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=> GENERAL DISCUSSION => Topic started by: xcanuck on July 10, 2006, 09:47:00 am
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Who's seeing the Weaks? Great, punk and country influenced rock and roll for the socialist in you. Did I mention they're from Canada? :)
They sold out the Black Cat the last time through so I anticipate the 930 show will be pretty full.
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I'll be there.
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I'm djing and looking for recommendations...
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Originally posted by kosmo vinyl:
I'm djing and looking for recommendations...
Something from the new Mojave 3 album, Puzzles Like You (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000F9RHVQ/qid=1152572880/sr=2-1/ref=pd_bbs_b_2_1/104-7813654-0592724?s=music&v=glance&n=5174).
It's new, hip, and should satisfy both the Indie and the Alt-Country fans.
Maybe something from the new Camera Obscura album too since it sounds like the show went down well enough and also should tend to please both sides of the crowd.
Think the crowd might enjoy some Drive By Truckers too.
Would also recommend the song "How It Ends" by DeVotchKa.
Also, maybe something by The High Violets, The Meeting Places and/or The High Dials.
And what about some local action with something by Dead Heart Bloom? Maybe "Saint Henry", which is a tad more lively yet the entire album has lots of Alt-Country leanings.
Another consideration would be something by Apostles Of Hustle. This is a concept thing; as in, Broken Social Scene just played here, Raising The Fawn is on the bill and Apostles Of Hustle are another one of those BSS incestual off-shoot bands.
I guess some new Sam Roberts would go over well too and would add even more to your Amero/Can Con quota friendly public relations.
With that said, I won't be there but just putting in some suggestions that I think should go down well.
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I will be there. This and the DBT show in the same week, I love it.
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Will definitely be there. LOVED this album:
<img src="http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0000AGWJG.01._SS500_SCLZZZZZZZ_V1138399168_.jpg" alt=" - " />
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Originally posted by kosmo vinyl:
I'm djing and looking for recommendations...
The Weakerthans background and probably a good deal of their fanbase is going to be in the punk community; the singer for the Weakerthans used to be in Propagandhi, the political-ish punk band. I'd recommend digging into the punk vault a bit for some older things, then hit maybe some newer rock/punk things - Hot Water Music, Cursive, etc.
Just some ideas. More info on the bands below.
From AllMusic:
Propagandhi:
"As one of Fat Wreck Chord's very first bands, Propagandhi have long been going against the grain of not just society, but even their own record label. Initiated by Chris Hannah and Jordy Samolesky, the band of radicals from Winnipeg, Canada, got together in 1989 and eventually played a show with NOFX. After talking with Fat Mike and realizing they shared the same D.I.Y. attitude, the band agreed to join his fledgling label. Ideally, the band would have loved to skirt the entire capitalist process of selling and marketing music, but made compromises in order to get its pro-gay, pro-feminist, pro-civil liberties, anti-fascism message out. Screeching over fast, catchy punk music, the group moved easily from humorous to profound to blunt with song titles like "I Was a Pre-Teen McCarthyist," "Hate, Myth, Muscle, Etiquette," and "Stick That Fucking Flag Up Your Goddamn Ass, You Skinhead Creep."
That style took a dramatic turn in 1997 when singer, songwriter, and bassist John K. Samson left to write, start a publishing company, and eventually form the Weakerthans. The remaining members of Propagandhi started their own label, G7 Welcoming Committee, which released the band's third album, Where Quantity Is Job #1 [1998], along with Weakerthans' records and Propagandhi's 2001 effort, Today's Empire, Tomorrow's Ashes, in Canada. Both Where Quantity Is Job #1 -- a compilation of live tracks, demos, and previously unreleased material -- and Potemkin City Limits were released in 2005. The latter CD featured Glen Lambert as a replacement for Chris Hannah, although it soon became apparent that Hannah had not left the band, and had instead been using the "Glen Lambert" moniker as a pseudonym."
The Weakerthans:
"Formed after Propagandhi member John K. Samson got the itch to perform and record again after taking a sabbatical to write and start a publishing company, the Winnipeg-based Weakerthans took Samson's music in a completely different direction. Propagandhi had been known for powerful, speedy punk and overtly political lyrics, but the Weakerthans went down a more melodic and introspective path. Consisting of Red Fisher drummer Jason Tait and bassist John Sutton, the Weakerthans took their name from a line from the film adaptation of Marguerite Duras' The Lover: "Go ahead, I'm weaker than you can possibly imagine." The band prided itself on its high standards, both as political beings (shying away from large label or distribution contracts because of their connection to exploitation) and in their personal lives (promoting vegetarianism) and received critical praise for their debut album, Fallow, which was issued in 1998 on a co-operative label, G7& Welcoming Records. Their second full-length, Left and Leaving, was issued in early 2000. Watermark followed a year later. By 2003, the band found a deal with Epitaph and issued Reconstruction Site."
