Category Archives: Art

A Poem For Record Store Day

True story: I bought this because a cute boy told me to. And then I threw it at my mother.

True story: I bought this because a cute boy told me to. And then I threw it at my mother.

It’s Record Store Day! And we all love record stores, right? They’re magical places filled with wonderful albums and equally wonderful people who want to help you find those albums! They’re where those of us who had no lives and friends (or at least no friends who weren’t Smiths records) spent most of our formative years.

But they’re also places of heartbreak. I learned that for myself as an overly naive 19 year old. You see, there was this lovely young man at my favourite record store. I called him Record Store Boy, because I am creative like that. He was serviceably cute, he liked all of the right music, and he talked to me. And so I spent almost two years nursing a ridiculous crush on him that led me to do stupid things like buy a Coldplay CD because he told me to and wear a PVC dress to the store in one of my more bizarre effort to impress him. When I was 19, I finally made my move. I went to the store, I gave him a copy of Chart Magazine that included my first ever feature story and I gave him my email address.

I never heard from him.

Overcome with heartache and unfocussed rage, I wrote a free verse poem about him that references Eugene O’Neill and long-repressed fantasies about the stars of Gladiator, among other things. And, in honour of Record Store Day, I would like to share it with all of you.

Long night’s journey into pms

do not trust the boy at the record store

(okay, you can probably trust scott, but that’s a different story)

he will smile his cute (in an aryan way) smile

and talk you into buying coldplay records

and will be charming just so

you’ll buy lots of shit at his store

so you’ll buy videodrome on DVD

(which is kind of cool because you’ve wanted it for years)

and act like an ass

you know it’s the Dr. Pepper slurpee’s fault

but he can’t see that

he thinks you’re tingly

which you are

but really you’re shaking because you had a slurpee for lunch

but the record store boy isn’t that special

ooh coldplay… didn’t see that obscure reference coming

and so yeah, they’re fabulous

but if you hear yellow on the radio one more time

you’ll vomit (and it will all be yellow)

and that manic street preachers stuff he was saying?

how original

they’re a socialist band

on a corporate label

the irony of it all!

i’m so impressed

at that stunning insight

looks like his two years

of political science

at the university of

fucking toronto

have really been worth it

does he live in that sloan shirt?

and can you ever forgive him for

never having heard

joni mitchell’s a case of you

when he loves sloan’s sloppy cover of it?

dork

he’ll be the one feeling like an ass

when you’re all infamous and shit

with your booker winning novel

in which you’ve henry carr-ed his ass

(sorry for the obscure James Joyce reference,

but it’s a really fucking good shot)

and then he’ll meet you at

some book signing

having realized

what a fool he was

to let such a saucy and sexy

second coming of truman capote

go

you will laugh at him

and inform him that

you would never dump

your boyfriend george

for him

especially after george

was so understanding

after you were caught

in that bathroom stall

with joaquin phoenix

and his lover

russell crowe

“sorry, chicken shit indie boy,”

you will say

“take your aryan smile

to some other lonely indie girl

who won’t think that

over worn, washed out

sloan shirt

is past its peak.”

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Bizarre Taylor Swift Arts And Crafts On Etsy

Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift

The true mark of musical fame isn’t ticket sales, #1 albums or Grammy Award nominations, its the bizarre lengths fans will go to in order to express their devotion to their favourite act.

Like, say, stencil the face of their fave musician on a toilet seat. Or maybe compose a print of the zombified version of their object d’adoration holding the severed head of John Mayer.

Such things are normal in the world of Taylor Swift arts and crafts available for purchase on Etsy.

Sarah navigated this murky world to find the 10 best Taylor Swift items for Huffington Post Music Canada.

You can read the story by clicking here.

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YAMANTAKA // SONIC TITAN’S Threatening Performance

YAMANTAKA // SONIC TITAN

YAMANTAKA // SONIC TITAN

One of the most intriguing and least well-known contenders for the now-decided Polaris Music Prize was the kabuki theater heavy metal project YAMANTAKA // SONIC TITAN.

The band (who prefer to be considered an art collective) use elaborate Asian-themed costumes and props in their pummeling live shows and I got a chance to talk to them about said shows.

To read the interview over at Spinner, go here.

 

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Sarah vs The Fence, Or How The TTC Finally Broke Me

Over the years, I have managed to engage in at least three combat sports and pillow fight professionally with relatively little incident. The activity that finally did me in was crafting. Or, to be more precise, coming home from craft night after declaring that my craft for the evening would be drinking wine.

I did end up making this collage about drinking and driving, though. The gist of this piece is that if you drink and drive, you go to heaven. Which is filled with tiny Mustangs floating in the clouds.

It was a lovely craft night. I drank questionable wine with far less questionable people. I made wonderful art. A friend of mine gave me an absolutely brilliant old Niagara Falls tourism poster that she found at Goodwill. And so I went home just after midnight, tipsy and in love with the world because I had amazing friends who see cheesy Falls memorabilia and buy it for me because they know how much I love it and friends who agree to join me at craft night so that I can lend them Oz DVDs and friends who let me cut up their old issues of OMNI and make collages out of their car ads.

The Niagara Falls Poster, my trusty companion on this fateful journey.

The closer I got to home, though, the more my unbridled love for the universe was replaced by an unbearable longing for pizza. And when I finally got off at Eglinton Station, I went off in search of the exit that would take me closest to the Pizzaolo. This seemed like a perfectly logical course of action at the time. Going out one of my more common exits and then heading south for half a block seemed so utterly unnecessary.

