Archive for July, 2010

What To Pack For Osheaga

July 29th, 2010 | By: Melody Lau

Not exactly what I had in mind when I said sun protection...

For those throwing clothes across their room right now, searching for the perfect outfit to wear to this weekend’s Osheaga festivities in Montreal, PAUSE. Read this list of essentials to bring with you, it should help you with your packing list. That perfect outfit though? Well that’s still your responsibility, go ahead and continue throwing clothes around. My room’s not looking so hot either…

1) How much do you love your hearing?
I mention this every time, folks. No matter where you are, indoors or out, you need to protect those ears of yours. BRING EARPLUGS. Forgot them? Swing by a drug store and pick up a pack.

2) The sun is not your friend. I repeat, NOT.
Sunburns are not fun. So to prevent yourself from looking like a lobster don’t forget to bring sunscreen and a hat.

3) CFF – Concert Friends Forever!
Let’s face it – it’s not fun going to a show alone let alone a festival. So make sure you have at least one buddy there with you at all times to prevent lonely crying sessions in the bush.

4) Say cheese!
Cameras – no, not the fancy ones that will get confiscated by security. Anything from a small digital camera to cheap disposable ones will do. Just so you can document all the great bands and maybe your friend who forgot to bring sunscreen and actually ends up looking like a lobster. I guarantee you there will be at least one person in your group who will forget.

5) Umbrella
No matter what the Weather Network says. Mother Nature is not kind.

  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Black Mountain @ The Horseshoe Tavern, July 23, 2010

July 26th, 2010 | By: Amanda Macchia

Photo By Amanda Macchia

For anyone who enjoys easy psychedelic rock that sporadically turns into lightweight metal, The Horseshoe Tavern would’ve been a satisfactory destination this past Friday night.

Black Mountain brought their live show to a packed Toronto house, (which was warmed-up by homegrown talent Quest For Fire), plowing through previously released tracks as well as songs from their upcoming LP Wilderness Heart, set to be released this coming September.

“Old Fangs,” the band’s new single driven by spacey synths and the eighth-note chugging of Stephen McBean’s power chords, appeared to resonate with the generally immobile but attentive audience, filling the sweaty venue with the band’s distinctly distortive sound. “Angels,” off of the band’s last full-length In The Future, highlighted the lo-fi melodramatic harmonies of McBean and vocalist Amber Webber, although enthusiasm from the performers was not exactly in abundance.

Nonetheless, the set list rolled around to tracks like the bluesy, brand-new “The Hair Song,” as well as the well-known powerhouse of synthetic drones and drum fills “Stormy High.” The latter, reminiscent of a tranquilized version of Wolfmother’s “Woman,” transitions from a conventional guitar riff to looping vocals suffocating in reverb and echo, all to the crowd’s satisfaction.

Mid-way through the encore, Black Mountain brought out what was probably the most exhilarating number in their set list “Let Spirits Ride” – a track off of their new record, filled with the band’s signature fusion of blues riffs, power chords, and synths, with a built-in energy that accommodated for any that was lacking from the individual performers.

If the crowded venue and welcomed display of the band’s new tracks are any indication of the future, it’s safe to say that Black Mountain possess a high level of musical creativity that will continually be observed by a solid number of onlookers. Belay on.

For More,
MySpace:
http://www.myspace.com/blackmountain

  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Album Review: The Cat Empire – Cinema

July 26th, 2010 | By: Amanda Macchia

Cinema

After bearing witness to the conglomeration of Latin-esque horns, dreamy synthesizers, and frequent syncopation featured on The Cat Empire’s latest release Cinema, one could easily classify this record as “alternative” and walk away, but its incorporation of genres and musical elements are far too plenty for such a vague description.

The amalgamation of musical styles the Melbourne-based band draws on from their endless list of influences (including, but not limited to, ska, jazz, and reggae) has clearly carried through to their fifth-studio record, leaving listeners with sounds and feelings as juxtaposing as seeing a Mariachi band play Wrongbar.

Cinema features a number of well-crafted pop songs, such as the opening track “Waiting”an up-tempo, tambourine-induced number served with playful falsettos and a side-order of trumpets. Similarly, “Feelings Gone”, one of the album’s singles, undoubtedly features memorable melodic phrases and well-articulated hooks, but a few more tracks into the record and one may find the cursed curse of redundancy – most every track on Cinema is drowning in trumpets, and for every bar of music that has been left vacant of horns, a synthesized record-scratching sample replaces it.

