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These days, Los Angeles is known for the crazy adventures of Lauren Conrad and her friends on The Hills. Surprisingly, while talking to Juan Velazquez of Abe Vigoda, he made it very clear that he’s no stranger to these types of “adventures.” “I’ve totally staged fights with my friends, worked for Teen Vogue or whatever,” Velazquez says jokingly. “What I like about L.A is that although it’s expensive you can find a way to live here for cheap and have fun.” Well, it’s safe to say that L.C and her girlfriends don’t live cheap, dudes like Velazquez are more accustomed to the simple beauties of the big city: the beautiful weather, the architecture, and most importantly, those crazy summer nights. “It’s so good to just go out in shorts, riding your bike and hanging out with friends; moments like that are super amazing and epic,” Velazquez says. “A hot night with your friends doing crazy stupid shit and going swimming, it’s the best.” Originally from Chino, Calif., Velazquez and his friends Michael Vidal, David Reichardt, and Reggie Guerrero (who recently left the band) formed Abe Vigoda while in their senior year of high school. They’re named after the actor most famous for playing Sal Tessio in the classic film, The Godfather. For people who’ve never seen the film or heard of this actor, Velazquez says it’s been quite the recurring question during a lot of their interviews. “We get asked this question a lot and I think people are hoping for this amazing story or for us to say something witty, but unfortunately, we were 16 and just really big dorks,” Velazquez says. “A lot of people don’t know Abe Vigoda as an actor and people sometimes assume to that one of us is Abe Vigoda, which is kind of funny.” Upon moving to L.A full time, the band got a lot more serious, while holding down days jobs on the side. Most of the initial attention was garnered from their many performances at the L.A venue, The Smell, which has been home to a lot of local indie rock acts such as BARR, Lavender Diamond, HEALTH, and one of Abe Vigoda’s good friends, No Age. “We’ve known them since 2004, but we knew of them because of their previous band WIVES,” Velazquez explains. “Dean (Allen Spunt of No Age) helped us out a lot early on when we booked our tours and they have been big supporters of what were doing.” With many shows at The Smell under their belt, Velazquez explains why their last show with Guerrero was one of their best. “I kind of choked up and cried, which was kind of embarrassing. The show was really good, but it went by really fast and it was kind of surreal,” Velazquez says. “I think I was thinking too much about an end of an era or something. It’s sad to see someone leave the band since we’ve been through a lot in the last four to five years.” The band has released two albums, Sky Route/ Star Roof (2006) and Kid City (2007). Last year saw the release of their third album, Skeleton, on Bella Union. The album’s charisma, smoothness and sometimes very brash delivery garnered the boys more attention then their previous two releases and was one of the many records last year that put the L.A scene on notice. “I think 2008 was just a good year for L.A bands and a lot of that has to do with No Age’s popularity, which is awesome,” Velazquez says. “We’ve grown a lot since our earlier releases, but I think something definitely sorted of clicked with Skeleton.” The band toured with No Age prior to the album’s release in early 2008 and later toured with Diplo in the fall. In Toronto, they opened for Diplo at CiRCA, along with Brooklyn duo Telepathe. Going from playing The Horseshoe to playing for club kids and hipsters at CiRCA was a bit of a step up and definitely different from the what the boys are used too. “The main reason we did that tour is because we wanted to try something different, but we definitely liked the venue we were at for the No Age show,” Velazquez says. “That CiRCA place was sort of strange and definitely more of dance club than a venue. It was one of the hardest shows we’ve ever played, but luckily we had some friends in the audience.” Reviver is the band’s new EP and it sort of picks up where they left off with Skeleton. A lot of bands who follow up a hit record with an EP are seemingly trying to keep the momentum going, but Velazquez explains that they had a different approach. “We recorded these songs during the No Age tour. We’ve played these songs since then and we wanted to put them out without having to compile a whole new record,” Velazquez says. “I think the songs stood well on there own and I think EP’s are really cool aesthetically.” - Max Mohenu
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Embarking on your first cross-country tour can be a daunting prospect for any young band. Acres of Lions have taken a fairly pragmatic approach. “Considering the winter conditions for this tour there's definitely the fear that our shiny new van might turn into a rocket toboggan somewhere in the Canadian Rockies; but other than that there's nothing we're too concerned about,” states guitarist Tyson Yerex. His statement certainly comes across as rather dry. Rest assured this four piece, pop-punk product from Victoria’s oft-reticent music community is chalk full of ambition as well. Yerex continues: “We've got about 35 dates booked across Canada and our only real expectation for those shows is that we're gonna get up on stage every night and have a great time playing music. For people who have only heard the album, we definitely bring more of an intense live rock show than you might expect; but our main focus is always on getting the fans involved in the show. Whether that's picking up two spoons and clanging them together, rattling a tambourine, screaming at the top of your lungs, or just standing up and dancing and clapping along; we encourage participation.” Taking an active role in Victoria’s music scene has served Acres of Lions well, evidently. After releasing a three-song EP in the summer of 2007, Acres of Lions worked the circuits with tireless grassroots efficiency, sending their EP to local radio stations before “Let’s Get Sentimental” began receiving airplay. They were eventually featured on Victoria’s 91.3 The Zone as the band of the month for February 2008. The organic effort Acres of Lions has plied towards their craft has seemingly paid off. They have perfected a formula which many other bands have treaded on before; their cut and dry take on pop-punk strikes a direct chord in the hearts of listeners. “Dance Sequence” takes no prisoners with anthemic, chopping guitars with a poignant opening line: “Honey, can we make this work?” Though Lerex said that he also hopes to “Make a lot of new friends and fans” throughout their first cross-Canada tour, Acres of Lions seem to have a good grasp on their pop-punk listenership. Yet in a musical landscape satiated with paint by numbers bands that disappear after their first single drops on MySpace, how does Acres of Lions set themselves apart? “I think what sets us apart is our live show. The record does sound very polished and smooth, like we intended, but if you come out to see us live, you will know we mean every word and didn't just write the songs with the intention to sell it,” claims vocalist Jeff Kalesnikoff. Infectious, dance-ready sound? Check. Determination for the cold roads ahead? Check. Acres of Lions are following the pop-punk aesthetic rather well. The only thing left to ensure is that the emotional lyrics which are pungent in Working, the band’s debut LP are born out of authentic emotional involvement. “Most of my inspiration comes from the people I have met in my life that have made some sort of impression; their interactions and my interactions with them, the brilliant things they say, the things we achieve together. I find my friends and family very inspiring,” Kalesnikoff continues. Keeping their emotions in check will be a high priority for Acres of Lions as they cross Canada. Dates in remote locations such as Medicine Hat have been qualified with three dates in Toronto, which included one at the legendary Horseshoe Tavern during Canadian Music Week. But for Acres of Lions, a potent mix of ego-less and sky-scraping pop-punk, they qualify where they’re going with where they’ve been. Bassist Dan Ball declares: “The music on Vancouver Island is very rich because there aren’t really a lot of places to go. We got started just opening for our friend’s bands.” - Joshua Kloke
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When life’s got ya down, the economy is in the toilet and Wal-Mart Supercenters are being built in your garden, it’s nice to know that at least someone is trying to keep the American dream alive. No, not the 2.5 kids and Cosco Member Card American Dream, but the old school American dream – a throwback to the spirit of America – of wilderness, and hard times, and all that. Ohio’s Akron/Family, the psychedelic, genre-bending trio attempt to capture this rural American vision in their fourth studio release, Set ’Em Wild, Set ’Em Free, yet the band are not without hard times themselves. The past year has been a turbulent affair for Miles Seaton, Dana Janssen and Seth Olinsky (bass, drums, and guitar/vocals, respectively), transitioning from their Young God label to Dead Oceans earlier last year, and the departure of original member Ryan Vanderhoof marked a creative milestone for the band, a period described as “complicated and emotional.” Akron/Family’s downsize from four members to three appears to be a symbolic moment in their creative process. Bassist Miles Seaton defines the change: “the band was started as a family of sorts, or with the idea that it would grow and change, we spent so much time developing as a four piece creatively and interpersonally that despite our intellectual idea of ourselves, we were really emotionally and creatively a four piece.” Heralded for their highly improvisational and trance-like live performances, Akron/Family had to adapt to the dynamics of a three-member band without Vanderhoof – an adaptation Seaton describes as an evolution of their creative process. “It has been difficult live to create the sonic worlds we are attempting to create [with a trio], so we have employed more instrument changes, samplers, and drum machines,” he said. “I think with each tour we are gaining confidence with these tools and they are becoming more inside the sound and the performance. I think it just takes time.”
“Pastoral was definitely a word I was using a lot in reference to a certain element I was interested in representing in this record,” he said. “I moved from Brooklyn to Central Pennsylvania two years ago, lived on a beautiful 50 acre farm, and wanted to put some of the inspiration the ‘land’ shared with me into the music. For me, probably the largest part of this American thing that i want to connect to or celebrate is a land thing. It is social too, but in a way even that feels inspired by the beauty and diversity of the chunk of land that we all get to live on.” Take that, Springsteen. “I wrote called a song called ‘Woody Guthrie's America,’” Seaton said. “We are asking all of our friends to record versions of it and we will post them. It will hopefully be a throwback to the days when a song was not a commodity, but a story that people shared, traded, and shared with friends and family.” As usual, Akron/Family’s genre is mainly indefinable. Hulking between the country/western theme is the man-tastic influence of psychedelic rock, which contributes a disorientating rhythm and spectacular guitar lovin’, while electronica and post-rock make themselves heard as well. Its kind of like Mogwai, its kind of like nothing you’ve ever heard. It is described by Miles Seaton in seven seemingly unrelated words: “Sawtooth lumberjack wave generative bee locative train-hopping.” More coherently, he later adds: “It’s a very beautiful and wild landscape, America.” - Tommy Morgan
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Alan Cross, long time program director of 102.1 The Edge in Toronto and host of the ever popular Ongoing History of New Music has decided to make a foray into the world of audio books. Cross was approached last year to turn a print book he’d written in 2000, into an audio version to be read by Alan himself called The Alan Cross Guide to Alternative Rock. “The audio book market was initially a little slow to evolve, but now has just taken off,” said Cross explaining why it took so long to make the obvious leap from print to audio. “Now, people are doing a lot of commuting, listening [to books] on iPods,” to put it simply the timing was right. “Much to my surprise, we sold out the first run of about 2000 audio books in ten days.” The print book, a 25 chapter analysis of the most influential alternative rock artists of the 20th century (including U2, The Clash, and The Velvet Underground) has been split into 3 separate volumes for its audio book format. The first was released in October 2007, with the next two to appear in early and late 2008. Each chapter of the book is a detailed biography of a band or artist who made an incredible impact on music and the world at large. Far from a point by point standard bio, Cross’ book reveals little know facts and unheard stories much like The Ongoing History...“There’s some quirky stuff in there,” Cross assures. For those who already own the print book Alan confirmed there is much new material to be found in the audio version. “This was the beautiful thing; there was an opportunity to do an update, for all the chapters.” Fans of The Ongoing History needn’t be worried their host is thinking of canning the show however. “I have no idea how long I’m going to do the show, it has absolutely taken on a life of its own but I’ll probably end up doing it until I die” he said without a hint of sarcasm. “People will always want to hear about their favourite bands.” The show which is researched, written and produced by Alan Cross himself has garnered a legion of fans in Toronto and around the world largely due to the quality and depth of the research on the program and Cross’ charismatic, unguarded delivery. Alan promises there will be many more quality programs in 2008. “I’m actually working on something right now called, “Fan Fatalities” about people who have died at rock shows. Then I’ve been asked extensively to do a profile on Linkin Park and somewhere down the line we’re hoping to do an in-depth profile on grunge as well.” Alan Cross’ audio book, The Alan Cross Guide to Alternative Rock can be purchased at most bookstores and online and The Ongoing History of New Music airs Sundays at 7pm and Mondays at 11 pm on 102.1 The Edge. - Sam Stilson
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Amazing Baby is hungry. Each member steadily sips an alcoholic beverage after ordering appetizers inside the Drake Café on Queen West after their six o’clock sound check at the Drake Underground. That is, every member except lead singer Will Roan, who plops onto the last empty chair in the four-table spread the band occupies by the entrance to the thriving outdoor patio. Across from Roan is guitarist Simon O’Connor, who’s wrists are covered in multi-coloured laminated bracelets from different venues, trophies from the tour, denoting to any security guard that he’s definitely in the band.
