Category Archives: Concerts

4 Toughest Scheduling Conflicts Between TURF TO And Riotfest Toronto Festivals

TURF and Riotfest Festivals are both in Toronto this weekend.

TURF and Riotfest Festivals are both in Toronto this weekend.

With Toronto now designated as one of the official alphas of the North American touring music scene it often means an embarrassment of riches in terms of acts coming to the area to perform.

It also means that sometimes music lovers have to make difficult decisions about what shows they’d like to attend. Like this weekend, for instance. The three-day Toronto Urban Roots Festival (Sept. 18-20) being held at Fort York and the two-day Riotfest Toronto (Sept. 19-20) taking place at Downsview Park will both bring high-profile international and well-loved local acts together for open-field rocking of a sort that makes it tremendously difficult to decide which to attend.

Unless you’re some sort of superhero whose power is to be two places at once you just can’t win. Want proof? Check out these four scheduling conflicts between acts hitting the stages at TURF and Riotfest:

Echo And The Bunnymen (Riotfest) vs. Choir! Choir! Choir!
5:10 pm, Saturday, Sept. 19

On one side you’ve got the most brooding of original new wave goth acts and their near-perfect song “Killing Moon.” On the other you’ve got joy, wonderment, participatory singalongs and potentially transcendent communal experience. I, for the record, am not a person who naturally gravitates towards joy. Take that for what you will.

Motorhead (Riotfest) vs. Cake (TURF)
8:30 pm, Saturday, Sept. 19

Let’s face an uncomfortable truth here: Lemmy’s going to die soon. This one isn’t a conflict. If you’ve never seen Motorhead before and you think you should you MUST try to see them at any opportunity that presents itself.

Wu Tang Clan (Riotfest) vs. Neko Case (TURF)
7 pm, Sunday, Sept 20

There’s likely little overlap between these two fanbases anywhere other than my apartment, but this battle of rap vs. croon can have no winner. If pressed I’d lean slightly more pro-Neko because I can get more of what I want out of the Wu by watching a straight up Ghostface Killah (the king) show instead.

The Prodigy (Riotfest) vs. Pixies (TURF)
7 pm, Sunday, Sept 20

Granted, the Pixies have ground just about everything they could out of this reunion of theirs while The Prodigy’s return to the living is a kind of fun reminder of that second wave electronica movement in the ’90s. But when it comes down to it, which song is more important for you to hear surrounded by thousands of people, “Smack My Bitch Up” or “Here Comes Your Man”?

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I Saw $400 Worth Of Concerts Thanks To Ontario Taxpayers

The TORONTO sign as part of Panamania.

The TORONTO sign as part of Panamania.

As a person who a) appreciates high-level athleticism, but b) also understand that many international sporting organizations are amoral-to-outright evil, I knew that when the Pan Am Games came to Toronto this summer that regular citizens like myself would to a certain degree be fucked.

After all, I’m not part of some overtures-covered, politically-connected contractor circle jerk, so none of that grift was going to come my way.

Instead, knowing that as an Ontario taxpayer I was paying for this shit, I was going to have to earn back its value the hard way… by extracting personal entertainment from the whole thing.

Which is exactly what I did to the tune of about $400, mostly in the form of checking out the free Panamania concert schedule.

I explained all about how I came up with this number in a math-y article for AUX.

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Triumph Nearly Surrender: Reunion Show Almost Didn’t Happen Due To Migraine

Triumph

Triumph

When anthem rock trio Triumph decided to reunite for a show at the Sweden Rock festival in 2008 it marked the first time in 20 years that Rik Emmett, Gil Moore and Mike Levine played together.

Literal decades of feuding and acrimony between the three was about to get wiped away in one glorious return to the stage. But it almost didn’t happen because of a headache.

A very bad headache.

The whole story starts innocently enough with a question to bassist Mike Levine about the golf shirt guitarist/vocalist Emmett wore during the band’s reunion set. Triumph were an act known for leading edge lighting and staging in the ’70s and ’80s, as well as “of the time” spandex rocker outfits, so Emmett looking like a soccer dad for the band’s big comeback seemed like a peculiar oversight.

As it turns out, what shirt he was wearing was the least of the band’s concerns.

“We ended up laughing about it,” Levine said, recalling the show, which was recently released as a DVD/CD combo Live at Sweden Rock Festival, “but we couldn’t put too much pressure on him because he was so sick before we played.”

