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Check out
what’s going on
around Winnipeg tonight! |
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Check out
this week’s
online CD reviews by our
music staff |
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Local
Heroes
Just about every genre of music is represented in this quarter’s
Local Heroes roundup of made-in-Manitoba CDs. It’s all
here, from roots to metal to punk to jazz to rock to folk and
beyond. Find out if Uptown’s music dorks enjoyed staying
at the Twilight Hotel and getting covered in Mung.
All reviews by John Kendle and Mike Warkentin. |
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Erik Athavale
Athavale
(Indie)
B+

Website: www.athavaleonline.com
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Soulster Erik Athavale
is back with a follow-up to 2005’s Quess Presents ReSOULutions
V. 1.1. Athavale is only a four-track EP, but the frontman has
enlisted the help of keyboardist Kevin Torgalson, co-writer/arranger
Marc Arnould, multi-instrumentalist Joey Landreth and drummer
Christian Dugas to take things further than his previous full-length
did. Funky closing track Nothing New (Under the Sun) is a good
example of the new sound as it puts backing vocals by Lisa and
Natalie Bell to good use. The highlight, as always, is Athavale’s
voice. He’s got a sweet, light tone that’s perfectly
suited to the lyrics of Bounce. The next time you’re working
your mojo for a prospective bed partner, let Athavale help seal
the deal. — MW |
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Steve Bell
My Dinner With Bruce: Songs of Bruce Cockburn
(Signpost Music)
A

Website: www.steve-bell.com
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Larry LeBlanc of Billboard
Magazine has called Steve Bell a “musical treasure,”
and I’m sure LeBlanc wouldn’t hesitate to apply
the same label to Bruce Cockburn. Bell himself would certainly
agree, so he decided to cover 13 of his favourite Cockburn songs
on My Dinner With Bruce. The result is a lovingly selected,
delicately delivered series of songs that have become a part
of Bell’s life. Steve is a passionate, deeply spiritual
man, and songs such as Red Brother Red Sister and Thoughts on
a Rainy Afternoon resonate with those qualities. Front and centre
are Bell’s fretwork and voice. Both are impeccable, and
on Wondering Where the Lions Are Bell comes pretty damn close
to capturing the brilliance Paul Simon mastered on Graceland.
If you think of Bell simply as a Christian artist, you’re
missing out. This guy’s good, period, and if there’s
any justice in the world Bell will one day actually get to sit
down to dinner with Cockburn. — MW |
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Chelsea Crawford
The Masquerade
(Indie)
B

Website: www.chelseacrawford.com
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Some debuts sound exactly
like debuts, while others are fully realized compositions that
skilfully introduce an artist. The Masquerade, the first offering
from singer/pianist Chelsea Crawford, is of the latter variety,
which is a credit to Crawford; her four-piece band, The Styles;
and producer Jeff Lukin. Lukin, who also plays guitar in the
band, highlights Crawford’s voice, adding a touch of reverb
to give things a sexy, loungy vibe, especially on cuts such
as Oochy Koochy Man. The 13 tracks included here cover a wide
range of styles; the title track is a jazzy number, Listen is
just a little bit rootsy, Intro to Insomnia is a clever piano
piece that successfully incorporates a few classic radio samples,
and Perfect Day has a hint of new wave pop. As eclectic as The
Masquerade is, everything fits together pretty well. The aforementioned
Perfect Day is a miss, and Crawford’s smoky voice can
be just a bit too breathy at times, but overall this is a very
nice introduction to a young woman to watch for in the future.
— MW
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Crosley
The Crosley Collection
(Indie)
B

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Winnipeg’s most
prolific asshole serves up the disc the public has been waiting
for — a greatest-hits collection that selects only the
most offensive tracks from his five previous assaults. Yes,
the production values are still crap, but that’s beside
the point. Crosley makes me laugh — plain and simple.
It’s not a giggle but rather the kind of laughter that
occurs when someone rips a fart so beautifully heinous that
you can only gag and bust a gut at the same time. If you like
Kids in the Hall humour, old Andrew Dice Clay and vicious social
commentary, check this out. Previously unreleased cuts When
She Hits the Stage and Coleslaw Ribshack round out the set,
but the semi-apocalyptic It’s Just a Matter of Time and
the nonsensical The Evil That Dogs Do still make me laugh the
hardest and cringe the most. — MW
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The
Doug and Jess Band
Slave to this World
(Independent) B+

