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Spotlight – Alert The Medic

Posted on 2014-06-26 by Bondo Posted in Spotlight

Alert The MedicArtist: Alert The Medic

Album: The Phantom Moves

Genre: Rock

Website: http://alertthemedic.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/alertthemedic

Twitter: @alertthemedic

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Rosie’s Juke Joint, aired on June 21st, 2014

Posted on 2014-06-26 by Rosie Posted in Rosie's Juke Joint

***THe #1 most listened to Canadian Blues Music Show in North Korea!!!***

Monkey Junk All Frequencies Why Are People Like That?
David Vest Roadhouse Revelation Santa Fe Steamer
David Vest Roadhouse Revelation Gone Too Far
Harpdog Brown What It IS How Come?
Harpdog Brown What It Is If Ya Wanna Grow Old
Harpdog Brown What It Is In My Younger Days
GB Roots The Key The Key
Fred Eaglesmith Tambourine What It Takes
Steve Hill Solo Recordings Vol2 Slim Chances
Steve Hill Solo Recordings Vol2 Go On
Robert Cray Band In My Soul You Move Me
John Nemeth Memphis Grease I Can’t Help Myself
Junior Wells Buddy Guy & Junior Wells Plays the Blues Messin’ With the Kid

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Spotlight – Andino Suns

Posted on 2014-06-26 by Bondo Posted in Spotlight

Andino SunsArtist: Andino Suns

Album: It’s Time To Rise

Genre: Latin/Folk Rock

Website: http://www.andinosuns.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AndinoSuns

Twitter: @AndinoSuns

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Spotlight – BadBadNotGood

Posted on 2014-06-26 by Bondo Posted in Spotlight

badbadnotgoodArtist: BadBadNotGood

Album: III

Genre: Jazz

Website: http://badbadnotgood.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BadBadNotGood

Twitter: @badbadnotgood

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Spotlight – Friendly Rich

Posted on 2014-06-26 by Bondo Posted in Spotlight

FriendlyRichArtist: FriendlyRich

Album: Bountiful

Genre: Parma Pop

Website: http://www.friendlyrich.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Friendly-Rich

Twitter: @Friendly_Rich

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Spotlight – Sleepy Driver

Posted on 2014-06-26 by Bondo Posted in Spotlight

Sleepy DriverArtist: Sleepy Driver

Album: Ignatius

Genre: Alt/Roots Rock

Website: http://sleepydriver.bandcamp.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sleepydriver

Twitter: @SleepyDriver

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Spotlight – Jay Malinowski and the Deadcoast

Posted on 2014-06-26 by Bondo Posted in Spotlight

Artist:JayMalinowski Jay Malinowski and the Deadcoast – Martel

Album: Martel

Genre: Singer/Songwriter

Website: http://jaymalinowski.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JayMalinowskiAndTheDeadcoast

Twitter: @JayMalinowski

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The Morning Madness Show- Thursday June 26

Posted on 2014-06-26 by El Posted in The Morning Madness Show

Here is todays showLOGO

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Wednesday June 25

Posted on 2014-06-25 by El Posted in The Morning Madness Show

Here is yesterdays show… sorry its late

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The Lunchbox: Adrian Park of “Diversions” on the 15th Annual Opera series

Posted on 2014-06-25 by encaf1 Posted in Diversions, The Lunchbox

LunchBox-DiversionsMusic moves you. It inspires, transmitting emotions and power without even understanding the language. That’s what opera feels like to me, but I feel like I’d really like to know more. That’s where Adrian comes in..

For the past 20 years, Adrian Park has hosted Diversions, a weekly show dedicated to highlighting great classical performances. For the last 15 years, he has also extended his show by an hour each summer to present his Opera Series, in which he plays some of his favourite operas along a theme.

Adrian joined me on the Lunchbox, and shared with me his vision of a great opera, opera as the root of all modern movie soundtracks, and a piece from his favourite opera of the season.

BONUS: Adrian also wrote an article for the blog section of CHSR. Check it out: “So, Just What Is Opera?”