I went out what I thought was the right door. It was, as it turns out, not the right door at all. It was, in fact, a door that probably shouldn’t have been unlocked at all, seeing as how it led to a chunk of the abandoned post-industrial wasteland that used to be Eglinton’s bus terminal. I walked toward what looked like an exit at one end of my post-apocalyptic prison, but it was fenced off. I tried the other end, but it, too, was fenced off. So I doubled back towards the demon door that had started the whole mess, and that was when I discovered that it had no handles. I was alone and trapped in an semi-abandoned TTC back alley.

I felt like this.

Now, those of you have never had the pleasure of riding with the Toronto Transmit Commission might be asking yourselves “Why on earth would they leave a one-way door to a completely caged-in trap of nothingness and pain and terror unlocked? That’s absurd!” But those of you who have spent any quality time with the world’s most underfunded transit system, a public entity so entirely unloved and ignored by every level of government that it’s practically gone feral are probably saying “Well, that sounds about right.”

Evaluating my surroundings, I quickly constructed a foolproof plan. I called Aaron, told him that I was trapped just south of Eglinton, that I was probably going to have to jump a fence, and that he should come meet me and help me extract my gym bag full of art and my framed Niagara Falls poster from the premises.

With Aaron on his way, I hung up and began to inspect the fence in question. Then, out of nowhere, some dude showed up and told me some cockamamie story about his duty to guard the fence and make sure everything was OK with it.

“I have to take a picture of this fence to prove that it’s fine,” he told me.

“Take your picture,” I said.

“Is everything fine with the fence?” he asked.

“The fence is fine. I just have to climb over it because I’m locked in here. Just take your damn picture and leave me alone,” I replied.

He said OK, and then left without ever having produced a camera of any sort. Weirded out, I decided that I couldn’t possibly wait for Aaron any longer. I would jump the fence and meet him on the other side, triumphant. I had visions of Sherlock elegantly scaling the gate in The Reichenbach Fall dancing through my head.

What was supposed to happen: 1. I am trapped. 2. I successfully scale the fence. 3. I execute a perfectly graceful landing and await Aaron with the pride of a grade A fence jumper.

That’s not what happened.

What actually happened: 1. I was trapped. 2. I scaled the fence with some success. 3. I leapt like a tool and landed entirely on my right ankle. 4. I flopped around like I was dying.

The actual scaling of the fence went off without a hitch, but getting down is always the hard part. Instead of descending slowly, I caught my cardigan on the top of the fence, and then I flung myself off of the damned thing, landing entirely on my right ankle.

What I realized I should have done, as I was flopping around on the floor: Crawl through the giant, Sarah-sized gap between the fence and the pavement.

My right ankle was not impressed. It responded to the latest development in my misadventure by throbbing in immediate and overwhelming pain. I responded by curling up into the fetal position and rolling around on Yonge Street in tears.

I called Aaron and told him that I had probably broken my ankle. Then I went back to rolling around.

We quickly decided that I needed a cab home. But procuring one isn’t particularly easy when you’re rolling around on a sidewalk.

“You need to stand up,” Aaron told me. “If you keep doing that, they’ll think you’re drunk and that you’re going to throw up in their cab.”

Figure One: How Aaron wanted me to wait for the cab.
Figure Two: How I wanted to wait for the cab.

But every time I tried to stand up, everything turned blue and my already strong desire to vomit increased exponentially. So I went back to rolling around on the sidewalk.

Eventually, we managed to hail a cab and I hobbled home. I called my mother, because that’s how grown-ups deal with things. She agreed to drive up and take me to the emergency at Sunnybrook.

By the time she arrived in town, I’d moved past hysterical sobs and reached some sort of delirious brand of bemused giddiness.

“When you decided to have a baby 31 years ago, did you ever imagine that you’d be doing this?” I asked her. “I mean, when you were my age, you had a three year-old. I got drunk at craft night and fell off a fence.”

She assured me that it was fine, and tried to placate me with some story about the time she stepped on a twig when I was three, but somehow that didn’t really work. I moved on to other concerns.

“Why do I always end up at Sunnybrook emergency for the weirdest reasons? The first time was because I fell off a stool at McDonald’s. Then Tara fell on my leg at jiu jitsu. Now I’ve fallen off a fence in the middle of the night.”

Two pleasant and only mildly long visits to Sunnybrook later, we’ve confirmed that nothing’s broken. The swelling, in all of its gargantuan proportions, should go down within the next four or five days. The psychological scars, however, will be around for much longer.

My cardigan

What bothers me most about the whole fiasco, somehow, is the discovery that I’m absolute rubbish at scaling fences. After years of ever so slightly ridiculous physical pursuits and physical training, I flopped off a fence like a drunk toddler attempting the world’s worst parkour demonstration. Far from my visions of flinging myself over the fence with the catlike grace of Sherlock Holmes, I now find myself at the opposite end of the Cumberbatchian physical acting spectrum, moving around like The Creature finding his footing at the beginning of Frankenstein.

My ankle

And Pizzaolo wasn’t even open when I had my great fall. Not that I could have stomached it in the aftermath, anyway.

My soul

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10 Greatest/Weirdest Moments In Flaming Lips History

Flaming Lips

Flaming Lips

If you live near Toronto and like music you’ve no doubt heard about The Flaming Lips doing a free concert at Yonge-Dundas Square on June 16.

In honour of said concert I dove deep into the technicolour wig-out tripping balls-space that is the history of The Flaming Lips and emerged with a story:

Ten of the greatest/weirdest moments in Flaming Lips history.

There’s human skull usb-drive 24 hour songs, appearances at The Peach Pit, nudity and a whole lot more.

To read the full Spinner story click here.

 

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