Posts Tagged ‘japandroids’

NXNE Announces 2010 Line Up!

April 13th, 2010 | By: Melody Lau

IGGY!

It’s the day we’ve been all waiting for – the official announcement of the NXNE line up! NXNE, a seven-day marathon this year, will feature Les Savy Fav, Surfer Blood, De La Soul, Mudhoney, Japandroids…oh, and Iggy and the Stooges. No big deal. Oh, and they’re playing for free at Dundas Square on June 19th. Again, no big deal. I just squealed like a little girl when I saw it; that’s all.

Here’s a list of everyone’s who have been confirmed so far:

A Plot Against Me
AA Bondy
Ali & The Dts
Ally Kerr
Amanda Rheaume
Amos The Transparent
Asteroid # 4
Autumn Owls
Avi Buffalo
Belle Roscoe
Box Elders
Bruce Peninsula
Buffalos
CALLmeKAT
Camera
Cat Malojian
Chasing Pandora
Chris Velan
CoCoComa
Cold Cave
Comanechi
DD/MM/YYYY
De La Soul
De Staat
Demon’s Claws
DM Stith
Drive like Maria
Elliott Brood
Fanshaw
Fugitive Underground
Funeral Suits
Glass Candy
Gold Panda
Grooms
Happy Hollows
HEALTH
Hidden Towers
Icarus Line
Iggy and the Stooges
Imaginary Cities
Indian Jewelry
Inlets
Japandroids
JEFF the Brotherhood
Jess McAvoy
Julianna Barwick
Kate Rogers Band
Kid Sister
Kistehén
Les Savy Fav
Luluc
Man or Astroman
METZ
Mudhoney
New Country Rehab
Nicola Watson
Paul Greene
Praise the Twilight Sparrow
PS I Love You
Queen Kwong
Quintron & Miss Pussycat
RÄUBERHÖHLE
Resplandor
Rudely Interrupted
Ruth Minnikin
Sean Nicholas Savage
Silje Nes
Simone Felice
Sloan
Smile Smile
Spaceships are cool
Surfer Blood
Svavar Knútur
Teengirl Fantasy
Templo Diez
Ten Bears
Terracotta Pigeons
The Adventures Of Loki
The Besnard Lakes
The Black Atlantic
The Craftmen Club
The Gentle Good
The High Dials
The Jack Stafford Foundation
The Moi Non Plus
The New Royales
The North
The Poison Arrows
The Racoon Wedding
The Raveonettes
The Rough Sea
The Setting Son
The Soft Pack
The Strange Boys
The Sunshine Underground
Thee Oh Sees
Twin Stumps
Wavves
We are Enfant Terrible
Will Kevans
WOMEN
Wooden Wand
Wussy
X
Young Galaxy 
Zola Jesus

MORE TO COME!

NXNE – Bring it.

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Japandroids @ Horseshoe Tavern – April 3, 2010

April 6th, 2010 | By: Max Mertens

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The Singing Lamb Tuesday Twelve Vol. VIII

February 16th, 2010 | By: Max Mertens

Sleigh Bells

Sleigh Bells

Sleigh Bells – “A/B Machines”

Ladies and gentleman, allow me to introduce you to Brooklyn buzz band no. 45, 056, Sleigh Bells. Their recipe for success? Take one guy (Derek Miller, former guitarist in Florida hardcore outfit Poison The Well) and one girl (singer Alexis Krauss, who spent time in the teen-pop group RubyBlue). Next, record some demos and have a major coming out at the CMJ music festival in New York City, all without having a full-length album to your name. Add upcoming tour dates at pretty much every major American music festival (including SXSW, Coachella, and the Pitchfork Music Festival), stir in a healthy dose of blog love, and you’ve got yourself a winning formula. “A/B Machines” is a delicious slab of glitch-pop, complete with buzz-saw guitar licks, distorted drums, and Krauss’ giddy chanting. According to a recent post on their MySpace, we can expect the debut album from the duo sometime this year. Also, the word on the street is that these two are going to helping out with producing the upcoming M.I.A. album (that’s your cue to get excited). Sleigh Bells will be opening up for Yeasayer at Lee’s Palace on May 1st, so get your tickets while they last.

Woodhands – “P’iss”

If you haven’t heard it yet, Woodhands’ new album is good. Really, really, really fucking good. The dynamic duo of Dan Werb and Paul Banwatt have managed to outdo themselves with this album; Remorsecapade contains some of the most sexually-charged (“Sluts”), emotion-baring (“I Want To Be Together”), frenetic (“Coolchazine”) and anthemic (“CP24″) songs that the band have recorded to date. And while it’s far too early in the year to call, I’m pretty sure that come next December, we’ll be seeing this album on a lot of people’s “best-of” lists. Just when you thought it couldn’t get any better, we get this absolutely hilarious “Z-side”, a tongue-in-cheek stab at none other than the music website everyone loves to hate, Pitchfork. As far as diss tracks go, it’s certainly no “Ether”, but it does sample Kanye outbursts, lets Werb scream random obscenities and complain about the site’s poor HTML coding, and allows Banwatt to rap and give Eminem a run for his money. This might even better than the duo’s cover of Katy Perry’s “I Kissed A Girl”, and that’s saying something. Get it for free over at Paper Bag Records’ website, and check out Woodhands’ MySpace for upcoming tour dates near you.

Rihanna – “Rude Boy (Diplo Rudeboyz Remix)”
Major Lazer feat. Elephant Man – “Halo (Beyonce Cover)

Major Lazer feat. Busy Signal & M.I.A. – “Sound Of Siren”

Diplo is by far one of the funniest “celebrities” that I follow on Twitter. But when the globetrotting DJ isn’t Tweeting about wild partying in New Orleans (“Switched slipped pon some beeds and broke his coxix”), or starting faux beefs with everyone from Sean Kingston to Miley Cyrus, he’s sharing new tracks and remixes. And Diplo’s been busy lately. During the Grammy Awards, we got this tongue-in-cheek cover of “Halo” in response to Beyonce’s winning night, and shortly after, a mashup of Rihanna’s “Rude Boy” and M.I.A.’s “Boyz” and another new Major Lazer track. Can anybody stop this guy? Oh, and expect a new Major Lazer EP this spring, featuring a remix from none other than Radiohead’s Thom Yorke (!!!).

