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The Courtneys Music Video Release Party

Since their inception, The Courtneys have always had a playful character to them. They never seemed to take themselves too seriously, a trait that has come to define their brand of slacker-pop. But after a good, solid year of suspicion, Saturday January 4th’s performance and Music Video Release Party at the Rainbow Connection on Hastings demonstrated that they are, in fact, some of the hardest working slackers in the Vancouver music. 

 

Author: 
Jamie Cessford
  • Posted on: 12 April 2016
  • By: Administrator
Momentum Youth Arts Movement: Win The Moment

For a guy who complains all too often that “they” don’t make good music anymore, it was quite refreshing to be at Massey Theatre on November 1st. There, I got to witness Win the Moment, a contest in which local bands competed to open for Hey Ocean!, a Grammy winning Vancouver based band. The audience voted for the winner. As part of the Momentum Youth Arts Movement, it was a showcase for young bands to show their talent and that they did. All four bands put on a great show.

 

Author: 
Austin Cozicar
  • Posted on: 12 April 2016
  • By: Administrator
Hey Ocean! at the Momentum Youth Arts Movement

Having grown up in New Westminster, I have seen the development of the Momentum Youth Arts Movement Festival from its early conception as Yam Jam, infamously known by the youth locals as one of the most lifeless youth music festivals in the Lower Mainland. However, seeing its new form and its handpicked line up of artists leading up to the internationally-known headliner, Hey Ocean!, I was curious with how the festival was doing since I last went a decade ago during my high school years.

 

Author: 
Mark Bustalinio
  • Posted on: 12 April 2016
  • By: Administrator
Death with Hag Face and Tough Age

My new favourite genre, without a doubt, has got to be proto-punk. It enlists a vision of early man expressing himself through double-time 4/4 beats and incoherent yelling. But in actuality, proto-punk refers to the punk music that existed before punk music really existed. Billed as ‘before Bad Brains, the Sex Pistols, or even the Ramones’ the band called Death has one of the most fascinating stories in rock and roll, and earns the illustrious title of proto-punk to the fullest degree. On November 1st, Death visited the Rickshaw Theatre to revise the music history books.

Author: 
Jamie Cessford
  • Posted on: 12 April 2016
  • By: Administrator
Hockey

Arriving at the Biltmore for a Friday nite gig one usually has a set of certain expectations.  On this particular evening it was seeing former Portland-based indie/alt rock act Hockey.  After an initial slow trickle of attendees and slightly peculiar crowd mix seemed to cause delay, somehow everything seemed to work itself out just right and become more intimate and cheery by the conclusion of a wonderful musical entertainment experience. 

 

Author: 
Scott White
  • Posted on: 12 April 2016
  • By: Administrator
Peter Murphy

Peter Murphy has been making music for the greater part of 35 years and is most notable as the front-man and lyrical force behind legendary Goth-rock outfit Bauhaus.  The original lineup composed of Daniel Ash (guitar) David J. (bass) and Kevin Haskins (drums) were not on hand this night however.  After a slew of bad breakups beginning in 1984 and ending in 2009, it’s not so surprising that those three individuals are no longer in the picture.  In fact they would later go on to form the more pop and mainstream friendly Love and Rockets, as Murphy would continue his career a solo figure.

Author: 
Scott White
  • Posted on: 12 April 2016
  • By: Administrator
Rogue Wave

By all rights San Francisco/Oakland based indie rockers Rogue Wave should not even exist in the year 2013.  This band has been through such heartache and turmoil since their inception that likely no one would blame them if they packed it in and called it a day.  The fact that they still do have a pulse speaks to their collective passion and desire to play music; and with such hype and brightness, that early on they were often considered northern California’s answer to similar Lo-Fi darlings Built to Spill and Modest Mouse.

Author: 
Scott White
  • Posted on: 12 April 2016
  • By: Administrator
Hooded Fang

While they only garnered a small turnout at the Media Club on June 16th, particularly as it had been a Sunday night, Hooded Fang brought the ease of a friendliness with casual jokes on stage, looking like they had just stepped off and out of their tour van minutes before their performance.

 

Author: 
Carmela Akiatan
  • Posted on: 12 April 2016
  • By: Administrator
Youth Lagoon

The first Youth Lagoon album, Year of Hibernation, lived up to the potential of great pop music to affect people by wrapping the listener up in nostalgia and hopeful optimism.  Seeing Youth Lagoon’s Trevor Powers playing these songs live is less important than the collective experience that is shared with everyone in the audience.  That comes when you feel everyone around you moving to the same slow rhythm of the echoing bass drum as Powers builds layers of reverb to a climactic chorus that fades to a piano loop.

Author: 
Fred Hawley
  • Posted on: 12 April 2016
  • By: Administrator
Palma Violets

In an era of manufactured success, Palma Violets are in the midst of a natural ascent to stardom. 

 

Natives of south London, Palma Violets just released their first album 180. To say their album was well received would be an understatement. 180 blew away the British press and won the quartet the title of NME’s best new band of 2013.  Their early success has drawn comparisons to the Arctic Monkeys and White Stripes – some impressive company for a new band.

Author: 
Samuel Hogg
  • Posted on: 12 April 2016
  • By: Administrator

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