Category Archives: Concerts

Wilderbeat Revisited: Brian Jonestown Massacre In The Bush During The Great Blackout Of 2003

Brian Jonestown Massacre

Brian Jonestown Massacre

It’s been a full decade since North America’s entire eastern seaboard was plunged into a multi-day blackout (which I remain convinced was a massive anti-terrorism fire drill). I spent that weekend camping out at an ill-fated mod rock festival called Wilderbeat. Here’s what I wrote in the aftermath:

Amidst the blackout chaos, low attendance and some devious local politicking working against them, organizers of the Wilderbeat mod/garage/psych festival definitely learned about bad luck the hard way.

The Brit-pop kids of Toronto’s Blow Up scene are generally too precious by half, so asking them to rough it in the wilderness for three days to hear bands they’ve barely heard of was a dicey proposition from the start. But throw in one of the biggest power outages in North America’s history and it made for a lot of no-show campers. Probably more damaging to the fest though was its location — the Country Camping grounds in Port Burwell. Calling itself “Ontario’s #1 party campsite,” the operators of the site apparently had a change of heart about that claim over the weekend. Citing a combination of blackouts, police warnings, noise complaints and some new local by-laws that had been passed, the DJs and bands set to perform during the late-night portions of the weekend were all forbidden to play.

All of which made for a fittingly fractured climax with the performance of California rockers the Brian Jonestown Massacre. See, despite everything Wilderbeat was up against, the bands that were scheduled to perform during the day Saturday dutifully came, played and did their job.

The Candidates have shown vast improvement over the last year or so. The Gruesomes were still a dose of entertaining nostalgia. And The High Dials potent set was more proof that they’re poised for bigger and better things. Despite the campsite security guards trying to enforce a “skinny-dipping only after dark ” policy in the campground pool and a DJ roster met with total indifference, the bands played. That is, until they got to the headliners BJM. Fronted by the always enigmatic Anton Newcombe, BJM set themselves up on the main stage at just about midnight on Saturday night. Things looked promising… and then before a note was even played, the plug was pulled.

All the power to the stage — the lights, everything — was gone. This, of course, cued up a spectacular rant from Newcombe. Standing at the side of the stage, he railed against the campground owners, calling them “hippie fuckers” and accusing them of trying to rip off the people. Somewhere in this tirade were also rants about the devil being at work here and a tantrum where Anton galloped through the pool/lounge area of the grounds while other BJM members took solace kicking a nearby inflatable palm tree.

In short, it was a total bummer scene. With angry folks milling about and clearly no BJM performance forthcoming, it was time to retire to our campsite deep in the nearby woods to salvage out of the evening what partying we could. It seemed like a lame way to end the weekend, but then around 2 a.m. a couple of well-informed stumble-drunks rushed into our site with exciting news.

“BJM are playing again!”

“They’ve got some crazy set-up at the movie area. They’re going on soon!”

See, deep in the heart of the campsite, the Wilderbeat folks had set up a giant outdoor whitescreen and had been running reels of classic mod movies. BJM, being industrious sorts, took over the movie area; they were going to perform after all. Just that instant of anticipation, the realization of what was about to happen, was an adrenalized buzz. BJM were subverting the system. And fuck everyone, they were going to play.

When we got to the movie area BJM were all set up. The entire band was crammed onto two pieces of plywood to signify the “stage.” A crude PA system had been set up and best of all, with no proper mic stand available, Anton’s vocal mic was set-up, bound via someone’s ratty bandana, to a wooden tiki-torch. And then they started to play. I’m not even sure what they started out with — I think it was “Servo.”

BJM-wilderbeat-bush-concert

But in the almost total darkness, with the sound crackling through the jury-rigged sound system, the hundred or so people who were still awake and aware of the show started howling. Wild, out of control and drunkenly swaying, this crowd was ready. What seemed like a massive letdown was about to turn into one of the most transcendental concerts BJM will ever play. Another song in and the crowd was lurching, right up on the edges of the plywood. The tiki-mic completely collapsed and Anton enlisted Robbie from The High Dials to hold the microphone for him.

Robbie’s job was simple, hold the mic for Anton to sing into while he played guitar. It just added another layer of chaos to the whole performance. And then, like a walking, unkempt buzzkill, the campground security showed up. Brazenly sauntering onto the stage and threatening Anton to stop, the music was temporarily halted. Somewhere during exchange, Newcombe told off the guard, yelled at one of the band members for being out of tune and was the beneficiary of the following chant from the crowd: “Angry mob! Angry mob! Angry mob!”

