Category Archives: Burden of Salt

Burden of Salt was an arts and culture blog I operated from 2010 through 2014. Don’t ask me about the name. This also served as an online portfolio for some of the work I contributed as a volunteer (2009-2011), Arts and Culture Editor (2011/2012), and Editor-in-Chief (2012/2013) to The Ontarion (the University of Guelph’s independent student newspaper) as well some reviews and interviews for Aesthetic Magazine and Truth Explosion Magazine.

Concert review: Nine Inch Nails (Tension 2013 tour) @Air Canada Centre in Toronto, ON | Oct. 4, 2013

Trent Reznor and newest iteration of Nine Inch Nails hit the ACC for Tension 2013
Tom Beedham

Part of a dynamic light show, an LED wall separating fans from Nine Inch Nails blasts fans with the band's minimal "NIN" logo toward the end of the Toronto stop of its Tension 2013 tour at Air Canada Centre  on Oct. 4, 2013. Photo: Tom Beedham

Part of a dynamic light show, an LED wall separating fans from Nine Inch Nails’ stage blasts the audience  with the band’s minimal “NIN” logo at the Toronto stop of its Tension 2013 tour at Air Canada Centre on Oct. 4, 2013. Photo: Tom Beedham

They came back haunted.

In the time of Coachellapalooza-commissioned band reunions, derision, detraction, reduction, accusation, and speculation looms heavy over the actualization of any band reboot or reunion – especially those with cult followings.

But if the current band Trent Reznor is bussing around the world as Nine Inch Nails has been feeling the pressure, you will not have guessed it – especially upon witnessing the Toronto stop of its Tension 2013 tour.

When Reznor announced in February of this year that the band was “reinventing itself from scratch,” it was with a recipe that enlisted ingredients long claiming presence in NIN’s stew. Reznor had collected intermittent guest contributor and King Crimson frontman Adrian Belew, Year Zero/Ghosts I-IV/The Slip-era NIN multi-instrumentalist Alessandro Cortini, Things Falling Apart contributor Josh Eustis, and Ilan Rubin, who toured with NIN in 2009 for its Wave Goodbye touring drummer – all contributors to NIN’s Aug. 30-released Hesitation Marks.

The one exception was bassist Eric Avery (Garbage, Jane’s Addiction), who before NIN’s 2013 touring would kick off, departed from the band in May.

Quick to fill the void in the lineup, Reznor summoned guitarist Robin Finck, a longtime pillar of NIN since the band required a touring member in 1994.

With the re-addition of Finck, Eustis took on the principal bass duties Avery relinquished, but when Belew echoed Avery’s move and quit the band in June, Reznor was left short a guitarist for the band’s 2013 festival, and a dynamic one at that.

While festival audiences (and the amateur audio and video bootlegs that followed) gave listeners a dose of the new NIN, when the band exited the festival circuit in September with a fresh album to promote on the Tension 2013 tour, Reznor revealed Hesitation Marks bassist Pino Palladino amongst the band’s lineup, and with him a personnel closer to what he had initially intended.

At the Toronto stop of Tension 2013, Reznor used that new, once again shuffled army to breathe as much life into the new album as could be considered respectful in a city that would perhaps rather approach the show as a reunion instead of a commercial endeavour.

And dynamic it was.

Opening with Hesitation Marks single “Copy of A,” Reznor framed a performance that – although still acknowledging fan favourites through “Head Like A Hole,” “Terrible Lie,” and concert closer “Hurt” – would favour the new album as well as The Fragile (with nine and five tracks from each, respectively), recognizably withholding numbers from earlier albums like Pretty Machine and The Downward Spiral (full setlist below).

If any were wondering why the new material warranted – in addition to Reznor himself – three guitarists onstage, they soon learned the reason: Cortini, Finck, and Eustis spent the show trading off principal guitar duties as they stationed themselves at bass guitars, drum pads, erhus, keyboards, synthesizers, or violins on tracks like “Disappointed” or “Find My Way.”

Can’t imagine getting bored in that audience, can you?

Even if the instrumental juggling failed to engage you, Reznor and co. brought in tow one of the most engaging light shows the Air Canada Centre has ever seen.

Once the band had closed out “All Time Low,” “Dissappointed” a series of stage-long LED fences lowered onto the stage, fencing the band off from the crowd. At first they featured dancing lines of light moving from side-to-side, but eventually, as if to illustrate the boundaried freedoms that are the subject of the song they accompanied, created the illusion of a three-dimensional box prowling around the band it surrounded.

It didn’t stop there.

During “Terrible Lie,” the band lined up Kraftwerk-style as each bandmate stood in front of their own narrower light walls and their shadows projected over screens of blindingly white cyberpunk static.

Although the light show was newer than ones of old (and impressive to say the least), it wasn’t entirely unexpected, especially for those that caught the band live in the more recent years before their circa-2009 hiatus.

Perhaps more surprising and mind-blowing were the standout soul backing vocals provided by singers Sharlotte Gibson and Rolling Stones touring backing vocalist Lisa Fischer, a move that offered fans exhilarating new ways to experience songs both new and old, from songs positioned as early on in the set as “The Wretched,” all the way through “While I’m Still Here.” A personal favourite of their vocal performances was on Hesitation Marks cut “Various Methods of Escape.” Find yourself a recording of that on the Internet. Do it.

In sum, it was a fantastic opportunity to catch a renewed Nine Inch Nails performing both new and old material in entirely new ways. And while it is true that the band held back mercilessly on performing its earlier material, let’s not forget that a certain Downward Spiral reaches its 20-year-anniversary next February. If NIN were to cash in on that occasion with the lineup and the risk taking it brought to the Air Canada Centre on Oct. 4, I wouldn’t just forgive them; I’d say bring it on.

