Thursday, June 30, 2011

Green Eggs and Ham: SUMMER SPECTACULAR

Oh, summer. In Saskatchewan, it's the season of high winds, construction, mosquitoes and sunburnt noses. This week's show was a celebration of sorts: of the summer vibe that has a tendency to pervade music all year round. The songs this week will do well at your next BBQ or BBBQ (the extra B is for BYOBB [that extra B is a typo]), and it'll do equally well at cheering you up in the dead of winter. Here's the playlist:


Wavves - "King of the Beach"
Jason Collett - "High Summer"
Wild Nothing - "Summer Holiday"
Land of Talk - "Quarry Hymns"
Zombifyus - "City Heads"
The Fjords - "Come My Way"
Sloan - "Shadow of Love"
The Soft Pack - "C'mon"
Jaill - "Summer Mess"
Panda Bear - "Surfer's Hymn"
Washed Out - "Feel It All Around"
Young Galaxy - "B.S.E."
Crystal Fighters - "In the Summer" (Streetlife Deejays remix)
Superhumanoids - "Mirrors" (Cosmic Kids remix)
CEO - "Come With Me"
Delorean - "Warmer Places"
Slow Down, Molasses - "Wake Me Up at the Coast"
PS I Love You - "Facelove"
Socalled - "Work With What You Got"
Twin Star - "Summer Loving"   *this week's Slice Of Cheese
The Wilderness of Manitoba - "Summer Fires"
The Rural Alberta Advantage - "In the Summertime"
Regina - "Jot Et Sä Soita"
Broken Social Scene - "Meet Me in the Basement"
Kisses - "Kisses"
Black Mountain - "Holiday"

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

The Sleducation of Brendan



Summertime in the Northern Hemisphere means certain things to certain people. It's that time of the year when you bust out your favourite groin-hugging piece of swimwear and hit the beach, sip a Tom Collins on a patio somewhere, or simply curl up under a blanket in a darkened basement reading Nietzsche (I'm talking about you, goths). It's also the season for music festivals, a worldwide circuit that gets everyone to pay big ticket prices to stand in a sun-baked field somewhere and sort of see the Dave Matthews Band (if only that tall guy would move his head a little to the left). To the ever-growing list, add Sled Island: Calgary's answer to the bloated outdoor indie Meh-stivals. I went to Sled for the first time this year not knowing exactly what to expect. I knew I would see a lot of bands; I also knew I would probably learn a thing or two about how to go about things for the next time. Here's what I learned:

1) I'm out of shape.
The shows that take place over the 4 nights of Sled Island take place in 30 venues spread out over Calgary's infamously sprawling downtown areas. It's recommended to "do" the Fest by bike; quicker than walking, you save lots of time on transportation that you could be using to see more bands. My first night in Calgary I was on foot the entire time and, while not particularly tiring, it was time-consuming enough to be bothersome. Not to mention that all night long I watched well-prepared scenesters whizz by me on their fixies, seemingly taunting me with their good sense. I opted to bike for the remaining nights of Sled which proved to be a good decision. I also biked during the day, however, and this served only to remind me that I don't often bike ALL DAY. By closing time on Friday, for instance, I was experiencing enough fatigue that I was considering pounding the pavement the next day. I sucked it up. Biking is more fun.

2) Who needs context?
There were certain bands I told myself I had to see at Sled Island 2011: Twin Shadow (they killed it at the Hifi Club), of Montreal (their live show is spectacular in every sense of the word) and Crocodiles (showmen and songsmiths who craft great tunes and put in the work), among many others. These were shows I'd go into with expectations, and most of the time the expectations were exceeded. Some of the truly inspirational and affirming moments of the weekend came with the exposure to new acts I'd never heard or heard of before: bands like Red Cedar (an up-and-coming Vancouver 5-piece who would fit on a bill with Yukon Blond) and Bayonets!!! (a fun Edmonton nerd-punk outfit that played a long-for-them 16 minute set on the same bill as Auld Beak) really made the trip worthwhile.

3) I'm addicted to technology.
While the real story of Sled Island was the music, I wouldn't have seen nearly enough without electronic devices. This occurred to me the night before the trip when I was charging my phone, my iPod, my computer, my video camera and my portable recharger simultaneously. My phone alone was a Sled Island schedule, a map, a resource of information on the bands themselves and sometimes a phone. Time and time again, after pausing on a street corner to search on my smart-phone for the directions to the next venue, I was regarded as a local and asked for directions by strangers. I was rarely, if ever, actually helpful to these people. I'm sure I did a bit of damage to the reputation of all Calgarians, so you're welcome Saskatoon.

