Category Archives: Music

the folk-good song of the summer

Folk music is not dead.

I mention this on the eve of a folk festival that was originally slated to feature Neil Young, a man who apart from the song Ohio and an ill-advised album-length tirade against George W. Bush, has never exactly been a folk singer. Patti Smith, however, who in my folk-festival world would be headlining tomorrow night, is certain to direct our inward gaze to thorny issues. This is a good thing. And you won’t find much of it at Folkfest this year.

The mainstream has lost a few pop-music traditions in recent decades. Gone are the once-obligatory “answer songs” to hits of the day. Gone, for the most part, are the cash-in numbers recorded to capitalize on the latest craze, from streaking to Pac-Man to, uh, Wendy’s TV commercials. Gone too, it seems are instrumentals, once a common sight on the charts. Funny, given that today’s chart-toppers seem to have even less to say than the pop stars of old. Presumably, it’s just that today’s artists can’t shut up. And in the age of autotune, why would they? Topical songs, meanwhile — songs that chronicle this ever-changing world in which we’re livin’ — have long been absent from the mainstream. Continue reading

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O Canada

It’s the 146th anniversary of… Confederation. Everybody sing together.

I wasn’t going to resort to the great national media exercise that is the knee-jerk Canada Day (or, if you prefer, Dominion Day) list. But a raft of rather bizarre and hastily compiled lists published this week had me thinking that this nation probably deserves better. Here, then, compiled in haste, are a few short lists of proudly Canadian musical excursions. Enjoy!

List 1: Four defiantly Canadian album titles

Third Down, 110 to Go by Jesse Winchester

The celebrated draft-dodger’s 1972 release boasts what is surely the most outright Canadian title ever to make it to U.S. soil.

Born on the First of July by Chixdiggit

Yes, Calgary’s Chixdiggit. Feel free to give this 1998 disc a spin over the weekend; it still holds up.

Favourite Colours by The Sadies

OK, so the title is not particularly Canadian, but you just know those Good brothers chose it at least in part to reclaim the proper spelling of both words in the title.

Canadian Content by various artists

A rather obvious one, this Capitol Records compilation, but it kinda says it all. Anne Murray. Gene MacLellan. Pierre Lalonde. Heck, the label was even thoughtful enough to offer a warning that Lalonde’s song C’est mon Coeur qui chante clair, is “sung in French.” Makes you proud, it does.

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Three distinctly Canadian band names:

Anal Chinook (Who can forget?)

Bruno Gerussi’s Medallion (Too bad the band sucked.)

Pierre LeBon et les Separa-twists (Bein oui!)

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Three artists that could only have come from Canada:

A Tribe Called Red

Rock et Belles Oreilles

The Rheostatics

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And finally, for your Canada Day enjoyment…

Across Canada in eight songs (a musical travelogue):

Canadian Railroad Trilogy by Gordon Lightfoot

Home Again in Newfoundland This Year by Dick Nolan

Going Down the Road by Bruce Cockburn

Excursion à Venise par Kate et Anna McGarrigle

This Ottawa Valley of Mine by Mac Beattie

Wa Wa Tey Wak by Andrew Balfour

Four Strong Winds by Ian & Sylvia (yes, or Neil Young)

Beautiful British Columbia by Alberta Slim

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100 years of punk

Punk turns 100 today. Reason enough, me thinks, to flout convention and follow your muse.

For me, that means, oh I don’t know, typing the remainder of this article with my fingers placed one key to the right of where ‘The Man’ says they should be.

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OK, I can see a downside to that approach. Just as Good Charlotte revealed the downside of punk. Continue reading

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delayed response

I’ve been involved in only a handful of conference-call interviews or reporters’ scrums. Each time, I have come armed with questions. Sometimes I even got to ask them.

With Joan Jett, I was allotted a generous total of two questions. During a Corel Centre (or was it the Palladium?) gathering at the feet of a very approachable Alanis Morissette, I chose to ask no questions. Why? The tone of the media love-in was set early on by a gushing question from one local reporter: “Did you bring a ‘special’ friend to town with you?” I decided my two prepared questions were too good for this crowd; though, I suspect, Alanis would have welcomed them. And as for Madonna‘s press conference in Toronto, I knew chances of my getting in a question amid the MuchMusic and YTV personalities were slim to none. Continue reading

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at it and to it

Last summer, having already journeyed through 10 provinces and one territory in an effort to get to know this land that much better, we ventured to the forbidden land that is northern Ontario. Or, as we quickly learned, northeastern Ontario.

It was already proving to be the region’s annus horribilus, forest fires having recently threatened many communities and the picturesque city of Elliot Lake still reeling from a tragedy from which its people may never fully recover. Shortly after our trip, storms would wash out parts of the TransCanada that is the lifeline of some towns; the provincial government’s closure of the Ontario Northland Railway would further isolate others.

It was a good time to venture north, if only to provide much needed moral and tourism support for a battered region. Continue reading

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