Friday, December 01, 2006
Warners’ Release Dates of New Music - Christine Albrecht
NEW RELEASE DATES- As of Nov 28, 2006DECEMBER 5
LARRY THE CABLE GUY A Very Larry ChristmasLIL SCRAPPY Bred 2 Die Born 2 LiveOST Music From The O.C. Mix 6:OST Van Wilder 2: The Rise of TajBRIAN MCKNIGHT TenMETALLICA Metallica: The Videos 1989-2004 (DVD)VARIOUS The Best Of...Later (DVD)DECEMBER 12
TAKING BACK SUNDAY Louder Now: Part One (CD/DVD)DECEMBER 19LORRAINE HUNT LIEBERSON Sings Peter Lieberson: Neruda SongsTRICK DADDY Back By Thug DemandNEIL YOUNG Living With War - In The Beginning CD+DVD) JANUARY 9GREEN DAY Kerplunk!GREEN DAY 1,039/ Smoothed Out Slappy Hours OST Arthur & the InvisiblesJANUARY 23
’pààBLACK LIPS Live In TijuanaPRETTY RICKY Late Night SpecialKENNY WAYNE SHEPHERD 10 Days Out...(Blues From the Backroads) (CD/DVD)JANUARY 30
CRIME MOB Hated On MostlyTRAVIS TRITT Best OfVARIOUS ARTISTS Chick Flicks: The CollectionVARIOUS ARTISTS From The Heart 2VARIOUS ARTISTS From The Heart: The ClassicsTBS JANUARY
HONEYMOON SUITE Bed of Nails (DVD)MADONNA The Confessions Tour (DVD, CD/DVD)FEBRUARY 6BARENAKED LADIES Are MenBLOC PARTY A Weekend In The CityLIL' FLIP I Need Mine LIL' FLIP I Need Mine (Chopped & Screwed)ASHLEY TISDALE Headstrong(CD, CD/DVD, CD/Karaoke THE USED The Berth (CD, CD+DVD)FEBRUARY 13
8 BALL & MJG Ridin' HighFEBRUARY 27BILL ENGVALL 15 Degrees Off CoolTBS FEBRUARY
VARIOUS Unholy Alliance (CD/DVD)MARCH 6NOTORIOUS B.I.G. Greatest HitsMARCH 27
BILL ENGVALL 15 Degrees Off Cool (DVD)LUVANMUSIQ Musiq SoulchildBLAKE SHELTON Pure BSPAUL WALL Get Money, Stay TrueALL DATES ARE TENTATIVE
Saturday, November 25, 2006
The best concert I ever saw Was... By Anonymous
The best concert I ever saw was Streetheart at the Playhouse Theatre in downtown Winnipeg, (late 1978). Streetheart was touring in support of their first record, 'Meanwhile Back in Paris'. They were so hot at that time. It was the first time I ever heard their version of 'Under My Thumb'. That was the best cover of any Stones song that I have ever heard. One weird thing I remember about that night is that the washrooms were so small people were peeing in the sinks....
Check out our 'swank' site atSwank's Home
Check out our 'swank' site atSwank's Home
Terrorism or Free Speech? By the Poltical Heretic
http://politicalheretic.blogspot.com/
Friday, November 24, 2006
Tomi Swick to Tour With The Bare Naked Ladies...
Contributed by Christine Albrecht on November 24, 2006
Hot on the heels of his just completed tour of Canada opening for the Goo Goo Dolls, it has been announced that Warner Music Canada recording artist Tomi Swick will be heading back out across the country in February performing with the Barenaked Ladies. The tour, which begins on January 31, 2007 in Victoria, B.C., will see the bands playing hockey arenas in 17 Canadian markets ending on February 26, 2007 at Mile One Stadium in St. John's Newfoundland.Of Tomi's performances with the Goo Goo Dolls, critics and fans wrote:"Thanks to edgy alternative electro-pop and feisty lyrics, songs such as Easy Company, A Night Like This and Everything is Alright seemed to have so much more to say..."- Ottawa SunWatch for concert tickets for February 3rd at GM Place.
Hot on the heels of his just completed tour of Canada opening for the Goo Goo Dolls, it has been announced that Warner Music Canada recording artist Tomi Swick will be heading back out across the country in February performing with the Barenaked Ladies. The tour, which begins on January 31, 2007 in Victoria, B.C., will see the bands playing hockey arenas in 17 Canadian markets ending on February 26, 2007 at Mile One Stadium in St. John's Newfoundland.Of Tomi's performances with the Goo Goo Dolls, critics and fans wrote:"Thanks to edgy alternative electro-pop and feisty lyrics, songs such as Easy Company, A Night Like This and Everything is Alright seemed to have so much more to say..."- Ottawa SunWatch for concert tickets for February 3rd at GM Place.
Lemony Snicket... doesn't really appear - or does he?
Contributed by Lezah Williamson on November 22, 2006
The other night we went out to see a talk with the famous author Lemony Snicket, only to be TERRIBLY disappointed when AT THE LAST MINUTE he didn't show up, leaving this chap called Daniel Handler holding the bag. Mr. Handler was EXTREMELY apologetic about the situation and did his best to CONSOLE the audience, but it was NO GOOD. In short order Mr. Handler fled the building in tears...All kidding aside, we did go to see the famous author, in whichever persona he was that night. I had heard Daniel Handler speaking as himself on the CBC a few months ago, and I found myself laughing so hard I was crying - not really the best state to be in when one is driving, I soon found out. However, on the night in question (Nov. 14), Kids Books in Vancouver had arranged for Lemony Snicket to appear at a local high school (Mr. Handler kept insisting it was a synagogue) in his only Canadian appearance of this tour. The show was sold out quickly and when we arrived an hour before the show, the rush line-up was already longer than the line-up for ticket holders. Clearly this was a must see event. Time proved us right. After a short (15 minute) delay due to Snicket/Handler being stuck in traffic, the show started with Mr. Handler apologizing for Mr. Snicket not showing up. He was accompanied by a musician, who fled the stage part-way through the show. Handler had a few audience members up on the stage to help him out with some songs, and he circulated freely in and through the audience, liberally coating one and all with put-downs and sarcastic comments that kept those not targeted in stitches.Although it only lasted 45 minutes, it was well worth the $18 we paid to get through the door. I rate this one a 9.5/10

The other night we went out to see a talk with the famous author Lemony Snicket, only to be TERRIBLY disappointed when AT THE LAST MINUTE he didn't show up, leaving this chap called Daniel Handler holding the bag. Mr. Handler was EXTREMELY apologetic about the situation and did his best to CONSOLE the audience, but it was NO GOOD. In short order Mr. Handler fled the building in tears...All kidding aside, we did go to see the famous author, in whichever persona he was that night. I had heard Daniel Handler speaking as himself on the CBC a few months ago, and I found myself laughing so hard I was crying - not really the best state to be in when one is driving, I soon found out. However, on the night in question (Nov. 14), Kids Books in Vancouver had arranged for Lemony Snicket to appear at a local high school (Mr. Handler kept insisting it was a synagogue) in his only Canadian appearance of this tour. The show was sold out quickly and when we arrived an hour before the show, the rush line-up was already longer than the line-up for ticket holders. Clearly this was a must see event. Time proved us right. After a short (15 minute) delay due to Snicket/Handler being stuck in traffic, the show started with Mr. Handler apologizing for Mr. Snicket not showing up. He was accompanied by a musician, who fled the stage part-way through the show. Handler had a few audience members up on the stage to help him out with some songs, and he circulated freely in and through the audience, liberally coating one and all with put-downs and sarcastic comments that kept those not targeted in stitches.Although it only lasted 45 minutes, it was well worth the $18 we paid to get through the door. I rate this one a 9.5/10
Buy Nothing Day - November 24/2006
Devon of http://devon.tblog.com/post/
Never mind Valentine's, Groundhog or St.Patrick's Day. Since 1992, Kalle Lasn 's brainchild Adbusters have been promoting an annual celebration known by many as Buy Nothing Day. Fourteen years later Buy Nothing Day is celebrated in 65 different countries. In America, BND occurs on Black Friday (by design), November 24th, when millions of shoppers indulging in their glutenous pre-holiday shopping traditions that eventually spin-out-of-control the closer we get to Christmas Day. Kalle Lasn on CNN in 2004: "I think that a lot of people just need to wake up to the ecological, psychological and political consequences of this opulent kind of hyperactive lifestyle that we have built up here. You know, right after the Second World War we only consumed very frugally. And we have increased our consumption by 300 percent. The average consumer today consumes three times more than the average consumer did right after the Second World War 50 years ago."By the way, you can read the transcript or watch the video . Carol Costello was hosting the interview and in my opinion, she's a flake. She took her orders from above to debunk Lasn and his celebration, but failed miserably as Lasn stuck to his guns. Rock on. Keep your eyes peeled on the six o'clock news for BND is making a bigger impact each year it occurs. Here's hoping your Buy Nothing Day will be the best yet!Participate by not participating!
Link: http://devon.tblog.com/post/
Link: http://adbusters.org/metas/eco/bnd/
Never mind Valentine's, Groundhog or St.Patrick's Day. Since 1992, Kalle Lasn 's brainchild Adbusters have been promoting an annual celebration known by many as Buy Nothing Day. Fourteen years later Buy Nothing Day is celebrated in 65 different countries. In America, BND occurs on Black Friday (by design), November 24th, when millions of shoppers indulging in their glutenous pre-holiday shopping traditions that eventually spin-out-of-control the closer we get to Christmas Day. Kalle Lasn on CNN in 2004: "I think that a lot of people just need to wake up to the ecological, psychological and political consequences of this opulent kind of hyperactive lifestyle that we have built up here. You know, right after the Second World War we only consumed very frugally. And we have increased our consumption by 300 percent. The average consumer today consumes three times more than the average consumer did right after the Second World War 50 years ago."By the way, you can read the transcript or watch the video . Carol Costello was hosting the interview and in my opinion, she's a flake. She took her orders from above to debunk Lasn and his celebration, but failed miserably as Lasn stuck to his guns. Rock on. Keep your eyes peeled on the six o'clock news for BND is making a bigger impact each year it occurs. Here's hoping your Buy Nothing Day will be the best yet!Participate by not participating!
Link: http://devon.tblog.com/post/
Link: http://adbusters.org/metas/eco/bnd/
Monday, November 13, 2006
The Best Concert I Ever Saw Was... By Lezah Williamson
The Best Concert I Ever Saw Was...
drum roll, please!
I was asked a question the other day: what was the best concert I had ever seen?
Now, I've thought and thought and thought since then, but still cannot come up with a definitive answer. After all, what criteria do you judge something like this by? Musical technique? Audience reaction? Originality? Best stage show? Costumes? Or maybe it's a combination of all of the above. But what about cross-genre performances? Can you really compare a hardcore punk band to a performance by the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra? Or even an indie tunesmith like Sufjan Stevens to the wildly exciting performance of The Go! Team? Can it be done?
I don't know.
What I do know is that I went out on a limb a few weeks ago and said the the recent Sufjan Stevens show I attended was 'the best concert I've ever seen, bar none.' So, am I going against my word now? Am I a big fat liar? Maybe. And maybe not.
What I've decided to do is kind of a retrospective of the musical life of Lezah, concert emphasis. I've decided to pick not one, but rather the top seven concerts I've seen, and list then in no particular order.
So here goes:
Rush and Streetheart, Pacific Coliseum, Vancouver. That's right, you heard it - Rush and Streetheart make the list. Why, you ask? Well, that is the question any sane person would ask, because frankly, it was a crap concert as far as the music went. And our seats were way, way, way up in the nosebleeds, so we couldn't even see anything (but maybe that's a blessing...). So why is this concert in my best of... list? Because it was my first time, and as they say, you always remember your first time. Yup, prior to this show I was a concert virgin. It was this show that started me on the road to ruin that I am still travelling today. And for that, I shall be ever grateful.
Alice Cooper nd The Babies (who, it turned out, never showed up because they couldn't get across the border), Pacific Coliseum, Vancouver. Alice Cooper was the second concert I ever attended, and was much, much, much better than the aforementioned Rush/Streetheart disappointment. Alice Cooper's 'School's Out' was the first record I ever bought, and I still have an incredible soft spot for that make-up wearing, goofy old golf-crazy grandpa. He's old, but he's cool. And his stage show was second to none, complete with ballet dancer, guillotine, and copious amounts of (fake) blood. What could be better, I ask you?

The Arcade Fire, The Commodore Ballroom, Vancouver. Christine and I saw this show together, and when I got back to my 'real' life, I felt compelled to spread the gospel that is The Arcade Fire. This band puts on a musically hedonistic performance that is life-affirming and visually exciting. Even seeing them on TV a few months later at some music awards set me on fire again. So you can imagine my extreme disappointment - nay, despair! - when we bought tickets to see them in Seattle, and stupidly misread the date, showing up a week after the fact. Oy vey!
The Beta Band, Richards on Richards, Vancouver. I had a bit of a lull in my concert-going career for the decade they called the '90s. Maybe it was because the music sucked? Could be. I did go to some shows, but certainly not anywhere near the number I had been seeing prior to that. So when, on a lark, Dave and I went and saw the Beta Band, I tell you - I was thanking my lucky stars. This band brought music back to me. For that I shall be forever grateful (again). This band was largely unknown at the time and was nearing the end of their first North American tour.
One guy who had seen them play New York had been so excited by the band that he hopped in his car and followed them from gig to gig across the nation and up into Canada. I felt like doing the same, frankly. Later that same year The Beta Band were up for Best Live Act at some British music awards, but were robbed - I can't recall who won, but chances are it was someone like Britney Spears. All I can say is, there is no justice in this world.
But The Beta Band was great beyond their live act, as well: each of the band members spun discs before the show, and that was certainly an indicator of the eclectic mix of musical styles and genres that we would be experiencing that evening. Altogether, I saw the Beta Band three (or was it four?) times, and every time they had this knack of starting off in a kind of small way and then building and building and building to the ultimate climax. This show ended with 11 people up on stage (including their New York fan), most playing some variation of percussion instrument, from bongos to steel drums and beyond. It was glorious!