Jay-Z – “Lucifer (Mako Reactor)”
Clipse – “Virginia (Lost Woods)”

I don’t play video games. Maybe its because, unlike most children of the 90s, I grew up with two younger brothers in a household without a video gaming system. Occasionally I’ll pick up a plastic Rock Band axe or the microphone, but when my roommates start killing zombies on Left 4 Dead 2 or trash-talking 12-year-olds on Halo online (how do you like that not-so-subtle product placement?), it doesn’t really interest me. I’m not trying to be preachy, because I waste more than plenty of time on my MacBook, but video games have never been my proverbial cup of tea. However, there is something geeky cool about a mixtape that takes songs from some of the biggest names in rap today, and mashes them from instrumentals from classic video games. And as Massachusetts’ Team Teamwork know, you can’t get much more classic than Final Fantasy 7 and The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, pairing Hova’s Black Album gem with the former, and the drug-hustlin’ Clipse’s “Virgina” with the latter. Download them both for free via Team Teamwork’s website (via Matt Braga).

Erykah Badu feat. Lil Wayne & Bilal – “Jump in the Air and Stay There”

What is it about Erykah Badu that brings out the best in other musicians? As Chris Rock once joked to Rolling Stone, “Outkast did a great record [Aquemi] while Andre was with Erykah. Common made a great record [Electric Circus] when he was with Erykah. Before I write any more jokes, I think I’m gonna call Erykah Badu.” This time around, she’s getting Lil Wayne to bring his A game, on this track from Badu’s forthcoming album, New Amerykah Part Two (Return of the Ankh) (which is easily an early contender for the worst album title of the year). And let’s face it – Wayne could probably benefit from a swift kick in the behind these days, and he rises to the challenge, to contribute some sharp verses that remind us why he might just deserve his self-appointed “Best Rapper Alive” title. “I go nuts like a Danish”? Great line. If Weezy teaming with the woman who has been called the “Queen of Neo-Soul” isn’t enough to get you excited, this song samples from Parliament Funkadelic and also features a crooning hook from soul singer Bilal. Yes, that Parliament Funkadelic. Hell of a music video too.

Japandroids – “Art Czars”

“Here’s your money back, here’s your punk rock back.” If you didn’t think that Japandroids could get any better, than this newest single from Brian King and David Prowse, proves that the Vancouver duo are more than a one album wonder after making the sublime Post-Nothing. Unfortunately these guys won’t be making an appearance at this year’s Canadian Music Week, but you can catch them in Toronto on April 3rd, when their upcoming North American tour brings them to the Horseshoe Tavern.

Harlem – “Psychedelic Tits”

If you ever wondered what would happen if King Khan and the Black Lips hooked up while on peyote, and had a illegitimate love child together, then wonder no longer. Not to be confused with Brooklyn’s Harlem Shakes, Harlem are three guys from Austin, Texas who enjoy a nice pair of cutoff denim shorts, Patrick Swayze’s performance in Dirty Dancing, and some band named Nirvana. They also enjoy making scuzzy garage-rock songs about drugs, Disneyland, and their dream girls, not necessarily in that exact order. From last year’s album, Free Drugs, which was made available as a free online download, “Psychedelic Tits” ain’t exactly Shakespeare when it comes to lyrics. But it is infectiously catchy, and it makes me want to drag out my BBQ in the middle of winter, invite a few friends over, crack open a tall boy, and have a party in my backyard. The band recently signed to Matador and their debut album, entitled Hippies, will be out April 6th. Harlem will also be touring around the States the next two months, but unfortunately, there are no Canadian dates as of right now. You can check out this song, and several more, by moseying on over to Harlem’s MySpace.

Oh No Forest Fires – “A Letter Of Apology To My Parents For Becoming An Alcoholic (Song For Claudia)”

R.I.P. Oh No Forest Fires, we hardly knew ‘ye.

Phoenix – “Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands (Bob Dylan Cover)”

If anyone still had any doubts about Phoenix being the biggest band in the world right now, than the last two weeks should have silenced any doubters. First they won the ridiculously-named Grammy for “Best Alternative Music Album”, which resulted in some absolutely hilarious awkward interviews on the red carpet, including one with MTV Jersey Shore celubu-tard Snooki. If that wasn’t a big enough crossover, how about “1901″ in a fucking car commercial? Or “Liztomania” in the trailer for a godawful-looking Hollywood romantic comedy? Just when you thought these guys had completely sold-out though, they go ahead and put out this stripped-down, unpretentious cover of Bob Dylan’s “Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands”, a song that appeared on Dylan’s 1966 classic Blonde On Blonde. Recorded as a live five minute acoustic cover for the German magazine Musikexpress, this song has no flashy synths or dance-pop drum beats, just strumming guitars and Thomas Mars’ earnest vocals. It looks good on them.

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The Singing Lamb Tuesday Twelve: Vol. VI

January 5th, 2010 | By: Max Mertens

Rich Aucoin

Rich Aucoin

Ruzan Orkestar – “A Dead Man’s Last Words”

“Holy s#%@, they do sound like Godspeed You!” I’m pretty sure those were the words that spilled out of my mouth when I first listened to the songs of Toronto’s Ruzan Orkestar. This statement was, of course, quickly followed by me posting the link to the band’s MySpace on friends’ Facebook walls, with the excitement-conveying caption, “Hey, I think I found the next…”. While the band – Egin Kongoli, Cydney Clark, Stefan Ho, Patricia Auchterlonie, and Gabriel P – certainly wear their hearts on their sleeves when it comes to their love of the now-defunct Montreal outfit, their music is a melting pot of sounds. Their songs – which tend to average the nine minute plus mark – effortlessly transition between noisy punk breakdowns and beautiful, quieter instrumental passages, sometimes multiple times in the same song. I have to give full credit for finding out about this band to Daps Duo (Dan and April from Hooded Fang), who recently announced that Ruzan Orkestar would be joining Ohbijou’s Casey Mecija & Jeff, Santa Guerilla, Sean Nicholas Savage and The Miles in the next edition of their all-ages shows on January 16th (Facebook event details here). If you haven’t been able to one of the Daps shows yet, then I’d advise you go – they’re a lot of fun, and offer those who are underage (and those of us who are of age too!), and can’t get into bars and certain music venues, the chance to see really great live music.

