Archive for June, 2008

Monday, June 9th, 2008

We Looked Like Giants


Photo by Frank Yang

Indisputable conclusion to be drawn from Saturday’s Olympic Island mini-festival out on the Toronto Islands – the kids still love the Death Cab For Cutie. Oh, how they love them. The Seattle foursome’s tour in support of their recent #1 record Narrow Stairs brought them to town with a perfectly-conceived lineup also featuring Stars, Rogue Wave and Young Galaxy, and by assembling a set of bands so RIYL-friendly, you were pretty much guaranteed a happy audience from the start of the afternoon through the evening’s close.

For me, it was interesting because while I’d followed almost all the bands from their early days, I’d sort of lost touch with them in recent years. For Death Cab, Stars and Rogue Wave, it’d been four and a half, two and two and a half years respectively since I’d seen them live so while I thought I’d know what to expect, that wouldn’t necessarily be the case. It would be like seeing them with fresh eyes, and that was also precisely what I needed for the first band of the day, Young Galaxy.

I’d seen them once before in January 2007 and was so underwhelmed that I basically filed them under “ignore” ever since. But everyone deserves a second chance and since I was already there and they were right in front of me, I gave them one and happily, it wasn’t wasted. I wasn’t blown away or rush out to the merch tent to grab a copy of their self-title, but considering their recipe of dreamy co-ed space-pop should be right up my alley, I was much more sold this time around. Maybe it was the bright daylight, but they played with exponentially more energy and interest than I remembered from that Horseshoe show with even a few songs – “Come And See” in particular – that jumped out as exceptional. Congratulations Young Galaxy, you’ve made it out of my kill file.

At no time did I make an overt decision to ignore Rogue Wave, but following their second release Descended Like Vultures and subsequent departure from SubPop, they simply fell off my radar. I didn’t even know that they’d released a new record last year with Asleep At Heaven’s Gate until some time after the fact, so the fact that they seemed to lean more heavily on this record than the ones I was familiar with made it difficult for me to be overly engaged by them. They put on a good, energetic show – as I recall, the previous times I saw them, they rated as high as “alright” but not really threatening with “great” and while they were definitely better now, certainly not out of place on the big stage, my impressions were about the same on a relative scale.

For some time, Stars have been of a stature that they could reasonably have headlined a show of this size on their own so the audience response to their penultimate set was certainly a loud one. And certainly, with their flower-festooned stage setup, the band were able to endear themselves even further to their fans by tossing roses and tulips into the crowd throughout the set. They delivered a set of all the hits from their repertoire, making a case for themselves as one of the best singles bands in the country over the past few years and also making me wonder why I didn’t spend more time with last year’s In Our Bedroom After The War. Torq Campbell remains the sort of frontman who will full up whatever size stage you put him on and his antics, including scissor-kicking a feedbacking mic stand that was interrupting his trumpet solo, added a welcome bit of showmanship to the day.

As previously mentioned, the kids love the Death Cab. It’s been a while since I’ve heard such shrieks of joy as erupted when the band strode out onto a remarkably empty stage (every other band had a sea of equipment with them) at dusk. I wondered before the show how their set would be allotted – whether it would lean heavily on the newer, major-label material with which much of their fanbase was probably won over, or would it pay proper respect to their older albums? Luckily for me, it would be the latter as material from as far back as We Have The Facts And Are Voting Yes would get their proper due, but I would hope that their more recent fans have taken the trouble of exploring their back catalog – it’s not as though they’ve radically changed their sound over the years so fans of Plans should find much to love in The Photo Album.

It’s so easy to forget that for all the “sensitive band” credit that Death Cab gets, they can also bring the rock quite handily and while I don’t really remember how intense their early shows that I saw were, they definitely delivered in terms of energy. Ben Gibbard, trading in his “I’m listening” glasses for some righteous porkchop sideburns, never stopped moving (a joy for the photographer, lemme tell ya) with his facial expressions reading more like crazy person than someone you’d bring home to meet mom. It was good to see. But for all the rock, the biggest response came for solo acoustic sensitive number, “I Will Follow You Into The Dark”. The swooning was audible and a sea of digicams and cellphones were raised high above heads while the bodies they were attached to swayed and probably made out. LCDs are the new lighters.

