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April 29th, 2011

Wyrd III :: Grown-Ups & B-Lines added to Vancouver bill!!

We’ve got some great news for Vancouverites planning on attending Wyrd III. As Weird Canada’s traveling festival makes its final destination in Vancouver on Sunday May 22, 2011, we’ll be making two very important additions to the bill. We’re excited to announce that both Grown-Ups and B-Lines as additions to the Vancouver show! This will put the final tally of bands in Vancouver at 20! Pictured above are the Wyrd III tickets (the Edmonton ticket is featured there), which are available at Blackbyrd Myoozik and Listen Records in Edmonton, Sloth Records in Calgary, and Zhoo Zop, Zulu, Red Cat, and the Waldorf Hotel in Vancouver. If you feel like saving trees and the sanctity of never having touched a magic the gathering card, you can also purchase tickets online. For further scheduling and festival information, please visit the Wyrd III home.

April 29th, 2011

New Canadiana :: Mouth – Could You Lie to a Camera

Some say it ain’t always good to look at the world through rose-coloured glasses; Mouth want you to put on the shades, and never take ‘em off. Gravelly garage rawk of a Lips/Jonestownian ilk, these blissed-out rabblerousers hearken nicely back to sweaty basements of ’66 and ’07. Urban libertines play sock hops (“Fortune Teller Blues”), black-lit comedowns (“Déjà Vu”) and scratchy tape-to-tape harmonies (“Clever Disguise”). Come one come all to a greasy baptism revival; heavy leather on sweaty bods.

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Mouth – Fortune Teller Blues

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Mouth – Deja Vu

April 28th, 2011

New Canadiana :: Alpha Couple – STALINGRAD

Alpha Couple carry themselves like blossoming aristocrats until they have crying breakdowns as pauper existentialists — at which point they whip out the digital SLR and take pictures. Maybe cuz of this heightened self-consciousness, their realm of music is informed and effective: arty/singer-songwriters that wail on about their innermost feelings of insecurities and infidelity; or an allegorical pop song about miscommunication; or something like a Pink Moon instrumental disintegrating into a sound collage; or whimsical despondency over “the scene.” With a thick gauze of reverb, Kristel Jax and Mark Wohlgemuth sing obscurely because they have so much to hide — but they irresistibly hate to admit it to you, the prying listener, at the same time.

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Alpha Couple – Four Eyed Monster

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Alpha Couple – Jasper Johns

April 27th, 2011

New Canadiana :: Mess Folk // Fuck Montreal – Split

Mess Folk: C’est l’été, il fait chaud pis t’es quand même dans ce bar-là, celui qui va faire mal le lendemain et qui se cure avec une plottée de bines pis les fonds de la veille. Du rock garage boueux qui sonne comme si tu te faisais verser de la bière dans les trous d’oreille. Tu te réveilles hungover, tu cales ton Gatorade trop vite pis tu vires la cassette de bord. Fuck Montreal sonne le glas et te paraphrase un mal de tête dans lequel se confondent des chants tribaux pis des comptines patibulaires sur un fond de grunge hanté. Fuck Montreal essaie peut-être de te faire peur, mais t’es là pour leur montrer que t’es pas pire tuff pis que tu combats le feu par le feu – pis que plus que ça fait mal, moins ça fait mal.

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Mess Folk – No Jobs

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Fuck Montreal – Bucket of Blood

April 26th, 2011

Ephemera :: Jennifer Castle on Castlemusic

At the wintry tail of 2010, Toronto’s spook-folk minstrel Jennifer Castle teamed with the ever-enigmatic Wyrd Visions for a stunningly beautiful 12” split. Four months later, Calgary-based boutique label Flemish Eye gives us the follow-up, an expanded excursion through the wardrobe and into Castle’s enchanted kingdom. Accentuating pillow-soft vocals and delicate finger-plucks with flourishes of pedal steel, organ, medieval flute and signature fusion instrument ‘the guitlele.’ Castlemusic casts a spell you won’t want to counter. In line with the site’s physicality m.o., Weird Canada asked Castle to take part in the inaugural edition of our latest feature ‘Ephemera’, assembling a shrine of totemic objects that played a part in the album’s creation.

Feel free to listen to these two tracks from the album while you peruse the images below (which you can click for larger versions). The accompanied text was provided by Jennifer Castle. We’re very grateful to Jennifer, David Clarke, Ian Russell (Flemish Eye), and Landon Speers (photos) for this very special feature.

