Posts Tagged ‘shows’

Wake for The White Stripes

March 10th, 2011 | By: Aviva Cohen

Our pals at Gold Soundz are putting on a rad event for fans of The White Stripes, movies, movies about bands, cover songs and Canada.

Nine bands, including Ruby Coast and Foxes In Fiction will cover the very best of Jack & Meg White. Following that nostalgia will be a screening of the documentary “Under Great White Northern Lights” chronicling the band’s journey through Canada: playing bowling alleys to city buses.

Doors @ 9, Film @ 12:30 — Saturday, March 12, 2011 — Toronto Underground Cinema — $10 or CMW wristband.

All information is up on Facebook or Gold Soundz Blog

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The Singing Lamb’s 12 Days of Lists – Day 6: Alie’s Favourite Shows of 2009

December 18th, 2009 | By: Alie Lavoie

Hooded Fang

Hooded Fang

9. Hooded Fang @ Cafe Dekcuf (Ottawa) Friday, January 23

Even though Rural Albert Advantage were the headliners at this show, Hooded Fang completely ran off with my heart about thirty seconds into their set. Between the male/female harmonies, the unpretentious inter-switching of instruments and the copious amounts of good cheer that they spread around the room, I was sold. And judging by the bouncing, shimmying attendees around me, I’d say everyone else caught the Fang fever.

8. Rah Rah @ Cafe Dekcuf (Ottawa) Friday, May 15

The second the band hit the stage, I felt like I’d been saved from the brink of musical disparity. I had assured my friends that this would be an excellent show, and felt incredibly guilty for making them endure THREE opening bands that were either flat out awful or dreadfully mediocre. But when Rah Rah got going, I (and hopefully my friends) felt  re-invigorated, forgetting the earlier musical blunders. The band was just so into it and so excited to be there, making their Going Steady material come alive. And of course you can’t talk about Rah Rah without mentioning the throaty beauty of Erin Passmore’s rich, soulful vocals, which the crowd were hootin’ and hollerin’ for, much to her bashful chagrin.

7. Spiral Beach @ The Mansion (Kingston, ON) Tuesday, April 28

This show was particularly special due to the fact that the opening band flaked, meaning that Spiral Beach stepped in to fill the void. That’s right. Two back-to-back sets of Spiral Beach: the first a stripped down, folksy affair, and the second being the regularly scheduled program of raucous, cow-punk-circus-in-space rockers. It was a Tuesday so the audience was a little sparse, but this only added to the especially intimate atmosphere of the evening.

6. Most Serene Republic @ Zaphod Beeblebrox (Ottawa) Saturday, November 14

I knew that MSR would have no problems living up to my high expectations, even before a single note was played: the show began with Adrian Jewett leading the crowd in a spirited chant of “Rufio! Rufio!” (ala Hook), followed by the necessary crowing. From there on, the night was a blur of Jewett’s psychedelic dance moves, Emma Ditchburns clear, jazzy voice ringing out above everything, down-on-the-floor trumpet solos, and the sound guy’s compliance when the band requested that the ignored disco ball be put to use for a freak out dance party during an all-or-nothing performance of “Don’t Hold Back, Feel a Little Longer.”

Spiral Beach

Spiral Beach

5. Spiral Beach @ Zaphod Beeblebrox (Ottawa) Friday, October 30

So it might seem a little excessive to have two Spiral Beach shows in the same list, but if you’ve ever seen these guys live you’ll understand that this isn’t really excessive at all. Since the first time I saw the band play at the Wolfe Island Music Festival back in 2007, these humbling-ly young musician types have only managed to knock my socks off with increasingly greater force. As per usual, they induced me into complete, grooving, musical submission, such that I didn’t even mind the vaguely patronizing “Isn’t she cute” smirks that I kept getting from a middle-aged lady. Whatever, lady. This is Spiral Beach. Smirk away.