It’s not to say that the 11 tracks the album is comprised of are not well-made and well-played, but when it comes to the question of creativity and reinvention within an individual release (if that’s the question the listener is asking) the answer would be that Cinema falls a tad short.

“Reasonably Fine” on the other hand, a mid-track on the record, is a hidden gem demonstrating a sound not found anywhere else on the album. Its soulful phrasing and sweet Hall-and-Oates-type of chord suspensions may be comparatively conventional, but the omission of chaotic brass runs allows the sincerity of the track to surface and it’s harmonious melody furnishes its simple lyrics with some sophistication: “And hopefully we can find ways to let us be reasonably fine, reasonably fine, at least to beat my drums in time.”

Even if it’s on the off-beat.

For More,
MySpace:
http://www.myspace.com/thecatempire

Don’t forget to catch the Cat Empire this Wednesday at the Phoenix!

  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Apollo Ghosts Instore!

July 26th, 2010 | By: Melody Lau

Apollo Ghosts

Just a quick reminder that this Tuesday, B.C. indie rockers Apollo Ghosts will be playing a free instore at Criminal Records! Music starts promptly at 7pm so go and see what all the Polariz buzz is all about!

Apollo Ghosts will also be playing at the Ossington Tuesday night and Sneaky Dee’s, with Dog Day, on August 6.

MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/adrianteacher

  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Who Would You Rather Be: The Beatles or The Rolling Stones?

July 25th, 2010 | By: Melody Lau

Sandman Viper Command (Photo By Michael Fil)

As Emily Haines asks on “Gimme Sympathy” – Who would you rather be: The Beatles or The Rolling Stones? Well Toronto rockers The Balconies and Sandman Viper Command are going to bring this debate to Sneaky Dee’s on August 13 when they will present The Beatles VS. The Stones Covers Night. The list of musical guests are still TBA but doors will be at 9pm and it will only set you back $5. See you there!

  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Fundraiser For Musa Tomorrow!

July 25th, 2010 | By: Melody Lau

Donate!

Earlier this month, a fire broke out on Dundas West and subsequently took down popular restaurant spot Musa. Nearby neighbor Magpie Tavern will be hosting a fundraiser tomorrow night for Musa which will include musical performances by members of White Cowbell Oklahoma, the Golden Dogs and more. There will also be a silent auction and raffle prizes. Doors for the event are 7pm and it is PWYC.

  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Let’s Chat: Braids

July 23rd, 2010 | By: Carmel Garvez

Les Braids

Braids is composed of Raphaelle Standell-Preston, Austin Tufts, Katie Lee, and Taylor Smith. Friends from high school, this quartet laces together intricate dream-pop that flourishes with layers of gorgeous melodies and harmonies to create opuses like the nine-minute stunner “Lemonade”, which you can sample on the band’s MySpace (link below). The band recently relocated to Montreal, by way of Calgary, mostly for school which the band has now put on hold temporarily to focus on Braids. On a fine Saturday evening, we chat on the phone about their experiences touring, playing goth venues, and their aspirations to play with Celine Dion.

The Singing Lamb: I saw you a couple of weeks ago in a basement, and that (sort of) marked the end of your tour with GOBBLE GOBBLE. What was that like – touring with them?

Tufts: It was really, really fun. When you’re on the road, there are so many different relationships. And when you develop that relationship with somebody within the span of 2-3 weeks, like we did with Gobble Gobble, it’s nice because you actually get to know the people and have a few more intimate moments, whereas on the road, everything is so fleeting. So it’s a nice contrast to tour with really nice people like Gobble Gobble. They’re honestly some of the nicest people I’ve ever met.

Besides playing basements, what other strange venues have you played at? What was the weirdest?

Standell-Preston: On our last Canadian tour, we were playing in Saskatoon and we got put in this venue called Walkers Night Club. So we load into the venue through the back, and then we go down these really dark stairs and go into this room with this huge metal door and dirt floor and there were these chains in the corner. We were all like, “Holy Shit, what is this place?” Then we go into the main part of the room, and there were cages on either side of the stage. Like, Cages for creepy dancers. Also, there were two television screens, and they were playing this super creepy movie that was of high contrast. It was about people who would go around and rip out people’s hearts. So, we just went out to get food, and my grandparents came early. They were super petrified and they left. Since then, they’ve been kind of concerned about what kind of music I’m playing.