Website: www.dougandjess.com
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If The Duhks are modern
bluegrass tastemakers and D. Rangers are mutant bluegrass rockers,
then The Doug and Jess band are Winnipeg’s old-time bluegrass
purists — and thank goodness for that. With a sound and
style steeped in the Appalachian music Doug Reimer listened
to while growing up, this father-daughter team (he plays guitar
and his voice is high and lifeworn, while she handles a double
bass and offers up a clear, bright alto) has developed a one-two
punch that touches on all aspects of bluegrass tradition. You’ll
find lovelorn laments, richly textured life tales, heartfelt
spiritual testifying and even a traditional blues sashay on
this collection, which is split between songs penned by both
of the group’s mainstays. While the Reimers provide the
tunes, banjo player Tim Osmond and multi-instrumentalist Jeremy
Hamm give them their colour, bringing wailing, piercing tones
that make the songs seem to drip with bluegrass authenticity.
Congratulations also go out to local producer Norm Dugas (Alana
Levandoski, The Duhks), whose deft touch with acoustic instruments
is tremendous. — JK |
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The Dust Poets
Lovesick Town
(Indie/Festival Distribution) B+

Website: www.dustpoets.com
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“Out on the edge
of town — everything’s on the edge of town…”
So observes Murray D. Evans, the poet laureate of this Brandon
group formerly known as Das Macht Show! He’s ostensibly
talking about the box-store phenomenon, and much of this clever,
wonderfully musical album is like its opening couplet —
full of wry, pithy and wholly observant comments on modern life.
Evans’ talent has long been evident, but Lovesick Town feels
like the culmination of all the right elements — impeccable
songwriting, tremendous musicianship and a fully realized sound
that touches on numerous styles. There’s rootsy pop/rock
(Good Enough for Me), aching country (Lonesome, a wonderfully
stirring ballad from Karla Ferguson that stirs thoughts of Patsy
Cline), brassy jazz pop (Dance With Ourselves) and even a take
on accordion-fuelled Tex-Mex (the title track). Though the group
members are now spread across the country, it’s obvious
that all five remember their roots at the 100th meridian and that
the heart of the country is far more urbane than many may realize.
— JK |
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Floor Thirteen
Floor Thirteen
(Independent) B

Website: www.floor13.ca
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You might have heard
Floor Thirteen’s Bright Light Rockin’ City on Power
97. It’s a straight-up cock-rockin’ cut, but it
isn’t really all that indicative of the music the quartet
plays. Bright Light is a guitar-driven rocker in the vein of
AC/DC, but the next four tracks on this EP paint the band as
a melodic post-grunge outfit that’s been influenced by
the likes of OLP, Live, Incubus and Moist. What’s clear
is that these guys are still discovering themselves. Jeremy
(Koz) Kozielec, Aaron Vandall, Marc Jaworski and Billy Kiely
are working on a full-length follow-up, and it’ll be interesting
to see which direction they take. There’s potential here,
but Floor Thirteen will need to dial it in to take the next
step. — MW
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Don Freed
The Valley of Green and Blue
(Gabriel Dumont Institute) A

Website: www.donfreed.com
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In just 65 minutes,
veteran Canadian singer/songwriter Don Freed tells the tale
of an entire people, from origin to present day, in a thoroughly
researched, wonderfully humanist history of the Métis
and the Red River Settlement. The scope and magnitude of this
project is almost unfathomable — work began with a small
grant in 1991 — yet Freed manages the journey from beginning
to end in just 15 songs, culminating with a breathtaking singalong
of When This Valley (considered by some to be the Métis
national anthem) at the old church in Batoche, Sask. This musical
trek, which encompasses folk, roots, blues, jigs and reels,
begins in the 17th century and touches on the fur-trade wars,
the first settlements at Red River, the massacre at Seven Oaks,
the politics of ‘Manitobah,’ the tale of Louis Riel
and Sir John A. Macdonald, and the struggle of a people without
a home. Along the way we meet many remarkable characters, from
the first man named ‘Sansregret’ to Gabriel Dumont
and his rifle, ‘Le Petit.’ Aided and abetted by
a star-studded cast of local roots and bluegrass players, from
Dan Frechette to Sierra Noble to four-fifths of The Duhks, the
thin-voiced but always passionate Freed has created a masterpiece
of musical storytelling. How he’ll recreate this live
is anybody’s guess — but I’d love to see him
try. — JK
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Scott Hinkson
Tracking Outside In
(Indie) B+