Rockets Red Glare – “Backwards Masking”

In case you’ve been living under a musical rock the past week, you’ve no doubt heard about the stellar list of bands scheduled to play the 500th edition of Toronto’s long-running music series Wavelength, which will be spread over four nights in February. That list includes Holy Fuck, Constantines, Diamond Rings, The Russian Futurists, Laura Barrett, Bruce Peninsula, Kids On TV, and a reunion by The Bicycles, among others. Among the names that I didn’t recognize, one reunion stood out as being highly-anticipated by fans that had posted on the event’s Facebook wall: Rockets Red Glare. So I thought I’d give ‘em a listen, and it turns out the fuss is justified. According to Wikipedia, “Rockets Red Glare formed in the winter of 1999 following the demise of hardcore band Blake and instrumental trio Blue Light Blockade. Based in Canada this three piece band toured Canada extensively and also played in North America, gaining critical praise for their powerful and atmospheric live performances. Releasing two full length albums and a two track 7-inch they specialised in playing a dense, meandering and sometimes explosive brand of post punk, taking influences from dirgecore bands such as Cerberus Shoal and Neurosis. Many Canadian and American bands today cite Rockets Red Glare as an influence on their music.” Here’s what I can tell you myself: I’ve been watching YouTube videos of these guys (including this one, shot at Sneaky Dee’s in ’03) recently, and it looks like they put on one hell of a show (drummer David “Gus” Weinkauf is a powerhouse on the kit).

Japandroids – “Racer X (Daytrotter Live Session)”

For those of you clamoring for new material from Vancouver’s Japandroids, the folks over at Daytrotter have you covered. The duo of Brian King and David Prowse recently stopped by Daytrotter’s studio in Little Rock, Illinois, to give a sneak preview off their upcoming 7-inch. “Racer X” is set to be the B-side, and it is a cover of a 1984 tune by American punk band Big Black, which was fronted by Steve Albini. There’s certainly nothing here to suggest that the band is slowing down anytime soon – this song gallops at a breakneck pace, with crashing drums, almost metal-sounding guitar hooks, and some seriously sinister-sounding vocals. It reminds me a lot of the band’s pre-Post-Nothing (their debut album which put them on everyone’s radar) material, especially “Darkness On The Edge Of Gastown” and “Couture Suicide”, both excellent songs. Japandroids already have a pretty busy year lined up. At the end of the month they embark on a pretty extensive European tour, coming back in March to play this year’s SXSW.

The xx – “Islands (Nosaj Thing)”

Finally, a remix of a song by everyone’s favourite ’09 buzz band from London that doesn’t completely suck. Los Angeles-based Nosaj Thing, aka Jason Chung, has remixed everyone from Drake to HEALTH, and his debut full-length Drift was one of the best albums you never heard last year. Listen to his remix, a deep cut from The xx’s debut album, here (via Gorilla vs. Bear).

Modest Mouse – “King Rat”

By now, everybody has pretty much wrapped up their year end and decade end best-of music lists. Permit me to allow one more though: most underrated songs of 2009. These are songs that, in an alternate universe, everyone would know about and they would get massive radio and television airplay. One such song that I think fits into this category, and a song that I’ve been listening to recently, is Modest Mouse’s “King Rat”. Featured on this year’s stellar No One’s First, And You’re Next, the EP collected new songs, B-sides and previously unreleased material from the band, including this little-heard gem. While it briefly got some attention earlier in the year, thanks to a truly bizarre music video directed by the late actor Heath Ledger, the song quickly faded from the public’s conscious afterwards. And here’s why: nowhere nearly as catchy, immediate or radio-friendly as “Float On” or anything on the band’s last full-length effort, We Were Dead Even Before The Ship Sank, “King Rat” has more in common with songs from older Modest Mouse albums. This song feels like it could be a lost outtake from the Isaac Brock & Co.’s gritty The Lonesome Crowded West, or even the more sonically-adventurous The Moon & Antarctica (in my opinion, the band’s best album, and one of the best albums of the decade). It doesn’t follow a typical verse-chorus-verse structure; instead it piles on horns, tempo changes, and Brock’s trademark pessimistic barking. Required listening if you are a fan of the band, or even if you aren’t.

Jay-Z feat. Alicia Keys – “Empire State Of Mind (Rich Aucoin Remix)”
Rich Aucoin – “Push (Ryan Hemsworth Remix)”

You never know where Nova Scotian experimental-pop mastermind Rich Aucoin might show up next. Opening up for Girl Talk at the Halifax Pop Explosion? Been there, done that. Appearing as a roller skater in fake movie trailers by local Halifax comedy troupes? Yep – watch this if you don’t believe me. Remixing one of the biggest hip-hop singles of the year? Check…wait, what? As Aucoin himself explains it, “I noticed that a new song of mine has the same chord progression as Jay-Z’s brilliant Moments-sampled new track. So I upped the BPM of the original from 86.65BPM to 105BPM and added some more samples; taking Dan Deacon’s “Slow With Horns” and speeding it up considerably and pitching it a few cents and also, for the second verse, I noticed “Empire State” is in F#m which is the same key as Michael Jackson’s “Billie Jean” so I took the otherwise minor sounding bassline from “Billie Jean” and put it under the feel-good majors of “Empire State”. I added bass, organs, vocoder, and my voice and had some friends help with the gang vocals for the chorus and I re-sampled the drums from “Empire” to make a new beat out of its sampled drums.” How’s that for getting technical? The result is a textbook example of a not-so-textbook remix, the kind that I described a few weeks ago, in my roundup of the year’s best remixes. The second track is a remix of Aucoin’s “Push” by Haligonian artist Ryan Hemsworth, that throws in a Goonies sample, so how can you say no to that? (both remixes via Herohill). You can catch Aucoin performing his own material at the Horseshoe on January 30th, appearing alongside Toronto’s Lioness and Everything All The Time, in the first No Shame show of 2010.

K-Os feat. Nelly Furtado & Saukrates – “I Wish I Knew Natalie Portman”

Since when did Natalie Portman become the most sought-after actress in Hollywood? First we heard her rapping alongside the guys from The Lonely Island, with hilarious results (“I never said I was a role model”). Next, she (and her dog Whiz) was a guest on this year’s best fake Web talk-show, Between Two Ferns With Zach Galifinakis, hosted by the ever-jovial Galifinakis. This time around, Portman serves as the muse for none other than Canadian rapper K-Os, who gets a little help on this one from songbird Nelly Furtado (where have you been girl?) and Toronto rapper Saukrates. The third single from K-Os’ latest album, Yes!, this track is getting plenty of love from CBC Radio 3 lately. And for good reason too – for a song with such downhearted lyrics (sample line: “I’ve been on the run, this shadow weighs a ton”), “Natalie Portman” is infectiously catchy, thanks largely to a beat that samples from this song, and K-Os’ typically-deft rhymes (“Since the age of seventeen/I’ve been taking apart microphones/You’ve been taking apart men you’ve blown/With glowing skeleton bones”).