The Go! Team, Seattle. This was a wild night with a bunch of crazy, action-packed bands. Quite frankly, the first two acts were imminently forgettable but they did set the tone for the evening, which revolved around a dance-your-socks-off type of musical therapy, the like of which I have never experienced before or since. Lead singer Ninja had the whole place dancing in such a frenzy that this question actually crossed my mind: Could I contract AIDs from someone else's sweat? Because sweat was spraying everywhere, from everyone - it was unavoidable. This was an out-and-out boogie fest. Not surprisingly, I read an interview with Ninja this fall, and she cited this concert as being the best one they had ever done.

Matchbox 20 (or is it Twenty? - I don't know, as I'm the ultimate Matchbox 20/Twenty anti-fan out there), George, Washington (gotta love that name!). A good friend of mine was, a few years ago, a huge Rob Thomas fan. For her birthday, she invited us all to go to see the band down in Washington. And we had to camp out. But I don't like camping. And I like Matchbox 20/Twenty even less than I like camping. But I went anyway. For my friend. What happened after was a comedy of errors such that I have never experienced the likes of ever again - nor do I want to.
September 11th being the first disaster, which to many, of course, had far bigger implications but to us merely meant that we had one heck of a time getting across the border. It was 3-4 hours in line, which in turn translated to being 3-4 hours behind schedule, which in turn meant no lunch for little old me. Then we lost our friends, as we were travelling in separate cars - and we never did find them again until the next day, once the dust had all settled.
So Dave and I wandered around at the concert like a couple of lost sheep, bleating and baaahing and just generally not having a very good time. But then our fairy god-father came along, and offered us the greatest seats in the world (their friends hadn't shown up). On top of that, the setting was indescribably fantastic, perched in a nature amphitheatre on a cliff above the Columbia River. And the weather was beautiful. And the smell of the alfalfa wafting in from the fields beside us was so sweet. And, it turned out, although Matchbox Twenty/20 didn't turn my crank, the opening act was surprisingly good. So there were many, many silver linings to this otherwise disastrous day.
Sufjan Stevens,St. Andrews Wesley Cathedral, Vancouver. The current indie darling, Sufjan Stevens recently played a completely sold out (and then some!) show, the whole while wearing an enormous pair of butterfly wings. Need I say more? Just listen to a recording of him, and you will hear exactly what we heard that night - he is a master at his craft, and is probably the most skilful singer/songwriter I've ever heard. His intricate tunes sound as though they would be difficult to reproduce live, but Sufjan is the man. Amen, brother.
drum roll, please!
I was asked a question the other day: what was the best concert I had ever seen?
Now, I've thought and thought and thought since then, but still cannot come up with a definitive answer. After all, what criteria do you judge something like this by? Musical technique? Audience reaction? Originality? Best stage show? Costumes? Or maybe it's a combination of all of the above. But what about cross-genre performances? Can you really compare a hardcore punk band to a performance by the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra? Or even an indie tunesmith like Sufjan Stevens to the wildly exciting performance of The Go! Team? Can it be done?
I don't know.
What I do know is that I went out on a limb a few weeks ago and said the the recent Sufjan Stevens show I attended was 'the best concert I've ever seen, bar none.' So, am I going against my word now? Am I a big fat liar? Maybe. And maybe not.
What I've decided to do is kind of a retrospective of the musical life of Lezah, concert emphasis. I've decided to pick not one, but rather the top seven concerts I've seen, and list then in no particular order.
So here goes:
Rush and Streetheart, Pacific Coliseum, Vancouver. That's right, you heard it - Rush and Streetheart make the list. Why, you ask? Well, that is the question any sane person would ask, because frankly, it was a crap concert as far as the music went. And our seats were way, way, way up in the nosebleeds, so we couldn't even see anything (but maybe that's a blessing...). So why is this concert in my best of... list? Because it was my first time, and as they say, you always remember your first time. Yup, prior to this show I was a concert virgin. It was this show that started me on the road to ruin that I am still travelling today. And for that, I shall be ever grateful.
Alice Cooper nd The Babies (who, it turned out, never showed up because they couldn't get across the border), Pacific Coliseum, Vancouver. Alice Cooper was the second concert I ever attended, and was much, much, much better than the aforementioned Rush/Streetheart disappointment. Alice Cooper's 'School's Out' was the first record I ever bought, and I still have an incredible soft spot for that make-up wearing, goofy old golf-crazy grandpa. He's old, but he's cool. And his stage show was second to none, complete with ballet dancer, guillotine, and copious amounts of (fake) blood. What could be better, I ask you?
The Arcade Fire, The Commodore Ballroom, Vancouver. Christine and I saw this show together, and when I got back to my 'real' life, I felt compelled to spread the gospel that is The Arcade Fire. This band puts on a musically hedonistic performance that is life-affirming and visually exciting. Even seeing them on TV a few months later at some music awards set me on fire again. So you can imagine my extreme disappointment - nay, despair! - when we bought tickets to see them in Seattle, and stupidly misread the date, showing up a week after the fact. Oy vey!
The Beta Band, Richards on Richards, Vancouver. I had a bit of a lull in my concert-going career for the decade they called the '90s. Maybe it was because the music sucked? Could be. I did go to some shows, but certainly not anywhere near the number I had been seeing prior to that. So when, on a lark, Dave and I went and saw the Beta Band, I tell you - I was thanking my lucky stars. This band brought music back to me. For that I shall be forever grateful (again). This band was largely unknown at the time and was nearing the end of their first North American tour.
One guy who had seen them play New York had been so excited by the band that he hopped in his car and followed them from gig to gig across the nation and up into Canada. I felt like doing the same, frankly. Later that same year The Beta Band were up for Best Live Act at some British music awards, but were robbed - I can't recall who won, but chances are it was someone like Britney Spears. All I can say is, there is no justice in this world.
But The Beta Band was great beyond their live act, as well: each of the band members spun discs before the show, and that was certainly an indicator of the eclectic mix of musical styles and genres that we would be experiencing that evening. Altogether, I saw the Beta Band three (or was it four?) times, and every time they had this knack of starting off in a kind of small way and then building and building and building to the ultimate climax. This show ended with 11 people up on stage (including their New York fan), most playing some variation of percussion instrument, from bongos to steel drums and beyond. It was glorious!
The Go! Team, Seattle. This was a wild night with a bunch of crazy, action-packed bands. Quite frankly, the first two acts were imminently forgettable but they did set the tone for the evening, which revolved around a dance-your-socks-off type of musical therapy, the like of which I have never experienced before or since. Lead singer Ninja had the whole place dancing in such a frenzy that this question actually crossed my mind: Could I contract AIDs from someone else's sweat? Because sweat was spraying everywhere, from everyone - it was unavoidable. This was an out-and-out boogie fest. Not surprisingly, I read an interview with Ninja this fall, and she cited this concert as being the best one they had ever done.
Matchbox 20 (or is it Twenty? - I don't know, as I'm the ultimate Matchbox 20/Twenty anti-fan out there), George, Washington (gotta love that name!). A good friend of mine was, a few years ago, a huge Rob Thomas fan. For her birthday, she invited us all to go to see the band down in Washington. And we had to camp out. But I don't like camping. And I like Matchbox 20/Twenty even less than I like camping. But I went anyway. For my friend. What happened after was a comedy of errors such that I have never experienced the likes of ever again - nor do I want to.
September 11th being the first disaster, which to many, of course, had far bigger implications but to us merely meant that we had one heck of a time getting across the border. It was 3-4 hours in line, which in turn translated to being 3-4 hours behind schedule, which in turn meant no lunch for little old me. Then we lost our friends, as we were travelling in separate cars - and we never did find them again until the next day, once the dust had all settled.
So Dave and I wandered around at the concert like a couple of lost sheep, bleating and baaahing and just generally not having a very good time. But then our fairy god-father came along, and offered us the greatest seats in the world (their friends hadn't shown up). On top of that, the setting was indescribably fantastic, perched in a nature amphitheatre on a cliff above the Columbia River. And the weather was beautiful. And the smell of the alfalfa wafting in from the fields beside us was so sweet. And, it turned out, although Matchbox Twenty/20 didn't turn my crank, the opening act was surprisingly good. So there were many, many silver linings to this otherwise disastrous day.
Sufjan Stevens,St. Andrews Wesley Cathedral, Vancouver. The current indie darling, Sufjan Stevens recently played a completely sold out (and then some!) show, the whole while wearing an enormous pair of butterfly wings. Need I say more? Just listen to a recording of him, and you will hear exactly what we heard that night - he is a master at his craft, and is probably the most skilful singer/songwriter I've ever heard. His intricate tunes sound as though they would be difficult to reproduce live, but Sufjan is the man. Amen, brother.
Friday, November 10, 2006
The Goo Goo Dolls / Tomi Swick Concert Review by: Christine Albrecht
The Orpheum Theatre, Vancouver, Capacity Crowd - November 6, 2006
As usual, The Orpheum venue is a beautiful theatre. A perfect place to listen to the Goo Goo Dolls, however, at times one just wants to move around and have fun, whereas a seated venue doesn’t allow for that. Don’t get me wrong, this was not a staid crowd as I experienced with Bonnie Raitt’s concert. (I am still struggling with that review.) This audience was more energetic and more vocal - which I would assume is music to performers’ ears.Opening performance was Tomi Swick who always sounds in top form. He still reminds me a lot of Tom Cochrane. Imagine, it’s been 20 years since the band formed in New York in 1986 (then briefly known as the Sex Maggots) but soon formed The Goo Goo Dolls after reading a blurb written in a True Detective magazine. 1998 saw their breakout into mainstream with the song, ‘Iris’. The Goo Goo Dolls have just released their latest (2006) album, ‘Let Love In’, which includes Supertramp’s ‘Give a Little Bit’, along with other known songs. The Goo Goo Dolls consist of Jonny Rzeznik (vocal/guitar) Robby Takac, (Bass/Vocal) and Mike Malinin (Drums)The band appeared happy to be in Vancouver and did their requisite Vancouver name dropping. Robby, sporting dred locks was in high energy form. I found the set to be short given the repertoire of songs they have to choose from. However they did play Slide, Black Balloon, Smash, Tucked Away, Name, Iris, Let Love In, Feel the Silence, Give a Little Bit as well as an assortment of other popular GGD songs. When Better Days was played, there was a reference made to Hurricane Katrina. Fans really enjoyed the tunes Naked and Broadway, and when the opening refrain of Iris began, it was game over for hearing Rzeznik. The crowd enthusiastically (and quite well I might add) sang every line of the song. It was a song that obviously touched many people on different levels. You could see some crying, some laughing, some hugging and so on. Ahh, the power of music.
As keyboards are integral to the music, it was nice to see some extra bodies on stage with a keyboard and guitar. It helped fill out the sound somewhat. The only downside of the evening was when I remembered that ‘Dred’ Robby sings. He sang lead on Black Balloon, Smash and Tucked Away. Robby sometimes growls through a song as if he has a mouthful of marbles, and he’s not too happy about it either. Ah well, it was only for a couple of tunes.Jonny joked about the amount of hate mail they got for the song ‘Name’ which guaranteed it airplay. Surprising, as the song ‘Name’ is an instantly popular song for the fans.I didn’t get a chance to interview The Goo Goo Dolls, but the one question I’ve always wanted to ask is why their song titles do not generally ‘set up’ the song for the listener. Perhaps next time through.
As usual, The Orpheum venue is a beautiful theatre. A perfect place to listen to the Goo Goo Dolls, however, at times one just wants to move around and have fun, whereas a seated venue doesn’t allow for that. Don’t get me wrong, this was not a staid crowd as I experienced with Bonnie Raitt’s concert. (I am still struggling with that review.) This audience was more energetic and more vocal - which I would assume is music to performers’ ears.Opening performance was Tomi Swick who always sounds in top form. He still reminds me a lot of Tom Cochrane. Imagine, it’s been 20 years since the band formed in New York in 1986 (then briefly known as the Sex Maggots) but soon formed The Goo Goo Dolls after reading a blurb written in a True Detective magazine. 1998 saw their breakout into mainstream with the song, ‘Iris’. The Goo Goo Dolls have just released their latest (2006) album, ‘Let Love In’, which includes Supertramp’s ‘Give a Little Bit’, along with other known songs. The Goo Goo Dolls consist of Jonny Rzeznik (vocal/guitar) Robby Takac, (Bass/Vocal) and Mike Malinin (Drums)The band appeared happy to be in Vancouver and did their requisite Vancouver name dropping. Robby, sporting dred locks was in high energy form. I found the set to be short given the repertoire of songs they have to choose from. However they did play Slide, Black Balloon, Smash, Tucked Away, Name, Iris, Let Love In, Feel the Silence, Give a Little Bit as well as an assortment of other popular GGD songs. When Better Days was played, there was a reference made to Hurricane Katrina. Fans really enjoyed the tunes Naked and Broadway, and when the opening refrain of Iris began, it was game over for hearing Rzeznik. The crowd enthusiastically (and quite well I might add) sang every line of the song. It was a song that obviously touched many people on different levels. You could see some crying, some laughing, some hugging and so on. Ahh, the power of music.
Saturday, November 04, 2006
Write A Six Word Story
http://ladyg.tblog.com/
http://blog.wired.com/sixwords/

Lady G writes: Can you write a story using only six words? There is a site that invites you to do just that. I have tried to come up with one, but no luck as yet. Give it a try. Check out the ‘short stories’ section on wired.com.We'll be brief: Hemingway once wrote a story in just six words ‘For sale: baby shoes, never worn.’ and is said to have called it his best work. So we’ve asked sci-fi, fantasy, and horror writers from the realms of books, TV, movies, and games to take a shot at the six-word story, themselves. Some examples of stories submitted:Failed SAT. Lost scholarship. Invented rocket.- William ShatnerComputer, did we bring batteries? Computer?- Eileen GunnVacuum collision. Orbits diverge. Farewell, love. - David BrinGown removed carelessly. Head, less so.- Joss WhedonAutomobile warranty expires. So does engine.- Stan LeeGo to the link below and explore your limited, yet profound, vocabulary.
http://blog.wired.com/sixwords/
Lady G writes: Can you write a story using only six words? There is a site that invites you to do just that. I have tried to come up with one, but no luck as yet. Give it a try. Check out the ‘short stories’ section on wired.com.We'll be brief: Hemingway once wrote a story in just six words ‘For sale: baby shoes, never worn.’ and is said to have called it his best work. So we’ve asked sci-fi, fantasy, and horror writers from the realms of books, TV, movies, and games to take a shot at the six-word story, themselves. Some examples of stories submitted:Failed SAT. Lost scholarship. Invented rocket.- William ShatnerComputer, did we bring batteries? Computer?- Eileen GunnVacuum collision. Orbits diverge. Farewell, love. - David BrinGown removed carelessly. Head, less so.- Joss WhedonAutomobile warranty expires. So does engine.- Stan LeeGo to the link below and explore your limited, yet profound, vocabulary.