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Homemade Jams 2014-06-25

Posted on 2014-06-25 by Bondo Posted in General, Homemade Jams

HJTrack Listing:

1.) Margo Margo – Beats

2.) Mike Trask and the Precious Memories – Judy Moon

3.) Josh Bravener -OCD

4.) Mike Biggar – Feels Like Now

5.) Shaun LeBlanc – Move Together

6.) This Ship – Memory (Radio Edit)

7.) In Dreams – Hologram

8.) Glory Glory – Take My Time

9.) The Band Before Time – Pow!

10.) Burning Coast – Pow!

11.) Stephen Hero – Weekend Girl Pt. 2

12.) Banokkburn – Nowhere Fast

13.) Celestial Sunrise – She Regrets Me

 

Episode 296: NEW COMICS DAY!

Posted on 2014-06-25 by MonsterMike Posted in Where Monsters Dwell
WMD 296

Listen to episode 296 now!

It’s NEW COMICS DAY this week on Where Monsters Dwell. It’s almost like they do this every week.

A lot of our favorite creators have books out this week; Mark Waid, Nick Bradshaw, Jim Zub, Dan Slott, Kel Symons, and Kurtis Wiebe are just a few of them. We’re going to dive in and tell you about them. Hell, we may have even read some of them. (Inside joke for those of you who have listened to the show.)

We’re also in countdown mode; it’s only 4 weeks until our 300th episode, hope you come along for the ride.

As always, we welcome you to participate in the show. You can post any questions or comments you may have in our Facebook group or call us at 506-452-6056.

Where Monsters Dwell is brought to you by Strange Adventures and Club Fred Grafx.

WMD gets it’s pop culture news from SciFi Mafia.

Help Support the Monsters by purchasing some of our swag: WEAR Monsters Dwell.

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Episode 296: NEW COMICS DAY!

Posted on 2014-06-25 by MonsterMike Posted in Where Monsters Dwell
WMD 296

Listen to episode 296 now!

It’s NEW COMICS DAY this week on Where Monsters Dwell. It’s almost like they do this every week.

A lot of our favorite creators have books out this week; Mark Waid, Nick Bradshaw, Jim Zub, Dan Slott, Kel Symons, and Kurtis Wiebe are just a few of them. We’re going to dive in and tell you about them. Hell, we may have even read some of them. (Inside joke for those of you who have listened to the show.)

We’re also in countdown mode; it’s only 4 weeks until our 300th episode, hope you come along for the ride.

As always, we welcome you to participate in the show. You can post any questions or comments you may have in our Facebook group or call us at 506-452-6056.

Where Monsters Dwell is brought to you by Strange Adventures and Club Fred Grafx.

WMD gets it’s pop culture news from SciFi Mafia.

Help Support the Monsters by purchasing some of our swag: WEAR Monsters Dwell.

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Homemade Jams 2014-06-24

Posted on 2014-06-25 by Bondo Posted in Homemade Jams

HJTrack Listing:

1.) Kuato – Black Horizon

2.) Joshua Van Tassel – The Sharpest Corner

3.) AA Wallace – Lipstick & Stethoscopes

4.) Ryan Hemsworth – Avec Vous

5.) Gianna Lauren – Ghosts

6.) Hey Rosetta! – Carry Me Home

7.) Hey Rosetta! – I’ve Been Asleep For A Long Long Time

8.) The Town Heroes – Rust Away

9.) Meaghan Smith – Have A Heart

10.) Cedric Noel – Count You Out

11.) RocketRocketShip – Tell Me What You’re Waiting For

12.) Alert The Medic – Hanna and the Ocean

13.) Like A Motorcycle – Georgia

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Against The Mat – June 18th, 2014

Posted on 2014-06-25 by AgainstTheMat Posted in Against The Mat!

We were all in this week for a quick rundown of Raw, offered some results from TNA’s Slammiversary PPV, reminded you kind folk that Hacksaw Jim Duggan is coming to Fredericton on July 12th, and had a disappointing ending to the finisherIt no go ding-ding-ding!.

Download/Stream the latest episode or Subscribe to our podcast.

Filed under: Uncategorized

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The Lunchbox: Interview with Len Falkenstein, Jacob Martin and John Ball of Bard In The Barracks’ “Hamlet”

Posted on 2014-06-24 by encaf1 Posted in The Lunchbox

LunchBox-BardInTheBarracks-HamletI can’t help it: I love live theatre.