This show felt like the unofficial start of Summer, not just for the sweltering heat wave which hit a couple days previous (thankfully mitigated by the lake so as to be just on the warm side of sublime) but for the lazy and laid back vibe of the day. Though set up like a proper fest, the compact lineup and not overwhelming crowds (except at the food concessions) kept everyone in a good, mellow mood. I’m a little alarmed at how much my feet were hurting after such a relatively easy day of show coverage, but I’ll chalk that up to getting the rust off and not that I’m too old for this stuff anymore. I’m hoping by V Fest I’m once again a lean, mean festival-going machine. Or I’ve got a sherpa to carry my gear, whichever.

The Toronto Star, The Toronto Sun, Canada.com, The Baltimore Sun, The Washington Post, Gothamist, Perth Now and She Knows have interviews with Death Cabbers while Falls Church News Press talks to Rogue Wave drummer Pat Spurgeon. The Toronto Sun, Chart and eye also have reviews of Saturday.

And I think my list of media links is longer than my review. Oh well.

Photos: Olympic Island 2008 – June 7, 2008
MP3: Death Cab For Cutie – “Soul Meets Body”
MP3: Death Cab For Cutie – “Title & Registration”
MP3: Death Cab For Cutie – “A Movie Script Ending”
MP3: Death Cab For Cutie – “The New Year”
MP3: Death Cab For Cutie – “Song For Kelly Huckaby”
MP3: Death Cab For Cutie – “Company Calls Epilogue (Alternate Version)”
MP3: Death Cab For Cutie – “405 (acoustic)”
MP3: Death Cab For Cutie – “For What Reason”
MP3: Death Cab For Cutie – “The Employment Pages”
MP3: Death Cab For Cutie – “Champagne From A Paper Cup”
MP3: Death Cab For Cutie – “Bend To Squares”
MP3: Stars – “The Night Starts Here”
MP3: Stars – “Ageless Beauty”
MP3: Rogue Wave – “Lake Michigan”
MP3: Rogue Wave – “Endless Shovel”
MP3: Rogue Wave – “Every Moment”
MP3: Rogue Wave – “10:01”
MP3: Rogue Wave – “Publish My Love”
MP3: Young Galaxy – “Outside The City”
MP3: Young Galaxy – “Come And See”
MP3: Young Galaxy – “Swing Your Heartache”
Video: Death Cab For Cutie – “I Will Possess Your Heart”
Video: Death Cab For Cutie – “I Will Follow You Into The Dark”
Video: Death Cab For Cutie – “Crooked Teeth”
Video: Death Cab For Cutie – “Soul Meets Body”
Video: Death Cab For Cutie – “Title & Registration”
Video: Death Cab For Cutie – “The New Year”
Video: Death Cab For Cutie – “A Movie Script Ending”
Video: Death Cab For Cutie – “The Sound Of Settling”
Video: Stars – “The Night Starts Here”
Video: Stars – “Take Me To The Riot”
Video: Stars – “Reunion”
Video: Stars – “Ageless Beauty”
Video: Stars – “Your Ex-Lover Is Dead”
Video: Stars – “Elevator Love Letter”
Video: Rogue Wave – “Lake Michigan”
Video: Rogue Wave – “Eyes”
Video: Rogue Wave – “Publish My Love”
Video: Young Galaxy – “Outside The City”
Video: Young Galaxy – “Come And See”
MySpace: Death Cab For Cutie
MySpace: Stars
MySpace: Rogue Wave
MySpace: Young Galaxy

Though it’s supposed to be Brendan Canning’s turn in the “Broken Social Scene Presents” marquee – his solo record Something For All Of Us… is out July 22 but available for sale digitally right now (Chart explains why), Kevin Drew isn’t quite ready to step aside, having just released another video from Spirit If….

Video: Kevin Drew – “Safety Bricks”

The Irish Independent talks to Feist.

The Times wonders why Canada is so good at turning out female singer-songwriters. Why, a eugenics program based around the genome of Joni Mitchell, of course.

NPR is streaming Neko Case’s recent performance at LA’s Walt Disney Concert Hall.

The Guardian talks to The Hold Steady about their new record Stay Positive, out July 15.

Bob Dylan and Billy Bragg – two fellows who’ve been known to have an opinion or two about politics – endorse Barack Obama to The Times and Reveille, respectively. Bragg, who plays Harbourfront Centre on June 17, also chats with The Georgia Straight and Canada.com.

Aversion interviews David Gedge of The Wedding Present.