Yoplait® Donations Towards Breast Cancer Research
As I was reading through some t-blog sites, I came across ladyg.tblog. She wrote a couple of posts that I felt would be of interest for swanktrendz readers.
The first article deals with fund raising, via Yoplait® products, for breast cancer.Every lid matters, because every lid gets us closer to our goal of giving $1.5 million to the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation. For every lid we get, we'll donate 10 cents to the Foundation, up to $1.5 million. And we guarantee to donate at least $500,000.Working together, one lid at a time, we can get there. So, this is a chance for each of us to take part in the search for a cure. Doing your part couldn't be easier.• Beginning in September 2006, look for the pink lids on packages of Yoplait® Original, Light, Thick and Creamy, Light Thick and Creamy, Whips!, Yoplait Smoothies, and Nouriche.• Save them, wash them, and mail them in before December 31 2006. Yoplait® is committed to the fight against breast cancer. And we know you are, too. So let's work together. For every pink Yoplait yogurt lid you send us, we'll donate 10 cents to the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation through our Save Lids to Save Lives® program. So here's a chance for each of us to bring the world a little closer to a cure. Yoplait will donate up to $1.5 million and we guarantee a donation of at least $500,000. Every lid matters. Especially yours. Send Lids to:Save Lids to Save LivesP.O. Box 72716Rockford MNUSA55572-7016To read another contribution of Lady G’s, go to the link below.
http://www.swanktrendz.com/php/files/11_04_2006_0319_462433419.php
http://ladyg.tblog.com
http://www.swanktrendz.com/php/files/11_04_2006_0319_462433419.php
http://ladyg.tblog.com
Monday, October 30, 2006
Marianas Trench - Everything I Thought They Would Be. By: Christine Albrecht
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=1310949353
jpeg from: http://far-from-here.net/
Tuesday, October 17, 2006
Online Haute Couture By Christine Albrecht
Instalment One - ‘Trendy Casual’ Haute Couture at our Fingertips, but Without the Couture’s Hands Fully Immersed in Our Pockets. By Christine Albrecht
Visit our swank site at swanktrendzTrendy casualnetaporter has terrific designers such as:• Alexander McQueen• Antik Batik• Anya Hindmarch• Blossom Mother & Child• Bottega Veneta• Burberry Prorsum• By Malene Birger• Cacharel• Celine• Chloé• View this Diane Von Furstenberg FURSTENBERG Montespan Chiffon dress $400.00 Beautiful!
• Or this Roberto Cavalli for $6650.00 - Believe it or not, a true scoop
• This delightful top from poisonivy only has an ordering code and a contact email. I suppose they send you the price and perhaps online bargaining ensues.
• hotinhollywood has delightful handbags, shoes, fashion and accessories at their disposal. This Hollywood Spectacle bag is a reasonable $45.00
• This Wet Seal site has a section entitled the ‘Top Ten Fall Fashion Trends’. Check out the Deep V Stripe Tunic Sweater at $17.50.
Add some leggings or a mini and you can’t go wrong with that price• Planet Funk offers shopping for both men and women. As we know, the skinny jean is back (much to the dismay of anyone with thick thighs and/or short legs.) However, those of you blessed with perfect genes... well here are some perfect jeans for you.
• These Planet Funk Exclusive ‘70s Xanadu Jeans can be purchased for $200.00• H&M have a website H & M that showcases its world boutiques. With menu options such as ‘Haute Couture’ and ‘Fall Trends’, you know you are in designer heaven. This site is more of a buying guide and gives stores in your location. Their online store is at HM• Step into your American Eagle online shopping experience at American Eagle. The AE Escape Zip Hoodie (Now $34.95) is a hot trend amongst the casual chic.
Stay tuned for our next instalment - Online Shopping for Dresses/Skirts and Celebrity Knockoffs.
Visit our swank site at swanktrendzTrendy casualnetaporter has terrific designers such as:• Alexander McQueen• Antik Batik• Anya Hindmarch• Blossom Mother & Child• Bottega Veneta• Burberry Prorsum• By Malene Birger• Cacharel• Celine• Chloé• View this Diane Von Furstenberg FURSTENBERG Montespan Chiffon dress $400.00 Beautiful!
• Or this Roberto Cavalli for $6650.00 - Believe it or not, a true scoop
Monday, October 16, 2006
Mastodon - Blood Mountain Contributed by Mike Gillis
Mastodon - Blood MountainContributed by Mike Gillis
First off, I'd like to say that it's been many years since I’ve bailed early on a night of drinking for the sole purpose of going home and listening to a new album.Secondly, let me tell you what this album sounds like.Imagine ‘Yes’ at their most proggy-fantastical (circa Close To The Edge and Fragile); now imagine that the members of ‘Yes’ are angry, fourteen-foot tall Minotaurs who play with the technical majesty of 80's ‘Maiden’ and the speed and ferocity of ‘Reign In Blood’ era ‘Slayer’.Also, one of them might have a hard on for Lightning Bolt.Never could I have foreseen that the record I'd go the most ga-ga for in 2006 would be a heavy metal concept album about a man scaling a mountain in search of a Crystal Skull and chronicling the beasts and hallucinations he encounters along the way.Absolutely epic.The song Capillarian Crest contains some the the most mind-bending guitar-o-batics I've ever heard.Toward the end of Circle Of Cysquatch (a one-eyed Sasquatch that can see into the future) we actually hear the 'Squatch's horrible voice, as he warns of the Colony Of Birchmen that lie only two songs further up the hideous mountain trail.And Bladecatcher? Bladecatcher is just fucked.But it's not all earth-shattering heaviosity; there are peaks and crests of majestic beauty sprinkled throughout, but it's quite a journey to reach them.It's daunting, there's a lot to digest here. I'm not even sure how it ends or if it's even supposed to end or if the end is somewhere else completely.I do know that if you listened to this record for the first time on mushrooms in a dark forest, you would die.My inner myth-nerd: satisfied!My inner headbanger: satisfied!My inner have sex with two chicks at the same time guy: still not satisfied!
http://www.myspace.com/mastodon
http://www.sneakinout.blogspot.com/
http://www.myspace.com/mastodon
http://www.sneakinout.blogspot.com/
Don't Make me Feel Weird in my Heart Contributed by Mike Gillis
Don't Make me Feel Weird in my HeartContributed by Mike Gillis
For the record, I didn't lose my iPod.My iPod wasn't stolen.It' s in the house, I just don't know where.I did know where when I hid it there/wherever during the party last week, in that mindless ether that conjoins Saturday night and Sunday morning. But that information was washed away the second I rejoined the drink-a-thon.I've torn this place apart, day by day, room by room, and still nothing.This is not the first time I've done this.I am, and have been since I was very small, one of the world's most ingenious and diabolical hiders-of-things.Which is all well and good.But it can lead to serious problems when I hide stuff when I'm drunk. The drinking doesn't affect my sublime (almost Satanic) ability to conceal things in plain sight, but it does affect my ability to remember where the concealing took place.One night several years ago, when I thought Daryl might have been involved in petty crime, I hid his sneakers, fearing they could be used as evidence should the hammer fall. Naturally, I was highly intoxicated at the time and couldn't locate the sneakers the next morning. Or any morning for the next several weeks. (My timeline may be a little garbled, but I believe the only reason I found the crime shoes again was because we were moving out of the house.)So, exhausted with spending all my spare time searching, I've decided to take the stance of "It'll show up sooner or later".But man, it's fucking killing me.I'm 930 songs in the hole.And all my old fashioned CD's are back in the Maritimes in my mother's garage.But the real punch in the bag is that Autumn, for me, is the best time of the year for hours long headphone walks.During my two hour excursion today all I could think about was the lack of music.Fuck.And that dank, crisp fall air was practically on its knees, begging for me to fill her with some big, throbbing rock and roll.Anything.Master Of Reality.Fear Of A Black Planet.Hot Rats.Murray Street.Double Live Gonzo.Anything.Then, a wet yellow leaf nose-dived off a tree and slapped me in the face, making me suddenly and frighteningly aware of how dependant I've become on such a sleek and attractive little piece of technology.(Her skin was like porcelain, and when I touched her sensitive belly, her face would light up and she'd sing to me. I had her in the palm of my hand.)I'm sure it'll show up.(Don't make me feel weird in my heart.)Now... to learn how to whistle.
http://www.sneakinout.blogspot.com
http://www.sneakinout.blogspot.com
Sufjan Stevens with My Brightest Diamond Contributed by Lezah Williamson
Sufjan Stevens with My Brightest DiamondOct. 14, St. Andrews Wesley Church, Vancouver, BCContributed by Lezah Williamson
Last Saturday night we headed out to Sufjan Stevens in great anticipation. We had bought our tickets almost two months ago and the show had sold out almost immediately. But then I read in the paper Saturday morning that a limited number of tickets would be available at the door, and that might have been what the problem was. You see, we arrived at 6:30 to get good seats near the front; the tickets said doors at 7. But when we got there, the line up was already a block long. Word was that people had started to line up for those extra tickets at 8 am that morning. Yeesh. So us, with tickets, ended up getting in behind the people who arrived without tickets. Sometimes life's just not fair!And then some guy walked by towards the end of the ever-increasing line and said that he's heard Sufjan Stevens is always notoriously late. And I guess that's the case, because although tickets said doors at 7, we never even moved until about 7:45, and by the time we got in just before 8, the first act was already half way through the set. Fortunately a very kind and generous fellow fan offered to go get coffees for everyone, so we had something to keep us warm as we waited. Thanks to the red haired guy with the nose ring, if you're reading this!Anyway, as I said, My Brightest Diamond was already about half-way through her set when we got in. We eventually got a seat in the balcony, and we were able to see quite well from there. I'm sure that wasn't the case for most of the patrons on the floor.There seemed to be a theme in the dress of her band - everyone was wearing some variation of black and red, in some cases with white thrown in for good measure. Her voice is fantastic - very operatic, and the music seems to cover a number of genres.When she was done we had the opportunity to take a look at the venue which was fantastic. The acoustics had already proven themselves with the first act, and the setting just fit right in with Sufjan Stevens and what he's all about.When his band came out, then were wearing what looked like mint green pants and butterfly wings. He came out later dressed in a similar fashion, and when he sat down at the piano the energy in the air was palpable. There was both a string and horn section, as well as the conventional guitar and drums that one expects to see at a concert. In addition, Stevens spent quite a bit of time at the grand piano that was centre stage, although at times he also played the banjo or the guitar. Throughout the show, he would tell little stories about the origin of the songs and the audience was absolutely reverential. You could literally hear a pin drop, and I know this for a fact, because as the second song, the music stopped and my stomach growled and it sounded as though it filled the whole balcony. Fortunately the sound of my stomach was quickly drowned out by applause. And that was the rhythm of the evening: the band played, the song stopped, people applauded enthusiastically and yet very politely (no whistling, no yelling, no hootin' and hollerin') - it was like I was in Japan watching a show, rather than Canada.He played two new songs (one called Snowbird and one from the upcoming Christmas album) and a lot of songs from Illinois, but nothing from The Avalanche. Some of the songs had been rearranged quite a bit from the albums, but they didn't lose anything. All in all, it was the best concert I've ever attended, bar none.
Thursday, October 12, 2006
Sufjan Stevens - By: Lezah Williamson
Warner Music Canada is the First Major Label in Canada to Launch its Own Shortcode. By: Christine Albrecht
Warner Music Canada is the First Major Label in Canada to Launch its Own Shortcode. By: Christine AlbrechtWarner Music Canada has, today, become the first major music label in Canada to launch its own direct to consumer, shortcode mobile content solution. On that date, Canadian music fans will be able to purchase Truetones directly from Warner Music Canada via the mobile content purchase code 311311 utilizing all major mobile carriers available in Canada.Warner will launch this program with one of the world's most popular hip hop artists, Diddy. All that music fans will have to do is text the keyword 'Diddy' to 311311 and they will get a text message back that allows them to purchase Truetones extracted from Diddy's new single, "Come To Me." Diddy's new album, Press Play, is scheduled for release on Tuesday October 17, 2006. Other Truetones will be made available shortly from many of Warner Music Canada's most popular artists.In the coming weeks, Warner will also roll out their first strategic partnership program with Canada's leading music retailer, HMV Canada. The campaign will include 20 current WMC releases including Billy Talent, James Blunt, Madonna, Green Day and Panic! At The Disco, and will be featured in HMV's marketing campaigns in store, in print and on TV across Canada from October to January. For example, consumer will be able to download Billy Talent Truetones by texting 'HMV BT' to 311311."We are excited to be partnering with Warner Music Canada in order to expand our current offering by making ringtones available to our consumers," noted Humphrey Kadaner, HMV Canada President. "This new initiative further supports HMV's vision as Canada's world class destination for music."Charlie Millar, Manager of Digital Business, Warner Music Canada commented "Warner Music Canada recognizes the value of this new mobile distribution model and the purchase code has been developed to allow for further third party consumer and retail brands to market and sell Warner content." "This shortcode will help bring our artists to a wider market place," says Warner Music Canada President Steve Kane. "Fans will have the opportunity to opt in to receive communiqués from their favourite artists for additional unique content and tour information."MyThum Interactive has partnered with Warner Music Canada to design, develop and deploy the mobile content solution that will enable WMC to retail Truetones directly to music fans. The distribution platform will allow consumers to text in a specific keyword to download content items promoted in album packaging or through various other media.
