Category Archives: Music

A Tribe Called Red’s Social Media Musical Revolution

A Tribe Called Red

A Tribe Called Red

When dance DJ crew A Tribe Called Red bring their electric pow wow to the Field Trip festival this weekend they’ll also be bringing with them a certain air of social change.

That’s because the First Nations musicians have been on the forefront of a social media movement to grow, connect and empower indigenous citizens.

The band’s Ian Campeau talked to me about this, the Washington Redskins, The Flaming Lips and more for Huffington Post Music Canada.

To read the story go here.

 

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Austra Find Their Own Social Scene

Austra's Katie Stelmanis

Austra’s Katie Stelmanis

With the annual Toronto-centric-ish, Arts and Crafts-centric-ish Field Trip music festival kicking-off today I spoke with the very Katie Stelmanis from the very excellent Austra about the fest, feminism and finding her own social scene.

Needless to say, she’s got a wealth of connections to rival Broken Social Scene’s.

To read the story head over to Huffington Post Music Canada by clicking here.

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Coeur de Pirate On Loving Liz Lemon, Covering Kenny Rogers And What She Learned From ‘The Wire’

Coeur de Pirate

Coeur de Pirate

Béatrice Martin, better known as the A+ list chanteuse Coeur De Pirate in Quebec, happens to be a big fan of the bumbling, stumbling 30 Rock character Liz Lemon.

Sarah found this out while speaking to Martin recently about The Wire, covering Kenny Rogers and more.

To read the story head over to Huffington Post Music Canada by going here.

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Chris Isaak Slams Bands With Bad Singers: ‘It’s Like a Team Without a Good Pitcher’

Chris Isaak

Chris Isaak

Chris Isaak has some advice for youngsters looking to play that old-time rock ‘n’ roll — you’d better know how to sing.

“A lot of bands don’t have a good singer,” says the 55-year-old crooner behind such hits as ‘Wicked Game’ and ‘Baby Did a Bad, Bad Thing.’

“It’s like a team without a good pitcher or quarterback. He’s going to be involved in a lot. If he’s not good, if you don’t have a singer who’s convincing and powerful and has a lot of range, then a lot of this stuff falls by the wayside. You can only do ‘Yeah, baby, yeah!’ because when you try to do a ballad your singer can’t sing ballads. Elvis did ballads. Jerry Lee Lewis could do ballads. Carl Perkins could do ballads as well as rock. So the original guys really had a lot of range.”

The “original guys” would be at the top of Isaak’s mind these days because he’s just released Beyond the Sun, a 14-track album of him covering classic rock ‘n’ roll and country songs by the likes of Presley, Lewis and Perkins as well as Roy Orbison and Johnny Cash. Isaak recorded the songs at the original Sun Studio in Memphis, Tennessee, where most of these musical pillars got their start.

Interest in these original rock ‘n’ roll pioneers is quite possibly at its highest point since the Stray Cats strutted and Huey Lewis and the News kept the heart of rock ‘n’ roll beating back in the ’80s. There’s the Black Keys holding down the jean jacket blues rock, Bruno Mars’ pompadour dancing away on the pop end, Imelda May standing up for the rockabilly chicks and the likes of King Khan, Dirty Beaches and Hanni El Khatib making noise out there on the college rock fringes.

Two separate tribute albums, Listen to Me Buddy Holly and Rave on Buddy Holly, have attracted Cobra Starship, Patrick Stump and Zooey Deschanel, and Julian Casablancas, Modest Mouse and Florence and the Machine, respectively, to cover the icon’s songs.

Meanwhile, the likes of Feist, Metric’s Emily Haines and Rilo Kiley’s Jenny Lewis can be seen bopping along to Chubby Checker and the Isley Brothers at hipster events such as Toronto’s Goin’ Steady monthly ’50s and ’60s dance party.

Isaak’s excited about prospect of young people finding out more about the music that he loves so much.

“What I’m hoping is there are a bunch of people out there who are 25 who’ve heard some of these songs on Beyond the Sun and don’t really have a picture of what the whole thing is, having them go, ‘This is good. Now I want to hear the original guys.'”

Still, Isaak wants the next generation to warm up to this music without it being just be an exercise in nostalgia.

“I love that people have different interpretations of it,” says Isaak. “And I love that they dig the music and they do cool things with it. Me personally, and it’s not a judgment about what other people do, but a lot of times when I hear a rockabilly band and they do ‘weelll, tick-a-tunk, tick- a-tunk,’ next song, ‘weelll, tick-a-tunk, tick-a-tunk,’ and if they’re just nostalgia-based, if it’s ‘Weelll, I’m going with Mary Lou/In my pink Cadillac/We’re goin’ to the hop…’ I go, ‘This is just about another time.’

“To me, I picked these songs not because they’re nostalgic. If I’m listening to ‘Crazy Arms,’ Ray Price sang it and it meant a lot, Jerry Lee Lewis sang it and it meant a lot. And when I sing it, I hope it means a lot. Because it’s still a love song. Those words are not nostalgic. They’re not about pink Cadillacs and going to the ’50s hop or something.

