Author Archives: Tom Beedham

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About Tom Beedham

Tom Beedham is a Canadian writer and photographer whose work focuses on independent culture, experimental art, DIY communities, and their relationship to the mainstream. He has reported on a spectrum of creatives ranging from emerging acts to the definitive voices of cultural movements. He lives in Toronto, Ontario. He has contributed features to Exclaim!, NOW, A.Side (formerly AUX), Chart Attack, and VICE publications Noisey and THUMP, and has appeared as a correspondent on Daily VICE. Tom is also a co-organizer and curator of the inter-arts series Long Winter, for which he has overseen the publication of an online blog and print newspaper-style community publication, and, in collaboration with Lucy Satzewich, implemented harm reduction strategies for safer event spaces. From 2006-2012, he was Editor-in-Chief of Halton, ON -based youth magazine The Undercroft and served as an outreach worker for parent organization Peer Outreach Support Services and Education (POSSE) Project. He was also a DIY concert organizer in his hometown Georgetown, ON in the mid-2000s.

WL14 reviews: Weaves @ Adelaide Hall – Feb. 14, 2014

Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 – Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

By Tom Beedham
Having released just four recorded tracks so far, Buzz Records rookie act Weaves are already gaining attention for their singular live gigs. Their WL14 performance was no exception.

Forced to take the stage without drummer Spencer Cole for the evening, the remaining trio of singer Jasmyn Burke, guitarist Morgan Waters, and bassist Zach Bines was forced to tie together the loose ends with a drum sampler, but the playful improvising that was conducive to made it all the more interesting to watch go down.

For those that don’t know, Weaves is a psychedelically bubbling bog of a band that makes impressionistic sound paintings out of what some might call songs. As far as their singles are concerned, “Motorcycle” is a gasoline chugging journey into the sunset; on “Hulahoop” Waters keeps Burke’s wavering vocals in orbit with strategically leaned noise flourishes, and like all too many failed attempts at hoop records, it comes to an abrupt and screaming halt when Burke and Waters get out of synch.

They brought four new songs—“Buttercup,” “Sunshine Road,” “Candy,” and “Know About It”—to Adelaide Hall, so expect more recordings in the near future.

More photos:
Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Weaves @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

Weaves setlist:
“Crumble”
“Buttercup”
“Sunshine road”
“Candy”
“Know About It”
“Take A Dip”
“Hulahoop”
“Motorcycle”

Originally published by Aesthetic Magazine.

WL14 reviews: Most People @ Adelaide Hall – Feb. 14, 2014

By Tom Beedham

Most People filled in lineup space left empty when originally scheduled headliner Marnie Stern was forced to cancel her Wavelength Music Festival appearance due to the snow storm in New York. Photo: Tom Beedham

Most People filled in lineup space left empty when originally scheduled headliner Marnie Stern was forced to cancel her Wavelength Music Festival appearance due to the snow storm in New York. Photo: Tom Beedham

After Matrox unsuccessfully ordered the audience to disperse, Wavelength 2013 Artist Incubator participant Most People subbed in to fill a set gap left by originally headlining but New York-snowbound Marnie Stern.

For the most part, their turn at the stage saw them breathing new life into tracks from their 2012 self-titled debut, taking the hushed pop psychedelia and pumping it full of percussive enthusiasm, guitarist Paul McEachern and bassist Brandon Gibson-DeGroote seeding the stage with their fair share of drumstick shrapnel as they traded off drum duties and with them their turns at bringing physically and technically aggressive wails to all sides of their floor toms.

The heavier take on the older material might have something to do with a new direction the band’s been exploring. Most People revealed two new songs to the Wavelength audience, one of them a darker new wave listening experience for which Gibson-DeGroote requested the audience recall the opening scene of the film that heavily inspired it, The Terminator. But as to whether the harder hitting feel of the band’s live performance at Wavelength is something we’ll see carrying over to future recordings or if it’s something they’re reserving strictly for concerts is ultimately something we’ll have to wait and hear on, well, recordings.

More photos:
Most People @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Most People @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Most People @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Most People @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Most People @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Most People @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Most People @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Most People @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

Originally published by Aesthetic Magazine.

