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January 17th, 2011

New Canadiana :: Wyrd Visions // Castlemusic – My Boat b/w Voice of God

Wyrd Visions // Castlemusic
My Boat b/w Voice of God
(Blue Fog)
Toronto, ON
::web/sounds:: // ::web/sounds::


From the (blue) fog bath of Michael Deane:
The Bog Lord and Haunting Pixie return to add to each other’s tales, but gently, with contemplative, (blue) fog-bathed, repetitively folk-essed meditations. Side Wyrd finds Colin Bergh reveling in single guitar riffs that cascade from their centre into softly sung Nordic tales. Finger-plucked medieval guitar patterns sit in the back while a four-note bass line twists and repeats. Bergh’s voice brings you further into a trance, struggling to find the beginning and end. When Jennifer Castle joins him, the waves combine and the tide swells, prepping you for Queen-like vocal stabs that bring this to new levels of acoustic-black-metal-folk-prog. Side Castle flips the script with a delicately plucked minor guitar pattern and soulfully smooth, airy vocals examining the powers above. Sporadic toms fill in the emptiness to give a surprisingly lush start to this solo-turned-strange-duet. Bergh re-enters the fold, echoing CM’s questioning of the voice of God. Together, they create an epically surreal musical landscape. Grip Hurr.

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Wyrd Visions – My Boat

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Castlemusic – Voice of God

May 11th, 2010

Review :: Wyrd Alberta Traveling Festival

Wyrd Alberta
Wrap-Up
(Weird Canada)
Alberta
::photo/credit::


I spent a few days trying to figure out a way to summarize the behemoth that became the Wyrd Alberta Traveling Festival. Yesterday it dawned on me that I don’t have the time to go through every minute detail of the event. Instead, I’m just going to talk it out (see 2:42).

What started out as a phone call between Paul Lawton and myself on the successes of Mammoth Cave Fest and Wyrd Fest, quickly turned into a mad-hatted idea to both showcase Alberta’s burgeoning talent and bring bands from Canada’s abundant East to our beautiful, desolate West. Thus the Wyrd Alberta Traveling Festival was born; a traveling caravan of our favorite, genre-bending bands whose schedule permitted them to make it westward.

Paul and I proceeded to write up a list of “dream bands.” After a number of e-mails, deals, hand-shakes, phone calls, and deliberation, the first “final draft” of bands was concocted. We were lucky to work with Calgary’s premier indie-music festival Sled Island, granting us a Calgary date for the whole ordeal. Boom! We thought all the work was done there! Press releases went out, tickets went on sale, and my partner Marie LeBlanc Flanagan embarked on the unsane task of ensuring I didn’t work myself to death. In the interim we had some unfortunate drops (Dead Ghosts and Grand Trine) but we had some very fortune replacements (MYTHS and D’EON). The festival seemed on track…

After about a hundred hours of phone calls, venue cancelations, billeting, postering, painting, advertising, interviewing, soliciting and organizing volunteers, and trying to ensure the whole operation didn’t collapse under a pile of promoter entropy, the festival happened. There were many times I thought the whole thing would implode, nevertheless, it actually happened. Before my own eyes the whole thing unfolded like a chromatic Mobius strip undulating within some cosmic explosion. What an experience!

Calgary :: April 31

Calgary was the show I was concerned the most about, only because I had never promoted a show in Calgary and was very unsure of the strength of Weird Canada’s brand. It turned out Calgary was the most successful ticket-wise (thanks largely to Sled Island), and for Paul and I probably the most fun. The No. 1 Legion was a great venue, and it was amazing to experience bands like Bikeland, MYTHS, D’EON, and Omon Ra II for the first time. While I prefer the 30-minute set-times, the 20-minute set-times in Calgary seemed to work quite well and by the end of the night we were only 25 minutes behind schedule. Calgarians seemed really into the philosophy behind the festival, which was a very encouraging experience.

(personal) Highlights: D’EON (w/ tiny midi-keyboard), MTYHS (impromptu liquid dancing), Shearing Pinx, Nü Sensae (best sound I’ve ever heard).

