Showing posts with label local. Show all posts
Showing posts with label local. Show all posts

Arkells spin a wild one with third album, High Noon



Back two months early for their third triennial full-length, Hamilton, ON’s Arkells have proved themselves a well-crafted draught. High Noon, out August 5th via Dine Alone Records, is a driven album any fan can cheer along to; it's seriously the best thing Arkells have done thus far, and one has to wonder exactly what role new (temporary?) keyboardist Anthony Carrone (illScarlett) played in this.

Every component of the band is perfectly tucked into the others on the album, with synchronized bursts of sound reminiscent of hip-hop isolations but for musical instruments, and the piano sticks out like a green thumb. In that it’s sparkly, clean, fresh, and steals Max Kerman’s otherwise well-deserved spotlight.

Back to vocalist Max Kerman: he delivers High Noon like as hard rock diva, with that very subtly expressive voice distinct to “the post-grunge style.” Most of the album’s tracks are juxtaposed in this way, a contrast most prominent on “Cynical Bastards,” with trilling keys next to Tim Oxford’s pounding toms and Mike DeAngelis’s stiff guitar.

Of the three existing singles, “Never Thought That This Would Happen,” packs the most punch – I had actually unknowingly nailed it for a single when I first heard the full album, then found out it had been the lead single. Its relatable lyrics detail a friendship turned something more with lines such as “when you’re playing for no strings sometimes you find yourself tied up” and “sometimes you make out with an old friend.” Furthermore, the elongation of pre-destined syllables (“sometiiiiiiiiiimes”) and gang vocals mid-chorus (“AND IIIIIIIIIIII / AND YOUUUUU”) are a recipe for instant catchiness and plentiful airtime. By the distorted guitar cadenza and “ooh ooh ooh,” the feeling is equivocal to Judd Nelson’s victory pump at the end of The Breakfast Club. (I never thought this analogy would happen either.) Nick Dika’s bass is perfectly turned up a few more notches, also; it’s not complex, but it makes an audible difference. The track’s single demerit point is its cliffhanger ending, created by a missing resolution chord to a jazz piano cadence. It’s too strong of a song to end underwhelmingly.



The above is not to discount singles two and three entirely, “Come to Light” and “11:11;” the former is a classic, fast-paced head bobbing piano rock piece that does Crash Kings better than Crash Kings. Meanwhile, the latter pop song's redemption is its xylophone foundation a la The XX’s “Islands." But quite frankly, I can’t tell lyrically if "11:11" is about one night or love at first sight. (Listen: “You were glowing in the dark / You made a wish at 11:11 / I had your hips at 12:54.”)



After a strong start to High Noon set up by the accusatory “Fake Money,” the album is informally split by four consecutive tracks: “Dirty Blonde,” which sounds like a college fling and lyrical sour note despite flawless piano; “What Are You Holding On To?” where the acronym “WAYHOT” is too distracting to actually focus on the classic rock throwback; “Bennie and the Jets”-inspired “Hey Kids!” and a song waywardly dedicated to a party girl in a “Leather Jacket”... fans will either appreciate these or they won’t.

But High Noon reveals itself to be a front-loaded album with an electric finish in the form of power ballad, “Crawling Through the Window,” and big-city-night-traffic strings (a descriptor that makes more sense exampled) on “Systematic.” Overall, any local would be mad proud of the five-piece unit who are currently touring in European. Arkells are back in North America August 22nd, and having seen their live show during their Jackson Square era, I do strongly recommend. Dates here.

City and the Sea rock out with new single, "Venture"



City and the Sea, or CATS as the band has dubbed themselves, play some mean rock 'n' roll. Aside from slightly young, pop-punk sounding vocals that will certainly mature over time, the Hamilton-based unit has its key features locked down: toughly-conceived guitars, an unapologetic percussionist, a solid bass line, and the right attitude. They're "hell bent" on bringing back the glory of classic rock and they're making a good case for it.

After three locally-absorbed and nationally-acknowledged EPs, CATS has released "Venture" to bridge the gap between Action Figures (2013) and whatever is coming next. It'll be immediately followed by the B-side of the single come September, that's for sure, but is a debut full-length in the works? One can speculate, given the band's appreciable success four years in-the-making. View the video below and download the single, at your price.

