If it wasn’t obvious by songs about Hurricane Carter and shoutouts in his songs to Cassius Clay, Bob Dylan is a fan of the sweet science.
Sarah wrote about Dylan’s boxing connections for Fightland.
To read the story, go here.
If it wasn’t obvious by songs about Hurricane Carter and shoutouts in his songs to Cassius Clay, Bob Dylan is a fan of the sweet science.
Sarah wrote about Dylan’s boxing connections for Fightland.
To read the story, go here.
Filed under Jock Stuff, Music, Shameless Promotion
May 1, 2015
Phoenix Concert Theatre
Toronto, Ontario
Four songs in to the Jesus And Mary Chain’s set at Toronto’s Phoenix Concert Theatre there were… concerns.
There was a lot of pomp and circumstance behind the first show for the band’s North American tour honouring the Psychocandy album’s 30th anniversary. The show was to be the marquee anchor kicking off Canadian Music Week, a 10 day club level festival where the Chain’s relative undersell at the 1,350 capacity venue had made it a hot ticket for Toronto’s wealth of Creation Records nostalgists.
“April Skies,” the inexplicably popular “Head On” (the sixth best song on Automatic, tops), “Candy Talking” and “Psychocandy,” the song, were all performed with a simple, studied, and most uncomfortably, clean air of polish and professionalism.
Sure, if this was the way the Chain were going to play it — older, wiser, softer — it would still be a fine evening. But it wouldn’t have been a marquee evening. It’s not what anyone in the Phoenix wanted, though weighed against that vs. nothing, it was an acceptable compromise.
Then they played “Reverence.”
The manic highlight from the Chain’s 1992 album Honey’s Dead and the band’s biggest North American hit brought the single thing everyone in the building was craving — the noise. Jim Reid’s “I wanna die! I wanna die!” cued brother/lead guitarist William Reid to explosively reacquaint Toronto with the spiraling, undulating waves of white noise rock ‘n’ roll that have defined the Jesus And Mary Chain for all these years.
The assault continued with b-side “Upside Down” and that’s when the epiphanies began.
See, I love bands who sound like the Jesus And Mary Chain. So much so that for a music writer I’m worryingly close to lacking critical faculty once that slicy feedback bams up a song to make it all nasty sounding. Devotees like Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, The Black Angels, The Raveonettes, Brian Jonestown Massacre… I love them all. I even, at least to a degree, usually enjoy the many, many, many middling noisy college and art rock bands who rise up out of the weeds before disappearing two years later because objectively they aren’t any good.
The Jesus And Mary Chain can fill a room 30 years later because they’re simply more adept at doing this noise-pop thing than anyone who’s ever come after them. Watching them work on Friday night, it became clear they’re still the kings because they have the one thing their many imitators can’t quite match — the songs.
When the band launched into the 14 song Psychocandy set what became most obvious was their appreciation for a simple pop song, a universal country ballad, a soothing soul song. Look past the squelching white noise and that musical appreciation is buried deep in the DNA of the Chain’s songs, whether it be the surfing safari edge to “The Living End” or the girl group shimmy underlying “Taste of Cindy.”
Sure, if you want to get technical about it, the back half of Psychocandy isn’t exactly the best, which was illustrated by the indifferently performed “Sowing Seeds,” the false start to “My Little Underground” and the placeholder quality of “Something’s Wrong.” But zoom the lens out a little further and you’d see how the buzzing takes on “Taste the Floor,” “In a Hole” and “Never Understand” were electric affirmations the Jesus And Mary Chain are undisputed masters of their craft.
If one thing became clear this night, it’s that 30 years later the Jesus And Mary Chain are still the best at what they do.
Setlist:
“April Skies”
“Head On”
“Candy Talking”
“Psychocandy”
“Up Too High”
“Reverence”
“Upside Down”
Psychocandy set
“Just Like Honey”
“The Living End”
“Taste the Floor”
“The Hardest Walk”
“Cut Dead”
“In a Hole”
“Taste of Cindy”
“Never Understand”
“Inside Me”
“Sowing Seeds”
“My Little Underground”
“You Trip Me Up”
“Something’s Wrong”
“It’s So Hard”
It’s always been a little easy to pick on Canadian Music Week what with its focus on the “industry” side of music and the sheer amount of wide-eyed acts who’ll travel to the fest in the hopeless hope of “making it.”
Thing is, that’s the cynical view. If you actually still like music, and you’re not dead inside there are a tremendous amount of intriguing acts worth investigating.
