Saturday, September 06, 2008
Virgin Festival 2008 Preview
And now this year. After a strong start with the likes of Oasis, Paul Weller, Foo Fighters, Bloc Party and Spiritualized, the Toronto edition of V not only failed to add any more especially big names, they were actually losing them. Well, moderately big names. Swedish dance-pop queen Robyn disappeared from the lineup almost as quickly as she was announced on account of being tapped to open up for Madonna. Perfectly reasonable. Then UK brothers in arms The Cribs bailed - no reason given, but considering they've probably cancelled more Toronto shows than they've played, not a surprise. But when the official schedule was released last week and The Wombats were nowhere to be seen, that was a let-down. And inexplicable - their North American tour is continuing on as planned, and their routing still takes them near Toronto on Sunday (from Chicago to Providence) but they're not crossing the border. And while it's unlikely anyone bought a ticket explicitly to see these acts - that's just bad budgeting - they were certainly draws and their absences cause for grumbling.
But on that, there's naught to be done and at least the big guns are still coming to town today and tomorrow and if the weather holds out - looks iffy right now - it should still be a good weekend. The Toronto Star is obviously excited, devoting an entire section to the fest - previewing acts, talking to Bloc Party and Shudder To Think and generally getting all worked up. The Globe & Mail profiles a band that I'm more interested in seeing every time I listen - The Airborne Toxic Event, eye catches up with Constantines, AOL Music Canada talks to Paul Weller and NOW discusses the joys of ALL CAPS with MGMT.
Oh, and for a little audio content, one V Fest act covering another. The Kooks on MGMT.
MP3: The Kooks - "Kids"
And finally, apparently Noel Gallagher has whilst on this North American tour, but you need to be a registered member on their website to read em. I don't think I'm quite ready to trade my personal info for access to such insights like the fact that The Beatles are his favourite band of all-time... though Details and Canada.com have more substantive pieces on the band. Either way, I'm still really forward to seeing them on Sunday night. Yessir.
Posted at 09:25 AM by Frank in General - 5 comments - Back to top
del.icio.us -
digg -
facebook
Friday, September 05, 2008
Lost Wisdom
In addition to the new record, which Pitchfork talks to Elverum about, both artists have also re-released old records this year. In April, The Microphones' 2001 release The Glow, Pt 2 was put back into print with a bonus disc and in July, Doiron's second solo record Loneliest In The Morning was also reissued along with three bonus tracks.
The tour stops in Toronto on October 14 at the Church Of The Redeemer along with Calm Down It's Monday on the bill.
MP3: Mt Eerie - "Woolly Mammoth's Absence"
MP3: Mt Eerie - "2 Blonde Braids"
MP3: Julie Doiron - "So Fast"
Video: Microphones - "The Glow, Pt 2"
Paste reports that Great Lake Swimmers, who themselves played the Church Of The Redeemer in Spring 2007, will be theatrically releasing a concert film shot at the Phoenix in HD last Fall on November 5 and intend to have album number four out next Spring. They're at Lee's Palace on October 25.
And she who accompanied Great Lake Swimmers at that April show - Basia Bulat - has an incendiary new video out. Yes, incendiary. Wait for it.
Video: Basia Bulat - "The Pilgriming Vine"
Blurt interviews Neil Young. He's at the Air Canada Centre on December 9.
Radio Free Canuckistan has posted the full transcript of his interview with Angela Desveaux which yielded the previously-linked Exclaim piece. There's also interviews with her at The Montreal Gazette, Montreal Mirror and hour.ca. If you missed her show at the Boat last night, you can still see her October 15 opening up for The New Year at Lee's Palace. The Mighty Ship is out on Tuesday.
Drowned In Sound follows The Hidden Cameras on tour around Europe.
David Berman of The Silver Jews talks to The Weekly Dig, Valley Advocate, The Philadelphia Inquirer and Metro Boston.
Bradley's Almanac is sharing audio of The National's show in Boston this Summer whilst opening up for R.E.M..
If you missed The Secret Machines when they hit Lee's in July, take heart - they're coming back. With their self-titled album due out on October 14, they're hitting the road and will be back at the Palace of Lee on October 22.
New Hampshire Public Radio has an audio interview with Okkervil River's Will Sheff. The penultimate installment in the Stand-Ins cover project is now up, featuring Ola Podrida. One to go before the album is out on Tuesday. Okkervil are at the Phoenix on October 12.
Video: Ola Podrida - "Calling and Not Calling My Ex"
The Sea & Cake have a new album in Car Alarm, out October 21, and will be at Lee's Palace on November 14.
