Friday, 8 July 2016

Steel Panther : straight up dysfunction

Get on the bus! Steel Panther make it on the road

By Christine Leonard
8 July 2016

It’s a long way to the top if you want to rock and roll, but it’s only a short trip to the back of the tour bus if you want to record a new album. That is if you’re the lead singer for the internationally celebrated glam metal-comedy band Steel Panther. Bonded in 2000 under the moniker Metal Shop (later changed to Metal Skool and eventually Steel Panther in 2008) vocalist Michael Starr, guitarist Satchel, bassist Lexxi Foxx and drummer Stix Zadinia have discovered the best way to squeeze recording sessions into their busy tour schedule is to take the studio with them on the road.

“Right now we’re working on a brand new full-length record,” says Starr. “We’re going to be recording a lot of the vocals live on the tour during the rest of the year. If you record in the hallway where the bunks are and you put a lot of heavier girls in there it gets a real warm, thick sound. So, that’s a really good way to record a ballad. If we’re doing a full-out ‘Pussy Whipped’ or ‘Party Like Tomorrow is the End of the World’ we’ll go into the back-lounge where’s there’s a lot of mirrors to get a harder sound.”

Despite the tight quarters, fleshing out their latest vision with plenty of sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll is just business as usual for the L.A.-based entertainers. Having spent the past sweet 16 years traveling the globe and performing live alongside Def Leppard, Mötley Crüe, Slipknot and Guns N’ Roses, Steel Panther has enjoyed enormous success, particularly in Australia and Canada where they’re keeping the spirit of ‘80s hair metal alive and kicking.
“Canadian people love metal… still and so do Australians, they miss it. Canada and Australia embraced Steel Panther right out of the gate; it’s been fantastic for us,” he says. “Is heavy metal aging well? Probably not. But does it matter? No. Shit, I’m a sabretooth, for Christ’s sake! But think about this, if you look at any guy that you went to high school with that’s 53 – do you think they look like Axl Rose right now? Not a chance. He looks fantastic! His singin’ is amazing! You know what the biggest offender is for weight-gain in rockers? Lack of cocaine and too much beer. I don’t do any cocaine before a show; I wait for the guitar solo.”
As sagacious as he is salacious, Starr knows exactly when to put the pedal to the metal and when to ease off the throttle whether he’s romancing groupies, eating candy, or partying all night long. It takes a certain amount of finesse and a strong constitution. Mandatory traits if you’re going make a living pumping out Sunset Strip satire albums like Feel the Steel (Universal, 2009), Balls Out (Universal, 2011) and All You Can Eat (Universal 2014).
“If somebody doesn’t like Steel Panther because of our lyrical content, or the way we look, or the fact that we’re bringing glory to heavy metal from the ‘80s they’re not going to like us no matter how good we are. There’s just no way around it. Kinda like if you get together with a girl and you know it’s not gonna go right. You just move on and go to the next girl. If you have a sense of humour, don’t’ take yourself super serious, and you like to have fun, and you like to party – we’re your band!”
Steel Panther perform at The Ranch Roadhouse in Edmonton on July 7th and at the Deerfoot Inn & Casino in Calgary on July 8th and 9th.  

Saturday, 25 June 2016

Sled Island 2016 Recap

Sled Island 2016 Festival Recap

22-25 June 2016

By Christine Leonard

Sled Island 2016 Day One Recap

June 22, 2016

HexRay, N3K, Blü Shorts, Technical Kidman, Physical Copies, Mitchmatic, ESG – #1 Legion

Once the all-ages crowd at John Dutton Theatre (see below) had turned into pumpkins, we sauntered over to the #1 Legion to lay eyes on HexRay. The sprawling beerhall was transformed into Calgary’s biggest bedroom as the dreamy denim-and-flannel trio projected their awkward poetics and petulant drum rolls at a steady, unhurried pace. Apple-pie sweet vocal harmonies and intimate country-folk interludes progressing towards an eight-minute-long boogie-fied ballad that evoked visions of undulating amber waves of grain and malt liquor. (CL)

The band that closed-out the Republik following the final day pig roast of Sled 2015, fabu-drone outfit Technical Kidman of Montreal always provides a breath of fresh air. Heavy on the bass, the dueling ultrasonic synths soon has the crowd enthralled. Clashing with convention, the threesome poured forth an electrifying audio smoke-show fit to give you a serious case of the vapours. Pulling angular, if not dispassionate, creations from a cold and unforgiving gridlock of electronic, ambient, dance, and noize, Technical Kidman ensnared the masses with an opaque opiate hum of cycling heartbeats and twisted tom-toms. (CL)

Edmontonian weird-boys, Physical Copies, proved themselves to be genuine replicas of some of the most original artists in the annals of modern music. A twonky, garage-raised, Devo sleeper-cell, with a penchant for laser blasts and neon pulses, Physical Copies is what happens when members of Shout Out Out Out Out sit too close to the screen (in a house where the television’s always on). Add the melodic accompaniment, and on-point jazzercising, of to-die-for guest vocalist Marlaena Moore and you have the makings of an all-star ‘80s club that can go straight on till breakfast. (CL)

A-Bomb, Chron Goblin – John Dutton Theatre (Central Library)

John Dutton’s legacy remains YYC’s best-kept secret, at least when it comes to gaining after-hours entry to his namesake Theatre; housed within the Central Library. Please note for future shows that this venue is best accessed via the +15 stairwell located on the west side of the Library. An early-evening, all-ages friendly gig providing the perfect way for newcomers to ease into the whole Sled experience. Ramping up the affirmative action, too high for school runaways, A-Bomb used their outdoor voices to deliver a fittingly gritty, but impactful set to an adoring audience.