WL14 reviews: Matrox @ Adelaide Hall – Feb 14, 2014

By Tom Beedham

Matrox @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

Matrox @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 – Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

The conceit Matrox offers at once in lieu of a “proper” band biography and in favour of a successful PR mythos is entertaining to digest: it is (or perhaps was) composed of robots sent from another planet (Planet Matrox) to colonize the people of Earth. Whether or not they intend to stay the course on that mission is less apparent; they seem to like the local colour, taking to Toronto’s local independent music scene to give scheduled concert performances.

Of course, the reality of the situation is that this is a synth-oriented trio composed of entirely human members, counting Alt Altman (Digits) among them. And when the group played Adelaide Hall last night for WL14, the suspension of disbelief Matrox requests was less simply maintained.

Although Matrox wandered onto the stage fully clad in its homemade robot gear and the mystique that comes with it, the opening of its performance was marred by a technical difficulty that ultimately forced the band to remove its helmets out of desperation to fix the glitch, fiddling with things like patch cords in a way that was all too human.

While the setback was temporary—resulting in a five-minute set delay at most—and the performance that followed was as stimulating as some of the showcases the group has already gigged at (All Toronto’s Parties, Long Winter, etc.), it also forced the audience to absorb another, entirely different, truth: this is a Toronto band mimicking a colonization outfit that is seeking to adopt the local culture as its own, absorbing attention at concerts first and foremost for its token “alien” idiosyncrasies. Everything from Matrox’s instruments—an arsenal of Korg and Behringer synths, a saxophone, and sound samples of revving motorcar engines—to its tendency to position itself onstage in a line à la Kraftwerk, is a farcical “appropriation.”

So, yes: Matrox’s set showed people that this group is more than just robot rock.

More photos:
Matrox @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Matrox @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Matrox @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Matrox @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Matrox @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham
Matrox @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Matrox @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Matrox @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Matrox @ Adelaide Hall for WL14 - Feb. 14, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham
Originally published by Aesthetic Magazine.

WL14 reviews: Phèdre @ The Silver Dollar Room – Feb 13, 2014

Phèdre @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

Phèdre @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 – Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

By Tom Beedham
For what was once referred to pretty unanimously as Daniel Lee and April Aliermo’s Hooded Fang side project, oddball party powerhouse Phèdre has absorbed plenty of its own attention. The group’s already followed up its February 2012 self-titled debut LP with another—Golden Age—recorded in Berlin, and when the group headlined the opening night of WL14, there was a devoted fanbase packed into the Silver Dollar to sing along to its happily weird and mind-bending anthems.

Decked out in all white hoodies that made perfect blank canvases they opened with a (presumed) hype speech delivered in German by impassioned, scarf-disguised Hooded Fang bandmate D. Alex Meeks (Holiday Rambler), who next theatrically tripped, fell, and lay on the stage floor for some time. The topple looked legitimate, though not severe enough to require any attention. Whatever the situation, Phèdre’s live performances seem to make striving for perfection less a virtue than they do letting loose and having fun. They took it all in stride and proceeded into the early hours of Valentine’s Day with Golden Age intro “Inifinity Chamber.”

That spirit seemed consistent throughout the sometimes wobbly, always danceable performance. Aliermo even commented on the title-referencing lyrics to “Atomic Love” mid-song: “what the fuck does that mean?!”

Even when technical difficulties required some waiting between tracks early in the set, Aliermo—ever the MC—used the space between “Supernatural” and “Aquarius” to wish frequent Phèdre dancer Leah Gold a Happy Birthday and suggested the crowd give her “hugs, kisses, birthday shots, licks, or whatever makes you feel happy.”

For the most part, the group stuck to cuts from Golden Age, but the band did forego a rendition of its “Death of Cupid” narrative. A happy night for Valentines indeed.

More photos:
Phèdre @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Phèdre @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Phèdre @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Phèdre @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Phèdre @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

Originally published by Aesthetic Magazine.

WL14 reviews: Zoo Owl @ The Silver Dollar Room – Feb. 13, 2014

Zoo Owl at WL14. Photo: Tom Beedham

Zoo Owl at WL14. Photo: Tom Beedham

Tom Beedham

It was a setup that should have required advanced night vision to observe it properly.

