Archive for the 'toronto' Category

Republic: Now With More Serene!

[population]

This Republic not what one might think. Musically: a powerhouse of a band that sits comfortably among the ranks of another Arts & Crafts borderline-white-noise electro-pop act Broken Social Scene, The Republic is the embodiment of tranquility in the notion of sensory overload.

Having matured since their debut, the newest offering is instrumentally a powerful series of cascades in the grandest sense one might think that layerings of drums, bass, guitars (three), piano, and horns/bowed instruments may produce.

In calculus everything is a matter of limits. The way each mathematical concept will approach infinity, and most importantly, the speed at which that is achieved. It’s no grand stretch to put music into these same terms, with white-noise as our aural anchor of infinitude we can think of music as growing, expanding, approaching its own limit. Yet, the idea is never to reach it, as we all know white noise is not a pleasant thing (think: your TV’s snowy cackle). It’s enough to drive a man into the outer-reaches of madness.

We’re not there though. The snow is absent as this Republic makes clever use of its cast of seven members, in a way that each participates in order to build toward that central point. Each instrument adds a proverbial floor, wall, and cathedral ceiling to the body of sound all the while keeping a steadfast harmony, a clear and decisive plotted course, and more often than not leaving some head-space for vocals.

“Humble Peasants” is the most illustrative track of the band’s direction. It picks up pace as you hear each member don their instrument and find a place in the sound until the inevitable climax (infinity it is not). I can imagine this track playing inside the cabin of the space-elevator as it launches clear through our bubble, emerging from a made-for-theatre dust cloud meant to represent the atmosphere (fainciful, yes).

Population is a fitting title for the album, especially with a track like “Present of Future End” which dawdles around one lowly voice harking unto the world until at around the 2:20 mark it erupts into a crowd. You know those musicals where everyone has the same fanciful dream, and everyone’s mind is running the same circle of inner monologue as their feet run imagined dance-steps around the drabness of their everyday lives? Yeah, it’s just like that, only with drums and fuzz and horns.

The album is a hard thing to describe, but as Ryan Lenssen remarks (in one awesome article):

    “[Population’s] juxtaposition between the music and the lyrics is just so grand,” Lenssen says. “The music itself sounds almost—almost—happy. People will look at the cover and see all the beautiful graphics but then they’re going to get into the philosophy of the record and that is much, much darker.” “If people were to truly understand what we were really saying and all of the musical choices and why they were there…this is way more calculated. This is murder in the first degree. This is malicious, unbridled anger and I think we’re sort of a little insane because of the way we present it. We are that scary clown. We are stabbing you in the front and smiling, brushing your cheek, saying ‘Isn’t it lovely? Isn’t it lovely?’”

It is, it really is.

listen (headphones recommended):
The Most Serene Republic - Humble Peasants
The Most Serene Republic - Present of Future End
The Most Serene Republic - Sherry And Her Butterfly Net

Population will land October 2nd, and A&C should like to have your back on the pre-ordering front soon enough.

8-Bit Permutations, Circa 1983

[crystal castles]

8-bit sounds have permeated the lives of practically everyone who lived through the late-80s/early-90s, and like a recipe for healthy living, they need to be consumed now and again by anyone whose life was touched by their tantalizing raw pitches.

I can remember my first experience with an Atari 5200, it was monumental. The family tele would go without serving its mediatastic purpose for days on end as my sisters and I would gawk at the 256-bit color pallettes, in awe of the way we could magically manipulate and move about on the screen. To be fair, though, videogames at the time were always musically lacking, and the blip-bloops that accompanied animations were usually meant to repercuss the fact that you had hit something, shot something, or… jumped? Sounds meant using disk memory, and bytes were terribly scarce back then. Because of this, games would rarely be scored with soundtracks, and when they were, it was still within the limitations of the hardware; it wasn’t until much later that the soundtracks would evoke the same emotive qualities as a full-bodied song.

Nowadays, artists who are proud to list videogames as their prime source of inspiration are often overlooked on that very premise, but who says it’s not a worthy source? There’s a whole world of people directly reproducing game-music, and while I respect them from afar, I fail to see the point of it - the whole vg-midi craze is beyond me, but then, music grounded in 8-bit doesn’t have to be a direct, analog rehash, and Crystal Castles is out to get my back on this one.

Played on a keyboard modded with an authentic Atari 5200 chip, the tunes carry some pleasing IDM crescendos you wouldn’t think could come from such archaic keys. CC is self-described as THRASH THRASH THRASH, which is only apparent from two of the tracks on this 7″ teaser. The two tracks in question are wrought with female throaty vocals on cue with some frantic keyboard work, and it meshes in a way that’s reminiscent of another Atari-gang you may have heard of… who? Why Atari Teenage Riot, of course.