Next up, veterans Chron Goblin, freshly returned from a tour through Europe, took to the stage. The band’s guitarist Darty declared that A-Bomb “just shreds,” before elucidating that Chron Goblin’s core audience is largely comprised of “45-year-old guys with tattoos.” Proving that age ain’t nothing but a number, Chron Goblin’s second all-ages show ever struck a chord with young upstarts who threw out requests for oldies like “Come Undone,” while attempting to stage-dive to ribald cuts from the band’s latest album, Backwater. The movie theatre-like interior of the Dutton added a surreal touch to watching the strapping rock quartet; but certainly, the next best aspect of partying down in the library was being in the mossssshhhhh pit. (CL)



Sled Island 2016 Day Two Recap

June 23, 2016

Blü Shorts, The Avulsions, Shearing Pinx, Burro, Empty Heads, Crosss, The Zorgs – Palomino

It was an occasion for short shorts and azure lips, and anything but hypothermic. Thursday evening at The Palomino Smokehouse. The vitriolic thrum and strum of Blü Shorts kick-started attendees with staggered progressions and concentrated bursts of cobalt energy. Driven into the psych-rock wilderness like devil-dogs pursued by a big orange fender on a bender, their hiccup-ping coyote yelps and proto-jazz-punk drumming (worthy of Sled 2015 guests The Ex) wrung a collective sigh of “OMG!” from the devoted upon completion.

The Avulsions of Saskatoon, SK lived up to their deadly reputation by answering the age-old question regarding for whom the bell tolls. Cloaking the above-grade revelries in a gothic veil, the trio radiated ancient dirges reminiscent of Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D minor, with lyrics furnished in the form of sobering epithets. The atmospheric barrage of dark drama and unquiet insistence had a roomful of willing converts lingering long in The Avulsions ominous shadow.
Heavy on the bangs, Vancouver, BC’s Shearing Pinx launched a sensory attack with a zig-zagging ethos that might have benefitted poor Rickon Stark. Shedding any stage-shyness around the 20-minute mark, their ear-popping plunges and hairpin turns signaled that each song was going to be a race to an abrupt finish. A garage band that’s just ballsy enough to drag Dad’s favourite lounger into their “carriage house,” Shearing Pinx’s brazen charms anesthetized the basement dancefloor into tangoing with danger incarnate.
*Thanks to The Palomino staff for always slinging pints of ice water with their customary smiles. And kudos to CJSW for those handy earplug vending machines, a real lifesaver!
Continuing the underground rodeo, the cryptic rumination of Calgary’s Burro amped-up the psychic interference fields; filling every inch of available airspace with the rising tide of their cosmic swell. Eyes were closed and minds blown open as Burro leaned into the solar winds, seamlessly dovetailing one marauding motion into the next.
A shaggy, but firm, nod of approval to Empty Heads, who extended an unexpected pleasure that brought the audience schooling to the surface; aka upstairs at The Palomino Smokehouse. The modest hulk of a lead singer's voice was perfectly attuned to the rolling guitars, yet demanded to be drowned in a crushing surf of pyroclastic Mudhoney.
Downstairs, the long slide into Dante’s inferno continued. There was no escaping the fearful symmetry of Montreal’s Crosss, who’s anemia-inducing demon-metal commanded full attention. Sinister drills and echoing vocals had the crowd locked in Crosss’s be-hooded thrall as the doomy distillations rained down like a Sabbath-esque summer thunderstorm straight-outta Witch Mountain.
While reposed at the LRT train platform directly across from the venue, the petulant punk-rawk of The Zorgs could be heard battering the bricks and mortar of Stephen’s Avenue. The fun-lovin’ Winnipegger’s sardonic war-cry blasted into a night sky illuminated by a rainbow-bathed Calgary Tower. “How many fucks do I give?” Well, apparently one. I have to be at work on Friday morning. (CL)