It doesn’t take long for Roan, with his turquoise Oakley shades resting on his head, to inquire about a drink. “Yo, Ellis,” he addresses his manager at the other end of the tables. “What did you get to drink? What’s in that? Whiskey?” Ellis nods. “Sounds great. I’m going to get one of those too!” Roan turns to a busboy he mistakes as his server. “Can I order a drink?” he asks. “Not from me. Do you know who your server is?” asks the bus boy. “No, I just got up in here. Up in here,” Roan replies. Indeed, Brooklyn’s Amazing Baby just got “up in here,” considering the band was conceived as a recording project in January 2008 and bore a solid band lineup in July of that year; now consisting of co-founders Roan and O’Connor, Don Devore (bass), Rob Laakso (guitar), and Matt Abeysekera (drums). July 2008 was also when they released their four-song EP, Epic Fucking Cross. However, Amazing Baby garnered attention from NME two months before the EP’s release based on the merit of the songs on their MySpace page and being mutual top friends with fellow Brooklyners MGMT (of whom O’Connor — and only O’Connor, to clear those popular internet rumours — knew from his days at Wesleyan University). For awhile, Amazing Baby and MGMT shared the same drummer, Will Berman, until Berman decided to work solely with MGMT and that’s where the MGMT connection ends. On the NME blog, the new music editor of the time, Alex Miller, gushed, “They’ve only played like two gigs but everything they’ve got up on their site is blowing my mind.” NME’s attention didn’t stop there. A profile piece or two later in the magazine came about and in November 2008, Roan was ranked 30th in the publication’s annual “Cool List.” O’Connor explains the press in England works very differently than here, tying itself more to celebrity than substance. “(The main) reason why haters are hating is because NME picked us up really quickly,” he says. “A lot of the misconceptions about our band like how we all met in college came from the British press in the beginning. They tried to describe us as a Brooklyn hippie collective, which is such bullshit, immediately. I don’t fault them, that’s just the way they write.
And so it went; months before their album’s release, Amazing Baby was opening for the likes of Bloc Party, MGMT, The Virgins, Phoenix, and Cold War Kids. When success comes in a manner deemed as “too much too soon,” pockets of backlash often follow. Even the band’s Wikipedia page criticizes them by citing one negative CD review that said their album was “supernaturally shallow.” “People were surprised by our record because they thought we would be the next Passion Pit or something like that,” O’Connor says. “They were like, ‘oh shit’ and getting disappointed because it didn’t actually fit into what they expected us to be like. But I don’t think it’s our fault and I don’t think we need to cultivate an image. . . . People were reacting to the fact that people were talking about us before we had much music at all.” Amazing Baby did not even contribute to how their “image” was portrayed in any of their music videos to date. According to O’Connor, friends approached them to film videos for free with the catch: “as long as you do whatever we say.” It was a good deal for a band whose members had only just been afforded to quit their day jobs. Rewild’s 11 tracks in 47 minutes not only balance more light-hearted, nonsensical songs like “Smoke Bros,” with lyrics like “We are starving cannibals. / She protects her animals,” and heavier songs like “Headdress,” but also include what Roan, the main lyricist, told November 2008’s issue of Spin Magazine is a balance of “introspective songwriting with extroverted production.” “Lyrically, you don’t have to know what a song is about,” Roan says. “At least, I don’t have to know what a song is about when I listen to lyrics and get inspired. I usually make my own story out of lyrics, so I tend to act that way when I write my own. Nonetheless, you do need to express a certain amount of tone and heart and emotion with that. That said, we are also very much into — or at least we were into in the making of our last record — making bombastic and extreme styles of production. And you want to make sure that you can still express the meaning without going all balls out; expressing subtle nuances of passion through rock and roll.” Rewild is why O’Connor and Roan are in Toronto tonight; eating fish tacos and ordering a Drake burger, respectively. This is the band’s third trip to Toronto. The second was in June opening for Phoenix and the first was on their own at the Horseshoe Tavern in April. It’s almost amazing they returned to Toronto after what happened the first time. Tired after their show and full day drive from Brooklyn, the guys were relaxing and smoking weed in their hotel room. Then, Devore pointed out a man getting a blow job in the window across the way. “And then it turned out that it was no guy getting a blow job,” O’Connor reveals. “It was this dude in front of a window just jerking hard and was completely naked and noticed us looking and jerked harder. And then we were like, ‘fuck, this is weird.’ So he turned off the lights and we were like, ‘he’s gone.’ Then suddenly candles are lit and there he is in the dark jerking off some more. I looked right to the point where I was almost gay. It’s like the sun, you know, when you almost go blind?” And that was not their only memorable Canadian experience. At last year’s CMJ festival in New York, Berlin-based Montreal musician King Khan constantly called Roan “Wayne Gretzky,” thinking there was some resemblance between him and the Great One. “King Khan is this crazy German dude who loves to rage and belittle people by calling them hunky ice skaters,” Roan explains.
“There’s no music yet, but there will be,” he says. “Music comes very quickly for us,” Roan confirms. Finding time to write and record is the band’s biggest challenge, as they are almost always on the road. But that doesn’t mean they’ve forgotten the challenges they had faced when starting out. Their advice to other bands? “Definitely be very wise about how you expose yourself,” says Roan, knowingly. “You can take a different approach from what we’ve done,” O’Connor adds. “A lot of what we’ve done has been completely right because this is what I do for a living. Whether it’s our fault or not, we put ourselves out there when we weren’t even really a band, and people were treating us like a band and expecting a lot from us when we had just wrote two songs and recorded them. So, be cautious and there’s no rush, especially in music.” And living they are. A few minutes pass and Ellis looks up from his Blackberry. “Guys, we’ve just been confirmed for a Spin photo shoot after the Lolla set,” he announces. The band cheers. Amazing Baby has proven they are more than a fluke promise of potential; after Rewild’s release, they’ve shown they can truly deliver. Amazing Baby intend on returning to Toronto for their fall headlining tour. Their new single “Supreme Being” is available for free download this month at greensoundlabel.com. — Melissa Kim
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Interviewing Andrew Cash is like interviewing Canadian folk rock royalty, he is up there with Daniel Lanois, Jim Cuddy, Bruce Cockburn and Gordon Lightfoot. As a producer, songwriter, lyricist and overall musician Andrew Cash is a man with an enviable resume to say the least. - Andre Skinner ______________________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ The roots of speed metal band Anvil began in the basements of Toronto around 1973 as two teenage friends shared a passion for loud and heavy music. A few years later they were out playing the dive bars of the day, such as Larry’s Hideaway and The Gasworks. Now 30 years later, the band is enjoying new found recognition by an allegiance of fans around the world that are not even aware of their past accomplishments. “We never really stopped playing,” says drummer Robb Reiner. This year, the band is being inducted into the Indie Hall of Fame at the ninth annual Independent Music Awards on March 14, part of Canadian Music Week. This will likely be the one and only time to see Anvil play at the infamous Fairmont Royal York Hotel. “This is an achievement that will be received with gratitude. It’s nice to be recognized after all these years,” frontman Steve Kudlow, a.k.a. Lips, admits. So how does a band remain together and continue to plug along three decades after forming? “The motivating factor is quite simple, we’ve believed in ourselves. When you have this kind of focus you find ways to continue on. All factors weigh against the rock and roll dream of stardom and it is an upward endless battle. It’s all about being in the right place at the right time, and the only way to make that combination work is to always be ready, and by not giving up,” Lips advises. Anvil influenced countless other bands throughout the years, but what bands played a role in determining their original sound and direction? “All bands pay homage to their predecessors, and for us it was bands that came out playing hard rock music in the sixties and seventies: Cream, Jimi Hendrix, Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin, Grand Funk, Cactus are some examples of our influences,” Lips surmises. “The music we all listen to generally works in cycles although every time it comes around it’s a little different. The interesting thing is that these days it’s still electric guitar oriented music which connects it to five previous decades of music to draw influence from.” The recent resurgence and interest in the band owes a lot to one particular gentleman once referred to as “Tea Bag.” The band met him in 1982 at the Marquee Club in London when then 15-year-old “Tea Bag” went back stage after the show to meet the band. This lead to him working with the band as a roadie, later being mentored by Reiner on drums and eventually playing in the band at a couple shows. Then one day he was gone, until 2005 when he was back in their lives after Lips received an unexpected e-mail. “Tea Bag had gone Hollywood,” Reiner laughs. A couple subsequent e-mail exchanges and phone conversations lead to Lips flying to Los Angeles to meet Sacha Gervasi (Tea Bag), chat some more and return back to Toronto. A few weeks later Gervasi flew to Toronto, got together with the band and told them they had a story to tell: Anvil! The Story of Anvil. “He was so impressed with our tenacity he decided to make a movie about it,” Lips confides. Gervasi has presented an often hilarious account of Anvil's last-ditch quest for elusive fame and fortune. The story of Gervasi could be a separate film in itself. The self-financed feature length movie made its world premiere at the acclaimed Sundance Film Festival in 2008, where Gervasi and the band got to enjoy the long awaited spotlight of their career. The movie played six times to sold out audiences, and one cannot help but draw comparisons to the Spinal Tap saga, as the guys posed for photos appropriately decked out in their toques in true Canadian hoser style. The film has since gone on to win dozens of awards at film festivals around the world, and is finally set to make its much anticipated Canadian theatre debut. “We call it the slow burn rise of film notoriety,” Reiner laughs. Gervaisi worked on several other productions (The Big Tease, The Terminal) as a screenwriter, but this is his directorial debut. “My inspiration came from real life experiences as a young kid touring with my idols. I made a film about people I love with people I love,” he says. The DVD version of Anvil! The Story of Anvil and a follow-up book are both scheduled for release sometime later this year. “The actual story is one about relationships, perseverance and dedication. The fact that we are a heavy metal band only plays as a back drop to the story,” Lips mentions. “The book provides answers to all the questions people may have had after seeing the movie,” Reiner adds. The Anvil Experience is a very interesting concept that the band and management have developed since the release of the film. It’s a combination of film and live performance whereby the movie is screened followed by a full live music set by the band. It’s been hugely successful in New York, Los Angeles and most recently London, where the band did a one week stint of sold out shows at the Metro Theatre. There are also plans to tour this concept across Canada sometime later in 2009. Reiner says there is a new album on the horizon, Juggernaut of Justice, which he describes as “a genius piece of work.” “We were criminally overlooked 30 years ago, and now justice will be served,” Reiner proclaims. It should be noted that Gervasi has done a guest appearance on drums playing “School Love” at three different shows in the past, in Tokyo, Brooklyn and Toronto. With the Canadian premiere of the movie and the Hall of Fame induction, there’s likely a good chance number four could happen at some point during Canadian Music Week. - Bryen Dunn Catch Anvil performing live during Canadian Music Fest on March 13th at Velvet Underground (510 Queen St. W., 9 pm) and March 14th at the Royal York Hotel (100 Front St. W., Canadian Room, 8 pm) and check out Anvil! The Story of Anvil on March 14th at the NFB Theatre( 150 John St., 3 pm). ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Do you have a thing for pretty sounding 12-string guitars and 80s jangle-rock revival? Then here’s something for you. Based out of Toronto, The Assistants are a quintet of happy-go-lucky rockers with an affinity for European sounds that are largely melody driven. Bands like Echo and the Bunnymen, The Smiths and The Go-Betweens come to mind while listening to their latest effort, Fiction, a four-track EP. Fiction is the band’s sophomore effort and comes on the heels of their 2007 self-titled debut. The band formed in 2004, but the only remaining original members are Kiley Meehan and Ciaran Megahey who head up Toronto’s preeminent jangle-rock band. When asked what the band is up to these days, Megahey said, “Right now we’re just focusing on getting the EP out there.” This might be so, but it doesn’t mean that the pair of song-writers aren’t hard at work. Whether it’s on a laptop or with a guitar, Megahey and Meehan are always writing. “Song writing is something that I just do,” Megahey said. And of The Assistants, “We’re really pretty prolific. There’s lots in the vault.”
