SOME WICKED: Dashiell Brown's Blog

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New Podcast: John Brown and David Day on The New Spin

by dashiell on Mar.31, 2010, under Canadian, Interviews, Live Performances, News, Podcast, St. John's, mp3

John Brown, Newfoundland spoken word aficionado, did his thang on The New Spin with David Day backing him on guitar with some great alt-tuned licks that remind me of John Fahey and other instrumental acoustic guitar greats. I saw these guys down at Natalie Noseworthy’s open-mic night at the Hava Java, and John Brown has been going down there for more than a year now. John Brown initially started at the now defunct Turner’s Tavern.

Here’s the New Spin Podcast of John Brown and David Day, otherwise known as The Hip Replacements. This also features the hit “Once I Went On Medication.”

in sound,

dashiell brown

Hear all my other New Spin Podcasts.

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Dan Trouble Plays Live on The New Spin

by dashiell on Mar.19, 2010, under Canadian, Indie, Interviews, Live Performances, Podcast, St. John's, mp3


(photo by Tom Cochrane)

Dan Trouble performed on The New Spin last month as she was getting ready to audition for a major label in Toronto. Here she is playing at The Bovine Sex Club on Feb. 23, opening for Manitoba’s The Brat Attack. We talked about her latest EP Horses with Lazers and why she plays in DADGAD tuning so often.  Jordan Young also made a special guest appearance, backing her up on guitar.

Here is the whole podcast for your listening pleasure.

Dan Trouble will be touring the mainland this summer with her new outfit DT & the Dinosaurs, including J Young on bass. And don’t forget every Tuesday night at CBTG’s, DT with her co-host Andrew Mast host a variety show, opening the stage to a “wonderful host of randoms, hooligans and sometimes even musicians. It’s the only show in St. John’s where you’ll see a Jazz pianist, Ska trio and a Thrash Metal band on the same night on the same stage. ” Thanks, Uke!

Want more podcasts? Here are all the live shows/interviews I’ve had on The New Spin.

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Review: Patrick Molloy and The Manifest, Who Will Listen?

by dashiell on Feb.25, 2010, under Canadian, News, Reviews, St. John's

On his latest album with his latest band, Patrick Molloy and The Manifest’s Who Will Listen? is bold, italicized, and even underlined. He is clearly shooting for the moon on this one, channeling the progressive power rock of Rush a la Vapor Trails, with an Ozzie Osbourne-like wail that sounds surprisingly fresh against today’s trendy pop-oriented music industry and—daring.

Whether his aim was true will actually depend on who will listen but I’m sure radio stations here in Newfoundland and Labrador and across Canada will eat it up. From what I understand, they already are. “Who Will Listen?” was already featured as the Producers Pick on The East Coast Countdown and won the Regional Radio Star National Songwriting Competition for Newfoundland and Labrador.

Patrick Molloy will be representing Newfoundland in Toronto from March 10-14th during Canadian Music Week for the National Prize of the Radio Star competition. It’s apt because his album manages to reflect the smorgasbord of the tastes and styles you’ll hear from so many of the local bands here in St. John’s, from the progressive hard rock of The Pathological Lovers to the more punchy new-wave of The Subtitles.

Though a few songs may feel incomplete or less developed, there are a number of hits here, in particular “Darkness Glows” and “Peace, Now, Today” which I still have in my head. Produced right here in St. John’s by gold and platinum award-winning producer Krisjan Leslie, Who Will Listen? serves up a heaping dish of all that’s fresh and happening here in the St. John’s music scene, and Patrick Molloy must have felt it his duty to deliver such a showcase. For that alone, you can thank him.

Preview his new album online at www.patrickmolloy.ca

Here’s an interview I had with him last year on The New Spin.

(The New Spin airs every Thursday night, 9-11 PM Newftime, 7:30 Eastern on 93.5 CHMR-FM.)

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Boycott President’s Choice For Using GE Food (and all Molson and Labatt beer)

by dashiell on Feb.06, 2010, under Canadian, Essays, St. John's, articles

President’s Choice is not the brand I thought it was, and now I learn Loblaws heavily uses genetically engineered ingredients in many of their products. According to this Canadian Greenpeace Shopper’s Guide, up to 70% of all food items on the shelves of Canadian grocery stores have Genetically Engineered ingredients due to our lovely Members of Parliament who voted down a law to include mandatory labelling of GE foods in 2001. Yes, it’s one thing to have GE foods in the stores, but it’s quite another to have any lack of labelling on those foods whatsoever. This is a crime sandwich. To add further insult to injury, if you live in Newfoundland like I do, you have even less choice because many of the alternative products that are GE-free are not available here, much less any of the produce you can buy since the only stores you can shop from here are Dominion, Soeby’s, Wal-Mart, and Cost-Co. There’s Auntie Crae’s, of course, but you can hardly call them a grocery store. So what are Newfoundlanders to do?

