Showing posts with label weaves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weaves. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

#mfs15 playlist: Mira Martin-Gray

MFS has turned fifteen! My introductory thoughts on this landmark can be found here, but long story short: I asked some folks from the MFS community to help me celebrate by picking some selections from the archives, and possibly sharing some thoughts or stories.

Today's list is from Mira Martin-Gray.

I met the blogger behind this venerable operation in October 2017 at a show at the gone-but-not-forgotten Dupe Shop. But I first saw Joe about ten years earlier, at one rock club or another. Rancho Relaxo? Silver Dollar Room? Surely not The Reverb? I was an underage indie rocker sporting skinny jeans and oversized glasses gigging with my high school band, and often as not, that guy was in the crowd again, messenger bag in tow. Ah, 2007. Somehow all these years later Joe and I have found ourselves in the same-but-different music scene, and again, at least as often as not, we find ourselves at the same concerts – now friends and peers.

What a pleasure to dig through the Mechanical Forest Sound archive, a delicious mixture of nostalgia and discovery. I’ve chosen to focus on older stuff. Some of my selections represent cherished memories, and some offer glimpses of moments I wish I could have witnessed.


Laura Barrett - Sorting Hat

Recorded at Rolly's Garage (Daps All-Ages & No Shame Afternoon Extravaganza), June 20, 2009.

It was June 2009, the Ossington strip was newly "happenin," and I was a couple months shy of 19. Hooded Fang’s Dan and April ran a much needed series of weekend afternoon all-ages shows, often showcasing young bands and cheap eats. I came to this particular gig to hear percussive powerhouse Pick a Piper, with whom I’d shared a bill at the PWYC Pitter Patter Festival the year before (with DAPS side project HUT, IIRC). I was also happy to hear surprise guests Spiral Beach, the ultimate art rock teen idols. But the performance that I remember most fondly was Laura Barrett’s, and it seems she was the highlight for Joe as well. Barrett’s songs were quirky, feminine, complex – just what I needed to hear as an androgynous wannabe-intellectual indie kid. Soon after, I went out and bought a kalimba at African Drums and Arts Crafts in Kensington Market, and carried it around in my messenger bag.

Weaves - unknown

Recorded at Clinton's Tavern, September 12, 2012.

I started working at the same restaurant as Jasmyn Burke about a year after this sparkling clip was recorded. She was so cool, I wasn’t, and we talked music in the dish pit. Sadly I never saw her perform as Weaves in solo project form, but later went on to catch the full band incarnation at Wavelength a few times, and proudly wore their T-shirt and pinback button. I even wrote a little blurb about their record for the dearly departed Weird Canada. Damn, they were good. They made rock cool again. But 2012 was very much the peak era of the solo loop pedal artist, and this version of Weaves is a shining example. Jasmyn’s voice just does things to you.

Les Mouches - Winter = Dead Time

Another one to file under local indie hero whose career skirts the weirder edge of things. I recently gushed about Owen’s first solo album on a podcast. Pallett’s music has been close to my heart since high school, but I hadn’t heard of this sui generis post-rock outfit until Orchid Tapes reissued their old Blocks Recording Club album. Sadly I didn’t hear about this show at the time, but based on the blog entry, it was an under the radar affair. Luckily the man with the recorder whom we all know and love was in attendance!

c_RL - [fourth piece]

Recorded at Ratio, May 8, 2015.

This is not the same c_RL show in my memory bank, but it’s close enough in the space-time continuum to stand in for it. It's a vivid memory because it was the first time I had ever seen free improv. In 2012 I was playing loop pedal-core in a guitar-drums duo. We had a gig at the Tranzac in the late slot and as we were loading in, I was lucky enough to witness Germaine Liu doing unspeakable things to a snare, shaking it like she was rousing the drum from a dream. It was almost certainly upside down at one point. I had no idea what was happening and it was wonderful. It took me several more years to rediscover the door to Narnia that is our local experimental music scene, but that was my first peek into another world.

Kyle Brenders Ensemble - Grasslands [4th mvt]

Recorded at The Tranzac's Main Hall (Somewhere There Creative Music Festival – Show 3), February 27, 2016.

I wanted to choose a recording that reveals what I was missing out on before fully cluing in to the scene. This blog affords the rare opportunity to dig into ongoing history. Some of the players in this large group are now well-known to me, others I have only heard of, and a few names are totally unfamiliar. Calling to mind Otomo Yoshihide’s New Jazz Orchestra, I love this style of electroacoustical comprovisational big band music. It would be great to hear more of this kind of thing, but goodness knows it’s not always easy to get so many talented people in one place. It takes a special combination of creative vision and organizational skills, traits that don’t always arise as a pair. Thank goodness we now have Women From Space’s Big Bang to fill the void!


You can always click on the tags below to look for more stuff from these artists. Has there been five or so songs posted here that made an impact on you? If you'd like to get in on the action and make a list, feel free to send me an email: mechanicalforestsound@gmail.com.