Is there a particular venue you wish to play?

Tufts: I don’t know. We come from Calgary, and there’s this venue there that’s in the shape of a horse saddle. It’s the hockey stadium and it kind of looks like a big Pringle. It’s probably the worst acoustic-sounding hockey stadium ever but it would be really funny to play there. Plus, it holds thirty thousand people. Raphaelle has seen Avril Lavigne and Coldplay there, and I saw Motley Crue.

Who would join you in your dream line-up?

Tufts: Raphaelle would put Celine Dion on our line-up. Quebec celebrates Celine Dion Day. It was quite an experience last week, it’s kind of ridiculous. Millions of fireworks and Celine Dion songs for forty-five minutes straight. Maybe our dream date would be on the island where they set off the fireworks, playing with Celine Dion. Maybe she’d sing over a Braids song. Or sing all of Raphaelle’s parts, and she would just sit there and have a kick out of it.

There is an obvious closeness between the four of you. I noticed that you huddle before playing; what goes on in that huddle?

Tufts: We usually do that before we get on stage. We like to get close before a show and remind ourselves of what we really value. We remind ourselves to really focus on time and being delicate. It’s nice to keep close and picking a moment to de-stress before you play, because soundchecks are often so hectic. And we find that just by touching each other–

Standell-Preston: Austin! You make it sound like we’re having an orgy!

Tufts: We’re not having an orgy! You know what I mean. It really helps to be close, I think.

How has the Montreal environment influenced your sound? What do you like about the Montreal music scene, in comparison to Calgary’s? How do they differ in terms of affecting you as a band?

Standell-Preston: I wouldn’t say that Montreal had a direct affect on the type of sound we have… It’s the fact that we moved out and started living on our own. We had our first practice space in our parents’ garages and I think that kind of freedom and responsibility definitely had an impact. I think we started writing songs that are a bit more reflective, in my mind, and a bit more personal. When you’re in Calgary and you’re working a job, and you know your parents are feeding you, things seem pretty easy. But when we moved out of that element, I think our music definitely started to take on our personal characteristics. I understand that [Montreal and Calgary] are two different places; I like to think of Canada as a whole. But the thing that I can point out is that there’s a lot more venues [in Montreal], especially DIY venues, which is really great. Apart from that, there’s maybe a larger all-ages scene. I know that in Calgary, they’re having quite a lot of difficulty with the all-ages scene.

And has your French improved since moving to La belle province?

Lee: Well, I learned French from ETS to grade seven. I was probably better at French then than I am now. But I guess so. I mean, I know how to greet. Raphaelle knows how to order her breakfast. Austin took French for a year, so he’s pretty good and Taylor has been in French Immersion since he was little. I’d like to get better at French this year for sure, now that we’re taking a year off school.

What does the future hold for Braids?

Tufts: Global Domination. We’re just going to tour a lot and support this album the best we can. We’re really lucky because we’ve been set up with a really wonderful group of people in the States and Canada, who are going to help us put out a record and help us book our tours and stuff like that. So touring lots and recording another record, because we really want to keep moving in a positive and new direction. And we’re really looking forward to exploring some new sounds. We’ve all been kind of obsessed with very well-crafted electronic music, but we all really like playing live instruments. We kind of want to learn how to incorporate a sense of electronic music into our live set-up and just keep evolving the sound and not define it as anything and put any limitations on it and just see how it forms.

Is going back to school an option?

Tufts: I think we all intend to go back to school. As of five minutes ago, Raphaelle decided to become a marine biologist. So, she might go to school for that someday. But you know, Raphaelle’s a pretty impulsive person and she wants to be Celine Dion someday, so wherever Celine Dion went to school, that’s were Raph’s going. But we all definitely have intentions to go back to school. We’re just going ride this out for as long as it’s really fun and as long as it’s sustainable…

And finally, if you were singing animal, what would you be?

Tufts: That’s funny because there are so many bands with animal names! But I feel like we would be a quartet of giraffes, because giraffes have no vocal chords and it’s really important to embrace silence once in a while.

For More,
MySpace:
http://www.myspace.com/braidsmusic

Don’t forget to catch Braids tonight at the Garrison, as part of Shamewave (also featuring Colleen and Paul, Shapes + Sizes and Nick Storring!)