Website: www.scotthinkson.com
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Scott Hinkson was last
heard on Under the Radar as a member of Snooper. Hinkson’s
on his own again, and Tracking Outside In finds him mining the
melodic rock vein — with a little experimentation thrown
in. Hinkson was once a member of Far Gone with Trevor Tuminski
of Jet Set Satellite, and both Tuminski and fellow JSS member
Dave (Bulldog) Swiecicki lend a hand, as do Serena Postel and
others. For the most part, however, this is all Hinkson —
he wrote, performed, recorded, engineered and mastered all 12
cuts here. These songs were recorded over a five-year period,
so there’s some variety. Some experiments aren’t
as successful as The Bow Song, but on that track Hinkson manages
to create not just a song but an environment and a mood. Lately,
Everything Solo and On the Inside also warrant some love. Nice
stuff, with more to follow, hopefully. — MW
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The Hummers
Modern Entrance
(Sisyphus Records) B+

Website: www.the-hummers.com
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Instrumental. Funkadelic.
Bassoholic. Stereophonic. Scratchomatic. Hypnodelic. Soulfantastic.
Veggieorganic. Monumental. Ecstatic. Fundamental. Experiential.
Breakbeatmental. And so orchestral. Yes, describing The Hummers
requires a shopping trip for adjectives to the same magical
corner store that carries the ingredients of the band’s
super-rich, eclectic stew. Call it funk for backpackers if you
will, but these white boys create a hip-shaking, earth-quaking,
spine-motivating pastiche of sounds — most live, some
Memorex, but all put together in a way that should see this
loose collective of Winnipeg musos and misfits shaking dance
floors across the country for at least the next year, if not
more. Joel Klaverkamp, Benoit Morrier, Craig Bjerring, Jason
Banman, Joel Shane, Mark Hoeppner, Matthew Lawrence, Mike Germain
and Tyler Sneesby were the cooks this time out. Let’s
hope it doesn’t take another three years for them to digest
this one. — JK
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I Witness
Passerbye
(Indie) B

Website: www.iwitnessmusic.com
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Passerbye is the follow-up
to 2004’s In Reply, and the new offering finds the group
a quartet again. Guitarist Wes left the band early in ’05,
but his departure hasn’t really affected I Witness’
sound. The boys still play melodic rock, and frontman Robb still
brings Raine Maida to mind. These are polished songs —
getting elite local knob-twiddler Brandon Friesen to produce
helped with that — but I’m just not sold on Robb’s
voice. He’s an emotional singer and his passion is obvious
on the 11 cuts presented here, but sometimes he just sounds
strained and a bit nasal. See My Chemical for an example. It’s
difficult to convey tension and strain without sounding tense
and strained, but if it were easy Janis Joplin wouldn’t
be a legend. These guys are dedicated and they’re in it
for the long run, so keep checking back to see what they come
up with. — MW
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Kram Ran
When I Move
(Wooly Records) C+

Website: www.woolyrecords.com
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Kram Ran is Mark Wolgemuth,
a young man from Southern Manitoba who uses electronic music
as a vehicle to explore his feelings and thoughts on loneliness,
love and God. For the most part, though, he should keep these
thoughts to himself. Some of his lovelorn lyrics read like those
of a cringe-inducingly bad emo band, but the spiritual metaphor
in Press Play, I’m Leaving, while certainly not original,
is rather deftly put. Wolgemuth fares better with the creation
of his soundscapes, which can be harsh and aggressive but which
most often sound like the tonal explorations of melody and structure
that Radiohead and Wilco have toyed with in recent years. Again,
it’s mostly derivative stuff — distorted string
sections, amplified clocks and electronic heartbeats abound
— but Wolgemuth has at least realized a vision. He may
do better with film scores, where the textual structure is not
his own. — JK
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Rik
Leaf
…Now Is the Winter of Our Discontent
(Tribe of One Records) B

