by Miné Salkin | Mar 13, 2009 | albums
MSTRKRFT
Fist of God
Last Gang Records
this will rock your socks off
After a near three-year wait, Jesse F. Keeler and Al-P have released the highly energized sophomore album that is purposely designed to set your ears and head ablaze. For any electronica enthusiast, it’s easy to see that this album will be devoured in clubs and house parties in the months to come, because it shows the multitude of sounds that can be harmoniously bridged together through this wonderful genre. Caught somewhere between the catchy eccentricity of their earlier work The Looks, but with a bigger emphasis on dancing and complexity of rhythms, Fist of God shows the progressive, coming of age for the Ontario-based electro-duo. Tracks such as “1000 Cigarettes,” and “So Deep” are addictive and catchy as hell, reflecting the hyped up, ADD-riddled generation this band caters to. At the same time, the album shows a greater diversity of sound as it incorporates definitive traces of Death From Above 1979‘s manic metal crunch, and also the deep, anthematic beats that Keeler brought to his other project, Femme Fatale. What we get are very sexy results: the effects of well-rounded and well-versed musicmanship accomplished with a machine-like exactness. What’s most impressive about the album is added hip-hop sequences, sampling artists like Wu-Tang‘s Ghostface Killah, they mesh the plurality of these styles with great mastery, avoiding the oft-cheesiness this combination often produces. The name says it all: Fist of God conquers all styles of music with a tireless, omnipotent kind of force that makes one dance all night long.
by Miné Salkin | Mar 12, 2009 | Uncategorized
It’s been a while since my last blog, mostly due to the fact that I’ve been drowning in school. Most of my time has been dedicated to a news story on last week’s World Wheelchair Curling Championships so I’m sorry for the neglect.
However, my first movie for SPIN went live today, so check it out if you like. Here’s the blurb:
“Frontiers and Plains team up with WITNESS to heal the soul”
A little nook called Little Mountain Studios has a whole lot of heart, just off the beaten track. Recently, I was there to see Kate Lingley, a burgeoning filmmaker, who had connected with social-activist organization WITNESS about putting together an indie-folk-style music and art exhibit, aiming to raise funds for their ongoing humanitarian efforts around the world.
SPINearth was there and caught up with Brad and Jess Lauretti of This Frontier Needs Heroes , to get a sense of the brother-and-sister band who have received much acclaim for their folk-styled, Americana sound. A bit cynical of the times, but fairly hopeful in the consciousness and sensibilities of a new generation—the band’s name says it all.
Other bands were Joel Battle, an indie folk solo artist with a penchant for the intimacy that a single guitar can create and The Sappers, who also came through with a little rockabilly sound for everyone to enjoy. Altogether it was a night of music and art coming together, featuring the photographic artwork of the Soweto Youth Group , who explored a ghetto slum deep in Nairobi.
Hope you enjoy the capture, and please connect with our partners at WITNESS soon enough….
by Miné Salkin | Feb 14, 2009 | live action
“If you are a dreamer, come in. If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, a hoper, a prayer, a magic-bean-buyer. If you’re a pretender, come sit by my fire, for we have some flax-golden tales to spin. Come in! Come in!” — Shel Silverstein
These are the lines of a poet that have inspired a non-profit, collaborative, international multi-media art project. Lead by the independent Vancouver label Peppermill Records, the poetry of Shel Silverstein will come to life at Little Mountain Studios on Saturday, April 18.
Born in 1930, Silverstein was an American poet who was also accomplished as a musician, songwriter, screenwriter and cartoonist. He won a Grammy for his musical and lyrical composition of “A Boy Named Sue” which was performed by Johnny Cash in the early 1970’s. His quirky writing style, use of slang and bizarre story ideas was attributed to the fact that he never read the work of other writers in order to preserve and enhance his unconventional flair with words.
Like Silverstein, Peppermill Records has established an equally alternative aesthetic through its connections with eccentric underground artists from all over the world. Silverstein’s work as a children’s author has attracted the attention of the label, and this is where the entire musical project comes from.
Peppermill Records began as a pet project in 2005, but has grown tremendously with projects such as 52 Weeks, and last summer’s Lunar Jam, a three-day festival at Pierce Lake, B.C. Peppermill Records was created by the spirited 31-year-old Peter Krahn, who is a visionary drifter. During the summer months, Krahn is a nomadic tree planter, giving him the winter period to mull over new artistic events and ideas. The Shel Silverstein project hopes to capture the creativity and imagination of the childhood experience by turning his poetry into songs.
Krahn has always been interested in the intertextuality of art across all platforms and mediums. “For a while I thought about turning a poet into a musician. So I spent a while reading a lot of poetry and found one that was the most conducive to music. I just wanted the whole process of turning literature into melody,” he tells Discorder over a milky chai latté.
For weeks, Krahn sifted through a myriad of poetry books and researched obscure authors, when he finally picked Shel Silverstein’s work because it was a very positive element of his childhood. ”A lot of people have had really nostalgic memories of him,” Krahn says. For many people of all ages, Silverstein’s books such as The Giving Tree and Where the Sidewalk Ends are cornerstones of almost every North American childhood.
