Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Pemberton Music Festival Review

40,000 people, 1 million tonnes of dust, 20 bands seen. 1 great concert experience. Below is the day by day breakdown and all the fun and exciting events that occurred over the three days. So get ready for the story, you might need a coffee to make it through I am going to into a lot of detail.

Friday

We rolled into the Pole Yard Parking in the early afternoon, we had heard nightmarish stories from those people trying to come on Thursday and Friday morning so we were a little concerned with what we would face. Apparently, we arrived at a perfect time we faced no major traffic delays and were able to park with no issue. We boarded the shuttle after a little delay as people brought way to much stuff and cramming on a yellow school bus with backpacks, tents and sleeping bags made the drive to the festival site hot and uncomfortable. We got off the bus and were told where we needed to go for camping, carrying a ton of gear we started the lengthy walk to the campsite. After many stops to readjust and pick up fallen gear we made it to an open plot of land to set up camp. Thankfully, Metric was on the main stage and we were able to listen to most of their set while setting up. I being a great camper, set up my tent and such in a few minutes and as I do at festivals ditched everyone else off in search of music.


Metric had finished their set by this time so I wandered to the Lillooet Stage which was the side stage. Shearwater had just started their set so I grabbed some dusty dusty ground and watched the set. The set was good, very much like their album a subdued set would have been great to take a nap to if it hadn't been so incredibly dusty. During the break between Shearwater and The Secret Machines I wandered back to the Mount Currie Stage (the main stage) to watch Wolfmother. I have seen Wolfmother before at the Sasquatch Music Festival, it was virtually the exact same show as two years ago. They put on a good rock show sounding much like their album. The have a great energy on the stage and are certainly a fun band to watch live.

I headed back to the Lillooet Stage for The Secret Machines as I wanted to get close to the front, I was looking forward to checking out this band as I listened to some streaming tracks on their Myspace page and they sounded pretty good.


The show didn't disappoint, it was great. A three piece band they put on a good rock show the lead guitar player was a lot of fun to watch as he clearly played air guitar when we was younger. When he hit the higher notes you could see he was making the sounds like an air guitarist would, it was great. They were probably the highlight of bands on Friday for me. It was fun to be at the front for the concert and I was surrounded by their fans who clearly knew all the songs quite well.
After Secret Machines it was time to wander back for Serj Tankian, I was looking forward to seeing him, however at this point was I getting pretty tired from the drive up and the first few concerts so I chilled out a the back of the masses to listen and enjoy. Serj Tankian's show was very good, he is certainly a good performer and a wonderful musician. Naturally, their were a lot of political statements made which got a little old as the set went on. The crowd was buzzed when he played his hits and I was certainly feeling it when he played "Feed Us" which is my favorite Serj track.
After that I made a quick stop at the other stage to catch a song by Kathleen Edwards which was great and I am sure the rest of her show was just as great, but long drives on a sketchy highway and a lot of sensory overload made my body scream for a nap. So back to the campsite I went for a quick nap so I could stay up for the NIN set, I missed Interpol which I wasn't that concerned with as I am not a big Interpol fan.

NIN put on another great live show, I saw them two years ago at Sasquatch and it still measured up to that performance. Trent Reznor plays a great live show and the the light show was fantastic. Everyone was rocking out pretty good, probably stoned out of their minds as most of the concert goers seemed to be. NIN capped off a great start to the concert even though the dust was horrible and a lot of people were quite grumpy with the transportation issues from earlier.

Saturday

I woke up early on Saturday, we wandered around the camp ground got some coffee and breakfast. The camp grounds were very well behaved and everyone respected everyone else which was great. The garbage and portable toilets were starting to feel the effects of 40,000 people and the company in charge were doing a very poor job in taking care of things, this trend would continue through the entire weekend.

I spent the entire early afternoon/evening at the Lillooet Stage, to catch all the indie bands. Brazilian Girls cancelled their set due to a "schedule conflict". So the sets all started later then expected. Low vs. Diamond whose album was released today, came on stage and put on a fantastic show, they were clearly an emerging band as they were just as excited to be their as we were to watch them. They were taking pictures of us and thanking us a lot during their set, very cool band and great sound. Check out their album, kinda generic but a good sound all the same.

Carolina Liar was next up, they didn't really impress me at all. If Low vs. Diamond was generic these guys were one step up. Kind of a cross between the Killers and Theory of a Deadman, I did not enjoy them very much. In the middle of that set I made my one stop at the beer gardens to drink my dust filled $7 beer and headed back to get a good spot for Mates of State.


