Showing posts with label guelph. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guelph. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Hollerado, Hollerado, Hollerado (PCH, Apr 1)

Hollerado get an A+. While taking in their spectacle in the University of Guelph's basement I considered how this show would grade on Chartattack's annual "CMW Report Cards".

First there was the crowd interaction. If music doesn't work out for them (which it obviously will) then comedy could be a line of work. With cheeky lines and boyish energy they took cracks at everyone from themselves to the Republican party and kept the show rolling for their entire allotted time (and even beyond - playing an extra song beyond their timeslot).

Secondly the music was gosh-darn great. They've got one legit album out, the so-damn-literal Record In a Bag full of great tunes that they played like opener Juliette and Hard Love, but as they proved this does not come close to comprising their entire catalog. It also includes self-professed cheesy sing-alongs, and newly minted songs that are so new they had to pause to remember the chords. (They then ripped through On My Way to Shanghai so loud and fast in the dark that whether or not they got them right it sounded pretty sweet.)

Even the visuals and stage-use were something as the only time you'd take your eyes off the guys standing on top of their drum set or having a dueling guitar circle was when confetti exploded from side stage sending shrieks and cheers throughout the crowd.

Speaking of the young, university audience - they usually don't show much emotion in this notoriously energy-free venue but this set pulled them in. Even before Hollerado invited a Dinosaur Bones member on-stage to drop a freestyle rhyme people were clapping and dancing along.

All told it was a high energy display of party rock rooted in big, classic guitar riffs. If you like the band at all, or like a party, you'll effin' love these guys after a show!

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Saturday, March 12, 2011

Hooded Fang (Noon Hour Concert UoG, Oct 31, 2008)

Arriving after the beginning of their set I found the zombie-basketball squad (it was halloween afterall) in the midst of their fine young set. They played all the stuff from their online repertoire and a handful of others. It was pure creative Canadian indie music - right up my alley. Not sounding the same, but akin to Born Ruffians (who incidentally they were playing with the following evening). I ate it up as their drummer handled primary singing duties, and even gave up the drums at one point to allow one of the girls to unsteadily drop the backbeat while he sang and played guitar up front. They had a xylophone (who doesn't these days?) and the 6 piece impressed me enough to request a CD afterwards (which i was disappointed to hear they'd forgotten)

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Saturday, October 23, 2010

Wintersleep Live Up to their Potential (Vinyl, Oct.21)

Both previous times I’ve prepared to see Wintersleep I’ve listened to their records and dreamt about how amazing it the live show should translate. Yet both times I’ve been let down – mid-afternoon Hillside Inside set, and openers to a half-empty gargantuan Toronto Amphitheatre from half-way back. Each time I’ve thought “if only they could play in a sweaty, crammed little club where the fans are stoked to be there specifically for them”. Last night at the Vinyl my wishes came true and it was absolutely everything I could have hoped for.

Shoulder to shoulder with fans the energy buzzed in the darkness while the air filled with smoke. Finally the anticipation was sated as Wintersleep took to the stage and proceeded to rock our faces off. With well-composed songs and accomplished musicians playing them, they really know how to build a song up to epic proportions that make you lose your place in the swirl of guitar and drums. It didn’t matter whether the songs were new or old throughout the night because the band was feeling it, and the fans actually gained energy along the hour and a quarter of mindmelding music. Just as New Inheritors tracks like Preservation, Baltic and Trace Decay build and improve as they go along, so did this show.

A fine subset of Welcome to the Night Sky was included too, such as Archaeologist that played well with keys traded for tambo and a modified chorus, while Dead Letters.. was simply and purely awesome. The crowd sure was pleased by the early-set back-to-back accessible hits of Weighty Ghost into Oblivion while deeper cut fans must have been blown away by the full rendition of that album’s closer Miasmal Smoke & the Yellow Bellied Freaks that also closed this set.

After going out with a bang (figuratively, and literally – burst of confetti) the crowd hollered for a legitimately deserved encore and the efforts fully paid off. They led with the repeatedly requested Orca, dating way back to 2003 from the bands first self-titled effort, and it was appreciated. Finally they hit on 2005’s release, finishing oh-so-strong with the neatly drummed Danse Macabre letting us all yell out “Oh you had such big, big plans!” Well my plan was to take in Wintersleep at their best, in this well-suited situation and that’s exactly what I got; one of the best live shows in recent Guelph history - or anywhere for that matter.