FYI - New CD Release Dates By: Christine Albrecht
FYI - New CD Release DatesRelease Date: October 17Cobra StarshipWhile The City Sleeps We Rule The StreetsDiddyPress PlayEric PanicLe Combat Est Au JardinVariousAmerican Hardcore: History of American Punk Rock '80-'86Release Date: October 24Amy GrantTime Again (CD+DVD, DVD)My Chemical RomanceWe Are The Black Parade (CD, CD/DVD Spec. Ed.)Jeff Tweedy Sunken Treasure: Live In The Pacific Northwest (DVD)Release Date:October 31Deftones Saturday Night WristOST Happy FeetOST Borat: Stereophonic Musical Listenings...Sarah SleaneOrphan MusicVariousThe Vice Guide To Travel (DVD)Various Artists Women & Songs - 10th AnniversaryVarious ArtistsXM - Live At The VergeThe WalkmenPussycats Starring The WalkmenRelease Date: November 7Louis Armstrong The Wonderful World OfEric Clapton & J.J. CaleThe Road To EscondidoThe Flaming LipsAt War With The Mystics (CD/DVD)Josh GrobanAwake (CD, CD+DVD)Matt MaysWhen The Angels Make ContactOST Music From The Motion Picture "The Departed"Daniel PowterDaniel Powter (Ltd. Ed. CD/DVD)Various ArtistsBig Shiny Tunes 11Release Date: November 14Depeche ModeThe Best of Depeche Mode Volume 1 (CD, CD/DVD)Lynda LemayMa SignatureRobert MichaelsSpanish Guitar CollectionNotorious B.I.G.Ready To Die (CD/DVD)Laura PausiniLo CantoReset No Limits, No WorriesDamien Rice9StaindGreatest Hits (CD, DVD)Nei Young & Crazy Horse Live At The Fillmore EastYuselfAn Other CupRelease Date:November 21Enya Amarantine (Special Christmas Edition)Great Big SeaCourage & Patience & Grit: GBS in Concert(DVD/CD)Brian McKnightTenOST The Fountain - Clint Mansell QuartetP.O.D. Greatest HitsSteve ReichReich Remixed 2006Release Date: December 5Lil ScrappyBred 2 Die Born 2 LiveOSTMusic From The O.C. Mix 6: Covering Our TracksTaking Back SundayLouder Now: Part One (CD/DVD)Release Date: December 12VariousUnholy Alliance (CD/DVD)Release Date: December 19Lil’ Flip I Need Mine Lil’ FlipI Need Mine (Chopped & Screwed)Trick DaddyBack By Thug Demand
Concert Review: Lillix, Marianas Trench and Shiftkit - By: Lezah Williamson
Visit our site at http://www.swanktrendz.comConcert Review: Lillix, Marianas Trench and ShiftkitCitrus Nightclub, Langley, BC - Oct. 7/06All ages shows... they have certain advantages and certain disadvantages. On the advantages side, you don't get the drunken neanderthals who regularly try and push and slam their way through a crowd; you also get the fresh responses of those still not jaded from hundreds of late nights in clubs watching a variety of bands try to claw their way up to the top. On the disadvantages side, you get a lot of people who are there for just one band only (maybe they heard them on the radio) and so don't even give the other bands a chance - but hey, you get that at all shows, I guess.Anyway, this show was kind of different from your average night club show because it was at 2 in the afternoon. In a nightclub. I think there's an oxymoron in there somewhere. Plus it was all ages, plus it was in my hometown, plus it was a bunch of homegrown bands. So, a bit different from what I usually do, concert-wise.Fortunately the weather was beautiful, because when we got to Citrus Nightclub at 1:30 (doors at 1:30, show at 2) the bouncers kept us lined up along the sidewalk until about 1:50. The line was already long when we got there, and proceeded to stretch its way down the block, right past Save-On-Foods (or whatever it's called now - I think they just changed their name). Whatever the case, it allowed me to get a good look at the patrons, which was about 15% parents accompanying their children to their first concert, and the remainder being school-aged girls, for the most part. There were kids from 8 to 18 there, but the mean age appeared to be 13. Probably 65-70% were female. I think I'm getting a handle on this demographic...Anyway, turns out the first band, Shiftkit, is from Langley, so they didn't have a long drive. Ha ha. If you try and look them up on the internet, you'll probably just get a lot of stuff about car transmissions. Shiftkit is what, in the old days, I would have referred to as heavy metal but now is apparently more correctly termed 'alt rock'. They were shades of Rancid with touches of Pantera in there; the gravelly-voiced singer got a bit flat at times but their drummer was great. The bass player kept trying to incite the crowd to cheer for the lead singer, but the biggest fan reaction seemed to come from a single girl in the crowd who was wearing an 'I love Shiftkit' shirt. They played for a lot longer than I had anticipated - about 40 minutes - but were very quick with their tear-down after their set.Then we made the transition from headbangers to harmonies. Vancouver-based Marianas Trench (they're very deep!) came on, and all it took was one appearance on the stage at set up time and the girls in the crowd were screaming. Frontman Josh Ramsey has a relatively high voice compared to the singer in the first band; they also employ a lot of three and four part harmonies in their songs, somewhat reminiscent of The Futureheads or The Beach Boys, and yet different... There was a lot of harmonizing but an equal amount of hard rockin' drums and guitar. One song they did completely a cappella - quite amazing, really, and a rarity today. I can't remember the last time I saw something like that live - if ever. Brave. And it worked. I really liked this band, and the crowd was with me on this one. During Marianas Trench's set, the crowd was going wild. I was sitting up top on the balcony, and I kind of thought at times this some of these pre-pubescent patrons' first concert might also prove to be their last - there were a ton of people pushing from the back into the little girls who had stood in the front, and they were getting well and truly squished. Lesson learned, I guess...The final band of the afternoon was Lillix, an all girl band that hails from Cranbrook, BC. They had a big hit about five years ago that went gold in Japan and was used in the movie Freaky Friday - and this when the girls in the band were just 13-15 years of age! But they are now back, older and wiser, with a new album. The lead singer came out dressed in heels and a red trench coat, which she quickly discarded to show a black shift underneath. Each of the girls had their own distinct look, and their sound was a very commercial pop/rock with lots of harmonies. I think they'll do well with their new album, and hopefully we won't have to wait five years for the next one.
International Songwriting Competition - Deadline October 16, 2006! By Christine Albrecht
How To Enter The 2006 CompetitionYou can enter the 2006 competition two ways - through mail or online. All mail-in entries must be posted on or before October 16, 2006. Online entries must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. EST October 16, 2006. You may submit as many songs as you would like into any of the following categories: AAA, Americana, Blues, Jazz, Dance/Electronica, Latin, R&B/Hip-Hop, Folk/Singer-Songwriter, Lyrics Only, Rock, Children's Music, Gospel/Christian, Performance, Teen, Country, Instrumental, Pop/Top 40, and World Music. You may also submit the same song into multiple categories.The 2006 Judges include:Brian Wilson; Tom Waits; Rosanne Cash; Sean Paul; Mark Chesnutt; Jerry Lee Lewis; Frank Black (Pixies); Robert Smith (The Cure); Cassandra Wilson; Isaac Brock (Modest Mouse); Medeski Martin & Wood; Craig Morgan; John Mayall; John Scofield; Amy Ray (Indigo Girls); Darryl McDaniels (Run DMC); MercyMe; Macy Gray; Charlie Musselwhite; Peter Hook (New Order); Blue Man Group; Tiesto; and Jeff Stinco (Simple Plan) Click the link to find out more!http://www.admail.net/view/525745/1d57e7f/
Wednesday, October 04, 2006
Ladies and gentlemen, friends and bloggers, readers everywhere… By Sashi
This is it. It was bound to happen sooner or later. You knew it too.

In approximately a month from now, sashiweb.com will be no more. I am DEFINITELY not renewing my webhosting agreement. This has nothing to do with the webhosts, Exabytes, who have been quite good, really, and I’d recommend them to anyone who would want to have their own web space and domain.
I thank you all for having visited this little blog of mine, for having spent your precious minutes reading the stuff I’ve written, for commenting in the various posts, for linking to me in your own blogs, for e-mailing some posts to other people, for daring to meet with me in person after developing your opinions of who I am based on what you read, for pretending not to be shocked when you found I did not match your opinions, for supporting me virtually when I was down, for sharing in my zaniness when I was nuts, for simply returning time and again to this little corner of cyberspace so that I felt I was important to someone, somewhere, one word at a time, even if for only a few seconds,
EDIT: I’m sorry for not having completed the Steve series within the confines of this domain. I still hold out hope that I will do so, one day… You’ll be the first to know when that happens.
I don’t know what else to say, so I’ll do what I usually tend to do anyway: I’ll let the movies speak for me.
This is a sample of the last lines uttered in various Hollywood movies over the years. I’ll let them be my last lines written here.
“There’s a lot to be said for making people laugh! Did you know that’s all some people have? It isn’t much, but it’s better than nothing in this cockeyed caravan! Boy!”
- Sullivan’s Travels (1941)
“Maybe. Maybe I didn’t do such a wonderful thing after all.”
- Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
“Psychologically, I’m very confused, but personally I feel just wonderful.”
- In the Good Old Summertime (1949)
“Well, nobody’s perfect.”
- Some Like it Hot (1959)
“I’m too old for this.”
- Lethal Weapon (1987)
“A man’s got to know his limitations.”
- Magnum Force (1973)
“Sure, I could have stayed in the past. I could have even been king. But in my own way, I am king. Hail to the king, baby.”
- Army of Darkness (1993)
“This is the end! The absolute end!”
- The Lady in the Dark (1944)
“You see, Marcus. The ending is only the beginning.”
- The Human Comedy (1943)
“Yup. The end of a way of life. Too bad. It’s a good way. Wagons forward! Yo!”
- Hondo (1954)
“Where ya headed, cowboy?”
“Nowhere special.”
“Nowhere special. I always wanted to go there.”
“Come on.”
- Blazing Saddles (1974)
“Well, sir. Goin’ ‘ome…’Ome, sir.”
- Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
“That is all.”
- M*A*S*H (1970)
“End of story.”
- High Society (1956)
“Good night, and good luck.”
- Good Night, and Good Luck (2005)
“And I felt my body dwindling, melting, becoming nothing. My fears locked away and in their place came acceptance. All this vast majesty of creation, it had to mean something. And then I meant something, too. Yes, smaller than the smallest, I meant something, too. To God there is no zero. I still exist.”
- The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957)
“What do you want, a happy ending?”
- The Paleface (1948)
“Bye.”
- Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)
Swanktrendz's note - We have enjoyed Sashi's contributions over the last two years and hope that his 'retirement' from the internet community will be shortlived.
Link: http://www.sashiweb.com
In approximately a month from now, sashiweb.com will be no more. I am DEFINITELY not renewing my webhosting agreement. This has nothing to do with the webhosts, Exabytes, who have been quite good, really, and I’d recommend them to anyone who would want to have their own web space and domain.
I thank you all for having visited this little blog of mine, for having spent your precious minutes reading the stuff I’ve written, for commenting in the various posts, for linking to me in your own blogs, for e-mailing some posts to other people, for daring to meet with me in person after developing your opinions of who I am based on what you read, for pretending not to be shocked when you found I did not match your opinions, for supporting me virtually when I was down, for sharing in my zaniness when I was nuts, for simply returning time and again to this little corner of cyberspace so that I felt I was important to someone, somewhere, one word at a time, even if for only a few seconds,
EDIT: I’m sorry for not having completed the Steve series within the confines of this domain. I still hold out hope that I will do so, one day… You’ll be the first to know when that happens.
I don’t know what else to say, so I’ll do what I usually tend to do anyway: I’ll let the movies speak for me.
This is a sample of the last lines uttered in various Hollywood movies over the years. I’ll let them be my last lines written here.
“There’s a lot to be said for making people laugh! Did you know that’s all some people have? It isn’t much, but it’s better than nothing in this cockeyed caravan! Boy!”
- Sullivan’s Travels (1941)
“Maybe. Maybe I didn’t do such a wonderful thing after all.”
- Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
“Psychologically, I’m very confused, but personally I feel just wonderful.”
- In the Good Old Summertime (1949)
“Well, nobody’s perfect.”
- Some Like it Hot (1959)
“I’m too old for this.”
- Lethal Weapon (1987)
“A man’s got to know his limitations.”
- Magnum Force (1973)
“Sure, I could have stayed in the past. I could have even been king. But in my own way, I am king. Hail to the king, baby.”
- Army of Darkness (1993)
“This is the end! The absolute end!”
- The Lady in the Dark (1944)
“You see, Marcus. The ending is only the beginning.”
- The Human Comedy (1943)
“Yup. The end of a way of life. Too bad. It’s a good way. Wagons forward! Yo!”
- Hondo (1954)
“Where ya headed, cowboy?”
“Nowhere special.”
“Nowhere special. I always wanted to go there.”
“Come on.”
- Blazing Saddles (1974)
“Well, sir. Goin’ ‘ome…’Ome, sir.”
- Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
“That is all.”
- M*A*S*H (1970)
“End of story.”
- High Society (1956)
“Good night, and good luck.”
- Good Night, and Good Luck (2005)
“And I felt my body dwindling, melting, becoming nothing. My fears locked away and in their place came acceptance. All this vast majesty of creation, it had to mean something. And then I meant something, too. Yes, smaller than the smallest, I meant something, too. To God there is no zero. I still exist.”
- The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957)
“What do you want, a happy ending?”
- The Paleface (1948)
“Bye.”
- Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)
Swanktrendz's note - We have enjoyed Sashi's contributions over the last two years and hope that his 'retirement' from the internet community will be shortlived.
