First Night of NXNE 2015, Great Start to a Favorite Urban Festival

During this year’s NXNE, Toronto’s great music festival, Honourary Canadian will be publishing guest posts by my friend Regina Sienra, aka Reginula, a music journalist who hails from Mexico City. She’s a stalwart fan of Canadian indie music, and has been recognized by the CBC Radio 3 community as our Fan of the Year.  Below is a shot of Regina (l.) with CBC Radio 3 host Lana Gay. You can follow Regina on Twitter and Instagram where her handle is @Reginula. From one honourary Canadian to another, I’m delighted to be publishing her work here—Philip Turner. 

The 2015 edition of NXNE kicked off slowly, but in an extremely powerful way. After some major changes on the administrative side, Northby got rid of the Interactive section, changed the ticketing deal—now some special shows require an extra ticket—and added several new venues to their roster, including a new NXNE hub (bye, bye awkward process at the Hyatt) at the intersection of Queen and Spadina, near where much of the festival action happens at legendary venues like the Horseshoe Tavern, the Rivoli, and Cameron House.

As usual, it’s not common to see the big names on the first day of the schedule, but this doesn’t mean one can’t bump into old favorites and make great new discoveries.

The Royal Foundry is definitely among the latter category, an exciting discovery for me. Hailing from Edmonton, this duo is comprised of Jared and Bethany, a couple married for about 18 months and a musical ensemble for about twice that span. They recently won the Northern Alberta region of CBC Music’s Searchlight contest, and though it’s just the two of them on stage, they are a force of nature producing mesmerizing upbeat folk filled with romantic lyrics. Despite the early hour for the show (8pm) and the small venue, the crowd was very engaged by the duo’s performance (Thanks to @shonicar3 for use of her Instagram picture of Royal Foundry).

Back on Spadina and Queen at the Horseshoe Tavern for a 9pm set, I enjoyed hearing Girlfriends and Boyfriends who brought their heavily influenced ’80s rock east from Vancouver. They play a rather different musical genre than what’s currently coming out of the west coast scene. It was a fun warm up for the powerful bands that would hit the stage later.

A more roots option was available a few steps down Queen Street at the Rivoli, with NQ Arbuckle, front man of a perennially popular local alt-country outfit, and a favorite of CBC host Tom Power. NQ (stands for Neville Quentin) delivered a set full of hits and emotion, as he and his great band have done for many years. His banter was filled with stories about the songs, the set was perfect to take a seat and get ready for what was about to unfold over the next couple sets of live music. (Thanks to @shonicar3 for use of her Instagram picture of NQ and gang).

Moon King, local wonder praised by international media, was one of the biggest names of the night, fulfilling everyone’s expectations of what powerful and intense shoegaze rock sounds like. Daniel Benjamin and Maddy Wilde were joined by a bassist and a drummer in a set only a bit longer than thirty minutes that left everybody hungry for more from them.

Greylands, a garage rock side project of Cuff the Duke’s Wayne Petti was the option I chose to say goodnight to the first night of NXNE, with no mellowing down required. Mind-numbing distortion is put on the spotlight during Greylands sets, which is completed by Petti’s actions on and off stage, throwing his guitar away and hitting it against a monitor to create even more distortion. For those curious about this band, they will play again during Paper100, a highlight of the NXNE schedule, celebrating the work of Paperbag records. I’m eager to for Day II!

15 Photos from an Upper Manhattan Bike Ride to the Little Red Lighthouse & Great Gray Bridge

Hudson Beach view
Click here to see all photos at The Great Gray Bridge.

Leonard Cohen Singing His 1970 Ode “Joan of Arc,” in 2015

Quite a gorgeous Leonard Cohen song here, a recent recording of his longtime standby, “Joan of Arc,” from a forthcoming album, “Can’t Forget.” His voice has gotten so much deeper over the years, which makes the gorgeous voices of the female singers he chooses to sing with sound all the more gorgeous. Listen to it at CBC Music.   

