Friday, June 20, 2014

Limits of the Diaphane

Like he did for the week of Mother's Day, Mark Kozelek (aka Sun Kil Moon) opened this week's show with a meditation on parenthood, this time in the form of a belated Father's Day tribute. "I Love My Dad" isn't quite as sappy as "I Can't Live Without My Mother's Love" (and perhaps a bit more tongue in cheek), but it's got the same rambling, self-effacing honesty that runs through the whole Benji, without a doubt one my favourite releases of the year so far.

Our show originally aired the day after Bloomsday and we couldn't resist making mention of the annual celebration James Joyce's Ulysses (from which this week's rather pretentious title comes), a novel certainly interested in mothers and fathers, both real and imagined. We'll try to make more of our literary cross-overs in future episodes. For now, let's enjoy them as digressions.

This week Trevor and I were especially both captivated by the catchy garage rock of Cold Beat, the project of Lillian Maring (of Grass Widow), which I discovered through a mixtape that another featured favourite, Each Other, had put together for Under the Radar's Sled Island preview. Following the carefree melodies of Cold Beat, we met with the latest from Matador: Lower, four-piece punk ensemble from Copenhagen, whose intensity is truly chilling.

After hearing from Each Other's Being Elastic, we had a chance to play one of many highlights from the re-released Frog Eyes album Carey's Cold Spring. Former Edmontonian, now Montrealer, Sean Nicholas Savage provided the most sultry and poignant contribution to this week's playlist with "Heartless" from his recent LP, Bermuda Waterfall. "Heartless" was a fitting precursor to the moody, slow-rocking "Hotel," the centerpiece from Antlers' brand new effort Familiars.

Carey's Cold Spring wasn't the only Polaris Prize nominated album on our playlist. Manitoba-based Inuit throat singer Tanya Tagaq delivered an inspired cover of the Pixies' song "Caribou" from her new album, Animism. Next we heard the latest from the Dan Snaith, whose monikers Caribou and Daphni arrived back-to-back: first, with a new, impossibly addictive single "Can't Do Without You," and next with a reworking of a track by the Nigerian funk pioneer William Onyeabor, which comes courtesy of David Byrne's Luaka Bop label.

Our show ended with an additional pair of unannounced electronic artists: Tobacco (Thomas Fec of Black Moth Super Rainbow) and Germany Germany (an independent artist from Victoria, BC).



"I Love My Dad" - Sun Kil Moon
"Worms" - Cold Beat
"Lost Weight, Perfect Skin" - Lower
"Scared Witless, Really" - Each Other
"The Country Child" - Frog Eyes
"Heartless" - Sean Nicholas Savage
"Hotel" - Antlers
"Caribou" - Tanya Tagaq
"Can't Do Without You" - Caribou
"Yea" - William Onyeabor (Daphni remix)
"Pool City, McKnight Road" - Tobacco
"Find Your Way" - Germany Germany

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Made in Manitoba (Pt. 1)

Our show this week featured exclusively Manitoban artists (mostly from Winnipeg, but there were a few outliers). It's the first of several episodes that aim to collect some of the best music from one of Canada's most under-appreciated cities.



"Winnipeg Is A Frozen Shithole" - Venetian Snares
"Can We Run Away?" - The Lytics
"Zulumatic" - Mahogany Frog
"Breaking Breaking"- Old Folks Home
"Borealis Buffalo" - Animal Teeth
"Marblemouth" - Boats
"Out of Here" - Cannon Bros
"Teepee in the Forest" - Microdot
"Steady Glazed Eyes" - The Hours
"Since We Last Talked" - Slow Dancers
"Hey Stranger" - Demetra Penner
"Tristesse Suspendue" - Chic Gamine

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Mother's Day

This week we aired our Mother's Day special: another eclectic playlist with a some semi-relevant, mother-themed tracks thrown in for good measure. From silly folk songs to heart-wrenching ballads and indictments of systemic injustices, it's an odd mix of tunes from across the map.

After Robert Pollard's tale of how he met his mother, we heard Neil Young and Crazy Horse's social commentary and Ghostface (Killa's) tribute to struggling moms. Next, we took a brief detour into some brand new stuff from Abbotsford, BC (Open Letters) and Montreal (Ought), and we heard what was arguably the creepiest song of our playlist (though Billy Corgan wasn't far off) from The Knife. The title track from Damon Albarn's new solo release was another off-topic selection that managed to make the cut. But from there onward, we stuck to songs about mothers or the lack thereof. Mary Gauthier pondered her own journey to adulthood without a mother, while Sun Kil Moon's Mark Kozelek revealed his mother's potential absence to be his greatest fear. Next, we heard an off colour song from the Yukon's Spring Breakup about mothers and wives, and, finally, we endured the rare treat of listening to Billy Corgan' remarkable tribute to his late mother from 1998's Adore.
    