It’s easy to label The Assistants as a band out of time and place. Their style is distinctively 1980s Britain. Megahey freely admitted, “Bands I like tend to be British. Mostly melody-based bands. There’s just a different market over there. They’re more interested in melody. I like it because it’s pretty. Pretty sounds interest me.” The EP is full of pretty guitar sounds and alluring vocal harmonies, so it’s easy to see why The Assistants have a certain affinity for European sounds. The sound The Assistants are most comfortable with is called jangle-rock. It’s an American term, but encompasses everything that Meehan and Megahey strive for in their music. “Jangle describes The Byrds,” Megahey stated as he began to give a definition of both a genre and his band. “The guitarist from The Byrds (Roger McGuinn) was like the godfather of the whole thing. Him and his 12-string guitar. The Smiths and some other 80s bands revived it. Stuff like Echo and the Bunnymen. More recently bands like Magnetic Fields and Galaxy 500. Again, it’s just pretty sounding.” The word “pretty” kept coming up throughout the interview, and that’s exactly what you get throughout Fiction. The sound is warm, pleasing, dreamy, and most importantly never abrasive. To get a taste of what The Assistants are all about, check out their website where you can listen to the new EP, and of course keep your eyes peeled for upcoming shows. - Joe Veroni
______________________________________________________________________________________ Talking to British alternative rock band Band of Skulls feels faintly like a scene out of Almost Famous. Perhaps it’s the shared name between vocalist/guitarist Russell Marsden and fictional guitarist Russell Hammond that initiates the association but it’s the band’s authentic mixture of 1970s grit within a more modern context that harkens back to the days when rock ’n’ roll, in its rawest form, dominated record players and airwaves around the world. Marsden fits right into the rock ’n’ roll aesthetic, sporting long hair and a vintage-looking leather jacket. Any expected ego, however, is replaced with a humble and thankful demeanor throughout our conversation about Band of Skulls’ past, present, and future within the music industry. Born out of a childhood friendship between Marsden and drummer Matt Hayward, Band of Skulls has been developing since the boys first started playing instruments. “My sister would always ask for stuff at Christmas; she wanted a guitar,” Marsden reminisces. “She played it for about five weeks and then it was just hanging around so I picked it up and started playing. She did it about three times, ‘I need this other guitar, the first one wasn’t right for me,’ so I ended up with these three acoustic guitars because of my sister, who actually gave up. I have her to thank, actually!” After teaching himself how to play, the beginnings of the group began falling into place. “Matt’s family were friends with our family and I think they just sort of put us together to keep us out of trouble,” Marsden says. “We had an agreement with the neighbourhood that we’d rehearse on Saturdays between 11 and one and the whole street used to go out and we would rehearse.” It wasn’t until considerably later that bass player and vocalist Emma Richardson joined and brought the trio to its current membership. “We started thinking that we were going to make a band. We wanted a bass player so we started auditioning people,” Marsden says. “In the end, Emma came along and she had brought her guitar and we were like ‘Can you just play the bass?!’ and (when she played it) we were like ‘Woah, that sounds amazing!’ She didn’t even play the bass.” The group’s signature interplay of male and female vocals grew organically from rehearsing together and collectively writing songs. All three members equally contribute to the band’s well-oiled songwriting machine. “The main thing we try to do is not finish the work that we do,” Marsden explains. “If we do finish it, it’s hard for others to be involved in it.” While Marsden and Richardson write the majority of the lyrics to complement their vocal abilities, Hayward has contributed one of the group’s most memorable lyrical hooks. “’I Know What I Am’ is a phrase from this guy at a bar that Matt used to work in,” Marsden says, “and he would say the line: ‘I know what I am, they know what they are, so let me be.’” Stories like this accentuate the realness and raw talent perpetuated through Band of Skulls’ music; a talent that has been spotted and exhibited by the likes of iTunes, KCRW and other music industry tastemakers before the band even had a fully formed record.
The months that followed have been a whirlwind for the band and have included a live performance on trendsetting Santa Monica radio station KCRW’s “Morning Becomes Eclectic” program and an upcoming gig at music lovers’ paradise: Chicago’s Lollapalooza Music Festival. The overwhelmingly positive reaction to the band, their live show, and their yet-to-be-released album is more than the trio could have expected. “When you’re 13, everyone thinks that (you’ll become famous),” Marsden says. “Then you get to 18 and actually do some shows and you realize how far you have to go. You have a lot of years of struggling and it just toughens you up.” Marsden, Hayward and Richardson have been playing together for over four years, evolving from indie rock band Fleeing New York into who they are and the mature sound they portray today. “The greatest challenge in a band is not to break up,” Marsden says. “I have lots of friends’ bands that have come and gone, not because they’re better or worse than us, but it’s the staying power, the endurance of it. It’s kind of like being married.” Band of Skulls has mastered this creative relationship, merging each member’s best qualities to create a group with staying power. In addition to their musical talents, all album art was created by Richardson. “Emma’s a painter, a bona fide artist. It just seemed right,” Marsden says. “To us, our music sounds like what her work looks like. It relieved me of a lot of guilt of ruining her painting career!” The trio has also created a strong relationship with their fans, using social networking to communicate around the world, despite their busy schedules and slightly Ludditian attitudes. “It’s definitely part of the job now, it’s kind of funny,” Marsden jokes. “You do meet some nice people; I got to meet some nice people in L.A. and they were like, ‘It’s me, from Twitter!’ “We’re a little bit of technophobes, especially with the iPhone. I’ll probably send some letters to balance out my techno overload. I think I’m going to do that; start a movement of mail.” With Richardson’s career as an artist to fall back on, Marsden struggled when asked what he would be doing if it weren’t for Band of Skulls. “I can’t do anything else, I’m useless,” he quips. He has no reason to worry, however. Although Almost Famous’s portrayal of Lester Bangs claimed that rock and roll was dead, Band of Skulls continue to prove that it is very much alive in the musical landscape over thirty years later. “I think we’re just cut out to do this,” Marsden states. “It chose us, really.” Band of Skulls’ debut album, Baby Darling Doll Face Honey, will be released in Canada on Sept. 1 (though it is currently available through iTunes). After two critically acclaimed performances at Toronto’s North by Northeast Music Festival, the band will be returning to Canadian stages this fall: — Heather Adamo
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ They’ve toured across Canada and even released an interactive DVD board game but now the Bicycles have a new album out, one that’s a little bit more mature than their debut. Previously known for their light, quirky pop tunes, their new album, Oh No! It’s Love keeps to that formula but as the title suggests, love is in the air. The lyrics are a bit more serious this time around. Recording the album was also a change, said drummer Dana Snell. “When we did the first album, we didn’t have that many tracks, we had to do them one at a time so I had to play a quick track and then everyone else had to fill in their parts on top of mine. But this time we went to Jose Contreras’ good friend David Young’s studio up in north Toronto and we got to do everything together,” Snell said. “The drums and the rhythm guitar even a bit of lead guitar altogether. So it was fun you know it felt more like a collaborative effort in which you can kind of like express a little bit more about the songs”. While singer/guitarists Matt Beckett and Drew Smith wrote the bulk of the tunes on the album, multi-instrumentalist Andrew Scott contributed three songs and Snell wrote one herself as well, all part of their collaborative effort. Once their parts were complete, their songs were shipped off to their friends, not to hear but to beef up. “One other thing we did differently was we picked some players we wanted to have on certain songs and we would give them the tracks and give them a month or a couple weeks to just add parts onto it,” Snell said. Since their last album, the band released “The Good The Bad and The Cuddly: The Interactive DVD Board Game” in the summer of 2007. A new party trend was born, perhaps. “We did it just to have something in-between to put out so people remember us,” Snell said. “It was probably Matt’s idea, but we wanted some sort of game like a video game then we saw some copies of Nightmare and Party Mania at the house where we practice at, so we were playing those and decided an interactive board game hasn’t been put out in a while. It stopped with DVD so we’re bringing it back.” With their new album now on store shelves, the band is gearing up for their CD release party on Nov. 8 at Lee’s Palace. With Laura Barrett and Henry Fletcher (both from Snell’s other band Henri Faberge and the Adorables) among others, the Bicycles performed songs from their new album, with their friends taking the stage in between tracks. “We had a really good time with the first one and it really worked out. We wanted it to be something special and out of the ordinary and not just us playing our songs but involving the people who played on the record and the people who are around us and inspire us, like basically our favourite bands,” Snell said. “It worked out so we thought why not do it again.” The Last Waltz-ish concept is nothing new to the Bicycles, who did the same thing for their first CD release party in 2006, but this time, having Fletcher on board was key. “We had the Adorables the first time but Henry wasn’t there so he was really mad that he missed it,” Snell said with a laugh “He was like, ‘Why did you wait until after I was gone?’ As if we could plan it around him. So this time we made it a point of getting him on there.” -Jon Brazeau
A 10 a.m. phone call from a music journalist isn’t the best wake up call you can get, but considering Chad VanGaalen is no stranger to The Spill, our chat isn’t at all awkward. VanGaalen’s last show in Toronto was at the Harbourfront Festival on July 1, which he says was pretty fun but adds that he was a little scared when the crowd started singing the national anthem. “There is just something really weird about group chants, especially when the song is so old that most people don’t even understand the full meaning of the words their singing,” he says. “I’d rather everyone just fucking sang ‘Happy Birthday’ or something.” The last time I spoke to Chad VanGaalen, he was preparing for the release of his third record, Soft Airplane. VanGaalen’s melancholic, folk pop ballads meticulously illustrated his fears of the inevitable fate that is death. Arranged and produced in his studio, the record solidified the Calgary native’s musical talent and shocked a lot of music critics right off the bat. “I really liked Soft Airplane but it’s not the type of record I would buy,” he explains. “I like to sing but the type of music I like isn’t very ‘sing-songy’ type stuff.” The birth of some of VanGaalen’s best work comes from a lot of experimenting. Years of late night experimentation are what have spawned VanGaalen’s electronic alter ago, Black Mold. With Black Mold, VanGaalen is free to dive into a wilder side of his instrumental work. A lot of his very early work stemmed from these experiments. “I started with this stuff when I was 15. This was the first thing to come out my recordings,” he says. “The good thing about this project is that I know I’ll never play it live, so it gives me an opportunity to really fuck around with a lot of different elements of music and layering sounds.” Fans can draw parallels between Black Mold and a lot of the electronic work used in VanGaalen’s other albums. “‘J.C’s Head on a Cross’ had some house parts that were really cool,” he says. “Songs like ‘Red Hot Drop’ and ‘TMNT Mask’ are more up tempo and fun to dance too. A lot of the other Black Mold shit is stuff I was scared to sing over because it was so weird.”