Maluca – “El Tigeraso”

When it comes time to pick which artist(s) to draw inspiration from – whether it be musically, stylistically, politically, etc. – you can certainly do worse than M.I.A.. Not entirely all that different from the way Brittney Spears influenced a generation of bleached-blonde, MTV-whoring poptarts, the Sri Lankan-born, London-raised singer can lay claim to having at least a few students of her globetrotting sound. Recently the number of female singers that have listened to Arular and Kala more than their fare share of times have produced mixed results. On one hand, you have singers like like Philadelphia’s sex-crazed Amanda Blank or Baltimore’s Rye Rye, both of whom offer no real substance other than making guilty pleasure club filler. Once in awhile though, we get singers like Brooklyn’s Santigold, who outgrow their teachers (to use the geeky, but apt metaphor, it’s kind of like a Yoda/Luke Skywalker type-deal), and come into their own as artists. It’s hard to say yet what side of that line the 27-year-old, New York City singer (born Natalie Yepez to Dominican parents) will fall on, but suffice to say, “El Tigeraso” is some catchy-ass shit. A delicious slice of Diplo-produced electro-pop with elements of hip-hop, samba and merengue, “El Tigeraso” (and its accompanying video), sees singer flaunting and teasing, leading boys around her bodega like the Pied Piper. One to watch this year for sure.

Mr. Scruff – Keep It Unreal (mix)

Ever since it was formed in 1993, London-based independent record label Ninja Tunes has been a label to watch when it comes to breaking new artists and introducing new musical trends. Everyone from British dubstep hit-makers (The Bug), to American underground rappers (Spank Rock), to some of Montreal’s finest deejays (Kid Koala and Ghislain Poirier), all started out on the label. And Mr. Scruff – whose real name is Andy Carthy – has been with Ninja Tunes pretty much from the beginning as a producer. When he isn’t producing, he’s DJing all around the world, and making mixes like the ones that appear on his MySpace. I don’t recognize any of the tracks, but the British DJ seamlessly transitions between hip-hop, dubstep, jazz, some obscure samples about marine life, among other genres, creating a seemingly effortless twenty-one-minute mix that is soulful and varied. Plus, the man has his own line of tea. How can you say no to that? Mr. Scruff will DJing at Wrongbar on January 15th – tickets are $15 and you can get them at your friendly neighbourhood record shop.

South Rakkas Crew – The Stimulus Package (mix)

Two words: party music. Get this new mix, from the city-trotting South Rakkas Crew, via the Mad Decent website
here
.

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The Singing Lamb’s 12 Days of Lists – Day 4: Max’s Top 10 Songs of 2009

December 16th, 2009 | By: Max Mertens

Black Lips

Black Lips

1. Black Lips feat. GZA – “The Drop I Hold”

On paper, it probably shouldn’t work. In one corner, you have one of the founding members of the Wu-Tang Clan, the legendary New York hip-hop outfit who have wrote some of the best ever songs about drug-slinging and kung-fu. In the other corner, you have the Black Lips, the soon-to-be legendary Atlanta garage rock band who have wrote some of this year’s best songs about religious skepticism and um…drugs. But what started as a surprising hookup at this year’s South By Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas, ended up with GZA crossing genres to contribute a few lines to this track off the Lips’ latest album, 200 Million Thousand. Blame my own indecisiveness as the main reason I wasn’t able to come up with a “Best Albums” list this year, but rest assured if there was one, 200 Million Thousand would most certainly be on it. On an album of lyrically dense, soul and blues-infused psychedelic jams, with guitar riffs as dirty as lead singer’s Cole Alexander’s mustache, “The Drop I Hold” was probably the biggest departure. This song features an eerie, almost hip-hop beat with guttural screams and Alexander lazily singing/rapping (dude rhymes “Vietnam”, “atomic bomb” and “blacklips.com”) before GZA comes in with an equally hazy verse. Could garage rock bands with heavy blues influences collaborating with rap artists be the new musical trend in the coming year? The Black Keys recently put out an album as their hip-hop side project BlakRoc, while GZA has announced plans to work with artists including Fucked Up and King Khan. As long as it keeps yielding tracks like this one, then here’s one trend that I can certainly get behind.

2. The Dead Weather – “Treat Me Like Your Mother”

Jack White is my favourite male frontman of all-time. The Kills’ Alison Mosshart is my favourite front-woman of all-time. So you don’t need to be a genius to figure out that I was beyond thrilled when I heard that both of them would be starting a new band, with the killer backfield of The Raconteurs’ Jack Lawrence and Dean Fertita from Queens of the Stone Age, to boot. The result was everything that I had hoped for and then some. While “I Cut Like a Buffalo” and “Hang You From The Heavens” are standouts in their own right, “Treat Me Like Your Mother” – with its cacophony of guitars and crashing drums – is a study in glorious excess. The band is clearly going for a “more is more” approach with this song; piling on tempo changes, shrieking vocals, and surprisingly catchy “M-A-N-I-P-U-late” chants, with thrilling results. The chemistry between White and Mosshart is comparable to a wooden box full of lit firecrackers, and on “Treat Me Like Your Mother”, they sound like their going right for each other’s throats (think a more badass version of Brad and Angelina in Mr. & Mrs. Smith, but with more leather jackets). With their debut album, Horehound, The Dead Weather have avoided the dreaded “don’t quit your day jobs” jokes side-projects like this often do (my verdict is still out on Them Crooked Vultures), and have created music that stands outside the involved members’ previous bodies of work.

