Wednesday, November 7, 2007

J-School

No posts for a while? Well, school is crazy. The hard-working class of 2008 is doing an internet news project for the Saskatchewan election.

Check it out here for news, commentary, context and up-to-the-minute results:

www.jschool.ca

Thanks,

Jeanette

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Regina-Time


Hi All,

As some of you may be aware, I've relocated to the Queen City to finish the rest of my journalism degree. I'd like to continue the sounds, but most of them will be in Regina from now on.

And because of the craziness of school, posts may become even further apart and way less "professional", but I'd like to continue my little stories about music.

So, without further ado... I announce: "Saskatchewan!Sounds"

Um... oh the exclamation mark? No barbs at million-dollar ad campaigns in that title.

Keep reading,

- J

The Canmore Hotel






















































Here are some next-morning photos from the Canmore Hotel. Pictured are members of The Grass and some band photos of everyone. The Grass were great to play and hang out with. Derek the sound dude (third picture in) was both a good sound dude and a willing photographer.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Tour Wrap





































Holy crap, it's done already and I'm home... home? in Regina, listening to Neil Young in a coffee shop and wondering what just happened to me. All I know is that I wish I was still on the road, somewhere between Calgary and Victoria, singing funny little songs and scribbling in my notebook.

After Victoria we headed east, across the ferry and to Edmonton. In between Edmonton and Victoria was a night of camping in the mountains, crazy amounts of road construction and twisted pavement snaking through the mountains. What the prairie navigators didn't realize was that the amount of ground covered in the mountains is roughly half that covered driving flat out across the prairie. Still, it was beautiful, and aside from occasionally jangling nerves we emerged in the flatlands unscathed.

Edmonton was a good show. In between gourmet Buddhist vegetarian cuisine and bubble tea, we played a fun set in this really cool art-space with a band called Aurora and a talented dude named Eamon McGrath.

The the next night was the ultimate tour wrap-up — an old-school party at the Canmore Hotel with equally old-school band The Grass. By old-school I mean getting slightly liquored up, playing the tambourine so hard I bruised my leg and possibly getting turfed from the bar. All in a night's work.

Check out all the photos for more concrete details on the happenings.

-J

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Hiding Out in Victoria





































While the rock stars played board games on the ferry to Victoria, I took the chance to take some tourist photos. Check them out.

We're currently camped out at the Fury and the Mouse house, awaiting a final practice of the superband. Tonight we play (I think I get to play the whole show) at Lucky Bar in downtown Victoria. Come one, come all!

Van-city, Day Two














Day Two in Vancouver was lots of fun. Went for breakfast with some People for Audio, some All Purpose Voltage Heroes, some People Versus as well as a little Ladyhawk.

Then it was a day spent with Shena, who works at Mint Records in Vancouver. Attempts to visit craft stores and button stores were thwarted, but we did visit a knitting store and The Foundation, which is an awesome vegetarian restaurant on Main Street.

The show Sunday night was at Little Mountain Studios, an art gallery/studio space/DVD rental store. The band let me play mini piano for the whole acoustic set, and it went really well. Didn't stick around for the groups after, but heard To Bad Catholics and the Greenbelt Collective were good. Olivia from FanShaw played a solo set, and she was incredible. She also plays with The Choir Practice. Her great lyrics and beautiful voice need to be heard by more people.

Van-city, Day One










































The band played three shows in Vancouver. The first was at a fantastic deck party hosted by Joy and Jacob from the band The People Versus.

It was a great afternoon of music on a roof deck overlooking Commercial Drive. A couple of my favourites were the the bands e.s.l. and Johnny Wakeham and Featherwolf. e.s.l.'s singer Marta has a really cool voice. She also plays with the band girl nobody, who have a new album coming out on Jericho Beach this September.

After the deck party Slow Down played a set at Hokos, a cool little venue/sushi/karaoke bar. I played the mini piano for a couple songs. The owner filmed a lot of the show and posted it on YouTube (click the link). The All Purpose Voltage Heroes also played an extremely energetic set, while dressed in construction outfits and making boxes. Check them out, they really rock. Ryan Walter Wagner rounded out the night with an acoustic solo set.

Monday, September 3, 2007

Oh, Alberta


























Here are some photos from the first leg of the journey. We left Saskatoon Friday around noon, and arrived in Calgary just in time for some bacon wrapped corn at The Palomino, where the band played. They played a good set, up next to local acts Summer Abney and Drunken Public Love. I sold several CD's, and one of the guys pictured in the fan club photo paid me five bucks to watch his sweater. I'm glad to have made a contribution.

Then it was back in the van for an overnight drive. Patrick handled the worst of the driving, and then Ryan drove all morning until we got to Merritt. The fourth photo was taken just as the sun was coming up in the Rockies. It was a beautiful drive.

Slow Down, Molasses: ON TOUR


WHERE: West Coast
WHEN: Aug. 31-Sept.9

www.myspace.com/slowdownmolasses


Hi Mom,

I'm in Vancouver, on tour with this band. We are all alive and having a great time. Internet use is too scarce, but perhaps photos and more posts will follow!

-Jeanette

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Field Festival

Field was... well, it was last weekend already.

Because of the monsoon-like conditions I left my camera locked in the trunk of a car for the entire weekend. So, no pictures from this event, but a few thoughts.