Website: www.rikleaf.com
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In 1997, Rik Leaf moved
left the Okanagan for Winnipeg. That’s kinda weird, but
so’s Leaf. He’s also kinda talented, and his latest
album is proof of that. A 13-song serving of pop-rock, …Now
Is the Winter of Our Discontent is the creation of a thoughtful
poet with a gift for words. “Your love has ruined me/And
I know you’d say the same/Still I can’t wait to
feel you again,” Leaf sings on Our Love, and that lyric
alone should be enough to send you thumbing through the liner
notes for more gems. Leaf isn’t the most gifted singer,
but he holds his own, and the layered vocals on Fly Away and
Days of Wonder are a nice touch. Musically, What We’ve
Been Waiting For is the best cut. Leaf adds a little fuzz to
the guitar, throws in a synth and plays with dynamics to create
a groovy foot-tapper that calls for repeat listens. Other songs
put violin, viola, mandolin and didgeridoo to good use. Catch
Leaf live April 1 at the Folk Exchange. — MW
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Kim McMechan
Little Grey House
(Indie) B-

Website: www.kimmcmechan.com
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Singer/songwriter Kim
McMechan wrote all the tuness on this CD in Winnipeg before
moving back home to B.C. Little Grey House is her parting gift,
a collection of nine achingly lonely songs. McMechan is definitely
a poet at heart, and it’s a shame that her voice can’t
quite give these words the delivery they deserve. Still, the
gentle guitars, pianos and strings here make for a delicate
disc that’s pretty accurately summarized by its title.
The best song here is Leah, a tune that will make you wonder
just what emotions your environment makes you keep inside, and
The Way You Come & Go is a heart-wrenching poem about a
relationship we’ve all been in. McMechan has a gift for
words and imagery — a trip to the diary section of her
website further proves this — and she’ll be something
when her musicianship catches up with her pen. — MW
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Mung
We Who Sleep
(Indie) A

Website: www.mungscum.com
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Thank Slayer for Mung.
Some Local Heroes issues go by with a parade of singer/songwriters
— which is fine — but it’s nice to see Winnipeg’s
metal community represented once in a while. Mung stands for
the smelly, leather-clad, long-haired bangers who call the Albert
and The Zoo home, and the three-piece outfit carries the pentagrammed
flag well. Talented players Johnny Mung, Hawg and Peeker take
legs from thrash, arms from death metal, a black metal torso
and a hardcore head to create an undead monster that walks,
screams, kills and worships Satan — all while offering
a touch of social commentary. Only one song here breaks the
four-minute mark, meaning these are short, angry shots of aural
violence that get in, shout at you, wreck the place and leave
a trail of blood behind. Standout track is Shadow, a multi-movement
punisher that’ll leave you in pieces. The Dark Lord commands
you to get this disc. — MW
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Katie Murphy
A Nest in a Box
(Indie) C

Website: www.katiemurphy.ca
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Earnest and admirably
wholesome, Katie Murphy’s folksy pop is like a gentle
breeze, in that it wafts over the listener without really stirring
anything. On this eight-song disc, the prodigal Winnipegger
(who just returned home from Toronto) lets her guitar and alto
loose on songs that deal with motherhood, love relationships
and the joys of living. The lyrics are undoubtedly sincere and
her sentiment is sunny throughout, but most of these songs lack
memorable melodies or even ear-catching refrains. The one notable
exception is When I Got Sick, a soulful, jazzy ode to a lover
that brings Joss Stone to mind. — JK
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Neken
On Holding Hands, Qatching Television
(Indie) C+