Monday, April 24, 2023

Monday Roundup #119

Concert announcements:

Track Could Bend #79 (feat. Mira Martin-Gray [Hen's Teeth release celebration!] / Cetacean) / Wenona Lodge 2023-05-02 (Tuesday). $pwyc. [FB event]

Tim Hecker / The Phoenix 2023-05-12 (Friday). $36.05, 19+. [FB event]

Peter Zummo Octet [Peter Zummo/Hugh Marsh/Kurt Newman/Michael Davidson/Josh Cole/Blake Howard/Phil Melanson/Sandro Perri] (Dun-Dun Trio / Masahiro Takahashi) / The Tranzac (Main Hall) 2023-05-17 (Wednesday). $22.89. [more info]

TONE Presents (feat. Michael Foster's The Ghost / Not The Wind, Not The Flag / Allison Cameron & Thom Gill) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-05-18 (Thursday – 9:00 p.m.). $15 suggested or PWYC. [FB event]

TaPIR Lab Composer in Residence Concert [new works by Nolan Hildebrand, Molly Jones, Steven Lewis, Reilly Spitzfaden. "each piece utilizes experimental computer music techniques, from computer vision and AI sound synthesis to multichannel audio processing and hardware hacking"] (feat. University of Toronto Percussion Ensemble) / Array Space 2023-05-19 (Friday). $free. [FB event]

The Titillators [That's The Night tape release!] / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-05-19 (Friday) [FB event]

Cheryl Duvall [world premiere performance of Patrick Giguère's "Intimes exubérances"] / Canadian Music Centre 2023-06-08 (Thursday). $20 general/$15 arts worker, students, seniors. [FB event]

$™ Presents: The Wrong Show (feat. Astrolope / Infinite Monotremes / JazzTobacco / Popular Narcotics / Everyone's Intestines) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-06-17 (Saturday) [FB event]


Shows this week:

PROMPT ["...a new series that is open to anyone who is interested in learning to improvise in a group setting. Participants take a card before each session with a prompt, to guide their process. These prompts are written out by the established musicians who have helped build (and continue to maintain) the improvised music scene at The Tranzac."] / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-04-25 (Tuesday – early!)

Nick Fraser Presents (feat. Mark Godfrey Quintet [Mark Godfrey/Allison Au/Matt Woroshyl/Chris Pruden/Nick Fraser]) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-04-25 (Tuesday)

Tim Posgate & Andrew Downing / Sellers & Newel 2023-04-27 (Thursday). Minimum donation $20. [more info]

Ox (Fembots / Kyle Stephens) / The Baby G 2023-04-27 (Thursday). $18.35, 19+. [FB event]

Karen Ng presents (feat. Lina Allemano/Ryan Driver/Nick Fraser/Karen Ng) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-04-27 (Thursday). $10/PWYC.

New Music Concerts: Misceo – Between Folklore and Creation [works by Luciano Berio, Melody McKiver, Georges Aperghis, Iannis Xenakis, and Ana Sokolovic] (feat. Duo AIRS and Marina Thibeault) / Longboat Hall 2023-04-27 (Thursday). $33.90. [more info]

U.S. Girls (Jane Inc.) / Velvet Underground 2023-04-27 & 28 (Thursday & Friday). $34.31. [FB event]

Exit Points 37 (feat. Jerome Moone/Chiquitamagic/Hiro/Erin Corbett/Piers Oolvai / Morgan-Paige/Zoma Tochi/Steven Noronha/Michael Palumbo / "switchemups") / Array Space 2023-04-28 (Friday). $20. [FB event]

Parade [single release!] [Karen Miranda Augustine/Laura Swankey/Chris Pruden/Stefan Hegerat] / Tibet Street Records 2023-04-28 (Friday). $20 or PWYC. [FB event]

All-Set! Presents (feat. Marilyn Lerner) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-04-28 (Friday – early!)

The Ryan Driver Sextet / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-04-28 (Friday)

Cosmic Homeostasis XIX / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-04-30 (Sunday – 2:30 p.m.). $pwyc. [FB event]

Sundays in April Residency (feat. Eucalyptus) / Hirut Cafe and Restaurant 2023-04-30 (Sunday). Suggested $15 per person.


It happened this week...

  • ...on April 24, 2014 at The Tranzac – Southern Cross Lounge (Joe's Birthday Party).

Not The Wind, Not The Flag - For Joe, Part I

  • ...on April 26, 2014 at CineCycle.

Weaves - Candy

[Do remember that you can click on the tags below to go back and find the original posts (and often, more stuff) from these artists.]

Monday, January 9, 2023

Monday Roundup #104

Concert announcements:

Lula Music & Arts with Batuki Music Society present: Calefaction (feat. Butterfly Band / Lady Yetunde [album launch!]) / Lula Lounge 2023-01-18 (Wednesday). $free to $49.56 [FB event]

Drew Smith & Friends (Troglos) / The Dakota Tavern 2021-01-19 (Thursday) [FB event]

Daniel Barnes Quartet [Daniel Barnes/Brodie West/Stacy McGregor/Marc Zubek] / Hirut Café 2023-01-21 (Saturday). $15

Exit Points #34 (feat. Victor O/Jaz Tsui/Fuzzy/Colin Clark / Joyce To/Chibuzr/Raquel Skilich/Aidan McConnell/Michael Palumbo / “Switchemups”) / Array Space 2023-01-27 (Friday). $20. [FB event]

Burn Down The Capital & Nick Fraser Present (feat. Jessica Pavone & Tristan Kasten Krause / Lina Allemano Four / Jelly Ear) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-01-31 (Tuesday). $12 / pwyc. [FB event]

Batuki Music Society presents (feat. Naxx Bitota) / Alliance Française 2021-02-04 (Saturday). $20.11 / $17.99 (Students & Seniors). [FB event]


Shows this week:

Machaut Ballads / (feat. Jelly Ear [Cory Harper-Latkovich/Allison Cameron/Sara Constant/Kurt Newman]) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-01-09 (Monday) [FB event]

Dun-Dun Land Night 3 (feat. Dun-Dun Man / Nick Flanagan / Catholic Wilt) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-01-10 (Tuesday – early!)