Interesting:

1) Lily's On Mars.

This band came out of nowhere. This group makes the strangest music, but that's what makes them incredibly interesting. Five word description? Punk Rock Albertan Gypsy Music. Girl-wonder Duck sang in Cree, Spanish and French, and singer Dusty Ross counterbalanced with his strange 1950s movie-star style. Combined with hula hoop performance, it's clear they do whatever they want to. It's on the verge of working seamlessly.

2) Emaline Delapaix and the Delistocracy.

Who is she? What does she do? I have no idea, but she did sing some ABBA. Didn't really get the crowd going, but she has a very pretty voice.

3) Birds are Dinosaurs.

Not content to be crazy with just a horn section alone, this Regina octet has an oboe. Trippy, transcendental or whatever they were going for. Late at night in a grove of trees, it worked.

Tried and True:

Also saw some good local acts who are always fun to watch and/or heckle. Paul Kuzbik is now a trio, and a good-sounding one. Featuring former Despitado members, Regina lads Geronimo are doing some good things. Saw the Deep Dark Woods play a ramblin', old-time rockin' set, and Volcanoless in Canada destroyed a box of macaroni.

Oh, and The Weakerthans were there. They played some new songs, which were nice, and some old songs, which were nice to sing along to. John K. Samson is cute.

Field Festival has some promise. In bridging the distance between the province's two largest cities, it definitely has the potential to be a truly Saskatchewan festival. If they continue to think about showcasing local acts, along with bringing in a few solid headliners, there is room for this event to grow in the next few years. Kudos to the organizers for making an attempt, and to the community of Craik for getting into it as well, letting a couple hundred people trample all over their nice little regional park.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Field Music Festival









Field Music Festival is this weekend. The weather network is predicting cold, I'm bringing a toque and mitts, and I'll dance to keep warm.
With two stages going all night and camping it should be fun if the cold doesn't get us down.
The line-up this year is pretty impressive. The festival had a number of applicants from as far away as England, but they've kept the focus mainly on artists from the Prairies. While it might have something to do with cost, it's also acting as a way for local artists to get some exposure up next to The Weakerthans, who in their first Saskatchewan show in a long time, are likely to bring a sizeable crowd.
Check out this article for more about the band.
Check out this link for more about Field Festival.

Line Up

Friday:
MAIN STAGE
4:00-5:00 PM Joelle Fuller Band
5:30-6:30 PM The Nancy Ray-guns
7:00-7:30 PM Emaline Delapaix & The Delistocracy
8:30-9:30 PM Volcanoless in Canada
10:00-11:00 PM IBO & Kindread
11:30-12:30 AM DEF 3
1:00-2:00 AM Grand Analog
SECOND STAGE
4:45-5:45 PM TBA
6:15-7:15 PM John Fettes
7:45-8:45 PM Birds are Dinosaurs
9:15-10:15 PM Tribal Vibes
10:45-11:45 PM Bunnyhug
12:15-1:30 AM DJ Neon
1:45-300 AM The Gaff
3:15-4:30 Record Playing Grant
DAY 1 ENDS

Saturday:
MAIN STAGE
1:30-2:30 PM The Deep Dark Woods
3:00-4:00 PM Paul Kuzbik
4:30-5:30 PM Arms Up
6:00-7:00 PM The Wheatmonkeys
7:30-8:30 PM The Rebellion
9:00-10:00 PM Geronimo
10:30-11:30 PM The Weakerthans
SECOND STAGE
2:15-3:15 PM Lily's On Mars
3:45-4:45 PM John Powers
5:15-6:15 PM Li'l Andy
6:45-7:45 PM Slowdown Molasses
8:15-9:15 PM These Hands
9:45-10:45 PM Adverse Vital Signs
12:00-1:30 AM Square Sound Round Body
1:30-300 AM Hard Toe
3:00-4:30 Mikhail
DAY 2 ENDS

Immaculate Machine

WHO: Immaculate Machine
WHERE: Amigo's
WHEN: Aug. 16

I've been listening to Immaculate Machine's Fables albums since slightly before it came out this June (just had to assert my street cred).

Sometimes it really helps to get to know songs really well before shows, which is admittedly something I don't always do. I liked that the Victoria-based trio mixed up their old ones with the new, although the new really did seem fresher, sparklier, and strangely more youthful.

I would have loved to hear Kathryn Calder (who does some time with The New Pornographers) sing more ballads from the new album. I was waiting for the Regina line — "I've never been so glad to see Regina before" — in the song Northeastern Wind, but I think I may have missed it. Her voice is such a treasure, so quiet and unassuming, yet enchanting and incredibly nuanced. At times fellow vocalist and guitarist Brooke Gallupe's voice overpowered hers, as he puts a lot more push behind it, but some of the best moments vocally were when the pair listened carefully to each other in their harmonies.

Immaculate Machine did play C'mon Sea Legs, which was redemption for me. I didn't realize it but that song has infected my brain on several occasions, and served as a rallying cry for any scary thing I've had to do during the past few months.

The group is just about done their summer tour behind the album, then according to drummer Luke Kozlowski, the hard-working band is travelling up and down the west coast, then over to the east coast, then perhaps overseas in the new year. It might be all work and no play, but the unmistakable joy I detected on Kozlowski's face as they locked tightly into their up-tempo songs shows that it's worth it. And it was worth it for me, so they should know their hard work isn't wasted on these ears. Cheers.