Website: www.neken.ca
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Alt-rock? Alterna-pop?
Prog pop-rock? Cake on a bad trip? Neken is all those things
and more, so, if anything, the band is representative of those
groups that aren’t content with the status quo. Each of
the eight songs on this alb has something different to it. For
example, Tied up With String starts off as a basic acoustic
guitar track, but soon a synth is bubbling and beeping in the
background. Then we get a little screaming before Christopher
Johns sings softly over an acoustic axe to close the song down.
Some of the experimentation works and some doesn’t, but
the main problem with several songs is that the vocals simply
don’t seem to blend with the music. On verse sections
of The Underground, Johns sounds like he’s forced into
the mix, almost as though the vocals are battling the instruments.
Still, this quintet should be commended for pushing further
than the average pop record usually does. God knows we have
enough cookie-cutter crap out there these days. — MW
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Paper Moon
Broken Hearts Break Faster Every Day
(Endearing) A

Website: www.papermoon.ca
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God, it’s nice
to hear some sophisticated, cosmopolitan pop/rock music from
a Winnipeg band. That was my first thought as I dug into the
latest offering from the reconstituted Paper Moon, a disc which
comes four-plus years on the heels of the group’s debut.
With a collection of 11 breezily bittersweet tunes, a full sound
made fuller by expressive keyboard work, cascading vocals and
exquisite production from Brandon Friesen, these five (now six)
players have emerged as the city’s suave boulevardiers.
Singer/keyboardist/guitarist Allison Shevernoha stands front
and centre here, making this album a compelling pop confessional
that recognizes life’s petty foibles, its stolen moments
and its late, reflective nights. She and drummer Chris Hiebert
(the band’s other main songwriter) truly hit the mark
on songs such as So Far Away, Is It Too Much to Ask? or the
absolutely sublime Daytrip to Salzburg. Call up a radio station
and request it. Now. — JK
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Melissa Plett
Repeated Stories EP
(Indie) B+

Website: www.melissaplett.com
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Released in January,
Repeated Stories EP finds singer/songwriter Melissa Plett assembling
a talented cast of locals to craft a great little album. At
its core, this disc is a woman with a guitar, but the sound
is fleshed out by Dave Pankratz (Quinzy), Matt Epp, John Paul
Peters (who also produced the disc), Brian James and others.
The full effect is quietly beautiful, especially on Be Here
Tonight and Winter in September. Both songs are patient, down-tempo
numbers that allow Plett’s clear, warm voice to shine,
and both songs can stir up some emotion if they catch you in
the right mood. Hell, the delicate guitars and mournful violin
on Be Here Tonight made this banger sniffle just a bit. In the
liner notes Plett writes: “Thanks for the song, now I’ll
move on.” No, Melissa, thank you. — MW
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The
Quiffs
The Quiffs
(Indie) A

Website: www.myspace.com/quiffs
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Bands with ‘fuck
everybody’ attitudes simply demand your attention —
but once they’ve got it they’d better hold it. Thankfully,
The Quiffs’ take on this approach beats with the feral
pulse of primal rock ’n’ roll. In just 23 minutes
and 17 seconds, bassist Meghan Flett, singer/guitarist Erica
Jacobson, drummer Alana Mercer and guitarist Gillian Oswald
declare that they don’t like boys, defend Paul Reubens’
masturbatory tendencies, sing a song named after themselves
and offer up the best damn recorded version of the word ‘destroy’
since John Lydon. Just for fun they also tell jocko homos and
tit-flashin’ bimbos alike to keep their shirts on. For
some bands that would be a career. For these four proudly amateurish
hellions it’s just a start. So rock on Quiffs (ROQ).
— JK
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Steve Schellenberg
Run Away
(Erie Bay Music) B

Website: www.steveschellenberg.com
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Yet another local who
should be blessed with the time and money to record more often,
Schellenberg is a well-travelled player steeped in the roots,
folk and blues traditions of storytelling and songwriting. He’s
also pretty good at recreating it in his own fashion, harnessing
his richly timbred alto (which many liken to John Sebastian)
to lovingly rendered songs of travel and settlement, hope and
faith, love and despair. Best among the nine originals offered
here are Beauregard Avenue, a finely drawn portrait of a rough-and-tumble
neighbourhood, and Hit the Ground Running, an eventful but unsentimental
father-and-son tale that may well be the best song he’s
written — it certainly wouldn’t sound out of place
next to recent similarly themed work by Rodney Crowell or Steve
Earle. As if that wasn’t enough, Schellenberg throws in
a couple of jigs and traditionals that show off both his virtuosity
and his versatility. — JK
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Sick City
Where Do We Go From Here
(Indie) B+