Usually if a band is coming through town twice in a short amount of time, they hold off announcing the second show till the first one’s done for fear of siphoning off ticket sales. In the case of Mogwai, however, it might actually help. Matador has announced the band’s Fall North American tour in support of The Hawk Is Howling, out September 23, and its companion EP Batcat, out September 9, and it brings the Scottish outfit to the Kool Haus on September 24. Note that this is a venue twice the size as the Phoenix, where they’ll be on June 30. Obviously expectations are that the new record will double their fanbase. So if you’ve been dithering about deciding whether to go to the Phoenix show, there’s some incentive. And if support is a determiner, Toronto’s I Can Put My Arm Back On You Can’t open the Phoenix show, Fuck Buttons the Kool Haus.

Sunday, June 8th, 2008

Sunday Cleaning – Volume 92

A special NxNE preview edition!

Young & Sexy / The Arc (Mint)

I’ve given up that Young & Sexy will ever be the band I hoped they’d become since their 2002 debut Stand Up To Your Mother, which is to say a bonafide Canadian answer to Belle & Sebastian. But rather than hone the great twee-pop promise that record showed, they headed off in another direction. Paul Pittman and Lucy Brain’s immaculate boy-girl harmonies would remain but by album four, they’ve been grafted onto song structures that are more prog than pop, often eschewing the easy hook in favour of an unexpected turn. Such ambition is laudable but too many sudden turns and you’re likely to get lost and much of The Arc feels more like a knot – meandering and lacking focus or purpose. It could well be that eventually they’ll hit on the right formula to thrill both the pop-seekers and experimentalists, but until then we’ll have to settle for a balance of beauty and frustration.

Young & Sexy play Sneaky Dee’s at 11PM, June 13.

MP3: Young & Sexy – “Young & Sexy vs The Arc”
MP3: Young & Sexy – “Saucerful Of Fire”
MySpace: Young & Sexy

The New Odds / Cheerleader (Pheremone)

Even though they’ve got three of the four original members – singer/guitarist Steven Drake has opted to sit this out – The New Odds should be commended for taking on a (slightly) different name for their new incarnation. Back when they were just Odds (not even the definite article), they were a staple of my high school/college musical diet for their ability to mate clever (but not smart-ass) lyricism with sharp, guitar-driven power pop. The intervening years haven’t dulled those instincts but there’s something new between the riffs – not necessarily the maturity you’d expect from more advanced years, but more an uncertainty and ambivalence at being expected to be more mature. Conscious of the baby seat in the minivan but also the Marshall stack in the trunk.

The New Odds are playing Yonge-Dundas Square at 7PM on June 12 and at midnight that same night at the El Mocambo. They talk to JAM and The North Shore News about the decision to reform.

MySpace: The New Odds

Ketch Harbour Wolves / December (independent)

This isn’t the most timely review – this Toronto band’s EP came out last year and they’ve already released a follow-up in Dead Calm Horizon – but in my defense the slim paper packaging was easy to lose amongst the stacks of CDs, and hey, better late than never, right? What I was missing was a darkly elegant collection of songs reminiscent of The National, though perhaps not quite so world-worn or on the wrong side of last call. Tastefully appointed with strings, horns and stately piano but with a unmistakably rock core, December reaches for understated theatricality while sidestepping melodrama and achieves something a little short of greatness but still pretty impressive.

Ketch Harbour Wolves play the Matt Cohen Parkette (aka the giant dominos sculpture at Bloor and Spadina) at 4PM this Tuesday and at Rancho Relaxo on Thursday at midnight

MP3: Ketch Harbour Wolves – “The New Quixotics”
MP3: Ketch Harbour Wolves – “Maple Wine”
MP3: Ketch Harbour Wolves – “Curse Of Odysseus”
MySpace: Ketch Harbour Wolves

Friday, June 6th, 2008

We Started Nothing


Photo via thetingtings.com

Oh the iPod ad, that modern-day golden ticket to fame and fortune, at least for the length of the campaign. The latest act to ride the dancing silhouette to glory is Manchester duo The Ting Tings, though they were hardly pulled out of obscurity into the spotlight. They were one of the much buzzed-about acts at SxSW this year and while signing a deal with Columbia just before the fest may have diminished some of the feeding frenzy around the band, they still ended up playing something like a dozen shows over the four days.

But it’s one thing to have a song edited down to 30-seconds of maximum effectiveness, and quite another to remain as impactful over the course of an entire album. Or at least it should be. The Ting Tings’ full-length debut We Started Nothing actually manages to contradict this by essentially building each song around a single strong hook or melodic line (usually surrounded by remarkably simple and generic musical accompaniment) and repeating it ad nauseum until it’s approximately song-length. In fact, almost every track feels like a commercial soundtrack caught in an endless loop, though if they’re courting the indie-dance crowd then that’s surely by design.