I appreciate that posts have been a little on the brief side lately - this one only reached a respectable size at the last minute this morning. Call it a combination of trying to work ahead to minimize the amount of work that V Fest is going to be and some utter madness at work. So if you were hoping for more verbiage... blame the Harper government. No, I'm serious.
Posted at 08:18 AM by Frank in General - 1 comment - Back to top
del.icio.us -
digg -
facebook
Thursday, September 04, 2008
Dig It
The Doors song has long been a staple of her live shows, so that makes sense, and the Mama Cass song suits her style perfectly. The Nada Surf song... sure, why not, but The Church cover is a pleasant surprise though as she tells Stereogum, who have a stream of said cover, it was her "favorite song in high school". Who'd have thunk it? It's a bit of a shame that there's no definitive version of her take on Patti Smith's "Pissing In A River", though - I mean, just watch the vid below. Far as I know the only decent recording is from Austin City Limits last year and that's only available via iTunes.
Anyway, the EP will be out on Tuesday in digital form for sure and in physical form maybe? I have yet to find any evidence that there'll be a CD, but nowhere do they say "digital only" either, and the luddite in me still likes to thing that the CD is the default format for releasing music. Either way, it's coming.
Nicole talks a bit about the EP in a recent MySpace blog post and also mentions that after this upcoming leg of touring, she and The Sea will be hunkering down to work on album number two, which she anticipates taking a heavier, rockier direction. There's more Nicole blog action at her Tumblr and there's a two-part video interview at MOG.com from earlier this Summer.
Video: Nicole Atkins & The Sea - "Pissing In A River" (live)
An Aquarium Drunkard has an interview with Kurt Wagner of Lambchop, whose OH (ohio) is out October 7 and who will be playing the Drake Underground solo on October 6.
PopMatters talks to Alan Sparhawk whilst wearing his Retribution Gospel Choir hat.
Shannon McCardle, formerly of the Mendoza Line, discusses her solo debut Summer Of The Whore with Blurt.
Filter has posted the entirety of their recent cover story on Flight Of The Conchords. This article, along with their cover feature in Under The Radar (along with hilarious photo spread) was key to getting me to watch the show. Season two is supposed to start up sometime around January of next year.
Sonic Boom will be hosting another in-store on September 13 at 7PM, this one featuring $100 and Castlemusic.
Posted at 08:27 AM by Frank in General - 1 comment - Back to top
del.icio.us -
digg -
facebook
Wednesday, September 03, 2008
The Stars Whiteout
And it's a damn shame, really. As I mentioned two years ago, I'd never paid them much attention until I was sent a couple tracks from that final record and was quite won over by their sound, heavy on words and melody, a dry yet soothing aesthetic and a knack for both a well-placed bit of guitar skronk and violin line. Kind of a slightly snottier yet no less romantic Idlewild, with an similar facility for balancing anthemic rockers with more introspective, folk-inflected numbers. It wasn't necessarily anything new, but it was done really well and there were more than a handful of really excellent songs on there - it's quite a testament that even after all this time, it still gets moderately heavy rotation hereabouts and this is from someone with a pretty lousy attention span.
They had one posthumous release in last year's Disband In Bonn, which as the title implies was a collection of live tracks recorded on their final tour in Germany. They've now done a little more cupboard cleaning, however, and the result is the The Stars Whiteout - an 8-song mini-album that they're giving away as a free download to whoever wants it. It's mostly new songs, plus an alternate version of an On Fire song and a cover of fellow underappreciated Nottingham-ers Six By Seven's "IOU Love" (which in itself was a crib of The Church's "Under The Milky Way", but let's not get into that again). While it's kind of a bit late to act as a way to get into the band - at least in any sense that'll do them any good - it's a good listen and maybe it'll be enough to encourage you to scrounge up a copy of On Fire, With Love and enjoy it as the excellent record it is.
eMusic has pretty much their entire catalog available for download - which reminds me that I still have to grab their Matador debut Lay Of The Land - and if you've only got five minutes and forty-three seconds to spare, I suggest devoting them to "In", my favourite track off On Fire.
MP3: Seachange - "Personal Assistant"
MP3: Seachange - "IOU Love"
MP3: Seachange - "In"
Video: Seachange - "Glitterball"
Album: Seachange / The Stars Whiteout (.zip)
And speaking of scenes (and fitting into them or not), Brett Anderson tells The Guardian that Suede were never a Britpop band, no matter how many Union Jacks he posed in front of in the early '90s. Sure, Brett. He's got a new solo record out entitled Wilderness.