4. Lykke Li @ Phoenix (Toronto) Friday, February 6

Although the long wait time before she hit the stage was totally uncalled for, this petite Swedish powerhaüs delivered. She danced like a freak but was so confident in her freakitude that I could only wish that I, too, had the ability to twitch around like that and look cool doing it. Her backing band played a huge role in offering up really dynamic takes on material from the breakout Youth Novels, and complied during her respectable little rapping detours.

3. Ben Kweller @ Mod Club (Toronto) Sunday, February 22

I have had a long love affair with Ben Kweller. I think I was twelve when I first heard his live cover of “Drug Buddy” (by the Lemonheads), and have spent the past eight years in regular cycles of obsession over what has come to be a pretty extensive and varied music catalogue for someone so young. Given my long-term relationship with Kweller, he has been in the top three on my concert bucket list for a while, so it goes without saying that I was a little manically over-excited the night of the show. In the moments before he sidled up onstage, my stomach was executing some impressive gymnastics, but upon finally seeing that muppet face of his and hearing his voice in person, all Southern drawl and take-him-home-to-mom charm, I felt like a little part of me had been made complete. He’s an instantly likeable kind of guy, humble and personable with a natural storytelling ability and easy humour. Ben and his backing band hit a few of my old favourites (“Family Tree”, “On My Way” and “The Rules”), but approached them with the countrified sound of his latest album. Going into the show, I wasn’t really sure about the twangy of his newest release Changing Horses, but I left convinced of its merit and ever more enamoured with my favourite little Texan.

2. Frightened Rabbit @ Horseshow Tavern (Toronto) Wednesday, July 22

First in-person band interview: backstage, pre-show with front man Scott Hutchinson. First free journalistic beer as a result of said interview. (I kept the bottle cap). Ridiculously welcoming and enthusiastic crowd.  Explosive, equally enthusiastic performance from the band. Lots of torso-twisting dance moves. Lots of sing-a-longs. Lots of oh-my-god-I-can’t-believe-I’m-here moments. I’ve been wanting to see Frightened Rabbit live ever since my first spin of Midnight Organ Fight, and it’s really nice to know that when so many bands are absolute shit live, there are still musicians out there not only making amazing records, but elevating their studio recordings by giving sincere, passionate live performances.

Fleet Foxes

Fleet Foxes

1. Fleet Foxes @ Metropolis (Montreal) Monday, August 3

The musical skill packed into each of these band members is all at once inspiring and capable of knocking any aspiring musician down a couple of pegs. I have never heard a band who can perform live THIS flawlessly. They so perfectly executed the signature, intricate harmonies that make up the FF soundscape, leading me to believe that Fleet Foxes are physically incapable of singing or playing a bad note. Ever. The atmosphere in the venue switched between silent awe during each song, and an onslaught of appreciative noise-making as the last note faded out. But I felt like I should be doing more than just cheering my loudest at the end of each song. I felt like I should’ve been constructing some sort of Fleet Foxes shrine in the middle of the sardine-packed crowd.

Aside from seeing Final Fantasy play in a church a couple years back, I’ve never experienced such transcendence at the hands of live music. And I think this is the ultimate for live shows, those times when you let go of everything but the music and are able to enter into a state that’s probably something like an out-of-body experience. The band seemed continually bowled over by the audience’s adoring response, and the night ended with three fist-clenched bouts of thank yous from lead singer Robin Pecknold as he proclaimed that it was the best show they’d ever played. Now I know it’s naive to think that this hasn’t been said before to other crowds, but I’m choosing to take stock in this statement given the mutual, almost sappy appreciation that was blatantly exchanged between audience and band. As the Fleet Foxers made their way off stage, they could be seen embracing each other and shaking their heads at each other, seemingly disbelieving and overwhelmed by the crowd’s response.

We were pretty overwhelmed, too.