3. Japandroids – “Young Hearts Spark Fire”

Best Canadian album of the year? Maybe. Best new Canadian band of the year? Un-fucking-doubtably. Luckily for us, Japandroids apparently missed the memo about young bands not being supposed to be this good, and this year we got their fantastic debut album, Post-Nothing. Consisting of nine perfectly-crafted garage-rock songs, Post-Nothing proves you don’t need a full band to make a glorious racket – one guy on guitar and one guy on drums will suffice. Earlier this year, I described the duo of Brian King and David Prowse as “No Age hooking up with Death From Above 1979 at a Red Bull and vodka-fueled dance party”, a comparison that now seems pretty ludicrous in retrospective. “Young Hearts” is the album standout; over a fuzz-drenched mess of bass and Prowse’s frenetic drumming, King sings, “I don’t wanna worry about dying, I just wanna worry about those sunshine girls”. The resulting song manages to somehow feel equally cathartic and a youthful call to seize the day at the same time. If there was any justice in the world, this song would be the official anthem of the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics. For now, we’ll just have to settle with Post-Nothing finding its way onto this year’s Polaris Prize shortlist, and Japandroids finding their way onto playlists everywhere. The only direction for this band to go is up.

4. Joel Plaskett – “Through & Through & Through”

This song has been a recent topic of debate between myself and one of my good friends – whom typically I see eye-to-eye with musically-speaking – but I cannot convince him of Joel Plaskett’s genius as a singer-songwriter. His loss. With Three, Plaskett proved that ambition suited him well and cemented his status as one of the best musicians to ever come out of Atlantic Canada. “Through & Through & Through” casts Plaskett in the role he was born to play; a lovable loser devastated by a beautiful “wrecking ball in a summer dress”, and contains perhaps some of the best lyrics that the Dartmouth guitar balladeer has ever penned. The reference to iconic Canadian rock band April Wine (Wikipedia ‘em or ask your dad who they were) certainly wasn’t lost on any Nova Scotian over 35, but the line that stuck out for me, was Plaskett’s tongue-in-cheek “You be Israel, I’ll be Palestine” metaphor. To make the hours pass quicker (not to mention block out my many bitchy ex-classmates that I had to put up working with) when I worked in the kitchen of a Jewish camp this summer, I would bring in burnt mix CDs, that would then compete for playing time in the kitchen’s crappy stereo. Unfortunately for myself, my coworkers tastes veered more towards the Jonas Brothers than Justice, but I couldn’t help but smile when ever this song managed to creep on. Special mentions go out to the very talented Rose Cousins and Ana Egge, who provide the lovely backup vocals on this song.

5. Matt & Kim – “Daylight”

What a difference a year makes. Before 2009, most people would have been hard-pressed to identify any songs by the Brooklyn couple, with the possible exception of the ubiquitous “Yea Yeah”. This year saw the release of the duo’s sophomore album, Grand, and all of a sudden they were everywhere: in a Bacardi commercial, on the FIFA 2010 soundtrack (alongside the likes of Metric, Wyclef Jean, and others), and rocking out on Jimmy Kimmel. If you need proof that Matt Johnson and Kim Schifino have gained popularity here in Canada, look at the size of the venues they’ve played over the past two years: last November, I caught them playing an all-ages show at the community hall-sized Whippersnapper Gallery. Fast-forward to this year, where they sold-out Wrongbar during NXNE in June, and packed the Kathedral wall-to-wall only two months ago. “Daylight” is a first-rate example of how a song doesn’t need to be complicated to be catchy; Matt plays the keyboard, Kim thumps away on the drums, they throw in a nonsensical (but catchy) call-and-response chorus (“And in the daylight I don’t pick up my phone, ’cause in the daylight anywhere feels like home”), and you have a recipe for DIY pop gold. Bands from New York City come and go, but with Grand, Matt & Kim have proven that they’ve matured without losing their sense of fun.

6. The xx – “Basic Space”

With so many great tracks, picking a standout from the London quartet’s (now a trio) self-titled debut album proved to be both a blessing and a curse for music critics. The band’s brand of melancholic nouvelle pop and a sparingly used drum machine, combined with lyrics about seduction, isolation and despair in the vein of Joy Division and The Cure, and the almost-whispered, haunting vocals of Oliver Sim and Romy Madley Croft, was so unique, left most unable to pick a standout. One thing everyone could agree on was that the band have made one of the most unique debut albums of the year. When I first listened to it for the first time, my initial favourite was “Crystalised”, an opinion that seemed to be shared by everyone from Rolling Stone (“This hyperstylish London buzz band makes moody bedroom jams with girl-boy vocals – it’s like R. Kelly for kids with giant eyeglasses, an MFA and a heroin addiction”) to EXCLAIM! (“The xx may be the subtlest band you’ll ever hear”). Ever so slowly though, as the album became my soundtrack for late night walks through the city and before falling asleep at night, I began to sway more towards “Basic Space”. It might be the stuttering, skeletal beat, it might be the clarity that Sim and Croft deliver their lyrics with, but every time I hear this song, I get chills down my spine. This song is that good.

7. Yeah Yeah Yeahs – “Soft Shock”

Comeback album of the year? While many people were quick to write the Yeah Yeah Yeahs off following 2006′s uneven Show Your Bones; they could never write an another album as epochal as Fever To Tell, they all were too busy with their various side-projects (N.A.S.A.’s “Strange Enough”, which features guest vocals from Karen O, was considered for this list) they all hated each other, etc., etc., It’s Blitz! saw the NYC trio storming back to prove the naysayers wrong. With It’s Blitz, the band managed to reinvent their sound, while challenging the public’s perceptions of what a “typical” Yeah Yeah Yeahs record is supposed to sound like. The album’s first two new wave singles, the synth-heavy and remix-friendly (from the likes of Passion Pit, Animal Collective and MSTRKRFT, among others) “Heads Will Roll” and “Zero”, are probably the most dancefloor-friendly tracks that Karen O, Brian Chase and Nick Zinner have ever written. But no matter how loudly or how softly Karen O is singing, its her emotional vulnerability that she puts on display, that makes these songs get inside your head. On “Soft Shock”, the singer wears her heart on her sleeve, as she gently coos, “Still it’s a shock, shock to your soft side”. To try and compare the song to the band’s still-celebrated tear-jerker ballad “Maps” is unfair – “Soft Shock” is the sound of a older and more experienced band, a band that has dealt with their fair share of fights and make-ups, a band that has been around the world and back (and then some).