Mates of State were so much fun! It is hard to pick a highlight from Saturday but this show would have been close for sure. I was hanging with some great people and they put on a high energy, extremely fun show. They got a big turn out from the as all the set times were conflicting and they got the break between Sam Roberts Band and My Morning Jacket. We were very close to the front for the show and it was fun to watch the people dance along to the songs.

Now came the highlight of Saturday. Buck 65 took the stage and blew every one's mind. This was the 12th time I have seen him and he never disappoints, a great show with a ton of energy, as we were sitting around the camp site later that night, everyone was still talking about the Buck 65 show. He told some great stories about the not so glamorous state of the artist port-a-potty and was fairly graphic in his description which he blamed Sam Roberts and Gord Downie for. He played his favorites such as "Wicked and Weird" which got the crowd jumping, he was one of the few artists I saw where the crowd was demanding another song, however due to the time schedules no encores happened.

A quick pit stop at the campsite for some food and I headed back for Black Mountain, ran into some friends who were also going for the show so went with them to watch a great Canadian band. I saw Black Mountain earlier this year, but we left before the show was over as it was a Tuesday concert and it was late and I am old. This time I got to see the entire set. It was great, a few songs in they played "Angels" which is one of my favorite songs and they finished with "Tyrants" which in my opinion has one of the best intros to a song ever. Great drums and an amazingly deep guitar sound. It was a great live show and they are certainly a better outdoor venue band then inside a club. They need that open air to really bring out their true sound. Check Black Mountain out live if you get a chance.

It was a bit of a break between sets and so it was off for some horrible festival food, even though it was perogies and sausages it was pretty greasy and gross. But at least the coffee was good and surprisingly the sandwiches weren't too bad either.
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers finished off the night and they were Awesome! Such a great show, experience counts for a lot. He played a ton of his hits and it was a great sing-a-long. during "Free Fallin" the crowd nearly drowned Petty out and it was great. A perfect way to finish of Saturday and a great concert to add to the list of artists I have seen. After all the shows and putting up with drunk, high people it was pretty much straight to bed for the final day.

Sunday

The final day, started off a little wet after a night of rain and it was nice to keep the dust down. The garbage had piled up so much it was disgusting and the toilets were overflowing to the point that it was the constant topic to hear.

Vampire Weekend kicked things off for the final day on the main stage. They were good, although their set seemed quite rushed. I was in a pocket of fellow Vampire Weekend fans so we had a great sing-a-long session. They played about half of their debut album and covered all the best songs. They didn't banter with the crowd much, but put on a good show. I would see them again perhaps at a smaller venue. I went to the Rogers tent to charge my phone and made it back in time to see N.E.R.D.

N.E.R.D was the exact same as a few weeks ago at the Kanye West show. They put on a solid live show with high energy, Pharrell did his customary track upon which all the whorish girls from the front come up on stage to grind with him and lick his chest....yeah. The show ran long which put all the other shows behind schedule. A little bit of a piss off for those who wanted to see Coldplay and DJ Shadow.

Death Cab for Cutie came on and where I was the audio was distorted and horrible, it also wasn't a good follow up to N.E.R.D or a good lead in to Jay Z. So I headed back to the camp for some food and a break for the day. Thankfully, I was getting text message updates from Rogers and was set the new set time for Jay Z. It was nice to relax a little bit and I wasn't feeling very well after the constant crappy food and lack of healthy food. But after some Advil my stomach settled down and I was ready for Jay Z.

Jay Z!!!!!!
This show was my highlight for Sunday. It was crazy good, he played his hits, he played his hooks and got the whole crowd singing "Umbrella". It was a crazy high energy show everyone around us were dancing and throwing up the rock, including me! It is very fun to throw up the rock, you should give it a try. The surprising thing was that there was no collab between Chris Martin and Jay Z. For a time it sounded like there was going to be one, the crowd was calling for "Beach Chair" to be played but we were out of luck. It was wicked though that Jay Z brought Memphis Bleek out for some tracks it was awesome.

Finally, Coldplay took the stage. They put on a great show, had the whole crowd going nuts and singing along to every song. They did a great two song performance from the small sound stage in the middle of the crowd, this got me pretty close to them, not as close as row 3 during their Rush of Blood tour a number of years ago. They played their hits "Yellow", "Fix You", "The Scientist" and "Clocks" and covered their newer songs on Viva la Vida. It was a really good show and a great way to finish off the weekend. By the time I got back to the campsite we were all pretty exhausted and hit the tents for a early start to Monday morning. It was an early start and things went smoothly on the way home. It was great, Trant and I had some good sing a longs in the car that made the 11 hour drive a lot nicer. Overall, the concerts were great, the people were good and the filth and garbage was horrible. It made for a good experience, but there are certain things that this festival will have to fix for this to run for year and years.