One highlight is the sweet and strummy “Traffic Light”, which offers a respite from the breakneck pace as well as showcases Katie White’s vocals, which are stronger and more versatile than their shouty singles would imply. Otherwise, Nothing‘s jackhammer repetition is perfectly suited to the nano-second attention span of the MySpace generation but for those accustomed to more immersive and attentive listening, it gets a bit maddening before the record’s sub-40 minute running time is up. But obviously there’s more of the former than the latter out there, since the record went straight in at #1 on the UK charts. Nothing is an unabashedly slight but effectively catchy soundtrack for Summer. Put it on your iPod mix, turn up loud and don’t pay too close attention.

The Ting Tings are coming to town for a show at the Mod Club on June 16 and courtesy of Sony BMG Canada, I’ve got two pairs of passes to give away for the show. And, to sweeten the deal and add a healthy dose of irony, each winner will also receive a copy of We Started Nothing on un-iPod-rippable vinyl. And if you don’t have a turntable… well, you can get one. They’re fun. To enter, email me at contests AT chromewaves.net with “Shut up and let me go to the Ting Tings” in the subject line and your full mailing address in the body. Contest closes at midnight June 11.

There are features on the band at USA Today, The Georgia Straight, Rolling Stone and The Daily Star.

Video: The Ting Tings – “Great DJ”
Video: The Ting Tings – “That’s Not My Name”
MySpace: The Ting Tings

Drowned In Sound asks Kele from Bloc Party some questions. Kele answers them. Everybody wins. Bloc Party are playing day one of V Fest on September 6 at the Toronto Islands.

JAM (twice) and Beatroute talk to Islands.

John Roderick gives Spin a heads-up on The Long Winters’ return to the studio for the follow-up to 2006’s Putting The Days To Bed.

The Secret Machines will be at Lee’s Palace on July 12.

Crawdaddy and Beatroute talk to Drive-By Trucker Patterson Hood.

Mac McCaughan talks Portastatic with Beatroute.

Chart chats with Aimee Mann. She’s at the Kool Haus on August 28.

Topless Robot lists off the top 10 worst superheroes to ever appear on TV. Given the video evidence, it’s difficult to argue with any of the choices but I feel compelled to add Manimal (YouTube), Automan (YouTube) and the so-bad-it-makes-Ben-Affleck-look-less-bad Daredevil from Trial Of The Incredible Hulk (pic) to the list of atrocities. And yes, as a child I watched all of these religiously and without prejudice. What of it.

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Neutral Ground


Photo by Frank Yang

It’d been almost exactly a month since I’d last attended a proper club show – astonishing, I know – so it’s not surprising that rolling into the El Mocambo on Tuesday night felt a bit unfamiliar. Thankfully, there were some familiar faces on the bill to ease the transition back into the world of live music just a bit.

Brooklyn’s Jealous Girlfriends have become favourites of mine over the last few months, from their Toronto debut last October through their SxSW Hot Freaks appearance and the recent release of their self-titled album, so though I missed their visit in March opening for Nada Surf, I was pleased for the opportunity to see them play again.

The other times I’d seen them play, they’d come across as scorching but on this night, whether deliberately or not, they came across as more of a smoulder. Rather than fill the set with their more immediate, rocking material they kept it rather mid-tempo with a surprising amount of new material and establishing themselves as probably the only band on the planet to cover Think Tank-era Blur. As an established fan, it was nice to hear the new material and “Monkey Brains”, which is on their MySpace in demo form and which was a highlight last year at the Drake, continues to sound better each time out. But as far as winning new fans over – and I’ve seen people slackjawed after their shows – I don’t think this was necessarily them putting their best foot forward.

Conversely, I came to Sea Wolf with considerably lower expectations – I’m partial to their sound but their debut full-length Leaves In The River and past live shows have failed to fully engage me. But sometime between last June and now, they’ve figured out a key ingredient to rectifying that – an ass-kicking drummer. They’ve changed stickmen since last time and the extra volume and energy the new guy brought to the kit made a world of difference, giving Alex James Church’s compositions – finely crafted and orchestrated but rather stiff folk rock – some much-needed swing. The looser and louder Sea Wolf weren’t a revelation but a definite improvement and enough to move them up a good number of rungs in my estimation.

The Jealous Girlfriends are keeping a tour blog for Exclaim! while Vue and Pasta Primavera has an interview with the band.