"How I Met My Mother" - Guided by Voices
"Welfare Mothers" - Neil Young and Crazy Horse
"Mamma" - Ghostface
"This Song Was Supposed To Be Called 'Existence Is Futile' But Revocation Stole It From Us" - Open Letters
"Habit" - Ought
"We Share Our Mother's Health" - The Knife
"Everyday Robots" - Damon Albarn
"Mother Here, Mother Gone" - Mary Gauthier
"I Can't Live Without My Mother's Love" - Sun Kil Moon
"Mother and Wife" - Spring Breakup
"For Martha" - Smashing Pumpkins

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Unsafe, unsure

Start at 1:15 to hear Halifax ex-pats Each Other kick things off with an assortment of brash melodies. Some darker, dancier stuff came next from Calgary's Mark Mills, Toronto's Think About Life, and Brooklyn provocateurs Liars. Next, we heard from Germany's endearing indie poppers The Notwist, a new project by Gord Downie and the Sadies, and revived 90s hard rock heroes The Afghan Whigs. Our newly established "Pick of the Week" (name subject to change) was claimed by Edmonton singer-songwriter Marlaena Moore, who followed EMA's tortured concept art and Coeur de Pirate's respectable Linda Ronstadt cover. The show came to an end with a pair of torch songs: the first, Future Islands' enchanting anthem "Spirit"; the second, Germany Germany's bandcamp-approved "Reconnect."
 

"Swell Patterns" - Each Other
"Escape Artists" - Mark Mills
"The Velt" - Think About Life
"Vox Tuned DED" - Liars
"Kong" - The Notwist
"Crater" - Gord Downie, the Sadies, and the Conquering Sun
"Matamoros" - The Afghan Whigs
"When She Comes" - EMA
"Heartbeats Accelerating" - Coeur de Pirate
"Unsafe, Unsure" - Marlaena Moore*
"Spirit" - Future Islands
"Reconnect" - Germany Germany


*Pick of the Week (or something)

Monday, April 14, 2014

Interrobang



Trevor and I found ourselves trading favourites on this week's show. He had his Japandroids and Jenn Grant, I had my Archers of Loaf and Hush Pup, and the airwaves were grateful. (The way Archers of Loaf singer Eric Bachmann sings the word "weird" is pure 90s magic.) We also heard new stuff from Timber Timbre and Chad VanGaalen among others.

If the title of this week's show is unfamiliar to you, have no fear: we explain it partway through the show. Or you could just ask the internet.

Skip ahead about four minutes to arrive at the beginning of our show.



"One" - Yamantaka // Sonic Titan
"The House That Heaven Built" - Japandroids
"Web in Front" - Archers of Loaf
"War Between" - Huron
"The Fighter" - Jenn Grant
"Curtains!?" - Timber Timbre
"Décapote" - La Patère Rose
"Sign 11:11" - Hush Pup
"Monster" - Chad VanGaalen
"Lucky" - Magnetta Lane
"Shy-Town" - Gorillaz
"Hate" - Charisma.com
"Black Panther" - Crystal Castles

Friday, April 4, 2014

Contested ground


This week's show was an attempt to incorporate more independent music by First Nations artists into our usual playlist (which has, in the past, been rightly accused of being dominated by white males). While this sort of thing isn't at all uncommon in North American indie rock, it's led to some fairly stable ideas of what independent music should sound and look like. Of course, such perceptions are hardly representative of the diversity in Canada's independent music community and can create real barriers for voices that need to be heard.

Part of our inspiration came from witnessing the powerful and harrowing stories of residential school survivors at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which concluded this past weekend in Edmonton. We were able to see a free concert, featuring Cris Derksen and a host of other artists (from many different backgrounds).

Below, you'll hear music from aboriginal and non-aboriginal artists. Our goal with these selections was to steer our show in a more attentive direction and showcase several artists (such as Cris Derksen, Quillbox, Flying Down Thunder and Rise Ashen) that don't get much airtime, as well as some that do (Ghostkeeper, A Tribe Called Red, Kinnie Starr). It's a small step, but hopefully it's something we'll be able to build on.