Edmonton :: May 1

In Edmonton we were not able to use the venue we had used for Wyrd Fest I (it was already booked) so, after spending about 30 hours visiting various venues around town, the Edmonton organizers (thanks: Marie, Zach, Sean, Tyler, Amy, Taras and Stephanie) and I settled on TheARTery and a friend’s loft next-door which we termed the Annex. The event was a smashing success and everything proceeded very smoothly outside of the untimely visit of a Fire Marshal and the eventual crack-down on capacity (for any Edmontonian’s reading this, I’m deeply sorry for the lineups). Having both venues separated was quite interesting and worked well. In fact The Annex was a really great second venue. Pretty much every band killed it in Edmonton (from what I heard – I was too stressed running around ensuring people were OK with the capacity issues) and the two things keeping my sanity were: Marie’s extremely well-coordinated volunteer organization and the bounty of smiling faces leaving and entering each venue.

(personal) Highlights: COSMETICS (“they melted my face!” – jon), Taras telling me “you should have just booked D’EON for eight hours”, Nü Sensae saving my sanity in the green-room, The Wicked Awesome!’s last show (two crowd-surfed chairs), and Marie & Murray (my saviors!)

Lethbridge :: May 2

This was my favorite date of the festival. Paul had the event organized. So, I basically showed-up late and enjoyed myself. The Lethbridge date took place in the now-defunct Henotic Lounge, a venue/art-space/lounge/bar compacted within Alberta’s oldest brick-and-mortar Firehouse. It was a wild place and really exciting to cruise around, finding bands playing within every nook and cranny. Paul seemed to put Lethbridge’s entire music community within the building, jamming thirty bands for the day (it started at Noon and went until 1am). It was a wild ride, to say the least.

(personal Highlights): dude playing solo bass with four huge amps, Omon Ra II (dismantled guitar shreddery), The Famines (I didn’t see their set but everyone said it was amazing (it brought literal tears to Paul’s eyes)), the Days Inn grotto, and Women.

Summary & Thanks

In sum: Wyrd Alberta was the largest undertaking I’ve lived through. Co-ordinating 16+ bands from across Canada in three different cities was not something I imagined myself doing after I defended my masters thesis two years ago. I’m super proud to say it was a great success and I can’t wait to start planning something even bigger.

I couldn’t have accomplished Wyrd Alberta without the huge support of Paul Lawton (it is equally his festival as well), Marie LeBlanc Flanagan, Zak Pashak (from Sled Island), and Drew Marshal (also from Sled Island). Nor would it have been possible without the cooperation of all the bands (Women, Omon Ra II, D’EON, MYTHS, Shearing Pinx, Nü Sensae, Sharp Ends, Stalwart Sons, Brazilian Money, JAZZ, KRANG, Myelin Sheaths, Fist City, Topless Mongos, Outdoor Miners, The Famines, The Wicked Awesomes!, Bikeland, Hunter-Gatherer, Moby Dicks, the 20+ bands at the Lethbridge show) and the infinite support from all the volunteers (the five people in Calgary (thanks for the drawings!), Taras, Amy, Zach, Tyler, Marie, and Stephanie in Edmonton, and all the volunteers in Lethbridge). I’d also like to acknowledge the support of our sponsors (Beatroute Magazine, Sled Island, Pilsner, Pop Echo Records, Blackbyrd Myoozik, and the Royal Bison Craft & Art Fair) for their strong role in ensuring the Wyrd brand made it into the Canadian media ether.

Additionally, it’s important to acknowledge and thank the participants, especially every single person who purchased a ticket and made the whole festival financially viable: without your support none of this could be possible. This also goes to all the readers and supporters of Weird Canada

I’m glad to have made some new friends (Zach, Chris, Matt, Emily, Felix, Nic, Aja, Lief, and Quinne), solidified some old friendships (Nic, Jeremy, Daniel, Andrea, Paul and Evan), and had a gay ol’ time in the process.

I look forward to Wyrd Alberta II and, eventually, Wyrd Canada.

Hearts,

Aaron Levin
Weird Canada / Cantor Records
www.weirdcanada.com / www.cantorrecords.com

PS – Thanks to Omon Ra II & D’EON for the serious bro-down! See you at OBEY!

PPS – In case it wasn’t clear, I’d like to thank: Paul, Marie, Zak, Drew, all the bands, Mike Deane and Kathy, Graham Nichol, the volunteers, sponsors, anyone who came up to me during the Edmonton show and said “thank you” or “this was a great show,” the volunteers (again), the bands (again), everyone in the world, Max from the Annex, and, finally, to the dude who wrote “fuck lofi punk rock” on the wall of the Annex bathroom: you are an infinitely hilarious jerk. And I’m out!

