Showing posts with label Les Jupes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Les Jupes. Show all posts

NXNE 2011: Day 1, part 2-- a little bit of everything




In some ways, NXNE is the great equalizer. With the exception of the big shows at locations like Yonge-Dundas Square and the Phoenix Concert Theatre, bands are on equal ground. Everyone gets 40 minutes for a set, there's no time and frequently no space for elaborate staging, and not a lot of variation in the venues. Most are long rectangles with black walls. ("That's why they call them 'night' clubs," quipped S2W.) Which puts the spotlight exactly where it should be: on the music.

Luyas @ The Shoe

Luyas @ The Shoe












That certainly doesn't mean the music is the same. One of the great things about a festival like NXNE is the opportunity to see a little bit of everything, as we did Thursday evening, starting with  the Luyas (Montreal) at the Legendary Horseshoe Tavern.




As is common in the world of Canadian indie, the Luyas have assorted ties to other bands-- Arcade Fire, Miracle Fortress, Bell Orchestre, Torngat-- but their 60s psychedelia-meets-the 21st-century sound is completely their own. Led by the winsome soprano of singer/guitarist Jessie Stein, they interpret luminous alt pop/rock with a french horn, keyboards, drums/percussion and a good deal of creativity. They just released their second album, Too Beautiful to Work, earlier this year.


Luyas @ The Shoe
Luyas @ The Shoe






From the Shoe we headed over to the Velvet Underground for the Two Koreas (Toronto), a short walk in distance but a long way in attitude. The Two Koreas were in a "if we have time" slot on our schedule, and surprise-- their razor-sharp set of post-punk garage rock turned out to be one of our top 10 shows of NXNE.


Two Koreas @ Velvet Underground

Two Koreas @ Velvet Underground



































The 11 p.m. time slot was a killer: PS I Love You, Slow down, Molasses, the Details or Allie Hughes? Logistics and the opportunity for a second-helping of one of our favourite shows at the Phog Lounge last year prevailed. We went for Allie Hughes at Wrongbar. The quirky velvet riding helmet and mannequin heads were gone, replaced by heavy-rimmed glasses and a German schoolteacher persona, but whatever costume/staging suits her fancy, the theatrical Hughes and her very talented band are wildly entertaining and simply amazing.

Allie Hughes @Wrongbar
Allie Hughes @Wrongbar












Allie Hughes @Wrongbar

Allie Hughes @Wrongbar













Allie Hughes @Wrongbar


Les Jupes @Gladstone




Les Jupes @Gladstone













As bands well know, a good sound engineer is worth their weight in gold. They are unsung heroes if all the settings are in the right place; the band is unsung (literally, in some cases) if not.

Les Jupes @Gladstone

Les Jupes @Gladstone
 




Last year the sound in the Gladstone Hotel's lofty, brick-walled ballroom left something to be desired.








No problems this year at the Manitoba Music Showcase, happily for us and Les Jupes, of Winnipeg. We enjoyed them as much as we did this past March. Don't let their weighty approach to pop/rock fool you; lead singer/songwriter and man of many hats Michael Petkau Falk is one of the nicest guys around.



Les Jupes @Gladstone


We had hoped to catch Bruce Peninsula, a long-time wannasee, at 1 a.m.; a 19-hour day behind us, plus a date with a 9:30 a.m. radio show ahead of us, meant we hit the hay instead of the Rivoli. Next post: NXNE 2011, Day 2, part 1-- Breakfast and BBQ.


Photos: Russ Gordon/N2D Images

Manitoba Music Showcase @ NXNE

Toronto, ON – May 26, 2011 – Hot on the heels of their CMW Showcase back in March, Manitoba Music is hitting Toronto again – this time for NXNE. On Thursday, June 16 some of Manitoba’s finest will take the stage at the Gladstone Hotel Ballroom. The night will feature five acts – Surf-Noir rockers This Hisses, Polaris long-lister Greg MacPherson, indie rock outfit The Details, psychedelic Les Jupes, and electro-dance DJ Cyclist.

Les Jupes
Manitoba Music Showcase @ NXNE
Thursday, June 16 – Gladstone Hotel Ballroom
9:00pm – This Hisses
10:00pm – Greg MacPherson
11:00pm – The Details
12:00am – Les Jupes
(N2DS2W attending; here's our show review from Les Jupes' March show at the Phog Lounge)
1:00am – Cyclist



Other Manitoba Bands playing NXNE
The Seed Organization – June 15 @ Lula Lounge – 11:30pm (Balanced Records Showcase) 
Joe Silva  - June 15 @ Lula Lounge – 1:00am (Balanced Records Showcase)
Gt. DANE  - June 16 @ Bread & Circus – 8:00pm
Goldenboy – June 16 @ The Supermarket – 9:00pm
Magnum K.I. – June 16 @ Crawford – 10:00pm
Imaginary Cities – June 16 @ Rivoli – 11:00pm
Enjoy Your Pumas – June 17 @ Sneaky Dee’s – 9:00pm
Ian La Rue & the Heartbeat City – June 17 @ Bread & Circus – 11:00pm
Ingrid Gatin – June 17 @ The Painted Lady – 11:00pm
Abstract Artform – June 17 @ Crawford – 12:00am

Thanks to Joanne Setterington of Indoor Recess.

Show Review: This is it




Poorly attended shows are a guilty pleasure. After a sold-out show the night before at Windsor's Phog Lounge for Yukon Blonde (who always packs them in) and the Paint Movement, the audience stayed away in droves for the Wheat Pool and Les Jupes on Sun., Mar. 13. We'd always rather see robust attendance for the bands' sake (and their bottom line), but can't deny there's something special about a show when it feels as if it's just for you. "Honestly, we'd rather play for a few fans than a room full of people," said Wheat Pool guitarist Glen Erickson (glenroy on the R3 blog), who also runs the band's label, Shameless Records.





















The Edmonton-based Wheat Pool--Erickson, brothers Robb and Mike Angus, who ably alternate bass and guitar (including an awesome Norman acoustic) and new drummer Fred Brenton--deliver the tried-and-true extremely well.  Call it "dark country," alt-folk-country-rock (etc. etc.), we call their harmonies, tales of love lost, love found and prairie places, pure simple pleasure.  Coincidentally, the year the original Wheat Pool became Viterra (2007) is the year the band released their full-length debut, Township (Polaris long list- worthy  in our humble opinion).  The band continues to pay homage to similar themes on Hauntario (2009).  Fans will have to keep them on replay; although Erickson says they're working on some new material, there's nothing definite in the works.





















Winnipeg is rivaling Regina when it comes to producing great bands; count Les Jupes among them. Michael Petkau Falk is a go-to music producer, founder of indie label Head in the Sand (home to fellow break-out Winnipeg bands the Liptonians and Royal Canoe), and since January, artistic director of the West End Cultural Centre. Now he can add frontman for his own rising group of musicians that includes David Schellenberg on bass, Adam Klassen at the drums and Kelly Beaton on keyboards and vocals. Pop/rock seems way too ordinary to describe Les Jupes' quirky yet serious approach to the genre. Petkau's deep voice has a dire quality to it that gives their songs great import; it's not quite so heavy live. Their debut album, Modern Myths, is available now.
























Photos: Russ Gordon










Les Jupes - One Solemn Oath from Lena Franford on Vimeo.