Donna Lee Quintet with Marilyn Lerner [Brodie West/Josh Cole/Nick Fraser/Evan Cartwright/Marilyn Lerner] / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-01-11 (Wednesday – early!)

Cosmic Country for Communists (feat. The Hell Drivers [Kurt Newman/Andrew Furlong/Jake Oelrichs] / Nick Flanagan) / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-01-12 (Thursday). $pwyc.

Audiopollination (feat. Mike Barber/Daisy Betlej/Tegan Dietsch Kousha Nakhaei/Owen Kurtz / Jamie Eriksen/Adrian Russouw/Bri Clarke / Kimberly Ivany/Katheryn Merriam) / Arraymusic 2023-01-13 (Friday). $10 or PWYC. [FB event]

Brodie West/Josh Cole/Phil Melanson/Andrew Zukerman / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-01-13 (Friday). $PWYC, suggested $10. [FB event]

Class of 2023 (feat. Cinder / Bonnie Trash / Not A Band / Motorists) / Monarch Tavern 2023-01-13 (Friday). $17.50, 19+. [FB event]

Thunder Glove (The Great Octopus / Banananananana / Esther Splett) / Handlebar 2023-01-14 (Saturday). $pwyc. [FB event]

AGUE [Michael Peter Olsen / Laura C. Bates / Julia Seager Scott / Charles Spearin] / The Tranzac (Southern Cross Lounge) 2023-01-14 (Saturday). $pwyw.


It happened this week...

  • ...on January 10, 2014 at The Great Hall (Long Winter: Year 2, Volume 3).

Weaves - Take a Dip

  • ...on January 14, 2014 at Array Space (Audiopollination #14.1).

Michael Keith and cheryl o - [excerpt from first piece]

[Do remember that you can click on the tags below to go back and find the original posts (and often, more stuff) from these artists.]

Sunday, November 5, 2017

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.]

Saturday, April 16, 2016

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: One More

Recorded at Toronto Reference Library (Make Some Noise 10th Anniversary), April 9, 2016.

Weaves - One More

Collecting and showcasing music by local, independent musicians, Make Some Noise has celebrated the shared spaces of the city's libraries with free, all-ages concerts for nearly a decade now. (I have rather fond memories of seeing Shad, The Old Soul, Great Lake Swimmers, Elliott Brood and LAL at the Reference Library at one of the series' launch shows back in November '06.) For this birthday party, the Make Some Noise crew teamed up with Buzz Records to bring some music to the warmly rounded contours of the library's cavernous atrium.

The crowd took in Twist's opening set fanned out across the wide arc of the atrium's floor as if they were enjoying a casual day in the park, but it only took a word of suggestion from Jasmyn Burke to get them on their feel and pressing in as Weaves got going. Just back in town from some time on the road, the band were telepathically tight and it felt like a real treat to see 'em at just this moment, poised for something on the cusp of their first full-length's release. That's gonna take the band away from T.O. for a good stretch of time, so it felt nice to see 'em lurching on their home turf before the rest of the world claims them.

Friday, January 22, 2016

Recording: Strands

Artist: Strands

Song: Go Look Out*

Recorded at The Great Hall's Conversation Room (Long Winter 4.3), January 16, 2016.

Strands - Go Look Out

With recent solo excursions now gelled into a new hair-related concept, Jasmyn Burke's side-project has emerged as a full-on DIY multimedia experience, with her onstage star power boosted by some awesome old-school overhead projector visuals from Rosalie H. Maheux.

* Thanks to Jasmyn for passing along the title to this one.

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Recording: Basmyn Jurke

Artist: Basmyn Jurke

Song: unknown*

Recorded at Dundas Video (Track Could Bend #6), September 1, 2015.

Basmyn Jurke - unknown

When Jasmyn Burke started performing as Weaves — before Weaves was even a band — she played a few sets just on her own, with guitar and vocal loop pedal. Recently this slightly-mysteriously named Basmyn Jurke has appeared at a few low-key gigs, doing just the same thing, looping her emotions while testing out some new songs and sonic techniques.

[The next Track Could Bend will be at Dundas Video on Tuesday, October 6th.]

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

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Six years/Six pack: Ian Chai

MFS has turned six! My introductory thoughts on this landmark can be found here, but long story short: I asked some folks to pick some of their favourites to help me celebrate.

Today's list is from Ian Chai, the organizational force/grim taskmaster behind Buzz Records.


I promised myself that these selections wouldn't be an incestuous circle jerk: I failed spectacularly, but it wasn't for lack of effort.

As I worked my way through the voluminous pages of MFS, I was truly struck by how many amazing and formative moments I had shared with Joe. And as the years have passed, I've come to consider him not so much a friend, but rather a plausible alibi for my whereabouts.

