Archive for June, 2003

Saturday, June 14th, 2003

Looks Just Like The Sun

Beautiful beautiful day out today. I have got to find my shorts. Or, failing that, buy some shorts. Either way, pant legs have gots to go. Took an aimless bike ride through the city, swinging by some music stores to look at guitars and keyboards, checked out the big community garage sales at Trinity-Bellwoods and the Little Italy street fair in, uh, Little Italy. Nice to finally be out and riding without a coat and just enjoying the fresh air (or as fresh as air in downtown Toronto gets).

The new long-player from Sloan is entitled Action Pact and hits the streets August 19.

Radiohead tickets go on sale next Saturday at 10AM. I am already trying to delegate the hassles of buying them to others… I figure I’m always the one who has to trek to Rotate or Soundscapes to buy tickets for the smaller shows, someone else can deal with Ticketbastard for the big ones. Quid pro quo.

I am looking at my sidebar and noticing that eight of the ten books I have in my ‘Reading’ list are actually comic books. I actually read books without pictures, too. Really I do. I’m sure I have some around here somewhere…

Don’t go anywhere. I’ll find em.

np – Grandaddy / Sumday

Saturday, June 14th, 2003

You Forgot It In People

It’s a rare band that can open for itself not once, but four times in the course of a night. Punters showing up late to last night’s sold-out Broken Social Scene / Stars show and passing over the openers missed, essentially, Stars and Broken Social Scene.

Amy Millan from Stars kicked things off with a short countrified set, backed by members of BSS. This was followed by a impressive set by BSS-er Jason Collett, again backed by no less than seven members of BSS and Stars. This was followed up by BSS guitarist Andrew Whiteman’s Apostle Of Hustle project, which looked an awful lot like Jason Collett’s band. As did Feist’s. Did I just see four 15-minute openers or one hour-long set? Don’t know, don’t care, it was all great.

I had seen Stars way back in the summer of 2000, and must admit I wasn’t terribly impressed with their brand of electro-twee pop backed up by canned recordings. After their set last night, I will happily retract that opinion. The addition of a ridiculously strong drummer has done wonders for their sound, as did the addition of a couple of BSS’ guitarists (they had plenty to spare). The result was a surprisingly muscular and energetic show – it seems that Torquil Campbell has learned that Morrisey’s feyness only really worked when backed up by a badass band. Now if he could only learn to be a little less annoying with his stage banter… Regardless, a minor flaw at most.

Lee’s Palace was absolutely packed to the gills by the time Broken Social Scene took the stage as Broken Social Scene. This being their last hometown show before heading out to tour the US, the room was positively crackling with excitement and anticipation, and for the next hour and a half, they proved why they deserve every kudo and accolade that’s been thrown at them since You Forgot It In People‘s release last October. With an on-stage lineup that ranged between seven and ten people at any given time (and at least three guitars at all times!), BSS unloaded massive-sounding versions of most of People, along with some new material and an unexpected cover of Sloan’s “The Other Man”. By the time they closed off the encore with a triumphant version of “Lover’s Spit”, the band was feeding off the energy of the audience and vice-versa in a way that is far too rare. At the risk of sounding horribly cliche, there was love in the air and it was magic.

A particular perk of the show for me, anyway, was being able to connect names and faces with the band. The ever-rotating cast of players makes it difficult to know who on the record plays or sings what, and that’s compounded by the fact that there’s so damn many of them, but it’s still nice to be able to make a visual connection between the band and the record (like “hey – I buy my CDs at Soundscapes from the fourth guitarist!”).

It’s a pretty damn exciting time to be in Toronto, musically speaking. Not only is there a whole crop of excellent bands all around town, but they’re actually getting well-deserved recogintion from the rest of the world. It’s been a long time since there’s been this sort of buzz in the Big Smoke. It’s cool.

There are a whole whack of pictures from the show in my newly-reprogrammed concert photos section.

np – Broken Social Scene / You Forgot It In People

Friday, June 13th, 2003

Late Nineties Bedroom Rock For The Missionaries

Friday the 13th! Oooooooooh.

Dubya can’t work the Segway. Apparently he couldn’t get a handle on leaning forward to make it go – he kept pulling too far to the right and falling on his ass.

The Radiohead/Stephen Malkmus show on the 16th has been confirmed by the Molson Amphitheatre. Don’t yet know when tickets will be available.

A quick pass through the used CD stores this afternoon yielded a copy of the three-day old Grandaddy album. It’s pretty.

Broken Social Scene continue to rack up the accolades on the international stage. Tonight’s show at Lee’s is sold out and it’ll probably be the last time for a while they’ll be playing around town (not counting the Guelph Hillside Festival), so hopefully it’ll be a good one. They are on hella late so I’ve taken a nap in preparation. And now I am groggy.

np – Grandaddy / Sumday

Thursday, June 12th, 2003

Flux = Rad

You are looking at the net result of the past four weeknights. Version 5.0 of my site is good to go… I’d originally intended it to be a more drastic overhaul, at least in terms of interface approach, but I settled for keeping most of the changes behind the scenes. This is a much leaner site than it’s predecessor, particularly in terms of the CSS and the Nucleus templates. It’s also more graphic intensive, and to my eye, sharper looking. I’m pretty happy with it for now, and will continue tweaking this and that as time goes by, but I think this one might last a while. Or at least until I come up with that ‘drastic overhaul’ idea.

UPDATE – whoops, comments were broken. Now fixed.

np – Pavement / Wowee Zowee

Thursday, June 12th, 2003

Continuous Hit Music

On a whim (and on the high ranking in this week’s Anti-Hit List), I’ve ordered the Ben Gibbard/Andrew Kenney split album, Home: Volume 5. It was actually pretty cheap, even after shipping and exchange. Less than it would sell for in a store up here, anyway.

I am playing with a trackback plugin that’s available for Nucleus. I’m not sure how it’s going so far – I might have more luck if I actually knew what this thing was supposed to do…

np – Ted Leo & The Pharmacists / Hearts Of Oak