“It’s not about nostalgia to me.”

This story originally appeared Oct. 26, 2011 on Spinner Canada.

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Beck: Chameleon USA

Beck from the Girl video

Beck from the Girl video

Back in ’95 every disaffected Gen-Xer and their mom were down with the sounds of Beck Hansen’s hit single “Loser” and the slacker rock king was a marquee attraction on that summer’s Lollapalooza tour.

What only a far smaller batch of ‘Palooza-goers would find out at those shows, was that Beck had more to him than just one fast-tiring alt.nation anthem. After his crowd-sating duties on the mainstage would end for the day, he’d magically reappear on the far smaller second stage to perform sometimes charming, sometimes funny, often weird solo acoustic songs to the folks who managed to find their way back there.

It was here that the greater public began to realize Beck’s broad musical vision. Sure he was good at goofball alternative hip-hop, but there was a genuine folk singer in there too. Then, in ’96, the explosive dance-rock masterpiece Odelay cemented his reputation as a shape-shifter, a musical chameleon.

The intervening years have seen a slow, sprawling record (Mutations), a sex-funk album (Midnite Vultures) and a broken-hearted folk affair (Sea Change). So when word got out that Beck was again collaborating with Odelay colleagues The Dust Brothers, tongues began to wag. Where were they going with this? Is this going to be Odelay II? Beck doesn’t characterize the new album Guero in those terms, but anyone who rocked the block to “Devil’s Haircut” will sense something familiar.

“Yeah, there’s a thing that happens,” starts Beck, explaining how things worked with The Dust Brothers. “A chemistry. When you have certain people around you, even if they’re just in the atmosphere different ideas pop out. And we’ve just been in touch all along. We’ve very much planned to do another record right after Odelay, but I got swept on a tour for almost three years. And by the time I finally landed on my feet it was three and a half years later, they were doing two or three movie soundtracks and one of them was producing an Eels record and another was mixing tracks for some other band.”

Working with The Dust Brothers again came easily. The songs were danceable, funky and rocking. And there were lots of them. Over 20 by Beck’s count, with 13 making it on Guero. On an album where things like car horns get looped into the songs, the concern became more about controlling the creativity than actually creating.

“I think where we worked last time [on some Midnite Vultures songs], we were very much ‘We don’t want to sound anything like Odelay.’ So the songs that don’t sound like Odelay at all are from that time. But I think at this point enough time has gone by where I went in and consciously decided I just wanted to let it sound how we sound when we make music together — not try to turn the wheel inside out and reinvent it three times. Just let it come out and not overthink it. Although there’s a couple songs where we definitely went into experimenting.

“I had a death metal thing I was doing for awhile,” concedes Beck. “We had a song called ‘Bury Your Halo Above The Void.’ But y’know, you can’t do everything on one record. I’m already pushing my luck as it is. It’s going to be my whole other period.”

Almost as much has been made of Jack White’s contribution to Guero as Beck’s reunion with The Dust Brothers. The main White Stripes’ part on the album turned out to be quite small on the record though.

“Yeah, he came by,” says Beck. “That was really early on… We got him to play bass on a song [‘Go It Alone’]. We messed around for about two days. But for what’s on the record, he played bass on a song. That’s it. And I wrote the lyrics, did the vocals and played guitar on it after he left. We basically just jammed with him playing bass and I was playing keyboards. And that’s the facts.”

The Jack White mention is one of the few moments where Beck shows anything less than absolute decorum. It’s not that he sounds angry, it’s more like he’s a touch wearied.

As it turns out, the whole personnel thing is a bit of a sore spot for him. The rapid-fire sonic transitions — from low-fi acoustic punk to slacker hip-pop to mega-honky funk and beyond — have left a trail of musician bodies at the side of the road.

“It’s hard for me because I’ve kept the band together for amounts of time, but people eventually go off and start their own bands or get married and move to New Jersey or whatever happens,” he says. “They don’t want to tour. So it’s like every time I go out it’s like starting over, which is great on one hand because you get a fresh perspective. But on the other hand, you’re sitting in a room learning the same songs you learned with 10 other bands the last 10 years.”

When you hear Beck say things like this, you realize that your Guero bedroom dance party isn’t going to last. If nothing else, Beck will remain committed to shifting his music around no matter who he’s playing with. In fact, there may be a time in the future when he just dumps the concept of contributing musicians entirely.

“I did a solo thing in Europe a year ago,” he says. “I was working on the one-man-band thing and now the technology has gotten to the place where it’s almost possible, so I was toying with the idea of just doing the whole thing myself… I might do that down the road. I have these different boxes where I can basically play and loop myself and then go to another instrument and then play with myself. So to speak. Jam with myself.”

This story originally appeared in the April 2005 issue of Chart Magazine, #165.

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