CBC Radio 3 Memories Flickr Album

I became active in the CBC Radio 3 community in 2009. It’s been a great six years getting to know the on-air hosts, musicians, and listeners associated with this dynamic outpost for indie music in Canada. I’ve made many of my closest friends through this vibrant and generous community. In honor of this final day of live hosted broadcasting on Radio 3, I’ve assembled “CBC Radio 3 Memories,”a photo album on Flicker with 200 images. One of the photos below shows the day that musicians Adrian Glynn and Zach Gray climbed a tree to play songs for the annual Radio 3 picnic, an indication of how much fun we have. Radio 3 is continuing, albeit in a new format. Let’s hope the station and the great people who work there find ways to continue from strength to strength. Below are just five of the images. Enjoy the whole album!  

Great New 2-Volume Reference, “The Encyclopedia of Music in Ireland”

I spent an enjoyable Saturday morning reading about some of the early pioneers of traditional Irish and Celtic music—like the 17th century harpist and classical composer Turlough Carolan, the veritable Scarlatti of Ireland, and the 1920s fiddler Michael Coleman, a seminal figure who brought his technique and style from County Sligo to New York City in 1914, and inspired dozens of players in succeeding decades. I also sought out entries on several of my favorite contemporary Irish musicians: Mick Moloney, singer, multi-instrumentalist, educator, folklorist, musicologist, bandleader, and early facilitator of Cherish the Ladies; Liz Carroll, Chicago fiddler; Kevin Burke, Sligo fiddler; and Martin Hayes, Seattle fiddler, with whom my late Franconia College friend Rob Adams took some lessons in the 1990s; and bands like Boys of the Lough.

I was glad that I got to attend the launch event for The Encyclopedia of Music in Ireland (aka as EMIR within the two-volume set) at the Irish American Historical Society across from the Metropolitan Museum of Art on Fifth Ave one cold night last month. At rush hour it took me quite a while to get across Central Park from my office on the upper west side of Manhattan. When I finally got to the east side, the sun was setting vividly over the park, with a last peek of it along the horizon line.Central Park

Late though I was, I managed to enter the room just as Irish novelist Colm Tóibín was offered the floor to speak about the encyclopedia. I shed my coat, and spotted friend Jack Lamplough, who in helping the publisher promote the book, had invited me for the occasion. There were close to seventy-five people already there. Holding both volumes as in his hands as he spoke, Toibin offered sincere remarks about the amazing breadth of the encyclopedia, encompassing as it does orchestral music and musicians, operatic performers, folk music and its practitioners, popular artists, rock n’ rollers, and more.

While encyclopedias and multi-volume reference books were common in prior decades of publishing, and I worked on a few, examples of publishing like this are uncommon in the present era of digital publishing. This two-volume set, from University College Dublin Press, is a superb piece of publishing, with over 2,000 entries, and more than 200 contributors assembled by general editors Harry White and Barra Boydell, both of whom were on hand, and spoke after Toibin. Not only does it have biographical articles on individual artists and bands, such as Liam Clancy, James Galway, Bob Geldof, Them (Van Morrison’s early outfit who, according to the entry, were in 1965 “the first Irish band of the Beatles era to have a British hit with ‘Baby, Please Don’t Go'”), The Pogues, and Thin Lizzy, it orders the entire world of Irish music with such granular categories and topics as: “Bells and bell-ringing,” “Bodhrain” (‘defined in a 1904 dictionary of Irish as a deaf person, a person of indifferent hearing, an indistinct person, a shallow skin-bottomed vessel…a drum’), “Canada: Irish traditional music,” “Dublin,” “The Gaelic League,” and “Police bands.”

During my years at Franconia College, the aforementioned Rob Adams, and the third member of our tight troika of friendship, Karl Petrovich, opened my ears to traditional music from Ireland, Scotland, all of the British Isles, and Appalachia. During those years, a Franconia professor and friend, William Congdon, introduced me to the music of English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958), who like a British Alan Lomax, collected folk songs from ordinary people in the field, and combined folk melodies with modernist elements in his magnificent output of orchestral and chamber music. After my college years, when I ran Undercover Books with my siblings and parents, I sold folk and traditional albums in our stores and at live events, like the time Mike Seeger and the great Elizabeth Cotton played at a Cleveland venue (if you don’t happen to know her music, here she is playing “Freight Train“). When I moved to New York City in 1985, I lived in the Washington Heights section of Manhattan, close to Inwood, an Irish enclave where live music was played in bars I walked to or rode my bike to on weekend afternoons. North of Inwood in the Bronx was Gaelic Park, an outdoor sports venue where I watched teams from Ireland compete in hurling and Irish football matches. I was quite sure I was one of the only New Yorkers there without Irish roots. I also listened to Irish music on local radio station WFUV, which every week carried the Thistle & Shamrock program hosted by Fiona Ritchie notable emissary of Celtic music, herself author of the recently published Wayfaring Strangers: The Musical Voyage from Scotland and Ulster to Appalachia, a music book I’m eager to add to my library. This music will always be close to my heart. I relish the opportunity to experience and enjoy it afresh with the new encyclopedia, and to read about all the other forms of music that have flourished among the Irish.

