Posts Tagged ‘live music’

Titus Andronicus @ The Horseshoe Tavern, July 14, 2010

July 15th, 2010 | By: Guest Contributor

Titus Andronicus

Midway through their Wednesday headlining set, Titus Andronicus frontman and lead singer Patrick Stickles stopped playing his guitar, to address the rowdy crowd assembled in front of him. “We’d like to thank you,” he began, “For choosing us for your New Jersey rock experience tonight.” A simple gesture for sure, but one that came across as incredibly gracious, given the context of the night. While dozens were packing into the Horseshoe to see the band named after a William Shakespeare tragedy perform, across town, fellow New Jersey punk band The Gaslight Anthem  were also playing at Sound Academy. The latter have grown into something of a household name, thanks to their songs being played on rock radio stations, and having played large festivals such as Vans Warped Tour and Lollapalooza. Meanwhile Titus Andronicus – who are rounded out by bassist Ian Graetzer, Amy Klein on guitar and violin, David Robbins on guitar and a American flag-draped keyboard, and Eric Harm on the drums and back-up vocals – have managed to fly under the radar, unless you are a big fan of bands such as Neutral Milk Hotel, The Pogues, or even The Hold Steady, or are the type of person that reads Pitchfork reviews just for the numerical rating (their debut album, The Airing of Grievances, received a respectable 8.5 out of 10)

Even though both bands call the Garden State home, that’s really where the comparisons end. Titus Andronicus don’t write your typical verse-chorus-verse punk songs that are contained between two and four minutes, they write sprawling epic narratives about that last to upwards of fifteen minutes, often building to powerful finishes. They also aren’t a band that are afraid of ambition. Take for example the band’s most recent album, The Monitor, which is loosely based on the American Civil War. The song “A More Perfect Union”, which they opened with, even goes as far as to sample a recording of an address by Abe Lincoln. Stickles’ howling voice, which at any given time sounds like a cross between Conor Oberst, The Hold Steady’s Craig Finn, and (yes, it must be said) Bruce Springsteen, is the perfect vehicle for the band’s rallying cries against conformity, suburban malaise, and fears of the future. Another highlight was “No Future Part Three: Escape from No Future”, which somehow manages to take the line “You will always be a loser”, and turn it into a cathartic sing-a-long.

The show wasn’t all seriousness though – the band also broke out a rousing cover of Weezer’s “The Sweater Song” that had the entire audience chiming in. When they finished, a cheering crowd brought them back out for one more song, something that Sickles commented, “We don’t do very often.” Underrated, but never unappreciated. That’s the Titus Andronicus way.

For more,
MySpace:
http://www.myspace.com/titusandronicus

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The Album Leaf @ Lee’s Palace – April 29, 2010

May 3rd, 2010 | By: Guest Contributor

The Album Leaf

After braving throngs of jubilant Habs fans in the streets celebrating their team’s thrilling series win over Washington, not to mention university students drunkenly reveling in the end of final exams, fans packed into Lee’s Palace for a rare Toronto performance by San Diego’s The Album Leaf. While I missed openers Sea Wolf, I still managed to get there as the band was setting up their L.E.D. wands, and a bevy of instruments (enough to put a small record store out of business). The Album Leaf is a five-piece band, formed by lead singer and multi-instrumentalist Jimmy LaValle, who used to play in numerous San Diego-based hardcore punk bands. They have been making ambient post-rock with elements of electronica since the late 90s, though despite being featured in a few commercials and numerous episodes of The O.C., they still remain relatively unknown to most casual post-rock listeners (those who started listening to Explosions In the Sky only after their songs were used in Friday Night Lights, etc.).

Touring in support of their latest album, A Chorus of Storytellers (released this past February on Sub Pop), the band wasted little time talking as they delved into a mixture of new and older material. Listening to an Album Leaf record is like listening to the soundtrack to the greatest movie never made. LaValle and Co. have played and recorded with Sigur Ros in the past, and it isn’t hard to hear the influence the Icelandic band has had on their music.  Simultaneously ambient and cinematic, with crescendos building to powerful finishes (many of the new songs feature violin and trumpet solos), you don’t listen to the band’s songs to dance around the room to, you listen to them to relax to at night.  Until tonight, I’d never seen such a blissful and transfixed crowd at Lee’s – a testament to how calming the band’s (mostly) instrumental music is.  After telling a humorous story about the band’s earlier border troubles due to certain members’ previous records (which include a D.U.I., minor possession, and a charge for buying illegal fireworks), the band played a three-song encore, which included standouts “Always For You” and “Red-Eye” from the band’s 2006 album Into the Blue Again. It was a perfect ending to a great night of music – what more could you ask for to kick off the summer?