8. Dirty Projectors – “Stillness Is The Move”

For those who had forgotten how good this song was – and why it deserves to be on so many year-end lists – all it took was Beyonce’s little sister to remind them. Solange Knowles (who also scored hip points this year for introducing her sister and Jay-Z to Grizzly Bear) recently covered Brooklyn’s Dirty Projectors’ “Stillness Is The Move”, and by most accounts, doing a pretty decent job. This year saw a major changing of the guard in NYC’s indie pop/rock music scene; the garage-rock bands of the 2000s (The Strokes, The Bravery, Interpol) are out (with the exception of the YYYs of course), TV On The Radio announced they’d be taking an indefinite hiatus, and everybody tried to incorporate African rhythms (à la Vampire Weekend) or freak psychedelia (à la MGMT) into their music. Yet the Dirty Projectors stood out from the pack, mainly because they refused to sound like anyone else, and tried musical experiments that no one else would. “Stillness Is The Move” is hands-down the most accessible song on the band’s latest album, Bitte Orca, and its still pretty out there. That slinky R&B beat, Angel Deradoorian’s fluttering vocals that received numerous comparisons to Mariah Carey (in fact, Deradoorian probably did more for Carey’s name than Mimi did for herself this year), all carefully guided by the hand of head Projector Dave Longstreth – it’s a sound that is destined to spawn dozens of imitators in the not-so-distant future, but no one will do it as good as the Dirty Projectors themselves.

9. Phoenix – “1901″

I really want to absolutely hate this band. To paraphrase a local Toronto musician, who shall remain unnamed, Phoenix seems like the type of band that were put together by Urban Outfitters. I don’t really understand why every music blog, magazine, radio station and website couldn’t stop drooling over this French quartet, and why every other artist worth their salt couldn’t help but trying to remix them, with pretty mixed results. I’ve listened to their breakout Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix – an album that’s appeared at or near the top of pretty much everyone’s year-end best of lists – over half a dozen times, but still can’t get into it. Finally, I find it difficult to believe that these guys sold out the Sound Academy (though they did show good taste by picking Holy Fuck as their openers), with fans ponying up forty bucks per ticket nonetheless. But then you hear the chorus of “1901″ (you know, the one that goes “It’s twenty seconds till the last call, going hey, hey, hey, hey, hey”), and it doesn’t matter where you are; whether it’s on the radio while you’re washing dishes, on your friend’s iTunes while you’re helping her put together an IKEA bookshelf, or the DJ plays it while you’re getting your groove on at Dance Cave, you can’t help but sing along – it’s so goddamn catchy. Years from now, our children and grandchildren will ask us what music we listened to back in 2009 when we were foolish young hipsters, and we will play this song.

10. Jay-Z feat. Kanye West & Rihanna – “Run This Town”

Stop laughing! Yes, I’m putting a song featuring three of mainstream music’s biggest names on a list of supposed “indie” (or, as one of my housemates has recently taken to pronouncing it whenever I’m in earshot, “in-DIE”) songs. And here’s why: can you name another Top 40 rap song that goes this hard? If “D.O.A.” was The Blueprint III’s manifesto, than “Run This Town” is Shawn Carter’s victory speech. Love him or hate him, its pretty hard to ignore a musical career like Hova’s: eight Grammy Awards, over 30 million records sold in the United States, and 11 No. 1 albums on Billboard, putting him past Elvis. But this song is one of the album’s best, because it sounds like all three are hungry and have something to prove. Jay’s fighting the backlash that he’s run out of things to say now that he’s almost 40, Rihanna needed to prove that she’d moved on from the whole Chris Brown incident, and as for Kanye, the public just needed him to hear him flat-out rap again. Whatever their motivations, it works: Jay displays all the piss and vinegar of a much younger man, Rihanna provides the kind of warbling hook that reminds of us why the public fell in love with her in the first place, and Kanye comes in at the end to school them both with arguably one of the best lines of this year, “What you think I rap for, to push a fucking RAV 4?” (Toyota reps have yet to issue a response). The only unfortunate thing (for my friends anyways) about this song? “99 Problems” is in danger of being replaced as my new favourite song to drunkenly recite off-key at parties.

Honourable Mentions:

The Rural Alberta Advantage - “The Deathbridge In Lethbridge”
Clipse feat. Kanye West – “Kinda Like A Big Deal”
Grizzly Bear -“Two Weeks”
The National - “So Far Around the Bend”
Raekwon feat. Cappadonna & Ghostface Killah -“10 Bricks”

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News Update!

April 13th, 2009 | By: Melody Lau

Olympic Island Fest!

Olympic Island Fest!

Time flies by really quickly. It just felt like yesterday that I had begun my year at school and now, I’m faced with the horrifying week leading up to my final exams. So most of our staff will be busy studying their asses off instead of dancing their asses off at shows and writing about it for the next two weeks. We will still be covering International Record Store Day on Saturday though! For now, bask yourself in this ocean of news from the past weekend!

Last night, I had heard that the lineup for this year’s Olympic Island Fest was going to be announced this morning. Now I sit here with a presale ticket ordered for the July 11th show – that’s how impressive it is.Broken Social Scene have returned to headline the festival for the first time in two years, with other performers including Explosions in the Sky, Apostle of Hustle, Beach House, Thunderheist and Rattlesnake Choir. Presale tickets can be purchase here OR here right now!

The Water, a short film directed by Broken Social Scene front man Kevin Drew, is based on the song of the same name by Feist, and stars the songstress alongside Cillian Murphy. And although it hasn’t gotten the best feedback from viewers (read the comments on the link provided), I personally found it quite beautiful and an admirably job well done on Drew’s part. Watch here and let me know what you think!

Metric, who will be at the Mod Club tomorrow night with Holy Fuck, have a new video out for the first single off their new album Fantasies“Help, I’m Alive”Watch it here.

As previously mentioned, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs performed on Saturday Night Live this past weekend. Here’s the end result“Zero” was definitely better to hear live, but overall both performances appear to lack the energy and enthusiasm that we’ve all become so accustomed to. Not their best show, but still great to watch if you’re a big fan of the trio. And also, “Maps”? Really? You couldn’t have chosen something from Show Your Bones?

Listen to Animal Collective’s Remix of the Yeah Yeah Yeah’s “Zero” here!

Immaculate Machine will be at the Drake Hotel on April 30th, but potentially without female vocalist Kathryn Calder. As mentioned on the band’s MySpace page, Calder won’t play many of the out-of-town dates but will certainly be present for the May 8th show in Vancouver. So basically, don’t expect to see Calder at the Drake.

