Archive for the ‘ Interview ’ Category

Sixtoo Life

Let it be known, asking Sixtoo to explain all of his alter egos makes you sound like when your dad asks you, “What’s with all this hippity-hop music I keep hearing about?”

Like the Ryan Adams of hip-hop, this guy just keeps coming up with new projects. He dropped a new Sixtoo LP in September, spent the summer throwing remix parties under the Megasoid pseudonym and does DJ shows under the name Six Vicious. To further confuse the situation, he’s found an online home for each of these projects at weaponshouse.com. WTF? To his credit, Sixtoo, AKA Robert Squire, is kind enough to humour questions.

“The stuff that I’ve been doing with Megasoid is really quite different from what people would expect from a Sixtoo record,” explains Squire, which is why he decided to create the weapons house site. “It’s a place where I could have all my creative outlets under one umbrella,” he says, “whether that’s graphic design stuff, art projects or musical stuff. Obviously I’m not trying to confuse anybody, or anything like that. Really it’s just an extension of what I’m doing.”

Squire says that as the nature of the music industry has changed in recent years, so has his music.

“For whatever reason, my aesthetics and tastes have changed,” he says. “I wanted to be working on live remix shit and just going back to having fun with it.

“I think in some ways, what people consider to be ‘underground music’ isn’t necessarily the same thing. It seems that that moment in music has passed and the people that I think are doing really good underground stuff right now are actually really good club producers. Most of the dudes that are in the same genre of music that we’re making with Megasoid all come from that same place of being indie hip-hop producers, but they’ve just switched gears and have decided to do new sounds. I think this is really a big part of what Sixtoo and my personal philosophy about music is, that you should be moving forward.”

This wouldn’t be the first time Squire has bucked trends and veered left when everybody expects him to fly right: back in 2003 he made a conscious decision to stop rapping and concentrate on his production work.

“It’s only recently, once I started working with my friend Hadji,”—Bakara of Wolf Parade—”who I do the Megasoid project with, that that sort of interest has come back to me.”

A desire to do new things is probably the best way to sum up Squire’s career. He started right here in Halifax and gained fame with Buck 65 as Sebutones with their record 50/50 Where It Counts. After living in California for several years as a member of the Anticon Collective, Squire relocated to Montreal and settled with mega-indie label Ninja Tune, which has released his latest record Jackals and Vipers in Envy of Man, an instrumental record in 13 parts. The easiest starting point to describe it is DJ Shadow’s “Endtroducing,” with its bass-heavy beats and ambient sounds. But there’s an indistinguishable quality that makes it a Sixtoo record.

“With the new Sixtoo record I really tried to put together the best Sixtoo record that I could,” says Squire. “I think really I’ve accomplished that in a lot of ways, especially considering it’s an edit-based record.”

While Montreal may seem more cosmopolitan than Halifax, Squire sees both cities isolated from the outside world—Halifax due to geography and Montreal due to its heritage.

“I’m an anglo in a francophone city.”

While he understands the resentment that some people feel when artists leave town for greener pastures, Squire feels he contributed enough to the local scene to justify his move. He and his girlfriend were also back in Halifax early this year looking at properties out around Lawrencetown. The ocean is a big draw when you’ve grown up with it.

As for his show here Saturday night, Squire promises something for both Sixtoo fans and for the people that want to get crazy.

“I’m not going to be checking my email up there or anything. I just hope lots of my old friends come out to the show.”

This story originally appeared in the December 20, 2007 issue of The Coast.

Interview: You Say Party! We Say Die!

This story originally appeared in the September 27, 2007 issue of The Coast.

You Say Party! We Say Die! is a hard band to nail down. In its short lifespan, the group has been called dance-punk, party-rock, noise-rock, art-rock and pretty much any sub-genre in between. In fact, You Say Party! We Say Die! is one of the few bands that truly has to be seen live to be fully understood.

“People call us dance-punk, and I think a band like us, cause it’s always exciting and there’s exclamation points and it’s always like “Woooo!’ all the time, it’s easy to dismiss us,” says Stephen O’Shea, the band’s bass player and founding member.

Perhaps most often lost behind the wall of dance-happy riffs and dark visual imagery is the band’s sense of humour.

At a 2005 Christmas gig in Vancouver, lead singer Becky Ninkovic donned a giant box wrapped up to resemble a Christmas present with head and leg holes cut in it. Then she hit the stage and sang the first three songs of the set while wearing both the box and a beaming grin.

“When people complain about us they’re like “What a stupid band with a stupid name,’ and like “Bunch of pretentious scenesters,’” says O’Shea. “They don’t even know us, we’re the farthest thing from it.”

After releasing the Danskwad EP in 2004, YSP! WSD! burst onto the indie scene with 2005′s Hit the Floor LP. At first, the record sounds like it’s made by another dance-punk band fronted by a Karen O wannabe. But subsequent listens reveal a much more dense and intricate sound. Beneath the dance grooves you can hear fully formed songs and Ninkovic’s politically charged but personally filtered lyrics. These elements were purposely accentuated on the band’s latest record, Lose All the Time, says O’Shea.

“We don’t want to be stuck as this dance-punk band and everybody thinks we’re just a bunch of scenesters that throw two minutes into writing a song and then its like “OK it’s done. Perfect. Next song,’” says O’Shea. “There’s actually a lot of thought that goes into what we do.”

When it came time to record Lose All the Time in January, the band was very conscious of the pressures heaped on a sophomore release. O’Shea thinks most bands overthink their second record and end up making something stale.

YSP! purposely recorded as quickly as possible in order to keep the spontaneity that was such a huge element of Hit the Floor. “We knew that our songwriting was a lot stronger and so we put together the best album that we knew we could make at the time,” he says.

Still, O’Shea thinks they’ll never be able to capture the true essence of the group on record. But he also says that he doesn’t really care.

“The whole point of the band…was to get on the road and tour,” he says. Making records was just the best way to get word out to people about the band so they would come to the shows.

“I’d seen so many shows where there were bands playing and people just standing there,” he says. “There’s that bubble that you can’t pop up front. Man, I want to be in a band and I want to see shows where the crowd and the band are interacting and having a good time.”

