Saturday, February 03, 2007

Dynamite, wrapped up in a candy wrapper. This to me, best describes the experience of a Golden Dogs show in a succinct, one sentence, under 10 word manner. The Golden Dogs moved into London, Ontario Thursday evening for their first performance in almost 2 years, promoting their new album, Big Eye, Little Eye, which many critics are calling the band's coming of age. With balls-out rockers like Dynamo, the Tom Waits inspired Saints at the Gates, ballads like Theresa and a bang-on cover of Mc Cartney and Wings 1985 , it is hard not to agree. Although, in my opinion, it is not quite a kick in the head initially as Everything in 3 Parts was for me, especially without a Yeah! anthem, like most "mature" albums, they are a slow burn to full appreciation, and after 3 listens....I'm getting it, and lovin' it! Not that the basic concept the Golden Dogs has changed in any way, they are still creating catchy simple, easy to digest and almost immediately likeable songs and keeping them in the 3 minute range, so they can be force fed to you in a live show, in a barrage of machine gun fire, so fast and with so much pure raw energy that the live show will leave you wondering exactly what just hit you. Like a cliff hanger of a movie, the show never lets up, never lets you down and when it is over, you just want more (Like their songs, the show is by format, an hour, almost to the clock and there are no spaces, even between the final song and the encore...there isn't one). 2007 is being hailed "The Year of the Golden Dogs" by UofW press and "The Golden Era" for the band by The Toronto Star, but this is nothing new. The Dogs have been hyped right from the get go as the next big thing on the Canadian music scene and still haven't hit the big time. That being said, the first Call the Office show I went to in 2005, you could of shot a rocket off in the place and this time the place was a relatively full bar and the people who where there where getting into it with the intensity of the songs Dave Azzolini, Jessica Grassia et al where blasting from the stage....so maybe this is it. It really doesn't matter that much, because it will happen, but in the meantime, get out and see The Golden Dogs live and see one of the best fucking live experiences you can get for 5 bucks anywhere.

http://www.thegoldendogs.com/

What others are sayin':

http://www.thestar.com/artsentertainment/article/176398

http://www.gazette.uwo.ca/article.cfm?section=Arts&articleID=1529&month=01&day=31&year=2007
All photos are copyright 2007 Lucid Musings Photography
www.lucidmusings.com

Oh! The Pretty Things....pure R n' R....pure Good Times!!
http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendID=18517122

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Well I got to see one of the brightest talents on the Canadian scene on Friday evening and saw him in a one of a kind show with a one of a kind band. Matt Mays is on a coast to coast winter tour promoting his second, most explorative solo album, When the Angels Make Contact, a soundtrack to a shelved film that Matt apparently has decided to put on the backburner. A strange way to go about it, but When the Angels Make Contact can be construed as a strange album, considering Matt's solid rock n' roll image he set with his debut album with El Torpedo. It is strange in a good, refreshing and unique manner that I feel will turn both El Torpedo fans and newcomers into converts. This is not to say Matt doesn't rock on WTAMC, it is just he does so much more. Techno-Electronica, Rap, Funk, Floydian segues are all apparent. He actually steps back from the mike to allow Alanna Stuart, (one of the numerous musicians Mays collected to record the album, giving the members of El Torpedo-drummer Tim Jim Baker is along for the ride- a holiday), a stunningly beautiful and smooth and soulful vocalist, do the duties on Under My Senses. To say this album is strong, albeit unusual step in Matt Mays' career right after hitting stride with El Torpedo's debut and a #3 cross Canada hit with Cocaine Cowgirl, has some truth. After seeing him live (a show which consists of the album, beginning to end, concept complete with no hesitation) and digesting the CD pretty solidly for well over 2 weeks, I feel words like brilliant, epic, and visionary could also be inserted and not be out of place. From the opening scratchy dialogue to the final track Mornin' Sun (one of the most simple and honestly beautiful tracks to be released by anyone, anywhere I have heard recently), Matt Mays' When the Angels Make Contact is a stunning achievement.

http://www.whentheangelsmakecontact.com/
http://www.mattmays.com/

Below are photos from Friday night's show.