NME reports that Patrick Wolf has not one but two new albums in the works.
Head over to The Daily Growl for a taste of Richard Hawley in full-on rockabilly mode, part of his contribution to the soundtrack to British retro horror film Flick.
Austin 360 welcomes Nicole Atkins back to Austin for Austin City Limits in a few weeks.
Santogold is coming to the Phoenix on September 24, though I can't help notice that that's the same date as the Mogwai show... Mogwai versus Santogold. That, I would pay to see. I assume this conflict will be resolved one way or another. Full dates - correct or otherwise - at NME. Update: thanks to Daniel in the comments for pointing out that the show is now at the Guvernment. That post-rock/dance-rock showdown for the ages will have to wait for another day, but believe me - it's coming.
Zoilus has posted the the complete email transcript of his interview with Silver Jew David Berman that went into the piece in Tuesday's The Globe & Mail. I opted to skip the show at Lee's on Tuesday night - how was it?
There's another installment up in the Okkervil River Stand-Ins covers project - this one is "On Tour With Zykos" covered by, of course, Zykos. The Stand-Ins is out on Tuesday and Okkervil are at the Phoenix on October 12.
Video: Zykos - "On Tour With Zykos"
Hamptons.com chats with Aimee Mann.
Posted at 08:32 AM by Frank in General - 9 comments - Back to top
del.icio.us -
digg -
facebook
Tuesday, September 02, 2008
Now We Are Six
The occasion is today marking the sixth anniversary of this blog. If it were a small child, it would be in first grade. I'm so proud. And looking back at my "blogiversary" posts from the last couple years I realize that I still have nothing in particular to say on the matter. Whereas once I'd prognosticate about the future of the site, now I'm just whatever. It's what I do, and at the pace that I do it. A pace that's slowed a bit recently, I know, but much to the benefit of my state of mind so let's hope that quality is compensating for quantity.
And I'll take the opportunity to thank all of you for visiting and continuing to visit and making this whole endeavour worthwhile. Without you readers there's really no point, though I confess that I do sometimes secretly yearn for the day when my traffic drops to zero and I can close up shop with a completely clear conscience. But don't think you'd be doing me a favour by leaving - if I suddenly found myself with that much free time on my hands I'd probably take up a far less wholesome hobby like arson or bingo.
So cheers to you, cheers to me. Cheers all around. Yay.
Also in a retrospective mood is Portastatic, the side project of Mac McCaughan which has obviously been too long-lived and too fruitful to really call a side project anymore. With nine proper albums released under the banner - that's actually more than Superchunk has released - Portastatic has encompassed everything from instrumental film scores to full-band rock outs to Tropicalia to bedroom recording experiments and the new double-disc compilation Some Small History, out September 9, covers all those bases in the form of b-sides, rarities, outtakes and a whack of covers. A lot of the stuff is kinda sketchbook-y, but there's a lot of worthwhile material contained therein for fans and a pretty blistering take on Ryan Adams' "Oh My Sweet Carolina". Check out the title track from the collection below:
MP3: Portastatic - "Some Small History"
And speaking of the 'Chunk, they're not dead - they just played Bumbershoot in Seattle this weekend - but they're far from an ongoing proposition. Spin lists four reasons why the band still matters after all these years, even seven years on from their last album, and The Stranger has a chat with drummer/comedian Jon Wurster.
Thanks to For The Records for digging up the lineup for the free, Toronto International Film Festival closing gala at Yonge-Dundas Square on the eve of the 13th, which will feature performances from Esthero, The Midway State and Cadence Weapon.
Speaking of TIFF, I had a lovely Labour Day standing in line to claim my tickets for this year and then to find a substitution for the single film that I wasn't able to get - a total of five hours standing out in the sun, good times all around. But I eventually came away with tickets for It Might Get Loud, the doc on the history of the electric guitar, Gigantic, with Zooey Deschanel, Good, with Viggo Mortensen, RockNRolla, the new Guy Ritchie film, and The Other Man, with Liam Neeson and Laura Linney. A more mainstream batch of films than I usually end up with at the festival but should still be a good lot. I had expected to end up selling off at least a couple pairs of tickets but I may very well be able to make all of these screenings. How novel.
And a final cinematic note, RIP Don LaFontaine, king of the movie trailer voiceover. More tributes at Ain't It Cool News.
Posted at 08:28 AM by Frank in General - 17 comments - Back to top
del.icio.us -
digg -
facebook






Whether with 