Photos: Sea Wolf, The Jealous Girlfriends @ The El Mocambo – June 3, 2008
MP3: Sea Wolf – “You’re A Wolf”
MP3: Sea Wolf – “The Garden That You Planted”
MP3: The Jealous Girlfriends – “Roboxulla”
Video: Sea Wolf – “You’re A Wolf”
Video: The Jealous Girlfriends – “How Now”
MySpace: Sea Wolf

Calexico will release their new album Carried To Dust on September 9 – expect them to preview a lot of the new material when they play the Mod Club on July 6. Woodpigeon will support.

Popmatters and The Daily Yomiuri talk Third with Portishead.

VBS visits Lightspeed Champion and Handsome Furs in their rehearsal spaces, video camera in hand. Lightspeed Champion are at Lee’s Palace next Wednesday night – June 11 – and Handsome Furs are there on August 22.

Video: Practice Space – Lightspeed Champion
Video: Practice Space – Handsome Furs

The Line Of Best Fit interviews Bon Iver. He is at Lee’s Palace on July 22.

MSNBC and CNN discuss @#%&! Smilers with Aimee Mann. Thanks to Being There for pointing out yesterday that her August 28 show at the Kool Haus is not a headlining gig, but as support for Squeeze.

eye talks to Death Cab For Cutie and previews their show at Olympic Island this Saturday, while Minnesota Public Radio has the band in their studios for a session which is available to stream or download. The Ottawa Citizen, Hour.ca, The Monreal Gazette, Kansas City Star and Seattle Weekly also talk to various band members about various topics.

Also playing the island Saturday is Rogue Wave, and I Am Fuel You Are Friends directs us to this director’s cut of their new video by Bob Odenkirk.

Video: Rogue Wave – “Chicago x 12”

And also coming out of Minnesota with a radio session are Shearwater, who stopped in at the University of Minnesota’s Radio K to record some tracks from their just-released and Pitchfork 8.0-ed new album Rook. They’ll be at the Horseshoe on June 23.

Beatroute has a sit-down with Okkervil River’s Will Sheff. They release The Stand Ins on September 9 and play the Phoenix on October 12.

My Morning Jacket are streaming the whole of Evil Urges on their MySpace right now, in advance of the record’s release next Tuesday. They play the Kool Haus on June 16.

Stream: My Morning Jacket / Evil Urges

The Globe & Mail, The Province and The Los Angeles Times talk to a Billy Bragg, who’ll be performing at Harbourfront Centre on June 17.

Exclaim! talks to Matt Berninger of The National. They’re at the Molson Amphitheatre this Sunday opening for R.E.M..

Elbow respond to Drowned In Sound readers’ questions.

Reveille discover just how prickly an interviewee Mark Kozelek of Sun Kil Moon can be.

Erase Errata will be at Sneaky Dee’s on July 7.

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Working For The Weekend

So I wasn’t in at all last night so no proper post today. Just this, which I whipped together the night before. Be prepared, I always says.

So there’s lots going on this coming weekend – it’s Wednesday, we can talk about the weekend – but if on the off-chance you’ve got no plans as of yet, then I’m here to help. Courtesy of Against The Grain, I’ve got enough passes to shows to ensure you’ll have something to tell them about at the office come Monday morning. First, this Friday night, there’s the Grand Archives show at the El Mocambo – I wrote up their rather fine self-titled debut on Sunday. Then on Saturday, former Moldy Peach and Juno soundtrack contributor Adam Green brings his new solo record Sixes & Sevens to the Horseshoe and finally, on Sunday night, Belgian electronic artist Styrofoam plays selections from his new record A Thousand Words – out already digitally and out on CD next week – to the El Mocambo.

If some or all of these tickle your fancy – I have two pairs of passes for each show – fire me off an email at contests AT chromewaves.net with “I want to see (insert name of relevant artist)” in the subject line and your full name in the body. And if you actually send me an email with the above subject line verbatim, you will be eliminated from this and all future contests until the sun burns out. The rest of you, get your entries in to me by midnight tonight for Grand Archives, midnight tomorrow for the other two.

The Seattle Times considers Grand Archives in the context of the city’s new, super-soft and rootsy signature sound

MP3: Grand Archives – “Torn Foam Blue Couch”
MP3: Grand Archives – “Miniature Birds”
MP3: Adam Green – “Getting Led”
MP3: Adam Green – “Morning After Midnight”
Video: Adam Green – “Morning After Midnight”
MySpace: Grand Archives
MySpace: Adam Green