Setlist:
“Copy of A”
“1,000,000”
“Terrible Lie”
“March of the Pigs”
“The Frail”
“The Wretched”
“All Time Low”
“Disappointed”
39:00 “Came Back Haunted”
“Find My Way”
“Various Methods of Escape”
“Into the Void”
“Survivalism”
“Running”
“A Warm Place”
“Somewhat Damaged”
“Wish”
“Only”
“The Hand That Feeds”
“Head Like a Hole”

Encore:
“Even Deeper”
“In This Twilight”
“While I’m Still Here”
“Black Noise”
“Hurt”

The new folk art

Speedy Ortiz talks mixtapes, curation culture, and “secret” In-N-Out menu items
by Tom Beedham

Mike Falcone of Speedy Ortiz at Supercrawl in Hamilton, ON, Sept. 14. Photo: Tom Beedham

Mike Falcone of Speedy Ortiz at Supercrawl in Hamilton, ON, Sept. 14. Photo: Tom Beedham

With its debut LP Major Arcana, Northampton, Mass. noise pop outfit Speedy Ortiz received critical acclaim over the summer and – after the suggestion of friend and Thurston Moore bandmate John Moloney – recently laid tracks through Canada on tour with Chelsea Light Moving. But between the gas stations and the venues the band has been playing, Speedy Ortiz has found ample time to get behind others’ music.

Besides more standard releases, the band has also released a series of mixtapes through their record label Carpark, establishing itself as an establishment for curating as much as creating. Before its opening slot for Chelsea Light Moving Sept. 15, Burden of Salt sat down with three quarters of Speedy Ortiz at the Horseshoe in Toronto, ON to discuss a mixtape series the four-piece has been working on and what it means to toss music that isn’t your own to your fans.

“I feel like curating in this time is a unique thing. I think it’s almost like a folk art in a way – something that everybody does.” -Matt Robidoux

One of the first things the band pointed out was that with mixtapes being somewhat in the tradition of hip-hop, what they’re doing is nothing new, but for them it’s less to do with making the material your own than it is about sharing discoveries.

“Hip-hop mixtapes are built around – a lot of it is – taking other peoples’ songs and rapping over it, and this was more of just a fun thing we wanted to do,” said drummer Mike Falcone.

“I feel like curating in this time is a unique thing. I think it’s almost like a folk art in a way – something that everybody does,” said guitarist Matt Robidoux, who also runs Northampton record label Hidden Temple Tapes. “You’re a curator. You download these songs on a computer. You even curate the type of media that you choose to receive.”

Sadie Dupuis of Speedy Ortiz at Supercrawl in Hamilton, ON, Sept. 14. Photo: Tom Beedham

Sadie Dupuis of Speedy Ortiz at Supercrawl in Hamilton, ON, Sept. 14. Photo: Tom Beedham

Band founder, vocalist, and guitarist Sadie Dupuis says that curating media to share it with
those who might be interested is a passion shared by Speedy Ortiz members not just within the context of the band, but in their general careers as well.

“Mike’s a college radio DJ and I used to be,” said Dupuis. “Matt teaches at a school where he’s constantly learning new songs and putting together collections of songs. I think it’s just something that we’re all interested in for fun.” 

While Falcone has additionally been known to make video shorts and found footage VHS mixes, bassist Darl Ferm also studied film in college, and that shared passion led the band to sculpt the second of their mixtapes, Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, out of songs that originally presented themselves to the world as soundtracks for visual images.

Animal Style, the band’s newest mixtape, is comprised of tracks from the likes of Syd Barrett and Ween, as well as lesser-known acts like Potty Mouth and Wire, all of the selections tied together by the common thread of a loose animal theme, and it has its own objectives outside of theme-based curating.

A third of the 15 songs reference dogs directly in their titles, but Dupuis insists (if a little tongue-in-cheek) that the group made an effort to mix things up. “It was important to us to get Hatebeak on this list. We felt that the parrot voice is under-represented in mixtapes.”

While the “Bird Bites, Dog Cries” Hatebeak track presents a subversion of the reigning hegemony canines hold in the world of human-animal relationships, in the same perspectivist spirit, not all of the mix addresses the “man’s best friend” dialogues humans invoke when discussing their furry, feathered, or scaly friends; Robidoux says the mix’s Animal Style title is actually a reference to a secret menu item at In-N-Out Burger.

Matt Robidoux of Speedy Ortiz at Supercrawl in Hamilton, ON, Sept. 14. Photo: Tom Beedham

Matt Robidoux of Speedy Ortiz at Supercrawl in Hamilton, ON, Sept. 14. Photo: Tom Beedham

Some brief Internet gumshoeing will reveal that for the supposedly streamlined fast-food joint, “Animal Style” is a menu variation that can be applied to any In-N-Out burger order. Uttering the words at the cashier simply results in your burger coming as a mustard-cooked beef patty together with some mixed in pickles, cheese, “spread” and grilled onions.

“I don’t think it’s that secret,” said Dupuis. She might be right, but if this is news to you, you can thank Speedy Ortiz for your newfound expertise on America’s semi-hushed fast foods.

The band’s got more than themes on the mind, though; several songs come from friends of the band, with Speedy Ortiz counting Krill, Potty Mouth, Sam Gas Can, and Chris Weisman as associates they were proud to direct some ears to.

https://i0.wp.com/farm3.staticflickr.com/2878/9825320776_51a9f41dee.jpg

Speedy Ortiz bassist Darl Ferm at Supercrawl in Hamilton, ON on Sept. 14, 2013. Photo: Tom Beedham

Others tracks like Syd Barrett’s “Octopus” land on the tracklist out of compromise.

“It was kind of suggested that we include a Pink Floyd song, but we thought that would be too obvious, and the Syd Barrett song fit with the flow of the songs a lot better,” said drummer Mike Falcone. “Instead of putting a ten-minute-long song, it fit a lot better with the sequence.”

“Syd Barrett’s cooler anyway,” said Dupuis.

Animal Style was released Aug. 12 via Carpark. Stream the whole mix below.