Sled Island 2016 Day Three Recap

June 24, 2016

Chieftain, Anion, Witchstone, Advances – Bamboo

Calgary’s resident axe-swingers Chieftain brought the PIB (people in black) out of the woodwork and in from the rain on Friday afternoon. The sky’s stormy glow was simulating a fittingly nocturnal mood for a showcase presented by ‘Stoner Rock Guy’ at the Bamboo.
Those lucky enough to cut off work early were eager to soak up their massive metal surges as Chieftain grabbed on to heap-big riffs and proceeded to gnaw them like a dog with a bone. Their devastating performance definitely established an uber-heavy tone and decibel level for a session that leaned more towards black hash blade-hoots than blueberry rolling papers.
Their avuncular wet coast relations, Vancouver, BC’s Anion revived a rather sodden crowd with their Panzer tan subtlety and careening onslaughts. The lead-singer worked the annoyingly-congested boxcar of a floor amidst hard scrambles and lush, nigh-organic volleys, facing into the roaring tempest of his own making.
Calgarian chrysalis, Witchstone put on an impressive display of skills and artistic sensibility; who can blame them for strutting the fact that they’ve undergone more growth in a six-month period than most bands in their field-of-vision. Interweaving an amalgam of genres into their customary acid-metal architecture, Witchstone teased out melodic and riff-propelled elements with creepy tentacles of bilious acrimony. The finishing blow, a track from their latest album, plainly translated as: “You don’t know me. But you will!” (CL)

War Baby, Numenorean, Shooting Guns, SubRosa – Palomino

Have you ever fantasized about being a member of the Fellowship of the Ring? Numenorean has your bindle packed! Honouring the Old Gods with their smooth yet many-textured soundscapes, each song entails an epic journey through perilous peaks and horrific chasms. Their impressive lupine shrieks and lumbering plotlines left the mesmerized and admiring audience in a cold sweat.
Hauling axel from Saskatoon, SK, the summer’s favourite road trip soundtrack band, Shooting Guns screeched into town in a puff of smoke and minus one keyboardist, Toby, who got “hung-up in Chicago.” Losing the high-end of their string-heavy ensemble resulted in a flatter-than-usual sound for the already plateau-sighted highwaymen. Their intuitive biorhythms still scratched that stoner rock itch, pulling off a straight-forward and easily accessible set that ranged from low-fi CB-jamming frequencies to feistier headnodders. It should be interesting to see what they sound like at the Upstairs at the #1 Legion on Saturday night, once their accompanists and his magic-fingers get to town!
Rounding out the rain-dampened evening’s entertainment, a much-anticipated performance by Utah’s graceful doomsters SubRosa warmed the room like a blazing hearth. The sizeable and visually stunning orchestra amicably squeezed onto the stage with just enough elbow room remaining for their potent twin violinists to unleash a Pandora’s Box of gothic symphonics. Remember those friends who had to go straight to music lessons after school? Well, rejoice in the knowledge that SubRosa’s evocative neo-classical take on heavy metal is but one possible outcome of gaining a formal musical education that their parents didn’t anticipate! (CL) 

Sled Island 2016 Day Four Recap

June 25, 2016


Shooting Guns, Chieftain, Wilt, Numenorean, Deafheaven – #1 Legion

Once again reunited with their keyboardist, Toby, who arrived mid-festival, Shooting Guns almost sounded like a completely different band on Saturday night. The heat and the humidity of the second-floor beer hall, giving off a wafting welcome akin to entering a Turkish bathhouse, did nothing to cool the ardor of the sprawling stoner-rock ensemble. Muscling through wide-shouldered grooves and melodies that unfurl like freshly-laid two-lane blacktop, the extended Shooting Guns soon reaffirmed they were the same boogiemen who raised hackles, and PBR tallboys, when they unleashed the beast within for the soundtrack to the movie Wolfcop(CL)

The Weir – Bamboo
Have you ever wanted an excuse to pull a plastic bag over your friend’s head? What better occasion than a mad dash between raindrops? A roomful of spongy hoodies fogged up the interior of Bamboo conjuring an appropriately winterish atmosphere for The Weir to rest the slow-hand of their weighty message upon the heads of the all-too familiars. Their heaving black mass, incredibly dense and anything but dumb, went down like a pint of Guinness. A fitting gateway into the second half of the ‘Stoner Rock Guy Presents” showcase, which had hangover-cure seekers gathered to bask in the healing rays of The Switching Yard. One of the busiest musicians at Sled Island, The Switching Yard’s ambitious guitarist Chris Laramee also performed at this year’s festival with his bands Shooting Guns and Radiation Flowers (who had remarkably appeared at Olympic Plaza early that same afternoon)! Seeing any one of these Saskatchewan desert-rock entities is the mollifying equivalent of putting the ol’ motorhome on cruise control and watching the endless wheat fields fly by. (CL)

Dream Whip, Radiation Flowers, Moon King, Speedy Ortiz, SUUNS, Land of Talk, Built To Spill, Guided By Voices – Olympic Plaza

Scattered sunshowers did little to soften the resolve of the crowd or the stiff peaks of Calgary-based quartet Dream Whip on Saturday afternoon for a downtown daylight debutante ball to write home about. Cautiously optimistic, their nostalgic cocktail dress-chic was more couture than Coachella. The puffy clouds above were no match for a bomp-less early ‘60s sound coyly wrapped in a fuzz-toned angora sweater.
A highlight of the Olympic Plaza event is the opportunity to flip through “the big book of Sled posters” at the merch table; a rare chance to get your hands on some of the numbered prints from previous years, including artwork representing the likes of Lightning Bolt, King Tuff, Torche and more, all for a mere $30. (CL)