“I pulled about 50 albums worth of stuff for this record,” VanGaalen says. “A lot of the songs dwell into early house, experimental noise, and electro, which is a lot of the stuff I listen to.” From reworking modular synths to reprogramming Game Boys, Snow Blindness Is Crystal Antz is a unique listen. Some songs start as erratic bursts of noise before settling into simple acoustic layering, while others dwell into more glitchy beats and early house. “I wanted to make a really diverse electro record,” VanGaalen says. “It’s definitely a record I would buy, but I know not everyone would get. Like if there was a record that was primarily white noise, I would fucking buy that, but not everyone would get it.” VanGaalen will also be in the director’s chair again as he plans to release a DVD that will feature animations and videos for four songs on the record. VanGaalen previously animated music videos for “Clinically Dead,” “Flower Gardens,” “Red Hot Drops,” and “Molten Light,” as well as the Love as Laughter song “Dirty Lives.” Black Mold and Chad VanGaalen may never be one entity according to VanGaalen. “I’ve tried in the past and like I said it’s just not going to work,” he explains. “I feel like if I try again, that shit has to go smoothly, no exceptions.” VanGaalen shows no signs of slowing down. Soft Airplanes B-sides were just released and VanGaalen recently re-signed with Sub Pop after completing a three record deal. “There are two more new records coming out in the next little while,” he says. “One of them is already pretty much finished, but it probably won’t be released for another year or two.” With two Polaris-nominated records and now Black Mold, there is no telling what other musical concoctions VanGaalen has in store for us next. — Max Mohenu
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Black Moth Super Rainbow; with a name like that, you know it has to be good. Hailing from Pittsburgh, the band consists of Tobacco, The Seven Fields of Aphelion, Ryan Graveface, Iffernaut, Power Pill Fist and Father Hummingbird. You must be thinking, am I caught in a drug-induced children’s book daydream? Not quite but their fourth full-length album, Eating Us (out now on Graveface Records), will take you to a far away land. It’s multi-layered sound leaves so much room for imagination, where there’s a certain bitter-sweetness to the songs. Tobacco definitely agrees, “I think it's pretty gray and moody but that's what I was going for.” Way back in 1996 is when BMSR began with Tobacco performing independently. After additional members eventually joined, they went through many name changes – including satanstompingcaterpillars – until finally sticking with their current name in 2003. It makes one curious to think of the sort of musical influences each individual member must’ve contributed to the creative plate when writing the music. “I can't really speak for anyone else, but in the beginning it was just me anyways,” explains Tobacco. “I was just listening to an unhealthy amount of vintage synth stuff, kind of like, so much at once that it's the only way you can think. Hopefully that's worked itself out though!” On this album, Black Moth Super Rainbow were ready for something different and collaborated with Dave Fridmann, who’s worked with bands such as OK Go, The Flaming Lips (with whom BMSR toured with) and MGMT. “He's the only person I've ever met who could understand what I was going for without me knowing exactly how to communicate what I want,” Tobacco shares. “I don't know anything about music or the technical terms and he probably knows all of them and I wouldn't expect people like us to be able to mix. But I think he's gotten to the point where he's wise enough to be able to even understand someone like me who was raised by wolves.” The collaboration has worked out amazingly, considering they purposely tried to escape their comfort zones while writing the album, which can be a huge step to take. “I think the next level was to stop experimenting and see what would happen if we did it like everyone else…go into a studio one time and see how it turns out the old fashioned way,” says Tobacco. “Just to see if this one time, the songs can hold up when we take all the grossness away.” There is an obvious rebirth to the band that can be heard on the new record; they all seem to have been in a more mature head space while writing the album with a whole new crew. Although they have a definite sound - which could only surely be theirs - Tobacco and his mates were more concerned with being satisfied than playing it safe. “For the first time, I thought about what would actually be good for the album instead of just what would make me happy,” he says. “So I’m taking a less self-indulgent route with BMSR.” And to think, at one point Tobacco was questioning his career in music! “When we played at McCarren pool in Brooklyn last summer, the people running the show were the only good things about it,” he explains. “The crowd hated us, we just weren't in sync and there was such a weird air around the other bands and their managers that day that they just made me want to run far away from music and do something else with my life. It was like MGMT had convinced me that I should get a real job.” Happy to say they aren’t flipping burgers! Eating Us is a sure summer hit for Tobacco and the Black Moth Super Rainbow kids and is a sure treat for the ears. Synthesizers, vocorders, bells and electric drum kits; could it get any better? - Brittney Townson
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A low moan is sounded out against a loose and atmospheric guitar, while distant whistling announces a march. There is a rolling drum beat, and then a cry: “HEY! If I started my own country, for the flag what colours would I use? Such a myriad to choose from, I’d pick red yellow and blue”. These opening bars of the title track from the Born Ruffian debut album Red Yellow and Blue sounds almost like a revolutionary hymn. And though the boys of the Born Ruffians would likely never assume the role of activist—they’re far too grounded to attribute such lofty ambition to their album—there’s something pioneering about their style, and their sound. Lively but substantial, Red Yellow and Blue (released with US label Warp) is a collection of curiously upbeat and charged, eclectic, anthems. But if they do start a new country, I’m moving there. A Born Ruffian in name only, lead singer and guitarist Luke LaLonde seems anything but a rough and tumble type. He’s timid, pensive, and painfully humble. His gaze is often downcast as he answers questions thoughtfully from behind his beer with disarming sincerity. He explains that much is often made of the band’s youthful appearance. Lalonde, bassist Mitch DeRosier and drummer Steve Hamelin all turn 22 in the coming year, and have been playing together since they were 16 in their hometown of Midland, Ontario. “If only I could grow a beard like Steve!” jokes LaLonde. While he may still have a bashful and boyish manner, LaLonde is also particularly mature. The singer is still reeling from the Ruffians’ rapid rise since the release of their self-titled EP in 2006. “If you told ‘past me’ that this would be my life in two years, it would be like ‘Wow, that would be so fun’,” he explains with a light-hearted laugh, “but then it comes, and you find new things to worry about.” But on the eve of his European tour, LaLonde seems anything but agitated. He chattily recounts to me the book he’s reading on neuro-plasticity, and his growing need for routine and responsibility. “Youthful is something good, and we want to stay young, but we don’t want to be thought of as teenagers.” Surely, their new album will do much to convince critics that this band has come of age.
In classic indie style, the Born Ruffians take a DIY approach to music making. “I can’t study music,” says LaLonde, “It takes the fun out of it. I know a certain amount of music theory, but I don’t know what chords are in what keys, so I make a weird chord, I just kind of play until it sounds right to me.” Instead, the Ruffians relies on practice, and controlled chance, which result in up-beat off-tempo and occasionally a-tonal compositions. “We definitely like playing the drums in a different time signature than is right for the song,” explains LaLonde, “Steve will be like ‘Oh I fucked up’ and, and I’ll say no, that was so good, and it will happen by accident that we’ll end up playing in 6/4 and he’s playing in 4/4.” To these acoustic accidents, the Ruffians add whimsical instrumental touches like spoons-esque drumming, trombone, and accordion, as well as a distinctive vocal style. LaLonde’s harmonic effects range from melodic to halting yelps and wails. As a child, he was trained as a choral singer and soloist. “I like someone who does something interesting with their voice,” he says, “When I first started playing I was still a guitar player who was singing at the same time and then I realized that the vocal melody was as important as the guitar part.” In addition, playful lyrics like “I’m a little garcon in my head,” or more serious statements such as “I don’t want to be me anymore,” make for an equally fitting complement or contrast to the ecstatic tone. “It’s funny, Mitch said that Hummingbird has this really happy feeling when you listen to it, but the lyrics are so sad,” explains LaLonde, “He said it was the happiest sad song he’d ever heard.” These amusing juxtapositions of tone and meaning make up the richness of the Ruffian repertoire, and are a mark of their idiosyncratic aesthetic. But the evolution is still underway. For LaLonde, “our goals are constantly changing, like what we want to achieve with our music. Like the next album, I want it take a bigger step forward, but I can’t really think about it now.” For now, the band sets off to blaze trails with new tracks before returning home in April. - Davida Aronovitch
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The concept of having your feet in a number of pots is nothing new to pianist Brenda Earle. She has had a fruitful career as a composer and arranger in a wide variety of styles, performer and teacher. Earle continues to venture into new territory on her fifth album, Songs for a New Day, in which she incorporates singing into an already top notch recording with heavy hitting players. The choice to start singing later in a musical career is not always an easy one. For Earle it was something that was in her all along waiting to be explored. “I did a lot of singing in private,” she says. “I’d sometimes get frustrated when I was playing with a singer; I wanted to be up there.” While attending workshops in Banff one year, Earle performed in vocal jazz concerts and received the encouragement she needed from some of North Americas jazz aficionados - including the multi-talented Don Thompson - to take her singing to another level. When asked about the change in her playing once the transition into singing was made, Earle talks about the importance of separating the two. “When I was studying with (saxophonist and legendary jazz gourou) Dave Liebman, he wouldn’t let me play piano while I was singing,” she says. “I needed to know what it was to (actually) stand up and be a singer.” Her experience as an instrumentalist is evident on the album as many of her own compositions incorporate intricate jazz harmonies and atonal melodic lines. In some tunes, her voice would take on the feel of a horn playing the head of a bebop tune. “People would say to me, ‘the instrumentalist in you obviously wrote this ’cause it’s extremely difficult to sing!’” she says. Her experience in a wide variety of styles is clear on compositions like the title track, which almost has a music theatre feel to it, and covers like “You’d Be So Nice To Come Home To,” which incorporates vocal jazz sounding solis. Earle, who has a vast background in arranging everything from choirs to brass quintets to orchestras, takes it quite seriously, especially when it comes to her own album. “I tend to look at a lot of different music, find songs that have meaning to me for whatever reason,” she says. “The Marc Anthony tune (‘Valio La Pena’) was an itch that I couldn’t scratch. I finally had to do it. I treat my arrangements as a deconstruction, taking the song apart and putting it back together incorporating music of different cultures and jazz theory.” After a while of playing the same music, Earle “told all the stories she needed to tell” and simply needed new material, which helped in choosing her repertoire for Songs for a New Day. Like many singers, Earle had to avoid the stereotype of being the “ditzy vocalist” who knew nothing about her charts, music, etc. “People usually know that I do both piano and vocal so I manage to usually avoid that,” she says. “I always tell my students, ‘I don’t want you to have to marry a piano player to play music.’ It’s important to invest in your career as a musician and get your stuff together.” She reminisces of a time when she certainly proved herself not to be a “ditzy vocalist.” “I had been singing with a band on a cruise ship, but most of them didn’t know that I played the piano,” she recalls. “I sat down at the piano later in the show and played a blues and shred it….people were surprised.” What pot shall she venture into next? Earle is currently working on a project called “Sacred Voices,” arranging psalms for SATB that will be accompanied by a jazz quartet on a 90-minute recording. She is currently studying the pipe organ for another challenge and will be debuting with the New York Philharmonic in June. Songs for a New Day was is out now and features standards, original compositions, and covers of artists ranging from Crowded House to Marc Anthony. - Melissa P.
