Tag Archives: Music

OK Go Frontman Talks ‘Bataclan’ Song

Damian Kulash Jr. at Bataclan. Photo by Austen Risolvato.

Damian Kulash Jr. at Bataclan. Photo by Austen Risolvato.

Damian Kulash Jr., the lead singer of sophisto-pop band OK Go, was tremendously affected by the terror shootings at the Bataclan theatre in Paris in November.

So much so that he wrote a reflective song about it called “Bataclan” and released it as a free download.

Kulash Jr. explained his motivations to me in a story for Samaritan Mag.

To read the full story go here.

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Filed under Culture, Music, Shameless Promotion

Kill Matilda Helping Gay Syrian Refugee

Kill Matilda

Kill Matilda

Until the end of the year zombi-riffic rockers Kill Matilda have decided to donate half the profits of sales from their Songs Of Survival album to helping fundraise for a gay Syrian refugee who wants to come to Canada.

I spoke to the band about why they’re doing this for Samaritan Mag.

To read the full story click here.

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Rock Band Monster Truck Sponsors Tween Girls Hockey Team

Monster Truck-approved Stoney Creek Sabres hockey club

Monster Truck-approved Stoney Creek Sabres hockey club

Southern Ontario boogie rockers Monster Truck did a good thing this year.

The heshers decided to sponsor a peewee house league girls’ hockey team.

The strangeness (and, oddly, coolness) of this whole scenario was not lost on me.

So I interviewed band guitarist Jeremy Wilderman about it for Samaritan Mag.

To read the full interview about why the band decided to do this click here.

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Roddy Piper’s ‘The 12 Days Of Christmas’

Roddy Piper in holiday mode

Roddy Piper in holiday mode

The late, great pro wrestler Rowdy Roddy Piper once sang his own unique take on “The 12 Days Of Christmas.”

As mostly non-Christmas music people around here, it takes something like this to break through our traditional anti-holiday music wall.

Sarah ended up writing about the song for Fightland.

You can read that by going here.

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Oh What a Feebling: A CanRock Short Story Collection, Part 4

IMG_3796

North 44 and the pooping tree as they stand today.

Previously:

Million Days

Birthday Boy

Fire in the Head

When I wasn’t writing miserable small town psycho dramas set in poor Wainfleet, Ontario, I briefly flirted with the idea of writing a loosely connected short story collection set in Toronto. This week’s story, “Eating the Rich,” inspired by the Lowest of the Low song of the same name, is one of four stories that I actually got around to writing in 1997 before I promptly abandoned the idea and returned to writing Wainfleet psycho dramas (and that’s exactly where this series will return next week).

Of all of the bands that influenced these stories, pioneering Canadian indie rock heroes the Low are probably the most universally beloved and unimpeachable. They’re also my personal favourites of the bunch. I love them as much today as I did when I tried to make them my muse and I feel absolutely no shame for it.

Unfortunately, this story doesn’t exactly do their talent, vision, and legacy justice. It’s just a ridiculous almost-romp that shares little in common with its inspiration beyond a name and some vague proletarian leanings. I think it’s supposed to be funny and impassioned. It is neither.

Although this story technically inspired by “Eating the Rich,” there are some other things that clearly had a greater influence on the story and likely deserve far more of the blame for whatever the hell is going on in these 7,000+ words. Here’s a list of some of the most important and embarrassing ones:

  • I thought that the key to writing comedy was to create a bunch of weirdo characters, throw them into a weirdo situation, and then just let things fall apart. Hilariously.
  • I had developed a completely inexplicable fascination with North 44, a fancy restaurant up the street from my grandparents’ apartment in the Yonge and Eglinton area. It had, somehow, managed to become both a symbol of aspiration and burgeoning class consciousness in my life and I responded to this heady ambivalence by… trying to write songs and stories about it?
  • My mother saw a man shit on the tree in front of North 44.
  • I had developed a completely and utterly healthy fondness for a spy show from the ’60s called The Man From U.N.C.L.E. (This might come as a shock because I have never once discussed my fandom in the following two decades.)

Shockingly, the results of this unique alchemy aren’t great.

(North 44 is still open, by the way. It has not, to my knowledge, ever been the scene of an aborted class war. I still haven’t eaten there.)

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