The instruments on the stage were familiar enough—a sampling machine, effect pedals, and a floor tom all sat at the front of stage—but a black sheet was strewn across a drum kit in the background to make it less conspicuous, and the only light in the room came from a floor-placed desk lamp.

It was apparent to anyone in the audience unfamiliar with Bryan Sutherland’s psychedelic electronic act Zoo Owl that they were in for something special at WL14. But they couldn’t have seen this coming.

Sutherland kicked things off slow: an atmospheric buildup from the sampler; some skin beating on the tom.

But then things took a left turn. Sutherland started worshipping a tall glass of water, making motions requesting people to gaze upon it in its clear liquid form. Then the glass itself lit up. Sutherland drank, and what happened onstage was a descent into surrealist propaganda. Sutherland dipped below his sampler and reemerged with a light in his mouth, his head turning like a sentinel, casting light on parts of the audience as if searching for a transgressor to scold. In time, he descended again, returning this time with goggles that had LEDs for lenses.

To the crowd, Sutherland addressed the eyewear as possessing the power to do “the opposite of what your eyes do,” instead facilitating “inner vision.”

He pulled out a laser field projector, and from there, Zoo Owl had reign over the crowd with a control so total there was at once a dedicated crew dancing along to his echoing trance spell while others were content to let the laser beams shoot into their faces and engage the alpha waves in their brains.

No one could have been sure what Zoo Owl’s motivation was in all of this surreal theatre, but we can presume that, whatever he was going for, it worked.

More photos:
Zoo Owl @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Zoo Owl @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Zoo Owl @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Zoo Owl @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Zoo Owl @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham
Zoo Owl @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Zoo Owl @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Zoo Owl @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Zoo Owl @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Zoo Owl @ The Silver Dollar Room for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

Originally published by Aesthetic Magazine.

WL14 Reviews: Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar Room – Feb. 13, 2014

Alden Penner performed songs from his new solo album, 'Exegesis,' at The Silver Dollar Room on Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

Alden Penner performed songs from his new solo album, ‘Exegesis,’ at The Silver Dollar Room on Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

Tom Beedham

Rolling into Toronto just a day after divulging in an interview that his former band The Unicorns were working towards a reunion of sorts—news that unsurprisingly piqued the interests of international music publicationsbut has already been somewhat deflated—you could cut the tension in the front row of Alden Penner’s solo set at WL14 with a knife. Although he did use set time to make somewhat awkward banter about eating lamb kebabs during his last visit to Toronto (as means of a segue into “Beauty of the Lamb”), Penner kept decidedly mum on the subject of breathing new life into The Unicorns at The Silver Dollar.

Observably more concerned with shedding proper light on new solo effort Exegesis (on a personal level for Penner, it is a compilation of material he’s been incubating since he attended high school, after all), the set was made up almost entirely of cuts from Exegesis – “Precession,” and the darker “We Seek” among them – fans of Penner’s other projects weren’t left entirely underappreciated: Penner (joined by partner and Exegesis co-producer Laura Crapo on drums and Sebastian Chow of Islands on violin) did offer a reworking of “Elope” by his former band, Clues. Since we’re on the topic of reunions, take from that what you will.

More photos:
Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham
Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham Alden Penner @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb. 13, 2014. Photo: Tom Beedham

Originally published by Aesthetic Magazine.

WL14 Reviews: You’ll Never Get To Heaven @ The Silver Dollar Room – Feb. 13, 2014

Tom Beedham

Chuck Blazevic and Alice Hansen's sample-based dream pop project You'll Never Get To Heaven performing at The Silver Dollar for Wavelength Music Festival  on Feb. 13, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham

Chuck Blazevic and Alice Hansen’s sample-based dream pop project You’ll Never Get To Heaven performing at The Silver Dollar for Wavelength Music Festival on Feb. 13, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham

One might not expect to find purveyors of a particularly narcoleptic dream pop—a label once typified by guitar music and its effect pedal-oriented (and derisively labeled) “shoegazing” forebears—to make a point of deploying sampled material in it’s enchantments, but partners Alice Hansen and Chuck Blazevic have figured out a way to make a gig of relying on that technology almost exclusively.