Jay Arner, BRASS, Chron Goblin, Bell Witch, Valient Thorr – Palomino

The show-stopping and jaw-dropping antics of Vancouver, BC’s BRASS had perambulators stuck in their tracks as they willfully transformed the upper-floor of The Palomino Smokehouse into a penthouse punk-art party. The walls wept Andy Warhol cream-of-tomato soup as BRASS’s big strings and skins whipped up trouble and brought the punk foam steaming to the surface. Blazing with all-caps fury, each headstrong missive was delivered like a saucy knuckle sandwich, which just happened to pair perfectly with ibuprofen, earplugs, and cold draught.
Going hungry is never an issue at The Palomino, but Calgary’s thirst for “Backwater” continued to be an issue. One of the more crowded basement shows of the week, Chron Goblin’s homecoming performance left no doubt regarding the quality of Calgary psych-metal they were dispensing while recently on tour in Europe. Well-equipped to shoot whiskey while rendering their anthemic psych-metal, the foursome had the other musicians in the room perking up their ears in appreciation of their challenging choices and powerfully gritty vocals.
Speaking of witch… Seattle’s Bell Witch opened a portal to deep listening on Saturday night. The expansive dark matter of their loathsome tolls and overarching themes flowed forth in a monosyllabic blast. Growling eloquence may sound like a contradiction in terms, but the wrathful drone tones and banshee shrieks emanating from the drum kit paint a scene that would give Francis Bacon nightmares. The curse interfered at least once, causing technical havoc that required a “one moment please” break early into their performance. Resurrected, Bell Witch redoubled their efforts to spin a web of suspense-filled moments.
“Is this the last show of the festival? And, we’re the last band playing here tonight? Well then, you’d better get your fuckin’ money’s worth!” And, with that, Valient Thorr launched into one of the most entertaining performances of the entire festival. Stripped to the waist, save for a ginger-flocked hair shirt, the wily lead-singer, Valient Himself, brought Chapel Hill, NC’s hot and heavy Southern Rock roadshow to Cowtown in earnest. Internationally infamous and self-proclaimed legends of the world, the multicultural outfit embraced their immortalized audience in a sweaty bearhug of righteous rhythms, metal-core meltdowns and Bad Brains-esque breakaways. Was the ceiling getting lower, or were we all levitating on a wave of hardcore happiness? Either way, it was good Sledding. (CL)


Wednesday, 22 June 2016

SubRosa : More Constant than the Gods

SubRosa: Silver thorns and sirens of the deep

By Christine Leonard
22 June 2016

 Draw the beeswax from your ears and unlash yourself from the mast, there’s no reason to dread the siren song of Salt Lake City’s SubRosa. Painting melancholy portraits with her banshee vocals and enthralling guitar vortexes, Rebecca Vernon stretches a skin of sludge, doom and stoner rock over a gothic post-metal skeleton. The powerful undercurrents generated by twin electric violins, wielded by Sarah Pendleton and Kim Pack, lend a supernatural bent to SubRosa’s epics, which rarely dip below the 10-minute threshold. All the while, the inescapable gravity of bassist Levi Hanna and drummer Andy Patterson bring the atmospheric ablutions back to a terrestrial fulcrum.
“I feel like it’s really adventurous to have a longer bigger canvas to work with and to have a series of movements that tell a story and take people on a journey, rather than just reaching a destination,” Vernon says. “It’s been exciting to build those stories and anticipate how we’re going to make people feel.”
Thanks to appearances with the likes of Kyuss, Red Fang, Deafheaven, and Cult of Luna, SubRosa has established itself as a force to be reckoned with. Two previous releases, No Help for the Mighty (2011) and More Constant Than the Gods (2013), along with their earlier LPs and EP, have hit home with a growing North American and European fan base. While readily admitting that performing in the middle of the day is one of her worst fears, festival-veteran Vernon has no reservations about shedding a little moonlight on SubRosa’s forthcoming compositions.
“The title is For This We Fought the Battle of Ages, and the release date is August 26th. There’s a lot of literature that influenced the new album, but the core and the heart of it is [the novel] We. It’s an amazing old, sci-fi, dystopian novel written in the 1920s by a Soviet dissident named Yevgeny Zamyatina. He was in exile most of his life because of his criticism against Communism and the collective way of thinking. In a nutshell, We is an argument for individual happiness over collective happiness.”
Armoured in the romantic trappings of myth and fantasy, SubRosa’s sprawling, lyrical symphonies do battle with the emotional and psychological demons by holding a mirror up to the darkness within.
“I actually consider myself to be a positive person, but one who’s keenly aware of the vicissitudes of life,” Vernon explains. “Our songs deal with social and political issues and modern problems, like racism and warfare, and I feel compelled to sing about this deep sorrow and feeling of universal suffering in cosmic and poetic ways. I guess we’re trying to look up in the heavens, high up in the stratosphere like a bird’s-eye view, and trying to sing about it almost like the Greek chorus in an opera watching the tragedy unfold on stage and trying to explain how terrible it is, without a message other than – life on earth is really hard sometimes.”
SubRosa plays the Sled Island Music & Arts Festival for two shows June 24 at the Palomino and June 25 at Bamboo.