All photos are copyright 2007 Lucid Musings Photography www.lucidmusings.com





Monday, January 22, 2007

Well the news about the spring/summer fests is starting to trickle in/out and both of the heavy hitters are looking promising.

Bonnaroo has nothing official, yet, but reports leaked on a few sites put an initial band list as:

Late Sunday night, an initial line up announcement apparently leaked onto the internet. The lineup included Bob Dylan, Trey Anastasio, Tom Waits, Gov't Mule, Norah Jones, Pearl Jam, Ben Harper, My Morning Jacket, Arcade Fire, Modest Mouse, Yo La Tengo, The Decemberists, The Shins, The Roots, John Butler Trio, M. Ward, Band of Horses, Tea Leaf Green, the Hold Steady, TV on the Radio, Lily Allen, Cut Chemist, Grizzly Bear, Cold War Kids, Man Man, The Slip, Girl Talk, and Isis (band). More artist announcements are expected in the coming weeks.

http://www.bonnaroo.com/2007/


Coachella has officially announced its kicker bands for the end of April show in Cali:

Pitchfork Said:
OK folks, stay calm. CALM LIKE A BOMB that is, because the only rap-rock band we actually remember (somewhat) fondly is back. That's right, as reported by the Los Angeles Times and confirmed by the festival's organizers, Rage Against the Machine will come out of retirement to play the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, taking place April 27-29 at Empire Polo Field in Indio, California.Rage will headline the festival's final night, April 29, while Björk will headline on Friday, April 27 and the Red Hot Chili Peppers on Saturday, April 28. (Ugh Why do the Red Hot Chili Peppers always have to come around and ruin these sorts of things?)Other awesome artists confirmed to play Coachella: the Arcade Fire, Interpol, Willie Nelson, the Roots, Manu Chao, the Decemberists, Arctic Monkeys, Sonic Youth, and Air. Other debatably awesome artists confirmed to play Coachella: Crowded House, Tiësto, and Kings of Leon.And although the festival hasn't officially announced it yet, !!!, LCD Soundsystem, and Lupe Fiasco are also playing Coachella, as we've gathered from previous news stories.

http://www.coachella.com/

With no clear winner so far, I will have to go with my personal feelings about what makes Bonnaroo the winner, and why Bonnaroo will ALWAYS be the winner when it comes to the battle of the mega-fests:


-FUN

-community spirit and togetherness

-Indie Bands...and famous people:-)


-Jam Bands...and famous people:-)

....and oh ya...it's as close to heaven on earth you can get for a weekend...if you have been, you catch my drift...PEACE

Friday, January 19, 2007

Today is Janis Joplin's birthday. If she was still alive today and hadn't died an untimely death under still unsure curcumstance (her death was unquestionably a heroin overdose, but the method of injection and quality of the smack still something questioned in some circles), she would be 64. Janis was, is and will always be an icon. There was and will never be another Janis, her crazed, out of control personal life and onstage rants. Her voice echoed power, pain and beauty all in the same verse. She was larger than life and her legend only grows as the years go on. So dig out some of her songs, be it with Big Brother, Kozmic Blues or Full Tilt Boogie, lay back, inhale and remember how great she was. Happy B-Day Janis, we miss ya:-)

The first video is from the Festival Express documentary. Only released a couple of years ago, after the sound bites and video where re-united after several years lost, this recording of Cry Baby is, in my opinion, the best video footage of Janis, period. When I first saw this performance in the theater, chills went right up my spine. With the camera right in Janis's face, we can really see the emotion. To me, it is almost as if she had forsight into her destiny when she went into spoken word mode, you can see that all she wanted, really, really wanted was to have someone to hold. True love and the simple life. I cannot watch it without feeling that, in the context that she would die alone in less than 3 months, that she is painting an effigy of her life struggle through her gift of music. Too bad someone wasn't listening.
The following video still brings tears to my eyes. Part of the extended re-release of the Woodstock 69' documentary, it really shows the power Janis had when she performed live. Backed by the The Kozmic Blues Band, the second band to back her in her short, but illustrious career, she rips through Work Me Lord with a passion and intensity that few, if any female singers had been able to do before, or after. As a sidenote, local musician, good friend and former guitar teacher John Till can be seen playing guitar in Kozmic Blues. He became Janis's main guitar player up until her death of a supposed voluntary drug overdose on October 4, 1970.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