Across the partners’ material, the chilly downtempo beats and tone washes that Blazevic spends the sets eliciting from his sampling machines are enough to carry you off to another plane of awareness. Less consistently present (though always welcome), Hansen’s atmospheric vocals aren’t held back and “buried” by any genre tendencies, but instead emerge from Blazevic’s impressionistic sound paintings, bringing listeners back down to earth. And considering the pair were tasked with opening the first night of a four-night festival (and effectually WL14 as a whole), it was easy to appreciate an act that sedated its listeners without charging them to reach for their pillows.

Photos:
You'll Never Get To Heaven @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb 13, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham You'll Never Get To Heaven @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb 13, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham You'll Never Get To Heaven @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb 13, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham You'll Never Get To Heaven @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb 13, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham You'll Never Get To Heaven @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb 13, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham You'll Never Get To Heaven @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb 13, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham You'll Never Get To Heaven @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb 13, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham You'll Never Get To Heaven @ The Silver Dollar for WL14 - Feb 13, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham

Originally published by Aesthetic Magazine.

Concert Review: Pixies @ Massey Hall – Jan. 15, 2014

Pixies pave a motorway to weirdness at Massey Hall
By Tom Beedham (originally published via Aesthetic Magazine)

The last time Pixies graced a Toronto stage was in April 2011; the performance came under undeniably different circumstances. At the tail end of a globetrotting, two-year-long 20th anniversary tour for the band’s first international release, 1989’s Doolittle, fans piled into Massey Hall two nights in a row to celebrate a uniquely deranged album that frothed noisily at the mouth regarding subjects like surrealist painters and filmmakers, Biblical violence, and Japanese businessmen initiating murder-suicides with their families over failed business ventures. Having played Virgin Festival two years prior, the Molson Amphitheatre four years before that, and Mississauga’s Arrow Hall twice as part of their 2004 reunion tour, Massey Hall was the most intimate venue the band had played in or near the city since it graced The Silver Dollar in 1988.

The April 18, 2011 concert began with a standing ovation.

When original members Black Francis, David Lovering, and Joey Santiago returned to the same theatre last night sans Kim Deal, fans were less generous.

Despite balancing the first handful of songs between cuts from their earliest recordings and newer material, it wasn’t until Pixies got to popularly adored trunk song “Here Comes Your Man” — six tracks in — that the audience got to its feet and showed any real enthusiasm about the show. Granted, standing praise that welcomes concert sets is something of a rare event, but that the band was coming into town without the bassist and vocal harmony supplier to Black Francis’s caterwauling vocals couldn’t have boded well for the collective headspace the audience entered Massey Hall with. Maybe it was uneasiness over the elephant in (or missing from) the room that was bassist Paz Lenchantin (A Perfect Circle, Zwan) stationed at what would have been Deal’s mic; maybe fans were waiting for their drinks to take their effect; maybe they were just comfortable in those nicely cushioned seats their concert-going behinds were not accustomed to. But the band’s approach to the gig was fairly uncompromising.

Even if it allowed fans to hear Surfer Rosa’s “Brick Is Red” and “Nimrod’s Son” from the Come On Pilgrim mini-LP early in the program, these songs didn’t come until after some confrontation. The concert kicked off with a gloomy, plodding “Silver Snail,” a track that remains so far unreleased even though Pixies have issued two four-track EPs since Deal’s sudden departure from the band in June last year. They followed that immediately thereafter with an interpretation of Peter Ivers’s “In Heaven (Lady in the Radiator Song), first recorded by the band for its first demo in 1987.

How the second of these proceedings could be read as confrontational requires some elucidation, but it comes down to the delivery: now a regular fixture of Pixies live shows, when the band started playing “In Heaven” live, Black Francis sung it; Kim Deal eventually took over those duties in concert upon the band’s reunion, but Francis has now reassumed lead vocal duties. This implies that even though Pixies favoured recruiting a bassist/singer that was also a woman to maintain the diversity (sonic and otherwise) that Deal once brought to the table, it doesn’t mean that the band will continue to exist or act as it did with Deal still participating, nor should we expect it to.