Levine then dives in to explaining how the band almost had to pull out of their reunion show.

“He [Emmett] gets serious migraines where he’s flat out,” said Levine of his bandmate. “He pukes, gets blind spots, we used to have to cancel shows midway through the show if he got sick and he’d be violently ill for 24 hours.

“So day of show, and I’m getting ready doing whatever I’m doing and Rik’s in the next room and I hear him puking through the wall. And I say, ‘Oh my god, I hope he’s alright.’ And this was 11 o’clock in the morning and we’re supposed to go to the site at 2:30 or 3 p.m. So I go pound on the door and he comes crawling to the door going, ‘Mikey, I’m really sick. I got the migraine.’ I’m thinking, ‘Oh my God, we’ve gone through all this, we’re over here… and we’re not going to play.'”

With the clock ticking for Triumph’s early evening set, Levine put in a panicked phone call to the band’s agent, who was already at the venue an hour’s drive away.

“I called him up and said, ‘We got a big problem. Rik’s really sick. He’s got a migraine. We need a doctor in a hurry.’ So he goes to the promoter and it turns out the onsite doctor was a foremost specialist in Sweden for migraines.

“So they helicoptered him over or something. It was incredible. I don’t know how they got there so quick, he’s hammering on my door and he says, ‘OK what’s going on?’ and I go next door we have a big problem. I told him, ‘He has to play today.’ It was kind of like a football player when they tend to them on the sidelines. It was like, ‘Just get him on the field.'”

“So he whacked him up with I-don’t-know-what and basically put him to sleep, but we didn’t know what the result would be.”

From there Levine, in a sharp Swedish national team hockey jersey, and Moore, in never-goes-wrong black tee and pand pants combo, headed to the venue still having no idea whether or not they’d even get the chance to perform. Behind the scenes the former arena-headlining band and authors of such albums as Allied Forces and Never Surrender unsuccessfully jockeyed with Poison to switch their set times in order to get Emmett a better chance of making the show.

“We were trying to get the promoter to move us further into the show,” says Levine. Switch us with Poison or whoever’s after us, and he’s thinking that we’re bullshitting.

“And we’re like, no, we need as much time as we can otherwise we may not play.”

“So we’re there and the promoter’s there in our trailer and we’re just twiddling our thumbs, waiting for the call from Alex, our tour manager and it was 3 o’clock, 3:30, 4 o’clock, 5 o’clock… and we’re on at 7 or 7:30.

“Finally he called and said ‘We’re on our way.'”

Emmett made it just in time to hit the stage and power through Triumph anthems like “Lay It On The Line,” “Magic Power” and “Fight The Good Fight.”
It turns out, when your first gig in 20 years almost doesn’t happen, what you’re wearing isn’t a big deal.

“We didn’t want to hassle him about anything,” says Levine. “He performed admirably. He was pretty weak. I was amazed how well he played and how well he sung under those conditions.

“So to me the shirt was secondary.”

This story originally appeared on Noisecreep on Sept. 24, 2012.

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Tragically Hip’s Canada Day Show Proves Gord Downie Is The Nation’s Weird Uncle

Tragically Hip's Gord Downie

Tragically Hip’s Gord Downie

Somewhere between the burgeoning arena rock of 1991’s Road Apples and 1992’s Fully Completely and the emerging eccentricities of 1998’s Phantom Power, Gord Downie — and, by extension, the rest of his band The Tragically Hip — cemented their status as Canada’s most beloved weird uncles.

Like the uncle who slips you mixtapes of his favourite bands, The Hip have introduced the greater populace to all sorts of unplucked musical gems and artistic outliers through festivals like the band’s signature Another Roadside Attraction series and opening slots on cross country tours.

They’ve suggested that we check out semi-obscure works by Canadian literary giants, like Hugh MacLennan’s The Watch That Ends The Night, from which the song “Courage” has the final verse ripped wholesale. And, in return, we’ve fondly listened to their wacky stories about killer whales and catharsis, and sung along to their ballads about tragic painters and hockey players.

As such, seeing The Tragically Hip play on Canada Day at Burl’s Creek in Oro, Ontario was like spending the holiday with extended pop culture family. Although the band’s current outdoor concert forays lack the sweeping scope of Another Roadside Attraction’s ’90s heyday, both in size and artistic out-there-ness, they’re still an impressive mix of good old Canadian rock, American tokenism and hey-check-this-shit-out discoveries, and this edition was no exception.