O’Shea realized his desire to do this while hitchhiking across Canada, prior to forming YSP!WSD! In Charlottetown he witnessed a Wolfnote show that refocused his goals.

“It was that night that I realized that travelling is a lot of fun, but travelling and playing a show every night is even better,” he says. “I think that all five of us have the travel bug in us and we really love to be on the road, playing shows and meeting new people.”

Though the band has never played a show in the Maritimes (they’ve had them booked, but a blown brake system in Ontario got in the way) O’Shea spent a week here on his trip and he’s been anxious to get back ever since.

“There’s something about being close to the ocean,” he says. “As a Vancouverite, that’s something you just don’t get once you leave when you go across Canada.”


Third Time’s a Charm

This story originally appeared in the September, 2007 issue of Halifax Magazine.

After five years and two albums, you could argue that Wintersleep has become one of the most critically acclaimed outfits in the country. Now the band is set to broaden its reach when its third and most cohesive album, Welcome to the Night Sky, drops on October 2. Drummer Loel Campbell gave Ian Gormely the scoop on all the band’s news: new record, new label, new producer, and new member.

IG: Was there any plan in mind when you went into the studio?
LC: We actually had quite a bit of material [going into the studio], more so than any of our other records. We’ve been playing a lot of these songs live too, so we were fairly comfortable with them all and fairly happy with them going into it. We’re working with a producer by the name of Tony Doogan (Mogwai, Teenage Fanclub, Belle and Sebastian) and he kind of put his own take on things, making sure we don’t do anything that we might regret. He basically became a sixth member.

IG: There seems to be more fluidity to this record. Is that something you were aiming for in the studio?
LC: I guess we did aim to do it, just by actually making a record as you should make a record, because we’d never done that before. We had all the material ready and we went in, blocked out a month in the studio, and just worked on it every day. We finally had the opportunity to make a record the way you used to hear about bands making records.

IG: Did you feel a bit more pressure this time around?
LC: I guess so. You always hear about bands having pressure on their second record, but we’re kind of funny. We only started working with a label well into the release of our second one (2005’s untitled album). Labwork Music re-released our first two records. I guess our third record is kind of like our second record. But there wasn’t really any pressure at all. We all write a lot of music and that’s what we do every day, just work on music that we’re excited about. Obviously there’s the pressure that you want people to like it. But we can’t really worry too much about that. We’re just doing our thing. We’re becoming more and more relaxed. When we’re sitting in the studio, it’s exciting but it’s not like a Christmas Day kind of feeling, like when you’re first starting to play in bands and the first time you go to record. It’s just part of the work now. I think we’re a little bit more in tune with that whole atmosphere. I think we’re ready for whatever is thrown at us.

IG: All the members of the band contribute to songwriting. How does the writing process work for Wintersleep? Do you each bring in your own songs?
LC: Not really. We’ll all have ideas, like myself or Tim (D’Eon) or Paul (Murphy) might have something really cool on the guitar, or any instrument for that matter. We’ve been jamming at my parents’ house in Stellarton a lot lately and we just kind of go on these retreats and we bring up an idea. If it goes somewhere, it goes somewhere. Like the last track on the new record was kind of like our ideal situation for a song to come about. It was just me, Tim, and Paul, and it was just completely finished in one day. The way you hear it on the record is the way you heard it in the rehearsal space. It’s almost like a scatting beat. Sometimes it’s just far too easy.

IG: The band did some pretty extensive touring for the last album. Is there a big tour planned to back this record?
LC: We do like playing a lot because it’s just more time to spend together and work on new music. And obviously it’s pretty darn fun playing to an audience that knows your songs and that’s into them. We’re definitely pretty excited. But we toured Canada five times for that last record so that’s a little much. We had a ton of videos for that last record so we kept getting these new gusts of wind in our sails, so we had a lot of excuses to do it. Hopefully our next tour will be broader and we’ll put a bigger foot forward and try to bring some more production value to the show. I think that maybe we’re in that kind of position now, where we can bring the kind of moody record that it is and play it in an appropriate manner. But definitely looking to expand upon what we can do on the tour for the audience and for ourselves.

IG: Touring as much as you do, is it hard to maintain relationships with friends, family, and girlfriends?
LC: It is. We haven’t been touring too much in the past few months, but it’s almost like you’re put in a freezer for a few months and you come back and it’s like, “Oh, I guess you’re my friends again.” It’s a good way to find out who your real friends are. We’ve all just known each other for a long time, the people in the band and the other bands that we play with. And we’ve all got a lot of really old friends. You just get a lot of insight doing it too, so you really know what you want in a friend. It’s definitely hard—we’re all still learning to juggle. But nothing totally tragic has happened. As long as we can keep our communication lines open. We keep using our tour manager’s Blackberry. In Canada it’s fine, but when we’re overseas it’s harder to make that phone call—you don’t know about the neighbourhood. The last time I was in Atlanta, I went out at night to make a phone call and ended up getting hustled. That’s not cool.

IG: Did they take anything from you?
LC: I didn’t want to get hurt so I gave them some money. I thought playing drums was more important.


After independently releasing two successful records through their own label and quasi-music collective, Dependant Music, Wintersleep signed a deal with Labwork Music last fall. A joint venture between Hamilton mega-indie Sonic Unyon and major label EMI Records, the deal gave the band the opportunity to re-release 2003’s Wintersleep and the untitled 2005 album to a wider Canadian audience and to get American shelf space for the records for the first time.
IG: What does your new label Labwork offer you that your own label Dependent didn’t?
LC: Dependent was kind of our own thing. We didn’t get a lot of funding but we did have distribution, so we could actually get our records in stores and if we were touring enough, we could justify that. But Labwork sees some potential in our band. It’s kind of like this joint venture between Sonic Unyon and EMI. Everybody we deal with is based in the Sonic Unyon building, but EMI is going to help put the first single out to radio because they like it. I think it’s a pretty good position. And they gave us a budget for the record and we were able to work with Tony, which was amazing because we’re big fans of everything that he’s done. It sets us up to be what we could be and what we hopefully are.