This wasn’t the only moment of the concert coloured with perceivable (misdirected?) audience contempt: when Pixies got to the uber-popular “Where Is My Mind?” they sped through it at an accelerated pace, effectually making a listener’s darling into an inaccessible experiment in fast-forwarding. Other bands like Dinosaur Jr. have applied similar methods to popular songs such as “Feel the Pain” and made it work, but when Pixies did it last night, it just came off as sloppy: Francis stumbled over lyrics and some key note progressions were botched or missed entirely. Beyond raising unanswered questions about artistic responsibility to their songs and the fans that loved them, it made some wonder at why the band bothered playing it at all.

Maybe it was a joke. It still received what was probably the loudest and longest sustained applause of the entire night.

It wasn’t all disappointing and soul crushing, of course. Even without Kim Deal, this was the Pixies. They played a 33-song, hour-and-45-minute set that was heavy on cuts from Surfer Rosa and Doolittle, they debuted EP2 cut “Snakes” and the other new songs sounded great, new inductee Lenchantin rightfully shined under the spotlight (literally and figuratively) on bass-propelled tracks like “Hey,” “Bone Machine,” and “Gouge Away,” and during “Vamos,” guitarist Joey Santiago facilitated an epic, two-and-a-half-minute noise solo from the centre of the stage, swinging his guitar around and playing it backwards against his body, waving at fans as he fiddled with his pickup toggle while the feedback played out. It just got a little… weird. But that’s what makes the Pixies so great.

Pixies Setlist
1. “Silver Snail”
2. “In Heaven (Lady in the Radiator Song)” (Peter Ivers cover)
3. “Andro Queen”
4. “Nimrod’s Son”
5. “Brick Is Red”
6. “Another Toe in the Ocean”
7. “Here Comes Your Man”
8. “La La Love You”
9. “Indie Cindy”
10. “Motorway to Roswell”
11. “Bone Machine”
12. “I’ve Been Tired”
13. “Tony’s Theme”
14. “Levitate Me”
15. “Bagboy”
16. “Magdalena”
17. “Snakes” (live debut)
18. “Ana”
19. “Cactus”
20. “Monkey Gone to Heaven”
21. “Hey”
22. “Greens and Blues”
23. “Where Is My Mind?”
24. “Gouge Away”
25. “Debaser”
26. “Broken Face”
27. “Head On” (The Jesus and Mary Chain cover)
28. “What Goes Boom”
29. “Blue Eyed Hexe”
30. “Something Against You”
31.“Vamos” (2.5 minute noise solo)
32.“Tame”

Encore:
33. “Planet of Sound”

Originally published via Aesthetic Magazine.

Concert Review: Long Winter Yr. 2 – Vol. 3: Jan. 10, 2014 @ The Great Hall

Even working double time, Long Winter flexes muscle
Tom Beedham

Long Winter returned to its home base at The Great Hall on Jan. 10 for the first regularly programmed Long Winter of 2014, offering a platform for new bands like Weaves (pictured above) to play alongside established Toronto musical acts like The Hidden Cameras, Rae Spoon, and more. Photo: Tom Beedham.

Long Winter returned to its home base at The Great Hall on Jan. 10 for the first regularly programmed Long Winter of 2014, offering a platform for new bands like Weaves (pictured above) to play alongside established Toronto musical acts like The Hidden Cameras, Rae Spoon, and more (more pictures below). Photo: Tom Beedham.

If people going to 2014’s first proper Long Winter event were expecting to catch its organizers with their pants down, they’ll have realized their mistake by now.

The folks at the traditionally monthly event have been putting in double time over the past two months to supplement its usual fare with some bonus programming – just a week prior, the event invaded the AGO and took over all programming responsibilities for the gallery’s own monthly culture celebration, First Thursdays, and a special just-for-kids version of the traditionally late night affair was held at LW home base The Great Hall less than a week before that.

Instead, Year Two – Volume Three saw LW once again increase the scale of its production, threading its tentacles even further throughout the Queen Street West and Dovercourt Road building’s hallows to include a new, fifth room that event-goers could cram into and watch bands in. Before last Friday’s event, bands could be seen in the main hall and the conversation room on the same floor, basement party cave BLK BOX, and (as of this season’s LW inauguration) the street-level Samuel J. Moore Restaurant.