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I will be there!
Also, this is my very first post. Nice to be here!
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yay jess!!!! :)
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Thanks for the recommendations... I always thought they were a punk band so imagine my suprise when i listened to the emusic download of theirs. Anyways, its one of the cases where once get pasting the first couple of cds to bring along it was an easy to pick the rest.
Had been listening to the new Mojave 3, Mission of Burma, for ideas of late...
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I'm sitting in the Ottawa airport waiting for my flight and hoping I get back in time to be up front for tonite's show.
Although Samson's was a member of Propaghandi, the Weakerthan's music is definitely more rooted in alt-country. That, along with drummer Jason Tait's and Raising the Fawn's John Crossingham's involvement with BSS, would lead me to the following recommendations:
* The Canadian Dream - Sam Roberts (who can resist a song where the chorus spells out "socialism" over and over??)
* Broken Social Scene (anyone see BSS on Letterman? Crossingham was f**king brilliant)
* Neko Case
* High Dials
* New Porns
* The Fembots (one of Jason Tait's other bands)
* Hylozoists (another of Tait's bands)
* The Dears
* Jason Collett (going with the BSS link)
* The Lowest of the Low (longtime touring partners with the Weaks and good friends. ...And Then The Riot from their last CD, Sordid Fiction, namechecks the Weaks)
* Sloan
* Christine Fellows (she's Samson's wife)
* Amy Millan (again, the BSS link)
* Stars
* The Stills
* Telepathic Butterflies
OK - that's enough for now. :)
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X
The Blasters
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i would be there because i love matt pryor and the get up kids and of course the weakerthans, but i decided to choose cursive at the norva instead.
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Originally posted by kosmo vinyl:
I'm djing and looking for recommendations...
<img src="http://www.noidearecords.com/bands/releases/covers/againstme_axl.jpg" alt=" - " />
tons of good folk-punk choices on here
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what would you suggest for the first few songs to DL if i hadn't heard them before?
http://www.emusic.com/artist/11552/11552238.html (http://www.emusic.com/artist/11552/11552238.html)
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Originally posted by HoyaSaxa08:
what would you suggest for the first few songs to DL if i hadn't heard them before?
http://www.emusic.com/artist/11552/11552238.html (http://www.emusic.com/artist/11552/11552238.html)
"Plea from a Cat Named Virtue" - Reconstruction Site
"Our Retired Explorer..." - Reconstruction Site
"Aside" - Left and Leaving
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The emusic popular tracks (though I'd put The Reasons before some others); "Left and Leaving" and "My Favorite Chords" from "Left and Leaving."
Sad I can't go; they were excellent at the Black Cat awhile back.
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Originally posted by dfmcpete:
Sad I can't go; they were excellent at the Black Cat awhile back.
This might have easily been the best show I saw last year.
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Cool show will definitely have to spend more time with the Weakerthans ablums and someone else gets to DJ next time so I can bop around and have fun too...
The New Amsterdams were ok, they had the sound but the songwriting was kinda nonexistent. Liked Raising the Fawn's better than average post punk, indie rock and if I ever see their CDs used I might buy them otherwise...
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The problem with the New Amsterdams is the vocalist. His delivery was flat and you couldn't understand what he was saying.
Originally posted by kosmo vinyl:
The New Amsterdams were ok, they had the sound but the songwriting was kinda nonexistent. Liked Raising the Fawn's better than average post punk, indie rock and if I ever see their CDs used I might buy them otherwise...
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The Weakerthans has a cute vocalist :) mmmmm
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Holy hot fuck. What an amazing show last night! They were energetic, enagaging, tight...I just can't think of enough superlatives to use to describe the show. We're headed to Philly tonite for the show at TLA. Once is not enough....
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It was a great show.
Did anybody else notice that the levels overall seemed really low? The volume was pretty far down, so it seemed to me.
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Definitely an awesome, highly energetic and flawless set. New songs sounded good too.
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anyone have a setlist with or without the new songs?
i was hoping they'd have fallow on vinyl :(