IG: How did the idea of reissuing your first two records come up?
LC: Labwork wasn’t even thinking about the new album. The reissues came up to give them a proper release in Canada, so we put some bonus tracks on those. And part of the deal was for the U.S. release too, so that was a big initiative for us to go ahead with that. We really wanted to tour in the States more and have the record out down there.

IG: What has the reception for the band been like in the States?
LC: We’ve had it kind of easy. Well, not easy, but just playing to people is good. All the shows we’ve played have been with the Tragically Hip, so they have an audience down there already. A lot of them are Canadians, but nonetheless people are still living in those cities. It was a great run. I think the big push will be for this next record, so I think we’ll do a lot more touring down there. Things seem to be going quite well. We get a lot of feedback from different areas down there, people asking us to come to their towns.

IG: You mentioned your music videos earlier. The band tends to have very striking images in both its album art and videos. Is that something that’s important for the group?
LC: We just try to paint a picture of the music. We all are quite keen on the music that we make, so we just do it appropriately and work with friends of ours that we think really get it. The artwork for the last record was done by a friend of ours. You can imagine yourself getting a copy of that record, but instead of conducting an interview for it, making a painting or collage on wood that’s trying to portray the emotions and feelings that are in the music. So yeah, it definitely is very important to us and we don’t want to do anything cheesy and kind of ruin ourselves, but that gets harder and harder.

IG: How is it getting harder?
LC: Just things getting bigger. I don’t think we’ve done anything cheesy yet. It’s like when ads come out that people don’t run by you. What I’m referring to actually is a specific [music magazine] Exclaim! ad that came out. There’s one in the new issue, and it has the album cover art on it, but we didn’t actually want that to be released yet. We wanted to reveal that on our website slowly. So there it is, all out in the open. And we only knew when we picked up the magazine. And underneath “Wintersleep” is “Canada’s Favourite Indie Band.” It’s kind of this self-proclaimed looking thing. So that’s the kind of thing that I’m talking about. We’re just trying to keep a good eye on our business.
Founding bass player and lifelong friend Jud Haynes announced his departure from the band in June. Haynes remained with the group long enough to write and record the new record and still plays an integral role in the behind-the-scenes workings of the band.

IG: Was Jud’s departure from the band amicable?
LC: Yeah, absolutely. It just came to a point where we needed to do different things with our lives. Because it’s not just a hobby, it’s everything that we do. We just needed to clear the air. But we’re still working together because Jud’s an amazing artist. He’s still working on our website and stuff like that behind the scenes and he’s happy in that role so far. And Mike Bigelow, who I’ve been playing with since I was very young, is playing bass with us now.

IG: He toured with Wintersleep previously, didn’t he?
LC: Yeah, he was on keyboards and he plays in another band with all of us called Contrived and he was playing in Holy Fuck with me too. So it was a pretty easy choice and he’s pretty excited about it and we are too.

IG: Do you think Jud’s departure is going to affect the band’s sound?
LC: No, it’s not going to at all. I don’t think anything is going to really noticeably change to the listener. I don’t think it’s going to be a big change, except you won’t see him onstage, you’ll see Mike. He’s a great friend. We’ve all become such great friends and we’ve been through so much together. Obviously it was very hard to take—it was weird to know what to do with myself for the first week. It’s pretty heavy because you’ve been together through so many things and you put yourself in the line of fire so much with these people. It’s hard to not get very nostalgic and not think about the last Seinfeld episode. Oh, see? I did it, cheesy—there it is.

IG: Do find that as you get older you have to start making those decisions?
LC: Oh definitely. That’s the thing, it’s all very much life decisions that we’re dealing with here. We need to be happy and we want to be doing this 10 years from now. We have to make sure that everything is in our best interest to make that happen, make sure that we’re all going to be happy in a year. And touring is a big part of that.

IG: Jud said in an interview a couple years ago that the goal of the last record was to get the next one. If that was the case, what’s the goal for this record?
LC: I guess it’s the same thing really. We’re going to make music regardless. Either we’re going to make 100 copies of it or we’re going to make a lot more copies. But you definitely need to make records and you need to tour those records and it’s like this circle. Obviously we’re hoping for the same thing, that this won’t be the last record. We’re just excited to get out and tour it, be inspired, make more music, and do it again. It’s funny to think about. It’s this large, very odd routine, but it’s very enjoyable for all of us.


Golden Ticket

This Story Originally appeared in the August 30, 2007 issue of The Coast.

“Hey!” Dave Azzolini shouts to someone in the room. Azzolini, on the phone from Toronto, is trying to spend the afternoon relaxing. “My brother’s in town,” he explains. “He’s filming me, making me feel uncomfortable…and I’m only in my underwear so it’s even more embarrassing. Leave me alone!”

That evening, Azzolini is attending a friend’s wedding, where he’ll take off his hat as lead singer of The Golden Dogs and sing Dean Martin’s “You Belong to Me” for the bride and groom. It’s a song he’s never sung before. “It might be that I’m Italian that he’s asking me to do it,” he quips.

The Golden Dogs, Azzolini’s regular gig, is the culmination of the last 40 years of rock and pop music filtered to perfection. Even the most casual listener could pick up the Brian Wilson harmonies that compliment many of the songs on the band’s latest, Big Eye Little Eye, but Azzolini’s ability to acknowledge his heroes while remaining true to his own voice as a songwriter is reminiscent of early Elvis Costello and Joe Jackson.

“I think the first album was more about the influences,” he says of Everything in 3 Parts. “For this album, it was written in a phase where we were just playing live a lot. The band formed them as they went along.”

The record was produced and recorded over the course of 21 days last year by Paul Aucoin who, says Azzolini, essentially became part of the band. Aucoin is well-known in Canada for producing bands like Cuff the Duke and the Fembots, as well as his own group the Hylozoists. (Some Haligonians might be more familiar with his Grinch-loving younger brother Rich). The Golden Dogs’ Nova Scotian connection doesn’t end there —with the help of Chris Murphy, Sloan’s US record label Yep Roc just released Big Eye Little Eye in the US.

The group is the brainchild of Azzolini and it wasn’t until the Big Eye recording sessions that he was able to solidify a lineup of musicians. Throughout the tumultuous early years, Azzolini continued to operate under The Golden Dogs moniker because, he says, The Golden Dogs isn’t actually the name of the band. The way he sees it, The Golden Dogs are the collection of songs that the band plays.