Animal Style tracklist

01 The Problem Solverz – “Doghouse”
02 Sam Gas Can – “Life of a Dog”
03 Sparklehorse – “Pig”
04 Deerhoof – “Kidz Are So Small”
05 Wire – “I Am the Fly”
06 Krill – “Piranha Girl”
07 Hatebeak – “Bird Bites, Dog Cries”
08 Dr. Octagon – “halfsharkalligatorhalfman”
09 Syd Barrett – “Octopus”
10 The Shaggs – “My Pal Foot Foot”
11 Chris Weisman – “Elephant In The Room”
12 Potty Mouth – “Dog Song”
13 Porches. – “Fog Dog”
14 Guided By Voices – “Chicken Blows”
15 Ween – “Fluffy”

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Ortiz @Horseshoe Tavern

Concert review: Chelsea Light Moving and Speedy Ortiz @Horseshoe Tavern | Sept. 15, 2013

Angular, avant-aggro guitar explorations take centre stage as Thurston Moore showcases new material and reimagines older songs at the Horseshoe

Thurston Moore breaking out text from John Donne for Chelsea Light Moving's reworking of the 16th-century poet's "The Ecstasy." Photo: Tom Beedham

Thurston Moore breaking out text from John Donne for Chelsea Light Moving’s reworking of the 16th-century poet’s “The Ecstasy.” Photo: Tom Beedham

“We’re the Ghetto Priests from Nova Scotia. It’s nice to be back,” quipped Thurston Moore about 25 minutes through Chelsea Light Moving’s set. Towering over the crowd from atop just the modest stage at the back of the Horseshoe, it was the first time the Sonic Youth founder had acknowledged the Toronto audience directly that night. But with a strap reading “THURSTON” cradling the forest green Jazzmaster that Fender hot-rodded out in its wearer’s name – as if appearance was the only thing fans could go on – there was no question as to who was standing before them. The guitarist’s presence is not the kind to escape recognition; even when he hung back at stage left to concentrate on assaulting his amp with a load of feedback, Moore’s situation at the Horseshoe was undeniable, especially with his new band.

Whereas Sonic Youth offered listeners a dialogical sound democracy of which Thurston Moore was just one of four loud voices, Chelsea Light Moving is a puppet (albeit a dynamic, multi-brained one) under Moore’s guitar testing hand, and the live show made that resonate with a roaring ferocity.

Chugging through a set filled with songs culled from the group’s eponymous debut, as well as new tracks “Sunday Stage,” “No Go” – apparently the “theme song” to a new board game to “be made from wood, plastic, and meat” that the band is working on “since nobody buys records anymore,” if you take Moore’s word for it – and an interpretation of 16th-century poet John Donne’s “The Ecstasy,” (full setlist below) the band’s set was heavy on noise improv, but all under the directive gaze of its most famous member. Even when guitarist Keith Wood was slashing away with picks that struck below the bridge, above the nut, and anywhere else that could render sounds from his own Jazzmaster, it was while awaiting nods and “1, 2, 3”s from Moore.

When the time came and the crowd collectively clapped for an encore, whether intentionally or not, one fan articulated their leader’s surname into a double-entendre, incessantly screaming “Moore!” (or “More!”). This continued until the icon ducked through the steps and back up to the stage to answer the supporter with, well, more Moore – and not exactly the Chelsea Light Moving kind; with CLM bassist Samara Lubelski switching to her violin (an instrument she was called to play on Moore’s Demolished Thoughts), the band’s encore performance was focused exclusively on churning out extended jams of “Staring Statues” and “Ono Soul” from their leader’s ’95 solo effort, Psychic Hearts.

Moore fans who arrived early for Speedy Ortiz (if unaware of the 2013 alt-rock breakout act) got a surprise double dose of noisy, angular guitar exploration, and one that was notably disparate to the Northampton, Mass. band’s debut LP, Major Arcana in terms of the mix, with guitarist Matt Robidoux seemingly turned up to 11 and getting as much attention as Speedy Ortiz founder and frontwoman Sadie Dupuis. Sourcing a stack of cassettes gifted to him at the venue, the guitarist found a toy to slide across his strings when he wasn’t shaking his guitar in front of an amp or plowing away at it for the noise pop outfit’s signature rhythms. After his strap failed multiple times throughout the set, Robidoux said something to Dupuis and it was time to announce the last song after just 20 minutes of set, but at least the crowd got a chance to hear Speedy Ortiz’s sludgy slacker anthem “Tiger Tank.”

Chelsea Light Moving setlist
“Groovy & Linda”
“Empires Of Time”
“Sleeping Where I Fall”
“Alighted”
“Frank O’Hara Hit”
“Sunday Stage”
“Lip”
“The Ecstasy” (John Donne)
“No Go”
“Burroughs”
Encore:
“Staring Statues” and “Ono Soul” from Thurston’s Psychic Hearts

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Concert Photos: Fucked Up, METZ, Chelsea Light Moving & more at Supercrawl in Hamilton, ON Sept. 14, 2013

Alex Edkins of METZ takes a power stance at Supercrawl in Hamilton, ON on Sept. 14, 2013. The festival also saw performances from Fucked Up, Thurston Moore's new band Chelsea Light Moving, Speedy Ortiz, and more. Photo: Tom Beedham

Alex Edkins of METZ takes a power stance at Supercrawl in Hamilton, ON on Sept. 14, 2013. The festival also saw performances from Fucked Up, Thurston Moore’s new band Chelsea Light Moving, Speedy Ortiz, and more. Photo: Tom Beedham

This September the Hamilton community celebrated its fifth year of the annual James St. North Supercrawl, estimated to bring out an attendance of over 100,000 people this year. I brought along a camera and got shots of performances from bands performing the second full day of this year’s festival, including sets from Fucked Up, METZ, Thurston Moore’s post-Sonic Youth band Chelsea Light Moving, Speedy Ortiz, The Pack AD, X Ambassadors, and Doldrums.

Click here for all of the shots.