I’m less impressed with those tracks, but everything else screams of my childhood. It’s a certain nostalgia for wonder, adventure, and bemusement that I’d be at a loss to explain to anyone who doesn’t immediately “get it”; I can’t recommend enough that you try it on for yourself, though, and find out.

mp3:
Crystal Castles - 1983
Crystal Castles - Crimewave

(see also):
Gimmie Tinnitus : has another track, and a Crimewave remix.
Quarterlifeparty : a valid attempt at decipering some lyrics.

Unfortunately the EP mentioned was on a limited run of 500. You can support the Castles with their Crimewave single, over here.

The Return of the Bedouin Soundclash.

Kingston, Ontario’s Bedouin Soundclash made splashes back in 2004 with the pretty hot single, “When the Night Feels My Song“. For a band which went from playing local shows at Queen’s University, that one song propelled them into national spotlight.

Afterwards, there was some touring and an unfortunate car accident. The band was left out of the public eye, and their follow-up album, scheduled to be released back in early 2006, was placed on indefinite hiatus.

Yet, like all good Canadians, the Bedouin Soundclash kept their sights on their man, like Paul Gross in Due South and now, in the summer months of 2007, Street Gospels will finally be dropping into our laps.

And so, we are left with the usual question… Was it worth the wait? Can the band regain the momentum that may have fumbled away?

At an arguably scant 39 minutes, the album doesn’t take an extended portion of time to get through. As all of their albums, it is a fairly light listen - mixing reggae and dub influences with a noticeable ska/punk flair. Heavy echo effects lay on top of semi-political and personal lyrics. And, while his presence didn’t seem to change the band’s sound very much, it was produced by none other than Darryl Jenifer himself, who people should recognize as the classic Bad Brains’ bassist.

There doesn’t seem to be a single track as compelling and universal as “When the Night…” but the album is full of small classic moments, which makes it a cohesively enjoyable listen. From the, let’s face it, soft single (”12:59 Lullaby”) and the acapella “Hush”, to the awesomely-named echo-steeped lead track, “Until We Burn in the Sun (The Kids Just Want a Love Song)” - the album is as varied as their niche allows. And, for that, I am thankful.

If you dig one of their tracks, the likelihood will be you’ll dig most of them. Some people cannot get over the vocals or (and you have no idea how often this horribly reasoned complaint arises) they get caught up in the fact that “these guys aren’t, like, even from Jamaica… Why are they even bothering to try and play reggae?” Street Gospels might not be able to dissuade those who enter the album predispositioned towards hating on it, but for everyone else… grab a couple beers, sit out on yer balconies & enjoy it. It makes for perfect summer listening.

the speakeasy:
Bedouin - Until We Burn in the Sun (The Kids Just Want a Love Song)
Bedouin Soundclash - Gunships.
Bedouin Soundclash - Trinco Dog.

Street Gospels will be released August 21st via Stomp Records (a subdivision of the Union Label Group) in Canada and sideonedummy everywhere else. Canadians, represent.

The Deadly Snakes Are Deadly Not.

[deadly snakes image]

I have a funny way of keeping up to date on these things.

I wasn’t introduced to the Toronto-based outfit The Deadly Snakes until after they’d been around for a while, and their latest Porcella was only back in 2005 so with those two effects in order I sort of just assumed they were still a band, and you know, just sweating out new material for their next release. As it turns out there won’t be another release since they broke up 6 months ago.

In this final interview over at Pitchfork, Max Danger (vocalist, drummer) lays it pretty flat: the band just isn’t (and never was) an “entity” like other people think it is. They never sat down and formed a band that would be their life blood. The investment just wasn’t there, as we assume it to be.

    “The main reason is that it’s been like 10 years and…it’s not fun like it used to be and it’s not enough of a career to justify the lack of fun that we’re having,” McCabe-Lokos said. “It’s not excruciating by any stretch, but I think that we’re all getting a little tired of going on tour and playing in Ozona, Texas for two or three people. Some people can do that until their eyes fall out.”

Even despite the album having been nominated for the Polaris Prize, it’s just not happening:

    “For the past five years, I’ve been saving up money to buy a house, and I live with my girlfriend, and now I have the acting career, and I’m renovating a house right now. There are so many things in my life that don’t include being in a band that it came time to make a choice, you know–should I be in the Deadly Snakes and let it interfere with all these things, or even just let it stress me out and take up my time, or should I just take a break from that? It’s not so much that we’re quitting–it’s just going on with everything else in our lives.”

mp3:
The Deadly Snakes - Let It Go
The Deadly Snakes - Work