“There was a dream I had about this invisible dog and every time I’d pet it, it would make this amazing sound. I woke up and wrote a story about it,” he says. “I always kind of pictured that the golden dogs were the songs that we did. We brought them alive when we played live and on record, we kind of created these little beasts.”

Six months after the dream, Azzolini needed a name for his fledgling musical project. Jessica Grassia, his then-girlfriend, now-wife and bandmate, suggested using something from the story he had written. The story’s title, “The See-Through Yellow Dog,” was briefly considered but, as Azzolini notes, that name had a lot of “piss connotations,” and so The Golden Dogs was chosen.

The group’s biggest exposure so far came when they licensed the track “Birdsong” to the same Zellers ad campaign as Joel Plaskett’s “Nowhere with You.” Azzolini thinks licensing songs for commercials is a natural reaction to the musical landscape of the moment. People don’t look to the radio to find new music the way they used to and music channels like MuchMusic are no longer focused on actually playing music videos.

“It’s the necessary evil at this point until something gets figured out on the other side,” he says. “For me, it’s like this means we can get a van and things that let us be a band.”

Azzolini admits that it’s a bit of a strange time to be in the music business, but he’ll do whatever it takes so that he can continue to write and record songs in whatever form they may appear.

“I just kind of decided a long time ago that this is what I want to do,” he says. “If I have to dig trenches to make music, I’ll do that for now.”


The Two Joels

This story originally appeared in the August 2, 2007 issue of The Coast.

The Joel Plaskett Emergency is set to go on stage in five minutes. Outside, at Alderney Landing in Dartmouth, roughly 3,000 fans wait patiently in the unseasonable chilly July fog. This is the band’s first hometown gig in support of its latest record,

Ashtray Rock, a semi-autobiographical album of teenage love and music set in Clayton Park.

It would seem that the stakes are high for this show but backstage, you’d never know it. The Joel Plaskett Emergency—singer-guitarist and songwriter Plaskett, bassist Chris Pennell and drummer Dave Marsh—appear mellow and relaxed. With them are Plaskett’s father Bill; opening act, multi-instrumentalist and longtime friend Peter Elkas and Gordie Johnson, Emergency producer and former Big Sugar frontman.

The small group is thoroughly impressed with Johnson’s black Stetson and are trying to decide what chapeau styles each of them could pull off.

The Monday before the Alderney show, there’s a palpable buzz about Plaskett’s homecoming gig. He has three interviews scheduled this afternoon, and the announcement this week that Ashtray Rock is shortlisted for the Polaris Prize further fuels anticipation for the show and raises Plaskett’s profile around town.

“I would sooner try and exist in a small place and know everyone,” he muses, sitting in the Economy Shoe Shop on Argyle Street. “Like, just to have met everyone, so at some point they all just wave. That’s it. They don’t feel compelled to introduce themselves anymore. Everybody just waves to each other.”

It’s an interesting sentiment from Halifax’s most recognizable musician. And with his down-to-earth charisma, one gets the impression that he could actually follow through on his off-the-cuff remark. At the same time, a natural bashfulness comes through. When asked if he can speak about growing up in Lunenberg, Plaskett’s only stipulation is that his high school graduation photo isn’t printed with the story. “I just don’t like it,” he says, laughing.

Speaking with him in the Economy Shoe Shop, two sides to Plaskett’s personality become visible—the Plaskett who doesn’t want to offend, who wants to talk with each and every person that stops him on the street, and the Plaskett who values his privacy, his friends and his time with his wife Rebecca.

But the dichotomy of Joel Plaskett doesn’t end with his personal life. Ashtray Rock, which he describes as a “party record,” is probably the slickest, most commercial of the five albums he’s released since Thrush Hermit disbanded in 1999. At the same time, it’s artistically his most ambitious, a quality supported by his Polaris nomination alongside less mainstream fare like Junior Boys and Besnard Lakes.

Perhaps the record’s most direct comparison is British grime artist The Streets’ 2004 album A Grand Don’t Come for Free. “That’s a record,” he says, “when you listen to the whole thing, you follow the narrator and everything’s happening to him, it’s wicked.”

Sound familiar?

Despite its success, Plaskett says Ashtray Rock has polarized his fans. Some love the diverse array of songs and the emotional depth of the story. Others resent the frivolity of songs like “Drunk Teenagers.” (Detractors should rest easy though. The band made serious efforts to get Tone Loc to sing the breakdown of “Fashionable People.”)

“Music should be fun too,” he says. “So much stuff right now is so fucking melodramatic.”

Onstage at Alderney, Plaskett turns his homecoming gig into a party for his friends and family. The band comes onstage, mops in hand, wiping down their instruments before launching into a beefed up version of “Absentminded Melody” from La De Da. The Emergency is augmented by Johnson, beefing up the band’s sound as a second guitarist, and Elkas on keyboards.

In the wings is guitar tech Phillip Zwicker, guitarist for Air Traffic Control and a friend of Plaskett’s since elementary school in Lunenburg. Zwicker was playing guitar long before Plaskett and Bill points to him as a direct catalyst for his son’s interest in the instrument.

“He could do pyrotechnics on guitar,” says Bill of Zwicker’s playing.

Plaskett’s mother Sharon is in the audience, as are drummer Dave Marsh’s parents. “All my friends are in one place—I can see them both from here,” Marsh quips from the stage.

Bill joins his son on stage for two numbers, “Absentminded Melody” and “Love This Town.” Bill played guitar in a Cliff Richards and the Shadows cover band in England before immigrating to Canada in the 1960s. In the late ’70s he rediscovered his love of playing through British folk and, in the mid-’80s, helped found the Lunenburg Folk Festival.

Though this isn’t the first time Bill has joined Joel onstage, he’s flattered and honoured each time he’s asked. “What can I say?” he says. “It enables me the privilege and surreal opportunity to observe the following he has.”

Plaskett physically resembles his father—he’s tall, lanky and “a loper” according to Sharon. Both father and son apologize for their circumnavigational answers during their interviews.

“For me,” says Joel, “when I want to aspire to play something in genre, actually having him on board irons out my idiosyncrasies a little because I’m a lot more flighty as a guitar player.”