______________________________________________________________________________________ He has opened for Kid Rock, Buckcherry, Collective Soul, O.A.R, Poison, and the Marshall Tucker Band; he’s been in magazines like Hot Ticket, Spin Magazine, and All Access Magazine; according to his bio, he is “Mick Jagger meets Jim Morrison in a back alley fist fight, with a style of his own.” He is Brent Grunow of Brent Grunow & the Bandits. Growing up in Saginaw, Mich., Grunow was exposed to a lot of rad artists at a very young age. His parents would put on artists around the house such as, Marvin Gaye, Joe Cocker, and the Rolling Stones, just to name a few. His influences also consist of Iggy Pop, Bob Dylan, and Tom Petty. “Tom Petty is a genius if you ask me,” he said. As a young boy, he would sing in the car with his mom as she gave him tips on his vocal skills. Grunow started playing shows between the ages of 15 and 16 years old. He moved from Saginaw to New York City in 2003. “Saginaw is so saturated with cover bands,” Grunow said. “Don’t get me wrong, there are a few great bands as well, but no one gets out of Michigan.” He thought New York would be a great place for him to move to for the music scene. Grunow started working at record company, Everfine Records, and stayed there for about a year and a half but quit his job at Everfine because working there and constantly touring started to conflict with each other too much. Grunow wrote all the music for his EP, Push and Pull, and also co-produced it along side the talented Bob Iadeluca. Brent Grunow & the Bandits started touring on the album after recording it at Pearl Sound Studios in Detroit, with Chuck Alkazian. Having all his songs written for a couple of years, he gave his friends acoustic copies of the album. They encouraged him to get into the studio and properly record the EP. He is grateful for that push from his friends. “I consider myself a songwriter,” Grunow said. “I want people to remember my songs.” All of his songs were influenced by different times and moments in his life. Grunow plans to be in the studio for the next couple months to lay down more tracks for another album. He plans on touring in the New Year with hopes to stop off and play Toronto. He played Toronto about two years ago with his old band, the Flask, and had such a rad time here, he would like to rock out once again. To read up more on Grunow, listen to music, look at pictures, and keep an eye out for tour dates, check out his website at www.brentgrunow.com.
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Jared Tankel isn’t kidding when he says The Budos Band is “always teeming on the edge of chaos.” The Staten Island-based 11-piece instrumental-afro-beat-soul-funk-everything band has been touring, and hopped over the border on May 23 to play an absolutely packed show at the Polish Legion Hall. Actually, it was much more of an ordeal than that, as assorted members explained backstage (that is, “backstage” in a legion hall, which carries only the most tenuous of connections to most “backstages”). Apparently, the “bearded ones” (as their original band name meant) were welcomed less-than-warmly by our customs officials—surprising (or maybe not so…), considering they’d barely been in town three hours and were already exclaiming over some prime Canadian goods backstage. Tankel, baritone sax player and apparent mouthpiece for the band, also wasn’t kidding when he says being a Budos member, “has been a very good exercise in like ‘hurry up, hurry up, hurry up, and wait.’” Backstage, the shifting kaleidoscope of instruments, drinks, sounds, faces and seemingly wandering vagrants (myself included) was overwhelming and easily as lively as their vibrant music. The Budos sound is as close to honey-flavoured, brightly-coloured music as you’ll get without popping an impressive number of pills. Their songs, “usually named by [the] drummer” with “a medieval/comic book/something really random inspiration,” are singularly designed (or so it seems) to make people happy, and then to make them dance. And it works. In half-light (or half-shadow, depending on how you look at it), with people unassumingly streaming upstairs to see his band, Tankel says they’re “doing what [they] want, and really enjoy it.” Mixing several genres that are lesser head in popular music makes their sound occasionally “hard to describe” but for the Budos Band, it “really just invokes an emotional and psychological and sometimes physical response.” He says some of the best shows he can remember were at “this place in Brooklyn that shut down…this really small club—sweaty, dirty rock club, basically.” He admits that the shows they played there “probably weren’t our tightest shows, cause we were probably drunker there than the audience, but for me that was the most alive of all the live shows.” The Budos Band shares some of the flamboyant lifestyle of their influences (namely James Brown and Fela Kuti). “People expect because we’re an afro-funk band we’re going to be these mellow dudes, but we like to party,” Tankel laughs, with dancing blue eyes. “There are a couple of guys that tend to take more leadership roles when necessary,” he explains, especially during the writing stages, “a lot of times it’s hard to do that with ten guys shooting ideas everywhere.” Perhaps the fact that this “chaos” does not overwhelm the music is a testament to “the passion that [they] each have for those types of music.” Although without lyrics, the Budos Band arguably contain less of the personal, direct connection that much popular music has, Tankel explains that “this music is very personal and meaningful to us, and so the pieces we take of each genre—a little bit of Afrobeat and a bit of American soul, and to some extent like especially with our newer stuff, just straight up rock music—speak to our personal experiences.” Of course, most essentially, Tankel mentions that they “have a lot of fun.” In many ways, the Budos Band embody the completely alive nature of music; blending styles fluidly, enjoying it, and always letting us enjoy it too. - Sally Walker Hudecki
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If you ever visit Calgary, you best bet is to head up west to the mountains to avoid bodybuilders and random douchebags that live in the city. Upon your arrival, chances are you’ll find Chad Vangaalen doing one of the following things: working on his garden, skateboarding or taking care of his eight month old daughter, but more work than play seems to happen when it comes to Chad. “ I have a room for my music and animation that I work in till about 6 a.m.,” Chad says. “I’ll wake up at noon, have a coffee, hang out with my girlfriend and my kid, go hiking, eat something at some point, and around 6p.m, I’ll go back to work again until 6a.m and that’s pretty much been my set schedule as of late”. When Chad’s good friend Ian formed the label Flemish Eye in 2003, it was only a matter of time before the world would be exposed to the obscure folk pop sounds of Chad’s debut album, Infiniheart. The album’s strong presence garnered the Calgary native some serious attention in 2004, but it was in 2005, when it was picked up by Sub Pop that Chad’s whole life changed. “It was a dream come true. I really didn’t expect it at all to blow up the way that it did,” says Chad. “Infiniheart was 8 years of written material, stuff that I wrote from when I was 18 to 25, so it’s kind of like sharing entries in my diary. I did a lot of travel over the years, 75% of the record was written while I was in Boston, New York, and Montreal. The rest of the album I wrote when I was at home in Calgary.” His second album released in 2006, Skelliconnection was a definite test for Chad. The record put him on a higher plateau than Infiniheart, but Chad did not suffer the ‘sophomore jinx’. Not only was the album nominated for a Polaris Prize, the buzz from this record was pretty insane for Chad. “Skelliconnection was weird because I had deadlines”, Chad says. “I had to realize that this time around I wasn’t writing for myself, which kind of freaked me out because I didn’t want to fake it.” The Polaris Music Prize was a very tight race, but in the end, Patrick Watson’s Close To Paradise came out on top. “It’s really hard to compete with people you respect over money,” says Chad. “Julie (Doiron) has been doing her thing for years and The Besnard Lakes’ record fucking rocked, so it was just awesome to be a part of the whole thing.” Two years of living led Chad to Soft Airplane. His third release on Flemish Eye takes you through Chad’s dreams, fears and the ultimate unknown. Vangaalen meticulously depicts the morbid beauty in death; a new set of toys give the album its usual lo-fi swing, but with an early Neil Young folk-pop ego trip. “I was able to re-record a lot of material this time around,” Chad says. “I programmed an old gameboy to an acoustic guitar for one of the songs and it turned out great, which is one of the good things about circuit bending.” “Willow Tree” is the current single sparking the hype for the new album. Chad was so happy with the track the first time around that it was recorded on the same day. “It was a simple idea and I think it works well as the first single,” Chad says. “I try to come up with simple melodies because it’s hard to fit words together just right and I’m not one for poetry. I think that Devendra Banhart is the only man that can get away with really overdone flamboyant poetry, as far anyone else… the only other exception is Destroyer, if you’re not Destroyer, you can go fuck yourself.” Aside from Soft Airplane, Flemish Eye’s newest acquisition, Women, worked with Chad on their self-titled album during the winter months, but Chad has also been hard at work on a project that was first discussed during an interview with Exclaim! in 2006. “I have a hip hop side project called The Invention Of Science. I pretty much get really baked and rap over some hip hop instrumentals and electro-beats, which is really fun,” Chad explains. Chad Vangaalen describes his career as “eating the same soup”, which doesn’t taste that bad the third time around. “I have a lot of close friends at both labels, I’m a pretty cheap artist, considering that I do my own videos and album artwork,” says Chad. “I’m not interested in going mainstream; I think there is a classy way of going mainstream, Feist is a good example of how to do it and still remain humble, but I think it would be way more stress than I’d want to handle.”