Here's to 6 years and many more, Mr. Strutt!

ANAMAI - 50% Pizza

While it’s difficult to ignore the jackass yammering before the song begins, dude was right about one thing: this became a single.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Odonis Odonis - Blood Feast

An oldie but a goodie – you're listening to the live debut of their new sound rig at our Krampus party. It was so loud that at least 5 beer bottles vibrated off the merch table and onto my lap.

The Beverleys - Bre's House

We literally signed the band a couple days before this show, annoying many who thought they'd be attending the release party for their EP.

Hussy - Tarter Mouth

Remember when HSY was Hussy? And the song was called Tarter, not Tartar, Mouth? And Jude sang the tune? And Anna and Kat weren't in the band? Jude's going to be mad I posted this one.

Hut - On Parole

In many ways, this set was ground zero for my start in the music industry – so many feels – ask me about it sometime.

Weaves - Take a Dip

The Long Winter started taking fire code/capacity regulations seriously after this one – rager.


You can always click on the tags below to look for more stuff from these artists. Has there been a half-dozen songs posted here that made an impact on you? If you'd like to get in on the action and make a list, feel free to send me an email: mechanicalforestsound@gmail.com.

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Birds and Bees

Recorded at Artscape Gibraltar Point (WL 614: "Wavelength Island Show"), September 7, 2014.

Weaves - Birds and Bees

A fine day out on the island brought one last burst of that summer feelin' — and a reminder of times gone by. There was the formal announcement that Wavelength would be returning to the island for a full-fledged festival next summer, but the here-and-now was well-served by the bands on hand. Weaves was a definite highlight of the day, clicking on all cylinders performance-wise and sounding particularly on their game — and the newer tunes like this one are really integrated into the set by now. (A special nod should also be given to sound tech Dwayne Slack, who made AGP's backyard sound better than most clubs.)

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Closer

Recorded at SummerWorks – Lower Ossington Theatre Mainspace ("Weaves Through Time"), August 10, 2014.

Weaves - Closer

Full review to follow. Weaves' shows have been building up in spectacle and theatricality, so it was rather exciting to see things kicked up to the next level for this SummerWorks event, thanks to work by choreographer Allison Cummings and set designer Hanna Puley. With flower-creatures dangling from the ceiling, the environment suggested an earthy fecundity, while the strands extending from Jasmyn Burke's luminescent hoop-dress were like the hands of a giant timepiece — a biological clock, if you will, the stands getting just as entwined and wrapped up in each other as they do in our own lives. The accompanying dancers' motions suggested death and rebirth and by the end, the audience was called down from the stands to mix in freely with them.

Musically, the night was equally impressive, with the band mixing in even more new material than we've been hearing at recent shows. Guitarist Morgan Waters impressed as always, pulling out funky squawk-bursts that often doubled Burke's vocals. Perhaps appropriate to the environs, this felt like the birth — or the blooming — of something very vital. (And for those who like to track the growth of our local artists through time, this was a wonderful chance to compare how much things have changed since the previous time Burke played this very same room at SummerWorks, four years ago.)

[N.B.: Weaves will be playing Wavelength's free Island Show, this Sunday (Sept. 7th) at Artscape Gibraltar Point.]

Bonus! Here's some video footage to give you a sense of what was going on here beyond the musical element:

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Preview: SummerWorks 2014

SummerWorks Performance Festival

August 7-17, 2014

Over the past few years, the Music Series at the SummerWorks Festival has truly come into its own. Instead of just offering a band on a stage, the series' specialty has become its curation of unique events, pairing musicians and artists from other disciplines to create memorable one-off events.

This year's Music Series is curated by the fine folks at Silent Shout, who have their fingers on the city's electronic pulse. It's no surprise, then, that all the Music Series shows are recommended. Here's what's coming, with some selections from my live archives to give you a hint as to what you might hear from these musicians.

  • Brendan Canning / Brendan Healy: One Night, Two Brendans
    Broken Social Scene's Brendan Canning isn't resting on his laurels; instead of just playing nostalgia festivals he's also been exploring new directions in chill. Teaming up with Buddies in Bad Times' Brendan Healy, this night promises a "psychedelic dreamscape... and spectacular video art".
    Listen! Brendan Canning - unknown
    [Friday August 8, 9:00 PM @ The Theatre Centre Main]

  • Army Girls / Cara Spooner: Failure Fest
    Anyone wondering why Army Girls haven't released more of the songs from their repertoire now has a partial answer: the band recorded a full album, but were unsatisfied with the results and ultimately scrapped it. Meditating on artistic failure (and, just perhaps, the opportunity to find gems in the trash heap) Carmen Elle and Andy Smith are going to revisit that album, with Cara Spooner creating "performative disruptions with/on/for them". Omhouse and some other will be joining in as well.
    Listen! Army Girls - unknown
    [Saturday August 9, 9:00 PM @ S--------- Studio Theatre]