Plaskett’s upbringing was similar to the party he’s created onstage. There were always kids around the house. “I don’t think he was all that great on his own when he was little,” says Sharon. Plaskett was the kind of kid who loved to answer the phone when it rang.

“You might be surprised to know that he was quite a chubby baby,” says Sharon. “Joel at six months was the same weight he was at a year and a half. He just stretched out.” She says that before his sister Anna’s birth, she and Joel had what she calls “a very intense relationship.” When Plaskett was two-and-a-half years old, a friend of hers came to visit from Vancouver. “I think he was quite taken aback,” she says, “by my drawing my attention away from him.”

Plaskett’s music always comes across as very personal, and Ashtray Rock feels like his most personal record. But in interviews, Plaskett has made it clear that the record is not a literal translation of his adolescence. “I write autobiographically, but life is not cut-and-dried,” he says. “You can write something at a certain point and feel entirely different about it the next day. I want to present the actual real-life balance to the listener by putting it in a story.”

photo Scott Munn | October 16, 2003

Sharon takes it a step further. “Ashtray Rock—he never drank in high school,” she says, laughing. “Joel was a pretty clean-cut kid in most respects.” His mother says that as a child, Plaskett was obsessed with rhyming and nursery rhymes. “I listen to his lyrics,” she says, “and I see his playing around with words as coming from way back then.”Plaskett’s wife Rebecca Kraatz also finds her way to the stage this night. Wearing a yellow-and-orange rain jacket, she stands next to the sound board at stage right and watches the band rip through “Instrumental,” waiting for her spoken monologue.

A graphic artist, Kraatz is responsible for the covers of Plaskett’s In Need of Medical AttentionLa De Daand Ashtray Rock. Although the two only married last August, they first met on the set of Thrush Hermit’s “French Inhale” video shoot in 1994.

“I think she got a kick out of me and I was just really smitten with her,” he says. They struck up a long-distance friendship and eventually began a courtship that would last more than a decade. “She’s an amazing artist and really, really, funny, beautiful, idiosyncratic person,” says Plaskett.

“I think they complement each other in different ways,” says Sharon. “I’m very fond of her. She’s one of a kind.” Plaskett says his wife is “not a socialite.”

It’s apparent when Kraatz takes the mike. She remains in the wings, her back turned to the audience as she reads over the music. When she finishes, Plaskett touches his hand to his lips and then, extending his long arms, blows her a kiss from centre stage.

“They’re quite devoted to each other,” says Sharon, “and I like that.”

In the city where he has lived on one side of the harbour or the other for 20 years, Plaskett’s profile has been on an upward trajectory since he began playing Led Zepplin covers in his friend Rob Benvie’s garage with their pal Ian McGettigan in junior high school. Originally called Nabisco Fonzie, by 1992 they were gigging around town as Thrush Hermit.

photo Michael Tompkins | February 17, 2005Now, things are starting to break through to the masses. It’s not to say that fame is eclipsing Plaskett’s music or that he has screaming girls chasing him down the street. But things started to change after last year’s Juno Awards ceremony, held in Halifax.

“We played that outdoor Parade Square show and I had the Juno nomination and there was lots of press and stuff,” he says, “and it just seemed like all of a sudden that many more people knew who I was.”

Plaskett says that at last month’s White Stripes gig at the Cunard Centre, he was only able to watch half the show because people kept coming up to him, touching him, putting their arms around him and wanting photos.

As a music fan, Plaskett understands the desire to speak with someone whose work has connected with you, but at the same time, it’s difficult to deal with, especially when he’s with friends and family. He hopes that by talking about his growing celebrity that he can deconstruct it to the point where it’s no longer an issue.

“I’m trying to embrace that and demystify it as much as possible because I want to live here,” he says. “I don’t want to retreat but I kind of hope to demystify it a little bit or go, “Look, it’s not that big a deal, you’re going to see me again.’” But he’s also realistic about the situation. “It’s a small town,” he says. “You do anything long enough and everyone knows who you are.”

Peter Elkas met Plaskett at a Sloan gig at Concordia University in Montreal. Thrush Hermit was the opener. Elkas, 17 at the time, and his bandmates in the Local Rabbits were impressed with the young Haligonians and connected with what they were doing.

“They were four guys from the suburbs of Halifax and we were four guys from the suburbs of Montreal,” he says from his Dartmouth motel room. “They were so much like us. It was like looking into a bizarro mirror.”

Last year Plaskett had mentioned to Elkas that it was getting harder for him to walk down the street in Halifax. “You’re full of shit,” Elkas thought. But when Elkas played Keith’s Fest last October with the Emergency, he couldn’t believe the reception the local hero got. “He’s like Springsteen,” says Elkas.

He says that on the east coast there is a higher reverence for local talent, whereas in Montreal, his hometown, it’s the complete opposite, since “it wouldn’t be cool.” As for Toronto, everyone there is from somewhere else. “Sometimes I wish I was from here,” he says.

The Alderney show is a smashing success for the Emergency. Teenage girls rush to the stage during the power ballad “Tears Roll Down.” The crowd is filled with families. (One kid turns to his accompanying adult during “Nothing Left to Say” and reports, “He just said “fuck.’”) There are as many spiky-haired heads hiding behind popped collars as there are moppy-haired indie kids. But everyone is focused on the stage where Plaskett holds court.

The show ends with two encores. In the second, the band rips through the high school ode “Come on Teacher,” from 2003′s Truthfully Truthfully, one of the many Plaskett tunes which blend heartfelt nostalgia with idiosyncratic silliness. Just as they reach the bridge where Plaskett says “make it heavy metal now,” the band breaks into Big Sugar’s “Diggin’ a Hole,” which in turn morphs into Van Halen’s “Hot for Teacher.”

Like most things in Plaskett’s music, the song straddles the line between joke and homage.

“A lot of people who like my music like the superficial elements of it and some people really like the heartfelt elements,” he says. “I kind of want to embrace both.”

 

Electronic Rebellion: Max Tundra

This story originally appeared in the July/August 2007 issue of Halifax Magazine.

