Sunday, June 12, 2011

Relative Significance

Day the Sixth (which started last post but nothing significant had occurred yet. If none of this has been significant yet, this next piece certainly is. . . )

We ground to a halt in Chicago traffic – according to the GPS we were 5 minutes from the venue – although we've learnt that the GPS is no longer to be trusted. It seems to insist on completely irrelevant detours, where we get off a the interstate, only to merge back on 15 minutes later. Doubleyouteaeffff. We bemoaned our situation, as the 5 minutes took about an hour, but it turned out to be enlightening. Not going a trillion miles an our, we noticed how badly the van was shaking. After final arrival at the Elbo Room we inspected the van and discovered the culprit – a 6” x 4” section of tread was missing, leaving only internal wire mesh exposed and peeling away. We thanked our lucky stars that it hadn't blown on the three lane 70 mph highway we'd driven on for 8 hours and set about finding a suitable establishment for tire replacement. Matt – the manager of the Elbo Room – hooked us up with a 7:30am appointment at a local joint.

With that organized we set about loading in for the gig.

After playing we talked with locals and extensively with the Norwegian bartender – Solfrid (her full name meant happy as the sun snakehouse!!!!). It happened to be her birthday and she was stuck working. Seeing as we had a morning appointment with the tire shop before another 8 hour drive to Pittsburg, we did the only honourable thing and got supremely sauced with the foreign birthday girl.

The bar closed down and we continued. Plenty of Jamieson shots later we stumbled out into an insane thunderstorm (that lasted for 12 hours) and accompanied Sol to a local bar called Exit. It was there that the serious drinking and dancing began and continued until 4 in the morning.

Day the Seventh

Significantly worse for wear, we roused ourselves an hour late for our appointment, arrived at the tire repair shop and were told that we'd have to wait for about 5 hours. This would not do. Harnessing the available technology, we got ourselves out to another shop (which had a $100 dollar discount on tires), sorted the van out, ate disgusting breakfast and were on our way in an hour. The drive took us through Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and into Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh was our destination – playing at the Smiling Moose.

Pittsburgh surprised us. We didn't know much about the city before we rounded a corner on the highway and saw it burst forth from the tree covered hilltops. Damn. Gorgeous scenery, crazy mix of architecture, so many trees, great neighbourhoods. We learnt that you could buy a house for $19,000; a number of peoples we met payed less than $200 a month in rent.

In motion van shots never really deliver, but here's a couple none the less. . . .

The show was great, splendid bill – a passionate spoken word poet called William James started it up, followed by In the Wake of Giants. Worn Out Tiger closed up the shop. All three of the acts had toured a bunch together and were great friends, and their music ranged from post-rock to a dirrrrrty kind of hardcore – pretty freakin' amazing. We ate pizza and drank two dollar beers to recover from our lack of sleep.

Here's Worn Out Tiger doing there thang -

Justin (from In the Wake of Giants) hooked us up with a nearby place to crash – thanks to Mary-Ellen! - and we crashed gooooooood. New York is the next destination, and we've got four nights to play there, so a little time to cool our heels.

the above image is Julian doing some much needed 'splainin'

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Ruuuuuumplemints

Day the Fourth – continued.

We arrived in Winnipeg to little fanfare and we're informed that the venue which we had a show booked at (the Royal Albert) was flooded out. There's a lot of flooding in Manitoba right now – while bombing along the highway we saw an off ramp that was entirely submerged.

The loss of the venue was unfortunate, but fortune quickly smiled upon us again and we hoped on a bill at the Death Trap, which is just down the street. We played first, followed by three hardcore metal bands – one local, one from Minneapolis, and one from California – all pretty nice dudes. There was definitely some blood spilled at that show.

Lacking a place to sleep, we located a nearby and relatively secluded parking lot and made camp.

Day the Fifth -

We awoke to a rainstorm in Winnipeg and made preparations to cross the border - we ride for Minneapolis. The border was a longer stop than we'd hoped for, and a thorough search of the van was conducted. An hour later we were on our way – straight into a heat wave.

A giant blade for the wind turbines round here!

Sweet mother of submarines it was hot in Minnesota. Seriously, it hadn't been so hot there since 1988. A bonifide heat wave, which initiated the in-van shirts off party. Some of us didn't stop at shirts.

We played at the 7th Street Entry

We played with a couple bands, including a crew from Brooklyn, NY, called Young Boys. Well turned out gentlemen with solid indie jams. Reminded me of a cross between Joy Division meets and Hank Williams with a twist of synthyness. We enjoyed their set greatly.

A little dillying and and a little dallying later we were all packed up and ready to go – Julian had secured a spot for us to crash at a chap named Dave's place. Our GPS tried to trick us, but we were fortunate to befriend Sonya (a local violinist and employee of 7th Street whose job was to watch all the bands gear!). We took her bike on board and she guided us to Dave's house, and enjoyed a bonfire, sing along, warm Luckys and something called Rumple Mints, which is basically mint flavoured moonshine.

We're now about 2 hours outside of Chicago, flying along the I-94, hoping to make it in time for load-in and maybe some deep dish pizza?

Monday, June 6, 2011

it's an elk!

Morning, Day 1 – After a morning of the SERIOUS ironing, we were ready to make way!