Truth be told, I probably love all forms of storytelling, but live theatre is truly magical. Movies try to be exact in their representation, where the written word is evocative. In the middle is live theatre, where there is some precise and immediate representation, but once caught up in the story, the world comes alive, the people transform into their characters, the rest of the world fades away to insignificance.

Now imagine doing that outdoors, and surrounding your audience with a landscape on which actors move in every dimension.

That’s my experience with Bard In The Barracks, the local theatre company which has for several years transformed works of the immortal English Bard, William Shakespeare, into a whole new experience.

Not ones to rest on their laurels, they are at it again, this time taking the brooding and tragic Hamlet and recasting it amongst a travelling band of itinerant workers. I had the chance to talk with Len Falkenstein (director/writer/artist director), Jacob Martin (actor/Hamlet) and John Ball (actor/Polonius) and discuss the challenges and appeals to performing one of the best known Shakespearean plays, the ideas of how they have transformed and interpreted the work, as well as hear the actors run through one of the scenes as a teaser.

Bard In The Barracks‘ production of Hamlet opens July 25 and runs until July 6, nestled in Odell Park. Be sure to arrive early, and try to bring something comfortable to sit on the ground with.

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So just what is opera?

Posted on 2014-06-24 by Nuchtchas Posted in Diversions, Special Events, Specialty

Screen shot 2014-06-24 at 3.26.15 PMSo just what is opera?

(by Adrian Park)

 

Opera, from the Italian for ‘the works’, is probably the most completely integrated form of classical music – and not just music, but also drama and shear spectacle, and yet exactly ‘what is an opera’ is a question not easy to answer.  Here, for what it’s worth is my humble opinion.

Operas vary enormously in style, length and quality – of all classical music forms it probably has the highest rate of redundancy, with thousands having been composed over the last 400 years and fallen by the wayside (it has always been and remains a high-risk art form – expensive to produce with no guarantee of success at the box office).  I’ll admit to a personal bias here – my own tastes run to an eclectic mix of 19th century ‘greats’ and not so greats (Ethel Smyth’s ‘The Wreckers’ anyone?), and many more 20th century (even 21st century) pieces.  I have yet to sit through a Handel opera and not almost lose the will to live after 30 minutes, and while I can appreciate the importance of Berg’s Wozzeck in the history of 20th century opera, and realize an intense and original genius is at work, sitting through the entire piece is an ordeal.

What unifies the art form from Monteverdi’s Orfeo through to say Thomas Ades’ The Tempest or John Adams’ Nixon in China (which I will admit was one of the most engrossing pieces of music and drama I have ever sat through)?  Simply put, it is the marriage of drama and music, such that neither could exist without the other.  The music underpins the drama, comments on it, offers insights into it (particularly in revealing the state of mind of the participants – she’s singing one thing in the lyrics, but the music is saying something else entirely).

Structure lies at the heart of this art form.  Opera is not just a play interrupted by pretty songs or spectacular choruses – the music evolves and the themes relate to each other in such a way as to drive the drama forward.  The music expresses something that mere words cannot.  Music and words in opera generally come together in three ways – recitative where the characters render dialogue in a sing-song fashion accompanied by music, arias where one or more characters stop the show with a more or less spectacular display of virtuosity generally forming an important plot point, quite often fulfilling the same role as soliliquy in drama, and ensemble choruses where much, if not all the cast get in on the action with vocal pyrotechnics.  There may also be spoken lines with no music, and various pieces that are more than an aria, but less than an ensemble piece, such as duets, trios, quartets and such like.

Arias are the bits that generally get selected for recordings of highlights from operas, recordings illustrating the prowess of particular artists, and for live recitals by singers.  In Handel’s day they were often written with a particular singer in mind, and certain singers demanded that favorite arias be incorporated in productions of operas before they would agree to perform at all (whether or not the aria had anything to do with the production in question).  Here, the aria was pure vocal spectacle, and often followed the da capo formula – known as ABA, where A is one theme, followed by B, a second theme, wrapped up with a highly elaborate repetition of the first theme …. and with encores they could go on, and on, and on….