Link: http://www.sashiweb.com
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
Marianas Trench - Interview with Josh Ramsay and Mike Ayley (Completed Interview) By: Christine Albrecht
Marianas Trench - Interview with Josh Ramsay and Mike Ayley. (Completed Interview)

Mike Ayley (vocals/bass) and Josh Ramsay (lead vocals/ guitar) from Marianas Trench were kind enough to set aside an evening interview at the 604 Records studio Monday evening. I immediately congratulated the band on their cd release of ‘Fix Me’ due in stores October 3rd. Go out and buy, now. I have to say that the biggest compliment I could hand this band was the fact that they sound like themselves! To expand, I was listening to their tunes and I thought, ‘Oh yes, I’ve heard this before’... and as I scoured all of the songs on my desktop I found the ‘similar’ gem - yeah, it was a song by... Marianas Trench. So I guess they sound like themselves.Swanktrendz - First some basic editing stuff - Marianas has no apostrophe - right?Marianas Trench - That’s right.ST - I know you’ve been asked this a zillion times, but is the name from the geographic feature or from a line in the Pixie’s ‘Wave of Mutilation’ song?MT - Neither, but that’s a new one. I didn’t know there was a lyric like that and I like the Pixies. No one’s ever asked us if it was from the Pixies.ST - So the name doesn’t come from some obscure lyric?MT - It’s a long story involving bricklaying and parasailing and the accidents that happen when you try to combine the two. One day we just said, maybe we should call ourselves ‘Marianas Trench’ - that’s the short version of a long story.ST - You’ve been around since 2001?MT - Sort of. Josh and Matt (Webb) hooked up in high school (both were in choir).ST - Josh, you’ve been around music all of your life, and your mom (Coralynn Hanney) is a vocal coach - did she train you?MT - Yes, but when I was younger I tried to avoid taking lessons with my Mom and she wanted wanted to avoid it as well as that was a strange dynamic. For a year or two in high school, I took lessons from the person she took lessons from. And then eventually that guy couldn’t teach me what I needed so I did some research and it turned out that the only person that could teach me what I needed to learn, was my mom. She still helps me from time to time.ST - Your music, the song ‘Say Anything’ has consistently sat in the top 5 for Canada. Did John Webster produce this cd?MT - I worked with John Webster independently from the band - when I was 16 or 17. He and I worked together when I was a solo artist. John is the one who introduced me to Jonathan Simkin (co-owner of 604 Records studio). He mixed a couple on that venture and I mixed four.ST - You mixed? Is that an area you would like to pursue? MT - It’s not my main passion - I’d rather play the music than produce it. But it can be good because I understand more about music. Also, it helps to know the technical language when you go into the studio to listen to the tracks. I can be really specific about what I want, as opposed to being vague like, ‘I would like something more green’.ST - What about you Mike - would you like to do mixing?MT - I don’t think I could do it - there’s too much information. I could probably mix a mean bass track.ST - Some the stuff I’ve been reading about you (Josh), and I don’t know if this is applicable, but the discussions on addictions and then reading your lyrics, well... did you used to smoke heroin?MT - Yes I did. I’ve been in recovery now for a long time. That was a big problem for me as a teenager. ST - You must have started young.MT - I was also fortunate enough to get out young. It is something that still inspires me to write lyrics because you end up with so much baggage from that. I went to a treatment centre when I was 18 (or 17).ST - That is young. Then again, being surrounded by music when you were a child, I suppose it made you grow up fast.MT - On one side you do grow up fast because you are faced with these harsh realities, and that teenaged feeling of being invincible suddenly dies. You also learn some really dark things about yourself and life. At the same time, as long as you’re using, emotionally, you don’t age at all. That’s the same for all addicts or alcoholics that you meet at a treatment centre. You may have different ages, let’s say 45 years old and 17 years old, but they are all talking about the same thing because, emotionally, they are the same age. It stunts your emotional growth.ST - As you said, it does give you a lot of fodder for lyrics.MT - Yes, it does. And the stuff I took away from it certainly gave me patience for a lot of other things in life. The tools you use to stay away from (in my case) drugs are the same tools that help you in life, to be a healthier person.ST - And you Mike, did/do you have any vices?MT - (Mike) I am a hard core chocolate addict. Any chocolate, as long as it’s not unsweetened. I will rummage through trash, through closets for it. I would go to the grocery store, buy icing and hide it. I’m pretty good now. (Josh interjects) You wouldn’t want to catch Mike on the wrong end of a chocolate fix.ST - You’ll be in the 12-step chocoholic program.MT - Nah, I’m never stopping. (Josh adds) Admitting you have a problem and doing something about it are two different things.ST - With Marianas Trench being from Vancouver, well give me some hot West Coast spots that you enjoy hanging out in, or clubs you enjoy going to.MT - I love Vancouver. After touring the country, I think Vancouver is the best, and most beautiful, place to live. It’s also the most versatile, by far. Vancouver’s got the beach, a major metropolitan area, the forest, and skiing all within a stone’s throw of each other. It’s amazing. I’m certainly not the guy to talk to about clubbing because as a recovering addict I don’t go to the ‘bar’. Plus when you make your living playing in bars five nights a week you’re not going to say, on your day off, ‘Hey let’s go to a bar’.ST - Turning to Mike - what about you - where do you like to go?MT - I used to know where all the great places were until we started spending most of the time playing in bars. Now I say, ‘Let’s just stay home.’ST - What about local restaurants? Do you each have a favourite restaurant?MT - (Mike) There’s a place down the road (from the studio at Ontario and 3rd) called Bin 49. It has around 30 seats and it’s got wicked food. As well it’s got the local ‘feel’. (Josh) Hamburger Mary’s on Davie. I live about a block from there and they have great food.ST - Favourite unsung - unsigned bands?MT - Jellyfish, Ben Folds FiveST - They’re kind of popular. What about bands you’ve liked but they aren’t known?MT - Total indie? There was a band that we played with in Hamilton. Mike, what was their name? (ST note - either The Flairs or Obsidian or Charlemagne...?) They sounded like ACDC, the drummer was the singer and they were awesome. I think Canada has a lot of good singers - like Matt in Tupelo Honey. Also, Vancouver’s Yuca - they won the Seeds Festival. Marble Rye are also good.ST - That brings to mind another question. When a band has obvious talent, good vocals, good playing, what’s the difference between being unsigned and the ones who get signed?MT - I think the difference is some bands spend most of their time on being great musicians, but they may not spend the time writing good songs. Or you’ll see great songwriters and none of them can play or sing. I think it takes a lot of work to build up both sides of the spectrum. It’s like playing baseball and having a really good pitcher who can’t bat. It’s a long process and I don’t think people have taken the time to work on all of the skills. There are bands out there that make you feel that they are the best musicians you’ve ever seen, but they can’t sing very well.ST - (Jonathan Simkin co-owner of 604 Record Studio joined us at this stage.) What makes a band stand out to the degree that you would want to sign them?Jonathan Simkin - Well in Marianas case, it would be the nude pictures they have of me... (now here is a funny guy) They dazzled me with their mediocrity. Seriously, Chad Kroeger and I are of the mind that the songs come first and the music comes second. Most bands, if they work hard enough and are willing to listen and improve, they can learn about playing and performance. But song writing is an innate ability - you can get better at performing. You can either write songs or not. I’d rather find a band that writes great songs than a band that can’t. You can always arrange for someone to have vocal lessons, etc. But you can’t teach someone to write great songs.MT - - (Josh speaking) I have the opposite problem - I write too many songs, but that’s a good problem to have.ST - What about bands who rest on their laurels after getting signed and don’t market themselves?Jonathan Simkin I have no problem with bands who creatively want to make art for art’s sake, but stay in your garage and play. The minute you come into ‘our world’ (music business) you’re saying you want to do this for a living and the reality is you have to accept that marketing is part of the ‘job’. Music is a business. Some of the greatest bands in the world have subverted their own careers by being unwilling to be flexible with their music. Being signed only cuts your odds of becoming famous from one billion to one to one million to one. It doesn’t solve anything or automatically do anything. It just offers more resources.MT - You have to have talent, luck and a hard work ethic. Talent doesn’t always enter into the equation. The days of being discovered while pumping gas are long over. You have to work hard. We work really hard promoting ourselves. (Mike interjects)The harder we work, and the more we get noticed, just makes us want to work even harder. And sometimes getting noticed turns out to be being at the right place at the right time. If you are working your ass off, it just gives you more opportunities to be seen.ST - As well , it builds your reputation (within the music community) as being hard workers. I would also like to know about your upcoming tour with Lillix. That should be a nice line up and it will provide you with a different audience.MT - We are looking forward to the tour. Now that we’ve had some success with our video on MuchMusic, this tour will bring us the younger demographic because we are performing all-ages shows. Most of our fan base is not old enough to get into a bar so this should be really fun.ST - Josh, you write all the lyrics. Do you write the tune and then the lyrics or...?MT - I do most of my writing before I fall sleep, or instead of sleeping. (Josh is an insomniac.) I’ll come up with an idea and I’ll go over and over it in my head while I’m falling asleep. Sometimes, if I am lucky, I will have the tune in my head and I will actually work through it while I’m sleeping. Most of the time it just causes me to have a fitful sleep.ST - And the band comes in with the music? Does Josh come with the song ideas and then the band works through it?MT - Yes. (Josh states) I will come in with an unfinished song and the band will flesh it out.Jonathan Simkin (to Josh) Won’t the producer, after a couple of months decide that he has co-written a couple of the songs? (laughter)MT - Nooo. Dave Genn did not cowrite anything on the record. He did help a lot with the arrangements because that is what he’s good at.ST - So we’re not going to have a Sarah McLaughlin court case happening a year down the road?MT - (loud laughter) Oooh - Jonathan Simkin was the lawyer on that case... (note - Swanktrendz did not know the link between Jonathan Simkin and the Sarah McLaughlin trial so it was not an intentional statement).Jonathan Simkin If the case at been based on who cried the most tears, we would have won.ST - That case made me aware that listeners don’t always know what is going on behind the scenes.MT - If anything, Dave Genn will be suing us for emotional abuse. (laughter)ST - Speaking of business, the band is very accessible for publicity. I guess all publicity is good publicity?MT - Yeah, I get freaked out if I miss one opportunity to discuss the band.ST - You’re good businessmen then - always looking for opportunity.MT - Yeah, I don’t want to miss anything, ever. Even if it makes only ten new fans. That’s ten fans we didn’t have before.ST - I have a Swiss friend visiting, the ‘Swiss contingent’ I call her, will be attending your concert. Hopefully she’ll go home in October and talk about Marianas Trench and garner some European exposure.MT - That’s great.ST - I did want to ask you a publicity question, Josh, because you were exposed to Tommy Lee and other rockers at a young age (through his dad’s studio). What do you make of Tommy Lee’s ‘Rockstar Supernova’ show? I thought it was a clever publicity ploy as Tommy’s turned on a whole new generation to his music.MT - And he is also with 604 Records. It’s a smart business decision. Any of those shows are essentially karaoke. I do find it funny that no one has clued into the fact that they’re a televised karaoke show, but that being said, I think it’s proved to be a very smart way of marketing. But I wouldn’t say the show is marketing ‘artists’. As Jonathan was saying, song writing is very important. No one from those shows can actually write a song.ST - Perhaps, but I do believe that Lukas Rossi (winner of Supernova) can write songs. He had his own band in Canada and wrote his own songs.MT - I don’t know the artist you’re talking about, specifically, so I will not speak to his ability. Those shows, however, are marketed for entertainment not songwriting. The contestents are singers, and what a great way to get a career - even if it’s only for ten months. You might make some cash, you can have some fun, and you’ll get your 15 minutes of fame. The management can provide you with an army of songwriters who will sell you a hit song, and that’s cool. From a business perspective it makes a lot of sense, so I don’t have a problem with it. (Mike counters) - but it doesn’t nurture the ‘finding’ of a great band. It makes it too easy to ‘discover’ a favourite singer without helping the grassroots of the music business. (Josh) It’s a smoke and mirrors kind of marketing, like a star machine. These show contestants are not people who have paid their dues in the music industry. They’ve enough dumb luck to fall into that instant stardom, but they’re not going to be a healthy person when they receive too much attention, too soon. They’’ll get all this exposure overnight without having done any work. They’re not going to appreciate or respect the position they’re in. They’ll treat people badly because they don’t know any other way.ST - So, because they’ve been thrown into this position of power so quickly, and don’t know what it’s like to be on the receiving end, they may behave badly?MT - And I would probably be that way, too, if I were 16 years old, won some show and didn’t know my ass from a hole in the ground. I just look at the whole phenomena as pure business - those shows are pure business. I don’t think they are anything to do with good music. It actually doesn’t matter what the music’s like. That’s another thing - you could go on the show and win, or not even win, and you’ve built this huge fan base. All the power to them (the contestants). I don’t compare them to us as they didn’t spend years learning how to sing and learning how to play.ST - Someone I was speaking with the other day said that music, nowadays, appears ‘cheapened.’It is and it’s not just because of the fake reality shows. It’s also because the production of music does not rely on talent, anymore, or performance. It’s an industry that relies on computers. (Mike) The finished music is not a direct representation of what is happening in the live studio. (Josh to interviewer) I don’t know if you can sing or not...ST - Laughing - definitely NO!Well, I could get you into a studio and have you to sing for ...10 minutes and you’d be amazed at how good I can make you sound.ST - That would definitely be a miracle. I recall hearing something you said about singing a cappella and if a vocalist cannot sing without accompaniment or studio help, then he/she can’t sing. I thought that was a good comment because how many singers can go onstage and sing well, live?MT - We actually do sing a cappella during our gigs. I think that’s why music is becoming so soulless. You have reality television shows on one hand, and crafty studio engineering on the other and at the end of that, what you get is a product.ST - And I suppose a fallout of that final product would be lip-synching during concerts?MT - Yes. What are you going to get? Look at Ashlee Simpson. Here’s and example of a double-edged sword. What’s more embarrassing, getting caught lip-synching on Saturday Night Live or being booed off the stage at the Super Bowl because they don’t like your voice? I think the lesser of two evils would be doing a silly dance at SNL. And don’t tell me that it was acid reflux, or whatever. I’ve produced a lot of stuff and you are looking at a lot of work to get a backtrack together that only has a few things on it so you can play it during a live show. You can’t just ‘happen to have’ that track ready to go. Itt takes hours to put that tape together.ST - That’s a good point.MT - Well it’s ludicrous that anyone would think otherwise.ST - But I think there are a lot of people who don’t know what is involved. They really believe this (having to lip synch at the last moment) is a real predicament. And these artists are selling a lot of records.MT - We should all be that lucky. If I was some hack who couldn’t sing and I could get a career handed to me, I’d be saying, ‘Hell ya!’. I don’t begrudge Ashlee Simpson, but I don’t view her as competition either. We mght as well be jealous of Barney the Dinosaur because he’s popular.ST - Never mind, we are all jealous of Barney’s fame.MT - Well Barney and Raffi are not the kind of competition you worry about in the business.ST - I really enjoy your lyrics - they are very ... raw. I hope to review your upcoming gig, as well as have the Swiss gal take Marianas Trench’s music back to Europe and start a buzz.MT - Great. Get that European fire started. Worldwide domination! (Mike solemnly adds) But all we really want is ... Latvia... (laughter)On that note, I said good-bye to Mike, Josh and Jonathan and I am presently trying to think of anyone I may know in Latvia. Thanks to 604 Record Studios, Julie (label PR) in Ontario and Marianas Trench for accomodating a last minute interview. They are an extremely personable, and talented group.