Nearly Complete Set List
Drunk on Aluminium
Encyclopedia
?Trace Decay
Dead Letters & the Infinite Yes
Black Camera
Experience the Jewel
Weighty Ghost
Oblivion
New Inheritors
Preservation
Archaeologists
Baltic
Lasers
Miasmal Smoke & the Yellow Bellied Freaks
Encore
Orca
Danse Macabre

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Rah Rah open for Wintersleep (Vinyl, Oct. 21)

The evenly mixed-sex, sextet on stage known collectively as Rah Rah were performing their driving pop, lead by earnest drumming. They burst out with Betrayal Pt. 1, including male/female vocals, violin and plenty of energy. Carrying on in short time they covered the infectiously ridiculous Going Steady hit, Tentacles, as well as its record-mate Fuck NAFTA. Like their Saskatchewan brethren (and sistren(?)) of Library Voices they really know how to make a catchy hook and back it up with nearly frenetic pop instrumentation – keys and accordion included. That or burst out in the middle of songs like Henry with lines such as “Hey Henry, you better lock that shit down!” The female drummer who had been clanging a cymbal with a tambo earlier then doled out extra sticks to any bandmate with a free hand and they tapped out Beaches all over the joint (speakers, walls, mic stands etc.) – a highlight for sure. Unfortunately there wasn’t much more time for other highlights as they had a sick member so they tossed in a Duet for Emmylou.. and took off after playing for about as much time as it took them to sound check. Not even enough time for recent single Arrows – which leaves a reason as good as any to catch them on the next fly through.

The Noise and the Ghost are four guys from Guelph who had the honour of opening the evening. Catching only the closing few numbers they held their own with some chill roots rock, tossed in a few decent electric guitar riffs (and had an acoustic going too), before closing off with a Wilco cover.

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Thursday, October 21, 2010

Danny Michel & Emma Lee (Dublin St. Church, Oct 20)

Whether plucking her guitar or pounding it in a percussive-strumming manner Emma Lee’s voice soared above. Her singing is strong right across her impressive range, easily filling the open hall of the Dublin Street Church. Her whistling is nothing to scoff at either, as she proved with a fully-whistled verse – just another element of a diverse show. From beneath her hat she mixed storytelling with lovely and at times revealing songs, including one penned alongside Ms. Jill Barber. An enjoyable set from a performer who comfortably mixed brand new songs into a set book-ended by Never Just a Dream songs That Sinking Feeling and Until We Meet Again.

Danny Michel has a proven fan base, no doubt built up from putting on quirky and fun performances over the years. This show was no different as Danny played, with an emphasis on playfulness, a solo show to a large gathering. Foregoing introduction he took the stage and launched into song with his trusty red electric guitar. His silence didn’t last long though as the atmosphere was kept light with stories, new and old, as well as questions from the audience. He even solicited requests only to jokingly ignore most of them, though he did bend to include his harmonica and I Will Love You For Miles to appease two shout outs. Whether it was recently released songs or back-catalogue tracks, Danny kept things interesting with loops, curious glances, and occasionally unique and unexpected delivery.

Having seen Danny solo recently, and knowing he’d recently been touring with a full band I was slightly disappointed when they weren’t there. Especially for Sunset Sea cuts that really snap on record with their full, upbeat sound that just can’t be duplicated with only a guitar, no matter how many layers of loops are added. That being said, if the band had been there we may not have witnessed as much quirk, or as many new takes on old songs, so it is a trade-off.

All in all the audience seemed pleased, both old fans and new converts alike. A two-song encore was demanded and saw the aforementioned harmonica, as well as an electronic sound-effect solo that was pretty neat. Danny Michel, entertaining as always.


Set List after the Jump
Into the Flame
Maybe You Can Find It In Your Heart
Sweet Things (yes, rock and roll ending, in a church)
This Feeling
Feather, Fur and Fin
Whale of a Tale
Wish Willy
Bank Robber (quick Clash cover)
If God’s On Your Side
White Lightnin’
Who’s Gonna Miss You?
Tennessee Tobacco
Encore
I Will Love You For Miles
Switchman

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Friday, October 15, 2010

Sunparlour Playas (eBar, Oct 14)

The Sunparlour Players are one of those bands. Like Shout Out Out Out Out and The Burning Hell their recorded music is fine and all, but it is the live show where they really take off.