Jesse Locke
Weird Canada // Texture Magazine
weirdcanada.com // texturemagazine.ca/wordpress

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Jennifer Castle – Neverride

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Jennifer Castle – Powers

(click to enlarge)
Shrine
[Photo Scan] :: Jennifer Castle's Shrine (Cred. Landon Speers)

This is a shrine dedicated to the experience of making and releasing Castlemusic. It’s built on the piano I was given for my birthday two years ago and began writing on for the first time. “Way of the Crow” was one of the first songs I wrote on it.

Conch + Photo

This conch came from a small beach in Jamaica, just west of Kingston towards Black River, that I brought home for luck this winter. It’s a place with a rough and protective ocean, a hot and exhausting desert and a lush and inviting jungle all within a few minutes of each other. It has the best food in the world, positive vibes and uplifting friendliness. The ink portrait is of an old friend — a Jamaican immigrant himself — my late dad, Peter L. Castle. R.I.P.

Sage

This sage was bought from a man on commercial drive a year and a half ago while waiting for my sound check on a tour I did with Chad VanGaalen. It’s on top of my Harvard Reverb amp, which has the loudest buzz and is inappropriate to record with, even though I do.

1969 Harmony Rocket + Castlemusic Art

This 1969 Harmony Rocket guitar is well loved despite being almost nothing but problems. Then there’s the Castlemusic record itself, the cover of which is a photo of the arresting painting, DRAWBACK, by artist Mira Dancy . It’s an image so deep that no matter how much I think I know it I look again and realize I know nothing about it.

1969 Harmony Rocket + Castlemusic Art

This is my Yamaha guitlele that I tour with sometimes because it’s so light. It sounds awesome with a contact mic and a haze of distortion. I used it to record the song “Neverride.” Most think it’s a ukulele, but it has enough bass to keeps it grounded sounding.

Kom Jung BBQ Pork

This dish comes from Kom Jug, the BBQ pork joint across the street from 6Nassau where we recorded the record. It’s the food Dave Clarke lived on ($4 for a HUGE order) but that our engineer Jeff McMurrich wouldn’t touch with a ten-foot pole.

Magic Combo

For this magic combo, there are no words.

.

April 21st, 2011

Inferred Views :: Wolf Edwards of Iskra and the University of Victoria

Wolf Edwards is a composer and former stand-in instructor at the University of Victoria. His music is physical, violent, it disturbs, it instigates, and transcends. It is spectral and glistening – sheets or razor sharp sounds, clashing and colliding around your body, it is like being trapped in a birth of star. Perhaps Wolf’s aggressive approach is in-forced by his background and involvement in other forms of extreme music. Wolf started out playing hardcore punk and currently plays guitar for super heavy anarchist hardcore band Iskra. Wolf has been featured in Dusted Reviews as a part of their “Composers that Matter” series and this year he will be releasing a record of his string music. Wolf, being a very busy man, kindly took the time to answer some questions.

Zachary Fairbrother
Weird Canada
www.weirdcanada.com

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Wolf Edwards – Irons


/////////////// WOLF EDWARD INFERRED VIEWS ///////////////

Zachary
::
How did you find yourself on two such divergent musical paths? How did one lead to the other and how are they related?
Wolf
::
I was a punk rocker at Ucluelet Secondary School in the 1980s. It was during that time that I taught myself electric guitar by listening to Black Flag and Crass. I was also toiling in the largest fish factory on the West Coast of Vancouver Island: Ucluelet Seafood Producers with the rest of my family. I don’t know if you’ve worked in factories, but I’ll tell you that the environment was intolerable. My bandmates and I hated the blatent racism, homophobia, and sexism that was constant in the workplace. Add to that a violent disregard for the environment or any kind of intellectual stimulation and, for us, the factory was an embodiment of everything we came to hate. Our band left Ucluelet for Victoria. I spent the next eight or so years playing in Anarchist bands. We lived in poverty, and played music.

I was on Social Assistance at the time and, around 1993, was forced to take one of their many forced job programs. Such programs, rather than assist, were generally designed to degrade and humilate. It was at this time that I lived near a Conservatory of Music. Having played electric guitar in various bands for a number of years, I, on a whim, entered and inquired about classic guitar lessons. When I heard the cost, I told the receptionist that there was no way I could afford such lessons. She promptly informed me that I could apply for student loans and take a few courses. Since the welfare program was giving me a hard time, I decided to enroll. My family being poor, I was able to aquistion the loans necessary for the courses. I took theory, classic guitar, music history, and sight singing.