http://www.24hrspodcast.com/index.php?id=60
Mike Ayley (vocals/bass) and Josh Ramsay (lead vocals/ guitar) from Marianas Trench were kind enough to set aside an evening interview at the 604 Records studio Monday evening. I immediately congratulated the band on their cd release of ‘Fix Me’ due in stores October 3rd. Go out and buy, now. I have to say that the biggest compliment I could hand this band was the fact that they sound like themselves! To expand, I was listening to their tunes and I thought, ‘Oh yes, I’ve heard this before’... and as I scoured all of the songs on my desktop I found the ‘similar’ gem - yeah, it was a song by... Marianas Trench. So I guess they sound like themselves.Swanktrendz - First some basic editing stuff - Marianas has no apostrophe - right?Marianas Trench - That’s right.ST - I know you’ve been asked this a zillion times, but is the name from the geographic feature or from a line in the Pixie’s ‘Wave of Mutilation’ song?MT - Neither, but that’s a new one. I didn’t know there was a lyric like that and I like the Pixies. No one’s ever asked us if it was from the Pixies.ST - So the name doesn’t come from some obscure lyric?MT - It’s a long story involving bricklaying and parasailing and the accidents that happen when you try to combine the two. One day we just said, maybe we should call ourselves ‘Marianas Trench’ - that’s the short version of a long story.ST - You’ve been around since 2001?MT - Sort of. Josh and Matt (Webb) hooked up in high school (both were in choir).ST - Josh, you’ve been around music all of your life, and your mom (Coralynn Hanney) is a vocal coach - did she train you?MT - Yes, but when I was younger I tried to avoid taking lessons with my Mom and she wanted wanted to avoid it as well as that was a strange dynamic. For a year or two in high school, I took lessons from the person she took lessons from. And then eventually that guy couldn’t teach me what I needed so I did some research and it turned out that the only person that could teach me what I needed to learn, was my mom. She still helps me from time to time.ST - Your music, the song ‘Say Anything’ has consistently sat in the top 5 for Canada. Did John Webster produce this cd?MT - I worked with John Webster independently from the band - when I was 16 or 17. He and I worked together when I was a solo artist. John is the one who introduced me to Jonathan Simkin (co-owner of 604 Records studio). He mixed a couple on that venture and I mixed four.ST - You mixed? Is that an area you would like to pursue? MT - It’s not my main passion - I’d rather play the music than produce it. But it can be good because I understand more about music. Also, it helps to know the technical language when you go into the studio to listen to the tracks. I can be really specific about what I want, as opposed to being vague like, ‘I would like something more green’.ST - What about you Mike - would you like to do mixing?MT - I don’t think I could do it - there’s too much information. I could probably mix a mean bass track.ST - Some the stuff I’ve been reading about you (Josh), and I don’t know if this is applicable, but the discussions on addictions and then reading your lyrics, well... did you used to smoke heroin?MT - Yes I did. I’ve been in recovery now for a long time. That was a big problem for me as a teenager. ST - You must have started young.MT - I was also fortunate enough to get out young. It is something that still inspires me to write lyrics because you end up with so much baggage from that. I went to a treatment centre when I was 18 (or 17).ST - That is young. Then again, being surrounded by music when you were a child, I suppose it made you grow up fast.MT - On one side you do grow up fast because you are faced with these harsh realities, and that teenaged feeling of being invincible suddenly dies. You also learn some really dark things about yourself and life. At the same time, as long as you’re using, emotionally, you don’t age at all. That’s the same for all addicts or alcoholics that you meet at a treatment centre. You may have different ages, let’s say 45 years old and 17 years old, but they are all talking about the same thing because, emotionally, they are the same age. It stunts your emotional growth.ST - As you said, it does give you a lot of fodder for lyrics.MT - Yes, it does. And the stuff I took away from it certainly gave me patience for a lot of other things in life. The tools you use to stay away from (in my case) drugs are the same tools that help you in life, to be a healthier person.ST - And you Mike, did/do you have any vices?MT - (Mike) I am a hard core chocolate addict. Any chocolate, as long as it’s not unsweetened. I will rummage through trash, through closets for it. I would go to the grocery store, buy icing and hide it. I’m pretty good now. (Josh interjects) You wouldn’t want to catch Mike on the wrong end of a chocolate fix.ST - You’ll be in the 12-step chocoholic program.MT - Nah, I’m never stopping. (Josh adds) Admitting you have a problem and doing something about it are two different things.ST - With Marianas Trench being from Vancouver, well give me some hot West Coast spots that you enjoy hanging out in, or clubs you enjoy going to.MT - I love Vancouver. After touring the country, I think Vancouver is the best, and most beautiful, place to live. It’s also the most versatile, by far. Vancouver’s got the beach, a major metropolitan area, the forest, and skiing all within a stone’s throw of each other. It’s amazing. I’m certainly not the guy to talk to about clubbing because as a recovering addict I don’t go to the ‘bar’. Plus when you make your living playing in bars five nights a week you’re not going to say, on your day off, ‘Hey let’s go to a bar’.ST - Turning to Mike - what about you - where do you like to go?MT - I used to know where all the great places were until we started spending most of the time playing in bars. Now I say, ‘Let’s just stay home.’ST - What about local restaurants? Do you each have a favourite restaurant?MT - (Mike) There’s a place down the road (from the studio at Ontario and 3rd) called Bin 49. It has around 30 seats and it’s got wicked food. As well it’s got the local ‘feel’. (Josh) Hamburger Mary’s on Davie. I live about a block from there and they have great food.ST - Favourite unsung - unsigned bands?MT - Jellyfish, Ben Folds FiveST - They’re kind of popular. What about bands you’ve liked but they aren’t known?MT - Total indie? There was a band that we played with in Hamilton. Mike, what was their name? (ST note - either The Flairs or Obsidian or Charlemagne...?) They sounded like ACDC, the drummer was the singer and they were awesome. I think Canada has a lot of good singers - like Matt in Tupelo Honey. Also, Vancouver’s Yuca - they won the Seeds Festival. Marble Rye are also good.ST - That brings to mind another question. When a band has obvious talent, good vocals, good playing, what’s the difference between being unsigned and the ones who get signed?MT - I think the difference is some bands spend most of their time on being great musicians, but they may not spend the time writing good songs. Or you’ll see great songwriters and none of them can play or sing. I think it takes a lot of work to build up both sides of the spectrum. It’s like playing baseball and having a really good pitcher who can’t bat. It’s a long process and I don’t think people have taken the time to work on all of the skills. There are bands out there that make you feel that they are the best musicians you’ve ever seen, but they can’t sing very well.ST - (Jonathan Simkin co-owner of 604 Record Studio joined us at this stage.) What makes a band stand out to the degree that you would want to sign them?Jonathan Simkin - Well in Marianas case, it would be the nude pictures they have of me... (now here is a funny guy) They dazzled me with their mediocrity. Seriously, Chad Kroeger and I are of the mind that the songs come first and the music comes second. Most bands, if they work hard enough and are willing to listen and improve, they can learn about playing and performance. But song writing is an innate ability - you can get better at performing. You can either write songs or not. I’d rather find a band that writes great songs than a band that can’t. You can always arrange for someone to have vocal lessons, etc. But you can’t teach someone to write great songs.MT - - (Josh speaking) I have the opposite problem - I write too many songs, but that’s a good problem to have.ST - What about bands who rest on their laurels after getting signed and don’t market themselves?Jonathan Simkin I have no problem with bands who creatively want to make art for art’s sake, but stay in your garage and play. The minute you come into ‘our world’ (music business) you’re saying you want to do this for a living and the reality is you have to accept that marketing is part of the ‘job’. Music is a business. Some of the greatest bands in the world have subverted their own careers by being unwilling to be flexible with their music. Being signed only cuts your odds of becoming famous from one billion to one to one million to one. It doesn’t solve anything or automatically do anything. It just offers more resources.MT - You have to have talent, luck and a hard work ethic. Talent doesn’t always enter into the equation. The days of being discovered while pumping gas are long over. You have to work hard. We work really hard promoting ourselves. (Mike interjects)The harder we work, and the more we get noticed, just makes us want to work even harder. And sometimes getting noticed turns out to be being at the right place at the right time. If you are working your ass off, it just gives you more opportunities to be seen.ST - As well , it builds your reputation (within the music community) as being hard workers. I would also like to know about your upcoming tour with Lillix. That should be a nice line up and it will provide you with a different audience.MT - We are looking forward to the tour. Now that we’ve had some success with our video on MuchMusic, this tour will bring us the younger demographic because we are performing all-ages shows. Most of our fan base is not old enough to get into a bar so this should be really fun.ST - Josh, you write all the lyrics. Do you write the tune and then the lyrics or...?MT - I do most of my writing before I fall sleep, or instead of sleeping. (Josh is an insomniac.) I’ll come up with an idea and I’ll go over and over it in my head while I’m falling asleep. Sometimes, if I am lucky, I will have the tune in my head and I will actually work through it while I’m sleeping. Most of the time it just causes me to have a fitful sleep.ST - And the band comes in with the music? Does Josh come with the song ideas and then the band works through it?MT - Yes. (Josh states) I will come in with an unfinished song and the band will flesh it out.Jonathan Simkin (to Josh) Won’t the producer, after a couple of months decide that he has co-written a couple of the songs? (laughter)MT - Nooo. Dave Genn did not cowrite anything on the record. He did help a lot with the arrangements because that is what he’s good at.ST - So we’re not going to have a Sarah McLaughlin court case happening a year down the road?MT - (loud laughter) Oooh - Jonathan Simkin was the lawyer on that case... (note - Swanktrendz did not know the link between Jonathan Simkin and the Sarah McLaughlin trial so it was not an intentional statement).Jonathan Simkin If the case at been based on who cried the most tears, we would have won.ST - That case made me aware that listeners don’t always know what is going on behind the scenes.MT - If anything, Dave Genn will be suing us for emotional abuse. (laughter)ST - Speaking of business, the band is very accessible for publicity. I guess all publicity is good publicity?MT - Yeah, I get freaked out if I miss one opportunity to discuss the band.ST - You’re good businessmen then - always looking for opportunity.MT - Yeah, I don’t want to miss anything, ever. Even if it makes only ten new fans. That’s ten fans we didn’t have before.ST - I have a Swiss friend visiting, the ‘Swiss contingent’ I call her, will be attending your concert. Hopefully she’ll go home in October and talk about Marianas Trench and garner some European exposure.MT - That’s great.ST - I did want to ask you a publicity question, Josh, because you were exposed to Tommy Lee and other rockers at a young age (through his dad’s studio). What do you make of Tommy Lee’s ‘Rockstar Supernova’ show? I thought it was a clever publicity ploy as Tommy’s turned on a whole new generation to his music.MT - And he is also with 604 Records. It’s a smart business decision. Any of those shows are essentially karaoke. I do find it funny that no one has clued into the fact that they’re a televised karaoke show, but that being said, I think it’s proved to be a very smart way of marketing. But I wouldn’t say the show is marketing ‘artists’. As Jonathan was saying, song writing is very important. No one from those shows can actually write a song.ST - Perhaps, but I do believe that Lukas Rossi (winner of Supernova) can write songs. He had his own band in Canada and wrote his own songs.MT - I don’t know the artist you’re talking about, specifically, so I will not speak to his ability. Those shows, however, are marketed for entertainment not songwriting. The contestents are singers, and what a great way to get a career - even if it’s only for ten months. You might make some cash, you can have some fun, and you’ll get your 15 minutes of fame. The management can provide you with an army of songwriters who will sell you a hit song, and that’s cool. From a business perspective it makes a lot of sense, so I don’t have a problem with it. (Mike counters) - but it doesn’t nurture the ‘finding’ of a great band. It makes it too easy to ‘discover’ a favourite singer without helping the grassroots of the music business. (Josh) It’s a smoke and mirrors kind of marketing, like a star machine. These show contestants are not people who have paid their dues in the music industry. They’ve enough dumb luck to fall into that instant stardom, but they’re not going to be a healthy person when they receive too much attention, too soon. They’’ll get all this exposure overnight without having done any work. They’re not going to appreciate or respect the position they’re in. They’ll treat people badly because they don’t know any other way.ST - So, because they’ve been thrown into this position of power so quickly, and don’t know what it’s like to be on the receiving end, they may behave badly?MT - And I would probably be that way, too, if I were 16 years old, won some show and didn’t know my ass from a hole in the ground. I just look at the whole phenomena as pure business - those shows are pure business. I don’t think they are anything to do with good music. It actually doesn’t matter what the music’s like. That’s another thing - you could go on the show and win, or not even win, and you’ve built this huge fan base. All the power to them (the contestants). I don’t compare them to us as they didn’t spend years learning how to sing and learning how to play.ST - Someone I was speaking with the other day said that music, nowadays, appears ‘cheapened.’It is and it’s not just because of the fake reality shows. It’s also because the production of music does not rely on talent, anymore, or performance. It’s an industry that relies on computers. (Mike) The finished music is not a direct representation of what is happening in the live studio. (Josh to interviewer) I don’t know if you can sing or not...ST - Laughing - definitely NO!Well, I could get you into a studio and have you to sing for ...10 minutes and you’d be amazed at how good I can make you sound.ST - That would definitely be a miracle. I recall hearing something you said about singing a cappella and if a vocalist cannot sing without accompaniment or studio help, then he/she can’t sing. I thought that was a good comment because how many singers can go onstage and sing well, live?MT - We actually do sing a cappella during our gigs. I think that’s why music is becoming so soulless. You have reality television shows on one hand, and crafty studio engineering on the other and at the end of that, what you get is a product.ST - And I suppose a fallout of that final product would be lip-synching during concerts?MT - Yes. What are you going to get? Look at Ashlee Simpson. Here’s and example of a double-edged sword. What’s more embarrassing, getting caught lip-synching on Saturday Night Live or being booed off the stage at the Super Bowl because they don’t like your voice? I think the lesser of two evils would be doing a silly dance at SNL. And don’t tell me that it was acid reflux, or whatever. I’ve produced a lot of stuff and you are looking at a lot of work to get a backtrack together that only has a few things on it so you can play it during a live show. You can’t just ‘happen to have’ that track ready to go. Itt takes hours to put that tape together.ST - That’s a good point.MT - Well it’s ludicrous that anyone would think otherwise.ST - But I think there are a lot of people who don’t know what is involved. They really believe this (having to lip synch at the last moment) is a real predicament. And these artists are selling a lot of records.MT - We should all be that lucky. If I was some hack who couldn’t sing and I could get a career handed to me, I’d be saying, ‘Hell ya!’. I don’t begrudge Ashlee Simpson, but I don’t view her as competition either. We mght as well be jealous of Barney the Dinosaur because he’s popular.ST - Never mind, we are all jealous of Barney’s fame.MT - Well Barney and Raffi are not the kind of competition you worry about in the business.ST - I really enjoy your lyrics - they are very ... raw. I hope to review your upcoming gig, as well as have the Swiss gal take Marianas Trench’s music back to Europe and start a buzz.MT - Great. Get that European fire started. Worldwide domination! (Mike solemnly adds) But all we really want is ... Latvia... (laughter)On that note, I said good-bye to Mike, Josh and Jonathan and I am presently trying to think of anyone I may know in Latvia. Thanks to 604 Record Studios, Julie (label PR) in Ontario and Marianas Trench for accomodating a last minute interview. They are an extremely personable, and talented group.
http://www.24hrspodcast.com/index.php?id=60
Saturday, September 30, 2006
Everybody's Working for the Weekend: By Mike Gillis
Poetry Heals - By Mike Gillis
Roses are Red
Violets are Blue
I Hate Mel Gibson
Because Gibson Hates Jews.
