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Schwa.

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Posts posted by Schwa.

  1. anyone skilled in the art of snowboarding and living in the KW area want to give some lessons?

    I anticipate going to the hill at Milton (sorry the name escapes me) or Chicopee here in Kitchener.

    Lessons will be paid for with lots of laughs (i bet i fall 10,000,000 times) and lots of heady goodness (to ease the pain)

    Also if any of ya have a used board they want to part with let me know.

  2. i miss living in Windsor and its tropical Ontario winters. I have fond memories of wearing a hoody until january when i went to school there.

    I do love the winter sports though. thinkin of getting a board and taking up snowboarding, i've been a skier all my life but have been pining for the ramps and halfpipes that boarding has to offer. skiing = boring to me now.

  3. Morgan, bring me something from the spring tour!!!

    Detroit or Cleveland preferably, i got your blanks no matter how many you bring. DO IT!

    see ya Friday, i hope Diesel Dog does Space Wrangler although i wish they would give Good Time a try one of these days, or even Disco, YA DISCO!!!!!

  4. John Cale, former member of Velvet Underground is playing tonight at the Starlight in Waterloo.

    here is an article from this weeks Echo.

    BLACK VELVET

    By Ric Taylor

    As the patron saint of sonic exploration, John Cale’s work with

    one of the most influential bands of the ’60s, The Velvet

    Underground, and his later three decades of soundcraft have

    afforded him the kind of catalogue that is vastly important and

    influential, even if today he remains something of a cult figure.

    While Cale explored solo work after his departure from VU,

    his production credits are lauded as being beyond compare—he’s

    produced the debuts of The Stooges, Jonathan Richman’s Modern

    Lovers and Patti Smith, as well as worked with The Happy

    Mondays, Nico and more. By the ’90s Cale had brought his

    musical muse to movie soundtracks, but every so often he offers

    another peek into his mindset with a new album proper.

    A musical chameleon, it’s impossible to sum up Cale’s

    importance in a few sentences, but with a new CD and tonight’s

    Starlight performance, fans both old and new have a chance to

    partake in the Cale canon.

    As an influential figure in bringing the words drone, noise

    and soundscape into the more mainstream musical lexicon, his

    two most recent releases—2003’s Hobosapien and the newly

    released Black Acetate—offer up Cale as ever the inventor and

    explorer but with decidedly more friendly aural results.

    Cale’s old VU counterpart Lou Reed has often been difficult

    in interviews but Cale, is open, honest, excited and welcoming.

    We began our talk about his newest efforts with a friendly chat

    about the weather, and how sunnier days are nicer than the

    cloudy one he’s currently experiencing in California.

    “They offer more giggles in the day maybe,†smiles Cale on

    both sunnier days and a perhaps renewed perspective. While he

    offers an archetype for shoegazer and fusion bands, these days

    he is exploring hip hop technique and pop presentation. But

    would he prefer if audiences approached him without his past in

    mind?

    “I don’t think it’s realistic, and I think it’s what they expect

    from me,†says Cale on a career that offers a seemingly different

    musical style with each new recording. “If they are used to having

    something different from me every time, then they should have

    no problem relating, but maybe they need to have the idea of

    Hobo and Black Acetate in their minds when they think of me now

    because those two things represent a different environment for

    me as a musician then all of the stuff I’ve done before.

    “Those were polemical days,†Cale reasons on his time with

    The Velvet Underground, before suggesting that his new CD is

    not so polemical. “I’m happy with it. But I don’t think that there’s

    anything on this album that people won’t identify as being John

    Cale. I don’t think there’s anything you can point to and say,

    ‘that’s John Cale trying to be somebody else.’ I think it’s true to

    John Cale.â€

    Cale experimented with loops and technology on

    Hobosapien, but with veteran jazz fusion drummer Herb Graham

    has reached a different plane with Black Acetate. Yet, even

    knowing his penchant for experimentation, it was unexpected to

    hear him talking straight hip hop. “I started writing the songs in

    a different way. I heard Snoop and Pharrell Williams’ ‘Drop It Like

    It’s Hot’—that song only has five elements in it,†explains Cale on

    the influence of hip hop production on his own work. “There’s a

    single that Snoop did where they used [the sampled sound of] a

    spray can as a rhythm instrument, and I thought ‘the hiss of a

    spray can is one thing, but what’s the point of having a spray

    can?’ I think this guy is really writing about something else, and I

    think he’s making a statement about the environment of hip hop

    more than just a musical statement.

    “When ‘Drop It Like It’s Hot’ came along, it was just like an

    extension of that and it was amazing! It was so minimal. So I went back to the drawing board and tried cutting everything out.â€

    Musing on sampling and hip hop recording techniques, Cale

    suggests that the words or music alone aren’t what’s making the

    statement. The samples and production speak loudly as well,

    taking the spray can associated with graffiti and literally

    incorporating it into the rhythm of a song—the medium is the

    message indeed.

    But Cale is able to extract metaphor and meaning from the

    situation with ease, even finding a possible direct link between

    two disparate positions like the president of the U.S. and your

    average hip hop producer.

    “When I first started thinking about this, I thought, ‘what

    does anyone in the White House know about anything going on in

    the street?’ Do they have any idea what this represents or what it

    means? They couldn’t be farther apart. But then I thought, ‘wait a

    minute, they have commonalities. They have the bling and the

    group think is exactly the same—[the White House] is just another

    type of gang.’