I kept out some of the most horrible scenes I saw at the festival, whether your high or not you should never ever do some things in public! Don't believe the media in the fact that the festival goers created all that mess, if there were more garbage cans and recycling areas it would not have been so bad. But, there were maybe 20 garbages on the festival grounds and they got emptied at the end of the day, 40,000 people can create a lot of waste in a short time. The camp garbages were not emptied all weekend and the port-a-potties were cleaned sporadically. I hope you enjoyed the review, I hope you check out some of the bands you haven't heard of and let me know what you think. There will be no New Music for the next week or so as I am running Death Race this coming weekend and it's going to take a while to recover from.

-Dave





Tuesday, July 22, 2008

2 Days till Pemberton...

Ahh music! Combined with food and sport there is nothing better in life. It is Tuesday which means we get new music, new podcasts and only a few more days we get a new festival experience. In the newsletter we reviewed Dr. Dog's album Fate, as well as CSS's latest Donkey. There will be more reviews to come and a podcast round up by from CBC Radio 3 and NPR's All Songs Considered.

But, before we begin we will start with NMT blogs very first concert review. Well, kids all other concert reviews will be all down hill from here. Last Thursday was the greatest day ever! The Legendary Roots Crew from Philly took to Flames Central and blew every one's mind. The lead up was typical hip hop concert stuff. Dj spins some tunes trying to get the crowd hyped, it wasn't bad but fairly standard. Then Black Thought walked out on stage, the crowd went nuts! Following him was F Knuckles, ?uestlove, Kamal Gray, Captain Kirk Douglas, Owen Biddle and then sousaphonist, Damon "Tuba Gooding Jr." Bryson. That's right as ?uestlove liked to point out his nickname is Tuba Gooding Jr.....wicked!!!!

Sadly, I don't have the set list, but I can tell you that they did cover most of their well known songs and missed some of my personal favorites. The show began and was non-stop energy Tuba Gooding Jr. was running around the stage and jumping onto the raised stage that ?uestlove was on and at one point jumped down into the crowd to play. The band was clearly having a ton of fun playing and enjoying themselves. ?uestlove and F. Knuckles had a bet that ?uest had to play an entire song with only one drumstick and one hand (which he did and rocked it out), while F. Knuckles the percussionist was playing with sticks on his bongo drums. It was great.

The true star of the show was Captain Kirk Douglas, he took his guitar solos and ran with them, playing them with amazing talent to the crowds delight. The longest version of "I Got You" ever I am sure had at least a 4 minute solo from Captain Kirk. Also, ?uestlove, Captain Kirk and Tuba Gooding Jr. had a side project which they played Bob Dylan's "Masters of War" which Kirk Douglas and ?uestlove had 5 minute long solos which were great.

One of the biggest highlights to the show was the hip hop mashup performed by the band, including songs by Kanye, Biz Markie, ODB, Jay Z, TLC and more. It was phenomenal! There wasn't many down points of the show where you could rest, it was all energy all the time. It is great to see a band live that is having so much fun you have to ask yourself if they are having more fun then you. Best concert I have ever seen and for those that don't know me I see a fair amount of concerts every year. If you ever get the chance to see The Roots live don't pass it up!!!!!!!!!!

Podcast Central

CBC Radio 3 with Grant Lawrence

This week there was a guest host, Amanda Putz, who did a fine job leading us through the Summer music festivals in Canada. We hear from Snailhouse, Bell Orchestre, Hey Rosetta and my favorite song on this weeks podcast The Superfantasics. It was a good podcast although it would be nicer to listen to the summer music fest podcast in January so you could plan your summer vacation around going up to the Dawson City Music Festival located in beautiful Dawson City, Yukon.

NPR - All Songs Considered

Interesting week this week, we got introduced to Tilly and the Wall, who use a tap dancer as their percussionist. One of my favorite new band names is an electronic artist Podington Bear, the track hear on this weeks podcast was quite good and I may check out the album. Also hear this week were Notwist who have been getting quite the press coverage of late with a new album on the way. Also, Doveman who wasn't my cup of tea but this podcast does play everything under the sun so you take the good with the bad.

Well, next week New Music Tues may or may not be out on Tuesday as I am coming back from Pemberton on Monday and may need a day or so to recoup before heading of to the Death Race the following weekend. Enjoy the tunes and make sure to check out something new this week. If you can't afford the new albums or downloads go to www.imeem.com and listen to some samples of the bands there.