Pictures coming soon.

Spiral Beach

WHO: Spiral Beach
WHERE: Amigo's
WHEN: Aug. 16/07

Spiral Beach blew my mind.

"How old are these guys?" I heard from audience members over and over.

What I was focused intently on was their aesthetic. They decorated the stage with rope lights and pylons before the show. They had a sign with their names on it up behind them, just in case we couldn't remember who they are. Their merch table was illuminated, with a shining, rotating disco ball and black light glowing on the prices for their stuff.

The skinny foursome is travelling around the country on their own, like a rag-tag band of orphans, societal misfits, Oliver Twists. Two of them are brothers, their parents are folk singers. On one hand I feel like someone should just take them in for the evening and mother this Toronto-based foursome, but on the other hand it takes astounding gumption and maturity to hit the road as a Toronto-based indie-band when you are just barely old enough to buy cigarettes.

It's not their first tour either. Definitely more is to be expected from these young, ambitious upstarts, with their keyboard based pop. They put so much energy into the show, and creating not just a perfunctory performance, but actually trying to entertain their audience.

I was too transfixed to take pictures, which is unfortunate, because their frizzed hair and matching outfits added greatly to the neon horror-movie vibe. So cool.

Check out their myspace: www.myspace.com/spiralbeach

Monday, August 13, 2007

Regina Folk Fest









WHEN: Last weekend.
WHERE: Regina
WHAT: Photos. Because I'm slightly lacking in verbosity these days.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

REGINA FOLK FEST

WHO: Dallas Green (City and Colour)
WHERE: The Legion, Regina
WHEN: Aug. 10

Dallas Green played a show at the Legion after the Folk Fest got rained out by a torrential downpour that basically came out of nowhere.
I was bar tending, but he sounded pretty good to me, and the place was fairly packed. I love his music, and his voice. Managed to sing along to Coming Home in between popping beer cans and rye and cokes. I wish I could have paid more attention to Mr. Green, but such is life. I'm sure he would have liked to not have played the Legion instead of the Folk Fest stage, but kudos to being a good sport anyways, I guess. Those that did focus on the show were not impressed with his lack of stage banter and what-not, but I liked what I heard.

Friday, August 10, 2007

REGINA FOLK FEST

WHO: Sarah Slean
WHEN: 7 p.m.

I made it for half of her show. She's amazing. (said with breathless voice)
Dressed in a floaty fuschia dress, she looked like she might drift away as she unleashed her powerfully enchanting voice. From breathy vixen to French chanteuse, she drifted between moods and sounds. Her best stuff was her new material - particularly a song written while alone in Paris, and her all-out finale. I'm not sure what it was called. Her piano playing is also incredible although went unnoticed as I stood rapt in her voice.

WHO: LOS DE ABAJO
WHEN: 8 p.m.
Like a Mexican mariache band with a taste of heavy metal. This show was unexpected. It always seems to be the bands don't expect to be good that are. This was a dance party and a half, culminating in a conga line.

WHO: The Hylozoists
WHEN: 9:30 p.m. (ish)

Xylophone fever. Or actually "vibraphone." Like a symphonic dreamscape with no lyrics. Drifting. This would be much better... on weed.

WHO: Buck 65
WHEN: 10 p.m. (ish)

Between trying to figure out where to go for volunteering and taking a few photos (all of which will appear soon) I didn't get to see much of this show, to my great disappointment. He's a great, theatrical performer with a serious appreciation for formative hip hop music. A little bit funny for an East-Coast Canadian dude, but hey, that's the beauty of the unexpected. I will try hard to see him again at some point in my life. Which might be hard, because I believe he now lives in Europe, where I'm sure he's huge.

Corb Lund


WHO: Corb Lund
WHERE: Saskatoon Exhibition
WHEN: Aug. 9/07

Corb Lund is an artist who I think deserves a ton of respect. The crowd at this show ranged from Amigo's goers to legitimate cowboys. It was a great performance, and although I left to write this review — I am very excited to hear what he has to say on his new album, and to see how many CCMA awards he picks up this year in Regina.

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Blackie and the Rodeo Kings

WHO: Black and the Rodeo Kings
WHERE: Broadway Theatre
WHEN: Aug. 8/07

So many shows, so few days. Read this review here to get a sense of what this show was like. Perhaps I'll write more later.

Nickelback


WHO: Nickelback
WHERE: The Saskatoon Exhibition
WHEN: Aug. 7/07

I went to the Nickelback show. Read my approximation of it here.

From what I can tell, Chad Kroeger really, really wants people to like him.

* photo by Gord Waldner/The StarPhoenix

Arms Up

























WHO: Arms Up
WHERE: Amigo's
WHEN: Aug. 4/07

After winning Louis' Battle of the Band, Saskatoon band makes CD, gives it away for free at CD Release party. Lots of harmonies. Lead singer reading from The Life of Pii while wearing a cape. This band is evolving and finding itself. Perhaps in time for Pop Montreal, where they will play this October.