“I’d probably want to get it done really fast depending on how much time I had, so I could spend some time with my girlfriend and kid,” Chad explains half jokingly. “I could just take a bunch of drugs and vomit on a canvas, I think the best way to go would be to start a great big barn fire, burn all the personal archives and then I’d just jump into the fire”. - Maxwell Mohenu
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Brooklyn three-piece synth-pop band Chairlift have just embarked on their huge 2009 tour. With stops at SXSW, Bonnaroo festival and most European capital cities, this is no small excursion for the band. Multi-instrumentalists Aaron Pfenning, Caroline Polacheck and Patrick Wimberly make up this Brooklyn group, who were recently signed by Columbia records. Chairlift’s album Does You Inspire You received huge success in 2008; including being named one of SPIN magazine’s top 40 records of the year. The band will be re-releasing the album, which has been remixed and re-mastered since they joined with Columbia, on April 21st. They have also added two new tracks to the record. “The new tracks ‘Le Flying Saucer Hat’ and ‘Dixie Gyspy’ were intended to be on the original but we ran out of time in studio,” Pfenning says. The track “Dixie Gypsy” was also produced by Chris Taylor of Grizzly Bear. The re-mastered songs are promised to be of a noticeably better quality, something Pfenning likens to George Lucas’ re-mastering of the Star Wars trilogy: “George Lucas revisited Star Wars after new technologies were available in order to bring the films closer to his original vision – he did some colour correction and added a few key scenes that should have been in the original – that’s what we did too. We were happy with the first album but [after signing with Columbia] we were given some new options.” Chairlift began with Pfenning and Polacheck playing and writing together in a backyard shed back in 2005. Pfenning convinced Polacheck to join him in Colorado when he went away to college. There they formed the band. They have since moved to Brooklyn, the place they now call home. “In Brooklyn we found ourselves boring down musically. I was really into folk when I lived in Colorado, but moving to Brooklyn allowed us to explore music in different ways – like how it’s structured and produced,” Pfenning says. “Brooklyn is what lit the fire under the band.” Now known as “the band from the iPod commercial,” Chairlift does owe a degree of their success to having the poppy track “Bruises” featured in an Apple commercial. “I’d say about 33 percent?” Pfenning jokes. “I think the success comes from the work we put into our music. It’s like following a treasure map, you find ‘Bruises’ through the iPod commercial and that leads you to the album.” Chairlift has a second album already in the works with a bunch of the writing already complete. Plans include recording the album in a warm climate (a recommendation from a psychic in Virginia during an impromptu band psychic reading), making a video for every song on the album (both Pfenning and Polacheck have some talent with video production), and opening up their music to a larger audience through their Columbia release. Chairlift will be performing in Toronto at The Phoenix on April 25th with Peter Bjorn & John. - Allison Smith
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Cut Off Your Hands is a four-piece band from Aukland, New Zealand, ans have just released their first full length album, You & I (Frenchkiss Recordings) on Jan. 20. The success of their EPs Cut Off Your Hands and Shaky Hands has given these young men the chance to play high profile international gigs like South by Southwest (SXSW) as well as a recent European tour with UK bands Foals and Friendly Fires. Stuck somewhere between post-punk and indie-pop, the band both struggles and succeeds when it comes to finding a neutral ground for their music. “Fight-pop” is the term used to describe Cut Off Your Hands on their MySpace page. Lead singer and guitarist Nick Johnston said this description is most accurate of their performance style. “We’re often confrontational in our performance,” Johnston said. “We've always felt kind of in a nether region, as we're too melodic and poppy to be part of a certain crowd, yet we're too aggressive and hard hitting - especially live - to be part of the other side of things.” It is the band’s mixture of sounds that has made them accessible to a variety of listeners. Cut Off Your Hands’ songs range from poppy danceable tunes, like “Oh Girl,” a lighthearted song about a boy inviting his girl over to his house for the night, to more melodic and serious tunes, such as “Nostalgia, which has a fade-out, fade-in conclusion. “I love ‘Nostalgia,’” Johnston said. “It's one that has a nice simple sentiment lyrically, and sonically is much closer to the kind of music that I would choose to put on for listening.” Johnston’s vocals during his ballads convey the maturity of a man much older than his 24 years. Cut Off Your Hands’ ability to perform a range of songs with ease is the best gage of their talent. Their music never sounds forced and is played with an incredibly precise musicality. “I think we have a real sincere appreciation of melodic or pop sensibilities in songs, as well as our love for noisier and more energetic music,” Johnston said. “Hopefully it’s the marriage of these elements that comes through.” The album was recorded in London, England and shows a strong Britpop influence. “I would’ve preferred it to have sounded a little more live and garage,” Johnston said. “I think British producers are a little safe at the moment.” Safe or not, working with big name producer Bernard Butler, who produced The Libertines, Black Kids and many other successful acts, is no small honour, and is obvious in the quality of their album. Johnston writes all of the band’s music and is currently hard at work on their second album. “We are aiming to record it around the time of the South by Southwest festival,” he said, “So I am trying to finish [the writing] before we head to the States in mid February.” As the band grows, it seems likely they will move away from their more juvenile pop-punk songs and towards a more contemplative, toned down sound. Until then, Cut Off Your Hands is set to even break further into the independent music scene and should be ready to expect success. Although there is no set date yet, Cut Off Your Hands plans to play a Toronto show following their SXSW stop in March. - Allison Smith
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If you haven’t heard of Daphne Darling yet, perhaps it would be good to jot down a mental note. This Toronto songwriter is not only talented but a rising star in the Toronto indie music scene and the winner of a Toronto Indie Music Award. She also jokingly pokes fun at herself when asked how it feels to perform at the Toronto Indie Music Awards this year. “It will be my first time performing at an award show, unless you count that time I performed my number one hit song on the Grammys. Just kidding,” Darling laughed. “I'm guessing it will feel just as good to play for a crowd who appreciate what you do.” Perhaps she will feel added confidence in her performance since her last trip to the Toronto Indie Music Awards last year, when she won Best Pop Artist of 2007. “It was an honour because of all the great artists in musicians in this city. I seriously believe there is amazing talent in our city, and it was nice to be recognized and appreciated for my style of music,” Darling explained when asked how she felt about receiving the award. Anyone who listens to Daphne Darling’s music or even visits her MySpace page can get the hint of a sunny happy girl who seems to like the colour pink. She has a very interesting and proud background. Daphne is a first generation Canadian with roots coming from Iran and Israel. She admits that her family is part of the reason she is the way she is. “I learned from them that you have to work hard if you want something, and I adopted that attitude with all things I'm passionate about,” Darling explained. She isn’t a trained musician, but makes music to brighten the spirits of her fans, and they don’t seem to mind her lack of formal training. “I was self-taught, and I did everything I could to get better at it, and make music that people could connect to. I would call my music 'smile-out-loud' music. There are enough sad songs in the world, so I don't feel the need to add anymore at this time,” Darling said. Darling describes her music with enthusiasm. She makes it clear that she doesn’t want to restrict her music to any specific genre and would rather just write what she enjoys. “I do variety pop, I don't like to limit myself to one genre or style, so I tried to create a sound that fused all my music interests, like basic pop, mixed with R&B and country,” Darling described. “Lyrically I'm a literal writer and like to tell a story in some way. I do write less heartbreak and relationship songs, and more about the other parts of my life. But don't get me wrong, I am a hopeless romantic and stories like the one in my song "Eight" will definitely show that side of me.” Her influences are a wide variety of different artists that aren’t all as happy-go-lucky as Darling is herself. Some of her influences include The Carpenters, Wham, Prince, Peggy Lee, TLC, The Cars, Kylie Minogue, Garbage and the Dixie Chicks. “I am inspired by music that either says something, or makes me really feel different,” Darling said. “It's hard not to feel something when you listen to a song like Peggy Lee's ‘I'm A Woman’.” The Toronto music scene is thriving and this is something that Darling has noticed herself. “As far as indie music scenes go, Toronto is alive and well,” Darling explained. “We don't always support the efforts of originality in the city, and sometimes it's hard for people to get it. You either do or you don't, not everyone will like you. We're tough critics here, and that’s a good thing, it's humbling.” The Toronto indie scene has been blooming more and more internationally as years go by and Darling has her opinion for the reasons that our local artists are getting recognition further away. “Any 'scene' that includes real music, fans who communicate their feelings on new bands and artists, will definitely make some kind of impact in the international market,” Darling said. “The cream does rise.” As for Darling her self, she is going international soon and her plans for the future show her rising success. “Right now the summer is booked with shows in NY, and an opening spot for Rascal Flatts at Sarnia's Bay Fest,” Darling said. “In the fall, I'm hoping to add some more touring to support The Darling Project my EP, including L.A. and Nashville.” Daphne Darling may be one of Toronto’s rising stars, but she can still relate to the other indie artists. “I tried out for the musical in high school, and never got any part,” Darling said. “I'd laugh if another indie artist could relate to that.” So keep the name Daphne Darling on your mental notepads, she may be one of the popular Canadian names in the future. - Ana Cristina da Silva ______________________________________________________________________________________
Dan Bejar is a strange fellow. The sometimes New Pornographer and lead-man/creative impetus for the band Destroyer seems to feed off this eccentricity which has earned him a solid fanbase and an impressive, if not weird, catalogue of tunes. Trouble In Dreams the latest album from Destroyer is an excellent, strange, impressive and at times annoying piece of work, not unlike the man himself. “I recorded this record where all the records have always been recorded - Vancouver, B.C. But I actually wrote most of it while living in Spain,” he explained. “I recommend that everyone go there to write their records. It’s like going home.” Indeed the new album does feel like going home for old fans as many of the same themes of regret, nostalgia, loss and condemnation resonant through the songs. Rather than mine inspiration from his personal life, Bejar took a more creative approach for these new songs. “I used my imagination to conjure up what those themes might sound like,which I tell you is a first for a Destroyer record. I¹m sure all my experiences inspire each album, seeing as I’m generally not a very imaginative person.” When asked which songs personally spoke to him on Trouble in Dreams he quizzically responded: “The really resonant numbers for me are the spritely ones which take on some of [the album’s themes], though mostly the idea of the getting or suppressing of information through torture or the threat of torture, but in a swingin’ manner. I’m thinking of “The State” or “Plaza Trinidad”. Or maybe some of the more wistful numbers, like the first song or the last song.” Divining meaning from the words of Dan Bejar has long been a pasttime of his fans and critics. Bejar’s lyrics are often cryptic or at times just plain bizarre. This has led many to describe his wordplay as being Dylanesque. “I think both acts have a very set way of delivering words and melody, that some people see as imprecise. His bands stay pretty loose, we try to stay loose. We both might have a couple songs that feel like just a controlled flow of images that you hope ends up somewhere.” On the strength of Dylan’s Whether his lyrics are comprehensible to everyone or not, one can’t deny that they are one of Destroyer’s strongest points, not to detract from the often gorgeous soundscapes painted by the band. Bejar’s lyrics are without a doubt, poems. “Until I publish my first poem, I will be forced to consider myself a songwriter first. Though really I am a singer first, rhythm guitar player second,” said Bejar in response to the idea of any poetic aspirations. Still despite his lack of published poetry he admitted his work is very much informed by poets and poems. Franz Wright, Rilke, Ana Enriqueta Teran, Albertti, Lorca, Aleixandre, Spanish surrealists, Mandelstam, Pasternak, Anne Sexton’s rock band, Lou Reed, Azita, Morrissey, and Mark E. Smith are just a short list of lyricists and poets Bejar names as inspirations for his writing. Despite the strength of the words and music found on a Destroyer album, many would-be fans are turned off by Bejar’s peculiar vocal delivery. It is very different, and feels almost improvised and scatter-shot. “I¹m not attached to exact notes,” he confessed, “I know where they’re supposed to land, there are actual notes, [but I’m] more into diction, cadence, style, styles.” Trouble In Dreams even with its weirdness, has received quite a good response from critics and fans alike something Bejar definitely appreciates. “I’m beaming over the success of Destroyer, I feel incredibly lucky, even if we are the most overlooked band in the Americas,” he said. With the record finished and released, Destroyer have been on a North American tour the past few months but wrap up at the end of May. Touring is something Bejar has mixed feelings about. “I don’t look forward to the lifestyle that accompanies touring,” he lamented. “I do enjoy playing live, depending on how many nights in a row of playing one is talking about. Like three. I try my hardest every night, but it is incredibly nerve-wracking, and I don’t enjoy being nerve-wracked.” Destroyer, and subsequently Dan Bejar, may not be to everyone’s taste, however one can’t deny their music smacks of originality and talent. Trouble In Dreams is available at a record store near you. To learn more about Dan and Destroyer and to stream the new album visit www.mergerecords.com. - Sam Stilson ______________________________________________________________________________________
Matt King and his four cronies, or more affectionately known as the band DD/MM/YYYY, are spending their Family Day holiday driving up the coast of Oregon in their 2005 Chevy Venture. The van that barely fits the five young men is also loaded with equipment, forcing the guys in the backseat to have their feet squished up upon amplifiers. The cell phone reception is crummy and they have been driving since 1 am that morning, their destination, Portland, still hours away. What motivates this hard working Toronto act to spend months at time sleeping on stranger’s floors every night? The music, man. “We all want to be musicians for the rest of our lives,” King says. “Right now we are trying to make the most of every opportunity we are given. As long as people keep asking us to come play we are going to do it!” King describes a day-in-the-life of DD/MM/YYYY on the road as one of constant movement: “We wake up, drive forever, set up, then play for half an hour,” he says. The band is currently in the midst of a large-scale North American tour that will last until the end of April. In 2008 the band spent about four months on the road, including a month in Europe. This year they plan on doubling their time in Europe because they are releasing their newest album Black Square on both a Swedish label and a U.K. label. This could mean up to six months on the road for the band. Constant movement has become synonymous with DD/MM/YYYY’s sound and live performances. Each member is capable of playing all of the band’s different instruments to some degree, and is likely to do so during a single set. For example, throughout the new album, King works his vocals, the synthesizer, drums and saxophone. “If someone comes into practice with a part that needs playing we are all willing to contribute what skill we can to get it played,” King says. Black Square is a more concise and complex record than their previous efforts. Instead of 20+ tracks, their newest album offers only 12. “The cohesiveness of this album comes from the slow recording process,” King says. “We worked in a studio that we could only use at night for about three hours a week. This allowed for more review and introspection into each track.” The songs are so condescend, with so much overlapping, that at any given time on the record each member could be playing something different, in a different time signature. “Although the song are much different stylistically than on previous records, they are being performed in a way that is much more DD/MM/YYYY. As much as a band can want to change, the way your work together begins to solidify,” King says. “We have become very conscious of this.” King describes their live show as pretty intense, but still light-hearted. “We don’t want to be too staunch and serious, but also not too showy,” he says. “It’s about throwing down the songs to the best of our abilities.” The band certainly has a lot of practice when it comes to live performances and have said in previous interviews that their live shows end up sounding much better than the recordings because of how often they play. DD/MM/YYYY’s motivation for non-stop touring may be unmatched among Toronto indie acts, so much so, that they haven’t played a Toronto show in almost six months. When asked about any final thoughts on the album, King passes the phone to band mate Thomas Del Balso, who says, “Black Square is like turning off your TV, because once your TV’s off, all that’s left is a black square.” - Allison Smith Black Square is now available on iTunes. The physical copy will be released on We Are Busybodies and will be available on March 17. You can also catch DD/MM/YYYY live at Lee’s Palace on April 16.