As they were soundchecking I was worried that Guelph had forgotten about this as the eBar seemed to have cleared out to some degree, but when the banjo broke out the crowds came flocking, seeing as we are what singer Andrew Penner described as their pseudo hometown. What better place to kick off an extensive tour?

And kick it off they did.
The raucous three-piece ran through a serious amount of favourites from both of their previous two albums, much to the delight of the attentive and responsive people clapping along up front.

The key difference to the live show seems to be the drumming. Not only is he lined up at the front of the stage along with his bandmates, but Rosie is seriously killer at percussion - multi-talented too! Most tunes saw a xylophone rested on his set being played by one hand while the other manned the drums, and the kick leg kept the beat. He even broke out the accordion a few times.

Dennis celebrated his birthday by accepting a spontaneous outpouring of fan-led 'Happy Birthday', a couple of pints, and then rocking out the guitar and banjo. He even set banged on the "The" kickdrum and cymbal for a few tunes too like Dyin' Today. (The band is still rocking the rattiest looking kickdrums which at one point were painted one-word-per-drum "The" "Sunparlour" "Players".)

Hollerin' and singin' is what Penner does best and last night was no exception. Belting out old favourites like John Had a Bell and a Whistle and If the Creeks Don't Rise from Hymns for the Happy he sure did make us happy. Also give him some creativity points for hanging a windchime from the stem of his instrument, and tying bells to his boots for other songs!

It was a full, energetic and upbeat set but we still wanted more. An encore screamed O'Captain, the movie-soundtrack tune Bless this City and once again a distinctly Sunparlour version of Thunderstruck! Can't wait for the new album sometime next year, and surely a tour to boot.

Sunparlour Players Set List:
Wall Sisters
Battle of '77
Joy in What You Lack
Nuclear
North
*New Song?* "Your Grandfather"
Point Pelee is the Place to Be
Pacifist's Anthem
If the Creeks Don't Rise
Dyin' Today
John Had a Bell and a Whistle
The Detroit River is Alive

Encore:
O'Captain
Bless this City
Thunderstruck

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Hoodie Good, Modern Field Recordings (eBar Oct 14)

The recognizable eBar/Hillside sound guy, Jordan, has a solo musical incarnation. It's called Hoodie Good and it is pretty good. Primarily a one-man show he plays guitar, sings, taps some keys, bangs drums, and sometimes runs a drum machine, and loops a bunch of this - all while barefoot! It was entertaining, even Tiffany's I Think We're Alone Now. Highlight was when he had a backing trio chanting and hollering along while the intensity ratcheted up and Jordan fully circled the stage, working from guitar, to beating the drums from all sides and back to his guitar. Check out the CD that was released this night, and then watch him do it live next time.

Modern Field Recordings had a stand-up drummer and a stand-up bass but the music went along more with the seated singer/guitarist, and his wooden box tapping counterpart. The songs would start out with promise but the level never elevated - the set never took off. Fun instruments like the melodica - even a synthesizer! - still didn't quite break through. I think they're okay with this since the singer did note "We want to be a band you can dance to, but we like chilling out too much."

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Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Hillside 2010 - Sunday Recap

The Acorn falls from the Wooden Sky

There were enticing collaborations happening throughout the grounds to kick off a sunny Sunday morning. Being a big Acorn fan (with new concert tee to prove it), and after an impressive Wooden Sky performance the day before this team effort drew me in. Many of the so-called ‘workshops’ had fallen flat with bands simply interchanging on the same stage, but this set went beyond that to integrate both bands in ‘the hole in the universe’. For example they all played a light-hearted rendition of the Barenaked LadiesLovers in a Dangerous Time which was good fun and included some slide guitar. Keeping with the easy-going set they led a Happy Birthday singalong, and joked about the seemingly accidental ‘uniform’ for nearly all on-stage members – plaid shirts of all colours.

Location appropriate, and carrying on the weekend-long love for Royal City, they performed a cover of these legendary locals. Keeping with the covers while commenting on how indulgent they were being, they closed out strong with a double dose of Tom Petty - Last Chance for Mary Jane and finally Runnin’ Down the Dream. Cliché or not, I think the audience enjoyed hearing it as much as these boys did playing it.