    Cale’s delving into new production brought about a new

    philosophy—and with his new CD, more than just presidents and

    producers can find common ground. Acetate is heavily reliant on

    technology, yet it’s possibly Cale’s most organic work. With his

    reputation for exploratory music, Acetate offers pop lullabies and

    comedic though acerbic commentaries—it’s a new direction for

    Cale, but that’s what diehard fans have come to expect.

    “For Acetate, it’s a one man band,†Cale explains. “We didn’t

    use the technology as severely as we did on Hobo, and that whole

    thing was locked to a click track. This time we let it be as

    inaccurate as we could stand. Generally, there’s a thing called

    quantizing, which takes all of the inaccuracies you’re playing and

    puts them in time, and we didn’t do that. We let it bubble along

    until we got to the song ‘Woman,’ where the MPC took over. That song has a dual personality. It has this edgy, hip hop groove to it,

    but it ends with an anthemic arena rocker.â€

    Acetate sees Cale as adventurous as ever, but perhaps

    mostly pushing the nature of his own catalogue. “Outta The Bagâ€

    features a fun, falsetto–voiced Cale, while “For A Ride†shows how

    much Cale influenced bands like Love and Rockets. “Perfect†is

    pure power pop, and “Satisfied†offers a lush ballad, but the

    stand–out for me is the self–deprecating “Brotherman,†which sees

    Cale at his most relaxed and honest, exclaiming “I write reams of

    this shit everyday.â€

    “That’s a joke and it happened by accident,†clarifies Cale. “I

    was just ranting in the studio and everyone in the booth was

    laughing and telling me to keep going. What I hear when I listen

    to the track is my trying to avoid being political, but it’s still there

    a little bit.

    “This is a light–hearted album for me,†adds the singer. “It

    has humour and goofiness. ‘Outta The Bag’—People tried to get

    me to sing it an octave lower, but it just lost all of its charm. Even

    when I perform it live, even if I can’t hit the notes it doesn’t

    matter, everybody gets it.â€

    And as Cale is set to return to the area after a decade or so

    away, he promises not a man and a computer but a full–on rock

    show. It might not focus too heavily on the drones and durges of

    his earliest works; but with a VU tune thrown into a mix of more

    of his recent work, John Cale presents an artist on a different

    plane, ready to deal with his past glory and prepared to present

    his future.

    “Mainly, it’s a slamming rock and roll show,†beams Cale on

    the new Acetate tour. “A lot of people haven’t seen me in that

    context for a while, so these shows are offering me a lot of fun

    with these guys…

    “For this record, I developed a sense of humour and we

    don’t have any problem recreating anything on the record onstage. For Hobo we played with [backing computer] tracks, but

    this is a lot more raw. There’s mostly this record, some of Hobo

    and even a VU song… But overall, you’re going to be standing in a

    wind tunnel when you hear this band.â€

    Will Cale’s return be an occassion for a plethora of new fans

    to be inspired to create new sonic sounds in his wake? Should we

    applaud or blame Cale for helping to create a wealth of new

    musicians that find beauty in noise? With his reputation, Cale can

    muse on his past philosophy to challenge musical convention or

    to offer a ‘rub’ against the grain of expectations.

    “The rub is really good sometimes,†muses Cale on any

    young musician set on creating challenging music. “It’s how long

    you can live with the rub that really shows how interested you are

    in the future. You rub against things and if something grates

    against you… When you can’t solve a problem, it’s the same

    thing. How patient or insistent are you to solve a problem? Some

    problems are worth solving and others are not. So that really is

    the best question—is it worth solving this problem?â€

    And whether historians will thank or blame him for a

    cacophony of exporations from countless followers of his musical

    teachings, Cale muses on the thought and only replies: “I kind of

    like the Zen attitude towards it, and I’ll say it’ll be sunny today.â€

  5. HOOKAH RULES (even with a guy with a bad voice)

    WIDESPREAD PANIC RULES (see above)

    ...and lets not, i repeat, NOT start talking about how incredibly horrible Brad Barr's voice is. Let's not talk about how it sounds like cats fighting in an alley after they take a break from scratching their claws down a chalkboard.

    Everyone's entitled to an opinion Del, just not you ;)

    I am intrigued by the fact that if someone likes a band on here and professes it, someone always brings up the slip (lower case out of lack of respect ;) ) can't it be Phish vs WSP this time, or The Dead vs Phil and Friends or kenny vs spenny? Sheesh.

  6. It's one thing to dislike a band, it's another to make ridiculous comments about them because you are ignorant about them...

    now your previous comment:

    "The panic" is nothing more than a bad impersonation of the Allmans...

    Seems to me you're doing one thing and saying another.

    slip suck, giver!

  7. They are one of those bands where a live recording just doesn't do them justice. They have a great, full, and make no mistake, rock and roll sound but the energy of their shows is not captured on live recordings all that well.

    Don't get me wrong, i love the songs, but there is something about being at their shows that is soooo invigorating.

    Like Baj says, see them live and if at all possible see them close to Athens, GA. They are ridiculously big there and judging by their shows that i have in the collection they always turn it up a bit for the home town (region) peeps.

    ...where everybody dances different with familiar grace.

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