-Alie

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Review: Two Hours Traffic & Spiral Beach @ Lee’s – Oct. 16, 2009

October 22nd, 2009 | By: Guest Contributor

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Two Hours Traffic

I have a confession to make. Whenever I take someone to a show based on my recommendation, and said person has never heard of the artist/band playing or listened to them before, I feel personally responsible if that person has a shitty time.  Maybe its because I feel like I’m wasting that person’s money, maybe its because I feel like I am failing to sell the band, but I feel guilty nonetheless. Thankfully, that wasn’t the case last Friday when I went with a friend to Lee’s Palace, to check out a bill with three bands that she had never heard of. I had interviewed bands at Lee’s before, but I had never attended an actual show at the venue, but was plenty impressed with the layout of the place. No matter where you are in the venue, you are guaranteed a decent vantage point of the stage.  We started sitting along the outside, before moving to stand in the lowered pit in the centre of the room.  The multiple gin and tonics also didn’t hurt.

Unfortunately for the packed crowd at Lee’s, the night got off to a weak start with the opening band, Charlottetown’sThe Danks. Despite sharing members with Two Hours Traffic, it was the voice of the band’s lead singer, Bryan Moore, that I felt ruined what might have been decent, albeit uninspired, garage rock tunes.  It was obvious that Moore was trying to pull off  his best Julian Casablancas impression, but his raggedy vocals fell rather flat.

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

Luckily any bad tastes left in the crowds’ mouths were quickly forgotten, as soon as Toronto’s hometown darlingsSpiral Beach took to the stage, accompanied by their trademark orange pylons. The quartet are just entering their twenties, but the energy they display onstage, reminds me of a group of junior high kids that got into their parents’ liquor cabinets. The band recently released their third album, The Only Real Thing, which adds spaced- out synths and surf rock guitars to their frenetic, messy garage-punk.  It didn’t take long before the band’s female vocalist and keyboardist Maddy Wilde, who was wearing an upside down, cut-up tee with “Florida” written on it and a frilly black skirt, had the crowd willingly eating out of her hand. I think my friend who accompanied me to this show described Wilde’s look the best, calling her “Emily Haines, if she had got electrocuted.” And while its true the singer was highly entertaining to watch; and her hair is a few twigs short of a bird’s nest, she is certainly a vocal powerhouse, wailing like a banshee and hitting some impressively high notes. The rest of the band; vocalist and guitarist Airick Woodhead, bassist Dorian Wolf, and drummer Daniel Woodhead, were also on pointe in terms of  musicianship and enthusiasm. Spiral Beach played a solid set with plenty of songs from The Only Real Thing mixed in with older material, including the stellar “Zombie”, and left the audience more than pumped up for Two Hours Traffic.

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

This was the second-last show on their tour, and the Lee’s crowd was more than happy to give a heroes’ welcome to Two Hours Traffic. Hailing from the smallest province in Canada, the quartet are the musical equivalent of “The Little Engine That Could” – coming up from relative obscurity to headlining tours, appearing on the cover of national music magazines such as EXCLAIM!, and even receiving a 2008 Polaris Prize nomination for their sophomore album, Little Jabs. Two Hours Traffic are truly the type of band who prefer to let their music speak for itself. That music isn’t flashy either – just earnest, well-written power-pop songs free of pretentiousness with a characteristically laid-back Atlantic Canadian nature.

The public and critic consensus of the band’s latest album, Territory, is that Two Hours Traffic have discovered darker subject matter including alcoholism, religious beliefs, and conflicted relationships. But if you need proof that the band who once wrote a song cheekily-named “Backseat Sweetheart” has lost their sense of humour, look no further than a lyric like, “You say you don’t like the beach, that is fine, but there’s sand in your sheets.” While new songs like“Noisemaker” and “Territory” are TWT classics-in-waiting, cuts from Little Jabs like “Nighthawks” and the incredibly catchy “Stuck For The Summer”, got the biggest reactions from the crowd. After lead singer Liam Corcoran finished thanking everyone and their mothers, the band finished their set with the absolutely gorgeous“Jezebel”.  How do I describe just how good this song is? Let’s just say that if there was any justice in the world, this song would be played at weddings more often as the newly wed couples’ first dance.  One can only hope… After about five minutes of cheering, the band came back for a quick encore, but at that point it wasn’t even necessary.  It’s great to see a down-to-earth, hardworking band like Two Hours Traffic have this success, and I’m sure everyone in attendance that night at Lee’s went home hoping that there are nothing but even better days and more success to come for these guys.