Concert review: Savages @ Opera House in Toronto | Sept. 12, 2013

Post-punk quartet Savages perform unreleased material, feature Duke Garwood onstage at Opera House

Album artwork from 'Silence Yourself,' the debut LP from Savages. Savages performed material mostly from this release at its Sept. 12 Toronto performance, but also showcased some newer, unreleased songs.

Album artwork from ‘Silence Yourself,’ the debut LP from Savages. Savages performed material mostly from this release at its Sept. 12 Toronto performance, but also showcased some newer, unreleased songs.

While post-punk quartet Savages played a Toronto gig at the Mod Club just back in July, when the London, England band’s fall tour made a stop at the Opera House Sept. 12, it proved it was up to more than clinging to the opportunity provided by a critically lauded debut LP.

To wit, the band’s solitary full-length, Silence Yourself, accounted for the majority of the band’s set, and to no profound surprise. They opened with “I Am Here” and its My Bloody Valentine-reminiscent noise intro, followed by consistently arresting performances of chilling tracks like “City’s Full” and “Shut Up” (full setlist below).

But Savages also used the occasion as a vehicle for planting the seeds of some newer, yet-to-be released material – and with it some sonic forays the band has been pursuing.

First there was “I Need Something New,” that was led by Fay Milton beating an entrancing war pattern into her kick and tom drums while guitarist Gemma Thompson let some notes stretch out into what (with the help of a delay pedal) seemed like infinity. When singer Jenny Beth lent her voice to the mix, it was to give articulation to what came across as spoken word. Then Milton started involving her cymbals, crashing the song to its climax as Beth screamed a line that was first repeated several times, then poetically deconstructed and (in a move that was both artistically and logically clever) developed into the song’s titlesake. All along the way it was every bit as haunting as you’d expect from them.

The band also injected some rarities into the mix: “Give Me A Gun” from the I Am Here EP, and “Husbands” B-side “Flying to Berlin” – the latter introduced by singer Jenny Beth as “a song to turn you on.”

They closed the set proper with another new one: a track that Beth has called “Fuckers” at previous performances. Prior to performing the track, Beth explained the song’s central refrain was inspired by a friend’s note left at her house:

“I have a friend – a very good friend of mine. He said, ‘don’t let the fuckers get you down.’ He came to my house, he left a note, and it said, ‘don’t let the fuckers get you down.’ I have good friends.”

After the band took bows and walked offstage only to have a techie rush over to their gear and check on tuning, where in the past the band has claimed aversion to encore performances, there was little question that one was going to happen at the Opera House.

When the quartet returned – in a move that you couldn’t really say was unexpected – they brought with them show opener Duke Garwood, carrying with him the clarinet he played earlier in the night to deliver the part he provided on Silence Yourself closer “Marshal Dear” as Beth tucked into a piano.

It wasn’t the only non-new material treat the audience got that evening: if they got there early enough, fans were able to catch Beth lend her own guest talents to the swirling closer that ended Garwood’s set of guitar, clarinet, and bass noise.

Savages were announced as shortlist contenders for presitious U.K. and Ireland music award the Barlcaycard Mercury Prize on Sept. 11. Let’s hope the increased exposure that comes with the nomination leads to some more news regarding their new material in the near future.

Savages setlist
“I Am Here”
“City’s Full”
“Shut Up”
“Give Me A Gun”
“I Need Something New”
“Strife”
“Waiting For A Sign”
“Flying To Berlin”
“She Will”
“No Face”
“Hit Me”
“Husbands”
“Fuckers”
Encore: “Marshal Dear” (feat. Duke Garwood on clarinet)

Weird Canada is getting behind cassettes in a big, $50K way

Canadian indie music website to use FACTOR grant to distribute music, champion technological accessibility

Cassettes overflow a KFC bucket display atop a table for Sonic Boom’s Cassette Fair held Sept. 7. The event was held in honour of the first annual international Cassette Store Day, where Weird Canada spoke of plans to feature cassette releases in its upcoming FACTOR grant-funded distribution service. Photo: Tom Beedham

Cassettes overflow a KFC bucket display atop a table for Sonic Boom’s Cassette Fair, held Sept. 7. The event was held in honour of the first annual international Cassette Store Day, where Weird Canada spoke of plans to feature cassette releases in its upcoming FACTOR grant-funded distribution service. Photo: Tom Beedham

On Sept. 7, a hefty serving of audiocassettes filled a KFC bucket to the point of overflow atop a table in the Annex location of Toronto record supermarket Sonic Boom. Ripe for consumption and low in calories, what’s been dismissed by some as a stale format for decades, the audio cassette has seen something of a revival amongst recording artists in recent years, this year prompting an inaugural, international celebration of the medium – labeled Cassette Store Day (hence the format’s prominent situation at Sonic Boom on the Saturday).

While Sonic Boom’s locations are most revered for the breadth of music they offer consumers through vinyl media, its Annex shop spent the day housing a “Cassette Fair” at the front of its store featuring offerings from cassette-release toting labels Arachnidiscs, Artificial, Awesome Tapes From Africa, Bennifer Editions, Burger, Buzz, Daps, Feather Hat Guy, Healing Power, Heretical Objects, Hosehead, Inyrkdisk, Kinnta, Mathematic Recordings, Medusa Editions, Not Unlike, Optical Sounds, Pansy Twist, Pleasence, Reel Cod, and Telephone Explosion.

Also tabling at the event were representatives of renowned indie music website Weird Canada, a publisher about to get behind cassettes in a big, $50,000 way.

After a stressful grant application process that had Weird Canada Executive Director Marie LeBlanc Flanagan up late writing (and rewriting) a proposal to the Foundation to Assist Canadian Talent on Records (FACTOR) on Valentine’s Day earlier this year, in the spring, Weird Canada was informed it would receive a $50,000 FACTOR grant to build an online store and distribution service.

“Basically what we’re going to try to do is connect record stores with bands, with fans, with labels, and send these cassettes all over Canada,” Flanagan told Burden of Salt while taking time out from speaking with consumers and those curious about the table she was working at the fair.

