anticipated.

Have you found any new ways to do old things? How are you feeling about the shifts in how music is being made/shared/listened to?

Venus Fest created some videos that I can only really describe as extended music videos, where the visual component was done by video and animation artists. That's a new way for us to share art with people and I was blown away by what the artists and musicians created together.

As an artist myself I've done three livestream shows and I struggled with all of them! I am not a gear person, so creating a home setup with limited knowledge and tech isn't ideal for me. However, I like the experience of creating a visual environment and setup, which is much harder to do at a show. As a highly kinesthetic person, I need to be in a space with people to really feel the experience of music. So I miss that and am still pondering ways it can be shared differently before we can return to shows.

Any works of art that have been a light for you in these times? Anything that's just been a good diversion?

So many! New albums from Lido Pimienta, US Girls, Austra, Basia Bulat, Anjimile, Backxwash, No Joy, Emel Mathlouthi, Gia Margaret, Julianna Barwick, I guess those were some of my favourites in the year.

But I actually have been spending a lot of my time deepening my astrology study, which is a lifelong learning when you work in the field. There is no end to the complexity and nuance of astrology's many systems. I've been listening to astro podcasts from Chris Brennan, Kirah Tabourn, and others, and currently reading a Hellenistic astrology tome (there's no other word for it) from Demetra George. Reading has been one of my favourite things about 2020 because when I'm not working 70 hour weeks I actually have time for it!

How are you feeling about 2021?

With my astrologer hat on we've made it through the profoundly difficult territory of 2020. But there are still some tough planetary configurations in 2021. I think they are more about rebuilding broken systems (whether those are political, economic, social, personal, or related to our wellbeing).

But for me personally I am feeling strong moving into 2021. I am in a good place to share my energy and resources with the people and things I care about, and I am ready to be adaptive to the unexpected. Plus I have my cat Luther now, so we're all good.

Anything else we'd chat about if we bumped into each other?

How are you? How would you answer these questions for yourself?

Editor's note: Aerin's Queen Of Swords project will be playing a Venus Fest/The New Colossus Festival livestream tomorrow (Friday, January 7th) along with Dorothea Paas and Poolblood.

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Recording: L CON

Artist: L CON

Song: There Was a Glow

Recorded at Jam Factory (Venus Fest presents), June 1, 2018.

L CON - There Was a Glow

If there were any, er, insecurities in presenting the beautifully-engineered songs from their new album in a live context, Lisa Conway and company tackled them head on, approaching the songs in a few different configurations. Conway started the set off solo, performing a couple songs solo with her Ableton-based rig, before adding members and building up to a lean groove and some disco-reimaginings of older tunes. And ending as she started, Conway stepped into the crowd to close things out singing unamplified, her voice floating above the highway-whisper of cars seeping into the hot room through the open window.

[L CON will be performing at Slip, Slop, Slap, Kat Burns' experimental summer series at Handlebar, on Sunday, August 19th. The group will also be opening up at Falcon Jane's album release celebration at the Gladstone Hotel on Thursday, August 23rd. Venus Fest is presenting a free/all-ages/family-friendly concert in Ontario Place's Trillium Park this Thursday (June 26th) featuring Bernice, OBUXUM and Ansley Simpson.]

Recording: Pantayo

Artist: Pantayo

Song: Taranta

Recorded at Jam Factory (Venus Fest presents), June 1, 2018.

Pantayo - Taranta

Leading off a summer of prestigious concert and festival appearances, Pantayo showed off their streamlined pop presentation, integrating their kulintang moves into some increasingly-sophisticated songcraft. Besides the grooves they've been providing, there's a number of tasty new songs in the set, as the members of the group raise their voices in love and resistance.

[Venus Fest is presenting a free/all-ages/family-friendly concert in Ontario Place's Trillium Park this Thursday (June 26th) featuring Bernice, OBUXUM and Ansley Simpson.]