Plenty more after the jump including Gospel Choir, Braids, Shapes and Sizes, Hayley Sales and Gord Downie.

Gospel Hour

In Hillside 26 years the Sunday morning gospel hour has gained a strong following. No matter how hard people go on Saturday night they make a point of being there for this now three-hour ‘hour’. Sarah Harmer was charged with duties of overseeing this melee and that was no easy task with the amount of performers listed and hanging around (ie: emcee Vish Khanna holding down drum duties). As mentioned above the workshops really take off when collaborations add a hint of spontaneity to produce magic. Unfortunately those ingredients were missing in the section that I watched, so there was little sorcery making its way to the back edge of the tent where I was peeping in. The Good Lovelies led a tune but didn’t have enough of an opportunity to exhibit their reputed humour. Despite the extra backing Basia Bulat’s If It Rains didn’t blow away her strong version from the previous afternoon’s set. Luckily it wasn’t raining, so the opportunity was taken for an early dip in the lake.

The Skeletones Four

Being locals, and with a Gordon as a member, The Skeletones Four were on the radar without having yet made a huge impression. This set may not have changed that for everyone but it was should have. With hard-hitting, instrument-based music (as opposed to lyric driven) they included a couple electric guitars and added some synths to a rocking sound. Evan Gordon held down bass duties as the fourtet (surprise, surprise) played a jam-my set of tight music, if you know what I mean.

The Shapes and the Sizes

In the early afternoon set the 4-piece Shapes and Sizes sounded pretty good over a lunch and beer. They came off rather loose in a positive way, and closed well with Head Movin’.

Braids

With a bit of hype coming into this set the bar was set pretty high. (High enough to draw me in over the Zeus set that everyone seemed to be talking about for the rest of the day, which I don’t want to talk about at all, to avoid that sinking feeling of regret.) This Pop Montreal band built from ambient noise composed from synths and effect pedals and reverberated vocals, into swirling songs with texture. Animal Collective references seem to follow them like, well braids on a little girl, but there’s definitely some substance to that. The set was intriguing with much to take in, with all four members contributing unique sounds from their individual instruments, in addition to all of their voices.

The Gord Downie Hour

The introductions for this tried to sound like a list of living legends from Canadian indie rock. Judging by the rammed tent people were obviously excited by this, but without a sightline I couldn’t be bothered to stay beyond Julie Doiron’s song (the second of the set) when I realized they’d be round-tabling it with a song from the back catalogue’s of each member’s career.

Corb Lund and the Hurtin’ Albertans

There isn’t a heckuva lot of country I like. Usually I hide it under a ‘folk’ heading even if I do. But Corb Lund is unabashedly country and I will unabashedly say that I enjoyed him thoroughly. Staring into the afternoon sun of the mainstage (no cowboy hat to protect his eyes) Corb played a handful of Horse Soldier! Horse Soldier! favourites, including the title track, and I Wanna Be in the Cavalry complete with banjo. Nearing the end of the set Corb gathered us all in with a very serious and somber introduction. He had us hook, line and sinker and I couldn’t help but laugh as the song he was prefacing turned out to be Time to Switch to Whiskey. And a rousing version it was as they went around the band each offering a solo, mixing in some Folsom Prison Blues, and returning to the song that left everyone content - and fixin’ for a drink!

Holy Fuck in a Tent

With gear of all sorts stacked center stage each member of Holy Fuck faced the other three to create their electro rock and eventually a dance party. Arriving late due to a Shad set that just couldn’t be torn away from it would have been more interesting to have a better vantage point to figure out how they produce this music live. From what I could gather they had two guys manning keys, a third on bass and another beating the drums. Mostly instrumental at times they would scream with the microphones firmly implanted in their mouths, busting out vocoded vocals atop the music. Expectations may have been built up since their last Hillside appearance a few years ago so when the dancing didn’t erupt immediately it was slightly disappointing. Song after song the momentum built, playing a bunch of well-known tracks and for the second-to-last track things finally let loose with the entire crowd bouncing up and down in unison.