While studying guitar, my teacher, Alexander Dunn, who was a student of Pepe Reomero, noticed my interest in certain twentieth century compositions that I had been playing. The music was not very good, but I was never-the-less more interested in modern music, as well as that of the 15th century and Baroque, much more than the Romantic and Classical. Alex informed me that the “modern” music I was playing on guitar, Leo Brouwer, and Toru Takemitsu, was not the most challenging and that I should, in fact, check out the leading composers of the era. He introduced me to his old composition teacher’s music with whom he’d studied with at UCSD. This composer was non other than the great Brian Ferneyhough. I was immediately attracted to the energy, and life, of the music. I went to the Conservatory library and there discovered Stockhausen, Xenakis, and Cage. After that, there was no going back, so to speak. I fell in love with the music of the 1940s on. After a few months of listening, I decided that I must write music. The guitar repertoire, with the exception of a few works, left me unimpressed. I left behind the idea of becoming a guitar performer. I told this to Mr. Dunn. He informed me that if I wanted to make any headway with music composition that I’d better think about enrolling in the University, which I did the following year.
Ever since then I’ve written, and performed, what one might call “extreme” music, while at the same time written what one might call “classical” music. For me, neither title fits. The music I play with my band ISKRA is, in many ways, more “classical” than that which I write for acoustic instruments.

Zachary
::
Do you think that in the end punk/hardcore and rigorous experimental music are different means to the same end?
Wolf
::
I can’t say because I don’t think about “the end.” I am extremely dedicated to both, and prefer to work through them, on my own terms, without any end goal in mind. I try, in both fields, to simply do my best. To write better. If I reached some kind of “end” then I think I would no longer need to write.

I never mix the two different genres. For me, this post-modern idea of pastiche is far to simple and contrived. Personally, I would much rather push the limits of both, but on their own terms. Different things need to be done within each musical sphere. They are not the same language.

Zachary
::
Are your approaches to composing for other instruments grounded in the sounds of punk and hardcore musics? It terms of the use of noise, dissonance, rhythms, extended techniques, or else?
Al
::
No. I never think about punk when writing classical music. Ironically, the music I write for my band is more “classical” than my “classical!” That is, in ISKRA, I write tonal music, mostly in sonata form. There are of course elements that cross over, mostly because they both deal with sound. Distortion, for example. One could say that I use distortion in my classical music. In reality this so-called “distortion” is simply complex sounds. That is, there are many frequencies present.
Zachary
::
Being in an anarchist hardcore band on one hand and a composer on the other seem on the surface contradictory; one is thought of as being a communal democratic process while the other is associated with emperical tendencies. Can you talk about your approach?
Wolf
::
I don’t believe that one is “democratic” and one is “emperical.” I suppose one can think of it this way, but I do not. Obviously it depends on how one views the process of making music as well as how one approaches the process. First of all, I don’t see the composer ias being a tyrant, telling people what to do and so on. When a composer writes a chart, s/he needs a community to ensure the piece happens. When I walk into a room full of experienced, and talented, musicians, I am not there to be a dictator, I am there to make music with them. To bring music to life. We work together and great things happen. It is a communal effort. I am sure some composers have a different outlook, but, as I am an anarchist, that is how I view the musical process. The band is the same thing. The group gets together and brings the compositions to life. We work out alternate ideas, find the rhythms we want, and make the songs happen. So these two worlds are not contradictory, so far as process goes. They are seemingly contradictory, however, in terms of their historical root. Anarchist punk/metal is rooted in working class revolt to a status quo system that, in reality, doesn’t work. Classical music is rooted in an aristocratic tradition, or at least that’s what most people think. That is the apparent opposition. Times have changed, however, and now we can have someone like me who works in both worlds.
Zachary
::
I have read that your politics influence your music in terms of form and architecture. I am curious to your methods, could you speak about them?
Wolf
::
The music I make is mediated through a political, or anti-political, lens(depending on what one thinks when reviewing the word “politic”). I work with crumbling foundations, and open experimentation. Multiple possibilities are present at every stage of my work. I work without law. As well, the laws of our society have no place in my creative process. I work with sound only. My sounds are alive. They communicate with me. I work with them to create a labyrinth of communications. In my music, the sounds are interactive. In fact the sounds write the music. I am a type of medium that listens to what the sounds require. There is no clear method, but I am fully conscious at every moment. The real “performance” is happening for me in each moment of the creative act. I don’t work from sketches for fear of, as Feldman once said, “pushing the sounds around.” The piece is the sketch and vice-versa.
Zachary
::
I noticed that the Quasar Sax Quartet will be playing a piece of yours this year. Can you speak a bit about it and any other projects you have coming up.
Wolf
::
The Quasar have performed my piece ISKRA about 12 times all over the world. Now we are working together on an octet that will be performed by the Quasar and Arte(Switzerland). I will go with the group to Europe and work with both quartets. In addition, the Quasar just performed in a work I wrote for Walter Boudreau and the SMCQ entitled IRONS. This piece was for saxophone quartet, amplified strings, contrabassoon, and six percussionists. I’m also writing a piece for an instrument invented by Montreal composer Jean-Francoise Laporte, which will be premiered in May. Aside from that, I have a record coming out of all my string music to date.
Zachary
::
Lastly, any other Canadian Composers Weird Canadians should know about?
Wolf
::
Yes, you should know about Mark Molnar from Ottawa, and Charles-Antoine Frechette from Montreal. These are great composers who also work with sounds, not systems. They are original, intelligent, and uncompromising sound artists.