Saturday, January 27, 2018

Recording: Jennifer Castle

Artist: Jennifer Castle

Songs: Tonight the Evening + You Can't Take Anyone

Recorded at The Garrison (Venus Fest Winter Solstice Celebration), December 21, 2017.

Jennifer Castle - Tonight the Evening

Jennifer Castle - You Can't Take Anyone

Jennifer Castle's solstice celebration, long a seasonal highlight, was co-presented this time 'round as part of Venus Fest's monthly concert series. A month after what was by all accounts a triumphant turn at Massey Hall, Jennifer Castle stripped things back for an intimate, round-the-campfire night of songs. Making a rare appearance on acoustic guitar, she was joined only by Paul Mortimer and Vic Cheong, pulling the audience into her new songs (as well as new arrangements of older ones). That still left plenty of terrain to explore, like in this set opener that roared out on the highway line with Cheong taking over on the coda. Wonderful stuff.

Recording: Aisha Sasha John

Artist: Aisha Sasha John

Poems: selections from I have to live

Recorded at The Garrison (Venus Fest Winter Solstice Celebration), December 21, 2017.

Aisha Sasha John - selections from I have to live

Jennifer Castle's solstice celebration, long a seasonal highlight, was co-presented this time 'round as part of Venus Fest's monthly concert series. Seizing the opportunity to present some intersectional/multidisciplinary vibes, this spoken word set from local poet Aisha Sasha John saw her read her work with dry humour concealing some barbed hooks. Like in Jennifer Castle's work, there was a porous boundary between chill-on-the-couch bon mots and cut-to-the-core existential quandaries. Leading with some new work in raw form (some of the lines ripped straight from her tumblr musings), she then read from last year's I have to live, considering how identity shifts from the ideal (and the idealized) with every real-world fact and compromise.

Recording: Ora Cogan

Artist: Ora Cogan

Song: Darling

Recorded at The Garrison (Venus Fest Winter Solstice Celebration), December 21, 2017.

Ora Cogan - Darling

Jennifer Castle's solstice celebration, long a seasonal highlight, was co-presented this time 'round as part of Venus Fest's monthly concert series. Opening the night was folky Montréal-via-Vancouver singer/songwriter Ora Cogan, whose exploratory lyrics and nimble guitar playing made her a sympathetic pairing with the headliner. Crickets, her new album (out on local label Hand Drawn Dracula) adds some synthy textures to the songs, but on stage she was accompanied only by a rhythm section, fighting to be heard by a crowd that beyond the first few rows was sadly uninterested in discovering something new. True heads know, though, so it was no surprise to see Castle at the side of the stage, head down, eyes closed, receiving the vibes.

Sunday, November 5, 2017

Recording: Emel Mathlouthi

Artist: Emel Mathlouthi

Song: Dfina*

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

Emel Mathlouthi - Dfina

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

After performances by Lido Pimienta and Weaves, the last segment of the festival felt like a different show entirely. The event's visiting artists got the nominally-headlining "prestige" slots, but also played to smaller crowds than the local heroes. The diminished audience was the only regrettable thing in Emel Mathlouthi's local debut, as she showed off her postmodern protest trip-hop/folk anthems. Hailing from Tunisia, where her music was a revolutionary force, Mathlouthi is now based in New York City, so one hopes that she'll return to these parts in the not too distant future. Symbolically, this was an excellent finish to the superbly-curated event, and hopefully Venus Fest will build on this most memorable day.

* Thanks to a twitter commenter for passing along the title to this one!

Recording: Grouper

Artist: Grouper

Song: unknown*

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

Grouper - unknown

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

After performances by Lido Pimienta and Weaves, the last segment of the festival felt like a different show entirely. Besides the headliner vibes those two sets gave off, taking in a full dozen acts was clearly not in everyone's agenda, and one could get the sense of one crowd departing and a late shift replacing them. The latter were mostly on hand to see Liz Harris, making a rare local appearance with her Grouper project. Offering hazy, layered ambient pop, Harris sat cross-legged on the stage, and the bulk of crowd followed suit, settling in on the floor to trance out to Harris' gauzy loops. A very pleasing close-your-eyes-and-float sort of experience, the distance of the vocals and guitars doesn't translate as well in this recording — the live set was also enhanced by the visuals, with Harris playing roughly in sync to a series of abstract film vignettes that also managed to suggest distance, separateness, and drift.