You can do what Greenpeace is doing, calling on Loblaws to remove the offending GMO foods in their inventory as well as label the GE products at the very least. But they’re not even doing that.

According to the Greenpeace GMO guide above, retailers all over the world are refusing to sell GE foods and it is the law to label GE foods in more than forty countries worldwide. Yes, North America would be excluded from that list. Oh, the irony.

Read the guide and educate yourself. (You might also want to stop drinking Labatt and Molson beer; really that just leaves Quidi Vidi for us Newfoundlanders. Who owns Dominion beer? Molson, probably…)

The guide is organized by food category with three emoticons to easily see which foods are “happy” and which are not. Not much on the list surprised me save for President’s Choice. I really didn’t see that one coming. Basically any major brand is unhealthy, just add PC and No Name to the long list of untested crap that we are coerced to eat based on the sheer lack of choice we have in our beloved grocery stores.

At the very least, stop buying PC products until they start labelling them and email Chairman Galen Weston at customer_service@weston.ca and tell him why you are no longer buying PC products and that you’re spreading the word to everyone you know why they shouldn’t either. You can also become a fan of The People’s Choice Against President’s Choice on facebook as well and help spread the word. Everyone who shops at any Loblaws chain needs to know this since they obviously don’t feel your health is worth much.

And now for any of you naysayers out there who think GMO food is being blown out of proportion, who think that it’s safe to eat GMO foods. I’m not going to go into it, all the research is out there, but you can start by reading any book by Michael Pollan, specifically In Defense of Food and The Omnivore’s Dilemma and watch the movie Food Inc. Michael Pollan just wrote a new book Food Rules reviewed here in The New York Times. That should get you started as to understanding the eco-systemical nightmare that is GMO food. If you want a better understanding of the crimes of Monsanto against third-world food production and the devastating effects the WTO and NAFTA has had on these countries, you’ll want to read Raj Patel’s Stuffed and Starved. In a quick summary, basically poor farmers all over the world have been coerced into buying Monsanto’s seeds the same way we are coerced into buying GMO food in our grocery stores, and since these seeds are patented, these farmers will never become independent food producers in the same way that Newfoundlanders will never get to choose what they can fish. Furthermore, these foreign farmers cannot sell their local food in the markets since the cheap high-fructose corn syrup-riddled imports out-compete the locally-produced foods. It’s a nightmare, and we have our beloved institution of direct government subsidies to the soy and corn industry to thank for our corrupt food industry. King Corn is another must-see.

That’s all for now. Stop buying PC and tell Loblaws why. There’s going to be GMO food on the shelves. But at the very least, it should say so right there on the label. And not just PC, on everything.

Please become a fan of The People Against President’s Choice on facebook and help spread the word. It’s the least you can do, eh?

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The New Spin’s Top Underground Canadian Artists of 2009

by dashiell on Dec.17, 2009, under Alt-Country, Alt-Folk, Avant-Garde, BEST OF 2009, Canadian, Electronic, Garage/Punk, Indie, Inditronica, Links, News, Podcast, Post-Punk, Reviews, articles, playlists

The New Spin’s goal is to expose the great underground musicians of today. But given that 35% of everything The New Spin plays must be Canadian, I have discovered many great Canadian bands from among the piles of crap that’s out there. So here is a list in the order that I discovered them (kind of), the cream-of-the-crop Canadian bands making waves on The New Spin for 2009, some of which I have already written reviews for (they have links included.)

Of course, to listen to any of these artists, you can always tune in to the show every Thursday night on 93.5 CHMR-FM, online here, 9-11 Newftime, 7:30-9:30 EST, 4:30 Pacific. You should be able to find most of them on CBC Radio 3. I have added a few keywords to describe each artist in case you only like certain genres. SL means “sounds like.”

Tonight I will do a special show playing these artists, so tune in and hear the best of the best in Canadian music.

Hear a playlist of most of these artists here.

Timber Timbre (truly unusual folksongs, like Patrick Watson, this guy’s in a class all his own.)

Bruce Peninsula (dark choir/chamber folk, oh yes.)

Geoff Berner (Klezmer punk, what more needs to be said)

The Hylozoists (all instrumental like post-rock, but wow.)

Headache24 (SL Pixies)

Japandroids (SL Fugazi)

Olenka and the Autumn Lovers (if you like Dead Can Dance, etc.)