April 20th, 2011

New Canadiana :: Sean Nicholas Savage – Trippple Midnight Karma

Caressing serotonin receptors like streetlight halos after a summertime all-nighter, Trippple Midnight Karma soothes like an Alka Seltzer before naptime. Windows-down synth weaves between wham-chk syncopation — coming off like a middle-schooler’s imitation of an eras-passed softcore soundtrack — and laissez-faire Latin guitar solos, while Savage’s suave falsetto provides the Halls to the Sting of a sore throat. Hailed as his return to the bedroom, Trippple Midnight Karma has Savage producing disco double rainbows with a CMYK palette — or, perhaps, the best archeological find from Bleu Nuit’s coffers.

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Sean Nicholas Savage – Serious Eyes

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Sean Nicholas Savage – Getting To Know Myself

April 19th, 2011

New Canadiana :: Hobo Cubes – Aerial Nocturnes

Hobo head honcho Frank Ouellette has stepped up production as of late, even by his own inexhaustible standards. This cassette for the mighty Digitalis finds him drifting through retro-future synth modes, tickling plastic through a series of otherworldly paeans to the Kosmische Musik forefathers. Traversing time (“Through The Ages”), space (“Hybrid Nebula”) and sea (“Skylab (Aqua Overview)”), Aerial Nocturnes hits its apex on the eight-minute “Stone Pegasus”, a softly undulating underwater blissando complete with seagulls cooing in the distance. Grip, turn on, tune in, drop out.

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Hobo Cubes – Through The Ages

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Hobo Cubes – Stone Pegasus

April 18th, 2011

New Canadiana :: Solids – Generic Dogs

Je vais vous dire un secret à propos du premier EP de Solids. Ils ont trouvé son nom, Generic Dogs, alors que les gars étaient à un BBQ, affirmant comment les saucisses sans marque font les meilleurs hot-dogs. Dans une certaine mesure, je pourrais dire la même chose de ce duo montréalais. Leur musique est simple, directe et entraînante, n’affichant aucune prétention de réinventer quoi que ce soit. Une fois assaisonnés de délicieux condiments, notamment la superbe qualité d’enregistrement et les voix en chœur, ces generic dogs méritent leur place de choix parmi les meilleurs bands de power-grunge-pop mélancolique. Je vous dévoile un autre secret à propos de ce EP : l’édition vinyle sera en vente très très bientôt.

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Solids – Whatevers and Neverminds

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Solids – Generic Town

April 15th, 2011

New Canadiana :: THOMAS – B R E A T H

THOMAS’ soft-more album is a hushed leap into breathless dance. Precious grooves lace the four-four jammery with an intimacy not seen since nativity. Deep within THOMAS’ narrative is a wilder paradise; a heaven built on stones of catch and rhythm. Pulsing tones and synthetic low-end weave while our morality cools into obsidian; glass candy for the Christ in all of us. B R E A T H is a new divinity. Grip and ye shall worship at the alter of smooth.

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THOMAS – How’s Everything?

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THOMAS – The Wonderful Child

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