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

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Songs: Walkaway + My Generation [The Who cover]

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

Weaves - Walkaway

Weaves - My Generation

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

It'd been more than a year since I last saw Weaves in action, then on the cusp of their first album's release just as this show served as a preview of their second. Those months in between not only saw them spending a lot of time touring the world, but somehow also gave them enough time to turn over their setlist. Besides all the new songs that the band unleashed, it was interesting to see a few incremental changes in their live approach, including an extended cameo by Fake Palms' Michael le Riche on second guitar as well as increased backing vocal duties for Zach Bines. In the blistering set-closing Who cover, he got to play Lenny Kaye to Jasmyn Burke's Patti Smith, providing the sturdy bones of the song as Burke took to the crowd with a monologue that re-positioned the song as an anthem for her generation.

[Weaves will be performing alongside the likes of Feist and Lido Pimienta at the New Constellations Tour's closing stop in town at The Opera House, Wednesday, December 20th.]

Friday, November 3, 2017

Recording: Lido Pimienta

Artist: Lido Pimienta

Song: Fornicarte Es Un Arte

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

Lido Pimienta - Fornicarte Es Un Arte

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

Playing her first big show after claiming the Polaris Prize, the crowd seemed to be evenly split between well-wishers and curiosity-seekers. There were clearly many in the audience who had never seen Pimienta performing before, and it wasn't long before it looked like a paparazzi event, with growing clumps of people moving to the front to grab an action shot. For Pimienta, meanwhile, it was both a celebration (with her son and mother in the crowd) and business as usual, mixing humour and empathy with her innate sense of righteous justice, taking no shit and making sure her voice is heard.

[Lido Pimienta will be performing alongside the likes of Weaves and Feist as part of the New Constellations Tour, which closes out in Toronto on Wednesday, December 20th at The Opera House.]

Recording: DIANA

Artist: DIANA

Song: Confession

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

DIANA - Confession

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

Rolling a half-dozen members deep, there's a lot of moving parts to get set up quickly for this group to play a festival set. And though there were a few points where it looked like several of the members were adjusting and fixing things on the fly, their lush, layered sound cruised like a smooth oiled machine. Only backing vocalist Gary Beals wasn't on hand from when I last saw this expanded lineup, but that left more room for Ivy Mairi to dance and support Carmen Elle's vocals.

Recording: The Highest Order

Artist: The Highest Order

Song: unknown*

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

The Highest Order - unknown

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

The Highest Order came to this set with Kyle Connolly sitting in on bass and a keen appreciation of how a "festival set" should work — keeping things short and snappy, as well as hyping up the crowd with a free t-shirt contest. And meanwhile, without being didactic, vocalist/guitarist Simone Schmidt worked to raise some awareness with her words and songs — all along with the band's cosmic roots grooves.

[The Highest Order will be playing alongside S.H.I.T. and Ansley Simpson at a fundraiser for the Toronto Overdose Prevention Society on Sunday night (November 5th) at The Baby G.]

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

Recording: Phèdre

Artist: Phèdre

Songs: WTF?! [feat. Above Top Secret] + unknown* [feat. HanHan and Alanna Stuart]

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

Phèdre feat. Above Top Secret - WTF?!