Every year at these sort of things (this will be my 16th CMW) I put together a flex list broken down by day/hour for acts I’m interested in seeing. Not quite an official recommendations list, this is more of an awesome-known-quantities + this-sounds-like-it-has-promise list.
If you want to play Where’s Waldo and try to find me over the next 10 days it will likely be at some of the following places:
Friday, May 1
8 pm Gateway Drugs @ Phoenix
9 pm Jesus And Mary Chain @ Phoenix
9 pm John Cougar @ Sony Centre
11 pm Daniel Lanois @ Horseshoe Tavern
11 pm Fidlar @ Great Hall
12:30 am Tre Mission @ Rivoli
Saturday, May 2
9 pm John Cougar @ Sony Centre
9 pm Planet Creature @ Silver Dollar
12 am Fidlar @ Horseshoe Tavern
Sunday, May 3
8 pm Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds @ Sony Centre
Monday, May 4
8 pm Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds @ Sony Centre
9 pm Of Monsters And Men @ Massey Hall
Tuesday, May 5
8 pm Canadianity @ Rivoli
10:30 pm Programm @ The Garrison
Wednesday, May 6
8:30 pm Slow Down Molasses @ Drake Underground
9 pm Murder Murder @ The Dakota Tavern
10 pm Sianspheric @ Horseshoe Tavern
10 pm The Cocksure Lads @ Rivoli
10 pm The Holy Gasp @ Silver Dollar
11 pm Swervedriver @ Horseshoe Tavern
12:40 am Slow Down Molasses @ Parts & Labour
Thursday, May 7
9:30 pm Souljazz Orchestra @ Lula Lounge
10 pm Solids @ Horseshoe Tavern
10:15 pm Wordburglar @ Hard Luck
10:45 pm Swamp Thing @ Hard Luck
11 pm Thomas D’Arcy @ Smilin’ Buddha
11 pm Juliawhy @ Bovine
11 pm Pet Sun @ Silver Dollar
11:10 pm D-Sisive @ Hard Luck
12 am Jazz Chartier @ Garrison
12 am Twin Guns @ Bovine
1 am Gateway Drugs @ Bovine
2:30 am Acid Priest @ Horseshoe Tavern
Friday, May 8
12:55 pm Juliawhy @ The Rivoli
9 pm Dear Criminals @ Silver Dollar
10 pm Gateway Drugs @ Horseshoe Tavern
11 pm Dead Tired @ Lee’s Palace
11 pm Brave Shores @ Mod Club
11 pm East India Youth @ Drake Underground
12 am Single Mothers @ Lee’s Palace
12 am Elephant Stone @ Hard Luck
12 am Indian Handcrafts @ The Hideout
1 am Ghost Of A Saber Tooth Tiger @ Horseshoe Tavern
1 am Immigrant Union @ Bovine
1 am The Pinholes @ The Paddock
1 am Twin Guns @ The Hideout
Saturday, May 9
8 pm The Pinholes @ Cherry Cola’s
8:50 pm Jazz Chartier @ Danforth Music Hall
10 pm About: @ Handlebar
10 pm The Soul Motivators @ Supermarket
10 pm Kalle Mattson @ The Garrison
10 pm Psychedelic Furs @ Phoenix
11 pm Humans @ Great Hall
12 am Cloud Nothings @ Lee’s Palace
12 am Aldo The Band @ Underground Garage
12 am Rich Aucoin @ Great Hall
12 am Gateway Drugs @ Sneaky Dee’s
Sunday, May 10
11 pm Animalia @ Rancho Relaxo
I also want to see this Belgian band Soldout and Nick Flanagan’s new dorkstick thing Wrong Hole, but when and where they’re playing isn’t actually listed anywhere (?).
For more information about Canadian Music Week, go here.
For wristbands, go here.
Lisa Leblanc is awesome.
She calls the fiery folk-rock-bluegrass-whatever music she makes “folk trash” and it’s a mighty fair description.
I wrote about Leblanc’s folk trash as well as a wildly inspirational roadtrip she went on for The Bluegrass Situation.
To read the story go here.
Filed under Music, Shameless Promotion
You may think this weekend’s superfight of the centuryforevermillennium is between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao, but it isn’t. Not really.
It’s really about their competing musical surrogates Justin Bieber and Dan Hill.
Sarah wrote about this musical tilt for Fightland.
To read the story click here.
Filed under Jock Stuff, Music, Shameless Promotion