Weather Station (folk on the laptop loveliness)

Rae Spoon (how many transgendered folksingers do you know who sound like women but are actually men and who trade in their guitars for computers? not many, I’m sure.)

Patrick Watson (one of the best of the year, avant-garde/progressive indie folk)

The Torrent (dark 80’s inspired electro)

Pat Lepoidevin (amazing folk guitarist with an oh-so-sweet Scottish touch)

Eleazer Vs John (like Junior Boys?)

Tiga (play this at any club and watch them feet move)

Rural Alberta Advantage (dark, folky, I like them better than Elliot Brood)

Lovely Feathers (indie rock)

Hidden Cameras (80’s, New Order-ish, I love their new album)

Dan Mangan (folk, songwriter)

Wooden Sky (dark folk, reminds me of 16 Horsepower a bit)

Kids on TV Remixed V.1 from Blocks Recording Club (beats!)

Cousins (I can’t get play “Growling” enough)

Spiral Beach (kick-ass garage rock/punk)

Acres and Acres (lo-fi folksongs with St. John’s guest Amelia Curran)

Brock Geiger (banjo heavy folk songs)

Reverie Sound Revue (SL Stereolab)

Dark Mean (a little EP, but let’s see what they do in the future)

The Got to Get Got (fun fun in the sun indie rock)

Ambisonic (avant-garde-ish)

Jordan Klassen (love this guy from Calgary, oh my. SL Sufjan Stevens, David Pajo)

Gypsophilia (my interview with them is on my site here)

The Diableros (they have a new album, but haven’t heard it yet!)

The Danks (you love da danks if you love da strokes)

Flotilla (harp-based folk stuff from Montreal. SL Sunday All Over the World if you know who the hell that is)

Extra Happy Ghost (I only like one of the songs on this EP, but it’s so incredible I have to mention it. That would be “mash up: neither being nor nothingness”)

Vincat (Vincat!)

Rival Boys (alt-country, but their EP has grown on me)

Jesse Matheson (this guy’s songs are hilarious and oh so fun)

Octoberman (SL Calexico)

hellothisisalex (unusual chill-out chipcore or chipcore chill-out, whichever sounds better)

The Sales Department (electronic)

The Mountains and The Trees (from St. John’s, they’re making waves!)

Errand Boy (he moved away from St. John’s, too too bad, but keep an eye out for this dude)

Islands (not really underground, but whatever)

Language Arts (whoah, spoken word/hip-hop folk, cool…)

Fritz Helder (not really my favorite, but he has a very original electronic style that’s hard not to notice and that you may love, who knows)

Gregory Pepper and His Problems (problems? on his eclectic album With Trumpets Flaring I don’t see any problems, this guy’s uber-talented)

Makita Hack (straight up bluegrass, but awesome bluegrass at that)

Miss Quincy and The Ramblers (less exciting than Makita, but if you’re a bluegrass fan, why not?)

Woody Johnson (this guy’s a whiz on the acoustic blues front. so is Trevor Caswell, for that matter.)

Let’s Go to War (funky, electronic stuff, probably worth mentioning. SL Groove Armada)

We are Wolves (easily one of the best Canadian albums of the year, wow…)

Peace (who is this dude??? dark 80s-like stuff. SL early P.I.L. or Wilderness if you know them)

Minto (don’t know the album too well, but it’s produced by Steve Albini. yes, Steve Albini!)

The Fugitives (find me, find me! oh god, I’m drooling over them banjo licks.)

Digits (this guy emailed me and showed me his music. I cannot stop playing “Endgame”)

Jon and Roy (from BC, “Another Noon” is one of the best songs of the year.)

Vivian Houle (WTF???)

Rep by Pop (one of my favorite Canadian albums of the year, Cell Phone Camera, just wrote the review.)

Devil Eyes (very raucous, loud, but in a good, trashy-garage-rock-kind-of-way)

Sex with Strangers (I just love “We Want the Fire”)

Richard Laviolette and The Oil Spills (good folky stuff)

You Say Party We Say Die (yep, this is a good album, very punchy and lively)

The Racoon Wedding (like if Arcade Fire came from a bluegrass angle with some brass thrown in for good measure)

Okay, that’s it, I hope that’s enough to keep you busy for awhile, assuming you read this. I’ll post another list of the best underground artists from the rest of the world later. If you’re a new spinner, you already know them. If you need more, here is my list of top ten most under-rated records of 2008.

in sound,

Dashiell Brown

www.thenewspin.ca

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Review: Rep by Pop’s Cell Phone Camera

by dashiell on Dec.15, 2009, under Canadian, Indie, Inditronica, Music Videos, Post-Punk, Reviews

CPCCOVER-2 For an average Gen-X guy like me who grew up in the 80’s listening to The Cure, The Thompson Twins, Joy Division and New Order, Bauhaus, Gene Loves Jezebel and other MTV-like Euro New Wave/Post punk acts, Cell Phone Camera, the new album from the Canadian outfit Rep by Pop instantly grabbed my attention and gets regular play on my show The New Spin. Though the album’s punchier first half is stronger than the more U2-like rockin’ second half, Cell Phone Camera is all very fun and upbeat, fusing together everything I loved about the 80’s and then some. For you youg’uns, I’d put them in the Franz Ferdinand, Interpol, Cut Copy, Of Montreal, and The Rapture family.