Max Tundra’s music is like Rubik’s Cube—just when you think you’ve got it sorted, a misplaced green square buggers it all to hell. The brainchild behind the music is U.K. native Ben Jacobs who, although often accused of being one, insists he is not an electronic artist. He’s been at too many boring shows where the DJ is standing at the decks chatting on MSN Messenger or playing Tetris to want that label.

“I listen to so much dreary music,” says Jacobs. “In England it’s all around you.” Even while on hold with Jacobs’ mobile phone company, you’re stuck listening to mope rockers Coldplay and Keane. “My music is a rebellion against that.”

Jacobs plays all the instruments on his records and split vocal duties with his sister on his most recent L.P., Mastered By Guy at the Exchange. He also injects a dry sense of humour that’s missing in a lot of electronic music, such as using Van Halen synth riffs in a remix or begging filmmaker Michel Gondry to direct a music video for him in “Gondry.” Though not a jazz artist by the traditional definition, Jacobs’ improvisational and experimental attitude to his live show should translate well to more adventuresome audiences. His instruments of choice? “Whatever the promoter has provided for me.”


Even Song

This story originally appeared in the June 14, 2006 issue of the Coast

Ian MacKaye, punk rock God, is fixing his rose trellis. It stood in his backyard in Washington, DC, for years, but now the weight of the vines has snapped the wood. MacKaye still wants to try and salvage it, so he’s outside when I call, trying to decide if it’s a lost cause. He apologizes for the distraction and walks inside the house, the original headquarters for Dischord Records, the label MacKaye started with friend and bandmate Jeff Nelson 25 years ago.

While he washes the dirt off his hands from the yard work, he makes small talk. MacKaye speaks quickly, with precision and the strongest sense of conviction I’ve ever encountered. He tells me that roses are a metaphor for life—the flowers are beautiful but the vines will prick you.

Ian MacKaye is a punk rock legend to the point where it’s become a cliche to say it. He fronted hardcore heroes Minor Threat, helped create the emo genre with Embrace and led the post-hardcore revolution in Fugazi. When Fugazi went on hiatus in 2002, many critics and fans thought this could be the musical end for the then-40-year-old. And when MacKaye resurfaced three years later with new band The Evens, the same people saw the guitar-and-drums combo as MacKaye going gently into that good night. But for MacKaye, volume doesn’t necessarily equal power.

“People associate a drop in volume as a mellowing,” he says. Shows where people are forced to listen to the band, rather than shout over them, offer a far more powerful performance for both parties, he says. “It’s way more punk. It’s so confrontational.”

The Evens began the way most things in MacKaye’s life do—organically. He and Amy Farina, formerly of the Warmers, began jamming together in 2001 in between Fugazi tours. Normally MacKaye tries not to get involved playing with other bands, because he doesn’t have the time. But the collaboration proved fruitful.

“It was so effortless working together,” he says. “A musical conversation developed.”

The jamming continued for the next three years until 2004 when they decided to play a few shows together, eventually recording their self-titled debut in 2005. The Evens released their second record, Get Evens, last year.

Never one concerned with image, MacKaye makes no apologies for the very “un-punk” horticulture in is backyard, or that someone is coming to fix his furnace in the afternoon. It would be easy to latch on to the suburban middle-ageness of all this and call him over-the-hill. MacKaye has certainly accomplished enough in his musical career to pack it in and concentrate on running Dischord. But that’s not an option.

“Music played an intimate and intense role in my life,” he says. “It’s something that’s really important to me.”

The music MacKaye cut his teeth on in his early teenage days is what shaped him into who he is today. And he doesn’t look back on the music of his youth as a joke—Ted Nugent’s Double Live Gonzo! was a particular favourite. “It’d be hard,” he notes, “to find somebody that I have less in common with now.”

It’s not comforting nostalgia, but he contends that to this day he’ll defend them from any detractors.

“Music provides the opportunity for incredible moments, transformative moments. Things are revealed to you as a young listener,” he says. “And because you don’t know any better you accept them.”

Though MacKaye’s music has been pervasive in underground circles since the early ’80s, recently it has made some peculiar inroads to the mainstream. Nike infamously used the cover photo from Minor Threat’s self titled 7-inch for a skateboard demo flyer, digitally changing the image and logo. But even more surprising was when Fugazi’s song “Waiting Room” was added to the Washington Redskins playlist, blaring across FedEx Field during games. Despite outcries from some fans, MacKaye doesn’t let himself get bothered by these things—in fact, he kind of likes it.

“If our music, or our ideas pop up, it means that there are still open channels to the surface,” he says. “That’s encouraging to me.”

Fables of the Reconstruction

This story originally appeared in the September, 2003 issue of Discorder Magazine.

