Showing posts with label Feist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Feist. Show all posts

Friday, July 21, 2006

Dancing in the dusk

Feist's performance blended quite easily with Jason Collett's - a surprising number of people were on stage for both shows. Compared to her Capital Music Hall performance, I thought she was more controlled; there was less guitar fuzz, though her bouncy personality shone through. As before she looked smashing in white, prompting one audience member to yell that even her guitar tuning was sexy. "Thanks," said Julian Brown "but I'm not playing the guitar right now." A droll response which brought some chuckles since the guitarist and bassist isn't exactly the epitome of masculine beauty.

The lovely Leslie.





Bryden Baird toots his own horn.



Apostle of Hustle Julian mirrors the motion.



Shoot 'em up action!



Jason Collett in the least-surprising guest appearance ever. He didn't try to play the drums, though.



Alas I have no good pictures of drummer Jesse or Paso Mino guitarist Afie, but you get the idea.

Sunday, July 09, 2006

Bluesfest: Day Two

The Asylum Street Spankers got the second day of my Bluesfest off to a raucous start - they had far more songs about beer and sex than I expected; I don't think I've ever seen a rubber chicken used as a musical instrument before, either.



They were followed by Black Merda. Unfortunately it took them a little while to hit their stride. I don't think the audience ever warmed to them - in fact, it was unresponsive to the point of churlishness.





I told myself yesterday I should go and see Otis Taylor perform. I did, and was well-rewarded with a truly kicking show. Here he is with mandolinist Nick Amodeo and his daughter Cassie.



Lead guitarist Craig Hadley.



They were followed by The Deadstring Brothers. They cite Exile on Main Street and Gram Parsons as influences, and that's the case almost to a T.



After that, I went home for pizza, a quick nap, and a cup of tea. I returned to the MBNA Stage to see Jason Collett and Feist ... they probably should have been billed as one act, because the performances were heavily intertwined with everyone from both acts on stage during each other's sets.



Feist accomplice Bryden Baird adds some horn ... you can also see Julian Brown at right.



Feist came on stage to sing and grab the flower from Jason's breast pocket. Later she tried her hand at the drums.



Later still, she put on a stunning set of her own.



Some singalong action from some of her band (drummer Jesse Baird and Julian Brown of Apostle of Hustle) and Paso Mino's Afie Jurvanen.



She also previewed several songs from her next album, so it was a treat all around.

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Feist and last and always

My plan last Thursday was too wrap things up at work, zip home to eat dinner, then dash over to the Capital Music Hall to see Feist. While I handled the zipping, eating and dashing well enough, wrapping things up at work proved a little more troublesome. By the time I got there, about two hours later than I had planned, Peter Elkas had come and gone and Paso Mino was down to their last couple of songs.
This caused me a few problems picture wise - every other show at the Capital Music Hall I've managed to snag a place in the front row; this time around I was one of the last people to arrive. As you'd expect of a woman who recently won two Junos on the strength of her reputation-making sophomore album, Let It Die, Feist easily sold out the 1,000-person capacity Capital Music Hall, and all of them were between me and the stage when I arrived. Thus, this entry is long on text and short on pictures (all five of which are crap, anyway, so no harm there).
Anyway, the last few songs from Paso Mino sounded good. I saw them provide backing duties for folk-rocker Jason Collett at Ottawa'’s Bluesfest in the summer of 2005. At the Capital they sounded like hazy, fertile Americana and drew a good crowd response.

You can sort of make them out ...



The audience was super-keen to see Feist, and as her expected arrival on stage drew nie just about everyone who wandered on (sound people, guitar techs, Paso Mino members retrieving their gear) drew expectant yells.
Feist has a diverse set of influences, most of which emerged on stage. Her first band, Placebo, had their start as an opening act for the Ramones. Since then she'’s performed with Toronto rockers By Divine Right and Broken Social Scene. She'’s roomed and recorded with smut-rapper Peaches and hip hop production ace Chilly Gonzales. She'’s sung with the Kings of Convenience and Jane Birkin.
Her sophomore album blended chansons, bossa nova and indie rock, and included songs by Francois Hardy, The Bee Gees and Ron Sexsmith, among others.The result of this melting pot is the Left Bank'’s answer to Kate Bush, a woman who can make a garage rock riff sound like a flamenco lick.
Her star has risen far in Canada, and there was a roar of approval when she bounded on stage wearing tight white slacks and matching shirt-jacket, very little of which can be made out in this picture:



She performed her first song a cappella, singing into one microphone, looping the result and singing over it. She then picked up her Guild semi-hollowbody guitar for a more rocking tune before summoning her backing trio to flesh out her songs with a wide variety of instruments: Drums, vibraphone, French horn, bass, guitar and a small and cheesy synth gave her music a far more robust sound than it had on record, but her aching croon still conveyed their melancholy heart.



After a few tunes with her backing band, she sent them off and switched to a parlour acoustic for a few solo songs, including some from the album she intends to start recording in a month'’s time.



Feist was an active stage presence; shaking her past-the-shoulders shaggy '‘do, swinging her guitar during her all-guns-blazing version of Sexsmith'’s Secret Heart; shadowboxing and miming tears while the audience sung the chorus to Fighting Back the Tears. She also invited a couple up on stage to slow-dance, shushed some chatty show-goers during an encore of Intuition and raised the roof with her cover of the Bee Gees'’ Inside and Out.

At the end of the show various members of Peter Elkas' band (including Alanna Stuart) and Paso Mino came out to sing along.



One more cruddy picture ...



I'm definitely looking forward to her next album.