But why cassettes?

“Well, I feel that we as a culture, and our generation, really desire a physical medium,” said Flanagan. Speaking on the subject at a bustling record store, it was a suggestion that preached to the choir, but it didn’t yet clarify why people should be interested in what some now call an archaic recording medium.

Flanagan went on to explain that people should look to cassettes because they open doors for artists that other physical media cannot.

“We desire something physical that we can touch and collect and keep as a symbol of our music, but it’s really hard to release physical media,” Flanagan elucidated. “It’s expensive; it’s complicated; cassettes are the cheapest, easiest, actual physical, tangible media that we can access. The accessibility of technology means a lot.”

In deed, Weird Canada founder Aaron Levin has had some personal experience dealing with pressing records to vinyl.

“I put out a record and, yeah, it’s really expensive,” said Levin, leaning in front of Flanagan to get a word in. Levin also commented that the fallout from pursuing that particular physical medium can become intrusive. “When [records] don’t sell you have like 300lbs of stock that you have to live with.”

He calls cassettes “a very viable and accessible option for people who can’t release vinyl.”

Putting its money where its mouth is, Weird Canada will even roll out some cassette releases. After recording a Wyrd Fest showcase the publication threw at Toronto’s Music Gallery, the website has been granted release permissions from the venue to sell 100 cassettes of the concert, which featured performances from Jennifer Castle and Colin Bergh covering each others’ material, Zachary Fairbrother Feedback Guitar Orchestra, and Soul Sisters Supreme. They also have a project called The Weird Canada Releases, which will give rise to some cassettes.

While some have railed against the reemergence of cassettes as signaling cultural decay favouring an inferior recording medium and consumer exploitation, pointing to how less of the information recorded in a studio can be heard from cassettes when the medium is held against other formats like vinyl, Flanagan and Levin stand by the medium and say the “audiophile” argument is pushing a moot point.

“These cassettes aren’t taking away from records that would’ve been, they’re creating room for music to emerge that wouldn’t be without the cassette,” said LeBlanc. “This is a space in between for people that can’t [afford to] press a record.”

The argument also falls victim to deflation when it is brought up that most contemporary cassette releases come packaged with download cards linking the purchaser to digital recordings of the same music.

“But people don’t just want the download card, they want the cassette,” stressed LeBlanc. “They want the art and they want to touch it.”

“I think people want things to sound good, but most importantly they want the result of their creative expression to exist in the world and to be enjoyed by people. And tapes are right now the best format through which to do this,” said Levin.

Weird Canada’s distro is set to arrive in January 2014.

Concert review: Esmerine at The Great Hall with Matana Roberts, Saltland, Jerusalem In My Heart, and Dundasa 80 (Constellation Records showcase) at The Great Hall

Montréal label presents less exposed offerings to rapt audience

Esmerine performed at Constellation Records showcase at The Great Hall with four visiting members from Turkey, who helped them record their new album, 'Dalmak,' in Istanbul. Photo: Tom Beedham

Esmerine performed at Constellation Records’ label showcase Sept. 5 at The Great Hall, bringing in tow  four visiting musicians from Turkey, who helped them record their new album, ‘Dalmak,’ in Istanbul. Photo: Tom Beedham

“If all these things don’t make sense then just listen to the singing, alright?” Esmerine collaborator and current touring member Hakan Vreskala said after explaining the lyrics to “Yavri Yavri” as an articulation of a Hebrew relation regarding a bird that takes on the burden of crying others’ tears for them so that its own heart can become calm.

The disclaimer might not have demystified much for the audience gathered at The Great Hall for the headliner of the Toronto Constellation (CST) Records showcase, but Vreskala’s closing statement did convey a sentiment that seems to have been instrumental to the accomplishments of the label’s many experimental bands: who cares about satisfying what we think we know about music or instruments – let’s see what the stuff can do!

What began as Godspeed You! Black Emperor percussionist Bruce Cawdron and Set Fire To Flames cellist Beckie Foon’s cello-marimba duo, Montréal-based Esmerine pulled into Toronto Sept. 5 eight times the size of what it began as, having recruited Turkish collaborators Baran Asik, Ali Kazim Akdağ, James Hakan Dedeoğlu, and Vreskala himself after recording their recently released album, Dalmak, in Istanbul with the musicians, also having counted Jamie Thompson (Unicorns, Islands) and Brian Sanderson as members since early this decade.

The larger stage band helped the group deliver the sounds provided by the more exotic and numbered instruments heard on the new Esmerine album (they brought out a darbuka, an erbane, and a saz, among other things you’ll have to type into Google), but it also granted Esmerine the ability to perform some of its older material – they presented “A Dog River,” “Walking Through Mist,” and “Little Streams Make Big Rivers” from 2011’s La Lechuza (full setlist at bottom of review) – as new, fuller-sounding renditions.

With their set proper clocking in at less than an hour, the band did an admirable job adopting the headlining slot formerly granted to CST’s Colin Stetson, who had been forced to drop off of the bill some weeks beforehand following the announcement of a broken finger. The crowd response that led to the band (including its Turkish contingent) returning for an encore presentation of an abbreviated, higher-personnel version of Aurora’s (2005) epic “Histories Repeating As One Thousand Hearts Mend” seemed to completely dismiss the fact that the show’s original draw had dropped off of the bill; the crowd at The Great Hall was recognizably thinner in comparison to that in attendance at Stetson’s May concert at the same venue, but all in company appeared to arrive with a genuine interest in exploring more of the label’s diverse roster of experimental musicians – ambassadors the original headliner’s absence arguably gave the label the better opportunity to showcase.

While the acts onstage at the CST showcase might have been lesser known, with more formal ambassador and CST label founder Ian Ilavsky (Thee Silver Mt. Zion) on hand, the night didn’t pass without audiences getting their introductions: when he wasn’t manning the merch table displaying albums from CST bands present and absent or advising fans on their purchases, Ilavsky was before the crowd giving introductions to the evening’s performers – which included Chicago-born and New York City-based sound experimentalist Matana Roberts, Beckie Foon’s solo project Saltland, and Jerusalem In My Heart – or airing thanks to all involved, illustrating that CST’s resourcefulness goes well beyond that of its rule-breaking musicians.