The Decemberists, with opening acts Heartless Bastards will be making a stop at the Kool Haus on August 3rd.

In support of his upcoming album Yes!k-os will be playing a free show at the Kool Haus on May 9th – well, sort of. A donation (to the David Suzuki Foundation) is suggested for this show and in return, attendees will recieve a free copy of Yes! It’s Yours (a remix companion to Yes!).

Can’t wait till May 9th? k-os will also being throwing an album release party at Wrongbar tomorrow night. Doors will be at 8:00 pm and DJs will include DJX, DJ P-Plus, DJ Fase, Lil’ Jaz, DJ Barletta, Mikey Apples, DJ Dalia & Numeric.

Peaches, who will be in town supporting her new album I Feel Cream on May 20th at the Phoenix, has a new video out for her single, “Talk To Me”watch here. Also, if you visit her site right now, you can watch a mini-documentary of the electro-rock-shocker.

Gentleman Reg will be playing two free shows in Toronto in case you miss him opening for A Camp at the Mod Club on June 1st. First, he will be at Sonic Boom this Saturday, as part of Record Store Day. He will also be back in June, performing on the South Stage of this year’s Pride Toronto celebrations.

The Pack A.D. will be at the Drake Hotel this Friday, but if you miss out, they will also open for The Hanson Brothers & Potty Umbrella on April 25th at the Horseshoe.

Japandroids, Still Life Still and the Two Koreas will be at El Mocambo on May 9th.

In addition to a show at the Mod Club on April 27th, Anni Rossi will open for Camera Obscura at Lee’s on June 27th.

Gomez will be at the Phoenix on May 29.

Headlights will open for Lonely Dear at the Rivoli on May 8th.

Casiotone For The Painfully Alone and Crytacize will be at the Boat on July 8th.

Randy Bachman will be playing a free show at Yonge-Dundas Square on June 5th, as part of the Luminato Fest.

According to last.fm, Attack in Black, Julie Doiron and Kathleen Edwards are slated to open for City and Colour at Massey Hall.

St. Vincent has a new video for the fantastic new single, “Actor Out Of Work”watch here.

Time for some library talk:

Firstly, The Toronto Zine Library will be holding a fundraiser this Saturday at 69 Buy the Pound. This fundraiser will include a vegan bake sale and performances from We Were Former, Tonnn and Andre Theriault. Go and support our local zines!

Secondly, are you happy with our current selection of music at our public libraries? If not, read this article and make some suggestions!

And finally, as a sneak peek of what’s to come at this year’s NXNE, event man extraordinaire, Dan Burke has planned a kick-ass line up at the Silver Dollar and Velvet Underground including bands such as Zoobombs, Red Mass, CATL, The Golden Triangle, The Two Koreas, The Sedatives, “PIZZA PARTY” DJs, Teen Anger, Hexes and Ohs, and Revolvers. More details on these two shows and many more coming soon! NXNE lineups will officially be announced next month so watch out!

Happy listening!

Musically,
Melody

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Excitement

March 10th, 2009 | By: Max Mertens

Hot Panda

Hot Panda

Well there’s only one more sleep until the madness of Canadian Music Week begins, and it seemed that you could almost feel the excitement crackling and bubbling in the air throughout the city today. My friend and I successfully navigated the underground labyrinth known as PATH, and made our way from Ryerson downtown to the Royal York Hotel (which I’m planning on rushing to on Saturday night after Bloc Party to hopefully catch Crystal Castles’ set) to pick up our wristbands for the week. Yet before Singing Lamb is packed with interviews, concert reviews and photos, here is somewhat regular news for you. Enjoy!

I’ve already told you about Vancouver’s Japandroids, whom I hope to check out this week, but there are two other new bands I’d like to share with you that I haven’t been able to stop listening this week. Beast is the Montreal duo of vocalist and lyricist Betty Bonifassi and composer/producer Jean-Phi Goncalves. I first heard them on George Strombo’s radio show this week, and yesterday I got a package from home, which included a USB drive from my brother featuring their self-titled debut album. It couldn’t have came at a better time either. The band describe their sound as “trip-hop” on their MySpace, but listening to songs like “Mr. Hurricane” and“Satan”, but I would call them a hard electronica band with elements of hip-hop, strong rock drumming and Bonifassi’s powerful gospel pipes that set the duo apart from the current crop of Montreal bands. Hot Pandaon the other hand, are a four-piece from “Stabmonton” (if you don’t know where they’re talking about, you should probably read this), and have drawn comparisons to everyone from Talking Heads to Roxy Music with their highly danceable pop songs such as “Cold Hands, Chapped Lips”. The band is signed to Mint Records(home to The New PornographersImmaculate MachineNardwuar the Human Serviette and more), was featured in the independent music label’s recent spring ’09 ‘zine Fresh Breath of Mint (that you can pick up at your favourite local music store), and their debut album Volcano…Bloody Volcano is in-stores now. And yes, in case you were wondering, both bands will be in Toronto this week for CMW.

So unaware to most of Canada, the East Coast Music Awards 2009 took place two weekends ago in beautiful Corner Brook, Newfoundland. According to my friend Dave, a good time was had by all, and Corner Brook was treated to amazing performances from Hey Rosetta!In-Flight Safety, and Jenn Grant. At the awards gala, Hey Rosetta! were the big winners, coming away with three well-deserved awards includingGroup Recording of the Year and Recording of the Year. If you’ve yet to listen to this band or see them perform, they have three upcoming shows in Toronto – two during CMW (including a performance at “The Indies” award show) and on April 24th at Lee’s Palace with Bruce Randall.

The spring and summer show announcements are coming in fast and furious. Here are some of the more recent announcements, check the Shows page for more info and other concerts:
Spiral Beach will be playing at the Horseshoe on March 24th
Peanut Butter WolfJames Pants and Mayer Hawthorne will be at the Revival Bar on May 1st
Born Ruffians are opening for Franz Ferdinand at the Kool Haus on May 4th
The Von Bondies are back in town on May 29th for a show at Lee’s Palace

Yesterday morning on a whim, I downloaded a DJ Mick Boogie mixtape entitled Brooklyn Soul. What it does is takes Jay-Z’s last album American Gangster, and mashes it with classic Marvin Gayes soul songs (“Sexual Healing”“Ain’t No Mountain High Enough”, etc). I was pleasantly surprised – it was more understated and less over-the-top than other Jay-Z mashups that I’ve heard in the past (see: Linkin Park’sColllision CourseDanger Mouse’s The Grey Album). You can download it for free here.