Website: www.myspace.com/sickcity
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Without much fanfare,
the fivesome that calls itself Sick City has become a formidable
force in the past year, and the proof is in this five-song debut
EP, which practically dares modern rock radio to come calling.
If stations do bite, the freshness and ferocity of this band’s
straightforward, unjaded approach to hard emo should help persuade
those naysayers who still feel that melody and powerful, punkified
crunch cannot coexist. At times, the dueling lead guitars, crunching
changes and ambitious arrangements of this material recall the
effect Def Leppard first had when it first blended harmonies
and gang choruses with metal’s heavier elements. More
recently, Story of the Year sometimes approaches this sound,
but Sick City does it consistently, with more intelligence and
with a secret weapon in singer Josh Youngson’s ability
at the piano. Opening cut In the Millions sounds like a hit
to me, and it’s the best kind of hit, too — one
I’ll be happy to say I like. — JK
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Joe Silva
LoudMouth Sirens
(Purespace) B

Website: www.joesilva.com
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Silva favours house
and house techno — laid-back sounds built around a basic
groove that enables him to layer, loop and filter a variety
of sound. On LoudMouth Sirens he creates an hour-long mood with
varying results. First cut Sleepworking features a slow, funky
groove with a jazzy sax floating through the mix, rising to
the top just as the track reaches its most hypnotic vibe. Scorpio
pokes fun at anonymous e-commerce and electronic dating with
a hilarious spoken-word refrain. Another standout is Floaters,
which slathers on layer after layer of sound and groove to become
utterly compulsive, while the cowbells, misshapen piano and
pipe sounds of Leaving New York will have you nodding your head
and feet before you know it. The top track, though, has to be
I Don’t Remember, a relatively simple funk shuffle that
highlights the sexy, smoky vocals of Sherry St. Germain. —
JK
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Trouvères
A Shot in the Dark EP
(Indie) C+

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Trouvères is
the project of Jason Bernstein, who rounds out his rock-based
sound with bassist Ariel Posen and drummer Darrin Cohen. This
five-song EP moves easily from soft, rootsy music (Out of My
Mind) to gentle retro rock (Common Problem), and it’s
obvious that Bernstein learned a thing or two while busking
in Canada and South Africa. These are casual acoustic songs
in the best tradition of street-corner musicians, but they aren’t
anything particularly special. Common Problem is the closest
thing to a ‘hit.’ It’s got a Sweet Caroline
sing-along quality, and I could see a room full of scruffies
at the Times Change(d) singing “When I call you, I may
as well cry-hi-hi!” with Bernstein. I might not buy this
CD but I’d certainly love to finish a 40 of Southern Comfort
with the band and then jam for a while. — MW
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Twilight Hotel
Bethune
(Indie/Festival) B+

Website: www.twilighthotel.ca
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She’s a little
bit folkie, he’s a little bit rock ’n’ roll.
When put together, Brandy Zdan and Dave Quanbury are a rather
exotic musical beast. Bethune is their first full-length as
Twilight Hotel after a debut under their own names, and it’s
a sprawling, well-crafted project that encompasses elements
of Brecht/Weill cabaret (the title track and The Last Goodbye),
down-home country (Lift Me Far), genuine swing (Scrapbook),
straight-ahead rock ’n’ roll (34 Corduroy, Ponoka)
and even a gentle reggae lilt (Santo & Johnny). Given its
expansive tastes, Bethune is a hell of a journey — one
that’s easiest made when Zdan is singing the lead vocal
and Quanbury is accompanying her, rather than the other way
’round. Her voice best establishes this material’s
emotional heart, while Quanbury’s guitar gives it colour,
space and a sense of place. — JK
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