Violets are Blue
I Hate Mel Gibson
Because Gibson Hates Jews.
It's ‘Cause I Comb my Beard With Honey - Mike Gillis
http://images.google.ca/imgres?imgurlThe sound of dead and dying leaves; the smells emitted by trees and plants slowly stumbling into their winter comas; the sidewalks a sea of sweaters and scarves; the cool mountain air roaming in and scaring the humidity out of town.It was because of these things that I let my guard down.And it was because I let my guard down that the wasp attacked me and chased me for two city blocks.When the temperature dips low enough to warrant the breaking out of the leather coat, I officially stop worrying about wasps, bees, flies, dragon flies and Atlas moths.But the wasp I faced today was no lazy ‘I buzz around a trash bin stealing sugar from soda cans’ wasp. It was bigger, stronger, fasterand probably angrier.An autumn wasp.The fact he's even living at this time of the year is a testament to his (or her) awesome strength.And since I had the guff to stroll around downtown with an ‘I'm allergic to wasps but what-fucking-ever’ kind of look written across my face, he (or she) decided to chase me.So I walked faster.Still being chased.So I walked faster while casually swatting (flailing?) my arms all around me.Still being chased, he’s/she’s going for the face.I am running down the sidewalk like an idiot.Flapping my ‘wings’.Saying, "Fuck off!" and "Shit!" and "Hey, cool belt. Le Chateau?"When I thought I had enough of a lead on him I ducked into an alley and waited, pretending to tie my shoe so as not to look like I was kind of lurking in an alley/hiding from a tiny insect.When I felt safe enough I continued on my way.If anyone happened to see this go down... I was practising some new dance moves... I'll show you on the weekend.
Red Jumpsuit Apparatus - Concert Review by Christine Albrecht
Red Jumpsuit Apparatus with Monty Are ISeptember 26, 2006Croatian Cultural Centre - medium capacityIt is exciting to experience a band, firsthand, when its popularity has not quite taken off. That is the selfish side of me - the one who wants to hear great music, but is unwilling to experience it at an arena-like venue. If The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus can maintain its present momentum, stadium venues are not far off.Two bands opened for RJA; unfortunately I missed the first band (Lorene Drive) but was able to catch the next. Monty Are I ('Are I' as a play on Rhode Island) banged out their first tune and kept their high energy throughout the entire set. Monty Are I consists of Steve Aiello (vocals, guitar), Ryan Muir (vocals, trumpet), Andrew Borstein (trombone, keyboard, synthesizer, sequencer), Mike Matarese (bass), and Justin Muir (drums). This was an act that was fun to watch - be it for the geometrical hair styling of the lead singer, or the wild dancing and gyrations of the trombone playing keyboardist. The audience may have been small, but they were true 'Monty Are I'ers ' singing along with Aiello for many of the songs. The band also seemed sincere as they repeatedly thanked the audience for their enthusiasm, as well as thanked The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus for the touring opportunity. Vocally, Monty Are I could have sounded better (clearer), but given the venue (the smallest of Croatian's rooms) it was overlooked. Definitely a band worth checking out when they return to our area.
When Red Jumpsuit Apparatus came on, the adoration factor hit an all time high. This group has exploded onto the music scene via clever internet marketing and word of mouth buzz. As with Monty Are I, the audience was small in numbers, but huge in sound and feedback. The set opened with 'In Fate's Hand' (a nod to a prior band Ronnie Winter and Duke Kitchens had been in as well as the song chosen to be on Madden 2007 video game). I was immediately aware of RJA's similarity to Story of the Year - the two bands seemingly interchangeable. During one song, "Your Guardian Angel', Winter could have chosen to lip synch because the crowd was so loud (and accurate) in their sing-along. Winter physically resembles a younger, healthier, pre-cosmetic surgery Axel Rose in his movements and style. He also appears to be a laid-back, confident singer speaking to the audience as if casually conversing in his back yard. He deadpanned a few statements that were very humorous, but initially hard to gauge whether he was joking or not. At one point, he scanned the audience and remarked that he could see many of the 'dudes' swaying in the background, doing some kind of 'kumbaya thing'. Then he remarked that if we were in Jacksonville, Florida, the audience would show these 'dudes' some serious moshing. That remark made the Croatian Centre a bona fide mosh pit.The one downside to the RJA gig was the length of time that passed between songs. This could have been due to instrument malfunctions, or provided filler for a small repertoire of songs. After the seamless, (in regards to length of time between songs), energetic set of Monty Are I, this time mismanagement was akin to a bucket of cold water thrown on those eager to mosh. The moshers would have their pogoing set to 'high', only to have to stop and wait for the next tune.
On a superficial note, this band definitely fulfills the 'eye candy' requirements of a video band, perhaps a detriment to Winter's serious lyrics such as 'Face Down' (a song about domestic abuse). The Red Jumpsuit Appartus recently released their debut cd, 'Don't You Fake It' in July of 2006 . Purchase it today - it's worth the investment.The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus consists of: • Ronnie Winter - Lead Vocals• Duke Kitchens - Guitar, Piano, Vocals• Elias Reidy - Guitar, Backing Vocals• Joey Westwood - Bass, Vocals• Jon Wilkes - Drums, VocalsNote: Due to line-up changes over the years, the above noted members of RJA may vary with exception to Winter and Kitchens.
http://www.redjumpsuit.com/
http://www.newburycomics.com/rel/v2_viewupc.php?storenr=103&upc=60249858343
http://www.redjumpsuit.com/
http://www.newburycomics.com/rel/v2_viewupc.php?storenr=103&upc=60249858343
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
Interview with James Walsh of Starsailor - Christine Albrecht
James Walsh is a very level headed 26 year old. So level-headed that he appears mature beyond his years. Our interview wasn't as long as I would have liked (hey, I'm a talker) and I was unable to ask him some questions re: recording at Abby Studio, recording with Phil Spector, amount of control over videos, etc. Having said that, I did have a nice, albeit brief, chat with James about success, family in Vancouver, recording cds and life on the road.
Swanktrendz: So you are in Vancouver for a short while and then you are on to Seattle. How has your time been here, thus far?
James Walsh: Great - I have relatives here. My aunt (from his father's side) and cousins live here and they are coming to the show tonight.
ST: I don't want to repeat a lot of the usual questions - I know where the band's name comes from. I was hoping to ask you more about your song writing style. Do you find that you are writing for an outcome rather than from a feeling? For example, the pressure of the next cd being bigger and better than the one before it.
JW: Yeah, I think you definitely have to fight that battle. Every time you write a song now you fight it. I think the main way to combat that is to write as much as possible and just get it all down, absolutely everything, and some of it will turn out quite commercial sounding, inadvertently catchy sounding, and some of it will be quite weird. As long as you're not afraid to let it all go down on tape. Sometimes I will just sing into a mobile phone.
ST: So when an idea hits, that's when you get it down.
JW: Yes, because if you just sit down and say, okay I am writing an album now, everything has to be a certain way and it doesn't work that way.
ST: Now the first cd was hugely successful and then you have that period of time of the 'second album slump' where the pressure is so huge to produce a hit. How does it come naturally? How do you not get jaded with the recording industry?
JW: Yeah, well ... like I said, when I am in the mood, I just write it down as quickly as possible and don't try to think of what is expected.
ST: You write the lyrics - which are brilliant - I especially like the lyrics to 'In the Crossfire'. I've noticed your lyrics are becoming more politicized. I also wonder, when you are writing, do you have the melody first or do the lyrics come first?
JW: I generally have the melody first, and then the lyrics follow. I usually have a riff or a melody and then I take it from there. The songs kind of write themselves. Generally the slow songs, I write myself like, Jeremiah and Restless Heart.
ST: Yes, with Jeremiah (the murdered youth) did you read about it or hear it through word of mouth... how did you come to know of this individual?
JW: I heard it on the radio.
ST: And it just sparked something?
JW: Yeah.

ST: I remember reading that The Clash used to watch the news, read newspapers, listen to the radio and come up with songs regarding the times. I've also noticed your lyrics becoming more politically aware. This current cd (compared to the debut) has a stronger rythymic element and I find that it is stronger lyrically (with global awareness). For example, "In the Crossfire '- is that aimed at the Iraq war?
JW: Yeah, absolutely.
ST: And how else do you feel about the war? What did you think of Tony Blair's decision to join in?
JW: Uhm, I think he is between a rock and a hard place. I think the alternative is another Tory government. I also think he's in bed with Bush for better or worse.
ST: Blair's decision surprised me as I always thought that Canada and the UK were aligned in thought, so when Canada said no to going to war, and Blair said yes, I was quite surprised.
JW: It goes without saying that war is wrong. It costs a lot money as well, which is useful for the economy.
ST: War always stimulates economy. The US started with a great economy, but as the war has dragged on, the economy is suffering.
JW: Well Blair kind of got the house in order for us and he did some good things.
ST: And what is your alternative? Again, about the cd - it is more rhythmic and more of a 'rocker' than the previous cds. Was this your intention?
JW: I think it kind of evolved. All the gigs we did were key to it (the evolution). A lot of people who came... well the first cd was such a huge success that that tag stuck with us - they had us down as plaintive, acoustic balladeers. The people who were expecting that music have come away from the concerts hopefully enjoying our new songs. We wanted to get a balance between the two sounds, and hopefully the fans will enjoy it. That balance was our key motivation.
ST: Do you have a family?
JW: I have a wife and a little girl, four.
ST: What's your little girl's name?
JW: Niamh. It's an Irish name that is pronounced Neve.
ST: That's a great name, Niamh Walsh. I want to get your perspective on fans' loyalty. I was wondering what makes the fans (and other indie groups) turn on an indie band when they become successful? When you are an indie band the fans love you, but when you become a commercial success they accuse indie acts of selling out. What do you make of this phenomena?
JW: I'm not sure why that happens, I think people just like having their own little secret -their own little club. I think also the innocence and the amateur nature that a lot of the first albums take on - well you can't recreate that. And that is what the fans want.
ST: That's a good point, you can never go back. There is that whole innocence of discovering an indie band, and as the band progresses the people are unable to move forward, or progress, along with the band.
JW: And some people can't or don't accept the change and rather than move on with the band, they move on to another band. I think with a lot of the young fans, they are more like that. They tend to be heavily influenced by what their favourite DJ is saying and if someone on the radio makes a negative statement, they tend to go along with it.
ST: When you achieve some form of success, do you find you have more people agreeing with whatever you say, or do you have people in your camp who point out when you are being an ass?
JW: Oh, we definitely have people pointing out when we are being asses. I think that is what a wife is for... I think there's enough people around who don't like us and kick us to the ground.
ST: I would think you'd need a thick skin to put up with that. Someone telling you that 'you suck' when they don't even know you.
JW: It just drives you on and makes you want to prove them wrong.
ST: I hear that when you opened for the Stones you wowed the crowd.
JW: The crowd really enjoyed our set.
ST: And this is an older crowd - so you turned on a whole new generation.
JW: The most important thing was that the Stones liked us as well. Especially Mick.
ST: Well that's a compliment in itself. You began touring for this cd 'On the Outside' last October (05)? When do you take time off?
JW: I am not sure now - we might be coming back out. We are set to go home in October. But in the middle of October we might be doing something else - I can't say too much because of the usual things like finances.
ST: Did you find that with the release of the videos the download sales went up?
JW: Yeah.
ST: What do you think of the downloading industry? I had someone tell me that in the 90's a band could sell 30 million cds and now they are lucky to sell 1 million. Without the internet, you wouldn't be as famous, yet with the downloading, you aren't as wealthy as you could be.
JW: I think the main thing that must be affecting album sales is reviews now and as well, on some of the sites, it says 'download this'. It will list 5 tracks from the album and every band will have a similar chart. Unfortunately, people will download those 5 songs and not bother with the rest of the album. That must be affecting album sales. A friend of mine made a good point the other day when he said somehow music has been cheapened. People are quite happy to pay $10.00 for the cinema and $3.00 for popcorn, but they expect to get a cd for $10.00. A sports game, like Liverpool football, is like 30 pounds for 90 minutes. If you sold your albums for 30 quid, nobody would buy them.
ST: I would like to hear about the most interesting gig you've played. In terms of interest or excitement.
JW: Probably the Stones gig. That was pretty special. We also played in a Town Square in Belgium and we were the headline act with Ice-T and the Sugarbabes opening for us. That was a great experience and it was a landmark for us. It was the first big thing that we've headlined. Definitely a boost going out on stage knowing that people were waiting to see you.
ST: Especially when they waited through Ice-T. Where do you find your numbers (in terms of audience) are really huge? In regards to your fan base.
JW: At the moment it would be France and Belgium. It happened by accident when a remake of one of our songs became a big club hit.
ST: Which song?
JW: Four to the Floor. And it kind of grew from there where a lot of people discovered the band. I guess a lot of dance music fans might have listened to the album and thought, that's not for me, but a lot of people bought the album off the back of that song. It's like America and the UK liking similar things. The French speaking parts of Europe listen to similar music - France, Belgium and Switzerland.
ST: When you played at Sundance, which I don't think is a great venue for a band, you came away from the experience a little sour. Was it bad press for you, or did it just leave a bad taste?
JW: We just felt like a lounge band. I think the thing that said it all was when the security at the venue asked the sound engineer to 'turn it down because people were eating'. We weren't briefed in any way about what this gig was and if we had have been we would have turned it down. We understand the industry and there are some things that seem awful but they will benefit us down the line, but this had no benefit to us.