  • Weaves / Allison Cummings: Weaves Through Time
    Given that Weaves' Jasmyn Burke has been transforming into one of the city's most dynamic and theatrical frontwomen, this is a nifty bit of programming. Expect somethig dramatic to happen, even if it's not on stage (the venue "will be ransformed into a multi-level space where the bands' live music will be performed with no divide between Weaves, three dancers and their audience.") Choreographer Allison Cummings and set designer Hanna Puley join forces with the band's exploration of being situated in time.
    Listen! Weaves - Know About It
    [Sunday August 10, 9:00 PM @ Lower Ossington Theatre]

  • Lido Pimienta / Natasha Greenblatt: The Secret Garden of Lido Pimienta
    Lido Pimienta delivers her electronic experimentalism with a golden voice and a no-bullshit stance that speaks truth to power. It remains to be seen if her garden (an immersive installation by Natasha Greenblatt with artwork by Gustavo Cerquera Benjumea) is a place of peaceful repose or a survivalist's den of bared fang and claw.
    Listen! Lido Pimienta - Goodbye
    [Wednesday August 13, 9:00 PM @ Lower Ossington Theatre]

  • The Bicycles / Maggie MacDonald / Amy Seigel: Young Drones: A Graphic Novel Rock Opera
    It's intriguing to think of these projects as living, growing things. Young Drones — a fantastic tale of a pair of oilpatch-guarding aerial drones that become self-aware and fall in love — made its debut at the festival last year, and after a Long Winter re-mount, it returns in a more polished form with a multi-night run. That's excellent news, as Amy Siegel's "live performance animation" is just fantastic, and the music includes some of the band's best material yet. Even better, word is that the album version of the songs will be for sale at these shows!
    Listen! The Bicycles - Requiem
    [Thursday August 14, 9:00 PM; Friday August 15,9:00 PM; Saturday August 16, 9:00 PM; Sunday August 17, 4:00 PM @ Lower Ossington Theatre]

  • Light Fires / Adam Lazarus: Do I Have To Do Everything My Fucking Self?
    Ever since showing up under mysterious circumstances, Regina The Gentlelady has been burning up local stages as the high-kicking voice of electro-pop darlings Light Fires. Now, she's sharing her wit and wisdom in a one-woman cabaret that's sure to end with the audience members feeling just a little drrrty — and maybe having learned some lessons in feeling sassy and fabulous. Not to be missed.
    Listen! Light Fires - I Like To Work
    [Thursday August 14,10:00 PM; Friday August 15,10:00 PM; Saturday August 16, 10:00 PM @ Lower Ossington Theatre Cabaret]

[Music Series shows are $15, and available through the online box office and at Soundscapes. $10 tickets for those for 25 and under will be sold, subject to availability, five minutes before doors]


The Music Series is a huge opportunity for bands to re-approach and recontextualize their art — having time, expertise and other resources at hand to do something different is a real luxury. It's also a chance for music fans to encounter new kinds of art and broaden their horizons a little. And in that vein, it's definitely worth taking the plunge into the rest of the Festival. My m.o. is simply to pick a timeslot to commit to the festival and then just go see something new! — which is feasible when performances are a reasonable $15 (or less with various package options). Go see something that'll surprise you! That said, you can also have a gander through the listings for the various offerings on-stage and off. Plus, there were a few other things that caught my eye:

  • This Is Our Last Song: A conversation featuring Jonny Dovercourt, Brendan Canning, Jasmyn Burke, Allison Cummings, Silent Shout
    A sort of adjunct to the music series, this free talk looks at the walls that separate musical and theatrical performance. (For the curious, there are also several over talks in the Conversations series.)
    [Friday, August 15, 2 PM @ Theatre Centre Café/Bar]

  • Maracatu You!
    Aline Morales played the Music series a couple years ago, scintillating with her seductive Brazilian pop. This is a different take on the culture, "the story of how an Afro-Brazilian tradition functions in our city today as a celebration of liberation in the face of oppression." Expect that celebration to be rather boisterous — "Warning: Loud Percussion," offers the program guide in what might be an additional selling point for some.

  • The Water Thief
    Amy Seigel, who's helping re-mount The Bicycles' Young Drones also has a hand in this "haunting fable set in an abandoned East Coast town", which employs "film, performance, live music, shadow puppetry and dance". The music component is under the guidance of Snowblink's Daniela Gesundheit and includes a few other noteworthy locals as well (Alex Samaras, Cheryl Okrant and Evan Cartwright).

  • Common Fate
    I'm not entirely sure what's on offer at this entry in the "Live Art" series, which promises "dance, live music and animated projections" in a "a dream-like performance round". But it's overseen by local artist Zeesy Powers and includes an all-star music crew, including Isla Craig and Brodie West under the direction of Andrew Zukerman.

  • Fathers & Sons: Kamino Family
    I've encountered dancer Benjamin Kamino as a member of Sook-Yin Lee's ensemble LLVK, and here he's attempting a marathon, dancing for six hours straight while his father and brother stage complementary art-interventions around him. A Pay-What-You-Want, drop-in/hang out/come back later event that questions time, space and family ties.

  • Flowchart
    This "series of small-scale multidisciplinary performances" continues from an earlier iteration overseen by dance artist Amelia Ehrhardt. Mixing artforms, this is a great step into the world of dance for anyone curious about the form. [I don't know much about dance myself, so I asked Amelia some questions. Keep an eye out tomorrow for our conversation.]