Friday, 3 June 2016

Peaches will bring Rub to life onstage during a stint at Sled Island

Calgary opens wide for iconic artist Peaches’ first appearance in seven years at Sled Island 2016

By Christine Leonard
3 June 2016

An innovative and iconoclastic artist with a heart of gold and the warpaint to match, Peaches was already rocking the boat of Toronto’s club scene when she debuted her first solo outing Fancypants Hoodlum (Accudub Inc), under her given name Merrill Nisker, back in 1995. But it wasn’t until the electro-rocker and rapper was transplanted to German soil in 2000 that her musical career truly began to flourish. Signed to the Kitty-Yo record label after an unforgettable one-night stand, Peaches followed her water-testing Lovertits EP with the release of her breakthrough album The Teaches of Peaches in the fall of 2000. Evidently, she had found a home for her soul and her art in the cultural Mecca and has stayed on to return the city’s embrace.

“Well, I’ve lived here for 16 years and I just think Berlin is still a super cool city,” Peaches says. “It’s very open to nightlife, and music, and art, and performance, and experimentation, and I’ve received a lot of it and met a lot of international, super-talented people that make their way through. Being in Europe you get a little more of that because people float through a little easier and also in terms of funding and collaborations and other things like that.”
A tour de force with Marilyn Manson and Queens of the Stones Age further established Peaches’ reputation as a dynamic on-stage presence with a talent for smashing gender-norms through her glamorously riveting performances. Deemed too racy for Britain’s Top of the Pops, she went on to flaunt a full-beard on the cover of her 2003 album Fatherfucker (XL), which featured Iggy Pop on the single “Kick It.” Continuing to defy the odds and social conventions across borders, her subversive songs were suddenly accessible to a mainstream audience, popping up on the soundtracks for movies like Waiting… and Mean Girls, as well as on television series such as South Park, 30 Rock, True Blood, and The L Word. Meanwhile, everyone from Pink to REM were queuing up to have some of that erotic Peaches magic spread upon their labours.
“I’ve always been mostly interested in performance art, and video, and music – the fashion thing was never really a concern of mine, that just kind of organically grew out of what was happening. I think I’ve just found more likeminded people, not that there weren’t in Canada, but it just seems like a good flow. And, I’ve had a little stint doing different projects in a theatre here and met different people. There’s just a really good conceptual and contemporary art scene. So, I don’t need to push. I just try and do my thing and it just seems to like build organically, which is really, really good.”
After marrying her polti-punk passions to those of Joan Jett, Josh Homme, Beth Ditto, amongst others, for her next LP Impeach My Bush (XL) in 2006, Peaches returned to command the dancefloor in 2009 when she unleashed I Feel Cream (XL). A glittering trans-disco fantasy, teased-out by the show-stopping single “Talk to Me,” the album was buffed to perfection by the skillful ministrations of co-producers Simian Mobile Disco, Soulwax, and Shapemod. The next year in, 2010, Peaches gained the ‘Electronic Artist of the Year’ award at the 10th Annual Independent Music Awards in Toronto, and performed a one-woman version of Jesus Christ Superstar at Berlin’s HAU1, entitled Peaches Christ Superstar. For her latest full-length outing, Rub (I U She Music), featuring Nick Zinner (Yeah Yeah Yeahs), Peaches tapped into her love of filmmaking to enhance and contextualize each of the album’s carnal capers.
“From the beginning, I used to make a lot of Super-8 movies for the songs, so it was always part of it. I’ve made a movie that I’m in and also directed a lot of the videos that I’ve made throughout the years. I’m also enjoying making videos for every song on Rub. The track “Rub” has its own six-minute video and was made using a deliberately all-women cast and crew of 40 in the desert with me and Lex Vaughn, who spent a lot of time in Canada, and A.L. Steiner, who made the lesbian porn film Community Action. There’s already five videos that have been put out for Rub, including ‘Dick in the Air,’ which is a collaboration featuring me and Margaret Cho.”
Other NSFW vignettes for the album include the Peaches-directed “Light in Places” starring U.K. laser-butt-plug aerialist Empress Stah, “Free Drink Ticket” directed by Sara Sachs, and “Close Up” featuring Sled Island 2015 performer, Kim Gordon (Sonic Youth, Body/Head). Directed by friend and collaborator Vice Cooler (who performs alongside Peaches at the 2016 festival), the combative-clip for “Close Up” finds Peaches taking on the role of a pro wrestler.
“I’m glad that they [female martial artists] exist,” the composer of the ultimate walk-out song, “I Don’t Give A …,” confirms. “That video was born out of my relationship with Lucha VaVoom, they’re a Mexican wrestling and burlesque troupe who perform four times a year in L.A. and they’re friends of mine so it was a nice collaboration. We actually found me a stunt-double, a pole-dancer and wrestler who was sort of my build, so that was really cool. The director, Vice Cooler, also co-produced that album with me. I have a little house in L.A. and we spent a year in my garage making the album from scratch there. It’s not so glamorous, it’s just a garage, but it was fun.”
That album, Rub, and its accompanying eye-candy provide a galvanizing glimpse into the marvelous psyche, of an ambihelical performer who channels Prince and Bowie, while embodying the spirit of rebellious artists from history who have refused to choose between sexual identity and self-expression. This assertion is echoed by Peaches appearance on the silver screen in the motion picture Desire Will Set You Free (2015 Amard Bird Films), directed by Yony Leyser and is also Peaches’ selection for Sled Island’s film lineup.
Having called in favours and utilized her impressive network of contacts to assemble an avant-garde dream team of bands and artists to fulfill her role as curator and festival queen diva, Peaches looks forward to bringing a taste of her adopted hometown to Sled Island and the Canadian Prairies.
“A lot of these acts will give people a Berlin experience,” she says. “Hyenaz, Planningtorock, and Born In Flamez will sonically blow people’s minds. Just come as you are and be like you wanna be!”
As for her own flagship concert, the Sled Island headliner Peaches promises to bust out the ultimate Rub experience for her audience when she mounts the stage at Flames Central.
“The first half of 2015 was about finishing the album and getting it ready. It came out in September and I’ve just been touring like a crazy woman since then. It’s been business as usual, which is not business as usual, which is just super exciting and fun as usual. We have done so many shows and so many festivals. Mostly America and Europe, I’ve done Toronto, Vancouver and Montréal, like I usually do, but it’s good to dig a little deeper. The show is Rub-focused for sure, but with some classics thrown in. I’ve only done all the songs from an album in order live once; I’ve played Teaches of Peaches backwards so ‘Fuck the Pain Away’ would be last. This show is pretty true to the new album and working the songs out in their pure form. It’s like a big mess, but in a really good way.”
Peaches performs at Flames Central on June 25th with her curator picks Vice Cooler and Lafawndah.