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

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Shows Update!

September 28th, 2009 | By: Melody Lau

The Hidden Cameras

The Hidden Cameras

These are just some show announcements that we’ve missed out on in the past month, while we were away. Take a look and enjoy!

Andrew W.K. & Calder Quartet @ Music Gallery, October 4, $26.50, ALL AGES

Vampire Weekend @ Horseshoe, October 8, $22.50, 19+

Twilight Sad, Brakesbrakesbrakes, We Were Promised Jetpacks @ El Mocambo, October 10, $12.00, 19+

Lonely Dear, Asobi Seksu, Anna Ternheim @ Horseshoe, October 12, 19+

Amy Millan, Bahamas @ Mod Club, October 14, $15.00, 19+

School of 7 Bells @ Lee’s, October 15, $13.50, 19+

Pekko Kappi, Isla Craig @ Music Gallery, October 18, $15.00, ALL AGES

Rain Machine @ Lee’s, October 19, $15.00, 19+

Dead Man’s Bones @ Music Gallery, October 20, SOLD OUT, ALL AGES

Malajube @ Horseshoe, October 24, $13.00, 19+

Broadcast, Atlas Sound @ Lee’s, October 24, $13.00, 19+

Choir of Young Believers @ Horseshoe, October 25, $10.00, 19+

A Place To Bury Strangers, Dead Confederate @ Mod Club, October 27, $13.00, 19+

Mum @ Opera House, October 27, $20.00, 19+

Julie Doiron, Herman Dune @ Lee’s, October 27, $13.50, 19+

Liam Finn, Miracle Fortress @ Lee’s, October 29, $13.00, 19+

Canaille, Muskox @ Music Gallery, October 29, $10.00, ALL AGES

Noah and the Whale @ Horseshoe, October 31, 19+

The Swell Season @ Massey Hall, November 3, $29.50, ALL AGES

Dan Deacon, The Nuclear Power Plants @ Sneaky Dee’s, November 3, $15.00, 19+

The Rural Alberta Advantage @ November 4, $13.00, 19+

The Vic Chessnut Band @ Lee’s, November 7, $15.00, 19+

Islands @ Mod Club, November 7, $15.00, 19+

Girls @ El Mocambo, November 10, $12.00, 19+

J. Tillman @ Horseshoe, November 11, $20.00, 19+

Peter Bjorn and John @ Phoenix, November 11, $20.00, 19+

The Jesus Lizard @ Phoenix, November 12, $20.00, 19+

Alela Diane, Marissa Nadler @ Horseshoe, November 16, $12.00, 19+

Apostle of Hustle @ Lee’s, November 19, $15.00, 19+

Fuck Buttons, Growing @ El Mocambo, November 23, $10.00, 19+

Friendly Fires, The XX @ Mod Club, December 2, $16.50, 19+

King Khan and BBQ @ Lee’s, December 4, $13.00, 19+

The Hidden Cameras, Gentleman Reg @ Opera House, December 5, $15.00, 19+

Happy Listening!

Musically,

Melody

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Kids Just Wanna Have Fun!

January 19th, 2009 | By: Melody Lau

All Caps!

All Caps!

Contrary to popular belief, not all pre-teens are head over heels for the Jonas Brothers or Fall Out Boy. (That is also the last time you will see those two names mentioned on this site…ever) In fact, all I’ve done for years was sit around a lunch table, surrounded by fellow frustrated underagers, complaining about the plethora of 19+ shows in town and how we long for the day Jason Collett or The Rural Alberta Advantage would play another all-ages show. It’s understandable, all ages shows can’t always be done. But we may as well be stealing delicious, musical candy from babies – and by babies, I just mean anyone under 19. For those who are still coping with this frustration, here’s a little guide of all-ages venues and events in Toronto. Hope this helps.