The Weakerthans are a Canadian band. Not in the sense that they are ignored elsewhere on our continent (The Tragically Hip), not in the sense that they move south to pursue greater success (Finger Eleven), and not in the sense that they play big shows sponsored by Molson Canadian (Theory of a Nickel–Fault). They are Canadian in the way that they sound like Canada. Lead singer and guitarist John K. Samson’s voice evokes a sense of warm isolation that typifies life on the Canadian prairies. “We write the only songs we know how to write,” explained Samson in one interview, “songs that reflect the place we come from musically and geographically, the community we live in and the struggle for any one person to connect with another in a meaningful way.”
Hailing from Winnipeg, Manitoba, the band is comprised of veteran Winnipeg musicians including Samson who played bass in the legendary Propaghandi for five years and bass player John P. Sutton who has recorded “every Winnipeg punk band.”
The Weakerthans have managed to combine elements from their hometown’s two most famous musical exports: the breathy vocal stylings of Neil Young and the driving guitar rock of Randy Bachman. These influences are once again a prominent fixture on the group’s third LP Reconstruction Site. Bass player John P. Sutton in conversation via telephone from Toronto describes the album in typically modest fashion as, “On par with the other albums. The songwriting is basically the same idea, its the same group of boys writing the songs so it doesn’t stray too far off from anything that we’ve done before, but at the same time I think we put a ton of thought into it. It seems like we worked and worked and worked at these songs and hopefully that comes across.” The hard work does come across. The record boasts a cleaner (but not slick) production and much tighter or “cohesive” songwriting. Lyrically Samson took “a bit of a left turn” according to Sutton, moving away from the futon revolutionists of old into more “peculiar” territory with songs such as “Psalm for the Elks Lodge Last Call” and the first single, “Our Retired Explorer (Dines with Michel Foucault in Paris 1961).”
Reconstruction Site and its first single are accompanied by a new video. Set in the Antarctic, the band dances around with fake penguins among other things. Though unintentional, the video comes off as surprisingly humourous, somewhat of a change from a group that are often perceived as being quite serious artists. “I think we probably come across as quite a serious, straight–ahead rock band. Listening to the records you don’t really catch a lot of humour in there. I think there’s a bit more humour in the lyrics on this new album, but there’s also a lot of the same serious, heavy lyrics. We’re humourous people, I would think. We’re always joking around and we’re always having fun together. It’s good to make a video that brings out that side of us.”
The lyrical and visual turns are not the only change being ushered in by the new album. Reconstruction Site is being released on independent heavyweight Epitaph Records. “[Epitaph] is a great scene. Everyone was just so excited about their job and about music and it just seemed like a really great fit for us.” Sutton is quick to point out that relations are still good with the group’s old label G–7 Welcoming Committee, who still handles the group’s back catalogue. The move to Epitaph was motivated by a desire to consolidate the business side of the group. At one point Weakerthans albums were being distributed by no less than five different labels, making things exceedingly difficult to keep track of. The move was an issues of control. With Epitaph, Sutton explains, the band can now “walk into a studio, record an album without a record label, own the masters and just say ‘we want to sell it to somebody now. It’s our record, and we want to hold the rights and let’s find somebody to license it from us.’”
Control on the business side of the industry seems to be a key issue to bands these days. Internet piracy, according to the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), is apparently the scourge of the industry. It threatens artists from the top down. However, Sutton doesn’t quite see things this way. “I have my own issues around it. I have my own rules that I make. I don’t feel that opposed to downloading major label music or bands that are long gone, like band from the 70s or 60s.” He goes on to point out that “it has so many elements to it. A lot of people have already downloaded our new record and when we played in London, England, it was evident that there were a lot of kids out there that knew the words to the new songs. On the one hand that’s pretty cool. They’re coming to the show and probably buying a t–shirt. They’re just so into it that they had to get the record before it came out. For a band of our size it’s not that big of a deal. Sure we may lose a few CD sales here and there but ultimately these people are liking it, hopefully, and they’re coming out to the show. As long as people listen to the music and like it that’s sort of the main thing.
The release of Reconstruction Site will see the Weakerthans embarking on a “trans–continental expedition” that includes two shows in Vancouver on September 10 and 11 at the all–ages Mesa Luna and the Commodore Ballroom, respectively. “[Touring] is everything you can possibly think of. Somedays are so fun, and some shows are so great and other days you just don’t want to get out of bed. It can be anything.” says Sutton. “I’ve done every possible extreme on tour, from having a perfect day to breaking down in the middle of nowhere and freezing or sweating to the point where you just want to pass out. You know some shows you just get up there and the last thing you want to do is play a show but you gotta do it… its something I really enjoy.” The all–ages show is a conscious attempt by the band to allow younger fans to come and see them. “We’ve been doing that for a few years now. We try to do that in most of the bigger cities in Canada and the U.S. We just find that we all grew up in the punk rock world and our best experience of seeing bands has been at all–ages shows. I really like all–ages shows. I go to them all the time still. I would feel weird if we were going to a city and a lot of the kids couldn’t come out.”
The Weakerthans continue to spread the word on life on the Canadian prairies. But will this unique experience be lost on the new audiences that wider distribution will surely bring? Who knows? Go see them, though. They’re really good, eh? •
The Weakerthans play Mesa Luna on Wednesday, September 10 and The Commodore on Thursday, September 11. Reconstruction Site is in stores now.


Interview: The Bad Plus

This story originally appeared in the June 2004 issue of Discorder Magazine.

The very idea of a jazz group performing interpretations of well-known rock songs is enough to evoke images of Spinal TapJazz Odyssey” wankery for many music fans. One listen to the Bad Plus, however, quickly puts such baggage to rest.