This somewhat chaotic world of opera – where performers with big names dominated the stage – started to fade in the late 18th century, after the Austrian composer, Christoff Gluck, suggested reforms.  Anything not relevant to the story was abolished (largely) and arias for shear spectacle were the first victim (dance episodes were another).  In the years that followed opera entered a golden age served by such musical giants as Mozart and Beethoven, producing some of the first operas that held the stage from their birth into modern times (the revival of Handel’s and earlier operas has only occurred during the last 40 years).  These were also the years when Italian opera (the original), French opera and German opera began to go their seperate ways.  In all three traditions though, new dramatic elements entered opera.  Up to and including the operas by Gluck plots tended to come from ancient mythology, or the occasional Biblical story – with Mozart, Beethoven and then Rossini, composers turned to setting non-classical stories, even subjects by contemporary authors.

What happened next revolves around the larger-than-life figures of Richard Wagner in Germany and Giuseppe Verdi in Italy.  Each of these innovators, in very different ways, started developing a form of sung-through opera in which the distinction between recitative, aria, choruses, etc, blurred or vanished.  Arias still existed, but they no longer paused the action, they were part of it.  Wagner had a penchant for mythic subject matter, but Verdi tended to go for historical dramas or even Shakespeare.  Italian and French composers later in the 19th century, influenced by the verismo movement in theatre,went further and introduced modern subjects, often with a hint (or even more than a hint) of scandal.  One definition of a great 19th century opera is: ‘just the right balance of sex and violence, with a good body count in the last act’ – some slaughtered the entire cast in the finale (witness Saint-Säens Samson et Dalila or Meyerbeer’s Le prophete – Wagner, of course, went one step further, destroying the entire cast – except the Rhine Maidens – as well as heaven and earth at the end of Die Götterdammerüng), heroines also had a tendency to expire pitifully in the last act.

From Monteverdi to the late 19th century composers, such as Puccini, opera was a contemporary art-from.  Audiences demanded new productions and new compositions (as in all classical music up to the 1920s).  A few old war-horses were revived regularly, but the vast majority of operas that saw the stage in any major opera house most years were new works.  But the revolution that hit classical music generally early in the 20th century did not leave opera unscathed – the revolution brought on by the work of Schoenberg, Berg and Webern, and also by Stravinsky, fundamentally changed the nature of the beast.  Many composers eschewed opera entirely as a 19th century relic of the old way of doing things, and new operas in the revolutionary style did not grab the imagination of mass audiences in the same way the productions of the earlier generation had.  Opera houses came to be dominated by revivals of the old favorites, and those which continued to stage new works were considered daring (or well-subsidized).  At the same time costs began to escalate, and what had always been an expensive art-form to stage came to require some form of subsidy (either from the state or philanthropists with deep pockets) to survive.  In such a climate, risk-taking with new productions was not encouraged.

And yet, the composing and staging of new operas did not entirely vanish.  Composers were not as prolific as they had been in earlier times, but some composers demonstrated that an audience for opera, even modern opera, still existed.  Now, of course, earnings from the box office could be augmented by recordings – especially after vinyl LPs appeared in the later 1950s making it practical to record an entire opera in 30 minute chunks – by 1964 even Wagner’s gargantuan four-part Des Ring der Nibelungen has appeared on disk.  Broadcast royalties from radio and TV did not hurt a bit either.  With the ending of the strangehold academic post-serialism had on classical music from the 1940s through to the late 1980s, opera has even re-emerged with fresh vigor.  Composers like John Adams, Philip Glass, Thomas Ades, even Hans Werner Henze, have refreshed the genre.

So, where to begin if you are a novice?  First of all ignore the snobs – if you sat through the recent film of Les Miserables and enjoyed and were moved by it – guess what?  It’s an opera in all but name.  Beethoven’s Fidelio and most Mozart’s operas have more spoken dialogue.   The themes of Valjean’s soliliquy at the end of the prologue re-emerge in Javert’s big arias ‘Stars’ and the monologue before his suicide, Eponine’s heart-broken ‘On My Own’ revisits Fantine’s show-stopping ‘I Dreamed a Dream,’ and the ensemble piece ‘One More Day’ at the end of the second act pulls them all together with the revolutionaries’ rousing anthems. Sat through Evita, Chess or The Phantom of the Opera ?…… you get the idea.  Purist will always think of such things as ‘stage musicals’ – but they display the characteristics I listed earlier (whether or not they are ‘great opera’ is a different matter entirely).  Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess was produced as a stage musical with only spoken dialogue from its premier in 1936 until 1968, when the complete sung-through version was staged for a memorial concert for Martin Luther King.  The music is integrated so that themes evolve and relate to each other, and they are not just aural wall-paper, the music enhances and propels the drama along.  You could even make a good case for West Side Story … honestly.