Hayley Sales

Hayley has come recommended before, but it wasn’t until she’d sung live that the full extent of her talent was realized. This was a few years ago at Hillside and in the meantime I’m sure much has changed for her but she remains gorgeous, with a voice to boot. Slotted against Canadian music royalty (see the Hippest singer in the land) Hayley was fully cheerful and engaging with the audience that came to marvel at her range. In a blue polka-heart dress, Ms.Sales’ powerful voice rang out over her acoustic guitar with bass accompaniment, except when she dismissed him to play a Simple Song on a broken ukulele. As a sign of how great she is, I left her set to catch some of Gord’s (out of necessity) but ran back before Stars to catch her last few songs.

Gord Downie and the Country of Miracles

The Country of Miracles filled out to a six-piece on stage, with Julie Doiron being quite outgoing while Gord Downie seemed slightly more subdued than he usually is in his normal gig. (No broken mic stands!) It was more of a rock impression live than the recorded material gives, but either way it’s that signature voice that defines it. The East Wind under a rising full moon was something to behold.


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Sunday, August 15, 2010

Danny Michel, Solo, Sunlight Music Fest 2010

Danny Michel took the honour of headlining the fledgling Sunlight Music Festival in Guelph with grace and ease. Playing a very loose, solo set Danny oozed charm while entertaining the crowd gathered on the benches and grass encircling the Riverside Park bandshell. As mentioned he was unaccompanied on this occasion and worked primarily with his electric red guitar, swapped out briefly for a beat up black telecaster and augmented at times by his harmonica. It is the song writing that sets Danny apart moreso than his catchy, seemingly-simple music so this arrangement was just fine.

In keeping with this feeling his looping was understated and unobtrusive, as he laid down a few base samples for the first song while mirroring a child who was dancing and prancing near the stage. However for the catchysweet opening track from new album Sunset Sea Danny jovially noted that there were about 15 instruments on the album and that he’d do his best to replicate at least two, before playing Maybe You Can Find It In Your Heart. He described this album as being very happy and that feeling could certainly be heard on This Feeling – written on a bus riding in the Caribbean. Wish Willy played the part too. Older tracks were also put in the mix, with his environmentally-conscious Feather, Fur and Fin and a reinterpreted version of White Lightning that worked really well, especially with the mutli-layered ending (one of the few times the sampling was emphasized).


Throughout the show Danny was easy-going, playing with his cadence and with the kids in the audience. On I Will Love You For Miles he had a false start, momentarily forgetting the line and looking around to no one in particular, but laughed it off and began again with renewed confidence. A few songs also had false stops since the step of the sample pedal didn’t take effect but none of this detracted from the show, in fact it made it that much more personal. Adding to that was Danny laying bare his favourite song he’s ever written, Who’s Going to Miss You?, for good reason.

Leaving on a playful note the closer was Tennessee Tobacco, an upbeat ditty that had people tapping and bobbing along. So much so that they turned this kinetic energy to encore-worthy applause and received If God’s On Your Side, Who’s On Mine? in return. Danny Michel played a relaxed, easy-going set to a parkful of pleasant, fortunate people.

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Saturday Round-up with Jason Collett, Beauties, Wooden Sky +more (Hillside 2010)

A promising workshop between Flashlight Radio and Zeus failed to meld the two groups very well, creating chocolate and vanilla cake, not marble. Rather than play together it was mostly a back and forth that saw FR play New Constellations and Z rocking Marchin’ Through Your Head with the other band simply adding a little extra guitar and obligatory tambourine and some shakers in the background.


Read more for Jason Collett, Wooden Sky, The Beauties, Emerald City, and Chris Trapper

Chris Trapper played solo acoustic singer-songwriter stuff on his guitar or uke. It wasn’t bad but the fact that it took me away for The Canned Goods closing song was a bummer.

That early set finish did afford me the opportunity to check in on Emerald City. Like The Canned Goods they are a rather young band, but they seemed to have more unbridled energy, though perhaps less poise. Most members sang at one point or another, often overlapping too. Of note instrumentation-wise, they used a stand-up bass, as well as bowing a cello at times and included a whistle solo, which was the fashionable thing to do this weekend it seemed.