The Venues

The Music Gallery
Most shows at the Music Gallery (197 John St.) are all-ages. As Toronto’s Centre for Creative Music since 1976, this music venue has hosted great shows recently by The Dears and Basia Bulat. It’s location at St. George the Martyr Church provides a unique, unconventional atmosphere and the beautiful stained-glass windows makes for amazing back drops.

The Whippersnapper Gallery
This art space is quite the hot spot for all-ages shows. Located in the heart of Little Italy (587A College St.), this venue may be hard to spot on the outside, but the staircase covered with its name and the loud and fun checkered floor leave a bigger impression in your mind than the Kool Haus ever will. The Whippersnapper is small in capacity size, but has packed loads of fun from past performers such as Two Hours Traffic, Matt and Kim and Spiral Beach.

Harbourfront
Harbourfront consistently hosts some of the best (mostly FREE) shows throughout the summer. With the lovely lake on one side and a great outdoor stage on the other, what can go wrong? (besides potential drowning if you were to fall into the lake…) This past summer alone held free, all-ages show by Crystal Castles, Ladytron, Woodhands, Basia Bulat and Plants and Animals. So why worry about getting into a dark, 19+ show in a bar when you can go out and enjoy the fresh air (yes, it exists) by the lake!

Other Venues:
Massey Hall
Air canada Centre
Rogers Centre
Ricoh Coliseum
Molson Amphitheatre
Danforth Music Hall
Queen Elizabeth Theatre
Church of the Redeemer
St. Stephen-in-the-Fields Church
Trinity-St. Paul’s Centre
Rolly’s Garage
Yonge-Dundas Square
Nathan Philips Square

In-Stores (All-ages AND free!):
Soundscapes
Criminal Records
Sonic Boom

Occasional All-Ages Shows:
Sound Academy
Kool Haus
Tranzac Club
Opera House
Mod Club
Phoenix
Reverb/Kathedral/Holy Joe’s

The Events

Over the Top Festival
This phenomenal all-ages festival is now seven years old, entering its eigth in 2009 and was created by Toronto, Music-man-extraordinaire, Eric Warner. This film and music festival takes place in various venues around Toronto, and has hosted shows by acts such as Kevin Barnes (Of Montreal), Matt and Kim, Silver Apples, and Woodhands. This is basically any underager’s dream. Thank you, Eric Warner. Thank you.

All Caps
Brought to you by Ryan McLaren, All Caps is a monthly all-ages concert series that is an all-day funfest of bands. Taking place both indoors and outdoors, All Caps is a fantastic place to tune into new bands and discover and share the wonderfully diverse arts community in the city. A common venue used for All Caps shows is the aforementioned Whippersnapper Gallery and the concert series in general has included performances from Hooded Fang, Brides, Huckleberry Friends, The Rural Alberta Advantage and Bruce Peninsula.

Daps All-Ages Shows
Brand new and created by the wonderful folks of Daps Duo, the Daps All-Ages Shows is a new series in all-ages concerts in Toronto. Recently celebrating their successful, first show featuring The Bicylces, Tonka & Puma and Oh No Forest Fires (and many more), Daps clearly have a bright future in all-ages events. If the gods of Toronto work in our favour, will there even be a Daps-Singing Lamb all-ages funfest? Stay tuned.

Well I hoped this helped someone; I definitely would’ve liked to have known about these venues and shows way earlier. See, there are options out there! So stop moping around about the latest Wavelength show or even the upcoming Canadian Music Week festivities! Go to an in-store! Go experience the Whippersnapper Gallery (Boys Who Say No are having an EP release show at the end of the month there – GO)! If I was able to rack up 30+ shows in one underaged year, you can too!

Happy listening!

Musically,
Melody

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