The Giving Tree, 1964. Image courtesy of wikipedia
So far, Krahn has nearly 60 artists working on the project, some of which are from the U.K., Norway, and Denmark. Some notable Vancouver acts include Buffaloswans, the rambunctious psychedelic rock group with a country twang who will be playing to “True Story,” 2-step folk artist Nick Caceres for “The Loser,” and super unconventional Hymns To Werewolves playing to “Falling Up.” As the project is international, Peppermill is planning for three other shows playing for the same event in Toronto, Oslo and Montréal as well.
Drawn by the creativity of children and their curiosity about the world, Krahn chose bands that would bring out the offbeat, but morally yielding effects of Silverstein’s works. The aesthetic of Peppermill encompasses all genres, but emphasizes the need to be innovative and multi-textural. The Shel Silverstein project envisions the multidimensionality of art attuned to the mind of the child—the curiosity and imagination—accompanied by equally compelling music. ”This is one of the more folkier themes… it sort of taps into everyone’s inner child,” Krahn says.
Musician, curator, and collage maker, Krahn is also an investigator. He describes the pursuit of new musicians as an artistic kind of voyeurism, an inquiry into places and ideas. “You can search all places of the world,” he explains.
“I always look for the artwork first, then I give it to the musicians when I invite them.” Krahn tirelessly searches and scans through MySpace looking for promising artists, filtering through bands whose musical subject matches his artistic vision for his projects. ”I really enjoy being a curator for others,” he says.
Sometimes it comes down actively pursuing a specific country to search for new hidden talents. After not hearing anything from Sweden for a while, Krahn picked up Ljudbilden & Piloten, an ambient folk music band with highly ethereal, experimental montages who will be performing “Rain.”
The Shel Silverstein Project is a very promising one. While Krahn isn’t making a profit from the event, he hopes to sell artwork and other merchandise at the show in order to provide some of the bands with funds for their time. All of the previous Peppermill projects are available on the website, as free downloads. It truly is the age of new music when record labels are willing to disseminate and promote the creativity of others without asking for money first.
by Miné Salkin | Feb 12, 2009 | live action
Special to the VANCOUVER SUN
VANCOUVER – Spurred by the ongoing dialogue about the global financial recession, a group of independent musicians will play free street shows for the public tomorrow night at undisclosed locations in the downtown east side.
The location of the “bank crawls” remains a secret for now. While they’re playing acoustic, unplugged sets, the entire event is enshrouded by secrecy due to noise concerns and the fear of sabotage. Three bands will play at three different banks, and a fourth set will be an electric show whose venue will be announced at the end of the third set.
Harlan Shore, 18, is the head organizer of the Dancing in Our Debt event. A recent graduate from Kitsilano Secondary School, he now owns a R-R-Records, an independent music label, and is the singer for the folk-alternative group Search Parties who will be playing at the show. The driving impetus of the project is to provide a creative, musical expression for Vancouver’s relationship with money.
The ticket
Shore says that he’s tired of the incessant, dreary dialogue about bailouts, stimulus packages, and investments being lost down the abyss of the recession. “All people think about is money,” he explains. “We can have fun without money. Let us take it to the bank; let us dance in our debt,” he scribbles on old bank statements.
Shore’s goal is remove the barriers between individuals and their financial concerns. “I’ve been thinking a lot about money lately, and about how my friends and family obsess about it too. Everyone’s feeling the impact of the economic crisis,” he said.
Originally hailing from Vancouver, the band list includes a myriad of genres, bridging the gaps between jazz, rock and ethereal explorations. Despite his youth, Shore is a seasoned indie musician whose collaborative projects enabled him to carefully choose the artists for Dance in Our Debt project. “I really wanted a list of bands whose music would be really good to dance to,” Shore says.
Collapsing Opposites, a quirky alternative rock group that sounds like the Canadian response to Built to Spill are set to open the first part of the four part event. Buffaloswans will be bringing in their trademark country-psychedelic hybrid genre to the mix, alongside the Bible-belting Chris-a-riffic’s spiritual explorations of faith and hope, to name a few.
“I know a lot of these bands personally, so I chose the ones that were the most diverse. There’s going to be a lot of atmospheric music, indie-pop styles, and more experimental saxophone-heavy styles too,” Shore says.
Besides the situational irony of playing recession-relief music in front of financial institutions, Shore explains how creativity can change a space. “The bank is where money is really present, and I want to transfer this space into a positive one. People are encouraged to think that the bank is only a stressful place, but that’s because we give it that importance and power over us.”
“I think we can pull it off. Don’t you want to see somebody dancing in front of an ATM machine for once?”
by Miné Salkin | Feb 5, 2009 | film stripped
Based on the best-selling novel by Sophie Kinsella, P.J. Hogan’s film Confessions of a Shopaholic will be playing in theaters this February 13th, just in time for Valentine’s day.
Our headstrong, but sweet and suggestible protagonist Rebecca Bloomwood (Isla Fisher) embodies the concept of financial deficit through her insatiable materialism. The Aussie actress tells The Herald Sun that the consumerist fetishization shown in the film will inspire consumption and public spending, hopefully to revitalize the economy. (more…)