This year’s up-and-comers were the Rural Alberta Advantage, whose giddy cover of “Canada Geese,” a song from Downie’s solo album Coke Machine Glow — complete with an appearance from Downie himself — provided one of the highlights of the day. And if the shirtless, tribal-tattooed youngster proudly clinging to his autographed RAA LP was any indication, the Hip have once again succeeded in bringing a promising, semi-underground indigenous act to the masses.

A young man with a Tragically Hip logo covering his bare back

A young man with a Tragically Hip logo covering his bare back

This year’s potential successors to the Can-Rock throne, The New Pornographers, were entertaining, but somewhat upstaged by what seemed like singer (and honorary Canadian) Neko Case’s slow decent into heatstroke-induced stage banter, which included dry jokes about the band’s punk rockness, and their war against the sun (“Fuck you, sun! We’re playing right in your face!”). 2012’s token Americans Death Cab for Cutie sounded like an unfortunate mix of Treble Charger’s less dynamic moments and Jimmy Fallon parodying indie rock, but some of the kids liked it, and the band provided a nice dinner and/or campsite break for the rest of the audience who had been on-site all weekend.

Satisfactorily sated, rested and smoked up, the crowd returned en masse for The Hip. Downie took to the stage with a message about music’s ability to unite people, and his fans’ behavior during the band’s two hour, career-spanning set certainly did a lot of to support his hypothesis.

The biggest temporary beer tattoo-sporting (and permanently beer-gutted) drunken hoser united with the most bookish and bespectacled hipster as they negotiated the polysyllabic and thematic gymnastics involved in singing along to “Poets” and “At the Hundredth Meridian.” Rockers and activists alike hoisted their lighters (one of the charms of small town concerts is that people still generally eschew the cell phone for the more traditional source of ballad-accompanying light) for the David Milgaard-inspired “Wheat Kings.” And everyone chuckled when Uncle Gord embarked on twisted monologues about his complicated relationship with his microphone stand (he seems to hate the stand, but sometimes feels like the mic itself is the only one listening to him) and warned “Wheat Kings ” guest singer Sarah Harmer about wearing an old hat of his (“I can’t let you do that! I got conjunctivitis from that hat at Ontario Place in 1983. It’s an eye thing.”).

The Tragically Hip's Gord Downie performs on Canada Day 2012.

The Tragically Hip’s Gord Downie performs on Canada Day 2012.

Objectively, it wasn’t the Tragically Hip’s greatest or most accomplished set ever. While drummer Johnny Fay, bassist Gord Sinclair and guitarists Rob Baker and Paul Langlois remain as solid as ever, Downie’s increasingly shouty vocals and erratic stage presence and the band’s musical divergences sometimes cross the line from interesting into ill-advised. But, at this point in their storied and varied career, The Hip have certainly earned the occasional divergence and they’ve moved far beyond the need for objectivity. The band have become part of the country’s creative mythology and seeing them perform has become an experience that transcends the occasional blown note or hint of boredom (we suspect that Downie is taking the piss when he sings “Blow at High Dough” these days).

Like any good family reunion, a big Tragically Hip festival is a reminder of all that our people are and can accomplish, from the embarrassing to the bizarre to the truly great and heartwarming. And as long as we have our favorite weird uncles in the Hip around to remind us, Canadians can stop and take a little pride in the strange balance of hoserism and intellectualism inherent in our national consciousness that could make a band like T   he Tragically Hip big enough to stage this kind of festival to begin with.

This story originally ran July 2, 2012 on Spinner.com.

The New Pornographers' Neko Case battles the sun

The New Pornographers’ Neko Case battles the sun

Death Cab For Cutie

Death Cab For Cutie

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5 Moments From NXNE 2015: The Sadies, Comet Control And More

The Sadies at the Horseshoe Tavern during NXNE 2015

The Sadies at the Horseshoe Tavern during NXNE 2015

The ringing in my ears has stopped, my feet no longer hurt and my two-a-day restorative naps seem to have made my left eyeball stop twitching. This must mean I’ve survived yet another NXNE.