This three piece band (pianist Ethan Iverson, bassist Reid Anderson and drummer David King) has managed to bridge the gap between rock and jazz, garnering critical acclaim and little backlash from either side along the way. While covers of the Pixies, Aphex Twin and Nirvana have drawn in many rock fans, the group’s enduring success is a testament to their skills as both musicians and songwriters. “I’ve never gotten the sense that our audience likes the covers more than the original material,” says Anderson, “The covers are only a small percentage of what we do.”
Iverson goes further, pointing out that covering well–known songs “is a long–standing jazz tradition.” When asked about the group’s choice of songs, Anderson replied, “We like doing covers that are indestructible [and the songs we cover] are beautiful tunes and they’re indestructible.” Iverson adds, “All the covers are pieces we like and like to play.”
The group’s sound can be seen as the product of their musical upbringing. Anderson, King and Iverson all grew up in the Midwest, an area not generally known as a jazz hotbed. Iverson cites “the bits and pieces” that he heard while watching T.V. as his introduction to the genre, while Anderson points to his peers who “were all looking for new music and turning each other onto things.” Though, all members are evidently fans of pop and rock music, Anderson appears to be the one who has taken these styles to heart. He contends, “Rock was the first influence [or me] and remains a powerful influence.” He cites Autechre, Bjork and Led Zeppelin amongst his primary influences, sharing space with jazz greats John Coltrane, Keith Jarrett and Ornettte Coleman, whose track “Street Woman” is covered on the trio’s new record.
Following the release of their major label debut These are the Vistas, (their first self–titled album was released on Spanish label Fresh Sound) the Bad Plus received heavy acclaim in both jazz and rock publications, acquiring such labels as “piano trio gangstas” and “post modern jazz iconoclasts.” The group take their press in stride, however. “We really just see ourselves as playing our own music without trying to make it one thing or another,” explains Anderson.The group’s new album, Give, expands on the groundwork laid by These are the Vistas, creating a record that swings and rocks harder than most bands. The trio once again enlisted Tchad Blake to helm the project. Blake is known primarily for his work with artists as varied as Tom Waits, Ron Sexsmith, and Soul Coughing among others. The choice was an obvious one for the band, explains Iverson.“His personal genius, which combines vast studio knowledge, plus unerring instinct” results in what Anderson sums up as “great sound.”
As well as the new album, The Bad Plus have posted three otherwise unavailable tracks on Apple’s iTunes music store. Anderson explains the decision, citing time constraints for their omission from Give, and a desire by their label to have them posted. “Columbia wanted to use them for iTunes and we thought that was a good idea.” He does concede however, that since Columbia owns the recordings, there was little the group could have done had they opposed the move. When it comes to the broader issue of digital downloads, both Iverson and Anderson are equally complacent. “The writing is on the wall. They are part of the future of recorded music,” says Anderson. Iverson adds, “You can’t stop the acquisition of knowledge.”
The Bad Plus are quick to emphasize the importance of the “the group” or “ensemble” when writing and performing. “When you improvise, together, every night, a tribal language develops which is fabulous,” says Iverson. Adds Anderson, “I think a group where everyone is committed to the sound and music of that band can make stronger music than a group trying to support one person’s ideas. There is also a psychological advantage when everyone is playing music that is theirs.”
These ideals are reflected in the band’s writing process. Typically, each member will write individually, then bring the completed songs to the rest of the group. “From there, the music takes on a life of its own as we all make up our own parts and live with the tune,” explains Anderson.
Of course, ultimately, a band as dynamic as The Bad Plus must be seen live, where each member’s musicianship is moulded into its full sonic force. While the group feels that their studio albums reflect their live sound (almost every track on Give was recorded on the first take, with as few overdubs as possible), an “authorized bootleg” was released in 2002. Iverson is quick to point out however, that the record “is an antique since we play so much better now.” He defends the band’s guerrilla style of recording explaining, “We are in–the–moment players, not feeling the time is right yet to do a carefully assembled studio date taking weeks and months.” When they do, watch out. •
Luckily for you, The Bad Plus are playing twice during the Vancouver International Jazz Festival. Catch them with Jagga Jazz at the Commodore on June 26, or solo at Performance Works on Granville Island on June 27.


Interview: Joel Plaskett Emergency

“You fucking suck!” Comments like this can be discouraging to anyone, let alone to a musician trying to connect with a room full of people. For Joel Plaskett, audience discontent (or apathy) while playing in Kelowna, BC, was the inspiration for “Love This Town,” one of the most memorable verses on his 2005 record La De Da. This ode to Halifax, his hometown, is Joel Plaskett at his most reflective; yearning for home and familiarity while lost on the road in hostile environs. Characterized as both an ironic arena rocker and a soulful balladeer, the Haligonian musician is able to write lyrics that are at the same time hilarious, and heartfelt. It is these contrasting elements which have earned him and his band the Emergency a die hard following and growing mainstream attention, as seen by his Juno nomination for songwriter of the year and his winning the same category at the East Coast Music Awards.
Joel is proud of the recent accolades he has received but tends to view them as accomplishments along the long road in his career, as opposed to a goal which he was working towards. “There’s been a lot of momentum behind what I’ve been doing in the past couple of years, but I’ve been at what I do for so long, both with the Hermit when I was younger, and with the Emergency…but every year has these little things that are encouraging and mark the work that we’ve done as a band. At the same time when you’re in the midst of touring and recording and writing songs it kind of an acknowledgement of the work you’ve put in all year.”
When asked what he feels characterizes a good songwriter Plaskett offers what appears to be a description of his own approach to the craft. “I like personality and idiosyncrasy, I like people who reflect their own experiences and where they’re from” he says. “But also a bit of humour for me is always welcome. Its not necessary…there are certain people who are very serious and I love it, but often the people that you think of as being very melodramatic and serious often have more of a sense of humour than you realize.”
Though recognition for all this work is starting to find its way to both Plaskett and his band, it has been a long road. His original group Thrush Hermit played their first gig when he was 15 in 1990. They would go on to record two albums for Elektra Records before disbanding in 1999, the same year Plaskett’s solo debut In Need of Medical Attention was released. He would go on to record 2001’s Down at the Khyber and 2003’s Truthfully, Truthfully with the Emergency before taking the solo route for 2005’s La De Da, for which he received the songwriter nominations.
Although Plaskett says that songwriting is something he takes a lot of time and pride in doing, he is quick to dismiss the singer songwriter genre; “People say it’s a song based record and yes it is, but the records I’ve made with my band are equally as song based.” He feels that riff rock gets a bad rap in some circles. “I always find it interesting that you don’t think of Led Zeppelin as great songwriters, but they were and they were incredible band performances. People say Jackson Browne has great songs and the Who were a great band, but I liked the Who’s songs better than I liked Jackson Browne’s.
Plaskett is currently back on the road with the Emergency promoting their new DVD Make A Little Noise, which includes a hometown performance by the band at the Marquee Club in Halifax, a solo performance by Plaskett in Saskatchewan and all of the post Hermit music videos. As an added incentive the group traveled to Toronto last fall to record a three song EP with former Big Sugar frontman Gordie Johnson. “The whole band really enjoyed working with him, he brought a lot to the table. I was really impressed.”
The resulting tracks move away from the seventies riff rock of the Emergency’s first two albums and present a more fuller, Phil Spector rhythmic feel. “I’m really pleased that these came out different than anything we’ve done. My mandate for these three songs was to create something that was a little bit more 50s in its references. I wanted that rock and roll edge as opposed to the late 60s or 70s thing that I’ve mined a lot. I was also kind of freaking out on Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run.”
Plaskett has just finished a solo tour of Australia, which included an opening slot for Russel Crowe’s band at one gig, but is returning to Canada at the beginning of the month playing gigs with the Emergency. He expects to tour to the East Coast this summer while writing songs for an album he hopes to record in the fall. “This maybe the only chance you have to see Emergency on the West Coast this year. But it really just depends on when I’m going to make the new record. I think I’m just going to have to set the date which means I’m going to be busting my ass to get the tunes together all summer.” If this is the case, be sure to check out Joel Plaskett and the Emergency as the Commodore Friday, May 5th.
This story originally appeared in the May 2006 edition of Discorder Magazine.