The Wooden Sky had a packed tent, and it wasn’t all due to the rain falling outside. Out of the gate they seemed to be a rockin’ band but the energy waned as the songs slowed mid-set and things didn’t quite live up to their promise. With the finale some of this was recouped on a percussion-centric that brought on a solid hand clap. The crowd reacted with more hand-clapping than seemed due, but perhaps I just wasn’t feeling it.

The late afternoon son came out in time for Jason Collett’s timeslot. From backstage while grabbing volly dinner I could hear the Angel of Kensington. Rounding to the front I saw Jason, backed by Zeus of course, playing Love is a Dirty Word including that wicked bass riff. As I’ve felt before while watching his show, if I could choose the setlist I think that it could be a great show, but with major songs missing its hard not to feel slightly underwhelmed. At least he pulled out the prerequisite I’ll Bring the Sun in the blazing sun while sweat poured down his face as he strummed his beat-up acoustic guitar, and Zeus rocking out behind him.

The Beauties had a tough task to follow-up Flash Lightnin’ but with a bit more notoriety bringing the fans out already, and the sound traveling throughout the grounds they were up to the challenge. I was stuck in line for the loo during Fasion Blues but they had plenty of other bluesy rock’n’roll tracks to fill out the set. Die, Die, Die was a rambler that played on with varied pacing and instrumental interludes but showed just how tight the band are together (following their Toronto tavern residency). They extracted a huge singalong during Devil Do which was a bunch of fun. For a finale they had a big jam during which they would encircle the drummer, build up the song, let it cool off, only to do it again and again until the top finally blew off and left us all pleasantly exhausted.

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Richard Laviolette, Oil Droplets, and Lime Parade (Sunlight Music Festival 2010)

I'll be honest - the country, folk of Richard Laviolette and the Oil Spills doesn't normally do it for me (I'd prefer his other incarnation with the Hollow Hooves). However being a local upstart quickly gaining popularity, and the strength of the backing band, along with endorsements for their live performance I stuck around to see if there was anything to it. As it turns out there is. Behind Richard and his acoustic guitar were an accordion, banjo, couple more guitars and drums that livened up the sound (unfortunately some of the regulars like Jenny Mitchell and Geordie Gordon were replaced on this evening, though the understudies fared just fine). When they stepped it up it felt like a jamboree, with dueling guitars and banjo solos that were good fun. Funeral Song stands strong on the album and did so again live. As a finale they threw down a Neil Young cover, Music Arcade, and bid us adieu.



Lime Parade are a young, Guelph band trying to cut their teeth. Their apparel, shiny silver dress and sunglasses all around ended up being louder than their sound which pretty tamely wrapped the female vocals. The four piece used bass, keys, drums, ukelelee and guitars to play their brand of indie rock, as well as tossing in a kazoo on a respectable rendition of Feist's 1,2,3,4. On their closer they claimed to let loose but it still seemed a little bridled. The highlight of the set was another numeric cover, Bedouin Soundclash's 12:59 a song I'm especially familiar with but had no reason to be disappointed by this version. Props.

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Friday, August 06, 2010

Hillside 2010 - Friday Night Recap

A clean-shaven Beardyman kicked it all off on the main stage. Blinded by the afternoon sun that had busted through after an ominous day he composed blazingly danceable tracks by feel alone. Amazingly this beatboxer does not use samples or records but instead composes entire tracks by recording his vocals on the fly and whipping them into club beats. Only during his "sound check" did he perform a full-on beatbox track which turned out to be the highlight, even though the rest was great. Unfortunately it was still mid-afternoon and things were just getting underway so the rather sizable dance party that did form was only a fraction of what it could (and I argue Should) have been.

Read on for First Rate People, Warped 45s, Laura Marling and Flashlight Radio!

First Rate People were hard to pin down. As a young band, both age and experience, it may simply be that they haven't yet found their sound since it varied greatly from song to song. Not to say that it didn't sound good at times as this five-piece swapped vocal duties, even letting the female drummer in on the action. Songs were short, bass was groovy and the few tracks I caught were alright.

The Warped 45s were a quick, upbeat take on country, complete with a singer in a cowboy shirt. Their keys were poppy akin to Will Currie from the quick glimpse I had.

Laura Marling has been receiving quite the buzz for a solo twenty year old out of the UK. Up for the Mercury Prize she brought her music to Hillside's main stage. With a powerful full band behind her on most songs Laura's nicely accented, soft voice still managed to come through. The dynamics of the songs were pleasant, as were the tracks where she strummed solo on her acoustic guitar, using lulls to to her advantage.