Here’s a notable performance I saw on each day of the festival:

Giant Hand
Cameron House
Wednesday, June 17

Giant Hand’s Kirk Ramsay says “I sing about death mostly” in his Twitter bio and that statement is a very literal and sometimes uncomfortable truth. A slight, singular presence on stage with his guitar, Ramsay’s songs are diary-like confessionals, filled with references to family, friends and a need to be part of a simpler, more natural world. That, and death. Always death. The Grim Reaper is never far away in the music of Giant Hand and when Ramsay is singing about how he doesn’t want to die you can actually sense those dark forces circling around and that his songs are keeping them at bay.

Comet Control
Silver Dollar
Thursday, June 18

The lineal descendant of psych act Quest For Fire and, before that, garage rockers The Deadly Snakes, Comet Control are readymade to dominate a world where events like Austin Psych Fest and Vancouver’s Levitation festival are quickly becoming a thing. Led by Chad Ross (vox/guitar) and Andrew Moszynski (guitar), Comet Control aim for something a little more focused, a little darker and less technicolor than The Desert Sessions. The biggest revelation from watching Comet Control live was the situationally perfect keys from Christopher Sandes. Something of an afterthought for Comet Control on their self-titled album, on stage his explorations help take the band to a place where Deep Purple decide to set controls for the heart of the sun.

George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic
Nathan Phillips Square
Friday, June 19

Not actually a part of NXNE, George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic’s free show at Nathan Phillips Square was actually a kickoff event for the Toronto Jazz Festival which was taking place at the same time. My expectations were modest from Clinton. The man, after all, has lived a life that could make Keith Richards blush. But as friend David Dacks’ radio documentary from a couple years ago revealed, Parliament Funkadelic have some deep connections to Toronto and the opportunity to see them play at city hall felt like there might be something special to it. Unfortunately, special might have been an overstatement. The band, buried deep in a marquee VIP tent with its flaps up so the common folk could see the stage, felt sequestered from the audience. Clinton, meanwhile, made only token contributions to the set, frequently ceding the stage to his younger, healthier, more able colleagues. Most concerning though was the not-so-funky-levels of funk on display. I get that Clinton’s only one part of a big machine, and I get that Parliament Funkadelic are a dynamic act that can swerve from rock to blues to soul to rap to jazz effortlessly, but their raison d’etre is the funk. And beyond the anthemic “One Nation Under A Groove,” for much of the set I was left asking mommy, where’s the funkadelic?

View of George Clinton & Parliament-Funkadelic set at Nathan Phillips Square

View of George Clinton & Parliament-Funkadelic set at Nathan Phillips Square

The Auras with Tess Parks
Smiling Buddha
Saturday, June 20

Whether it was discovering dad’s Nuggets box sets, a heretofore previously unknown millennial appreciation for 13th Floor Elevators, or seeing Brian Jonestown Massacre documentary Dig! as teens and deciding for some peculiar reason it was aspirational, The Auras and their associated label Optical Sounds have carved out an entirely quality niche by mining 1960s psych, 1990s Creation-gaze and early-’00s garage rock. A late start due to some technical problems was certainly a hitch to The Auras’ showcase set, but starting 10 minutes late probably made them play 10 per cent faster, which was entirely fine for their tripped out boogie. Calling on Tess Parks (who they collaborate with on a split single) for the last couple songs was a solid change of pace as well and helped push the band to be more.

The Sadies
Horseshoe Tavern
Sunday, June 21

It’s easy to take The Sadies for granted. They play Toronto multiple times a year and their albums are always reliably good in a sorta comforting way. But to pass The Sadies off with a simple “Oh yeah, I dig those guys” is a disservice. The band — Dallas and Travis Good, Sean Dean and Mike Belitsky are very good. And it’s not until you see them play live — in this case for a free hangover cure Sunday afternoon matinee at the Horseshoe — that you remember, “Oh yeah, these guys are spectacular.” The proof was in the effortless set that cherry-picked from their Internal Sounds and Darker Circles albums as well as deeper catalog songs. The Sadies masterfully guided us through a wild west of psych rock, bluegrass, spaghetti westerns and country reels, reminding everyone why they’re masters of their craft.

Planet-Creature-nxne-500

Planet Creature at Smiling Buddha as part of Optical Sounds’ NXNE showcase

no-joy-nxne-500

No Joy at the Silver Dollar as part of NXNE

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