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Currente calamo: NXNE 2014 (Saturday)

NXNE 2014 (Saturday, June 21, 2014)

While these shows are fresh in my mind I want to get some quick notes down. In the fullness of time there might be a more complete accounting of the night that'll include more details and additional recordings.

From the department of I'm-getting-too-old-for-this-shit, I made a conscious decision to shift my NXNE plans to more of a start early/end early schedule. There were a couple appealing daytime Saturday options, but this Buzz Records day party was an easy pick for me. Buzz Records is getting some, er, buzz for the way their bands mix sweet pop hooks and abrasive noise, but this show served to remind that their interest in the latter isn't merely superficial. This was foregrounded by making the day a two-stage affair, with "rock" bands on the Great Hall's main stage alternating with noisier fare in the Conversation Room.

12:45 p.m.: New Positions @ The Great Hall (Conversation Room)

I arrived in time to catch New Positions — or at least theoretically I did, save for the fact that the security guards on duty were enforcing (with somewhat unnecessary zeal) a no external food policy, so me and my breakfast poutine had to pause in our sloppy embrace before I could duck in to catch Neil Rankin (also of Gay) and C. Jude (also of HSY) chugging out some sludge-noise. A very thin crowd at this point consisted mostly of people from other bands — but fortunately they were spared the sight of poutine.

1:10 p.m.: Mexican Slang @ The Great Hall (main stage)

Moving into the main hall, Mexican Slang played to a handful of folks now straggling in. Despite struggling with the NXNE backline — singer Annabelle Lee was unhappy with the tone of the rented amp and a kickdrum pedal died a couple songs in — the band was in fine form, showing off their tasty concentrated grunge-rock tunes. [Inside the Velvet Castle, the first full-band effort after Lee's initial salvo of solo EP's, is now imminently available.]

1:40 p.m.: Ancient Ocean @ The Great Hall (Conversation Room)

Back outside the Conversation Room, a small crowd gathered to chat as an undifferentiated drone seeped out from inside. Once it changed enough that I realized someone was playing, I wandered in to find one man with a guitar, playing as his analog synth burbled in the background. This was Brooklyn's John Bohannon, who plays as Ancient Ocean, and was the day's biggest discovery. As unrushed as his project name would indicate, Bohannon let his pieces unfurl in the musical equivalent of geological time. Many of the people that were willing to attune themselves to this were soon sitting on the floor, soaking it in. There were shades here of our own local Khôra, although this was somewhat less rigorously structured. Really lovely stuff.

Listen to an excerpt from this set here.

2:10 p.m.: Weaves @ The Great Hall (main stage)

There was a healthy crowd now on hand to check out Weaves, fresh off opening at Massey Hall and getting a lot of attention at the festival. Showing off their flexibility, they started with a languorous take on "Crumble" before they, too, experienced some technical difficulties in the form of a broken bass string. Once they were revved up, however, they demonstrated both their musical nimbleness and the sense of off-kilter joy they generate playing live. There was even a brand new song ("Birds and Bees") with some nice crunchy bite to it. As vocalist Jasmyn Burke shouted "fire it up!" to lead off closing song "Motorcycle", it felt like this was, indeed a powerful machine.

2:50 p.m.: STÜKA @ The Great Hall (back of main hall)

While that set was proceeding, there was some action behind the crowd as the second "stage" was shifted from the Conversation Room to the back of the Main Hall. Given there was a fairly minimal setup (plus the fact that as an all-ages event the bar was closed) made this work, and it served to put the "pop" and "noise" even closer together. Electronic noise duo STÜKA made things in the room less comfortable with some hard shards of distorted synthbursts, unintelligible vocals and feedback. (The latter was provided, at one point, by mic-ing what looked like an old milk can.) Deliberately non-tuneful, this was like a shot of espresso in the middle of the day's proceedings — wake the fuck up and pay attention! [You can sample some of the band's sounds on their bandcamp.]

Listen to an excerpt from this set here.

3:20 p.m.: HSY @ The Great Hall (main stage)

Vocalist/guitarists C. Jude and Anna Mayberry would both be playing the smaller stage with their other projects on this day, but they had a respectable crowd on hand as their main project HSY took the main stage. The sound was a bit off as they started — all thudding drumpad and static-y vox — but once that was reined in the band's proper dissonance took centre stage. Not unwilling to let song structure slide into a sludgy pit, the band can also reel off a catchy number (like the singalong-worthy "Slimeball") when they want. Given the random festival gear/backline variance this wasn't the band at their sonic best, but performance-wise, it was quite right.

4 p.m.: Huren @ The Great Hall (back of main hall)

At the back of the room, yellow police tape was strung from the PA monitors to the mic stand, but even without that, the crowd instinctively gave Huren some room. Huren is the longstanding solo electronic project of Toronto-via-Hamilton's David Foster, and is noteworthy as being the musical antipode of the more famous pop-kitsch producer/Mitt Romney fundraiser of the same name.

Foster performed with the sense of someone that is one hundred per cent committed to what they're doing, which is somewhat disarming in these times. In that regard, the performer that he brought most to mind was Corpusse — so full-on into it that at first it seems over the top, but then you realize that the performer is not fucking around. Topically, with his madhouse outbursts and polymorphous perversity, Man Made Hill also came to mind.