Matana Roberts used her time on the stage to preview what Ilavsky later confirmed as new material the artist has been preparing for inclusion on the follow-up to 2011’s Gens de couleur libres, the first chapter of her multi-media conceptual composition and narration project, COIN COIN. Spanning at least half an hour, the single track saw Roberts channeling jazz and beat poetry to deliver sourced fragments of American ideological state apparatuses like “The Star-Spangled Banner,” “My Country ’Tis of Thee,” the Pledge of Allegiance, and folk songs like “This Land Is Your Land,” juxtaposing them amongst scattered, gnashing renderings of sound bites from antebellum slave auctions – a context that certainly engages COIN COIN Chapter One’s commerce and consumption foci.

Playing in darkness as projections rolled behind her, Matana Roberts previewed work from the next chapter of her multi-media conceptual project 'COIN COIN' at The Great Hall as part of the Constellation Records showcase. Photo: Tom Beedham

Playing in darkness as projections rolled behind her, Matana Roberts previewed work from the next chapter of her multi-media conceptual project ‘COIN COIN’ at The Great Hall on Sept. 5 as part of Constellation Records’ label showcase. Photo: Tom Beedham

All throughout Roberts’s new number were her signature gloomy saxophone riffs, looped, layered, distorted, and eventually compressed into a doomy, overwhelming groan.  The deconstruction of her country’s narratives, memories, and self-perceptions made for an unforgiving post-America pastiche that was made all the more uncomfortable through ad nauseam repetitions and a time code that echoed the long histories of the piece’s disgraceful subject matter.

After the crowd responded to Roberts’s time travelling maxim mélange with a sea of applause, she gleefully asked the crowd, “Can I take you home?”

In a sense, she already had.

Prior to her own set, Roberts performed a workshop with Esmerine’s Beckie Foon and Jamie Thompson, which served as a segue after Foon’s own (brief) solo set as Saltland (which featured a cello-only rendition of Esmerine’s “Quelques mots pleins d’ombre” from Aurora). For the rest of the night, the live debut of Sandro Perri and Craig Dunsmuir’s DJ project Dundasa 80 was tasked with filling the void between stage sets, occupying a mixing booth at the front of the venue.

Fans that arrived early were forced to wait a little longer for their music as the night got underway about half an hour behind schedule, but they were soon treated to an enchanting performance from Jerusalem In My Heart.

Radwan Ghazi Moumneh sings while tweaking delay speeds as Malena Szlam Salazar uses three 16mm projectors to send visuals onto screens behind him on the stage. Photo: Tom Beedham

Radwan Ghazi Moumneh sings while tweaking delay speeds as Malena Szlam Salazar uses three 16mm projectors to send visuals onto screens behind him on the stage Sept. 5 at The Great Hall for Constellation Records’ label showcase. Photo: Tom Beedham

A contemporary Arab multi-media project, JIMH opened the night with Lebanese national and experimental musician Radwan Ghazi Moumneh onstage and Chilean visual artist and filmmaker Malena Szlam Salazar jockeying a series of 16mm projectors from the crowd, looping strips of film featuring images of flickering flames, moons crossing across the night sky, or deer running through a brush as Moumneh used dual microphones to provide and loop vocals, also playing a saz and even performing vocals for an entire song through a talk box. It had the audience so spellbound it seemed to resist clapping between some songs for fear it might interrupt the performance.

Forget the caricature of the smartphone generation texting away as it waits for its headliner. Here, the audience was entirely present.

Clocking in around three hours, the Constellation Records showcase was a night that made for a transcendent and entirely immersive experience that demonstrated how it is still possible to stray far from the beaten path in pursuit of art and find an institution that will throw its weight behind you, at least in the arms of a certain Montréal facility. Other labels could learn from Constellation.

Esmerine Setlist:
“A Dog River”
“Walking Through Mist”/”Little Streams Make Big Rivers” medley
“Barn Board Fire”
“Translator’s Clos I”
“Translator’s Clos II”
“Lost River Blues I”
“Lost River Blues II”
“Yavri Yavri”

Encore:
“Histories Repeating As One Thousand Hearts Mend”

Related:
Colin Stetson, Sarah Neufeld, Richard Reed Parry workshop material with Sonic Youth’s Lee Ranaldo and Steve Shelley
Review: Colin Stetson at Hillside Festival
Review: Sarah Neufeld at Hillside Festival

Sex, drugs, and Dwarves

Bay Area shock rockers The Dwarves talk about their 30-year habits

Album artwork from The Dwarves's 1997 LP 'The Dwarves Are Young and Good Looking,' set to be reissued by Recess Records this September as 'The Dwarves Are Younger and Even Better Looking.' The Dwarves are performing material from the album, as well as others from its catalogue and yet-to-be-recorded material at stops along its current North American tour, which stops at Toronto's Horseshoe Tavern tonight.

Album artwork from The Dwarves’s 1997 LP ‘The Dwarves Are Young and Good Looking,’ set to be reissued by Recess Records this September as ‘The Dwarves Are Younger and Even Better Looking.’ The Dwarves are performing material from the album, as well as others from its catalogue and yet-to-be-recorded material at stops along its current North American tour, which stops at Toronto’s Horseshoe Tavern tonight.

With a back catalogue consisting of 14 albums, two DVDs, a number of both EPs and seven-inch records, San Francisco Bay Area punks The Dwarves exhibit a career that is anything but dwarfish. And over thirty years as a band, the group has racked up quite some habits. They’re currently in the middle of quenching one of their less illicit ones.

