
By Liem Vu
Besides Toronto’s hometown heroes Broken Social Scene, many homegrown bands have become siphoned into indie obscurity. The defining trait of ‘indieness’ that once brought hopeful prospects of reaching the record label promise land soon deteriorates as blog buzz bands an equivalent to yester-year’s one hit wonders.
With filesharing, recession-era meltdowns and the thriving appeal of auto-tune (Sorry, Jay-Z, looks like your declaration of auto-tune’s death may only be in the U.S.), it’s hard not to get jaded when your favourite indie artists don’t get the recognition they deserve beyond the firewalls of the blogosphere.
A little over a year ago I stumbled upon the MySpace for The Framework, a then-unsigned, Toronto-based New Wave/Rock outfit with a synth appeal like no other. With melodic hooks, infectious guitar riffs, killer vocals and stadium-worthy instrumentation, I reached out to them for an interview for a local music e-zine I used to work for.
At the time, they had yet to be signed to Last Gang Records but with an EP-in-tow and a 3rd place ranking in Mix 99.9’s Radiostar contest, they had already worked tirelessly to become regulars on the Toronto live music circuit.
Having previously performed as stripped down, solo-artists (guitarist Chris Graham, keyboard player Rayanne Lepieszo, and lead singer Ryan Isojima aka Chisato Jackson), 2006 marked the year that The Framework became the serendipitous collective that we see today. Well, three-quarters of it, anyways (Bassist Scott Winter and drummer Tobias Smith would join shortly thereafter).
Last Friday, The Framework graced the tiny stage at the El Mocambo for the CD Release of their debut LP, Before Tonight. But while the muted interior of the El Mo ill-compared to previous gigs (i.e. The Mod Club), the energy was palpable as family, friends, and fans of The Framework celebrated the momentous evening that included a #3 ranking on MuchMoreMusic’s Top 10 Countdown.
Although The Framework have toured like clockwork, they showed no sense of complacency as they kicked off the festivities with their first single, “Always Left Behind”, an anthemic tune with an effervescent framework of synths, guitar virtuosity and Jeff Bucklian-resonance from Isojima’s vocals.
“The CD Release show was super exciting for us because we got to debut our whole record for a live audience for the first time…The energy of the crowd was off the hook and we as a band totally fed off of that, so it was a really fun time being on stage. It felt like one big party because because both us as a band and the crowd were having a great time,” explains Framework frontman Ryan Isojima.
With frenetic dance moves and unparalleled charisma, Isojima rarely stopped for a breather during the little over an hour set as he busted out his Brit-Rock inspired swagger. Oftentimes stepping down the small stage and singing to and around the audience, my friend and photographer, Matt C., whispered (well, shouted) to me that it was like a musical marriage had happened between Maximo Park and Jeff Buckley. During “Wasted”, “We Are The Trend”, and “Everything’s Gone”, Chris Graham took to the lead vocals with an equally compelling yet wholly differential energy as he sung with a endearingly coy smile that spoke both of pride but of humility and appreciation for being in that moment.
“I think Chris’ smile onstage really represents what we were all feeling that night. We’re just really happy that people finally get to hear our new record,” says Isojima.
And happy they were, as concertgoers displayed intermittent epileptic bursts of uninhibited dance moves. Unlike many concerts where looking cool is an unspoken rule that creates mass head bobs and chatter, The Framework’s feel good, radio friendly, and positive vibes even caused my photographer to occasionally dive into random spurts of hip-shaking euphoria.
Synth-player Rayanne Lepieszo, stayed stoic and still for most of the set with intermittent of head-bobbing action. But her fierce energy played well against Isojima and the other band members who, as corny as it may sound, fit into the puzzle piece of what makes The Framework, an astounding live band regardless of venue.
With the humidex in the venue rising from jumping bodies, to the delight of The Cure fans, the quartet belted out their own rendition of “Just Like Heaven.” Ending their set with an upcoming b-side, “Into the Sun”, The Framework humbly thanked the crowd as most of the band went to greet fans, family, and friends alike.
Before tonight, many people didn’t know about the band but if the glossy-eyed fella clutching a Framework album beside me was any indication, The Framework have just begun to set the groundwork for something much larger.
Tags: CD releases, Concerts, the framework
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Last Friday night Detroit indie-punk heroes The Von Bondies rolled into Lee’s Palace like a truck full of fireworks in the middle of a thunderstorm. Yes, their 60 minute show was pretty much that intense. And yes, you missed it again. Damnit, Charlie, you gotta start coming out to these things!
Tags: concert reviews, von bondies
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The line-up for the 32nd edition of Britain’s most coveted (and most drunken) summer music festival has been announced. This morning organizers for the always mud-soaked Glastonbury Festival revealed the massive roster of artists playing this year’s event. The three nights will feature the likes of Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen & the E-Street Band and Blur as the main headliners on the Pyramid Stage.
The rest of the line-up is rounded out by a mix of both experienced and emerging artists that includes Bloc Party, Franz Ferdinand and the Prodigy headlining the Other Stage, Doves, Jarvis Cocker and Echo & the Bunnymen closing out the John Peel Stage, and Animal Collective, Bon Iver and Seun Kuti & Fela’s Egypt 80 topping the bill of the Park Stage.
Other big names playing throughout the weekend include the Specials, Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, Spinal Tap, Lily Allen, Fleet Foxes, Ting Tings, Lady Gaga, Metric, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Black Eyed Peas, Bat For Lashes, Passion Pit, 2 Many DJs, La Roux, Peaches, M. Ward, Peter Bjorn & John, Glasvegas and Tom Jones.
You can see the entire line-up by clicking here.
Glastonbury 2009 takes place between Friday, June 26th to Sunday, June 28th in the fields of Pilton, England. As usual, the festival is completely sold out, so if you’re thinking of jumping the fence, keep in mind that the 12-foot-tall, $2 million steel “super fence” they installed back in 2002 has made life difficult for fence-jumpers over the last seven years.
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by Liem Vu
While many of us were fetal positioning in the late 80s (myself included), Glasgow duo, Eugene Kelly and Frances McKee, were positioning themselves in a less uterine way as the world’s best songwriters. Indeed, that title was bestowed onto the group by Nirvana frontman, Kurt Cobain.
Although they disbanded shortly after the release of their first and only full-length, Dum-Dum, The Vaselines slid over the Atlantic and gained notoriety through Nirvana’s covers of “Molly’s Lips” and “Jesus Want Me for a Sunbeam” on their album, Incesticide.
Touring for the first time in 20 years, Kelly and McKee stopped by Lee’s Palace for an impressive and almost comprehensive 19-song setlist that saw them performing the now-famous “Molly’s Lips,” the contemptuous “Monsterpussy,” and the rhyme-happy ditty “Dum-Dum.”
While their pop melodies, psychedlic harmonies and Glasgowian wit were in abudance, The Vaselines’ status as a musical artifact showed signs of age as their opening couple of songs had them readjusting their instruments and sound levels. But it was Frances McKee’s bouts of playful banter with the audience that truly roused (or should I say, aroused?) the gentlemen as she unraveled her flirtatious leer and suggestive words.
“I hear the men in Toronto are sensitive,” said McKee after the first song, “fuck that, we want to play rough.” A collective cheer ensued as McKee launched into the appropriately titled track, “Monsterpussy.”
In the end, the moderately crowded venue offered an intimate and nostalgic evening where fans were able to relive their musical memories live especially after the recent release of Enter The Vaselines, a 2-disc compilation album of remastered tracks and different live/demo tracks.
With Rick of the Skins opening up with their very own offering of pop music, The Vaselines may have very well stepped out of the Cobain shadow and cast a new one for themselves and for future musical artistes. Yes, you heard it. Artistes.
Tags: concert reviews
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Drake. Drizzy. Young Lion. Aubrey. Call him what you like, but don’t call him an up-and-comer - the dude is already a star. How else do you explain a sold-out show at Sound Academy for an unsigned artist? How else do you explain 2300 people spending $40 A POP, clamoring to see an artist who has yet to drop an album? Up-and-coming, please. Drake is already here.
To be purposely corny, you could feel electricity in the air before the show kicked off. Drake calls Toronto home and this was his hometown crowd, chanting his name 45 minutes before he appeared. The tiny backstage was sardined with supporters including Kardinal Offishall, everyone anxious to see what could one day be spoken of as a legendary event.
Tags: concert reviews, drake
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By Liem Vu
So while last Saturday saw Rihanna officially become the latest inductee into The Hall of (Nudie) Fame, a different kind of non-nekkid buzz was building at the Horseshoe Tavern as music connoisseurs gathered for a flannel-filled evening of musky, folk-rock tunes and classic rock guitar riffs courtesy of Attack in Black.
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Tags: concert reviews
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By Liem Vu
Love her or hate her, it’s still my obsession that Lady Sovereign has an uncanny resemblance to Mel C and by the looks of her ensemble last Friday, Dan Levy as well.
Ch-check it out:

What do you guys think?