For more The Album Leaf,
Website: http://www.thealbumleaf.com

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Olympic Music

February 21st, 2010 | By: Guest Contributor

Ah, the Winter Olympics. An event that happens only once every four years where people cheer for athletes they don’t know, competing in sports that they don’t understand, all in the name of sweet, sweet patriotism.

But if you are in Vancouver during the next two weeks – whether you live there or are just visiting – then there are plenty of free events and cool stuff going on for you to check out. And what kind of Canadian celebration would it be without some great live music? A week into the Olympics, the city has already seen performances from the likes of Nelly Furtado, Elvis Costello, Lou ReedBuck 65, Malajube, Our Lady Peace, Sloan, Wilco, among others. Toronto-based Dine Alone Records is one of the better represented independent Canadian labels at this year’s Games, with the Arkells, Bedouin Soundclash, City & Colour, and Alexisonfire all performing, the latter who unfortunately had to shut down their Tuesday show after fans caused a barricade to collapse. Moneen’s “Believe” was also selected by the CTV to be included in their Olympic coverage.

With the Olympics running until February 28th, there is still plenty of time to catch shows from homegrown Vancouver talent (Dan Mangan, Said The Whale, You Say Party! We Say Die!), artists/bands who were relatively quiet musically-speaking last year, (Feist, Stars, Tokyo Police Club), and international acts (Damian Marley, Devo, Girl Talk). Also playing are The Stills, Wintersleep, Matt Mays, Jully Black, Sam Roberts and many more!

For a more extensive list of all the shows going on, check out this Facebook event page or head over to LiveCity Vancouver’s website.

And no matter how many medals our athletes win at the end of the day, just remember…

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Steve Aoki @ This Is London – Jan. 29, 2010

February 1st, 2010 | By: Guest Contributor

steve_aoki

Steve Aoki

Steve Aoki is a rock star.

No, not in the conventional guitar-playing, substance-abusing, groupie-fucking sense. But there’s no denying that the Los Angeles-born DJ, and founder of the tastemaking label Dim Mak Records (home to everyone from Armand Van Helden to MSTRKRFT), is grounded in punk and rock roots. Last week, Aoki told Toronto’s NOW Magazine that when he was in college, he threw DIY shows in his own living room, and everyone from Dillinger Escape Plan to Isis to At the Drive-In played there. That’s pretty legit street credentials for a man whose name – for better or worse – has become synonymous with hipster culture (if you don’t know what I’m talking about, than please watch this), and has remixed thoroughly non-punk rock artists like All American Rejects (gag) and Good Charlotte (double gag). That’s too say nothing of his latest, perhaps ill-advised project with The Bloody Beetroots’ Bob Rifo – a screamo duo under the not-so-clever alias of Rifoki (obviously both men missed the memo about screamo going the way of the dodo).

But watching him thrashing around onstage, throwing his sweaty body into the crowd, and spraying champagne all over an eager dancefloor at This Is London last Friday, it was clear that Aoki was the biggest rock star in the room.

And why not? It was certainly more interesting than watching another guy press play on a laptop while twisting and fiddling with some knobs. Coming on shortly before midnight to a chopped-up take on the Lion King theme song, it took no time for Aoki to whip the packed crowd into a frenzy, as he did a set that considered half of his original material and half remixes. I’ll be the first to admit I’m not a huge fan of his original material – I find a lot of it just repetitive, boring electro-house (save the whiplash-inducing, Bloody Beetroots-assisted “Warp 1977″). But where Aoki shines is with his club-killing remixes – he’s never met a song that he didn’t like, and more often than not, his remixes transform the originals into something that sounds a hundred times more massive and anthemic. I first heard about Aoki on the Weird Science remix of Bloc Party’s “Banquet”, which featured none other than Canada’s own Peaches, singing/rapping over Kele Okereke’s vocals and spiky post-punk guitars. More recently though, he turned out a stellar remix of everyone’s current favourite rap song (even T-Swift – watch this and wait till the 3:45 mark), with Drake’s “Forever”. Aoki takes Drake, Lil Wayne and Kanye’s parts over a sped-up electro backbeat, while keeping those horns blasts that sound like air raid sirens, building the beat to a fevered pitch, before slowing the whole thing for Eminem’s to drop his downright sinister-sounding verse. The DJ also dropped his reworked version of Kid Cudi’s “Pursuit Of Happiness”, a song that might just be good enough to get me listening to Top 40 radio again.

Yet the highlight of the night by far was the energy that Aoki put into his performance, which carried on strong until four in the morning. Being caught up in a feverish mass of grinding and moshing bodies, it was easy to forget that I was at a swanky club in Toronto’s entertainment district, and not some punk show in someone’s basement (albeit a very nice basement, with wooden floors, brick walls and spacious ceilings). Too many DJs are content to phone-in their sets, without putting any real effort or enthusiasm, but Aoki is the real deal.

For more Steve Aoki,
Website:
http://steveaoki.dimmak.com/blog/

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