Friday, 13 May 2016

Decidedly Jazz Dance Centre : a new home for Canadian Jazz

A New Universe awaits at the Decidedly Jazz Dance Centre

By Christine Leonard
19 May 2016 
Jazz is coming out from behind closed doors thanks to the construction of the impressive Decidedly Jazz Dance Centre in the heart of the New West. Ten years in the making, the cutting-edge facility will provide a much-needed growing room for the professional company and dance school, which has been in its current home since 1993. Designed by architect Janice Liebe of the DIALOG design firm and built by CANA Construction, the new structure embodies the kinetic movement of a dancer’s body with its graceful application of glass and steel. While a versatile modern theatre and seven well-appointed dance studios rank highest amongst the new institute’s assets, the abundance of natural light and flowing floor plan are sure to infuse the environment with positive energy.
“It’s a spectacular facility. It’s not just for us, we feel that it’s really a space for Calgary,” says DJD’s artistic director, Kimberley Cooper. “It’s also just such a beautiful, vibrant, glass-filled open place that I think it will add to the landscape of Calgary. You’ll be able to look in and see dancing all the time, which is something we don’t see that often. The beacon at the top of the building is a 10-metre penthouse that’s kind of like a light-box and we’ve just been working with some artist to create a public art piece that’s going to be in there. That will really draw your eye to the building as well. The artists’ names are Hadley+Maxwell. Without giving too much away, they are big on the Canadian art scene and they were here taking images for a beautiful concept that will let people know that is dancing going on in that building.”
Located within the new 12-storey Kahanoff Centre on Centre Street and 12th Avenue SE, the accessible space offers a 327 sq. m dance studio, a comfortable 232 sq. m community living room, multiple smaller dance studios (to be available for booking) and will additionally provide storage for the Company’s wardrobes, dressing rooms, media room, library, box office and administrative offices. A home that has been custom-fit to accommodate the present and future needs of an organisation that anticipates great things to come. To accomplish this lifetime goal, DJD worked closely numerous supporters including the philanthropic Kahanoff Foundation, who rents office space to charitable organizations at affordable rates. Construction of the Decidedly Jazz Dance Centre within the context of the burgeoning complex, located at Centre Street and 12th Avenue S.E., means that the first five floors of the new building are inhabited by Decidedly Jazz with the six floors above them being occupied by DJD’s co-residents the Calgary Foundation.
“This building has been a long time coming,” says Cooper. “As the economy has risen and fallen a couple times it’s taken a lot longer than we thought it would. So, there have been many incarnations of what it has now turned out to be. We’ve had really great partners all around. We have had a lot of support from the government and the Kahanoff Foundation, individual donors. You can name a seat in the theatre for $1,000 or donate more and have the building named after you. Everyone from millionaires to the dancer alumnus who are pulling funds together to buy a couple of seats. There are lots of ways you can claim your space within the Centre, which I think is really cool!”
As a member of Calgary’s dance community and DJD’s resident choreographer, Cooper shares her company’s passion for innovation. Aiming to demonstrate that the new facility will consist of more than sprung floors and wires, she is busy rehearsing the first work to be presented in the Centre’s crown jewel studio theatre. Cooper’s latest choreographic work, New Universe, featuring nine dancers and five live musicians performing the music of NYC jazz legend William Parker, is sure to leave a lasting impression as it premieres at the Decidedly Jazz Dance Centre’s Opening Gala on May 27th.
“For me, what I’m really looking forward to is being able to create in the space that the work will be performed in because that is so rare in the dance world. It’s pretty spectacular and that’s where the company will rehearse every day,” says Cooper. “The nice thing about being in this smaller space is that we can run for longer and that’s better for everybody. The artists get to do it more, the work gets stronger, the word of mouth can travel throughout the city and that’s our best ticket seller. I think that all of those things will help to make us more successful.”
A one-of-a-kind place of business that offers a unique forum and launchpad for the performing arts, DJD’s headquarters will undoubtedly make it a cultural focal point as Calgary progresses through a ribbon-cutting Year of Music. Cause for celebration on many fronts, the completion of this new facility marks not only the realization of a dream but denotes the value that citizens continue to attribute to the arts and the ways in which artistic disciplines continue to benefit the community at large.
“We’ve been talking to board for Fluid Festival, we’ve been talking to One Yellow Rabbit, we’ve been talking to the Old Trouts, and Sled Island has approached us about utilising our new spaces. People have already asked to have a wedding on our main floor because it’s gorgeous. And, really, we want to be an arts hub,” Cooper confirms. “Everybody’s excited about it because it has the ability to change the cultural landscape in Calgary. And we’ve had great neighbours; the National Music Centre and Arts Commons are only a few blocks away. We feel like Calgary is building a new arts district right now and it’s really nice to be a part of that.”
DJD’s Opening Weekend Gala that shows off their new studio and performance space takes place May 27 and 28. Then New Universe, DJD’s new work choreographed by Kim Cooper featuring original music composed by New York jazz composer William Parker, who will also lead the live band during performances, runs until June 12.