4) I've got my work cut out for me.
In an effort to capture the essence of Sled Island for this site and cfcr.ca, I brought along my trusty Panasonic camcorder with the hope of getting lots of good footage. I did; a little too much. The tape was rolling at multiple points during every band I saw but, since I saw 26 bands (of a possible 300+), I have just a bit of sifting to do. Check back here for video highlights of Sled Island, as well as interviews with Slam Dunk, Bayonets!!! and Charles Rowell from Crocodiles

5) We need to feed our scene.
Sled is great and, while a uniquely Calgarian experience, involves a couple of long drives for us out-of-towner music fans. Once in the city, I found myself running into Saskatonians everywhere- fellow Sled attendees, Toon-town expats, even strangers that turned out to have common acquaintances. The place was crawling with Hub City natives. Saskatoon is still a small city with an even smaller music community, but that's no reason not to dream big for the future. We do have rambunctious upstarts working their butts off to bring bands to our town for us to see, even in the festival template (ViveFest comes to mind), but nothing yet on too large of a scale (at least for independent music). This can change, and everyone can help it along by doing small things; go to a couple more shows, tell a few more friends about a band you love, fly blind by going to see somebody you've never heard of. Go to something like Sled Island and spread the word about Saskatoon, the Paris of the Prairies. Imagine if we had The Dandy Warhols, The Buzzcocks, or of Montreal coming to town. Now, do something to make it happen.

Stressed Out rock out at Broken City Social Club


Thursday, June 23, 2011

Green Eggs and Ham: A mouth, an island, a saxaphone great

I've got approximately 5 minutes before I head out the door to go to Calgary for the Sled Island Festival (which I will be covering for this site and cfcr.ca), so I'll make this one quick. I played some bands playing this weekend at Sled, some singer-songwriters, an epic Simple Minds groove, a terribly cheesy dance number from La Bouche, a tribute to Clarence Clemons and tons more. Here's the playlist:


Feuermusik - "Doppelspiel"
Islands - "The Drums"
Danger Mouse & Daniele Luppi - "Season's Trees"
The Meters - "Can You Do Without?"
Clams Casino - "Gorilla"
Morgan Cameron Ross - "Let It Go"
Ron Sexsmith - "Michael and His Dad"
Laura Peek - "Grown Up"
Eamon McGrath - "Dark End of the Street"
Friends Electric - "Reach Out Your Hands"
Simple Minds - "This Fear of Gods"
Junior Boys - "A Truly Happy Ending (Diamond Rings Remix)"
Gold Panda - "MPB"
Of Montreal - "Sex Karma"
Twin Shadow - "At My Heels"
Braids - "Plath Heart"
Dum Dum Girls - "O Mein M"
Jon McKiel - "Motion Pictures"
La Bouche - "Be My Lover"   *this week's Slice of Cheese
Bon Iver - "Beth/Rest"
Bruce Springsteen - "Badlands"
Young Rival - "T-Shirt and Shorts"
Pat Jordache - "Radio Generation"
The Two-Minute Miracles - "Put It Out"

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Today's Tune: Junior Boys - "A Truly Happy Ending" (Diamond Rings Remix)


What a way to wrap up the remix rainbow. In case you're just tuning in, for the last six weeks, Diamond Rings has released a different remix every week. This week's effort, the final release (coinciding with the international release of Diamond Rings' album Special Affections), is a fun re-do of the Junior Boys' "A Truly Happy Ending". Download it below.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Green Eggs and Ham: Eno, Blood and Overtime

Solo again this week, and it flew by  (even though I hosted for an extra hour because somebody didn't show up). Songs by Blood Diamonds and Blood Orange were oddly not played at all together in the show, but I did manage to do a mini-set devoted to Brian Eno and at 7 the dance mix was in the spirit of summer sunshine. We had rap, we had punk, we had Nicolas Jaar. A very well-rounded week. Here's the playlist:

Frog Eyes - "The Sensitive Girls"
Snailhouse - "I Never Woke Up"
Wax Mannequin - "You And All Your Friends"
Talking Heads - "Cities"
Brian Eno - "Complex Heaven"
MGMT - "Brian Eno"
Blood Orange - "Dinner"
Spoons - "Out Of My Hands"
Tegan and Sarah - "Night Watch"
The Rebel Spell - "Uncontrollable"
Priestess - "The Gem"
Sebastian Drums & Avicii - "My Feeling For You"
Johan Agebjörn (ft. Queen of Hearts) - "Last Day of Summer" (Le Matos remix)
Stardust - "Music Sounds Better With You"
Ford & Lopatin - "Too Much MIDI (Please Forgive Me)"
Blueprint - "Keep Bouncing"
Cloud City Classic - "Yes" (ft. Vintage)
Cadence Weapon - "Baby I'm Yours" (ft. Shad)
Philip Oakey & Giorgio Moroder - "Good-bye Bad Times"
          *this week's Slice of Cheese
Nicolas Jaar - "I Got a Woman"
Blood Diamonds - "Grins"
Great Lake Swimmers - "Palmistry"
Siskiyou - "Big Sur"

Friday, June 10, 2011

Processed Cheese: May 2011

Be back here every month for a look at the previous month's selections from my show's "Slice of Cheese" segment. If the song is significantly cheesy, there's bound to be a video equally (if not more) so.








Green Eggs and Ham: Ridin' Solo and Ultra Chewy

I don't even know what to say about yesterday; I can barely remembered what happened 5 minutes ago, let alone a whole day ago. I hosted by my lonesome, epic tracks were played, enjoyment prevailed. Here's the playlist:


CFCF - "Come Closer"
Thompson Twins - "No Peace for the Wicked"
Jenn Grant - "Paradise Mountain"
The Woodshed Orchestra - "Geddy Lee"
The Golden Dogs - "Weapon"
Ty Segall - "You Make the Sun Fry"
Mighty Clouds - "Stay Single"
Foggy Notions - "Monacle"
We Are the City - "Get Happy"
Thurston Moore - "Circulation"
Wintersleep - "Faithful Guide"
Grum - "Heartbeats"
Mr. Oizo - "Erreur Jean"
Justice - "Civilization"
Japandroids - "Heart Sweats"
Shooting Guns - "Public Taser"
Earth, Wind & Fire - "Boogie Wonderland"   *this week's Slice Of Cheese
Gang Gang Dance - "Glass Jar"
Bad Books - "I Begged You Everything"
Hey Rosetta! - "Young Glass"

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Hey! Listen: Seaweedhead - Pleasure Yourself




Not much seems to yet be known about Seaweedhead. Besides the fact that they hail from Victoria, B.C., all I can truly assert is that they've got a future ahead of them. The scrappy, rough-around-the-edges tone set on their Pleasure Yourself EP is matched in their onstage style, and the fact that they sell the EP on cassette seems more than mere nostalgia. This is an analog band.

You can stream the whole EP below (I'm quite partial to the song "Way Out"), and download it for FREE here or at the Seaweedhead Bandcamp.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Friday Finisher (Saturday Edition): Justice - "Civilization"

It's summer, which means blockbusters. Enter Justice, with their first new music in years, and their new clip for "Civilization". It's epic. It's filled with bison. It's awesome enough that it'll make you forget (for a few minutes, anyway) that this song is in Adidas commercials. Rawr.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Green Eggs and Ham: Silence followed by 2 hours of music

We got to the station this morning expecting the usual random Canadian song to be playing on the studio computer only to find.... nothing. Silence. It seems there was a bit of a technical mishap overnight. I quickly reshuffled my plans for first song of the show and played "No Radio" by The Danks (fitting, n'est pas?). The rest of the show was spent talking up tonight's Fish & Bird show, doing a Springsteen impression, rocking out to Michael Bolton and generally invading the airwaves with positive vibes. Here's the playlist:


The Danks - "No Radio"
Mark Sultan - "Status"
Michael Rault - "Call Me On the Phone"
The Soundcarriers - "Harmonium"
The National - "Afraid Of Everyone"
Bruce Springsteen - "Tenth Avenue Freezeout"
The Mohawk Lodge - "Cold Hearts"
Dog Is Blue - "Southern Ontario"
Fish & Bird - "Winnipeg"
Bibio - "Wake Up!"
Friendly Fires - "Hawaiian Air"
Motëm - "True Douglas" (Diamond Rings Remix)
Architecture In Helsinki - "Contact HIgh" (Javelin Remix)
The Bloody Beetroots - "WARP 1.9"
My Morning Jacket - "Circuital"
Shuyler Jansen - "Inseparable"
Michael Bolton - "Time, Love And Tenderness"
Winter Gloves - "Paper Pile" (ft. Luke Lalonde)
Monogrenade - "Obsolete"
The Luyas - "Canary"
Moonface - "Fast Peter"