Category Archives: Music

bed rest and plenty of fluids

This morning, I went for lunch at Ottawa City Hall.

Which is a bit of a pity, as the only lunch option available involved standing at the end of very long lines to sample the latest in street food.

True, long lines at lunchtime are not unusual. But this was my first time in days experiencing natural light for any length of time. (Tell me about it! —Snorri) The bulk of my week has been spent in bed nursing a case of tuberculosis. No, not tuberculosis. What’s the word? Influenza. That’s what Jimmie Rodgers had, right?

I probably should still be in bed, but when offered an opportunity to share with a roomful of Councillors, reporters and musicians the experience of being put on hold by the City’s 311 phone service, well, one can only resist so much temptation.

And to those in attendance at the Mayor’s Boardroom event today, I’m pretty sure I am no longer contagious. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Music, Ottawa

the race card

Last month, through the magic of satellite radio, I managed to catch a fair number of sets by hip and happening artists performing live at Bonnaroo. And somewhere in the middle of Swedish sensation Lykke Li’s set, I was reminded that the 1980s may at this point have trumped the 1960s as the most stubborn decade in history.

Specifically, it was this song, a thinly disguised rewrite of I Want to Know What Love Is.

In the artist’s defense, perhaps it is intended to be a sequel to the Foreigner ballad. You know, she wanted to know what love was, found out and now will never love again. How very ’80s of her.

Yet, as we continue to go upward to go forward going backward all the time, there is hope. Take, for instance, the title track from the superfun new Socalled album.

That’s right. Funking you back to the 1970s with a song that is either a lost TV-show theme or a contemporary dance track from Québec. It is of course the latter (via Ottawa’s Bova Sound). But I like to think of it as both. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Music

The Newpart folk festival

I have long maintained a distant relationship with the Ottawa Valley Country Music Hall of Fame.

Not by choice. I have known and interviewed a number of the Hall’s inductees and executives, all friendly-like. I have made efforts to promote their activities and the virtual Hall’s website. (See?) Yet, many of those efforts have met with resistance. And I think I get it. The City of Ottawa is creeping ever closer to the Valley; it’s understandable that folks out there might be wary of interest from city slickers like me.

But I will not be silenced. (Though I’m also unlikely to shout.) I will continue to openly admire the rich musical vein that has fueled generations of Valley people. The countrified sounds of the Ottawa Valley has earned admirers nationwide and worldwide. I know. I’m one.

April Verch is another. Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under Music

against future earnings

So much negativity.

First, it was a wave of protest against the return of Kanye West to Ottawa’s summer Rockfest. Dozens of narrow-minded “music lovers” have spoken out against the hip hopper’s inclusion in a lineup that otherwise features such top-line talent as one surviving member of Lynyrd Skynyrd.

Again, that’s a few dozen disgruntled patrons out of a few hundred thousand likely attendees.

Newsworthy?

You’d be surprised. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Music

shattering mainstream experience

“So mainstream, there’s a hip hop song about it.”

That’s how a CBC Radio reporter referred to shatter, the latest “in” drug with a lame nickname, on this, the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination.

Not just a song, or even a popular song. It is considered significant that shatter is the subject of a hip hop song.

From which I, as a listener, naturally discerned three things. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Media, Music