Friday, August 3, 2007

Jiminy

WHO: Jiminy
WHERE: Lydia's
WHEN: Aug. 2/07

Jiminy is a new band on the scene, a funk-ska-plus turntables fusion that instantly brings to mind thoughts of other funk-band-in-town The Huxtabulls.

First performing at open-mic a couple months ago, the group went straight to headlining a show, albeit the open-mic-champion night at Lydia's. How they became open mic champions is unclear. The band members didn't know.

Either way, the bar was packed. The first evening of Fringe helped to draw the crowd, plus the sizeable number of friends the band members have.

Notably missing was jazz guitarist Andrew Dickson who played with the group in their first performance. Notables were Enver Hampton on guitar and Kayleigh Smith on keys. Other than that... If I were a grade-school teacher I'd write, "needs improvement" or some other perfunctory keep-trying type of remark. Oh wait. I just did. Seriously though, there is a lot of potential here, but that's the beauty of open mic.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

All Hail the Duffster


WHO: Hilary Duff
WHERE: Credit Union Centre
WHEN: July 30/07

Hilary Duff is evolving. I swear. Her show last night was so much good clean fun it almost hurt. It's likely I was the only person there who wasn't either in high school or younger, or towing a five-year-old.

I left a little early to write this review. However, my sister ensured me that things didn't get much more salacious after I left.

While the Disney treatment was good, I feel optimistic in thinking Hilary Duff may have room to grow with her career. The bottom line for me is that she doesn't have to perform (she's super rich) and yet she does, and sings hard even for crowds that aren't sold out. For now, she gets the benefit of the doubt.

Monday, July 30, 2007

The Buttless Chaps


WHO: The Buttless Chaps
WHERE: Amigo's
WHEN: July 28/07

The Buttless Chaps are a good band who make the kind of music that I dream about making at night. Luckily I avoided the fan club treatment, although I really liked their work.

What happened onstage seemed more like play. At times it became a keyboard party, with three people playing keys while Dave Gowans sang, everyone in the band smiling at each other like they were in on some secret we'd never understand.

Gowan's guitar and countrified vocals (I love his deep voice) blended in such an odd but delightful way with all the electronic quirkiness.

"Neil Young Trans," said a friend. The reason I qoute anonymous friends is that everyone has such good insight on the musical experience. Mostly more than me because I always overthink things.

So at risk of doing so, I will say that the vocoder duet with Ida (of Great Aunt Ida) was tentative and delightful and seemed like so much fun, and the set flew by in far shorter amounts of time than Friday-night shows usually do.

Luckily I was able to acquire both recent CDs and some Buttless Chapstick, so along with filling my ears with memories of the Buttless Chaps, I can also rub them all over my lips. Clever marketing.

Friday, July 27, 2007

Welcome to the Carbon Dating Show

WHO: soso/Maybe Smith/Carbon Dating Service
WHERE: Amigo's Cantina
WHEN: July 26/07

So many smiles. So much dancing. Or at least that was the show I saw.

Hip hop artist soso warmed up the crowd, playing only three songs. By the end the crowd was bobbing along. His music is minimal accompanied by his turntable and electronic devices and Maybe Smith on guitar. The rumour flying around is that soso’s new album will drop in November, and word on the street is that it is going to be amazing. For those who don't know, he's kind of a big deal. Soso has a Japanese tour coming up, as well as an October appearance at Pop Montreal in the beginning of October.
I’d like to offer up this nugget as a review: “I like this a lot more than I thought I would,” said friend with big smile on her face.
For me, it was great to see him live. Soso’s chill beats have an occasional home in my CD player (occasional is a compliment nowadays) and I think despite a little hesitation off the top, he put on a performance that ensured I'll go back for another.

By the time Maybe Smith took the stage the crowd was warm. Very warm. Actually they were hot and sweaty in the late July heat. Although the sound from the back wasn’t as good as usual (perhaps due to larger than usual crowd and louder than usual volume), at the front and centre it sounded quite good. Maybe Smith ripped through what seemed like a short set, including all the hits — Bloody Nose receiving the biggest sing-a-long. The songs are hits because people were singing along and dancing wildly, cheering and clapping. Well practiced after the cross-Canada tour, the band was greeted warmly by an enthused hometown crowd. The highlight was when someone brought a package of sparklers and fired them up mid-song. It was magical.

You’ve been served.

Perhaps we should talk about what’s happened to the Carbon Dating Service lately, if it isn’t already known. Given the royal love-up by CBC Radio 3, Carbon Dating Service was toured around Canada, featured on the r3 website, music blogs such as i (heart) music, and according to rumour sold out shows in eastern Canada.

The CDS (I'd like to think I'm cool enough to abbreviate them) was the headlining act, hosting an official CD Release party for their new album Polyentendrii. With so many band members it seems inevitable things will seem scattered at times, but the horn section worked tightly in tandem with each other and the group definitely got a groove on. Dressed in matching t-shirts reading "Support the Synchrotron Awareness Tour, Sponsor a Beam Line," jeans and ball caps, the loose uniform was interesting if not a little blah. Perhaps this band should go Polyphonic Spree pre-Fragile Army and get some robes. That would be cool, although probably a little warm for summer. At press/bed time, CDS had just played an evening-making cover of Space Hog’s In The Meantime. I doubt this song could have pleased anyone else like it pleased me. With fiddle player Toby Bond stepping up to sing rather poorly whilst dressed in a shiny sexy-nurse costume, and a horn section reinforcing the “ooooh, ooooh, oooh, oooh, oooh, ooooh” chorus, it was bliss. And yes, I loved that song in high school. Thanks CDS, you made my night and gave me many fond memories for the future.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Nathan













WHO: Nathan
WHEN: July 19/07
WHERE: House Concert

This post should probably be titled "how not to ruin a good experience by giving a band the fan-club treatment after they play."