Foster was so into what he was doing that he almost pulled the plug after a couple songs, convinced that the sound system wasn't loud enough — although in the end he pressed on. I thought this was totally fantastic, even though much of the crowd seemed unsure how to react. When Foster pulled something out if his bag and rolled it down the floor, the audience peeled away as if it were a bomb. At the song's end I leaned in, only to discover it was a can of cat food. This was one of the high points of the day.

Listen to a song from this set here.

4:40 p.m.: Perfect Pussy @ The Great Hall (main stage)

As that finished, the room suddenly filled up, nearly to capacity. Ah, here was festival buzz in action, as the crowds were out to check out the much-discussed Perfect Pussy in person. The band had something of a rep — including a divisive Horseshoe gig the night before — for being something of an on-stage disaster, better known for the spectacle unfolding in their wake than their music.

With that in mind, this set was remarkable for (if perhaps all the less distinguishable for) it basic technical competence. There would be no instrument-breaking sulk-offs here, just a brisk set of quick punk/noise ditties. Though fairly vital, that made the band less distinct from whichever noisy grrlcore band you might want to name — that's not to say they're uninteresting so much as to note their fairly meteoric rise might overstate where they are in developing their own sound. There were some interesting textures from synth player Shaun Sutkus and vocalist Meredith Graves (in an incongruously sunny brightly-striped summer dress) was a charismatic frontwoman, often doubled over and looking like an olympic swimmer quivering and ready to dive into the pool to attempt to break a speed record. The set ended with most of the band breaking down their gear and departing while Sutkus pumped out noise drones and Graves sat on the stage floor to put her shoes back on.

5:10 p.m.: ANAMAI @ The Great Hall (back of main hall)

That instant full house melted away almost as quickly as it had showed up, which was a real shame as they missed another of the day's best sets with HSY's Anna Mayberry returning with her ANAMAI project at the back of the room. Playing electric guitar and backed by synth player David Psutka (who recorded her excellent EP), I should have realized something was up beforehand when I saw him passing a cable up to the main stage's sound tech on the balcony. When I heard a synth tone behind me, I momentarily thought it was the next band soundchecking before I realized that Pstutka had fed his gear through the room's main PA, giving the set a wonderfully weird and immersive quadraphonic sound.

The crowd that did stick around was quiet (and, in quick order, mostly sitting on the floor) as Mayberry unfurled her folksongs, including a few of her best ("50% Pizza", "Dirt") that are as-yet-unreleased in recorded form. An excellent set and there's clearly more wonderful things on the horizon for this project.

Listen to a song from this set here.

5:45 p.m.: Frankie Cosmos @ The Great Hall (main stage)

I had no idea who was up next on the main stage, as Frankie Cosmos were a late addition to the bill. On asking around, one factoid that I gleaned was that the band was fronted by Greta Kline, daughter of Kevin Kline and Phoebe Cates. That admittedly set the bar low, as I was expecting something of a celebutante vanity project. The band quickly deflated any such preconceptions by knocking off a series of jaunty naive-pop songs. (On further investigation, the band is definitely no casual project, with a huge amount of music up on their bandcamp.) Light and breezy, this is the sort of stuff that can be easily rendered joyless and sterile if pushed toward popchart perfection — but as a slightly-shambly group leaping through two-minute bursts on stage, it was quite satisfying.

6:05 p.m.: Black Walls @ The Great Hall (back of main hall)

Black Walls works in exactly the opposite fashion, at its best when given patient time to unfurl under Ken Reaume's careful musical ministrations. Given a shortened set-time with the showcase winding down, Reaume looked a bit less than satisfied at having to trim down his setlist, but still managed to preserve the graceful architecture of his compositions — drawing equally from metal, folk and ambient spheres. After a full day's listening, I was quite satisfied to lay back on the floor and look up at the ceiling and just let his music unfold. A good comedown for a well-programmed day.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Buttercup + Candy

Recorded at CineCycle, April 26, 2014.

Weaves - Buttercup

Weaves - Candy

Full review to follow. When you're in the middle of it all, you don't always notice a band's constant transformation as much, but when you step back — when they put out an album, say — it's sometimes really striking how much growth there has been. Kudos, then, to Jasmyn Burke who has raised her game in so many areas, matching songwriting innovations with a captivating emergence as a frontwoman. This packed-in night at a boiling hot CineCycle felt like a joyful culmination of the past months — and even hinted that there's more to come, debuting some new songs and thickening their sound with the addition of Bram Gielen on keybs for a few songs.

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Know About It

Recorded at Adelaide Hall ("Wavelength FOURTEEN" – Night 2), February 14, 2014.

Weaves - Know About It

You can read my notes for this show here.

Currente calamo: Wavelength FOURTEEN Festival (Night 2)

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 mised 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 2 — Friday, February 14, 2014

Adelaide Hall — feat. DIANA / Odonis Odonis / Weaves / Most People / MATROX

The Venue & the vibe: With The Great Hall still in a bit of a holding pattern, Wavelength followed the exodus of shows down to the club district to the new-ish Adelaide Hall. I'd been here once before and didn't love the space, but was trying to reserve judgment. But, all things told, it's just not for me. While the sound was good, there was something about the space that just made me feel uncomfortable. Set on two levels, a balcony overlooks the stage, giving a choice of viewing areas. But if you don't get a spot on the railing, the upper level is mostly wasted space. The lower level feels a bit claustrophobic and while there's good views from in front of the stage, it's less ideal to the sides — leading to a big crush of bodies in the central area.