April 11th, 2010

Mix :: Wyrd Alberta Mixtape

Wyrd Alberta Mixtape
Compiled by: Drew Marshall
(Self Released)
Halifax, NS
::web/sounds::


From the midnight-mind of Drew Marshall:
Here’s a mixtape featuring some of the most radical bands in Canada that happen to be performing at the Wyrd Alberta Traveling Festival from April 30 – May 2. Each of the songs were selected from the ever-growing online database of Weird Canada reviews thanks in-large part to the inventor Aaron Levin and his worshiping gypsies. Sole proprietorship of these tracks has long since been sourced out to the general broadband public and for good reason in today’s idea-swapping, music-sharing platform of the digital revolution. And what is it all for? well, as it happens to be we find our actualization in the accumulation of bodies that come together and celebrate our eager-mindless expressions and appreciate those of others. The next great collaboration takes place in a three-part series spanning the ever-expanding, always-contracting province of Alberta from April 30 to May 2. In preparation for this momentous occasion, I have packaged a kinetic stream of glitch-bots and odd entities to please those snow-burried souls back into oblivion. Please enjoy with severe caution. [The mix contains songs by: Nü Sensae, COSMETICS, Grand Trine, Krang, Grown-Ups, Omon Ra, Shearing Pinx, Myelin Sheaths, and Brazilian Money]
[kml_flashembed movie="http://weirdcanada.com/binary/wyrdmix/mixwidget/mixwidget.swf" width="260" height="200"]

February 23rd, 2010

Review :: Colic – Best to Your Family

Colic
Best to Your Family
(Self Released)
Edmonton, AB
::web/sounds::


From the colic cleanse of Aaron Levin:
Colic resides as my favorite left-field discovery of 2009, splintering my identity with an onslaught of pop-sprinkled atonal adjective-everything. Best to Your Family reads like a distasteful Japanese stereotype: hyperactive occult meanderings, bent reflections from unknown metals, and piercing waves of inter-dimensional origin. Imagine Big Mac handed you his demo tape after a weird inter-terrestrial mind-meld; it’s addicting, unearthly, and completely fringe. Yet, it’s greatest strength is making the whole rite-of-passage engaging by burying the subtle popyness within layers of instrumental shreddery. A certified unique listening experience. Genuinely strange artifacts of this ilk are rare. File-under ??????

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Colic – Keys

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Colic – Cold Time

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Colic – At 30,000 ft.

November 16th, 2009

WYRD :: Success!

Wyrd Fest was a smashing success. The festival sold-out within mere hours of starting (with 87% of all tickets sold in advanced) and the crowd was absolutely ecstatic throughout the evening. Wyrd Fest was, without a doubt, the most accomplished dream I’ve ever had. All the bands stuck to schedule (and with 16 bands in one evening, that is a feat!), the patrons were wild but well-mannered, and nothing out of the ordinary happened (with the exception of Wicked Awesomes! singer getting food poisoning from A&W).

I am enthused and encouraged and cannot wait to organize another Wyrd Fest. Except we’ll be changing the name to Wyrd: The Gatheringâ„¢ thanks to a comment left on the original Wyrd Fest post.

I’d like to especially thank Tyler Harland, for being the true unspoken hero of Wyrd Fest, and all the volunteers (Sarah, Taras, Chris, Phil, Mike, Matt, Thomas, Graham, Cecil, Amy, Zac, Coryn, (the other guy from GBL GBL), Carrie, and anyone else that picked up garbage, moved chairs, and helped us load in). I could not have asked for better performers; you were all so enthusiastic.

I will write up a larger, more elaborate wrap-up once I get some better photos (if you have photos, please e-mail them to: aaron [at] cantorrecords [dot] com). In the meantime, you’ll have to deal with this:

Wyrd Peace

November 13th, 2009

Video :: Aaron Levin & The Wicked Awesomes! on Breakfast Television

In preparation for Wyrd Fest I was lucky enough to snag a 90 second interview on Breakfast Television (City TV, Cable 7) about the festival followed by a performance by one of my favorite bands in Alberta, The Wicked Awesomes!.

It was a weird experience being on television. I was kind of disappointed they didn’t put makeup on me. I hope I looked sexy in HD.

Hearts,

Aaron Levin
Weird Canada / Cantor Records
www.weirdcanada.com / www.cantorrecords.com

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