The usual list of ‘opera for beginners’ goes something like this …. La bohéme (and incidentally Rent is just a modern take on the same plot), Carmen, and I would add Otello.  Well, they are OK as far as they go, but why restrict yourself?  The psychodrama of Wozzeck may draw you in completely and Handel’s operas may delight you – the political passion in Henze’s We Shall Come to the River or Blitzstein’s The Crade Shall Rock may entrance you completely.  But do see an opera – don’t just buy a CD set or down-load tracks and expect to experience the whole thing.  Increasingly common productions on DVD are better – but an opera on stage is not to be missed.  And there is the rub – it is expensive – both tickets and the cost of getting to Montréal, Toronto, Boston or New York – accommodation, etc, and the end result is not much change from $800 (mind you, how many big name music concerts cost less than $150 these days, plus travel and accommodation?).

The New York Metropolitan Opera changed the game some ten years ago by arranging live broadcasts of some of its productions through co-operating cinemas (Cineplex in eastern Canada).  With high-definition projection and top quality stereo sound the result is probably the closest thing available to actually being there.  Tickets are $24 – add a zero and that might get you in the front door at the Met itself with a seat in the nose-bleed gallery behind a pillar.  In other words, the cost of a new CD, or three drinks and cover at your favorite watering hole is involved.  The seasons running from October to May consist of 12 operas (12 live broadcasts and 12 encore repeats) with the usual mix – each season will generally include at least one Puccini, Verdi and Wagner production, a couple of bel canto operas (Rossini, Bellini, Donizetti), at least one Mozart item, and then generally a couple of modern operas.  At least one new opera used to be a rule, but financial constraints since 2008 have put dampers on this aspect of all opera house programs.  The Berlin Opera House and London’s Covent Garden have got in on this act too, and they can be found on-line in North America.  Some of the world’s best opera productions are available as never before.  So take the plunge – be adventurous – don’t be afraid to dislike something.  I sat through the Met’s production of Wagner’s Ring (OK, that’s 16 hours of my life I’ll never get back) in Robert Lepage’s stunning staging.  Now, I’ll admit, part of the attraction is the novelty of being in a crowd where I’m one of the youngsters,but in Die Walküre three 19-20 year-olds sat in the same row (with ballcaps and T-shirts and bags of popcorn) and had the stamina for the full six hours.  After the Ride of the Walküres one of them muttered ‘s**t, that was cool!’ …… and he was right!

Diversions: 15th Summer Festival of Opera.

Every year on Sundays from the Canada Day Weekend to Labour Day ‘Diversions’ on CHSRfm puts on a Summer Festival of Opera – 9 complete operas in recordings that vary from examples from the archives to modern productions.  This year is the 150th anniversary of the birth of Richard Strauss and to mark this two of his operas, Salomé and Elektra will be broadcast.  The other seven will be opera with a Russian flavour, from Mussorgsky’s Boris Godunov, through Shostakovich’s Lady Macbeth of Mtsenk, and Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin, to Kabalevsky’s Colas Breugnon.  It’s not quite opera live, but then it won’t require a second mortgage ….. just tune into ‘Diversions’ on CHSRfm 97.9 Sundays at 4:00pm.

Anything Goes 2014-06-24

Posted on 2014-06-24 by Bondo Posted in Anything Goes

AGTrack Listing:

1.) Timbuktu – Spruce Goose

2.) Mike Boyd – I get Around

3.) Xprime – My Fair Lady

4.) Emm Gryner – Bright Spot

4.) Foxes – Echo

5.) Sleepy Driver – I Know You Know I Know

6.) The Harpoonist & the Axe Murderer – A Real Fine Noise

7.) Jack White – I Think I Found The Culprit

8.) The Schomberg Fair – I Won’t Be Afriad

9.) Gloryhound – Loaded Gun

10.) Amberwood – Now & Then

11.) Life In Vacuum – Seven

12.) Kids Eat Crayons – Flouter

13.) Kids Eat Crayons – Winston Contemplates A Biology Lesson

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Homemade Jams 2014-06-23

Posted on 2014-06-23 by Bondo Posted in Homemade Jams

HJTrack Listing:

1.) Gloryhound – Loaded Gun

2.) Gloryhound – Let You Down Again

3.) Little You Little Me – Zephyr

4.) Little You Little Me – Something

5.) Maiden Names – Easy Money

6.) The Motorleague – Litany for the Completely Forgettable

7.) The Motorleague – Every Man Needs A Cape Breton

8.) Kate Graves interviews The Brook

9.) Nap Eyes – Dark Creedence

10.) Nap Eyes – The Night Of The First Show

CHSR 97.9FM Album Chart – June 15, 2014 to June 21, 2014

Posted on 2014-06-23 by Bondo Posted in Charting, General

CHARTJune15June21BOLD = New to CHSR Playbox

Local

AA Wallace – Disambiguation

Adam Baldwin – Adam Baldwin

Adam Washburn – Beautiful Things

Alert The Medic – The Phantom Moves

Andy Brown – Tinman

Anna Janelle – So Long at the Fair

Ashley Condon – This Great Compromise

Billie Dre and the Poor Boys – Garlic Fingers

Caravan – Caravan

Carleton Stone – Draws Blood

Cavern/Anthesis – Cavern/Anthesis

Celestial Sunrise – Candle Power

Chris Picco – The Beach

Coach Longlegs – Coach Longlegs

Construction & Destruction – Dark Lark

Cory Paul Hill – Where We Live

Cousins – The Halls of Wickwire

Craft Singles – Vol 3 & 4

CROSSS – Obsidian Spectre

David Myles – In The Nighttime

Dennis Ellsworth – Hazy Sunshine

Diablo Strange – Sordid Tales

Dog Day – Fade Out

Don Brownrigg – It Takes All Kinds To Make This World, I Find

Earthbound Trio – Lettuce Turnip the Beet

Elephant Skeletons – Zazzerzaz Vol II

From All Sides – Kindred Souls & Complete Strangers

Foxwitches – Chapter One

Genre – No Stopping

Gianna Lauren – On Personhood

Gloryhound – Loaded Gun

Gordie MacKeeman and his Rhythm Boys – Pickin’ N Clickin’

Green & Gold – The Body Knows

Gypsophilia – Horska

Hero’s Last Rite – The Mirror’s Face

Jaguar Knight – Jaguar party Edits Vol. 1

Jayde Hunter – Dear God

Jessie Brown – Jesse Brown

Jessie Brown and the Black Divine – Act II: Decisions

Jessica Rhaye – Far Gone Lullabies

Jessy Ashfield – What We Leave Behind

John Jerome and the Congregation – Ask Not What I Can Do For You, but What We Can Do Together