Scale aside, the music lineup alone brought the night’s proceedings some of the most diverse programming the series has featured thus far. Save for a last minute cancellation that made for a temporary lull between early performances, the night featured steady, often competing performances from 16 musical acts.

Highlights:
The Hidden Cameras previewed material from their new album, Age (Jan. 21 via Evil Evil)
-Toronto rapper D-Sisive got the main hall bouncing to tracks from his new Raging Bull EP as well as older ones between comically salted asides. He threw out tributes to Corey Feldman and Michael Jackson, too.
-Elusive hardcore act Career Suicide stoked a set-long mosh pit in the BLK BOX with its current lineup and a special guest performance from Dallas Good (The Sadies).
Weaves – accountable for the rackety half of the night’s seven-inch giveaway – delivered its sometimes dizzying, always crazy noise rock to a packed Conversation Room that ate up frontwoman Jasmyn Burke’s theatrical delivery and all the abused instruments the band left in its wake, right up to and including drummer Spencer Cole’s set-closing kit-toss.
BA Johnston brought his self-deprecating comedy rock to the Samuel J. Moore Restaurant stage (and bar and floor and almost the street you can walk into the restaurant off of).
Bespoken invaded Studio 3 to deliver long-form chamber music to a cross-legged, floor-seated crowd (twice).
Ronley Teper wooed the earliest crowds up to the front of the main hall with her smokey-into-gargled à la Tom Waits vocals and a band – The Lipliners – that crammed the span of the stage.

Photos from Long Winter – Year 2, Volume 3:
The Hidden Cameras live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Bespoken live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. - Photo by Tom Beedham D-Sisive live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Rae Spoon live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Rae Spoon live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Ronley Tepper and the Lipliners live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Weaves  live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Weaves live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Weaves live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Weaves live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Weaves live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Weaves live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Weaves live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Weaves live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Weaves live at The Great Hall for Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three: Jan. 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham Weaves live at Long Winter Year Two - Volume Three @The Great Hall in Toronto, ON: January 10, 2014. Photo by Tom Beedham

Q&A: Anna Mayberry of HSY and ANAMAI talks folk roots, contemporary dance

HSY's Anna Mayberry gave Toronto a free taste of her solo project ANAMAI with a Sonic Boom in-store to support her new EP in November, but tomorrow night (Dec. 11), ANAMAI plays another free gig at June Records. Photo: Tom Beedham

HSY’s Anna Mayberry gave Toronto a free taste of her solo project ANAMAI with a Sonic Boom in-store to support her new EP in November, but tomorrow night (Dec. 11), ANAMAI plays another free gig at June Records. Photo: Tom Beedham

Interview by Tom Beedham

I’ve been sitting on this for a while, but with ANAMAI playing a free gig at June Records tomorrow night (Dec. 11) and HSY playing The Drake Hotel Thursday (Dec. 12), the stars seemed lined up right enough to make this an appropriate time to let this go.

Although she released an EP with HSY just back in September, Anna Mayberry dropped a release of her own under the alias ANAMAI just last month: the Alter Coals EP. Joined onstage for the first time by a full live band consisting of Allie Blumas (Doomsquad), her mononymous HSY bandmate Jude, and David Psutka (whom produced the EP), Mayberry supported her new release on Nov. 15 with two Toronto performances – a free afternoon in-store at Sonic Boom’s Kensington Market location, and a club gig at Holy Oak later that night. Following the Sonic Boom gig, Mayberry and I huddled by a wall outside the Augusta Avenue shop and talked about her new project, growing up in a Toronto folk community, and how contemporary dance influenced HSY’s video for “Tartar Mouth.” Full interview below.

Tom Beedham: You seem to have created some pretty distinct voices between what you’ve done with HSY and what you’ve put together with ANAMAI. How do you approach writing material for this project as opposed to what you’ve done with HSY?
Anna Mayberry: I think that the way I write songs for this project is really different from how we write songs for HSY right now. With HSY one person will bring in a riff and we’ll kind of just jam together and make it together. These songs are kind of more fully formed in my head. And it’s also like a different atmospheric vibe that I’m going for with these songs. There’s some similarities and kind of darkness and letting noise laugh over the songs that happens in HSY, too. But yeah I think they’re just coming from a different artistic idea with HSY. It’s a bit crazier.