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Dimitri From Paris, has been nothing but consisent when it comes to bringing great house music to our city. With the April release of Return to the Playboy Mansion we were fortunate enough to experience the return of this veteran DJ, producer, remixer, and very stylish ‘French Ambassador of House Music’. He recently played at This Is London as part of the tour for RTPBM. “Return to the Playboy Mansion is part of a series, a continuation of where I left off with the last compilation, and also it is a way to showcase the new music and make it accessible to more people,” Dimitri said, when musing on its conception. “It was a year-long project from thinking about it to actually contacting artists and working on the record. I was happy to leave it as a trilogy but Defected Records asked me to do another one.” Despite the fact that the music industry has changed drastically in recent years, and the ever-increasing power of technology has changed how music reaches audiences, Dimitri doesn’t feel phased or afraid of the new methods of music. “ I am actually working more as a DJ now than ever,” he said. “ It is good because it forces you to get out more to get noticed but also you have to be more creative and up to date with marketing and strategy. You don’t make as much money just producing a record anymore since the new generation hasn’t experienced really paying for a CD or vinyl.” More so then the opportunity to tour more, Dimitri has truly embraced the internet as a marketing and networking tool, as he feels, “it is easier to reach out to people and track people down with the internet. Certainly it has made music available to more people, on the other hand, it takes time tracking people down, they may be dead or out of the scene completely.” Having been around for a long time and having seen many changes in the world of dance music, it can be hard for veteran artists to fit in and perhaps more so, keep an enthusiasm for the industry. For Dimitri it’s a love of the music that keeps him going. “There is a new generation of music lovers, everything is more instant, in a way more competitive because they have access to so much now, and you have to weed out what is good in a sea of mostly mediocre stuff. You (the DJ) have to keep up with that generation. Because it is complex and takes a lot of time to listen and sort through all the music that is out there, I have gone back to my old stuff, my retro roots. It is exciting to have the opportunity to introduce this music to a new generation and get them to explore the rich history of dance music. Out of that new and sometimes-wonderful music can be created.”
From working on the radio, to fashion shows to becoming an internationally known DJ, the road to success has been a long one for Dimitri. “This career fell on me really. I used to come home and listen to the “Mission Impossible” theme song at the beginning of the show just because I loved the music. I wasn’t into that electro Euro trash stuff when I started going to clubs so I got into house, which led me back to disco, and a variation of black American disco and soul.” “I remember the first time I went to a hip hop show and heard the group scratching, mixing with three turntables, it was an inventive way to interact with the audience and bring them into the music. I was blown away, I went home and found all the turntables in the house, and started experimenting. I would spend hours doing edits of songs and making them my own. My success just came out of nowhere and I didn’t have time to think about it really.”
“Yes, in 2000. Hugh Heffner actually listens to CDs first and gives the final word if [they can be played at the mansion]. He liked the music and I was in. He is a very elegant and down to earth man, you know, he is a pioneer as well and he was brave with his politics and lived through exciting times.” On his return to Toronto, Dimitry was excited to be back in town. “I love this city, like NYC, Montreal and Paris. Toronto is very special and welcoming. I am excited about playing and Felix, Gani (MILK) and the gang are good to me. I look forward to playing here and I hope your city feels the same!” - Daria Essop-Lafontaine ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Saturday, January 17th marked the first anniversary of Toronto band Dinosaur Bones. Although they are still a few eons behind most other famous dinosaur bones, it only took this band one short year to make a name for themselves on the Toronto scene. Dinosaur Bones hosted their anniversary party at the Horseshoe Tavern, exactly one year after their first live show where they opened for Toronto band Arietta. Since their debut, Dinosaur Bones played shows about once a month around Toronto and released a four track self-titled EP. Perhaps most surprising about Dinosaur Bones’ anniversary party was the blank check they were given for the night. “Craig Laskey [owner and booker for the Horseshoe tavern] has been really good to our band and hooked us up immensely” says lead singer Ben Fox. “He gave us a blank check to assemble the lineup for the night.” Most young bands would be thrilled at the chance to play a slot at the Horseshoe on a Saturday night, let alone book the whole evening. What has Dinosaur Bones done to deserve such prestige amongst so many more well-established Toronto acts? For starters, Dinosaur Bones spent five months practicing and writing songs together before taking to the stage. “We have all been in other bands before and know the importance of playing together as much as possible” Fox says. Those five months helped form Dinosaur Bones’ musical identity. “It all started to take shape once we started playing together,” says keyboardist Dave Wickland. But it takes more than preparation and practice to make it in this town, it also takes connections. “Lots of new bands struggle with making contacts,” Wickland says. “It can be one of the hardest battles. We are lucky to be a part of a really supportive group of bands in Toronto who have helped us book gigs and get hooked up with venues.” This same group of bands is now helping Dinosaur Bones book shows in other cities across Ontario and Quebec. “We are going to start touring as much as possible to promote the new album” Fox says. Their full-length album is set to be released in summer 2009. The band is promoted by Audio Blood Media, who works with other successful Toronto acts Oh No Forest Fires and Fox Jaws among others. The band’s sound is a mixture of pop-rock, heavy hitting bass and catchy lyrics. Frontman Fox is one of those guys who, when looking at, you can only assume is the lead singer of a band. Long brown ringlets, dark eyebrows and large, almost comical facial features make him quite the attention grabber onstage. There powerful stage presence is what has popularized their live shows and is a big part of their success thus far. Dinosaur Bones have been featured on Toronto radio station 102.1 The Edge’s weekly Indie Hour and have six shows scheduled in the next six weeks, including one in Montreal and a hometown show during Canadian Music Week. - Allison Smith
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Logan Kroeber could be mistaken for a boxer. A white towel is wrapped around his neck like an albino python to Britney Spears as he rests on the brown cracked-leather couch in the pool room at Toronto’s Phoenix Concert Theatre, triumphant with his post-gig prize in hand — a bottle of Steam Whistle. Kroeber is the drummer of San Francisco’s The Dodos, who began in 2005 as the brainchild of singer/guitarist Meric Long. Kroeber was Long’s old roommate’s cousin and with such few degrees of separation, he joined the band. Vibraphonist Keaton Snyder joined when the band recorded their latest release, after percussionist Joe Haener left to pursue work with other bands. Time to Die, The Dodos’ third album, is a nine-track amalgamation of finger plucks and progressive percussion produced by Phil Ek (Fleet Foxes, The Shins) at Bear Creek Studios in Seattle. The entire album is streaming at timetodie.net after leaking online in July by an unknown third party. Time to Die is available for digital purchase now but will not physically be released until September 15. “Time to die” is a manic catch-phrase that Long uses when he gets nervous, but according to Kroeber, Long’s manic phrases are always stated using his “movie announcer” voice yet change according to circumstance. For example, when they’re about to eat, “time to dine” becomes the phrase of choice. The confetti drowned album art was inspired by a trip that Long took to a confetti-infested Mardi Gras-esque street festival in Switzerland. “I think that the album title creates an interesting disparity because the art work is light-hearted and has a celebratory nature to it and we don’t take ourselves really that seriously,” Kroeber says. “A lot of people might see the title as some morbid, serious thing but it’s really not.”