- Dave

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Situational Music and the Hold Steady

I am currently watching "G to a Gent" on MTV, wow it is amazing! It is truly crap. I don't understand how human nature can allow someone to do this sh*t. Wow, I am spellbound by the crap that this is.

Sorry, a little sidebar there. Onto the music. Let's begin with The Hold Steady and their newest album Stay Positive, well it is clear that the title will be misleading. Have they every been a positive band? (The answer is no for those of you who don't know). This album is very very good in a despair filled feel. The album has that great rock/punk guitar and wonderfully sorrowful, depressing lyrics. "Lord, I'm Discouraged" is my favorite track on the album, with "Constructive Summer" a close second. This is a potential for a top 5 album of the year, but it will take some more listening for me to see it. Buy it, it's worth it.

I was thinking about situational music. If you could create a mix disc for everyday of your life what songs would you have on it? Would you have something like "Another Day" by Jamie Lidell as your wake up music and "Von" by Sigur Ros as your falling asleep music? Sidebar: those are my wake up and go to sleep tunes. If you could create a soundtrack to your day what would it be? Here is my good day soundtrack and my bad day soundtrack.

Good Day Tunes:
Wake Up - "Another Day" - Jamie Lidell
Eat Breakfast - "Banana Slugs" - High Places
Brush my Teeth - "I Got Mine" - The Black Keys
Drive to Work - "Shake Shake" - The Subways
Working through the Day - The Black Keys, Medeski, Martin and Wood, Ben Harper
Drive Home - Perishing - SSLYBY
Out for a Run - The Bake Sale - The Cool Kids
Chilling out at night - Frightened Rabbit, Deerhunter
Reading and falling asleep - Takk - Sigur Ros

Bad Day Tunes:
Wake Up - Fleet Foxes (it takes a whole album for me to get up on a bad day)
Eat Breakfast - "Brick" - Ben Folds Five
Brush my teeth - "Knife" - Grizzly Bear
Drive to Work - "The Queen of Seville" - The Clientele
Working through the Day - Miles Davis, Zero 7, Xavier Rudd
Drive Home - Modest Mouse, Radiohead
Out for a Run - The Bake Sale - The Cool Kids (I just seriously love this album)
Chilling out at night - Twilight Sad, Boris
Reading and falling asleep - Kurr - Amiina (Like Sigur Ros, more string and despair sounding)

There is a character in Chuck Palahnuik's book Rant, he made mix tapes for every situation because he believed you should be listening to the perfect song for the situation at the moment you die. A little morbid I know, but most of his books are. It is a good point, I mean if your walking across the street listening to Miley Cyrus and get hit by a bus, when you get up to the pearly gates you might regret your musical choices...and the fact that you didn't look both ways....and the fact that you were listening to your music too loudly to not hear a bus coming at you.

Let me know your good day and bad day tunes, maybe it is something I can try and fit in my day.

Let me know if you have heard any good new tunes.

Cheers,
Dave

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Vinyl is the new CD

Vinyl is the new CD, Vinyl sales are higher then they have been in a decade and CD sales are down. Some might ask why this old music format is doing so well. Well, the simple answer is 'Vinyl kicks ass!'. While CD's take the music and gives it a nice polished sound, it is often over produced and digitized while vinyl brings that raw sound out of the recording process and lets you hear the notes and sounds the way they were intended. My love of vinyl is not new, my mom used to work at a record distributor in Toronto and brought with her a sizable vinyl collection with some great music, and some not so great. But, we grew up listening to Simon and Garfunkel, Stevie Wonder and Led Zeppelin on our old Sony turntable.

Today, I have my own turntable, a newer purchase and one of my favorite possessions in the world is my Audiotechnica USB turntable. I have started my own vinyl collection and it grows almost weekly, I have become a regular at an amazing little music shop called the Inner Sleeve in MardaLoop. As you can see from the picture above (my latest purchase) vinyl is fun and exciting. The Black Keys (one of my favorite new bands) released the above vinyl in 2002, it is one of 500 yellowlp's pressed for this release. The entire album is amazing, the Black Keys soulful rock sound with deep bass lines and amazing guitar riffs are brought out to their amazing brilliance on this lp. The sound is deeper then a CD and you can hear that rawness to it. Amazing!, the LP is called "The Big Come Up", if you don't own a turntable you should still get this album on whatever musical format you have, it is great and will be in your music player for years and years.

So, you might ask 'How does one get started in listening to vinyl?' Well, the answer is fairly easy. You can get a turntable for around $150 and vinyl lp's range from $5 to $50 depending on what you want to get. A lot of new vinyl such as The Black Keys, She & Him and Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin come with a digital download code from the record label that lets you get the digital version and put it on your iPod. Starting a vinyl collection is a ton of fun, you can go garage sale shopping and find some great gems that people are selling for $1.