TB: Where are you hoping to take things with ANAMAI now that you’ve got the EP out there?
AM: I’m working on a bunch of new stuff. I hope to record over the winter and write new songs and stuff. On the EP it’s just three songs, and I have more that I play live. There’s a pizza song in there. I’d like to do a little bit more vocal looping – not necessarily more poppy, but just a lot more layered vocals – and kind of push in the same direction that the EP’s started us in.

I drive boats in Toronto Harbour in the summers. So yeah I basically have one more week of work left and then I’ll be free to sing all the time all day.

“…we wrote down names for dance moves that haven’t been invented yet and then we’d kind of shout them out at each other while the one person was dancing…” -Anna Mayberry (on filming the video for HSY’s “Tartar Mouth”)

TB: When did these songs come about?
AM: When I was living in Montreal I wrote most of the songs there. I was studying for my BFA in contemporary dance at Concordia. Contemporary dance. So art dance.

TB: Did that inform the “Tartar Mouth” video [for HSY]?
AM: Yeah! I guess so. I felt like for that I kind of directed people’s dance moves, but I wanted them to kind of make up dance moves. Our process was we wrote down names for dance moves that haven’t been invented yet and then we’d kind of shout them out at each other while the one person was dancing so I guess in terms of that it’s kind of interpretive. My choices making dance work are always to kind of use the dancers and get them to contribute, so in that way it’s kind of related I guess.

TB: Most of the lyrics you write are from a first-person perspective. At least it’s true for all of the songs on the EP or “Space Girl” [from HSY’s Sick Rey cassette]. Is there something you find particularly interesting about that perspective?
AM: I think it’s nice to write from a first-person perspective because it kind of just grounds some of the lyrics or some of the stories. Coming from a folk background, pretty much everything is written in the first person or like a story about specific people because they’re these kind of recurring characters or recurring themes and everyone who sings the song, they’re taking it on. I really like hearing a woman sing a song that’s written from a male perspective or vice-versa. That’s a nice folk thing that happens. So I guess I’m just tied to that in a certain way when I write songs. That’s how they come out.

TB: Let’s talk about that “folk background” that you brought up. I read on Chart Attack that you grew up in a folk community in Toronto learning traditional English and Irish music. Appalachian folk, too.
AM: Yeah. My parents do English folk dancing, and I basically grew up having these kind of crazy folk parties where at certain points people would be playing fiddle and banjo and piano and whatever in the living room, and then in the kitchen, people are all singing these kind of big sea chanteys or ballads or whatever. And the fun of that is everyone’s kind of getting drunk and trying out their harmonies, and it could sound really good or really bad, but it’s just very inclusive, and it’s kind of like if you’re going to be in that room you have to be singing. So I guess I just kind of practice singing when there’s no pressure on and it’s a good way to do it I think. It’s a good way to learn to sing.

TB: You mentioned people playing banjo and stuff – did you join in on any of that? When did you start playing guitar?
AM: I played fiddle a bit when I was a kid. A lot of my parents’ friends are professional musicians and I was taking violin lessons. So every time there would be a party in the morning all the fiddle players would teach me songs when I was a little kid, maybe seven years old, and like [simulates fiddle noises] on my little half-size violin so yeah I mean I guess I trained that way and then guitar I took some lessons when I was a teenager like everyone does and tried to learn Jimi Hendrix kind of thing. I couldn’t play the Jimi Hendrix.

TB: Do you consciously bring any of those influences from your childhood into your music now?
AM: Yeah I think so. It’s an interesting thing. I feel like I wouldn’t be making this kind of music if I hadn’t played in HSY or played a lot of shows with HSY before that. Because I think that the way I grew up seeing folk artists starting their careers or playing or whatever, it’s just a whole different network, a whole different scene. I’m kind of taking that folk stuff that is in my blood but putting it into the scene that I live in versus playing for a bunch of older people sitting down.

Photos: ANAMAI live in-store at Sonic Boom (Kensington location) – Nov. 15, 2013
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