I’m grateful to Jack Lamplough for recognizing me and my blogs as press and offering me The Encyclopedia of Music in Ireland for review. I’ll continue writing about it, recommending it, and enjoying it for a long time. And now for your listening and viewing pleasure, click here for a youtube recording of reels by Michael Coleman, more pictures from the reception, and of the encyclopedia itself, with ordering information.

Why Vetoing Keystone XL is not Futile

I recommend Tim Dickinson’s excellent Rolling Stone article about the Obama administration’s refusal, at least to this point, to greenlight the Keystone XL pipeline, and the Harper government’s years-long efforts to tie virtually the entire Canadian economy to oil production. Dickinson hits on every key point about the fateful and disastrous choices made by Stephen Harper. It begins like this:

“Since ultraconservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper—famously described by one Canadian columnist as ‘our version of George W. Bush, minus the warmth and intellect’—took power in 2006, he’s quietly set his country on a course that seems to be straight from the Koch brothers’ road map. Harper, 55, has gutted environmental regulation and fast-tracked colossal projects to bring new oil to market. Under his leadership, Canada has also slashed corporate taxes and is eliminating 30,000 public-sector jobs….Stephen Harper came of age in Alberta, a land of cowboys and oil rigs sometimes referred to as ‘Texas of the North.’ He began his career in the mailroom of Imperial Oil (today an offshoot of Exxon). He rose through Parliament promising a revolution in federal affairs under the battle cry ‘The West wants in!’ Following his election to prime minister in 2006, he wasted little time unveiling his plan to open up his nation’s vast oil reserves. Before an audience of British businessmen in 2006, he spoke of ‘the emerging energy superpower our government intends to build,’ and rhapsodized about the ‘ocean of oil-soaked sand [that] lies under the muskeg of northern Alberta.’ He framed the challenge of bringing that crude to market as though it were a Wonder of the World. ‘It requires vast amounts of capital . . . and an army of skilled workers,’ he said. ‘It is an enterprise of epic proportions, akin to the building of the pyramids or China’s Great Wall. Only bigger.'”

The grandiosity is staggering, reminiscent to me of the early years of George W. Bush’s disastrous presidency.

Many American observers, even some generally alarmed by climate change, have noted what they consider to be a pointlessness to President Obama declining to okay Keystone XL, considering that the amount of oil to be carried by KXL is only a fraction of the volume being carried in other pipelines already, and that too much oil is now being shipped by rail, a risk as great as pipeline spills. Yet, this misses a key point: Harper has staked his total transformation of the Canadian economy to this pipeline, in line with companies such as TransCanada, the backer of Keystone XL, or to the creation of two other pipelines that are vigorously opposed by many Canadians. One of these would go west from Alberta through British Columbia to the Pacific Ocean, while the other would go east toward the Maritimes and the Atlantic. If he is unable to build any of these three, his intention to mine the great bulk of the tar sands is less likely to be realized. To the extent that the Obama administration can impede those grandiose designs, even if that isn’t the point of American policy, it will be a good thing from my viewpoint, because I believe that harvesting the entirety of the tar sands will inevitably hasten planetary change that we dare not risk.

One side note that amused me while reading Dickinson’s article: a cheery ad from TransCanada popped up in my browser, endorsing the idea that “Pipelines Work!” Doubtless, it appeared because the name TransCanada was on that page of the Rolling Stone article. See the screenshot below. I highly recommend you read Dickinson’s entire article.