  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Album Review: Big Boi – Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son Of Chico Dusty

July 22nd, 2010 | By: Guest Contributor

Sir Lucious Left Foot

“Been under construction for three years but its about time I double Dutch my way in.” That’s Andre Patton, better known to his fans as Big Boi – and best known for being one half of iconic American hip-hop duo OutKast – sounding off on “Follow Us” about Sir Lucious Left Foot, the first full-length album from either Patton or fellow Georgian MC Andre “Andre 3000″ Benjamin in over four years. After record label disputes stalled its release, some joked that the album might become hip-hop’s Chinese Democracy, and others feared that Sir Lucious Left Foot might never see the light of day. Fast forward to 2010, and after leaking numerous tracks (and a few stellar non-album cuts), we finally have a brand new Big Boi album just in time for summer.

So was the wait worth it? In a word, absolutely. Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son Of Chico Dusty is incredibly diverse musically, with songs incorporating elements of everything from synth funk to bass-heavy rock to electro, all narrated with Patton’s trademark lightning-quick delivery. Above all, the album is giddy good fun. “Fo Yo Sorrows”, which features guest vocals from funk legend George Clinton and a verse from rapper Too Short, is a ridiculously catchy ode to recreational marijuana use that’ll have weed smokers everywhere nodding their heads in solidarity.  If Andre 3000 was the Romeo of OutKast, a gentleman who’d take a lady out for a nice seafood dinner and then call her back afterwards, than Big Boi was the street-savvy skirt-chaser, which he makes a point of reiterating on the deliciously depraved album standout “Tangerine” (sample lyric: “When she’s liquored up, I’m leavin’ my fingerprints on her butt”). Meanwhile “Follow Us”, which features a chorus from emo dudes and Purple Ribbon Label-signees , comes across as the radio-friendly pop crossover that B.o.B. was going for (and failed) with the Hayley Williams-assisted “Airplanes”.

Despite having a who’s who list of guest vocalists, including Gucci Mane, Yelawolf, T.I., and Janelle Monae, the whole thing remains Patton’s show, and the veteran rapper shows it’s entirely possible for an old dog to learn new tricks. We might not be getting a new OutKast album anytime soon, but Big Boi proves that he can fly solo just as successfully. If you’re looking for a rap album to serve as the soundtrack of your late-summer days, you could do far worse than by picking Sir Lucious Left Foot.

For More,
MySpace:
http://www.myspace.com/bigboi

  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Sleigh Bells @ Phoenix – July 20, 2010

July 22nd, 2010 | By: Brian Vendiola

  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Shamewave: A Wave of Shame and Good Music

July 22nd, 2010 | By: Melody Lau

Colleen and Paul

This Friday, No Shame and Wavelength – in association with Pop Montreal – are bringing you Shamewave and here are the four reasons you cannot miss this show.

1) Nick Storring
Toronto’s Nick Storring is anything but your traditional musician. Combining ambient atmospherics with haunting electro tinges, Storring conjures up chilling storm clouds of instrumental proportions. No samples are used in his music, just various instruments, objects and field recordings.

2) Shapes + Sizes
Off on various other projects in the past couple of years (Miracle Fortress, Elfin Saddle, Think About Life), the members of Montreal’s Shapes + Sizes have again reunited for a new record entitled A Candle To Your Eyes (due out August 3). Back is the cacophony of noisy guitar riffs, quirky rhythms and lead singer Caila Thompson-Hannant’s off-filter yet beautiful voice.

3) Braids
Dream pop quartet Braids are still fairly young, in age and in existence as a band, but the maturity they pack in their perfectly woven hits is up their in the ranks of indie heavy hitters Animal Collective or the Dirty Projectors. If we didn’t give you enough warning before about this band, here’s another one. A few more months and we’ll be saying we told you so.

4) Colleen and Paul
What do we crave most during the summer? Well of course – sugary sweet sunshine folk pop. This power duo of sorts – Colleen Hixenbaugh of By Divine Right and Paul Linklater of The Pinecones – sings simplistic indie rock gems such as the cutesy “A Home In The Top Boughs” and fans of their respective day jobs will undoubtedly love the tunes of Colleen and Paul as well.

Tickets are still available for $8 in advance ($10 at the door) and doors are at 9pm. Come celebrate Wavelength 505 with a shamelessly amazing line up!

  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • MySpace
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS