Music

includes interviews, reviews of cds, concerts, etc.
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Your self-titled album has been quite successful. Do you feel you’ve incorporated all that you wanted into it?

Logan: I think so. I don’t know if we had a plan, which could be good and bad. At the end of the day the record was definitely something we’re very proud of. It felt like we gave it everything we had.

Ben: We wrote like ten of the best songs that were good. The thing is, it goes beyond that too. We built the studio and we produced the record so it’s more than songwriting and a band. We learned so much even before we started writing. We accomplished everything and more, I think. [Where’d you build it?] In Logan’s basement and we just built a studio.

Your tour with Hedley is about to start and a tour with Sum 41 will follow that. How are you coping with your growing popularity amongst bands and fan alike?

B: Personally me, I’m actually pretty scared because I know the guys like to prank. We’re a pretty timid band. I’m just going to try to not be the victim of the pranks. [Watch your back at all times?] Hide and stay in the shadows.

L: I’m pretty excited. We’ve definitely heard the prank side of Hedley and I’m sure it’s there and I’m sure it’s all in good fun. But as far as you know, we just feel really fortunate we get to tour with Hedley and State of Shock – also good friends of ours and Vancouver natives. So especially playing in Vancouver with both bands, we’re very excited. Same with the Sum tour, we just feel really fortunate and we’re really pumped to hang out with great Canadian bands and be able to share our music with their fans.

What do you feel has been the greatest accomplishment in your career so far?

B: I would say the whole last recording process – making the CD. We built the tour bus as well…[From scratch?]

L: We totally welded the frame, got the tires – yes, from scratch. Not quite the bus frame.

On tour, when you’re not on-stage, what are you doing?

L: Depending on where we are, probably most the time everybody tries to soak it up – take in whatever scenery you can, take in what city you’re in. Catch up with people there. We’re pretty casual, no one has any particularly overwhelming hobbies or video game addictions or anything. We just kinda – we go out to play music so the truth is we work really @#$%! tour and when we have off days, we tend to rest. That may be the lamest story in rock but it’s true.

M: I agree.

Do you have a specific routine you do before you go on-stage?

B: I know that some people have little pep talks or something like that. We don’t really do anything. We’re just like ‘Okay, we go on in like two minutes’ and we make sure our monitors are working and we just go on and play. We don’t even do anything after. We walk off the stage with towels and like ‘It was good.’

L: Probably the ritual is just some quiet time before the show. We don’t really pump it up and get everyone we know in the same room. We basically kinda settle into the vibe. Of course, the light switches as soon as you step onto the stage. But prior to it you just want to get everything ready. [Calm before the storm?] Calm before the storm, that’s it.

Where is your favorite city to play in?

L: Our hometown is – probably for most bands too. We fortunately get to say that – it’s the best town. But other than our hometown, we’d say Winnipeg and London, Ontario. Hopefully soon we’ll have other countries to mention cities about. But so far, just Canada so Winnipeg and London.

B: Every city is fun to play in. But as far as walking around, I really like Halifax. It’ really awesome. We usually get up at 6am and walk by the harbor when the sun is coming up.

What is the most embarrassing thing that’s happened to you on-stage?

B: Last tour, we were in Windsor, Ontario and we were touring with a band called Hunter Valentine and they were all girls. The last show, me and our tour manager decided to take their drum kit apart while they were playing. So they decided to get us back. They all whip creamed us.

L: It was pretty embarrassing.

B: There’s still whip cream on our instruments, we’re too lazy to clean them.

L: And I had grown the biggest beard I’d ever had. I definitely sport a beard these days but this had been a tour of like six weeks so it was really off the charts. Anyways, they definitely rubbed cookie crumbs into my beard and it was pretty gross. It was embarrassing but you know, in good fun.

If you can create a tour with any band, which would it be and why?

B: I would love to tour with the Foo Fighters. Just because Dave Grohl – he’s the be all end all of Rock n’ Roll right now. Everything he touches is awesome.

L: I think that’s probably a band consensus at this point. He’s such a great rock icon. The Foo Fighters just does these wonderful things they’ve been working for so long – so many years – and Dave even before that. The band makes rock…yeah, they’re just iconic…be cool to go out and just hang out with that kind of an audience and that kind of a band.

What was the first band you were ever obsessed about?

B: When I was growing up, probably Motley Crue. Tommy Lee is the reason I started drums – it was Motley Crue everything. I wanted to get tattoos like Tommy Lee, I wanted to grow my hair long like Tommy Lee, and I set my drums up like Tommy Lee. [Do you still set your drums like that?] I did for a point in time but evolved into my own little set-up.

L: Alice in Chains was the band that probably changed my life. It wasn’t like an image or anything like that for me. That band was the must at the time and it certainly was the first musical thing. I never really got rock until I heard that band; I’m not sure why I connected at that time but I did and yeah, it changed my life. Great tunes – I bought every album [Still have them?] yeah, I think so. In various conditions.

In high school, what stereotyped group did you belong in?

L: Yeah, lame. I don’t know, we were just like…in high school we weren’t playing Ben at the time, but we sort of knew him at that period; he was doing his own thing. As far as a band, Travis and I have been playing ever since high school. We were just the guys who played music when everybody else did everything else that was probably a lot cooler. We would always seriously spend our nights up until quite late, rockin’ out and just catch the last hour of a party. And after school, we weren’t being terribly scholastic; we were just rockin’. That’s all we did all the time. [No studying?]

B: I tried to study but I just wasn’t very good at school. I sort of tried but I didn’t really have a lot of fun in high school. I didn’t go to parties or anything like that. I just started playing drums and the more I got into drums the less I went to school. I still graduated and stuff but after that I went to music school and started playing in a band.

What was your most memorable experience in high school?

L: A moment that has scarred me for life in high school? Nah. You mean like musically – connected to music? [Sure, yeah] Well, we played a lot of shows in high school, every opportunity. We played at talent shows and coffee houses and parties. High school for me was pretty cool – casual.

B: I remember I started playing shows when I was in high school. I’d always miss the first couple classes the next day. I remember my guidance councilor said ‘What do you want to do when you graduate?’ I said ‘I want to play drums in a band.’ She really didn’t give me as much support as I would’ve expected and made me pick something from this list. I just ticked my way through it – I really didn’t get any support from her, but I got support from where it matters.

L: I think the thing about it is, I mean, everybody graduated high school and nobody brushed it off really. We all worked really hard, we took it seriously but we knew what we were going to do.

B: I graduated with more credits then I needed, I don’t know how that happened. [Ever took band?] I was in band, yeah. [Just drums?] Well, “percussions”.

L: I was more of a computer guy.

B: I know way more now and I wish I could go back to high school and be like ‘look what I can do.’ [You can visit your high school] that’s what Facebook is for – spying on high school people. [That’s why I don’t go on Facebook].

L: Classic!

If you can nominate one person to led the country, who would it be and why?

L: Wow…that’s a great question [Thank you]

B: Does he have to be political? [It can be anyone]

L: Jon Bon Jovi of course!

B: Does he have to be Canadian? [It can be anyone, it could be Chewbacca *my friend was wearing a Chewbacca shirt*]

L: I don’t know if Chewbacca would pull it off [You’d have to learn his language] Alright, I’m going to say Johnny Depp. I’m a big fan. He’s probably the only one, a figure worth idolizing to a degree just for certain characteristics, integrity and so on. It’d be interesting what the country would be run like if he was at the head of it.

B: I would have to say…I know a lot of people want Don Cherry to be Prime Minister. But I think Hockey Night in Canada; it should have to be Done Cherry AND Ron MacLean. One doesn’t work without the other. It should be 50/50. That’d be great. They could have a weekly TV show and everyone would watch.

If you weren’t making music, what do you think you’d be doing right now?

L: I’ve never really thought about it. Sometimes you’d think ‘Hm, is there anything else?’ But there’s never anything else that makes sense. You know what, if I wasn’t making music, I can honestly say I’d be a beach bum. That’s what I’d do I’d just waste away in Mexico.

B: I don’t know what I’d do. I’ve never really thought about anything else like even in high school since grade 10 or 11. I’m sure if I had to make a choice I’d make one, but I don’t have to so I won’t worry about it.

L: It’s usually how it goes. Unless you’re forced to make a decision…the only thing I’d do – I was very fortunate I got to produce the record so I’d like to do more of that. So years down the line, that’s something I’d like to do.

After the tours, can the fans expect some new music?

L: As far as new music being released, no idea. Indefinite. But we’re definitely working on it.

Do you have any advice for bands just starting out?

L: The same advice that’s always come to us and no one wants to hear it but there’s no simple answer to how to be in a band you just gotta play all the time. Write music all the time, play all the time and just get better. That’s what you do. That’s really the only answer there is. That’s what I’d say: just play. Take every chance they get if they’re a new band get on a stage and play. And become comfortable with that because that’s what they’re setting up to do.

B: I agree.

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The only way to become a famous music artist is to start at the age of six on the @#$%!ey Mouse Club and work your way up from there. This is what anyone will quickly discover after watching a large amount of pop culture television. However, in this day and age, that statement couldn’t be farther from the truth.

The music world has left the “child stars turned pop stars” behind with the twentieth century. Take a look at the great musical talent of today: Lily Allen, Kate Nash, The Arctic Monkeys, My Chemical Romance, Sean Kingston. When they were six, they were in school where they belonged. The key to their success is something much more accessible. All anyone really needs is a microphone, Internet connection, and let’s not forget the key ingredient, talent. Hopeful musicians and music lovers alike are googling “MySpace Music”, with the possible promise of fame and fortune and the guarantee that you will find some sort of music that doesn’t make you cry out in agony.

Whether their goal is to become popular “mainstream” or if their music is more “avant-garde”, MySpace musicians have often found what they are looking for. Signing up for a MySpace account costs no money, and the site allows artists to display pictures, biographies, and even post songs and videos.

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While Lindsay and Paris manage to stay afloat, the water just keeps seeping into Britney’s boat. It’s been over a year since the infamous starlets Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton, and Britney Spears were photographed giggling inside a car during a night of boozing and hard partying. Since then, stints in rehab, jail time, and custody battles have plagued all three young women as they struggle to survive in Young Hollywood. While two have emerged as seemingly “better persons”, Britney just seems to keep on the path to self-destruction as time drags on.

After the year of head shaving, divorce, and numerous questionings of her abilities as a mother, the New Year seemed to be a gateway to a new beginning. That ended rather quickly. Just a few days into 2008, Britney was taken away from her home in an ambulance and placed under a 72 hour lockdown in a nearby medical center where she underwent mental assessments by doctors (including TV icon Dr Phil). Not long after, she was released and seen out and about in- her old wedding dress. Upon speculation of bi-polar or multiple personality disorder, several times Britney was seen (and heard) with an English accent as she gallivanted about town donning a pink wig and sunglasses. Amongst all of this mumbo-jumbo, Spears still was (and is) in the midst of a bitter custody battle with ex Kevin Federline. After many court hearings, Spears’ kids had been taken away from her, and more recently she had to give a “gut- wrenching” deposition, one which did not change the fact that she was still denied visitation rights with her two sons. Not long after, Britney experienced yet another meltdown as she was spotted crying on the curb near her Summit home, where the paparazzi ruthlessly hounded her until she hopped into the car of a paparazzo and sped off.

It’s quite evident that Britney’s life is on a down spiral. With the turbulence and tumultuous events circling her, it’s no wonder she’s in her current state. We’d hoped that the day she’d hit rock bottom was the day she’d shaved her head. When that went to the dogs, it became the time when she was thrown into the “loony bin”. It looks like that’s gone down the drain as well. Apparently there’s a hard place below “rock bottom” and Britney’s stuck right in the middle. Still, we have to pray that at some point she’ll at last seek and stick to treatment for her issues, and that one-day she’ll reemerge into the spotlight and be able to reflect upon her past… in one of those 20/20 specials. You know, the ones where we see people like Robert Downey Jr. or Fergie talking about their past habits and how they’ve become better people. As of now, Britney’s boat may be sinking, but she hasn’t drowned - yet.

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4 stars out of 5

“We Are the Pipettes” by, naturally, The Pipettes, is a quick, up-tempo CD, in the tradition of pop-princess bands. The polka-dot dressed front-women of the UK ensemble give a lively selection of pieces that bring to mind the girl groups of the past, with an edgy, modern sound. While a little sugary for my taste, they are a long way from being fluff, as many pop bands are.

As I stated above, the sweetness of The Pipettes was a little more apparent than I would have liked, but overall it was a good showcase of what the band is about. The enthusiastic singing of the front-women lends the songs an optimistic, nervously excited feeling. Gleeful solidarity is apparent in this group that is made up of the three Pipettes as well as the Cassettes, who make up the instrumental parts of the songs. The feel of the CD is pretty consistent and there isn’t really a time when the energy drops.

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4 stars out of 5

All of us have bought an album the week of the release and then have a “Special Edition” come out with bonus tracks and live content. We all feel frustrated when this happens but thankfully “The Killers” have had the heart to release a compilation album with all the bonus stuff on it, so we don’t have to go out and buy 10 different editions of the same album.

Overall, this album is pretty solid. Some tracks that stood out were, “Tranquilize”, “All the Pretty Faces”, “Daddy’s Eyes”, and “Romeo and Juliet”. The rest of the songs I felt were just filling in the spaces between these songs. “Romeo and Juliet” is my favorite track on the album. It’s a pretty long song at about 5 and half minutes long but I like it because the chorus is really simple, but gets the whole message of the song across.

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4.5 stars of out 5

This has been my favorite CD review to date. I recently had the pleasure to see The Hives live in Vancouver with Maroon Five. The band was thoroughly entertaining, and even came out on stage wearing black and white suits! The lead singer Pelle Almqvist had an amazing stage presence and really got the audience on their feet!

The Hives are originally from @#$%!ersta, Sweden, although all songs on this album are produced in English. The band has released four albums to date including their most recent, The Black and White Album.

This album accurately portrays the bands energy and charisma through upbeat songs and rhythms. I actually really enjoyed working out to this album it is really fun and inspiring! I usually bring my CD’s to my job to listen to while I work, and my co-workers all loved this CD and would barely let me have it back to write this review!

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1.5 stars out of 5

Flat out, She Wants Revenge, is just plain flat. I'm not sure whether the artists wanted to convey the feeling of monotony, but if that's what they were intending to do, they have won my vote.

The album starts out with a plain drum rhythm, comparable to Meg White, of the White Stripes, but where Jack White usually steps in with a ground-breaking, ear-splitting guitar prelude, the plain drum rhythm goes on for 1-2 minutes the most, making the listener wonder whether if the primal drum beat is basically the song, or an annoying cliff-hanger to the good stuff. In the end, it looks like the album consists of basic percussion rhythms, a singer yowling, clearly with not enough vocal training and guitar strumming so simple, yet unfortunately uninteresting.

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5 stars out of 5

I definitely liked this CD. It was amazing. Ryan and Dan are very talented and have beautiful voices. After listening to the first few tracks it was evident that they put their hearts and souls into their singing. Something that drew me to this CD was the fact that it’s not your typical pop CD. Ryan and Dan achieve a wonderfully unique sound that is hard to forget. This was the first time that I’d ever listened to “pop-opera,” or “popera” if you prefer, but I doubt that it will be the last.

A few things really stick out about this CD. The use of a choir and rich orchestration is definitely one of them. At all times they are seamlessly incorporated into the songs and add to the intricate and reflective harmonies. The almost haunting piano that is played in “Tears of an Angel” is another. “Tears of an Angel” was written by the twins for their niece who is suffering from a brain tumor. Ryan and Dan’s voices blend so well that at times it is almost impossible to distinguish them, however, it makes the music that much more intriguing.

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4 stars out of 5

Jully Black, a Toronto native, burst onto the Canadian music scene with her 2005 album This is Me. Jully’s debut album was full of urban beats an R&B ballads, but with her sophomore effort she has taken a more mature and soulful approach.

This media regular, frequently reporting for eTalk on CTV, introduced us to Revival with her first single, and 1951 Etta James cover tune, “Seven Day Fool”. This is a strong and catchy song with an Amy Winehouse flare. After hearing this song on the radio, I held high expectations to the disk.

The CD’s opening track, “DJ Play My Song”, is an upbeat dance anthem that makes you want to move. Next comes the stand out single “Seven Day Fool”. At this point, Revival starts to mellow down and loose a cohesive flow between the rest of the songs. The remaining songs are done in more a of a ballad style with some mid-tempo tracks thrown in. Sandwiched between two slower songs is “Never Lose My Sight”. This song had a much different quantity than the others, it seems to have a bit of a harder edge and more power. I did like the song but found it to greater show the lack of flow on the album.

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