Josh Bravener – Josh Bravener

Josh Sangster – This Is A Demonstration

Joshua Van Tassel – Dream Date

Keegan Dobbelsteyn – Come Spring

Kickin’ Krotch – Kickin’ Krotch

Kim Harris – Only The Mighty

Kim Wempe – Coalition

Kuato – The Great Upheaval

Kyle Mischiek – Fallin’ In Deep

Last Call Chernobyl – Set Adrift

Leeboy – Better Man Blues

Like a Motorcycle – Motorpool

Like A Motorcycle – Stay Single

Little You Little Me – What Have You Been Doing With Yer Life

Lovestorm – Free to Love

Lucas Hicks – The Coast/Bad News

Magnolia – Magnolia

Matt Andersen – Weightless

Meaghan Blanchard – She’s Gonna Fly

Meaghan Smith – Have a Heart

Mike Bochoff – Start ‘Em Young

Mike Boyd – …Note The Sarcasm

Mike Bravener – Covern’ Hank

Molly Thomason – Columbus Field

Motherhood – Diamonds & Gold

Nap Eyes – Whine of the Mystic

Neil Conway – Songs For Topical Use

Old Man Luedecke – I Never Sang Before I Met You

Owen Steel & the Sad Turns – Time Machine Blues

Paper Lions – My Friends

Paula Tozer – Blue Muse

Quiet Parade – Old Haunts

Rebekah Higgs – Sha La La

Redwood Fields – Accidentals

Ross Neilsen Band – Resurrection

Ryan Hemsworth – Guilt Trips

Ryan Hillier – Midnight Revelation

Sanktuary – Something Fierce

Scientists of Sound – Electric Scissors

Scott Nicks – Gat Do

Seventh Stone – Voodoo Dolls and the Art of Misdirection

Shaun Leblanc – Kaleidoscope

Sherman Downey and the Ambiguous Case – The Sun In Your Eyes

Sissy & the Hobos – Sissy & the Hobos

Sleepy Driver – Ignatius

Slowcoaster – The Girls Downtown

Spinesplitter – Scourge of the Living

The Belle Comedians – Charlotte

The Burning Hell – People

The Danks – Gank

The Gordie Sampson Songcamp – The Gordie Sampson Songcamp

The Green Lung Grinders – Horny, Hungry, Hungover

The Heavy Blinkers – Health

The Meds – South America

The Motorleague – Acknowledge, Acknowledge

The Odd Bit – The Odd Bit

The Olympic Symphonium – Chance To Fate

The Stanfields – For King and Country

The Town Heroes – Sunday Movies

This Ship – All The Stars and Elements

This Ship – What’s Left to Burn

Uaxyacac – Double Seeker

Verse The Sun – And Moon

Vogue Dots – Toska

Walrus – Glam Returns

Wet Denim – Wet Denim

Wooden Wives – Pilot to Gunner

Young Manics – Solidarity Songs

Zac Crouse – Paddle To The Ocean

CANCON

001 – Emm Gryner – Torrential

002 – Bry Webb – Free Will

003 – Chromeo – White Women

004 – Dearly Beloved – Enduro

005 – Ray LaMontagne – Supernova

006 – Timber Timbre – Hot Dreams

007 – City Walls – Engines

008 – Language Arts – Wonderkind

009 – Sound Of Lions – Take Me With You

010 – Gen Gorman – Big Serf

011 – International Zombies of Love – You Heard This Wish

012 – Motel Raphael – Cable TV

013 – Chad Vangaalen – Shrink Dust

014 – The Franklin Electric – This Is How I Let You Down

015 – David Vest – Roadhouse Revelation

016 – Johnny Cox – Thin Blue Line

017 – Thus Owls – Turning Rocks

018 – The Frolics – Sippin’ Lemonade

019 – The Basement Paintings – Time Lapse City

020 – Fred Eaglesmith – Tambourine

021 – Melissa Payne – High and Dry

022 – Friendly Rich – Bountiful

023 – Joal Kamps – Heads is East, Tails is West

024 – Whitehorse – Éphémère sans repère

025 – BMBSHL – BMBSHL

026 – Matthew Barber – Big Romance

027 – The Damn Truth – Get With You

028 – The Harpoonist & The Axe Murderer – A Real Fine Mess

029 – Hands and Teeth – Before the Light

030 – BadBadNotGood – III

031 – Fuzz Kings – Re Turn Of The Century

032 – Andino Suns – It’s Time To Rise

033 – Steve Strongman – Let Me Prove It To You

034 – Brandon Isaak – Here On Earth

035 – Les Deuxluxes – Traitement Deuxluxe

036 – Young Doctors In Love – World’s Greatest Rock n’ Roll Band

037 – Colleen Rennison – See The Sky About To Rain

038 – Mike Janzen Trio – Metronome

039 – Young Magic – Breathing Statues

040 – The Planet Smashers – Mixed Messages

041 – Young Liars – Night Window

042 – Mark Mills – Triple Fire Sign

043 – Weaves – Weaves

044 – HLDN – In The Stars

045 – Cornell Kinderknecht and Martin McCall – Dreamtime

046 – Pink Moth – Eclipsed

047 – Odonis Odonis – hard Boiled Soft Boiled

048 – The Lovelocks – The Lovelocks

049 – Life In Vacuum – 5

050 – Wake Owl – The Private World Of Paradise