Monday, 25 January 2016

Trivium breaks silence in the snow

Trivium conjures a soulstorm for the ages

by Christine Leonard
Monday 25th, January 2016 

No strangers to the cyclical nature of the music industry, Floridian heavy metal band Trivium have successfully weathered a decade and a half of outrageous fortune, but not without gaining a few battle scars along the way. The fact that the quartet’s latest album, Silence in the Snow, debuted at 19 on The Billboard 200 charts demonstrates not only their ability to resonate with audiences across the heavy metal spectrum but their resolve to achieve ever greater heights. According to bassist and backing vocalist Paolo Gregoletto, the powerfully melodic seventh studio album marks a high point in Trivium’s artistic and technical trajectory.
“Every time you go into making a new record you’re always trying to find a new angle on your band and your music,” says Gregoletto, who joined in 2004 (the same year they were signed to Roadrunner Records).
“It’s funny how one song can change everything. We broke new ground on this record because of the path that ‘Silence in the Snow,’ a song we had had in our books for about eight years, sent us down. It opened up doors to what would gradually become something different. For example, on the tracks ‘Dead and Gone’ and ‘Beneath the Sun’ we used seven-string guitars, which is something we haven’t done for the two previous albums, so it was refreshing to get back to it.”
The already daunting task of following up their wrathful previous release, Vengeance Falls (2013), took a serious turn when Trivium’s lead vocalist-guitarist Matt Heafy damaged his vocal cords while on tour and found himself at a critical crossroads in his career as a thrash-throated singer.
“We were lucky it wasn’t anything serious. It was a culmination of the stress of performing in Canada at Rock on the Range and then enduring a border crossing 12 hours later. The general strain led to him having vocal issues, which were resolved when Matt was turned onto new vocal coach Ron Anderson by Matt [Shadows] from Avenged Sevenfold. Sometimes going through a crisis turns out to be a blessing in disguise. Going into this latest record we were all realizing it was going to be a heavy singing challenge, but having been through that earlier in the year helped strengthen his voice and he learned to scream in a new way that benefited us. Thankfully this record is an accurate reflection of how we are live.”
The atmosphere of discovery on Silence in the Snow was conveyed thanks in part to the production values of Michael “Elvis” Baskette (Slash, The Amity Affliction, Alter Bridge) and master mixer Josh Wilbur (Lamb of God, Gojira), who facilitated their transition to a more sustainable albeit classic metalcore sound.
“It’s cool to see how quickly the new songs have caught on with people after only a few months. I think Shogun (2008) needed time to sit with people, you don’t take it all in on the first listen, yet it became a fan favourite. Silence in the Snow is also very metallic and progressive, but we also made sure there are lot of big hooks and distinctive vocal and drum parts, as on the tracks ‘Until the World Goes Cold,’ ‘Silence in the Snow’ and ‘Blind Leading the Blind.’”
Another contributing factor to Trivium’s ever-shifting tempos has been the turnover of drummers including the departure of Travis Smith (Eternal Exile), Nick Augusto (Maruta), and most recently Matt Madiro. Breaking in the “the new guy,” Paul Wandtke, together with Heafy and long-time guitarist/backing vocalist Corey Beaulieu, gave Gregoletto pause to appreciate his bandmates’ resilience and desire to continue their artistic evolution. Reflecting on a platinum-plated past, the recharged Trivium seems primed to engage whatever surprises the future holds in store.
“The best way for us to honour Trivium’s legacy is by playing the back-catalog perfectly and giving the people what they want to hear. It’s been cool for us to perform songs we haven’t played live in years and we’re having fun pairing up old songs to help introduce the new ones. We’re at the peak of our abilities and we’ve got a pretty big selection of songs. It’s exciting again and it feels like a real breath of fresh air.”
Trivium are performing at Venue in Vancouver on February 8th, the Starlite Room in Edmonton on February 10th, the Marquee in Calgary on February 11th (Every Hour Kills and Shark Infested Daughters are opening), O’Brians in Saskatoon on February 12th, and the Pyramid Cabaret in Winnipeg on February 13th.