Timothy Kingston’s voice has an uncanny ability to drift from sounding like Robert Smith to Bono to that lead singer dude of Gene Loves Jezebel in “Spray Paint.” A few songs sound like early U2 backed by the early Cure, and “Bisbifren”, “Comfort Me and Comfort You” and “Cell Phone Camera” have immediate hooks with the latter having a wicked wah-wah/flanging guitar patch I salivate over every time I hear it. I love “Unknown” with its transcendent, uplifting quality.

This band has the potential to blow up huge and “sell out,” though that’s near-impossible to do these days, and as any new spinner might know by now, I don’t like bands that stick to formulas, but nonetheless I wish great success for this band. Though Rep by Pop is clearly inspired by the 80’s sound, thankfully they aren’t trying to copy it so much as use the sounds of the 80s like an artist does with a palette of colors. The challenge for them, for any band really, is to push their familiar sound rather than be swallowed by it. Needless to say, Cell Phone Camera stands out in all the right ways. Here’s a vid:

Read other reviews here.

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Review: hellothisisalex, the accidentals, Exciting New Canadian Electronica

by dashiell on Oct.01, 2009, under Avant-Garde, Canadian, Electronic, Music Videos, Reviews

cover-theaccidentals Exciting new Canadian electronica act, hellothisisalex has released their new album, the accidentals, using a blend of 8-bit video game music (think Commodore 64 or the Atari 2600) and moog patches, or chipcore, as their inspiration, similar to other bands using this sonic footprint such as Crystal Castles, Tobacco, and Black Moth Super Rainbow. I’d count Plone in there as well, recently made famous by none other than that Reese’s Peanut Buttercup commercial that ran all summer, taking us back to the days when patches on a keyboard were literally patched together by cables, not a button you could just push to change the “patch.”

Entirely instrumental, with smatterings of vocal samples and other creative digitalis, the album ranges from downtempo and chill to upbeat and fun to downright avant-garde. One listen isn’t nearly enough to catch all of the varied nuances this thrilling piece of electronica has to offer. Some tracks may stand out more than others, but the accidentals needs to be listened to with all the senses, like appreciating a fine wine or exotic cheese. You can’t get all the flavors in one bite. It goes deeper, and all the songs work together like an elaborately patched quilt (pun intended.)

A word of warning: it’s not a four-on-the-floor party starter, but I can imagine today’s DJs remixing their tunes for the club.

This video, inspired by their visit here in Newfoundland of all places says it all. Lobster Cove Head is in Gros Morne National Park and served as their inspiration for their new song, which also appears on the new album.

To learn more and to get your hands on the album, check out their website. You can also listen to cuts from the accidentals on my new show on electronic music, Other Frequencies, Tuesdays at 10PM on CHMR-FM, 8:30 Eastern.

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Review: Jesse Matheson’s Pleasure Pounds Will Have You Hungry For More

by dashiell on Aug.15, 2009, under Alt-Folk, Canadian, Indie, Reviews

jessemathesonJesse Matheson’s new album Pleasure Pounds is not only a delight, but Matheson wants to “get you alone” and “make you moan.” Based on the picture on the back of his album, he’ll achieve that by serenading you on his guitar with his Lou Reed-esque growl as he feeds you angel cake by candlelight. Pleasure Pounds is as fun as it sounds and any fan of Velvet Underground and Pavement will dig what Vancouver’s Matheson is going for here.

The first half packs a bigger punch followed by a 2nd mellower half, but it’s all good, and as you listen to his unique songwriting, it will become clear that Matheson is a great new Canadian artist you will want to keep tabs on. “She Does it in Graveyards” and “Orgy in Portland” are the highlights for me, and the backing vocals by various sirens like Misty Bath and Jill Propp among others make this all the more enjoyable, not to mention the varied folkin’ countrified instrumentation including an accordion, trumpet, and electric dulcimer.

Don’t let this guy escape your attention. Hear more at his myspace and on The New Spin this Thursday.

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