*Ahem*
Now that I got my daily non-sequitur fix out of the way, let’s get down and dirty with the 5”1 expletive-prone North London MC who has been dubbed as the female Eminem by The New Yorker. While the Tetris-themed music video for “Love Me or Hate Me” saw the fruition of this comparison with Lady Sov sporting a variety of ridiculous costumes, her sharp wit has never been reduced to Slim Shady’s blatant parodies or melancholic melodramas.
Demonstrating that she is just as much a rapper as she is an entertainer, Lady Sovereign hit up Lee’s Palace in support of her sophomore album, Jigsaw, where she cranked out a few oldies (“Love Me Or Hate Me,” “Public Warning”), a bunch of newbies (“So Human,” “Bang Bang,” “Pennies”), as well as a cover of Metro Station’s “Shake It”.

However, the highlight of the night was when Sov would take “breaks” during her set where she would interact with the audience, making it an evening of memorable sound bites and crazy shenanigans.
Here are the highlights:
1.) Brushing her hair with a toothbrush
2.) Quenching the audience’s thirst by drenching them in beer
3.) Throwing out some cash money into the crowd during “Pennies”
4.) Touching herself in the nether-regions
5.) Flashing her female-bosom support apparatus
6.) Letting her fans drink her vodka only to realize, “Oh great, I got the pig’s flu”
7.) Stealing a green tie from a concertgoer and saying it looked like a green lizard’s [lady business].
For a 23-year old artist, Lady Sov carried herself like a veteran without ever coming off like a pompous or pretentious musician. Thank you, Sovereign, for giving Toronto an evening of cheekiness, wittiness and sneakiness.
First, the Adele gig at Massey Hall, then the leaked Susan Boyle rendition of “Killing Me Softly,” and now, Sovereign. Thanks Britain, you sure have been generous this past week.
Tags: concert reviews, lady sovereign
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By Liem Vu

After a six-month love affair with Thunderheist’s “Jerk It,” I found myself at a sudden crossroads of having to find an equally danceable track with a perfect mélange of melodic hooks and frenetic electro-rhythms. Guelph synth-rockers, Green Go, were the answer to my woes as they burst onto the small stage a few weeks ago at Sonic Boom Records with their anthemic tune, “You Know You Want It,” in celebration of Record Store Day.
Holding their own against other Toronto indie-heavyweights like Slim Twig and Hooded Fang, frontman Ferenc “Fezz” Stenton and frontwoman Jessica Tollefsen’s co-ed stage presence were nothing short of a perfect marriage of Chris Martin-esque humility and Emily Haines-like ferocity; traits that seemed ever more potent at their CD release party last Thursday at Wrongbar.
Like the colourful orgy of confetti-like Chiclets on the cover of their first full-length, Borders, the Guelph quintet hit the stage in celebratory fashion (and often, in technicolour) as they ushered in the album’s release with a sonic sampling of tracks that included the spirited (“Brains for Breakfast”) and the sassy (“Cash for Gremlins”).

The large crowd of fedora-rocking and skinny jean-sporting hipsters went from subdued sways to voracious head bobbing offering us a glimpse of what Electric Circus (ah, the nostalgia) may have been like today if it were still around.
In a warm and fuzzy moment that rivaled any episode of Jon & Kate Plus 8 (ah, the cuteness), Tollefsen’s dad gave a gleeful grin when the red-panted frontwoman screamed out, “That’s my dad!”
While the under sixty-minute set omitted some of the stronger tracks from Borders, it was nevertheless a success as even the photographers abandoned their stoic professionalism for periods of psychedelic thrashing.
So if you haven’t done it yet, Go Green…er…Green Go! You know you want it. *Cue strobe light, disco ball, sweaty-ness and most importantly, indie-ness*
Tags: concert reviews, green go
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K-os has a brand new album Yes! and I’m all about the positivity that resonates from the word and the music. K-os is about to embark on the Karma Tour, which could have you catching his live show for FREE in every major city in Canada.
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Tags: Concerts, k-os
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Lily Allen is the cutest and also one of the coolest. I mean, I’m not biased or anything - maybe slightly - but you can’t hate on a lady who lets loose on stage… dancing like you would in the safety of your bedroom, comfy in some Air Jordans, lighting a cigarette, having a drink, giggling like she’s maybe a little self-conscious up there, discussing her under-attire Spanx, moaning about on-tour weight gain. You get my drift.
Lily changed venues to the Sound Academy after fans ravenously scooped up her first block of tickets set for The Phoenix Concert Theatre. And this place was paaaacked! She busted out from backstage with “Everyone’s At It” (or as her setlist says, “Everyone’s A Tit”) and then “I Could Say”. Throughout the night she stuck mostly to her latest album with a few tracks from Alright, Still thrown in for extra spice.
More, plus photos after the jump!
Tags: Concerts, lily allen
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