Security got the message and left.

Someone shouted “Just play!” and the band ripped into the song “Who.” Frenzied from all the drama, the savages in the audience brayed in a united, primitive chant. “Who!” then guitars, “Who!” guitars “Who!”

It was magical. Then the plug was pulled.

The security folks had found and cut the power to the movie area. The show was over. What could have been something incredible had been crushed underfoot. But everything wasn’t a total loss. For those few fleeting moments, rock ‘n’ roll had succeeded. And even though the first ever Wilderbeat Festival ended up being a near-complete fiasco, those few brilliant moments of howling at the moon will never be taken away from us.

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NXNE 2013 Reviews And Photos

Mickey Avalon

Mickey Avalon

The 2013 edition of NXNE has finally ended and I can say with a certain sense of shock that I didn’t end up developing my annual case of paralyzing bad back from it (though I do appear to have a cold).

Over the course of NXNE I ended up seeing the following acts: Brendan Croskerry, Calexico, Santiago x The Natural, Sunfields, Brendan Canning, Wordburglar, D-Sisive, Elaquent, Sunclef + Peroff, By Divine Right, Hayden, The National, Blowfly, Brave Little Toaster, CTZNSHP, Weaves, The Lytics, Catl, White Lung and Mickey Avalon.

Some of whom I wrote up about in the NXNE wrap story for Huffington Post Music Canada. You can read that by clicking here.

I also took some photos of varying quality. Check those out below.

 

 

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NXNE 2013 Best Bets: Blowfly, Mickey Avalon And More

Sloan

Sloan

Today the NXNE music festival properly begins and with it a million bands will descend on Toronto to perform.

I haven’t quite figured out how to fold time and space yet, so there are many conflicts, but here are the Best Bets — including the particularly exciting raunch double-shot of Blowfly and Mickey Avalon — I’m going to try to check out over the next five days.

For the first time in a long time I’ll be relatively untethered, so I’m also willing to deviate from this course if there’s bribery (hint).

Wednesday, June 12

10 p.m. Calexico @ Mod Club
10 p.m. Jane’s Party @ 1093 Queen St. W Unit 2
11 p.m. Devon Sproule + Mike O’Neill @ The Piston
12 a.m. Sunfields @ Monarch Tavern

Thursday, June 13

9 p.m. Wordburglar  @ Sneaky Dee’s
10 p.m. Diana @ Horseshoe Tavern
10 p.m. D-Sisive @ Sneaky Dee’s
12 a.m. No Joy @ BLK Box
12 a.m. Jane’s Party @ Supermarket
12 a.m. White Cowbell @ Lee’s Palace
1 a.m. Supersuckers @ Lee’s Palace

Friday, June 14

7 p.m. By Divine Right @ St. James Gazebo
9 p.m. Blinker The Star @ Horseshoe Tavern
9 p.m. Psyche Tongues @ BLK Box
9:10 p.m. The National @ Yonge-Dundas Square
10 p.m. July Talk @ Mod Club
10 p.m. Mike O’Neill @ Great Hall
10 p.m. Shooting Guns @ The Hideout
10 p.m. UN @ Sneaky Dee’s
11 p.m. The Magic @ BLK Box
11 p.m. Red Mass @ Lee’s Palace
12 a.m. The Danks @ The Hideout
12 a.m. Nu Sensae @ The Shop/Parts & Labour
12 a.m. Sloan @ Great Hall
1 a.m. Blowfly @ Horseshoe Tavern
1 a.m. Gold & Youth @ BLK Box

Saturday, June 14

4 p.m. Blinker The Star @ Yonge-Dundas Square
8 p.m. Chains Of Love @ Danforth Music Hall
9 p.m. The Lytics @ Nocture
10 p.m. Antiheroes @ Wrongbar
10 p.m. Catl @ Horseshoe Tavern
11 p.m. White Lung @ Horseshoe Tavern
12 a.m. Tangiers @ The Garrison
1 a.m. Mickey Avalon @ Lee’s Palace
2 a.m. Silvergun & Spleen @ Painted Lady
2 a.m. Monster Voodoo Machine @ Bovine Sex Club

Sunday, June 15

3 p.m. Mickey Avalon @ Yonge-Dundas Square

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Battle Of The Scores At TIFF Next Wave

home-nextwave2013

At the risk of coming across as even older and more crotchety than I am, back in my day, teenage film lovers had to skulk over to their local Blockbuster and rent the location’s measly collection of three Fellini tapes over and over again to get their fix. So I can’t help but feel a little envious of the kids these days, with their streaming options and their digital cameras and their Vines.