By Christine Leonard

Monday, 28 December 2015

Elder: Ancient root, future seed

Elder: Ancient root, future seed

Elder are set to decimate the stage at Arlen’s annual stoner rock birthday bash!
By Christine Leonard
28 December 2015 
Bostonian heavy rock outfit Elder isn’t the type to shout “Fire!” in a crowded theatre, but the incendiary heat of their saturnine blues-rock meltdowns can be felt from the back of the room. Originally hailing from Fairhaven, Massachusetts, guitarist/keyboardist/vocalist Nick DiSalvo, drummer Matt Couto, and bassist Jack Donovan have been making stylistically-charged headbanging music since they were kids. That’s probably why DiSalvo bristles being questioned about when exactly Donovan joined the group, following the departure of Chas Mitchell.
“Jack has more or less been around since the inception,” says DiSalvo. “We’ve all been friends going back to childhood. This was almost not even the same band as before the other guy left. As far as this goes, Jack’s been in the band the entire time.”
The value of loyalty isn’t lost on Elder, and with three full-length albums to look back upon, the wise-beyond-their-years band can be proud of what they’ve accomplished together. From the nascent rumbles of Dead Roots Stirring (2011) to the lofty heights of Spires EP and their cataclysmic live albums, Elder is one group that has continued to redefine their sound time and time again. To accomplish this, DiSalvo and company delved deep into the thrum and thrall psyche of influencers like Swedish rock act Dungen, doom lords Sleep, the almighty Black Sabbath, fuzz worshippers Electric Wizard and, perhaps not surprisingly, Alberta’s own Chron Goblin.
“It’s weird to look back and see the progress we’ve made. To tell you the truth, we’ve been on the road so much none of us has had time to be introspective about all the changes we’ve been through. Thank God there’s been no trauma in our lives, other than the trauma of becoming adults. We started playing music when we were 17 years old. Growing up together the main factor shaping our development was playing with the bands around us. We learned what we liked and emulated it on our way to becoming musicians with our own music. All of those new experiences; seeing new things and traveling to new places had an impact on…. [who and what] we are today. We actually met Devin (Purdy) of Chron Goblin in 2013 while we were playing at the Roadburn Festival in The Netherlands. We enjoyed hanging out and have been talking about playing a joint show ever since. Finally, the timing worked out so we will have a chance to come up to Canada and perform with them.”
Released in February of 2015, Elder’s latest full-length release, Lore (Stickman), aspires to mount an intricate fretwork cathedral over the stone circle of their hard-rock foundation.
“I appreciate the 50-50 split of complexity and grooviness,” says DiSalvo.
“That balance is what really draws people into the music. I think we’ve aged and matured, but I think our ‘Dead Roots’ are even more evident in our songwriting. We wanted to surprise people with the new album. Not for the shock-factor, but as a signal that we are changing as musicians and our style is shifting with us.”
DiSalvo continues, “Lore was chiefly composed and written by me and was a true studio album. The question of paring the songs down to make the album performable live was a real challenge. It made us rethink the way we’re going to write albums in the future. I don’t have three hands, so I can’t replicate all of the layers on the album, but hopefully, the versions of the songs we present on stage are just as complex and vivid.”
While the more brutal aspects of their sludge-metal personality may serve to underscore the beauty of Elder’s symphonic compositions, they certainly don’t subscribe to the doctrine of brutalizing eardrums.
“There is a loudness war going on in production at the moment,” DiSalvo observes. “The actual decibels on recordings have been going up notably throughout time. The same thing is going on with doom bands. We’re not interested in being beyond loud. It doesn’t make sense. It’s been done a million times. Even if you have a PA system that can handle that volume it’s not going to sound as impressive as the simple, classic three-piece set up we use. We’re not a stadium band. Nothing insane. We just want everything to be heard.”
Elder will be performing at Arlen’s Bday Bash on January 9th, 2016 at The Palomino with Chron Goblin and Woodhawk.