The reason for this is that I saw Nathan play a particularly special and intimate show on the rooftop patio of a local singer-songwriter who holds house concerts in her home.

It was a magical experience — the band bantering back and forth, telling stories of how they met and smiling adoringly at each other. The chemistry between singer Keri Latimer and singer/banjo/accordion player Shelley Marshall is smoldering.













Apparently — so the story they told goes — the two met when they were both dating a trucker named Nathan. Who knows if it's true, but it's a good story all the same.

They rolled through songs from their past three albums (the band debuted their first album in 2001), trading instruments and bringing out the Wurlitzer.

With their aching alt-country sound I feel like the captured the loneliness of growing up in a small town and being a little bit different from anyone else. They even have a song called Trans Am.

Nathan could have done anything and I would have loved it, but unfortunately (fortunately for me, not for them) they chose to play the song Gasoline, which is one of my favourite songs right now. This choice resulted in my grinning maniacally at them from where I was standing and then mobbing them after the show so I could buy their new album and then get signatures. It was too much really.

However, whether or not they enjoyed the enthusiasm from someone who is usually more composed around music-people, they did create a life-long follower with this performance.

Dear Nathan: I will always love you. Signed: Superfan.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

The Tragically Hip



















WHO: The Tragically Hip
WHERE: Bessborough Gardens
WHEN: July 18/07

Yes. I was there and completed a life goal by seeing this band.

I particularly enjoy this review of the show, although it is quite the love-up. I left wishing I'd seen the band ten years ago, when they were raw and full of testosterone, knowing they still had to prove it to people. Still, despite his many road miles and enough fans to never need to try again Downey moved around the stage like an electric jellyfish, loose and full of energy. Guitarist Rob Baker also proved his chops on a particularly emotional steel solo on Wheat Kings, his long hair hanging in front of his face.

Overall, I'm so glad I had the good fortune to be there. The Hip's music has so much complexity, and although I love them in rock-show format, I also have a not-so-secret dream to hear Gord Downie perform an intimate acoustic set that lets his beautifully poetic lyrics take precedence. But that's just me. Rock on.

Photo is by Gord Waldner/The Star Phoenix, www.canada.com

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Quiet on the Home Front

My blog is neglected, my brain is full of musical things. My personal computer is dying and it hates the blogger.com site. However, I'm going to be welcoming a new computer into my life shortly, and my publication schedule will become regular, photos will be featured on most posts, and the universe will realign itself.

Here's what I've been up to for the past few days:

- We Were Lovers. I happened to have the good timing to catch their first show ever while I was in Regina last Friday. And what a show it was. Although Elsa Gebremichael and her frequent companion S.J. Kardash can be seen performing with several local bands (including From Chimpan-A to Chimpan-Z, and The Blood Lines) this band is Gebremichael's, a chance to showcase her music, great voice and good looks. Dressed in a ruffled black velvet dress, she dazzled under the red lights above O'Hanlon's small stage. There were a lot of instrumental and not enough vocals (just a consequence of the sound system I believe) and the band seemed pretty tight, especially for a first show. All my friends kept talking about how good it was afterwards, and how beautiful she was. I'm not one to focus on superficial things, but I think it's very important to note. There was a lot of dancing, a little too much booze, I can't remember their song titles, but I'm hoping to see them again before the summer ends.

- Alphababy. Nice guys, good show and someone handed me a tambourine, effectively making me part of the music (or so I'd like to think). To avoid conflict of interest, I'm not going to write anything else. Check out their myspace.

- Craven Country Jamboree. Yes, Craven happened. Musically amazing, emotionally draining. I'd like to post more, and probably will. Or I'll write a book about it.

- Big and Rich, Cowboy Troy, Two-Foot Fred. Gretchen Wilson. The Muzik Mafia. An insane party, it was almost impossible to contain my excitement about this show. Their shtick is so preposterous but their charisma (and John Rich's raw talent) make it work. Big Kenny is a rock star. Plain and simple. This duo deserves respect. They sing about Saving Horses and Riding Cowboys, and then Big Kenny launches into a plea to end genocide in Darfur. Not in that order, but by the time his manifesto began they had me engrossed. Still, I'm afraid most people were far too drunk to catch any of it. I literally have 1/3 of a notebook full of notes about this show. It was wild. Hopefully I'll expand them into something eventually. Or you could just ask me to talk about it to you for about an hour. Who wants to talk about Big and Rich for an hour? Come on people.

- Carrie Underwood. She can sing. She can really sing. And she's gorgeous. I only caught a portion of this show, and from my lackluster vantage point, I couldn't really analyze it, but I think there is a reason for all those Grammy awards.