I’m especially jealous of their ability to enjoy and participate in TIFF Next Wave, a film festival by and for teens between the ages of 14 and 18. Now in its second year, TIFF Next Wave features screenings of teen-oriented flicks, Q&As with stars and directors, and interactive workshops and challenges for budding filmmakers. The festival isn’t just a breeding and training ground for the next generation of film lovers, Toronto International Film Festival patrons and Cronenbergs, though. It’s also doing its part to foster the next batch of Arcade Fires and Weeknds thanks to an event called Battle of the Scores.

Every year, six high school acts from a wide range of genres are chosen from an open call to participate in the Battle. They’re given three weeks to compose a score for an original silent film (also made by some preternaturally talented whippersnapper, like this year’s director, 18 year old Ben Roberts). And then, as part of Next Wave’s opening night festivities, they’re thrown on stage underneath one of the big screens at the TIFF Bell Lightbox to perform a live version of their score in front of an audience of friends, peers, and an expert panel of judges from the music and film industries. The winners of the competition are given a prime slot on the soundtrack for an upcoming film.

After attending the 2013 edition of the TIFF Next Wave Battle of the Bands and talking to all of the competitors this past February, I found myself just as envious of their drive and focus as I was of the opportunities that festival and the battle were offering them. None of the four bands and two solo acts who performed their original scores as part of the event were doing it as a lark. All of them were serious about their music and saw the competition as a great way to gain experience and exposure.

Some of them, like the one man loop and string machine Ari Van de Ven, signed up because they want to pursue a career in scoring for films. Moody acoustic foursome  Safe As Houses are already old hands at the art form, having recently recorded the soundtrack for a friend’s silent horror film. Almost all of the musicians involved are working toward careers in the arts, and many of them will be off to study music in the next year or two. A couple of members of Garrison Creek are also looking at film school.  The sleek and stylish rockers in Post would love to make a career of their band (“If it could take us that far, that would be a dream come true for us,” they told me.) Even electronic artist New World Mayor, who is going to Waterloo for mathematics next year, hopes to keep up his art in some way.

Second time contestants Lucas Bozzo and Elena Hudgins-Lyle, who brought their ethereal art rock unit Talkback Radio along with them this time around, did briefly interrupt their discussion about their vision for the band’s future to rhapsodize about last year’s after party and its free poutine. But really, an appreciation of free food is a pretty important skill to cultivate if you’re going to pursue if you’re looking at a career in the Canadian arts and entertainment world.

All six acts were just as proficient and professional on stage as they were off, which made for some agonizing deliberation among jury members. In the end, though, Post came one step closer to their own dream come true when they were declared the winners of the Battle of the Scores and awarded a spot on the soundtrack for the next project by Canadian zombie flick Dead Before Dawn 3D’s directing and writing team, April Mullen and Tim Doiron.

After the big reveal, the whole crowd was led down to the bowels of the Lightbox for a genuine ’80s-themed garage party, where everyone could indulge in free food, celebrate the opening of the Next Wave Festival, and bask in their youthful talent, potential and go-getterness. Everyone except the bitter girl in front of, that is, who preferred to mutter that she was glad the whole thing was over and made a “There Is A Light That Never Goes Out” reference.

It was reassuring in a way. Kids these days might have cool festivals and incredible chances to hone their craft that people my age could only have dreamed of. But at least they still have to deal with the same existential angst and fondness for Morrissey that we did.

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Michael Cohl: Super-Promoter Talks Rolling Stones, Spider-Man

Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones

Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones

Leading up to this year’s Canadian Music Week I got the chance to speak to concert super-promoter Michael Cohl, the man behind tours for the likes of Michael Jackson, U2 and The Who.

We talked a bunch about his early days adventures in Toronto (including The Rolling Stones‘ El Mocambo club show) and his most recent success, the turnaround of Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark.

To read the interview head over to Huffington Post Music Canada here.

 

 

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