Friday, 30 July 2010

Heavy MTL! \m/ (the longer version)


You may have read my (de-personalized) exclaim review, or followed Adam Wills's live blogging at hellbound.ca (or checked out his fest photos). Now here's my more rambling account of my first Heavy MTL weekend in Montreal (and repeated avoidance of full sentences).

day 0:
Road trip begins. Uneventful for the most part except for random (Mexican?) metalhead sighting at 401 rest stop. After a nap, time for a vegetarian dinner - a somewhat randomly chosen Yuan Vegetarian, an Asian veg place on St. Denis. The food was decent, the service a little inattentive, the atmosphere relaxedly posh. After a little (not really necessary) walk, pirate-themed service, loud (mostly 90s) metal and reasonably-priced drinks at Cafe Chaos.

day 1:
Up early for free continental breakfast and to join the metal hordes clambering (and clamouring) on the Metro line out to Parc Jean-Drapeau. After a minor lobster claw incident, headed into the venue for our free press wristbands, Heavy MTL neck things, and fancy laminated schedules (all of which smoothed our way no further than the other side of the security check). Arrived pretty much in line with the beginning of the opening set - to find the women's washroom already alarmingly short of toilet paper and the limited merch and food/drink options pretty expensive and well, limited.

Things picked up with Skeletonwitch, who I found nearly as entertaining as I had in Hamilton a few days before (which was quite a lot). High on Fire sounded big but looked small. Auf der Maur was barely audible at first but absolutely beautifully amazing (see the earlier reports for the Peter Steele connection). Kataklysm also sounded good but it was getting incredibly hot out and it was already time for a bit of a break. One that lasted through Fear Factory. I still love them but prefer to keep a distance so the glow of memory doesn't get doused by the dullness of current reality.

Revived long enough to get caught up in the inimitable enthusiasm of Anvil (I've had a soft spot for them ever since watching the documentary), a bit of Testament (with another refreshment break), and the beginning and end of Halford. Between some weird sound issues and another bout of heat fatigue I didn't enjoy Mastodon as much I hoped and decided to view and hear Slayer from up on the hill. Having seen Slayer many times and the Big Four movie recently it didn't seem important to be all that close. Same goes for Alice Cooper (minus the Big Four part) although it would have been neat to see his stage show up close -- the distant view and big screen close-ups didn't quite do it justice.

A little later, the fireworks going off just beyond the trees seemed symbolic of my feelings about seeing and hearing Megadeth perform Rust in Peace in full.Italic I wish Dave Mustaine's singing wasn't so visibly and audibly painful, but I'm impressed by the band's current line-up and only wish I had enough stamina for the "secret" charity show later that night. Instead we tramped across a precarious sea of crushed beer cups and aluminum bottles and joined the hot, sweaty and smelly stream of the dirty and black clad heading back into the city.

day 2:
Wanted to make it back to the Parc in time for Les Ekorchés, but when that clearly wasn't happening we decided to forego the other early bands for coffee, tea, and eventually a couple of tasty falafels from Basha (Ste-Catherine-Uqam location). Made it back to the festival site in time for Chimaira drowning out Three Inches of Blood on the side stage. Mocked a few outfits, got free, disgusting samples of Rockstar energy drink and spent a fair bit of time watching and listening from the relative comfort of the grassy slope.

Hatebreed sounded good but I still can't get fired up over them. Didn't really manage to stir up any significant appreciation until Alexisonfire. I'm never been a particular fan but I sort of get what they're doing and it was a welcome contrast to some of the more simplistic aural bombardment the afternoon had to offer. Following closely behind, Lamb of God were predictably intense and crowd-stirring. Again, I more or less understand the appeal, but I tend to like these guys best in short doses - a live set strains my attention. Mike Portnoy playing with Avenged Sevenfold was the highlight of that set, which mostly had me anxious for Rob Zombie to take over.

Zombie's performance was my Sunday highlight, hands down. I wasn't totally on board with the sound of all the material but the stage show was irresistible, as (openly) ripped off from Alice Cooper as it is. I mean, costumes and robots (including a framing Zombie's entrance on stage out of the flaming robot!) and monsters and horror film clips? He had me at the robots. After that, Korn's closing set was a complete anti-climax, despite their elaborate oil rig stage decor (which I didn't quite understand - was it an attempt at a political statement?) They sounded strong, had a loyal following in hand, and I even enjoyed the songs I know more than I expected, but I just had trouble caring after all the much more impressive performances I'd seen over the two days leading up.

We ended the night with craft beer and pizza at Le Saint-Bock and more drinks and metal with friends and new acquaintances at Les Foufounes Electriques and headed out, a little short of sleep, early Monday afternoon to return to Ontario and a vague sense of reality.

Can't wait until next year!

Wednesday, 28 July 2010

TV looks at Canada's animal rights record tonight

via Niagara Action for Animals:

Tune into Global TV tonight, July 28, at 10pm, for "Revealed: No Country for Animals" as Kevin Newman takes a look at "Canada's Real Record on Animal Rights in Canada."

If you miss the initial broadcast, apparently it will be uploaded to Global's website tomorrow.

Tuesday, 27 July 2010

Heavy MTL! \m/


Heavy MTL
Originally uploaded by kill eat exploit the weak
My first multi-day outdoor metal festival in North America.


More details to follow.

Tuesday, 13 July 2010

Rush, more concerts and reviews, and the summer of slacking

More than a month since my last post... But it's not for lack of love! It's just that time seems to be moving at an unusual rate this summer and I'm having a hard time keeping track of where it all goes. So, for the time being, here's a little recap on what I've been up to music-wise in the last several weeks and what's coming up in the near future.

On June 6 we saw Johnny Hollow open for Attrition in Toronto, though unfortunately missed Attrition's set. JH's acoustic cello opener was a particular highlight of the night.

A few weeks later, June 25 to be exact, I stumbled into a heavy gig at Casbah: Sexbeast (I'd run out of attention span by the time they came onstage) with openers The Electric Candles (who replaced their awol drummer with an ipod), SKULL (whose delightful doominess assaulted us from the back of the room) and the "amazing" and intense ViLipeNd (the band that brought me through the door in the first place).

June was a slow month compared to May. July has been quiet so far too but that changes tonight with The Creepshow playing at Casbah.
Then tomorrow night (Friday, June 16) we head to Toronto for Woods of Ypres playing with Battlesoul and The Great Collapse at The Blue Moon Pub on Queen East.
Then the noise continues Tuesday (June 20) when High On Fire roll into Casbah with Skeletonwitch and Priestess.
And if that wasn't enough... road trip to Montreal next weekend for Heavy MTL. A few highlights from the two-day fest I'm most anticipating: Melissa Auf der Maur, Rob Halford, Testament and Mastodon (all scheduled for Saturday). Full report here and at exclaim.ca to come.

I've only managed a couple new cd reviews in the past few weeks, but swing by the Exclaim site if you want to know what I thought of the new Nevermore and Witchery albums.

Last but definitely not least, if you're in need of a Rush fix (and even if you're not) you should peruse hellbound.ca for a while. If you haven't already checked out our Canada Day Rush feature be sure to have a look – we've got reviews of the new Rush documentary Beyond the Lighted Stage and an interview with directors Sam Dunn and Scot McFadyen, plus staff (and guest) picks of our favourite Rush songs and fav Rush albums. And as of today you can read Sean Palmerston's review of last night's Rush show in Toronto with photos by Adam Wills.