- Stars. Their new album is available from iTunes although it doesn't come out in physical form until Sept. 25. It's undergoing something of an analysis right now. I'm not sure if it can top Set Yourself on Fire, as the album was all I listened to for umm.. approximately two years. And that's not really an exaggeration.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Meligrove Band

WHO: Meligrove Band
WHERE: Amigo's
WHEN: July 10/07

I find it hard to write about things I like instinctively. The easier it is to dance to, the harder it is to write about.

This band has played together for eight or so years, and sounds like it. They are in-sync with each other and starting to sound quite polished. It felt like one of the tightest band's I've seen at a club show in a long while. And they rocked in an indie-rock way, while still being poppy, which is pleasing to both boys and girls alike.

For the most mainstream comparison I can dredge up, lead singer Jason Nunes's voice has a tinge of similarity to Ben Kowalewicz of Billy Talent, minus any screaming back-ups from other band members (funny... both bands come from Mississauga). Not content to just be a good singer who puts a great deal of intensity into his vocals, Nunes can also handle the keyboards like a classically trained pianist, and play a mean guitar too. Oh, and all the other members can sing — in harmony with each other at that.

Meligrove Band is starting to get noticed. The press is picking up on the Toronto-based group. Still, they stay extremely accessible on and off stage. Their banter between each other on stage suggested a local-band type camaraderie with the crowd. Maybe it was the three days they spent playing Nintendo in Saskatoon prior to the show, but this article suggests otherwise.

They are a great band, and they must know how good they are, yet they don't find it necessary to craft a wall around themselves that other groups sometimes do.

Listen, listen, listen and then maybe someday you can be one of those people who can say "I liked Meligrove Band when..."

http://www.myspace.com/meligroveband

I'd also like to note that scheduled openers Novillero have disappeared. No one seems to know where they are or why they couldn't make it. It was disappointing, but local dude Will Robbins (usually with Pearson) stepped in to fill the bill, playing among other songs, a nice but weird cover of Outkast's Hey Ya.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Watch This

Mostly because I love this Joel Plaskett song, and the video they've created looks nothing like the Lindsay Lohan-esque Young Hollywood treatment I saw playing in my head every time I listened to it. Darn it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKDgkcx9ric&NR=1

Monday, July 9, 2007

They Shoot Horses, Don't They?

WHO: They Shoot Horses, Don't They? + Shapes and Sizes
WHERE: Amigo's
WHEN: July 8/07

There is nothing so humbling as seeing something you can't understand and having much more musically astute new friends unravel it for you.

"As if Wolf Parade kidnapped a polka band," said Rich.

"Think of it like a death machine coming to kill you," said Ryan.

"Are you serious?" I say. He nods. "Did you make that up yourself?" I ask. He nods again.

And the wheels began to turn. With closed eyes. Seeing the giant monstrous machine- constructed out of the awkwardly juxtaposed sounds clashing and stomping together.

Menacing horn lines. A tuba. The audience grabbing noise makers from a germy jumbled bag of items on the floor and using them to construct blunt and awkward sounds. Everyone driving towards inevitable doom, picking at the edges of something strange and very weird, with lead singer Josh's little boy baby babble patching it all together. This wasn’t really music the ear could easily grab and hold onto. No melodies, no easy to find beats. But obviously They Shoot Horses, Don't They? has a band of believers, a sparse and devoted crowd including three people who drove up from Regina for the Sunday night show. At the same time, it wasn't fun. It wasn't comfortable or easy to understand.

Will this show provoke further listening as I stare down a copy of their CD on my desk? Perhaps. But it was some music, a moment, a death parade, a circus in a bag.

Openers Shapes and Sizes were almost as equally odd. A former Victoria band supplanted to Montreal to join the compendium of boy/girl vocalist groups with a poppy synth sound, although they seem to be skirting something outside of those conventions. The strongest moments came when their drummer used a beat you could feel underneath the meandering art project going on over top.

The group didn't seem like they truly wanted to be there (they announced it was their last stop on the tour with They Shoot Horses, Don't They?). What was intriguing about the group was female vocalist Caila Thompson-Hannant's voice, which she alternately pushed and held back, letting it wander up freely into her higher register. Definitely interesting and will prompt future listening so I can learn how to understand whatever it was they were trying to create but didn't quite reach.

Sunday, July 8, 2007

Damo Suzuki



WHO: Damo Suzuki
WHERE: Amigo's
WHEN: July 7/07
(photos by Maja Montgomery)

I was so intensely focused on the energy the musicians created in this performance that my shoulders knotted themselves up and I spent most of the show in pain.

After the show everyone in the audience looked bewildered over what they had just experienced. The musicians walked off stage not understanding what just happened. Not sure how they had created such a complex vortex of sound, orchestrated by Suzuki, hands clenched tightly around the microphone - channeling energy into it like it was a matter of life or death. Me left wondering how to dissect it. I don't think I can.

Suzuki's democratization of music - travelling around the world and playing improvised gigs with local musicians in each place - is an intensely important project. Surely it was empowering for the musicians to understand that they could create that kind of sound. Because his caliber of talent forced them to play towards that, to strive harder and drive towards the creation of such a finely pointed transfer of energy between the audience and the musicians. It was, in a sense, returning the music to the people. Suzuki deconstructed the idea of a "band" and broke down any of the rock poser musical pretention surrounding music, focusing on the creation of an experience specific to that place or time. As he describes it, the musicians are "sound carriers" and he was focused on creating a communication in sound with the audience and the players.