Have fun with your music collection!

- Dave

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

The Revolution Will Not Be Televised!!!

Welcome to New Music Tues - The Blog....

It began almost 6 months ago on a whim for some friends who wanted to find out about new bands on the scene and who seemed to enjoy my taste in music. It grew a little and then people wanted a blog, so here it is. I listen to a lot of music every week some new, some old, some good, some horrible and I send out my thoughts to all those who want to listen. By no means am I a music critic, I can't play an instrument or would I get up in front of people and try so I am just a music fan and that is all.

The Blog will be a place for all those albums I can't get to on a Tuesday, all those little extras that I want to toss on such as exciting music news or other tidbits. It will be updated every Tuesday for sure, but depending on time it will be updated fairly regular

Tuesday, July 8th -

Killer Mike - I Pledge Allegiance to the Grind II - Released July 8th

Well, Killer Mike used to have some great lyrics, some hard hitting political statements and a great flow to add on top of all of that. Please note the term "used to" now he is just a standard gangster rap drone. His flow hasn't left him, but most of the album is about how the man is keeping him down and how he f's his ho's. 17 tracks at least 4 minutes long for every track this was a trying experience to battle through. It is hard to find a gem in this mix, perhaps when I have enough energy for a second listen it will come out. Save your money.

Paul Potts - One Chance - Released September 18th, 2007

Alright, this is not an album you may like, or ever buy. Here is the story on why I own it and my thoughts. I was watching The Hour with George S. (who is losing his cool with the whole Hockey Night in Canada ads.) and Paul Potts was on the show. This guy was on Britain's Got Talent and the ever popular Simon Cowell was a judge. The actual comment on the show when Mr. Potts stepped up to the mic was "Let's get this over with". Mr. Potts is a sadly ugly fellow with classic British teeth. But then he started to sing, and the world stopped! This guys voice was out of this world amazing. One of the judges started to cry, a bunch of the audience started to cry and he received a standing ovation when he concluded his performance. He won the show and has become very popular over in Europe. Much like Pavaratti (Who I also have much respect for), it is not an album I will listen to very much. But give me a snowy day with a book and a cup of coffee and you have the perfect time to check out Paul Potts. If nothing else check out his youtube.com performance.

Podcast Central

Ahh more new stuff to bring to you. Well, I listen to a few podcasts on a regular basis. Radio 3's podcast with Grant Lawrence and NPR's podcast "All Songs Considered". I will bring up possible discussion or highlights from each every week and perhaps it will bring some more new music to your ears (which is the entire purpose of all of this really)

This week on NPR's All Song Considered they did a feature much like I did last week on the Best of 2008 so far. First track and the one that was getting the most votes when I voted was Panic at the Disco... yeah. I am not a fan of Panic at the Disco, I appreciate their talent of course, but lead singer's Brendon Urie's vocals give me that nail on chalkboard feeling. But good for them for releasing an album that a ton of people enjoy. What's your favorite album of the year so far??? Let me know! Other artists featured on this week's NPR podcast included: MGMT, Islands, Girl Talk and one of my favorites (although not in my top 5) Frightened Rabbit.

Radio 3's
Podcast recently did a Summer Mixtape, a good podcast featuring some of Canada's best. For those who know me, you know I love mixtapes and can not think of a better gift then a mixtape. So, thank you Grant Lawrence and Radio 3 for giving me a great mixtape. Here are some highlights. Trant's favorite band Ladyhawk leads off the mixtape and as we travel along we hear from other great Canadian Indie bands such as Weeping Tiles, Said the Whale, Corb Lund and the Wet Secrets. Check out the whole playlist at http://radio3.cbc.ca/ go to shows and it is pick the episode #163.

I will be posting some more reviews from today later this week, look out for new album releases from Albert Hammond Jr. (of the Strokes) and Ratatat's new release LP3.

Pemberton Samplers -
Samplers are $2 each. Order yours today by e-mailing me at sopossible@gmail.com. Only missing a few bands who I can't seem to find their albums. Over 20 tracks to get you amp'd for the best Festival of the Year.

Phew, a busy day of music. Hopefully you enjoy it. Just like the newsletter that you will all still receive in your e-mail this blog will grow as the readership grows. If you have friends or are just coming across this for the first time and want to be added to the mailing list for the newsletter send me an e-mail to sopossible@gmail.com. If you have suggestions or comments please let me know, hopefully you enjoy some of the music I suggest and if you have some suggestions of bands for me to check out let me know.

- Dave