Phèdre feat. HanHan and Alanna Stuart - unknown

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

With their DIY projection art, reflective foil backdrops and penchant for posse cuts, April Aliermo and Dan Lee have been pushing Phèdre in the direction of "spectacle" for a little while now, making them an ideal festival band. Perfectly placed at the day's fulcrum, they provided an energy boost for folks who had been there for a concert's worth of bands already and a jolt to those just walking in the door. They made this set a special occasion with a couple back-to-back all-star on-stage collaborations, first bringing up SunSun and Ayo Leilani (fresh from their own Witch Prophet set) to drop rhymes over a Lee Paradise (one of Lee's other noms du guerre) remix, and then upping the ante even more with HanHan and Bonjay's Alanna Stuart trading phrases back and forth.

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

Thursday, November 2, 2017

Recording: Witch Prophet

Artist: Witch Prophet

Song: Manifest

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

Witch Prophet - Manifest

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

The hustle never stops for Ayo Leilani and SunSun, so it was no surprise to see them playing an afternoon set of love vibes and cosmic ruminations on the very same day they were masterminding 88 Days of Fortune's all-night Nuit Blanche party in Nathan Phillips Square.

[The Venus Fest sessions series begins tonight (November 2nd) at the Gladstone Hotel, presenting sets from Tasseomancy and Dorothea Paas.]

Recording: Ice Cream

Artist: Ice Cream

Song: Peanut Butter

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

Ice Cream - Peanut Butter

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

Getting a second chance to hear Ice Cream's second-phase songbook, I was struck not only with the hooks and the grooves (this one sticks to the roof of your mouth like, well, y'know...) but with the duo's fed-up lyrical standpoint — they might be plastic, but they're sure as hell not empty vessels for the male gaze.

[The Venus Fest sessions series begins tonight (November 2nd) at the Gladstone Hotel, presenting sets from Tasseomancy and Dorothea Paas. Ice Cream will be opening things up at Whimm's album release party at The Baby G on Friday, November 17th.]

Recording: Queen Of Swords

Artist: Queen Of Swords

Song: Only Time Delivers

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

Queen Of Swords - Only Time Delivers

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

Taking a break from guiding the festival along, Aerin Fogel managed to sneak in a quick set from her own dark dream-pop project. With her self-titled debut album now released online, there were some further developments to the live presentation since I last saw her — most notably the inclusion of Kritty Uranowski (formerly of Patti Cake, currently with Lavender Bruisers) adding harmonies and keyboards to the songs. There were some hip-shakers in the set, but things were at their best when they hit a sort of John Hughes soundtrack slow dance vibe like on this one.

[The Venus Fest sessions series begins tonight (November 2nd) at the Gladstone Hotel, presenting sets from Tasseomancy and Dorothea Paas.]

Recording: HEX

Artist: HEX

Song: Cannibalistic

Recorded at Artscape Daniels Spectrum (Venus Fest), September 30, 2017.

HEX - Cannibalistic

The idea of a "feminist music festival" might bring to mind an earnest folkie gathering, maybe off in a forest somewhere, but this first annual event was nothing like that, using inclusive and intersectional ideals as guideposts to programming a day of wide-ranging musics. The brainchild of local musician Aerin Fogel, Venus Fest was an ambitious undertaking, presenting a dozen performances in Daniels Spectrum's spacious multi-purpose Regent Park digs. And it all came together quite wonderfully, highlighting a diverse slate of mostly local musicians and incorporating flourishes like Vanessa Rieger's live-mixed visuals. With this first festival completed, there's a new "sessions" series starting up, and lots of energy to build on the positive vibes this day released.

Running for nearly eleven hours, the day started early by rock'n'roll standards, but the first part had really strong programming. I was definitely eager to be on hand for the first set of the day to check in with HEX's howling guitars and ripping songs. Confident enough to ease in with with a slow-burner before unveiling their phosphorus-tipped fangs on this one, this got the day started with the right kind of energy.

[The Venus Fest sessions series begins tonight (November 2nd) at the Gladstone Hotel, presenting sets from Tasseomancy and Dorothea Paas. HEX will be performing at the Benefit Show for D-Beatstro on Sunday night (November 5th).]