After the show everyone kept asking "do you think they could have done it on their own?" Yes, but they need to understand how to focus on the music the way Suzuki does, breaking down their own walls and simply working towards the communication of sound together.

For more on Damo Suzuki's Network, check out: http://www.damosuzuki.de/

Friday, July 6, 2007

Pride Tiger and Golden Smoke

WHO: Pride Tiger w/ Golden Smoke
WHEN: July 5/07
WHERE: Amigo's

It happened. Good show. Update soon.

Mr. Something Something

WHO: Mr. Something Something
WHERE: Lydia's
WHEN: July 5/07

Caught the tail end of this group's Lydia's show. I like this band. I have a song by them on my myspace. They have great energy. Lead singer Johan Hultqvist is intensely focused on stage, his eyes set on the creation of music. I've been told he drinks sleepy-time tea before shows and feeds off the energy of the crowd.

They are a band who tours. A lot. I first saw them at the Junos only a couple months ago. They grab the crowd with their ability to make you dance, but their music carries a message.

Check out http://www.mrsomethingsomething.com/ for more.

Elliott Brood
























WHO: Elliott Brood
WHERE: Amigo's
WHEN: July 4/07
(www.myspace.com/elliottbrood)

This is a band whose eccentricities make them interesting.

A kick drum made of a suitcase, a banjo, a painting of Chief Joseph on the back of a guitar and a set of Roland PK-5 pedals (a take on the Moog Pedal, which the Rock Snob's Dictionary describes as a "squelching old school synthesizer" invented in 1965 and favoured by Beck).

But don't ask them to analyze themselves.

"It's just the way we do it," said Mark Sasso, lead singer, banjo player and guitarist.

The Ontario-based group started out as a twosome in 2002 but later added a drummer. Their lack of bass and a three-piece simplicity adds a raucous old-time country element to their sound.

The show itself was fantastic fun and the dance floor far too small. In the long set they showcased their own unique songwriting and sound (which at times drew comparisons by my friends to everyone from Modest Mouse to the best of the country old-timers ), and an encore of rocking countrified covers of Neil Young, Johnny Cash and the White Stripe's Hotel Yorba.

Any band true enough to their roots to write Saskatchewan into one of their songs — Oh, Alberta — gets my respect. By the crowd clustered around the trio after the show it's apparent that their style is drawing a solid following and will continue to do so for some time to come. Tour on Elliott Brood.

For more great music, check out their label Weewerk Records. Elliott Brood are label-mates with the Great Lake Swimmers and United Steel Workers of Montreal, two more great bands doing exciting alt-country things.

Thursday, July 5, 2007

Emm Gryner


WHO: Emm Gryner
WHERE: Lydia's
WHEN: June 30/07

Emm Gryner is unfortunately not as much of an anomaly in Canadian music as she should be. An accomplished musician who runs her own Canadian record label (Dead Daisy Records), has toured with David Bowie and The Cranberries, and who plays a mean Thin Lizzy cover, Gryner should be selling clubs much larger than Lydia's.

But luckily for the audience, we were able to see her up close at this show. Gryner has a rock star exterior, a hardened skin over her heart. Her own songs were beautiful, and I wished she played more of them — Black Winged Bird stood out — but she can also do covers. At one point she accompanied herself solely on bass guitar for a Thin Lizzy cover. It was strange to see someone do this, but oddly fitting, as the low notes provided a solid accompaniment that didn't compete with her amazing voice.

She then ripped through a full set of covers of old Irish songs, covers of '80s rock, and a few of her own gems. The appreciative audience begged for more and she closed off with a cover of Pour Some Sugar on Me. I wish we could have experienced more of her intensely personal stuff, but regardless, Gryner was great to see.

For more context on Gryner's accomplishments,check out this article, which appeared in The Star Phoenix before her show.

Kirby Criddle


WHO: Kirby Criddle
WHERE: Lydia's
WHEN: June 30/07
(photo from www.myspace.com/kccmusic)

The Emm Gryner show also showcased local talent Kirby Criddle, who is quietly making sweet, sincere music out of her Saskatoon home.

"i like to write songs, record them once on my kitchen countertop, and then put them on the internet. be gentle, it's my soul you're sinking your teeth into," she pens on her myspace page.

She doesn't have to worry. That soul exposed is what could warm any critic's heart. The way she laid bare the stories behind her song endeared the audience so much you could literally see them turning their rapt attention onto this picturesque pixie sitting up on the stage with her acoustic guitar.

As long as Criddle keeps that purity and honesty in her music, she'll do alright.

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Becoming a Music Snob

Just a random thought. I've been viewing my transformation into a music-snob with a sort of birds-eye view, if that makes sense. As in, I can see myself becoming a music-snob because I always hated all those things music snobs said.

For example: Feist is too commercial. I liked her when I saw her at ... yadda yadda this club.

But the reason — and I realized this when I was listening to the new Velvet Revolver CD and fantasizing that I could see them play at Bud's on Broadway, all squished up on the dance floor — is that they are so accessible at the small clubs.