Flashlight Radio were quite enjoyable live. Their deliberate instrumentation was offset well by the powerfully pretty vocals of the female lead singer. Laid over an acoustic bed the song Leaving caught attention - and did I mention they were pretty?

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Thursday, August 05, 2010

Shad and Hey Ocean reverse roles (Hillside '10)

I'm nearly out of adulation for Shad's live show. Not because I'm growing weary of it, but in fact just the opposite. His live show is even more polished than ever and his charisma comes off completely naturally. Added attraction at this show was the guest vocals of the acoustically and aesthetically pleasing Ashleigh from Hey Ocean on Rose Garden.

Another contribution to this performance was his Hillside-themed freestyle rap which I captured below.

With a joke about Hillside being like BC-away-from-home Shad introduced another member of the British Columbian band Hey Ocean, the bass player for Rock to It amongst other songs. The woman-empowering Keep Shining fit the Hillside vibe, as did the everyone-empowering Compromise. The only downer was the lack of TSOL bangers Yaa I Get It and We, Myself and I but older Out of Love Part II helped to fill the void.

As an indication of how much he pulls in his crowd, myself and friends pushed off a hugely anticipated Holy Fuck set so we could stick around for the end of Shad. No one was upset with the decision, especially as he played a crowd-friendly set pulling out classics interspersed with new TSOL songs, guests and freestyling.

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Bent By Elephants (Hillside '10)

A full contingent of elephants hit the stage; seven of them playing violins, trombones, horns, guitars, bass and drums - often in unique ways. Early on the female drummer left her post to bring only one drum to the front of the stage so the group could play a song with limited instrumentation but layers of vocals that came off really neat. Adding to the song was the bowed saw. With all that backing instrumentation they could really build up the music before the strong lead female vocals impressively kicked in. On Sask. Pool the lyrics ask "How high can you go?" and her range responded resoundingly high. A pretty good show from an emerging band.

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Shane Koyczan (Hillside 2010)

With Shane Koyczan being a spoken-word artist it is an intimidating task to attempt to describe his appearance at this year's Hillside Festival using only words. Making the task all the more difficult is the fact that it was the most moving performance of the year. The man did a mixture of spoken word pieces, both with and without musical accompaniment consisting of a male cello player and two females on keyboard, guitar and backing vocal duties. Shane sure can make you feel feelings through his seemingly simple stories and poems. Reactions ranged from smiles and laughs, to hugs and tears as he told tales of his childhood and Haikus about STDs (separate stories). The most affecting by far was that of a young, terminally-ill boy that Shane had met in the hospital and really needs to be heard for full-effect. That full effect was felt by every last person who crammed the tent to witness this wordsmith's magic, and they were unrelenting in their appreciation which brought a visibly touched Shane Koyczan back out for an unaccompanied encore that was met with more passionate applause.

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The Acorn Falls on Hillside '10

The sky is falling! No wait, it's The Acorn dropping double drum sets and dueling guitars on an expectant Hillside audience. Bringing Ottawa-indie from their recently released No Ghost they represented it well live, tossing in some beloved Glory Hope Mountain tracks like Crooked Legs for good measure too.

Secondary drumming with plenty of drum-edge tapping was really getting it done, and the one-armed hardcore tambo-shakin' while simultaneously keeping the drum and cymbal beat was spiffy. (All the while donning rubber boots in true Hillside/Wellington Brewery fashion.) Misplaced, a sparsely arranged but lovely tune held its own live, eliciting a slow clap/sing-along. Slightly more upbeat were Cobbled from Dust and Restoration but it was the title-track "single" No Ghost that finally had people shuffling along to the melodies. Returning to a tried and tested classic in Flood Pt.1 for the finale was a commendable choice, as was adding the phenomenal mid-song two-way guitar breakdown.

As the new album is still growing on me I wasn't fully blown away by this No Ghost-heavy set but it was enjoyable nonetheless, and their return to the stage for a workshop with The Wooden Sky the next day upped their cred further.