051 – Radio Radio – EJ Feel Zoo

052 – Philippe B – Ornithologie, La Nuit

053 – Library Voices – For John

054 – Pete Werner – Messing Up My Mind

055 – Royal Tusk – Mountain

056 – Jeremy Fisher – The Lemon Squeeze

057 – No Place For Heroes – Replug Me In, Please

058 – Timbuktu – How Huge: The Legend Of Howard Huge

059 – The Schomberg Fair – I Won’t Be Afraid

060 – Secret Broadcast – Filthy Souls

061 – Xprime – The Album

062 – Bidiniband – The Motherland

063 – Pif Paf Hangover – Curry Love

064 – Amberwood – Now and Then

065 – Unsacred Seed – Frontiers

066 – Reuben and the Dark – Funeral Sky

067 – Owen Pallett – In Conflict

068 – Kids Eat Crayons – Dogs At Play Among The Ruins

069 – Night Committee – Heaven

International

001 – SOHN – Tremors

002 – Kavita Shah – Visions

003 – Mø – No Mythologies To Follow

004 – Warpaint – Warpaint

005 – Roll The Tanks – Broke Til Midnight

006 – Lykke Li – I Never Learn

007 – The Horrors – Luminous

008 – Royal Blood – Out of the Black

009 – Mia Dyson – Idyllwild

010 – Young the Giant – Mind Over Matter

011 – The Black Keys – Turn Blue

012 – Clear Plastic Masks – Being There

013 – James VIncent McMorrow – Post Tropical

014 – Elliphant – Look Like You Love It

015 – Broken Bells – After The Disco

016 – Wagons – Acid Rain & Sugar Cane

017 – Tune-Yard – Nikki Nack

018 – Birdy – Fire Within

019 – Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings – Give The People What They Want

020 – Foxes – Glorious

021 – Chet Faker – Built On Glass

022 – The Orwells – Disgraceland

023 – Brooke Candy – Opulence

024 – Jack White – Lazaretto

025 – Rush Midnight – Rush Midnight

026 – Twin Forks – Twin Forks

027 – The Jezabels – The Brink

028 – Glass Towers – Halcyon Days

029 – Ju-Taun – By The River

030 – Foster The People – Supermodel

031 – Kongos – Lunatic

032 – Rival Sons – Great Western Valkyrie

033 – DWNTWN – DWNTWN

034 – Augustana – Ash and Ember

035 – The Bamboos – Fever in the Road

036 – Arc Iris – Arc Iris

037 – Kaiser Chiefs – Education, Education, Education & War

038 – Deleted Scenes – Lithium Burn

039 – Chuck E. Weiss – Red Bean and Weiss

 

Kate Graves Interviews The Brook

Posted on 2014-06-23 by Bondo Posted in Anything Goes

The BrookOn June 23, 2014 Kate Graves had the chance to chat with The Brook while they were in town on tour. Listen in!

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Kate Graves Interviews Three Lions

Posted on 2014-06-23 by Bondo Posted in Anything Goes

3lionspicOn June 17, 2014 Kate Graves had the chance to interview the new UK band Three Lions. Listen in!

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Kate Graves Interviews Papermaps

Posted on 2014-06-23 by Bondo Posted in Anything Goes

PapermapsOn June 19, 2014 Kate Graves had the chance to chat with Ontario band Papermaps! Listen in to the conversation.

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RFYL Episode: ThankYou

Posted on 2014-06-20 by Matt Nightingale Posted in Run For Your Life!

Run For Your Life! – the psychobilly rock show of zombie sharks

Playlist:

Psychostick – The Hunger Within 
MACHETE – Make My Day
Diablo Strange – Swine
Glory Owl – Shelter
Sumo Cyco – My Name Is Rock n’ Roll
Bobaflex – Wading Through The Dark
Sandveiss – The Bomb
Parasol Caravan – Supernova
Beneath the Grid Music – Hearts Under Fire – We’ve Come Too Far To Live In The Past
The Holy Snappers – Ain’t Got A Dollar
We Hunt Buffalo – Telepathic Eyes
The StandStills – Gone

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Homemade Jams 2014-06-20

Posted on 2014-06-20 by Bondo Posted in Homemade Jams

HJTrack Listing:

1.) The Brood – All Debit No Credit

2.) Keegan Dobbelsteyn – Spinning

3.) Mom, Can You Come Get Me – Brunch Over Rhinestone

4.) Jayde Hunter – Dear God

5.) Les Hay Babies – Fil de Telephone

6.) Sleepy Driver – Down To The River

7.) Mike Bochoff – Ishmael

8.) Redwood Fields – The Runaway Always

9.) Little You Little Me – Yer Skin

10.) The Meds- Dial Tones

11.) Walrus – Glam Returns

12.) Monomyth – Trash Day

13.) The Stogies – Skeleton Crew

14.) Kickin’ Krotch – Envious

 

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