I also got the sense that this space was out to serve someone else's culture. I suspected I was going to get gouged at the bar, but I figured I'd splurge on a glass of wine. When the bartender handed me a plastic cup filled about a third of the way and asked for nine bucks, I was a bit agog:

Me: Wow! That's quite expensive!

Bartender: [bragging rather than regretful] It's a concert venue! Everything's expensive!

Also putting a bit of a damper on the night was the fact that headliner Marnie Stern was caught in a storm and couldn't fly into town. But with Most People quickly added to the bill and the other bands bumped up, it was still a solid show — Wavelength shall prevail over adversity.

The show:

After some technical difficulties, visiting robots MATROX got the night started. There's something about Robo-Gamma (or is that Robo-Beta?)'s bulging froglike eyes that always brings a smile to my face, and as they continue to try and establish communication with Earth's populace (through the media both of saxophone solos and TTC announcements) I sometimes think that maybe it was all for the best that the conquering killbots of the Destructica Overlord Committee sent them to refuge amongst us.

Listen to a song from this set here.

Electro/bedroom pop duo Most People have a sunny vibe that's perfect under summer skies, but even if they were pressed into service at the last moment, they still had some tricks up their sleeve to make them appropriate for winter listening. The clincher in that department was one of the new songs that they closed their set with, its chilly sound reportedly inspired by the opening theme to The Terminator. It may be the best thing that the band has yet done. Sterling work on short notice.

Listen to a song from this set here.

Returning to the night's scheduled programming, the word that Weaves would be performing without drummer Spencer Cole gave some cause for concern, but armed with a drum machine, the band made the most of it, turning in a wholly unique set. Several of the songs were slowed down quite considerably — "Hulahoop" was a lurching zombie skank, for example — but that gave vocalist Jasmyn Burke more space to stretch out her voice. With the quirks and masks she's been employing lately, Burke has made giant steps forward in her stage deportment since her RatTail days, but here she didn't need any props to totally captivate the crowd. The more confined rhythmic structures kept guitarist Morgan Waters a bit more reined-in than he's been lately, but these re-versions were still quite intriguing.

Listen to a track from this set here.

The crowd was now feeling rather packed-in, giving me a slightly claustrophobic, paranoid feeling that wasn't entirely inappropriate to go along with Odonis Odonis. Though we've been hearing some of the songs for quite awhile, the release of the long-awaited Hard Boiled,Soft Boiled is finally upon us, and the trio ripped into the songs in a cold frenzy even though drummer Jarod Gibson explained that every song was going to be a love song (well, there are many kinds of love, I guess). The first thing I had thought upon arriving at Adelaide Hall was that it looks like it's served some time as an underground pit-fighting club, and as the crowd started roiling to OO's tunes, I looked up at the balcony to see if grim dystopian overlords were placing bets on who would be the last audience member standing after some sort of death-disco/deathmatch mêlée. But so far as I know, there were no casualties.

Listen to a song from this set here.

After that, it was as if a switch had flipped somewhere, and suddenly the room was filled with a swaying love-in for DIANA. And, rather than priming the crowd for a new album as Odonis' set had done, this felt much more like a victory lap for the huge success the band had found with last year's Born Again. Like old friends coming back from a trip abroad, the band was sorta just hanging out and sorta showing off a bit — but that just made some little slips (like, oh, a missed bridge that brought a song to a momentary halt) feel like casual laughs. Vocalist Carmen Elle tested the crowd's tolerance for Valentine's Day vibes, and despite a lot of jokingly jeering sentiment against it, she still made the set feel like a big ol' Valentine to Wavelength.

Listen to a song from this set here.

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

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Take a Dip

Recorded at The Great Hall (Long Winter: Year 2, Volume 3), January 10, 2013.

Weaves - Take a Dip

Full review to follow. With jam-packed rooms and three stages going at once at a few points, there's just no way you can see everything at a Long Winter any more. You just have to sorta dive in and see where the current takes you.

Playing to a sardine-packed Conversation Room, Weaves blasted and rumbled the crowd with their wriggly popsongs, each received like an old hit. "It's, like, noise-soul!" shouted the dude behind me to his friend.

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Recording: Weaves

Artist: Weaves

Song: Crumble*

Recorded at Daniels Spectrum ("Wavelength 570: The Regent Park Courtyard Session"), July 26, 2013.

Weaves - Crumble

Full review to follow. Wavelength is at its best when it takes its shows to new places and broadens the audience's musical perceptions. Both of those were in play at this outdoor show in the beautiful new courtyard behind Regent Park's Daniels Spectrum. That made it a good night for the "Wavelength crowd" to head to a spot that's off the regular show-going grid and for the locals to wander through and find some music in their backyard. Hopefully there'll be more chances to return to this vital new cultural hub.

Jasmyn Burke and co. are settling into their artfully-bent grooves — like an elastic band, they can go from stretched out to wobbly right in before your eyes, rocking a groove at either extreme. The warbling noises at the start of this one come from Burke "playing" her microphone like an instrument, generating feedback warbles by fluttering it in front of the PA as she paced around the front of the crowd.

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