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Thursday, July 29, 2010

Basia Battles the Weather (Hillside '10)

No way will the weather halt a Hillside. Sun, rain, lightning, or mud does not matter to these patrons that carry on despite it all. The elements did their best to put a damper on Ms.Basia Bulat's set by raining, on-again, off-again, hard enough each time to force the stage crew to come out and cover up. Perhaps ten minutes late it let up and stayed that way (for the most part) to allow Basia to perform. Thankfully she did as I've been waiting for two years now to see her after missing out on a sold out gig at The Stage.

Even with the prolonged build-up, further delayed by the rain, I was not disappointed once she began singing out. Flanked by a couple other female musicians, violinist and guitarist/ukuleleist respectively, Basia in her polka-dotted dress had further accompaniment from a stand-up bass and drummer. Despite all of this it is her voice that cuts through and presents the "Wow" factor, especially on set-toppers Heart of My Own, If Only You and In the Night. Guesting on Go On was the trumpet player from The Hidden Cameras before the males departed to leave the prettier half of the band to play Before I Knew much to the appreciation of the hand-clapping audience.
As if the weather-gods were anticipating Basia's set (or perhaps vice versa) Basia was well-prepared with her song that sings, "I don't mind, If It Rains". Neither did we, especially since her voice like sunshine broke the clouds, warming up the afternoon as well as our hearts.

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My Son the Hurricane (Hillside '10)

Once before have I seen a gaggle of musicians parade through a Hillside crowd. Unlike that internationally acclaimed band who were already in their heyday, My Son the Hurricane are an emerging group with something to prove. Without warning they began playing single-file, looping around the edge of the Island Tent during a break in the Saturday afternoon rain. Quite a stir was made even before their lead sing-/rapp-er reached the stage, blazing yellow banner bearing the bands name in hand.

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Eventually all twelve members clamoured up there behind him with their assortment of instruments and large brass contingent (complete with massive tuba). For the size of the band they were astonishingly in unison while playing some fun, upbeat music. Overtop of this, their beaming, charismatic frontman spit hip hop rhymes and did all in his power to get the party going. He was somewhat successful as a brave soul attempted to body surf, and even people just ducking under the tent for its rain protection seemed to be nodding along in approval. A playful version of Pantera's Walk medleyed into Rage's Bombtrack, the latter being an appropriate way to showcase their skills. If it's some high energy fun you're after, consider giving these guys a shout.

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Opening up the Canned Goods (Hillside '10)

It was early Saturday when The Canned Goods took to Hillside's stage. Never too early for some good rock though is it? This local Guelph four-piece is young in age only as their musical stylings hearken back to classic rock roots in a way that compliments them very well. Unphased by a mainstage billing they appeared cool and composed while their instrumentation and vocals came across loud and clear. Songs were well written and dynamic, including decent guitar solos which always makes me a happy blogger. The only telling sign of their newness was that they only used two-thirds of their allotted time, presumably running short of polished and completed songs to play. When the only complaint is "we wanted more" you're doing something right! All that means is that there's more incentive to get another dose at their next show and eagerly await mighty things from this band with a future.

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Wednesday, July 28, 2010

What was that Socalled? (Hillside '10)

What is Socalled? No, really. I saw a bit of the Socalled set at Hillside a couple years ago, didn't understand what was going on so dismissed it and moved on. This time around I stuck it out for the spectacle and yet I'm still just as confused. I mean, yes, there was music (including rapping in Yiddish) but it was much more than a concert. There was magic - so was it a variety show? A few guests, including local legend Noah 23 joined them on-stage to drop a verse or two, but I wouldn't say it was a jam.

Even though two saxophones were played simultaneously by the same man it wasn't a talent search either.

Perhaps the closest descriptor that could be used is that Socalled was a Party. All of those things, and much, much more, happened during the set led by the very eclectic ringleader, Josh Doglin. Encouraged by and encouraging fellow singer Katie Moore, he seemed to go off on tangents on a whim (sometimes clever disguises to buy time while his samples loaded). Whether it be a whistled solo or an accordion riff, songs were composed in a variety of ways much to the delight of the crowd. During their "hit" finale, (These Are) The Good Old Days the folks under the tent were only too happy to be responding with the "Na Na, Na Na'"s while crowd-surfing the talking garden gnome. (Yes, that happened too)

Socalled didn't make much sense, but who cares how it is defined given that overall it was a hoot?

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