"Pow. Wow. Wow." - Cris Derksen
"Talkin' Bout a Revolution (Tracy Chapman cover)" - Art Napoleon
"Passing Out Pieces" - Mac DeMarco
"Sadlands" - Rebekah Higgs
"Mountain/Relief" - Picastro
"Well, Well, Well" - Ghostkeeper
"Molina Blues" - Slates
"Unity of Culture" - Flying Down Thunder and Rise Ashen
"Look At This" - A Tribe Called Red
"Get the Show On the Road" - Canadian Winter
"Kiss It" - Kinnie Starr
"Spirit" - Future Islands
"Nii Mi" - Quillbox

Friday, March 28, 2014

It's inevitable


"What's inevitable?" you ask. Birthdays. Birthdays are inevitable. Or at least, that's what a song by Royal Canoe has taught me.

I was hoping that I could make up for last year's birthday themed episode (no link, sorry!) with something less gratuitous and self-absorbed. But Trevor wouldn't let me get away it.
 

"Check in" - Cibo Matto
"Witches finger" - Babysitter
"You suck" - Hagface
"American horror" - Speedy Ortiz
"Don't let it bring you down (live)" - Neil Young
"Oh my friends" - Nap Eyes
"Caramel" - Connan Mockasin
"A simple beautiful truth" - Wild Beasts
"Don't look back" - Mark Sultan
"Dragon egg" - Diamond Mind
"Sea of white" - Tough Age
"Brother" - Mac DeMarco
"Bunker Buster" - Viet Cong

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Spring succeeds



What better way to usher in the warm weather than with some swell tunes? Trevor and I have got you covered. Get ready for a lot of adjectives.

We started with the show's namesake, a gem from The Olivia Tremor Control's under-appreciated classic from 1996, Music from the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle. From there, we heard some Canadian indie jams from Montreal (Each Other) and Edmonton (Jom Comyn, Creaks). Our folk set included the frequently played Bill Callahan, the recently discovered Livingston, and the inimitable Gillian Welch. Some punkier stuff came next: from Mission of Burma's classic Vs., we entered the "Weatherbox," then heard Julie Doiron spill her lungs, and joined Thee Oh Sees for "AA warm breeze." Baltimore's Future Islands led us back to a more romantic perspective and Temples delivered a healthy dose of psych-rock before Victoria's Hush Pup took us on a weird trip through the desert.



"Spring succeeds" - The Olivia Tremor Control
"Ash mound" - Each Other
"Busy dreams" - Jom Comyn
"Daydream" - Creaks
"Spring" - Bill Callahan
"I am a weary immaterial labourer in a post-industrial wasteland" - Livingston
"Winter’s come and gone" - Gillian Welch
"Weatherbox" - Mission of Burma
"Spill yer lungs" - Julie Doiron
"AA warm breeze" - Thee Oh Sees
"Seasons (waiting on you)" - Future Islands
"Sun structures" - Temples "Dusty rose" - Hush Pup

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Long Distance Four



This episode aired two weeks late, but it's definitely one of our best. I was in Toronto for Reading Week so Trevor took sole control of the show and used his newfound freedom to craft a playlist that was near and dear to his heart (it's all music from Ontario artists). He also called me to discuss the recent announcement of a Constantines reunion. As a big WireTap fan and an even bigger Constantines fan, I couldn't have been happier.


A Northern Chorus - "No Stations" from The Millions Too Many
100 Mile House - "Queen St." from Hollow Ponds
AroarA - "#14" from In The Pines
Sarah Harmer - "Escarpment Blues" from I'm A Mountain
Constantines - "Young Lions (acoustic)" from Too Slow for Love
Constantines - "Brother Run Them Down" from Kensington Heights
Elliott Brood - "Hold You" from Days Into Years
Magnetta Lane - "Good For" from Witchrock
By Diving Right - "No One Can Fix Me" from Organized Accidents
Broken Social Scene - "Windsurfing Nation" from Broken Social Scene
Austra - "Beat And The Pulse" from Feel It Break

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

International Women's Day

This Saturday is International Women's Day so Trevor and I thought we'd put together a playlist made up exclusively of female artists. The only exception was the show's cheeky intro, provided by Flight of the Concords (remember when they were kind of a big deal?). There was some debate about whether the track was appropriate. Eventually we agreed that it was more or less consistent with the show, given the fact that there were no women present in the recording booth; just a lot of self-aware male posturing.

My embarrassment was nearly audible, but it was soon remedied with Brooklyn funk/soul outfit Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings. From there it was smooth sailing: we began with a handful of artists from British Columbia including Kandle and her pal Louise Burns, as well as garage rock duo The Pack A.D. Next, we heard the strange grooves of Argentina's Juana Molina and marked the show's halfway point with Alsara and the Nubatones.