The following video is from last years Grammys, the barf, gag, flip the channel, check again, curse, flip the channel night of nights for the elite of the shitpile that is mainstream popular music. Yes, there is always a gem or 2 amidst all the high rollers enjoying their 15 minutes of fame, but they are hard to find. This is one of those gems that keep me flicking back year after year in the hope I will see another. I saw Melissa Etheridge first do her Janis medley at Woodstock 94'...the peace,love,dove 90s rendition of the 69' classic...not the burn and pillage rendition. It smoked then and it smokes now. Nobody I have ever seen can as closely and honourably recreate the passion that Janis gave. Josh Stone is thrown in for good measure and does a decent job opening the tribute and backing Melissa...a little unnecessary...but she is nice to look at:-)

Wednesday, January 17, 2007



I came across some exciting news about The Icon, The Man and The Inspiration of the Canadian Music Scene. Hot on the heels of last years big fuck you to US foreign policy, Living With War, The Fillmore East recordings from 1970 and the DVD release of Heart of Gold, probably the finest live music cinematic achievement I have seen since The Last Waltz, it seems fans once again are about to get a treat (or 2, or 3).

By BRAD WHEELER:A record of a homecoming is on the way home. Material culled from a pair of Neil Young solo concerts at Toronto's Massey Hall almost 36 years ago is set for a March release. Previously available in bootleg form as Going Back to Canada, the live album captures an enigmatic singer-songwriter at his career's early creative peak.Young was a star rising, not much more than 24, when he introduced Old Man at Massey Hall as "a new song." On Jan. 19, 1971, with friends and proud family in attendance, the youthful brooder played two sold-out concerts, part of the Journey Through the Past solo tour that began in Vancouver's Queen Elizabeth Theatre and ended, in late February, at London, England's Royal Festival Hall.The crowd-drawing event was documented by the press, including an account by The Globe and Mail's Jack Batten, who noted a young audience's devotion to an artist who presented himself as distinctly Canadian. Wrote Batten: "There's no mistaking his sly manner, his flat speaking voice and his rather dour facial expression (which not even long hair can disguise) for anyone but a northerner."Batten was not alone in his characterization of Young -- in his onstage persona, at least -- as a lamenter: "He comes on wearing his private rain cloud like a halo," was how another writer put it.As far as his career was concerned, Young had no need to be grim. The man in patched jeans, lumberjack shirt and work boots had sold more than one-million copies of his album After the Gold Rush (1970) at that point, and his quarter share of the success of America's biggest band at the time -- Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young -- would have been substantial.The songs performed on the Shuter Street stage represented a memorable surge of songwriting, with some of material already released (Helpless, Cowgirl in the Sand, Ohio, Down By the River, I Am a Child) and some issued later (Old Man, The Needle and the Damage Done, A Man Needs a Maid).The concerts were recorded by producer David Briggs, yet Young himself never heard the tapes until 1996 -- a quarter-century later. At the turn of the seventies, Young was a driven artist, on the move creatively and otherwise. Once the material that ended up on 1973's Harvest was recorded (during and after the tour), the Massey tapes were shelved.Those shelves and others are now being cleared. Fresh rumours have Young's long-imminent archival box set (possibly 32 CDs in all) coming out later this year. In the meantime, the first CD of the Archives: Performance Series -- the stellar, if truncated (at 43 minutes) Live at the Fillmore East: March 6 & 7, 1970 -- was released late last year on Reprise Records, long the label home of Young. The second CD of the series (the forthcoming Massey release) is rumoured to include a DVD component, with film footage or a photo montage from the Toronto shows. No further CDs in the series are planned.Available now on iTunes is The Bridge School Collection, Vol. 1 and Vol. 2, a massive compilation of recordings from Young's star-studded annual benefit concerts. The artists involved include Radiohead's Thom Yorke (who covers After the Gold Rush on the first volume), Willie Nelson and Pearl Jam, and Canadian acts Sarah McLachlan, the Cowboy Junkies, the Barenaked Ladies and Tegan and Sara.Young only performs on five tracks in the whole set, all in the second volume (including Helpless with Bruce Springsteen and Down By the River with Crazy Horse and Elvis Costello), as well as on a pair of bonus tracks on Vol. 1 (Cortez the Killer and a Comes a Time/Sugar Mountain medley by Young and Dave Matthews, available only if the entire 80-track set is purchased).Young, with cohorts David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash, last performed in Canada this past summer in support of his anti-George W. Bush harangue, the Living With War album. Reportedly all of the tour's concerts were filmed, with a DVD scheduled to be released in 2008 (a U.S. election year). As well, a version of Living with War featuring stripped-down arrangements, a rawer guitar sound and a bonus DVD was released last month. A blast from Young's past comes in the form of a rare Motown single, from 1966 by the Mynah Birds -- a Toronto-based garage band that included Young (on 12-string acoustic), bassist Bruce Palmer and Rick (Superfreak) James. The record (It's My Time, with B-side Go On and Cry) was pulled the day of its release because of James's AWOL status with the U.S. Navy. It now sees the light of day as part of a five-CD set, The Complete Motown Singles: Vol. 6, 1966.The humble song may have been called It's My Time, but Young's era was actually to come a bit later -- and to continue long after. In the review of the 1971 Massey Hall show, Globe reviewer Batten praised Young's singing, yet reckoned the green tunesmith needed "more seasoning." But he added that Young had so much talent and so much "quiet charm" that the artist was "bound to stick around for a long time, maturing and writing and rewarding his audiences."And so it happened.Tonight was the nightOn Jan. 19, 1971, Neil Young played a pair of solo shows at Toronto's Massey Hall. The next day, a review by then pop-music writer Jack Batten, excerpted below, ran in The Globe and Mail."All of a sudden, without anyone (except a million kids) noticing, Neil Young of Winnipeg and Toronto has arrived as a major pop star, someone to reckon with on the rich, heady, crowd-drawing level of James Taylor. If you don't believe it, you should have been at Massey Hall last night where he played two concerts for sell-out houses of mostly young people who were there not merely to listen but to worship."From the opening ovation to the closing and standing ovations, the audience was positively adulatory, rewarding Young with constant bursts of clapping for every trivial move, from sipping water to announcing new songs, a fact I mention not merely because the handclapping was by itself a drag but also because it constantly intruded on any close relationship between Young and the best part of his audience. . . .""His songwriting isn't his strongest talent. (His lovely clean voice is.) He does have a knack for writing one- and two-liners that stick in the head, and occasionally, as in a new song he sang about a hired man on his ranch, he comes up with numbers that sustain a mood for their entire duration. .