“I definitely have noticed Meric branching out verbally with a lot of pretty decent vocabulary words in the lyrics,” says Kroeber, who enjoys seeing Long’s lyrics from a listener’s perspective. “It was pretty funny at first to hear these very long words put into a pop song and married to a beautiful melody . . . but after we recorded it and really got the rhythms down of it, he made it work.” Before heavy touring for shows like this one, Kroeber revealed that Long gets acrylic manicures because his regular nails would become too brittle from constant finger plucking on the guitar. “We’ll be in like Alabama and we’ve got to get his nails filed and we’ll pull into some strip mall and Meric will walk in and it’s just like somebody walked into the saloon in the old west,” Kroeber says. “Everybody goes silent and is like, ‘Uh, can we help you?’ and he’s like, ‘I need to get my nails done,’ and they’re like, ‘Your nails?’ I know that it’s sometimes a hindrance to him that he has giant claws, even though he probably enjoys it.” In May, Long told Easy Street Online he had no intentions for future pressings of his first release (pre-Kroeber), the Dodo Bird EP. Upon hearing this, Kroeber responded “Not if I have anything to do about it” before dreaming up plans of releasing it on vinyl in the same breath, directing Greg the merch man to remind him to set that into motion. That EP happens to be what drew Kroeber to Long, who had just finished recording it when Kroeber joined the band. “There’s a lot of great finger-picking on that record that isn’t necessarily as frenetic and crazy as how we do things now,” Kroeber says. “If we took some of those songs and put them together with the drums like we do now, they could have totally turned into more of these rocking songs, but as they are recorded they’re a little more introverted but still powerful.” Before joining The Dodos, Kroeber was playing in metal bands and lending his talents to surf punk band, Spencey Dude & The Doodles. Until Kroeber, Long was a “folky singer-songwriter guy” but the energetic drummer enabled Long to push towards “folk metal” during their initial jam sessions until the happy medium that is Visiter and Time to Die was reached. Kroeber took up the drums in junior high after teachers complained to his parents about him incessantly beating on his desk; a result of puberty making him frenzied. He also took up the guitar, vibraphone, and bass; all of which were at his disposal because his dad owned a music store. Kroeber took drum lessons on and off but admits he was not a focused student and did not retain anything stylistically. “For a guy like Keaton who went to (the San Francisco Conservatory for Music), he knows the names of those rhythms and stuff,” Kroeber says. “For me, I’m more kind of like, faking it.” Kroeber blames drug use during his formative years for cancelling out his ability to read music, which he’d picked up as a child. After a brief stint at Sonoma State University, Kroeber tried to study music at his hometown community college but quickly realized that going head to head with competitive music students was “too weird a scene.” He eventually fulfilled a liberal arts education, which included courses in music production, silk screen printing and poetry. But just because he doesn’t read music does not mean that he is not one for reading. For example, Kroeber had been reading up on Pitchfork Media since its early stages when his cousin began writing CD reviews for them. “Back then (Pitchfork) was still a hub of indie music criticism but now it really is what Rolling Stone was in the ’60s and ’70s; it holds the most sway as far as our genre of music is concerned,” Kroeber says. “I don’t know where the future is headed for [music journalism] but it’s definitely like they almost have some strange monopoly over giving credibility to people but I’ve liked stuff that Pitchfork liked, so I can’t hate on them.” Last year’s Visiter was so well-received at the Chicago-based webzine The Dodos were invited to play at that year’s Pitchfork Festival, even though Kroeber still does not understand what drew them to their music. As positive reviews for Time to Die steadily trickle in, it looks like round three for this boxer has already been won. That is, after some extensive fall touring of Europe and North America but Kroeber isn’t fazed. “Stretch before a show, and I’m ready to go,” he says. The Dodos return to Toronto on October 17 at Lee’s Palace. — Melissa Kim
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Eamon McGrath is the ultimate do-it-yourself story. His latest album, 13 Songs of Whiskey and Light, is his first on Toronto’s White Whale Records but it is in no way his debut. At 20 years old, the Edmonton native has already accomplished more than many artists will in a lifetime, having self-recorded, self-released, and self-distributed 17 additional albums since 2006. “I used the aesthetic or ethics or philosophy that I used playing in punk bands to record all that stuff when I was 17 or 18,” he recalls, describing the folk/punk sound of his material. “The thought of recording really lo-fi punk rock recordings in my basement never really seemed like it would be a career, you know? I kind of just would make really limited editions of each full-length and give them to friends and distribute them across Canada with tours that I booked myself, so I kind of thought that I was going to have to work as a cook or get a degree or something, a back up plan, and just do this for fun.” But McGrath got noticed, gaining attention from outlets across the country and the blogosphere. “I like being an independent artist; it’s kind of like representing yourself in court,” he says. “It’s a really gutsy and punk rock thing to do, but it’s really hard to be convincing for some reason. People are kind of skeptical of independent artists, they really have it really tough.” He attributes his success and ability to break through this skepticism to good old hard work. “I toured my ass off, that’s honestly the key,” McGrath explains. “Canada is so big. I mean, the only way you can really find some kind of attention even underground or something is if you play every Canadian city with the frequency that a local band in that city would play their town and that’s just impossible with Canada. You just have to be kind of strategic about the way that you operate when you’re an independent artist.” His travels have repeatedly taken him across Canada and into the Midwestern United States, playing Toronto six times in the past year alone. These experiences, coupled with a self-induced “chaotic” style of living, have left him with countless tour stories. “I lost a member of my band to the U.S. border because he had a little piece of weed in his coat and so we had to hitchhike that day from the U.S. border to North Dakota,” he says. “In the same tour, we hit a deer in Michigan and totaled our van; we hitchhiked to Toronto and bought a new van and then continued the tour. But in between buying the new van and totaling the old one, we actually had to make a Toronto radio spot. Some pretty crazy stuff. That was all like in three days.” McGrath also finds his inspiration from the adventures and interactions he has while on the road. “Every tour is an eye opening story I find, every one’s this chapter and it’s got one main point to it; you come back from a tour and you have a really clear understanding on your position on something in the world,” he says. “We always try to have a real experience when we go somewhere. It’s totally part of that quest for something to write about. I think that’s how you fight writer’s block, is throwing yourself into life experiences. Do things you wouldn’t normally do. Throw yourself a curveball.” His naturally poetic perception of everyday life doesn’t hurt, either; McGrath can turn your typical house party into a work of art. “When you’re at a party and it’s 8 a.m. and the sun’s kind of rising and the light in the house turns blue, it’s kind of this weird moment where there’s this sort of sadness and happiness at the same time,” he says. “Whenever that happens, there’s a song in something that’s going on in that room, I think.” His album 13 Songs of Whiskey and Light comes out of these experiences. “It’s a punk rock record,” McGrath claims. “I think there’s some pretty quiet punk rock songs but I think it’s first and foremost a punk rock record. Everybody that I listen to in some way or another is a punk rock artist, whether it’s something that’s an attitude or an ethic they have, or they might not even know it. “I went and saw Neil Young last week and I think that guy is unbelievably punk rock. What’s more punk rock than a 50-year-old that comes out on stage in front of 10,000 fans in a dirty plaid shirt, unshaven, uncombed hair, and rocks harder and louder and plays guitar and is breaking strings and throwing his guitar around? It’s crazy. It’s tough, and it’s gritty, but the songs are pretty, but it doesn’t matter because at the heart of it is this hard edge sort of artist that’s making music.” It’s clear that McGrath’s work ethic, passion, and full embrace of the rock and roll lifestyle set him apart from the numerous independent artists struggling to make it in today’s music industry. “I don’t know if I ever really made a concrete decision this is what I wanted to do, but it just sort of evolved to be what my life was revolving around; it sort of emerged out of thin air,” he says. “It’s kind of like waking up next to your true love after you’ve been with them for three years or something. You don’t really decide that you want to spend the rest of your life with them, you just kind of realize that you’ve already been spending your whole life with them.” 13 Songs of Whiskey and Light is available now on White Whale Records and McGrath is currently on tour across Canada and selected U.S. cities. - Heather Adamo
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It may seem odd for a Toronto band to use an American tragedy as a springboard for creating an album, but that’s exactly what Elliott Brood did The alternative country trio — consisting of Mark Sasso, Stephen Pitkin and Casey Laforet — have followed up their Juno nominated album Ambassador with the recently released Mountain Meadows. The new album is based on the massacre which took place in September 1857. About 120 men, women and children emigrating from Arkansas to California were killed by Mormon militiamen and Native American tribesmen in Mountain Meadows, Utah. Only a small group of children, believed to be too young to remember, were spared. The album isn’t a recount of the event — save that for the history textbooks — but the band used what happened to help form the songs on the album. “It’s more of a jumping off point as opposed to describing in detail what everyone can find out for themselves,” Sasso said. “We kind of looked at the children that they let live, what happened to those kids who were assimilated, their stories and their descendants.” Sasso and Laforet were high school friends from Windsor, Ont. But made separate journeys to Toronto a decade ago. The two eventually met up in the big city and had their first show at Holy Joe’s in 2002. “I’d like to think we were always Elliott Brood even though we probably weren’t called that for the first show,” Sasso said with a laugh. “I knew this was it when were just practicing. It felt really good and the songs that I had written or that we were playing were working really well. So we got a good vibe right from the beginning.” Pitkin later joined the pair and their first release was the 2004 EP Tin Type. Their first full-length album, Ambassador, was released in 2005 and was nominated for “Roots & Traditional Album of the Year (Group)” at the 2006 Juno Awards. Although they lost to the Duhks’ self-titled released, just being nominated was an honour. “It was pretty amazing actually,” Sasso said. “You don’t create music to win awards, we don’t anyway. We write it and if it’s appreciated by enough critics to be nominated, it’s pretty great. It didn’t win but it was like, ‘Oh, it’s been nominated!’” Elliott Brood also won Galaxie's Rising Star Award in 2006 and the band is currently in the running for XM Radio’s Verge Music Awards for artist of the year and album of the year for Mountain Meadows. For a list of Elliott Brood’s upcoming shows, check out elliottbrood.ca. To vote for the Verge Music Awards, go to thevergexm52.com/musicawards. - Jon Brazeau
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It’s difficult to refrain from the overuse of oral hygiene puns when talking about Experimental Dental School. The band describes their music as being both pretty and ugly, conjuring painful allusions of braces, pulling teeth, and even root canals. This, most certainly, would be the “ugly” and comes with the territory of the band’s lo-fi approach to music making. “It is nice for us if music can met noise in some interesting way…hence the pretty and ugly,” says guitarist/vocalist Jesse Hall. Their latest album, Forest Field, is certainly not “pretty” in the traditional sense, but is filled with raw, unbridled rock and roll. The album is available for free on their website and the band is forging forward in this digital world of file sharing and torrents. “We were able to make the record cheaply,” Hall says. “I already had a computer, a basement and some mics…not so fancy, but good enough to make a decent sounding record that cost almost nothing. It’s nice that money is not a factor in someone being able to enjoy our music.” Experimental Dental School is also taking full advantage of technology to promote themselves and connect with their fans. They’re active users of most social media outlets, including Facebook, MySpace and Twitter. Despite their newfound ability to converse with others around the world, the band is finding itself allocating more time to talking and less time to rocking. Through the magic of the world wide web, fans can now discover what the band is eating (dried mangoes), where they’re playing, and what they’re doing (recent tasks include “super gardening!!”). “The thing that’s changed since we started to use this stuff is the exact reason I hate it: we are spending more time behind a computer,” Hall says. Don’t stop your tweets just yet, however. Even with the added time commitment, Hall acknowledges that “it’s nice to hear from people who enjoy your music and also communicate with people whose work you also admire.” These influences include bands like Deerhoof (Hall gushes that “they are genuinely kind people. This is such an inspiration for me”), and frequently changing obsessions with songs and videos on YouTube. “I will become completely consumed with a random song and play it a thousand times in a row,” he says. “The last couple were Cab Caloway, Gang of Four, Johnny Cash live, Talking Heads live, Hovercraft, a Liars song, OOIOO and Chinese Stars.” Hall’s diverse tastes come from his musical upbringing. “My parents had an amazing record collection; I used to listen for hours as a kid,” he says. “I was obsessed with playing the guitar because it felt good, it seemed to be something I could not stop myself from doing.” This feeling of inevitability led to Hall’s harmonious union with Shoko Horikawa (drums and vocals), and their array of subsequent releases. After being featured on a number of global compilation albums, Experimental Dental School shared five split albums with artists from Italy, Japan and Germany. Although Forest Field is their fourth full-length album, the band has not strayed far from their international starting place. XDS undertook their first European tour in the spring of 2004 and have returned nearly annually. Currently touring the United States and Canada, they venture even further to Japan in the fall. “It is very different touring in Europe,” Hall explains. “For one thing, you always have food, a place to stay, and everyone works very hard to make the show great; from the promoter to the sound person. In the U.S., of course, these things can be more challenging because there are so many bands. I think Japan will be great because Shoko loves Japanese food.” The members of Experimental Dental School appreciate the value of their partnership, falling in line alongside the currently trendy rock duo. The power of this formation, Hall suggests, comes from the fact that “practically speaking, a two-piece is light and compact…you only have to meet minds with one other person. Also, it makes you stretch your technical and creative skills, and allows for more space and dynamics. Also, there is more space in the car for snacks.” Here’s hoping the band left their toffee, bubble gum and other sticky, tooth-rotting substances behind. Experimental Dental School performs three times during North by Northeast: June 18 at Sneaky Dee’s (11:00 p.m.), June 19 at the NXPO Day Stage in the Hyatt Regency (3:00 p.m.), and later that night at Rancho Relaxo (2:00 a.m.) - Heather Adamo
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