ST: What do you despise most - photos, interviews or meet and greets, and don't say none as you've been around long enough to tire of something?
JW: I guess I would say meet and greets as we meet so many people like, 'this is a friend of a friend of Bob's gym and they play your music'. But really, I would say it's not so bad.
Well, the tour manager, Chris, popped in to say I went over my time (surprise) and I was on my way. Check out Lezah's review of the live performance.
Swanktrendz: So you are in Vancouver for a short while and then you are on to Seattle. How has your time been here, thus far?
James Walsh: Great - I have relatives here. My aunt (from his father's side) and cousins live here and they are coming to the show tonight.
ST: I don't want to repeat a lot of the usual questions - I know where the band's name comes from. I was hoping to ask you more about your song writing style. Do you find that you are writing for an outcome rather than from a feeling? For example, the pressure of the next cd being bigger and better than the one before it.
JW: Yeah, I think you definitely have to fight that battle. Every time you write a song now you fight it. I think the main way to combat that is to write as much as possible and just get it all down, absolutely everything, and some of it will turn out quite commercial sounding, inadvertently catchy sounding, and some of it will be quite weird. As long as you're not afraid to let it all go down on tape. Sometimes I will just sing into a mobile phone.
ST: So when an idea hits, that's when you get it down.
JW: Yes, because if you just sit down and say, okay I am writing an album now, everything has to be a certain way and it doesn't work that way.
ST: Now the first cd was hugely successful and then you have that period of time of the 'second album slump' where the pressure is so huge to produce a hit. How does it come naturally? How do you not get jaded with the recording industry?
JW: Yeah, well ... like I said, when I am in the mood, I just write it down as quickly as possible and don't try to think of what is expected.
ST: You write the lyrics - which are brilliant - I especially like the lyrics to 'In the Crossfire'. I've noticed your lyrics are becoming more politicized. I also wonder, when you are writing, do you have the melody first or do the lyrics come first?
JW: I generally have the melody first, and then the lyrics follow. I usually have a riff or a melody and then I take it from there. The songs kind of write themselves. Generally the slow songs, I write myself like, Jeremiah and Restless Heart.
ST: Yes, with Jeremiah (the murdered youth) did you read about it or hear it through word of mouth... how did you come to know of this individual?
JW: I heard it on the radio.
ST: And it just sparked something?
JW: Yeah.
ST: I remember reading that The Clash used to watch the news, read newspapers, listen to the radio and come up with songs regarding the times. I've also noticed your lyrics becoming more politically aware. This current cd (compared to the debut) has a stronger rythymic element and I find that it is stronger lyrically (with global awareness). For example, "In the Crossfire '- is that aimed at the Iraq war?
JW: Yeah, absolutely.
ST: And how else do you feel about the war? What did you think of Tony Blair's decision to join in?
JW: Uhm, I think he is between a rock and a hard place. I think the alternative is another Tory government. I also think he's in bed with Bush for better or worse.
ST: Blair's decision surprised me as I always thought that Canada and the UK were aligned in thought, so when Canada said no to going to war, and Blair said yes, I was quite surprised.
JW: It goes without saying that war is wrong. It costs a lot money as well, which is useful for the economy.
ST: War always stimulates economy. The US started with a great economy, but as the war has dragged on, the economy is suffering.
JW: Well Blair kind of got the house in order for us and he did some good things.
ST: And what is your alternative? Again, about the cd - it is more rhythmic and more of a 'rocker' than the previous cds. Was this your intention?
JW: I think it kind of evolved. All the gigs we did were key to it (the evolution). A lot of people who came... well the first cd was such a huge success that that tag stuck with us - they had us down as plaintive, acoustic balladeers. The people who were expecting that music have come away from the concerts hopefully enjoying our new songs. We wanted to get a balance between the two sounds, and hopefully the fans will enjoy it. That balance was our key motivation.
ST: Do you have a family?
JW: I have a wife and a little girl, four.
ST: What's your little girl's name?
JW: Niamh. It's an Irish name that is pronounced Neve.
ST: That's a great name, Niamh Walsh. I want to get your perspective on fans' loyalty. I was wondering what makes the fans (and other indie groups) turn on an indie band when they become successful? When you are an indie band the fans love you, but when you become a commercial success they accuse indie acts of selling out. What do you make of this phenomena?
JW: I'm not sure why that happens, I think people just like having their own little secret -their own little club. I think also the innocence and the amateur nature that a lot of the first albums take on - well you can't recreate that. And that is what the fans want.
ST: That's a good point, you can never go back. There is that whole innocence of discovering an indie band, and as the band progresses the people are unable to move forward, or progress, along with the band.
JW: And some people can't or don't accept the change and rather than move on with the band, they move on to another band. I think with a lot of the young fans, they are more like that. They tend to be heavily influenced by what their favourite DJ is saying and if someone on the radio makes a negative statement, they tend to go along with it.
ST: When you achieve some form of success, do you find you have more people agreeing with whatever you say, or do you have people in your camp who point out when you are being an ass?
JW: Oh, we definitely have people pointing out when we are being asses. I think that is what a wife is for... I think there's enough people around who don't like us and kick us to the ground.
ST: I would think you'd need a thick skin to put up with that. Someone telling you that 'you suck' when they don't even know you.
JW: It just drives you on and makes you want to prove them wrong.
ST: I hear that when you opened for the Stones you wowed the crowd.
JW: The crowd really enjoyed our set.
ST: And this is an older crowd - so you turned on a whole new generation.
JW: The most important thing was that the Stones liked us as well. Especially Mick.
ST: Well that's a compliment in itself. You began touring for this cd 'On the Outside' last October (05)? When do you take time off?
JW: I am not sure now - we might be coming back out. We are set to go home in October. But in the middle of October we might be doing something else - I can't say too much because of the usual things like finances.
ST: Did you find that with the release of the videos the download sales went up?
JW: Yeah.
ST: What do you think of the downloading industry? I had someone tell me that in the 90's a band could sell 30 million cds and now they are lucky to sell 1 million. Without the internet, you wouldn't be as famous, yet with the downloading, you aren't as wealthy as you could be.
JW: I think the main thing that must be affecting album sales is reviews now and as well, on some of the sites, it says 'download this'. It will list 5 tracks from the album and every band will have a similar chart. Unfortunately, people will download those 5 songs and not bother with the rest of the album. That must be affecting album sales. A friend of mine made a good point the other day when he said somehow music has been cheapened. People are quite happy to pay $10.00 for the cinema and $3.00 for popcorn, but they expect to get a cd for $10.00. A sports game, like Liverpool football, is like 30 pounds for 90 minutes. If you sold your albums for 30 quid, nobody would buy them.
ST: I would like to hear about the most interesting gig you've played. In terms of interest or excitement.
JW: Probably the Stones gig. That was pretty special. We also played in a Town Square in Belgium and we were the headline act with Ice-T and the Sugarbabes opening for us. That was a great experience and it was a landmark for us. It was the first big thing that we've headlined. Definitely a boost going out on stage knowing that people were waiting to see you.
ST: Especially when they waited through Ice-T. Where do you find your numbers (in terms of audience) are really huge? In regards to your fan base.
JW: At the moment it would be France and Belgium. It happened by accident when a remake of one of our songs became a big club hit.
ST: Which song?
JW: Four to the Floor. And it kind of grew from there where a lot of people discovered the band. I guess a lot of dance music fans might have listened to the album and thought, that's not for me, but a lot of people bought the album off the back of that song. It's like America and the UK liking similar things. The French speaking parts of Europe listen to similar music - France, Belgium and Switzerland.
ST: When you played at Sundance, which I don't think is a great venue for a band, you came away from the experience a little sour. Was it bad press for you, or did it just leave a bad taste?
JW: We just felt like a lounge band. I think the thing that said it all was when the security at the venue asked the sound engineer to 'turn it down because people were eating'. We weren't briefed in any way about what this gig was and if we had have been we would have turned it down. We understand the industry and there are some things that seem awful but they will benefit us down the line, but this had no benefit to us.
ST: What do you despise most - photos, interviews or meet and greets, and don't say none as you've been around long enough to tire of something?
JW: I guess I would say meet and greets as we meet so many people like, 'this is a friend of a friend of Bob's gym and they play your music'. But really, I would say it's not so bad.
Well, the tour manager, Chris, popped in to say I went over my time (surprise) and I was on my way. Check out Lezah's review of the live performance.
Wednesday, September 06, 2006
Good News (other than Ernest Hemmingway) - Rob Williams
So a Texas commercial real estate developer has won Florida's annual Ernest Hemingway look-alike competition. This during the "26th Hemingway Days Festival, which ended on Sunday with an arm-wrestling contest in Key West at the tip of the Florida Keys,[and] celebrated the July 21 birthday of the Nobel Prize-winner, born 107 years ago."
What fun! I want to go the Hemingway Days Festival. It sounds like a hoot.
What's that saying, "When one door closes... another one opens?"
I recently got some really swell news: hot on the heels of my rejection (not getting the full time job at the college where I teach) I DID get a letter on Friday from a writers residency with the Djerassi Resident Artists Program (in Northern California) who said that my "application was ranked very high by our panel of professionals from your field, and you have been placed on alternate status for 2007."
Hooray! I'm actually very thrilled and honored to be even considered for alternate status. i had started to lose my faith in the whole writers residency thing-- having never gotten one, and having been rejected by several of them over the past 5-6 years. But this totally renews my faith.
Now I just hope someone decides to drop out! the residency, which is a 4-5 week stay, would not be until spring-summer of 2007, but that's great-- gives me enough time to finish the current book and get my stuff together for the 2nd book.
Cross your fingers for me.
Ok, back to planning my Fall Creative Writing Class--I'm sort of making my own reader-- I'm xeroxing a bunch of handouts, anyway. As soon as I'm done i'll post my final reading list (made up of nonfiction, fiction, and poetry) soon, but below are a few of my potentials. In fact, if anyone has suggestions for great SHORT nonfiction essays, short fiction, and poetry let me know. I emphasize SHORT-- meaning they should be an average of 5 pages (at least for the nonfiction); I know, that's short but it's because the class is HUGE and in addition to these short texts students have to read each others' work--AND because the class is so HUGE I'm encouraging the writing of SHORT short pieces; there is just not enough time to read 20, 30 page stories, novel chapters, or novelas. And anyway, it is just an Into to creative writing. I'm currently gathering all of The New Yorker Talk of the Town and other short pieces that I have.
So far I'm considering:
FICTION
Rick Moody, "Twister," from Ring of Brightest Angels Around Heaven
John Cheever, "The Reunion," from The Stories of John Cheever (Believe me, if we could read the whole book I would assign it)
Jamaica Kincaid, "Girl"
Helen Schulman, "Pushing the Point," from Not a Free Show
Judy Budnitz, "Art Lesson," from Flying Leap
Manuel Munoz, "The Wooden Boat," from Zigzagger
Ann Beattie, "Janus"
Brady Udall, "The Wig" (If you haven't read this-- it is fricken amazing)
John Dufresne, "Lemonade and Paris Buns," from Johnny Too Bad (a heartbreaker of a story)
NONFICTION
Jonathan Franzen, "Countdown" (from The NewYorker)
Mary Gordon "Pilgrimage" (from The NewYorker)
Nicole Krauss "My Summer in Poland" (from The NewYorker)
POETRY
Shit, so many I want to use! Whitman, Plath, Mark Doty, etc. etc.
Suggestions for any of the genres are certainly welcome! (And, even better, if you're one of my writer friends who has a great short story, essay or poem published out there somewhere that you think would be great for me to teach in my class, let me know).
What fun! I want to go the Hemingway Days Festival. It sounds like a hoot.
What's that saying, "When one door closes... another one opens?"
I recently got some really swell news: hot on the heels of my rejection (not getting the full time job at the college where I teach) I DID get a letter on Friday from a writers residency with the Djerassi Resident Artists Program (in Northern California) who said that my "application was ranked very high by our panel of professionals from your field, and you have been placed on alternate status for 2007."
Hooray! I'm actually very thrilled and honored to be even considered for alternate status. i had started to lose my faith in the whole writers residency thing-- having never gotten one, and having been rejected by several of them over the past 5-6 years. But this totally renews my faith.
Now I just hope someone decides to drop out! the residency, which is a 4-5 week stay, would not be until spring-summer of 2007, but that's great-- gives me enough time to finish the current book and get my stuff together for the 2nd book.
Cross your fingers for me.
Ok, back to planning my Fall Creative Writing Class--I'm sort of making my own reader-- I'm xeroxing a bunch of handouts, anyway. As soon as I'm done i'll post my final reading list (made up of nonfiction, fiction, and poetry) soon, but below are a few of my potentials. In fact, if anyone has suggestions for great SHORT nonfiction essays, short fiction, and poetry let me know. I emphasize SHORT-- meaning they should be an average of 5 pages (at least for the nonfiction); I know, that's short but it's because the class is HUGE and in addition to these short texts students have to read each others' work--AND because the class is so HUGE I'm encouraging the writing of SHORT short pieces; there is just not enough time to read 20, 30 page stories, novel chapters, or novelas. And anyway, it is just an Into to creative writing. I'm currently gathering all of The New Yorker Talk of the Town and other short pieces that I have.
So far I'm considering:
FICTION
Rick Moody, "Twister," from Ring of Brightest Angels Around Heaven
John Cheever, "The Reunion," from The Stories of John Cheever (Believe me, if we could read the whole book I would assign it)
Jamaica Kincaid, "Girl"
Helen Schulman, "Pushing the Point," from Not a Free Show
Judy Budnitz, "Art Lesson," from Flying Leap
Manuel Munoz, "The Wooden Boat," from Zigzagger
Ann Beattie, "Janus"
Brady Udall, "The Wig" (If you haven't read this-- it is fricken amazing)
John Dufresne, "Lemonade and Paris Buns," from Johnny Too Bad (a heartbreaker of a story)
NONFICTION
Jonathan Franzen, "Countdown" (from The NewYorker)
Mary Gordon "Pilgrimage" (from The NewYorker)
Nicole Krauss "My Summer in Poland" (from The NewYorker)
POETRY
Shit, so many I want to use! Whitman, Plath, Mark Doty, etc. etc.
Suggestions for any of the genres are certainly welcome! (And, even better, if you're one of my writer friends who has a great short story, essay or poem published out there somewhere that you think would be great for me to teach in my class, let me know).
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