Taking her cue from PJ Harvey and Tori Amos, Natasha Khan (aka Bat for Lashes) gave us an inspiring piano ballad (my "torch song," apparently) about refusing to compromise. We mellowed out with a track from Marissa Nadler's excellent new album, July and revisited a CJSR staple from Edmonton's Jessica Jalbert. St. Vincent's industrial beats provided a good warm-up for an infectious track by Karol Conka, and we closed with a witty number by Vancouver's Hannah Georgas. Finally, with two minutes to go, I was able to sneak in a classic from The Breeder's 1993 album Last Splash.


"Ladies of the World" - Flight of the Concords
"We Get Along" - Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings
"Control Me" - Kandle
"Airborne" - The Pack A.D.
"Emeralds Shatter" - Louise Burns
"Ferocisimo" - Juana Molina
"Habibi Taal" - Alsara and the Nubatones
"Travelling Woman" - Bat for Lashes
"Was it a Dream" - Marissa Nadler
"Lack of a Lake" - Jessica Jalbert
"Every Tear Disappears" - St. Vincent
"Gandaia" - Karol Conka
"Shorty" - Hannah Georgas
"Divine Hammer" - The Breeders

Friday, February 21, 2014

Repeater

This week's show begins unannounced, with Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band (thanks to Chad for keeping the airwaves avant-garde in my absence). This was unplanned. I was late getting to the station, so if the grating sounds are too much for your ears, you can skip ahead to 9:30 to hear Fuguazi's "Argument." And on we go.

Highlights include Trevor's spirited defence of Buck 65's greatness (and my skepticism regarding the matter), a beautiful track from Saskatoon shoegazers, the Moas, and a rambling ballad from Sun Kil Moon's new album Benji. Sadly, Beck's track got cut off, but it's all-over the internet so you'll probably hear it eventually.



Argument - Fugazi
All the Time - The Moas
New Age Prices - Fountain
Vol de nuit - Decibelles
Talking Backwards - Real Estate
Papier carbone - Mat Vezio
Do Make Say Think - Soul & Onward
Bike for Three - Heart as Hell
Clear Soul Forces - Freq Freq (clean)
The Extremities - Dial Tones
Ben’s My Friend - Sun Kil Moon
Waking Light - Beck

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Take Me to the Land of Hell


Our second episode of the new year steals its title from Yoko Ono's 2013 release, which figured prominently in this week's playlist and book-ended another eclectic mix of hand-picked tunes. Trevor and I are still crammed into Studio B, awkwardly passing a single microphone back and forth. But we know when to celebrate our limitations and this show was no exception. I think it's safe to say that our banter is improving, even if our time management skills remain wanting. This week, we debuted some pretty exciting new tunes from heavy hitters like Chad VanGaalen, Beck, and St. Vincent, while highlighting some lesser-known gems from Rebekah Higgs, Anamai, and Jom Comyn.



"Bad Dancer" - Yoko Ono Plastic Band
"Where Are You?" - Chad VanGaalen
"Sadlands" - Rebekah Higgs
"Crystal Ball" - Grimes
"Digital Witness" - St. Vincent
"My Jacket" - Josh Martinez
"Rimbaud Eyes" - Dum Dum Girls
"Alter Coals" - Anamai
"Blue Moon" - Beck
"Cool Room" - Jom Comyn
"Mutant Message" - By Divine Right
"Winter Park, CO" - Pat LePoidevin
"Forgiven/Forgotten" - Angel Olsen
"Shine, Shine" - Yoko Ono Plastic Band

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Deja Vu

And we're back, for the most part. It's been just over a month since 2013's year-end music marathon. Dyck's Pycks in 2014 will air Tuesday afternoons at 2pm.

Yes, changes aplenty. Starting with this show, your favourite regular guest, Trevor, will be joining me in the studio and splitting the song selections. So this was a bit of an experimental show, and we were both a little rusty from the extended holiday break. We prerecorded the whole thing the other night in Studio B, which isn't exactly the most well-equiped space for a multi-host show (you'll hear why).

We're also working on a new name for the show, hopefully something with a comparable tone of vulgarity; but for now Dyck's Pycks will just have to do.

Deja Vu - Cibo Matto
Shibboleth - Stephen Malkmus
Don't wannabe / loved by you - Julie Doiron
Joyride - Dog Day
Clipped On - Blood Orange
Look My Way - The Extremities
Expressing Views is Obviously Illegal - Prefuse 73
My Museum Needs an Elevator - Robert Pollard
The Hazards of Sitting Beneath Palm Trees - Hayden
Turn t'es mise en crier - Bravofunken
All Thoughts Are Prey to Some Beast - Bill Callahan
Stars to Waves - Jenn Grant