Touring across Canada and the United States’s Midwest and Northeastern states, The Dwarves make a stop at Toronto’s Legendary Horseshoe Tavern tonight, but fans that only know the mythology around the Dwarves shouldn’t let those impressions inform their decisions to catch the band on its current tour, Dwarves vocalist Paul Cafaro (a.k.a. Blag Dahlia) says.

In their salad days, onstage antics involving self-mutilation and live sex acts often turned Dwarves sets into abbreviated 15-minute performances, earning the band enemies among their earlier audiences and concert promoters. But as his band’s van rolled into Lincoln en route to a Chicago, Ill. gig, Cafaro – who has been one of The Dwarves’s two solely consistent members since its formation – explained over the phone Aug. 23 that fans who come out to Dwarves concerts these days will get more show for their buck.

“It’s generally like 45 minutes – the usual kind of thing,” Cafaro said.

Without any new material recorded since their 2011 10-inch record Fake ID, Bitch, the band is using its more lengthy sets to showcase material spanning its entire career.

“There’s songs from everything – from the Blood, Guts, & Pussy stuff and Sugarfix, [The Dwarves] Come Clean… then stuff from the last couple of records – [The Dwarves] Must Die, [The Dwarves Are] Born Again, even some brand new stuff – so new it hasn’t even been named yet,” said Cafaro.

The singer didn’t divulge much about the new material, but framed it and its contribution to the band’s sizeable (and ever-growing) discography as something that displays the band’s virtue when held up in comparison to those of other bands.

“Most bands suck. They make one good record and then they just flog it to death after that,” said Cafaro. “The Dwarves is just an embarrassment of amazing records. 30 years now. Mayhem.”

Also in celebration of The Dwarves’s career, the band recently announced a Recess Records reissue of its 1997 Epitaph LP The Dwarves Are Young and Good Looking, from which fans can also expect to hear songs at the band’s upcoming shows. Rebranded as The Dwarves Are Younger and Even Better Looking, Cafaro explained the Recess reissue will come complete with 40 minutes – or 22 tracks – of bonus material, all recorded during the “same time period” as the album proper:

Ten of them are from the solo EP that I did and the outtakes from that, which came right before Young and Good Looking, and then a bunch of it is a radio show that was never released. It’s The Dwarves live on the radio, Stanford. And then there’s like b-sides and stuff from the Young and Good Looking period.

Marking the band’s exit from Seattle, Wash. independent record label Sub Pop following a hoax the band propagated claiming the band’s guitarist (and only other consistent member) HeWhoCannotBeNamed (a.k.a. Pete Vietnamcheque) had been stabbed to death in a Philadelphia, Penn. bar fight, the original Young and Good Looking served as somewhat of a vehicle for a kiss-off to The Dwarves’s former label, containing a “modified” version of Sub Pop’s press release detailing the band’s departure in the liner notes. No word on whether that will also be collected in the reissue, but if Cafaro’s dismissal of even the mention of the group’s former label is any indication, don’t count on it:

I don’t get the fascination with those guys. No one’s cared about them since the ’90s. They’ve got nothing to do with me or anything. So I don’t know about them. Whatever they do is what they do. I have this band called The Dwarves. Not affiliated with whoever those guys are or whatever they’re doing.

The group’s website does promise the collection will come with “more classic photos of the naked skater chicks,” though: images consistent with the cover art for albums like Blood, Guts, & Pussy, The Dwarves Must Die, and The Dwarves Are Young And Good Looking itself, which all feature naked women covered in blood, wearing ski masks, or surrounding a dwarf pinned to a cross.

Such artwork has been known to bring The Dwarves condemnation from feminists and other critics in the past, but when asked about such controversy, Cafaro didn’t address how the band has been identified as exploitive and objectifying in its promotion of its material, but instead insisted, “these are classic shots,” and identified himself and his band as sex-positive, feminist crusaders, going on to discuss the reflections his artwork has received as “slut-shaming” type arguments that fail to see the album covers as glorifications of the female form.

“I consider myself to be a feminist, you know?” Cafaro said. “And I think one of the best things about femininity is nudity, so you know, we’re a great feminist band with all our naked album covers.”

“Lots of wonderful naked women. Lots of drug abuse and sex from The Dwarves. That’s what we’re about,” said Cafaro. “We’re very socially conscious and we’re on dope.”

Ah, yes. Dope.

That’s another thing The Dwarves have a thing for, and Cafaro says it’s something that excites him for the band’s Toronto visit.

“There’s nothing like Toronto drugs,” Cafaro meditated. “By the time cocaine gets to Toronto it’s been stepped on many, many times.”

Specifically Cafaro favours the idea of being in the same town as embattled Mayor Rob Ford, who admitted today that he has “smoked a lot of” marijuana and whom news media such as the Toronto Star alleged smoked crack earlier in the year.

“Don’t you guys have that mayor that smokes crack? That excites me. The idea of going to Toronto and smoking crack with a public official,” Cafaro said. “If he wants to come to the show, we’ll get him in free, and if he brings a prostitute, she can get in half price.”

The Dwarves play The Legendary Horseshoe Tavern in Toronto tonight with The Queers.

Yamantaka // Sonic Titan announce new album, stream new song

Experimental Canadian art collective/traveling rock band Yamantaka // Sonic Titan reveal tracklisting, album artwork

Artwork from Yamantaka // Sonic Titan's

Artwork from Yamantaka // Sonic Titan’s “UZU” due Oct. 29 via Paper Bag and suicide Squeeze.

As audiences might have gleaned from their Hillside performance, Canadian “Noh—wave” art collective/traveling rock band Yamantaka // Sonic Titan are recording new material and are set to release a new full-length, UZU, due Oct. 29 via Paper Bag in Canada and Suicide Squeeze in the United States.

Pitchfork broke the news to the public Aug. 8 along with the album’s artwork and its tracklisting. In addition to nine new releases including “One,” available for streaming above, the album will include the Adult Swim Singles Program 2012-retained “Lamia,” available for free download from Adult Swim. Full tracklisting (as provided by Pitchfork) below.