Don’t know how I missed this, but a little while ago Toronto’s Winter Gloves covered LCD Soundsystem’s“Someone Great”, condensing James Murphy’s sad, yet blissful disco gem from six minutes into two. Check it out here or the original here. It was also recently sampled by Kanye’s “protege” Kid Cudi for “Can I Be”, which features Cudi rapping several bars on-top of the track. You can listen to it over at the music blog fork/knife. While you’re at it, check out the rest of the site, because there are some really interesting songs and new artists featured on there.

Well that’s it for me tonight. Hope you enjoy the rest of your week, and for those of you catching any of the CMW festivities, I’ll see you around.

Cheers,
Max

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Smile, it’s Wednesday!

March 4th, 2009 | By: Max Mertens

Japandroids

Japandroids

I should be writing an essay on Barack Obama…

The countdown to Canadian Music Week (March 11-15) is on, and for Toronto music lovers, this year’s event is set to go down as one of best editions of CMW this city has ever seen. With over 500 bands scheduled to play at 45 different venues, there’s guaranteed to be something for everyone. I’m not going to list all the bands/artists playing here, but just look at this list: Bloc Party, Sloan, The Ting Tings, Matt Mays & El Torpedo, The Trews, Holy Fuck, Chad Vangaalen, Arkells, Sebastien Grainger, Slim Twig, The Rural Alberta Advantage, Hexes & Ohs, Hooded Fang, Josh Reichmann Oracle Band, Crystal Castles, USS, Hey Rosetta!, $100, A-Trak, Basia Bulat, Birds of Wales, Brian Borcherdt, CFCF, Cuff the Duke, DJ Sega, Duchess Says, Elliott Brood, Gentlemen Reg, Green Go, Handsome Furs, Holy Fuck, Jenn Grant, Lioness, Lights, Malajube, Mansion, Mother Mother, Nasty Nav, Pas Chic Chic, Quest For Fire, Rebekah Higgs, Jokers of the Scene, Ruby Jean and the Thoughtful Bees, The Bicycles, The D’Ubervilles, The Golden Dogs, The Novaks, The Hood Internet, The Waking Eyes, Two Hours Traffic, We Are Wolves, Young Galaxy and so, so, so many more! For more details on the above shows and the rest, you can check out the CMW’s official website here or Eye Weekly has a pretty goodguide for you to plan your perfect week of seeing live music.

I’m not one to promote or partake in illegal downloading of leaked albums – but if I were, I’d say that the new Yeah Yeah Yeahs album is shaping up to be one of my early favourites for the year’s best album. You’re going to have to find them yourself, but tracks like “Dragon Queen” featuring TV On The Radio’s Tunde Adebimpe and “Hysteric” (which has serious potential to become the new “Maps”) bode well for It’s Blitz!. If you haven’t marked April 14th on your calendar yet, you should probably do that now.

Speaking of upcoming releases, does anyone else think the hype for the new Handsome Furs (March 10th) and The Decemberists (March 24th) albums has been under-whelming at best? These are two marquee-name bands and yet it seems like there hasn’t been much media attention being paid to either of them. In this month’s issue of EXCLAIM! (which features Malajube on the cover wearing Crayola-coloured outfits), reviewer Dan Sylvester said that compared to the Handsome Furs’ debut album, Face Control is “much leaner, sharper, cleverer and more rewarding.” From the tracks that I’ve heard, including “Legal Tender” and “Talking Hotel Arbat Blues” (which can listen to on the band’s MySpace or here expect more of Wolf Parade guitarist Dan Boeckner’s tight vocals over electronic soundscapes, created by Boeckner’s wife Alexei Perrei on snyths and drum machine. You can catch Boeckner and Perrei in Toronto when they play the Horseshoe on March 13th during CMW. As for The Decemberists

Death To The Throne is one dude from Phoenix, Arizona who has been turning out some shit-hot remixes lately of everyone’s hipsters favourites, including M.I.A., Chromeo, Lykke Li, and Yeah Yeah Yeahs. My favourite track however is a reworked version of “Pop Bottles” (a song that I admit is a guilty pleasure of mine) to which he adds an electro back-beat and alters the vocals so that Birdman and Lil Wayne’s voices sound almost unrecognizable.

So for the most part, the soundtrack to the upcoming Watchmen movie (which hits theatres on March 6th) is pretty respectable. For a comic book movie (albeit an untypical one) to have a soundtrack that includes such classics as Jimi Hendrix’s “All Along The Watchtower” and Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah”, is an impressive feat. However, there’s one track that’s a black mark on not just the album, but possibly all of music itself. I’m referring to this: My Chemical Romance covering Bob Dylan’s “Desolation Row”. I mean it’s one thing to cover Bob Dylan (The White Stripes did it and their versions of “Love Sick” and “Outlaw Blues” are now staples in their concert repertoire), but c’mon, from the band that fucking once wrote a song called “I’m Not OK (I Promise)”? Seriously? Goddamnit, now I’m depressed.

Kings Of Leon have a new music video for their second single “Use Somebody”, which you can watch here. Maybe it’s just the chorus (“You know that I could use somebody/You know that I could use somebody/Someone like you.”), but this song is heart-wrenching for me everytime I listen to it, and it makes me want to give lead singer Caleb Followhill a hug to make him feel better.

I’m going to leave you with some new music, from a band called Japandroids. Hailing from Vancouver, Japanther is the duo of Brian King and Dave Prowse (see photo above), and are living proof that “Japan” bands (see: Japanther, Japanese Motors, etc.) are the new “crystal” bands (see: Crystal Stilts, Crystal Castles, Crystal Antlers,etc.). In fact, with their style of energetic, garage rock (think No Age hooking up with Death From Above 1979 at a Red Bull and vodka-fueled dance party), it’s only a matter of time before this guitar and drums two-piece that sounds like a five-piece is hailed as the new “it” band of the moment. But just listen to songs like “Young Hearts Spark Fire”, and tell me that there isn’t more to this band than an upcoming onslaught of hype. Japandroids will be playing not one, but three shows during Canadian Music Week at the Gladstone Hotel Ballroom, Trash Palace and Sneaky Dee’s (with respective dates being March 13th, 14th and 15th).

Cheers,
Max

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