Waterbodies post new track, set to play SCENE Fest



"You can make a load of noise with bass, drums & guitar," claim St. Catharines' Waterbodies. The Canadian trio appear to be following up their 2012 album, The Evil We Know, starting with new Home Alone-inspired single, "What the French Call 'Les Incompétents'." On it, vocalist Mike McGean sings:
Black girls, white girls freak me out / Did those words just come from my mouth / See I'm the kinda guy, your kinda guy / So baby just get in line
It's a most-conscious thought progression and that's exactly how it flows on the recording--naturally, like McGean had been improvising atop upbeat-downbeat guitar and percussion. The vinyl scratches on "WTFCLI" are an unusual touch, adding to the DIY punkiness of the track. It's got a little more definition, however, and a lot more funk than songs prior, such as "How to Burn Bridges" and "Silver Spoon" off Waterbodies' debut album. And therefore, a fair bit of promise for their new material, which is coming soon.



Waterbodies are performing at Mishun this Sunday for the SCENE Music Festival.

Digits announces new EP, premieres lead single


Toronto's treasured electronica maestro, Alt Altman (aka Digits) has made waves on home turf and abroad, with icy synth hits such as "Lost Dream" and "Love Is Only Affection." It's been a fair while since his last official album, so a new EP was due, but the uncharacteristically sunny and incandescently happy "When You Look Inside" threw everyone, myself included, for a loop.

Its production is not Altman's tightest and its relatively simple, no-frills accompaniment makes "When You Look Inside" prone to genre-lumping. Into the dream pop pool, at that. But perhaps we're just cainotophobic, because sunsoaked Digits isn't half-bad. Amid the forthright lyrics and the uplifting broken chords, is this ice king thawing? How unexpected.



The remaining three-quarters of The Day You Look Back is available June 10th. Digits appears Thursday night at Toronto's Adelaide Hall, and then embarks on a brief Canadian tour with St. Vincent.

ALBUM REVIEW: daysdeaf -- When Colour Lost Light

Manvir Rai is daysdeaf, but far from days deaf. In fact, his marketing slogan and signoff, “some music stays with you and leaves you deaf for days” is quite misleading. Rai, who hails from Brampton, Ontario, specializes in electronic watercolours, not bone-gnashing grind metal. If his latest, When Colour Lost Light, leaves listeners deaf, it’s not from loudness or fuzz; it’s the audiovisual clarity that arises from the lack thereof.


His colourbomb video for "Giving Life to Greys” is a fantastic visual introduction to the album. “The process involved using a ten-gallon fish tank and mixture of acrylic inks, food dye, and pigment,” he says. The video, like the album, is an experiment in timbre. “The album song titles work as a gradient. Starting from white, the songs are then ordered in the form of the electromagnetic spectrum, then moving to phenomena of light. We identify with colours, but our colour is always temporary, moving from one to the next.”

“Giving Life to Greys,” then, is the third song on the record, following “White Flags” and “Silver (oh Mercury!),” which open When Colour Lost Light on a minimalist blues/jazz note. “White Flags” has the sound of Air France and Signal Hill merging on a freeway at dawn, then somewhere in “Silver (oh Mercury!),” they pick up a vocal hitchhiker. Further along the spectrum, “Purple Thrills” adds a hip-hop beat, creating a smoky post-R&B atmosphere akin to Blood Orange and Frank Ocean. By “Chasing Green,” Rai is spitting verse, and rather greenly, I daresay.

A more laudable effort can be heard on “redREd,” a horror story of sorts with a spooky wavering string ostinato and “Thriller”-style screams. Here, Rai’s caught you “red-handed in the act, check check. […] This ain’t a fucking masquerade, check check check.” With “Iridescent,” “CMY,” and “Light,” When Colour Lost Light comes full circle, returning to its only seemingly colourless start, floating. Its feet don’t touch the ground.

MUSIC: "Serpentine" / "Blood" by Flamingo Báy


It would appear that Steel City is pretty consistent when it comes to churning out good-natured rock ensembles. Grungy, wistful Flamingo Báy think they're the next Nirvana. But that's okay, because if we disregard their latest high-school-comm-tech-class calibre, too-ironic-for-mainstream-viewers music video, they're pretty dece.

A tell-tale twang ages "Serpentine" like a mature wine, setting the trio more in the ranks of The Trews than Sum 41. "Blood", the other leading track off Loco Pony, packs a stomping East Coast romp. My first instinct is to compare them to fellow locals, Dean Lickyer. Download "Serpentine" / "Blood" here and share what you think!

Flamingo Báy is Kris Gies (bass, vocals); Dillon Henningson (guitar); Vince Rankin (drums).