UZU:
01 “Atalanta”
02 “Whalesong”
03 “Lamia”
04 “Windflower”
05 “Hall of Mirrors”
06 “Seasickness pt1”
07 “Seasickness pt2”
08 “Bring Me The Hand of Bloody Benzaiten”
09 “One”
10 “Saturn’s Return”

Related:
Hillside review: Yamantaka // Sonic Titan perform new material
Yamantaka // Sonic Titan’s Alaska B. and Ruby Kato Attwood talk “cerebral cougars,” video games
Concert review: Yamantaka // Sonic Titan at Guelph’s eBar Jan. 17, 2013

Hillside reviews: Supersonic (Lee Ranaldo and The Dust, Colin Stetson, Richard Reed Parry, Sarah Neufeld +guests) at Guelph Lake Island Stage – July 28, 2013

Members of Sonic Youth, Arcade Fire play improvised set featuring reimagination of The Velvet Underground and Nico’s “All Tomorrow’s Parties”

Lee Ranaldo and The Dust performed a collaborative workshop with Arcade Fire/Bell Orchestre members Colin Stetson, Sarah Neufeld, and Richard Reed Parry at Hillside Festival in Guelph, Ont. on July 28. Photo: Tom Beedham

Lee Ranaldo and The Dust performed a collaborative workshop with Arcade Fire/Bell Orchestre members Colin Stetson, Sarah Neufeld, and Richard Reed Parry at Hillside Festival in Guelph, Ont. on July 28. Photo: Tom Beedham

With a lineup consisting of Sonic Youth founder/guitarist Lee Ranaldo and his new band The Dust (which includes fellow Sonic Youth member and drummer Steve Shelley), Arcade Fire and Bell Orchestre members Sarah Neufeld, Richard Reed Parry, and Colin Stetson (all of whom performed their own sets previously that day at Hillside Festival), listeners knew they were in for something special when they assembled under the tent at Island Stage for the closing performance of Hillside’s 30th anniversary July 28. But when, before the interim super group drove into its collaboration, Parry offered a disclaimer admitting, “We’re making this up as we go along,” fans were guaranteed a truly idiosyncratic presentation from some of the best classically and alternatively informed musicians in the world.

If a little highbrow, the workshop experiment’s marquee prestige was tested by its allegedly extemporaneous coming together; transporting its participants from the comparatively insular settings of their typical creative unwindings to a public environment, the bands and their special guests showcased their true grit (as if anyone was suspicious) with a handful of introspective drone numbers.

As Steve Shelley hammered out a meditative bed track and Neufeld and Stetson tapped into their frenetic-to-tranquil-shifting fiddle work and dirgeful sax drones (respectively), providing a source of friction for the rest of the group to massage, Ranaldo dug into his seemingly bottomless bag of tricks to display some of the experimental techniques featured minimally (if at all) on his newer solo material and at his earlier Main Stage performance with The Dust. He tested one of his Fender Jazzmasters’ physical endurance with some unrestrained neck bending, took the body with both hands and shook out some choppy feedback surfing, drew and peppered a fiddle bow and timpani mallets across the strings, and even applied iPhone playback to the pickups to render feedback.

Leaving the acoustic six-string he stuck to throughout his solo set earlier in the day, Parry, à la Bell Orchestre, manned a double bass for the entirety of the collaborative set, also putting the percussion skills he’s sourced for in Arcade Fire and Little Scream to use by drumming on the instrument’s sides. The Dust’s Tim Luntzel aided him in providing the low end.

(review continues after video)

Laurel Sprengelmeyer (Little Scream) – a collaborator of Parry’s and his solo act’s keyboardist for the day – came onstage to perform Nico’s vocals on a slow burning, 11-minute reimagination of The Velvet Underground’s “All Tomorrow’s Parties.” (See video above.) Mostly instrumental, it was an easy set highlight that doubled as a nod to The National-curated All Tomorrow’s Parties performance Parry gave in December of last year. Sprengelmeyer also performed vocals for the ensemble’s  interpretation of Mary Margaret O’Hara’s “When You Know Why You’re Happy,” which she and Parry recorded in 2012 for the first volume of Have Not Been the Same: The Can-Rock Renaissance 1985-1995’s companion compilation, Too Cool to Live, Too Smart to Die.

Halfway through the Hillside performance, Ranaldo and The Dust left the stage while Stefan Schneider (The Luyas) stepped up to take Shelley’s spot at the kit for what Neufeld announced as “a post-Bell Orchestre throw down.”

About ten minutes after having left the stage, Ranaldo and co. rejoined the group to transition into a reworking of the performer’s “Hammer Blows” that would close out the evening  and with it, the 30th anniversary of Hillside. As a festival that’s built a reputation on providing the one-of-a-kind performer-coupling workshops it has hosted over the years, ending things with a little bit of the same magic seemed the only appropriate way to do things.

Arcade Fire’s version of Peter Gabriel’s “Games Without Frontiers” is set to appear on a compilation of material covering the singer’s work, And I’ll Scratch Yours, which will also feature a cover of “Solsbury Hill” by Velvet Underground frontman Lou Reed. The record is the answer to Scratch My Back, an album recorded by Gabriel as a collection of songs by other performers, including Arcade Fire’s “My Body Is A Cage” and Lou Reed’s “The Power Of The Heart.” And I’ll Scratch Yours is scheduled for release Sept. 23 via Real World.

Both Lee Ranaldo and The Dust and Arcade Fire have new albums of original material forthcoming. Lee Ranaldo and The Dust are set to release their first album under that official title sometime in September this year. So far untitled, the album will arrive via Matador Records. Also as yet untitled, Arcade Fire will release an  LP  Oct. 29 via Mercury Records.

Related posts:
Hillside reviews: Colin Stetson at Island Stage – July 28, 2013
Hillside reviews: Richard Reed Parry at Island Stage – July 28, 2013
Hillside reviews: Sarah Neufeld at Guelph Lake Island Stage – July 28, 2013