Because when the White Stripes played the bowling alley, there was a lot of "oh my god this is the White Stripes," but it was also a chance to see the band. I mean really connect with them and understand what they were doing on an intimate level. To see the interplay between Jack and Meg White that you can never see at the big show, even if you are three feet away in the orchestra pit.

So when stupid rock-snob verbosity starts spewing from my mouth, just asks me to justify it, because I usually can.

White Stripes x 2













WHO: The White Stripes
WHERE: Eastview Bowl, Saskatoon and TCU Place, Saskatoon
WHEN: Surprise Show @ 3 p.m. July 1/07
Concert @ 7:30 p.m. July 1/07

It's a little hard to find extra words for this experience.

Check out the article I wrote for The Star Phoenix.

For the night's performance, check out this colourful and contextual review penned by former colleague and Chart writer Dan McRae. His words rank higher than anything my musically-fatigued brain can pull together at this very moment. Cheers.



Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Bengough, Saskatchewan?

http://www.gatewayfestival.ca/

This caught my attention because of the proximity to my hometown. I kept noticing all these interesting acts were booked to play in Bengough, of all places. A town, near but not dear (grr... rival towns) to my heart.

So after I noticed Jeff Healey, and my friend Tyler Lewis, and then Elliott Brood, and the Cracker Cats were all playing the same weekend in Bengough, I got curious and decided to research.

By doing that I found out that, super but "not-so-rocking" band from Regina, power-pop quartet The Polymaths are also going to play.

Looks like I have no good reason not to go home for a weekend. Three cheers for Bengough, and whoever is behind this small-town-SK upstart festival. Hip-hip-hootenanny!

Monday, July 2, 2007

Ndidi Onukwulu


WHO: Ndidi Onukwulu
WHERE: Bessborough Gardens
WHEN: June 30/07
(photo from www.ndidi.ca)

This was one of those shows where I really regretted not bringing my camera. Ndidi Onukwulu was fierce. With a demure ruffled black dress cinched at the waist by a fiery red belt, lips painted the same shade to match and tattoos winding up her legs, Onukwulu displayed the passion inside of her in appearance alone. One part a lady and equal parts fire and musical fervor, this woman can sing the blues, and work a crowd.
"I used to be in a relationship with someone who would leave me at home all alone. So to get back at him, I wrote a song about him," she told the crowd. Almost all her songs had stories attached — a musician outside the New York City projects she lived in for a while who just played to make people feel better, and a song she wrote for the children of the world suffering in wartime. "Our children are our future," she said to some appreciative clapping and cheers from the audience.
Her narratives weren't just sob stories either. You could really feel the acute way she perceived the pain in the world and used her music to try and make it better.
At the end of the show she asked for a cordless microphone, got down off the stage and moved through the crowd, bringing everyone in the gardens to their feet for her last song, dancing with any audience member who wouldn't stand.
Her guitar player Madagascar Slim (a three-time Juno Award winner) also deserves a mention. At first I was impressed by the way he built a whole song with just his guitar alone, but he later revealed to the crowd he was using digital looping. Regardless, he was able to fully accompany Onukwulu with his guitar alone, provide a full, rich sound and have time to let loose with some solid blues riffs.

C'mon and The Get Down



















WHO: C'mon, with The Get Down
WHERE: Amigo's
WHEN: June 28/07

The perfect counterbalance to the concert I saw earlier in the evening, C'mon played a fiery set with The Get Down out of Edmonton opening for them. (I missed The Split Lips)

The show made my face feel like I had a slight case of wind burn. When The Get Down played, I literally stepped up to the stage and felt the wall of sound daring me to come closer.

Good rock is not about musicianship. Okay, well musicianship elevates good rock to astronomical levels, but good rock, the decent kind that gets you revving, is about the loudness. Good rock is about stepping up to the wall of sound and daring it to break your eardrums. The rush comes from slowly tearing your eardrums to pieces as you bask in the guitar solo raining down on top of you.

And that was the first band I saw.

Before C'mon got to the stage there was a good buzz in the room full of rock fans waiting to watch C'mon's bass player Katie Lynn Campbell, who has also played with Nashville Pussy.

What happened when she got onstage – and the show kicked ass really, it was epic – was that she proceeded to rock, take something like eighteen shots, and display a smoldering chemistry with guitar player and singer Ian Blurton . Their partnership (they are together offstage too) was so captivating that I didn’t even hear the drumming until nearly the fifth or sixth song. Which is, in my opinion, the sign of an amazing drummer. You don’t know they are there until isolated on the stage, a deft –tap-tap-tap- on the high hat, as the wall of sound moves backwards for a few moments. All this good, pure but distorted noise came from only three people. They played into the crowd, literally climbing into it. At one point,Campbell played her bass guitar in the middle of the audience, writhing on a table while we all stared in awe of her. Then she handed her bass off to an audience member so she could go to the bathroom but leave the band playing, an admission that she knew everyone in this room could at least play the bass guitar. We’ve all tried to rock that hard and failed. But they respected us for that, and so we respected them. Especially when a crazed Blurton started smashing his guitar into his already-trashed amp. This band really plays their instruments, to the point where almost all their gear looks like it's spent time in a war zone.

Come’on deserves a much more rock sounding name. But, that indie-rock name (and inclusion on the Exclaim! summer sampler) got me to that show, and so whatever flag they have to fly under they should keep flying it. Because they rock. Hard.