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Tunes

Best tunes of 2020: #14 The Beths “I’m not getting excited”

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Just a few days ago I posted about a set I caught at last year’s Ottawa Bluesfest, a set that serves as just one example of what makes the festival so special: the strong possibility for musical discovery in the joy of live music. This next band on my Best tunes of 2020 list was another example of one whom I really fell hard for when I saw them at this very same festival.

The Beths were formed in Auckland, New Zealand in 2014 by four musicians who met at university while studying jazz. They released their debut long player “Future me hates me” in 2018 but I didn’t come across it until the following year, else I might have included it on my list of favourite albums that year. Luckily it didn’t escape other’s notices because all the critical acclaim meant multiple tours and one of these landed them on the 2019 Bluesfest lineup. I don’t remember now if I picked up on them before I saw their name on the website or afterwards, but I definitely earmarked them as a set I really wanted to catch after repeat listens of their power pop harmonies. And of course, I’ve mentioned a few times on these pages how the New Zealand quartet “blew the doors off” the stage and I afterwards stumbled over to the merch tent to pick up a copy of their record.

So for me, “Jump rope gazers” was a highly anticipated release in early 2020, after having played the hell out of the debut record for the rest of 2019. Unfortunately, the sophomore record wasn’t quite as immediately attention grabbing as I was expecting and instead was one that had to grow on me, working hard to earn its place on my end of the year list. Track one on the album was an exception to this, a real standout for this writer, right from the first spin.

“I’m not getting excited
‘Cause my fight and my flight are divided
And so I don’t enthuse
Keep my grip on joy loose
And I wait for the news
With my feet in my shoes”

At first glance, the music doesn’t match the song title. The revving guitars, insistent drum beat, and Elizabeth Stokes’ breathless delivery is all very exciting and feverish and energetic. However, when you consider its almost like an updated and more self aware take on Green Day’s “Basket case”, albeit with a different set of neuroses, the anxious tone reveals itself, as does the pervading take on The Jonah Complex. “I’m not getting excited” is so good and so relatable.

For the rest of the Best tunes of 2020 list, click here.

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Live music galleries

Live music galleries: My Son The Hurricane [2023]

(I got the idea for this series while sifting through the ‘piles’ of digital photos on my laptop. It occurred to me to share some of these great pics from some of my favourite concert sets from time to time. Until I get around to the next one, I invite you to peruse my ever-growing list of concerts page.)

My Son The Hurricane live at Bluesfest 2023

Artist: My Son The Hurricane
When: July 12th, 2023
Where: SiriusXM stage, Ottawa Bluesfest, Lebreton Flats Park, Ottawa
Context: So we’re exactly two weeks away from the first night of this year’s edition of Ottawa Bluesfest. For the longest time, I was debating whether or not to attend due to being initially underwhelmed by the lineup. But this, I realized, was truly due to the previous year being much more aligned to my own personal taste. In the end, I broke down and got a full festival pass, partially* because of sets like the one I am featuring today. I had never heard of Niagara, Ontario’s My Son The Hurricane before wandering over to the SiriusXM stage early on in the evening but it wasn’t long at all before I was caught up in their energy, right along with the rest of the crowd. Theirs was a mad mix of Mighty Mighty Bosstone ska punk, Jane’s Addiction cali surf rock, old school Chili Peppers gnarly funk, and whatever you call the racket that Rage and the Machine gets up to. They have a dozen or so members that make up a big sound, all contributing to a musical message of change, acceptance, and love. A set I’ll not soon forget, to be sure.
Point of reference song: Mr Holland’s locust

Sylvie Kindree on vocals
Chris Darling, Fraser Gauthier, and Alyssa Shangham
Chris Sipos on guitar
Cooper Hannahson adding some beats
Ashlee Standish on the keys
Raphaël Désilets with his trumpet
Sylvie flirting with Alyssa
Raphaël Désilets, Lisa Gudgeon, Chris Sipos, Victoria Cox, and Danno O’shea representing the banner
Sylvie, Cooper, Justin, and Craig
Victoria Cox on the baritone sax
Equality!

*But also because I love live music and finally decided there were more than enough sets that I wanted to see to make the pass worth the money.

Categories
Tunes

Best tunes of 2013: #21 Crocodiles “She splits me up”

<< #22    |    #20 >>

I’ve already told the story on these pages about how my friend Tim and I drove to Cambridge from Toronto one day over the Christmas break back in 2011. We headed there to meet up with one of Tim’s university friends Greg and his wife Wendy, and check out their books and records store, Millpond. We stayed for dinner before returning to Toronto in a snow storm but not before sharing laughs and memories and trading a few musical picks.

Greg’s contribution was Crocodiles, seconded by Wendy, and based on their raves and descriptions, I definitely took note to check them out when I returned home. Perhaps coincidentally, my own suggestion was Dum Dum Girls, whose sophomore record “Only in dreams” was hot on my repeat listen list and had placed on my favourite albums list that year. What’s funny is that Greg and Wendy hadn’t heard of Dum Dum Girls and I hadn’t heard of Crocodiles but at the time, the front persons and driving forces of each band, Brandon Welchez and Dee Dee Penny*, were married and had regularly contributed to each other’s musical projects.

I later learned that Crocodiles were formed in 2008** by Welchez and Charles Rowell in San Diego, California, after their previous, mostly punk-driven bands had broken up. Their psychedelic and retro noise pop sound was established right from the beginning and got them drawing buzz. I recognized and fell for it when I first listened to their sophomore album, “Sleep forever”, quickly making the connection with Black Rebel Motorcycle Club and The Jesus and Mary Chain, and of course, with Dum Dum Girls. I’ve continued to follow the group through the multiple lineup changes but the sound hasn’t veered too far off course, nor has the songwriting quality diminished, right up to last year’s excellent “Upside down in heaven”, the group’s 8th full length album.

In 2013, though, they released their 4th album, the Sune Rose Wagner (The Raveonettes) produced “Crimes of passion”. The neon colours of its album foreshadowed the technicolour sounds and garish and glam tinged ethos. Ten searing and cool tracks for turning up and rocking out alongside, my favourite of which was track six, “She splits me up”. With guitars that wail at the high end, dance harpsichord-like arpeggios, and gnarl and snarl at the robust bass line. Meanwhile, Welchez bemoans and lauds a member of the opposite sex and the hold she has on him.

“She dazzles on the streets beneath me but her love is never real. And the world outside is fading fast, and she’s so detached. She splits me up”

Yessssss.

*Funnily enough, this is the first post to focus on Crocodiles but Welchez has been mentioned a couple of times already in posts about Dum Dum Girls.

**Same year as Dum Dum Girls.

For the rest of the Best tunes of 2013 list, click here.