Tuesday, January 16, 2007



For all those fellow travellers out there who have been weened off the Kontiki frat boy sorority sister, lets get pissed everynight in the closest Irish bar that reminds us of home type of travel, CouchSurfing is just what the doctor ordered. For those independents who have discovered the real essence of travel is not so much found within the restraints of some package operators vision, but within the homes, the personalities and the ground level lives of the people you meet on the journey, then you must look at this website. Although, to make it work, it must be a retributive venture, which is difficult for many with our homes becoming more of a fortress to shield the outside and protect what we have. It may not be possible, either, for some because of living situations, but for those who can become a part, the reward is priceless.

From their homepage:

What is CouchSurfing?You're probably here at CouchSurfing to find a free place to stay or people to hang out with while you are traveling. After your first experience of either surfing or hosting, you'll find out that what you get out of it is so much more. We help to create a better world by opening our homes, our hearts and our lives. We open our minds and welcome the knowledge cultural exchange makes available. We create deep and meaningful connections that cross oceans, continents and cultures. CouchSurfing changes not only the way we travel, but how we relate to the world!CouchSurfing.com helps you make connections worldwide. You can use the network to meet people and then go and surf other members' couches! When you surf a couch, you are a guest at someone's house. They will provide you with some sort of accommodation, a penthouse apartment or maybe a back yard to pitch your tent in. Stays can be as short as a cup of coffee, a night or two, or even a few months or more. When you offer your couch, you have complete control of who visits. The possibilities are endless and completely up to you.The friendships made through CouchSurfing enhance members' lives and contribute greatly to making the world a better, safer, more peaceful place. Signing up for a free couch and ending up with amazing adventures and a global family--that's what CouchSurfing is all about!

The Website:

http://www.couchsurfing.com/