Gig the first was at the Commodore in sunny Kamloops with our good friend Trevor – aka SGT SEABY - a highly enjoyable DJ, entertaining host, and original member of Bangers & Mash.

A dance party occurred. I harnessed the power of the dinosaur.

This is Scott. He's a pretty observant guy.

While in the alley loading gear after the show he noticed an audience member receiving oral pleasure against a nearby brick wall. We had a bit of a laugh and kept loading gear. Returning with some guitars in tow I noticed that Scott had now been approached by two people inquiring about the availability of some cigarettes. When I got closer I realized that the male component of the twosome was the oral pleasure receiver. The female component was staring at Scott. Suddenly she embraced him, hugging him with such speed that he barely managed to use the rear van door as a pelvic barrier. Now it looked suspiciously like she was going to plant a smooch on him. I almost died laughing watching him crane his neck back and forth to avoid what would certainly be a severe case of salty tongue. Scott broke away and the embrace dissolved – cigarettes lit, our two lovers sauntered up an alley full of possibilities.

After the gig we drank Red Stag Bourbon at Trevor's house until way too late. It smelled like dreams and tasted like bourbon. With Cherries. And sorta like medicine, which I guess it really is.

We had to get a move on early. The rockies awaited.


Day the second!

IT'S A MOOSE IT'S A MOOSE IT'S A MOOSE. it's and elk

Calgary at the Sprout Fair in Inglewood. The venue was called The A.R.E.A. (Agriculture, Recreation, Education and Art) – and the fair was a fundraiser for their community garden. They had local youth art on sale and aspirations of a rock school for young'uns – all pretty radical. A whole whack of bands played, including Günther. They are an instrumental sonic assault and everytime we've watched them it has blown our minds. And with the addition of a new member on the Casio and a strap-explosion-come-bass-guitar-juggle, this was no exception.

here's some Günther for you -

Big thanks to Cara and Ryan Mountain, Chilli and Pepper, and the cat for a soft bed and the best (vegan) blueberry pancakes I've ever had.

Day the third! So we headed off towards Regina. We didn't have a show lined up, but we needed to make Winnipeg on Monday, so an 8 hour drive it was.

We slept in a Petcetera parking lot. I ate a triple decker peanut butter and banana sandwich, which was heavy on the peanut butter. Good stuff. Then we drank fireball and all piled into the Safari for a close quarters sleep.

Day the forth! An early morning drive heading to Winnipeg and a stop in the very small Whitewood for a little roadside fry-up. We're class to the max.

The journey continues. Tune in next time we locate free internet for more scintillating observations and hopefully focused photos.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Who are you? Danny Zuko.

In an effort to limber ourselves up in advance of tour, we headed down to Seattle and played a gig at the Comet Tavern.

With US visas all in order we blasted through dense traffic, ate some sample sandwiches, and vigilantly searched for a reasonable parking space. Highlights included performances by local acts Wah Wah Exit Wound and Panther Attack - super nice cats playing brain snapping music. A ridiculous amount of free tallboys and Seattle dogs (hot dog + cream cheese + fried onions) later we tried to crash a soul dance party but ended up tailing a couple new acquaintances back to their apartment for drinking / bb shooting / spell casting / snoozin'. On the way home I ate what was billed as a "giant" pancake; it was of average size.

Back in Vancouver - we slept on a floor for an hour and then loaded in at the Biltmore Cabaret - to open for Nomeansno and the Ford Pier Vengeance Trio. One of the best sets I think we've played, followed by the sonic revelry that is Ford and a Nomeansno onslaught. I don't think I can really express how radical that all was. So, instead of a thousand meandering words, here's a crappy cell phone photo of Nomeansno.



We leave friday on tour. Van upgrades are ongoing.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

The quickening approaches!

So, we're heading out across the great expanse that is North America again, caps in hand, to play a whole bunch of shows in a whole bunch of cities. Nick L'Rage (VANeUS MAXiMUS) shows signs of weariness, but there is life in the old dog yet - he was built to safari or die trying.

Let's move on from the dying part and get to the good stuff!

We've just released a new EP, which is completely free for downloading
(here: http://manyourhorse.bandcamp.com/ )

That's exciting for us. We've also silk-screened a stack of new shirts and spray painted some more records too, so if you see us out there somewhere and we look dirty, malnourished or just plain old tired, buy something so we can drink heavily. It's all "inexpensive" and we're open to the bartering system (especially if you have some peanut butter for trade).

None of us are getting any prettier, so I'll wrap this up.

Thanks for reading the words. As the adventure continues we'll put things here depicting the arc of the adventure, so if you're into arcs, curves, or bends - you'll find it all here - brilliantly depicted in 800x600 72 dpi.

Here's one to get the ball rolling - courtesy of our pal Selina Crammond!


Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Coasting


Last tour gig @ Comrad Sound in Calgary

We made the 11 hour drive from Calgary to Vancouver yesterday, arriving in the evening hours and headed for sleeps in our own beds. It feels cold here, but is very comfortable despite.

Due to traveling restrictions I haven't really mentioned the shows that we played in the US so far, but they were very very fun. Chicago, East Moline, an all ager rager in Lansing and a gig at the 501 club in Minneapolis - for trivia fans, this was the home of Prince's first house gig. The US is a fun and interesting place, and apparently we look like criminals and need to be searched ruthlessly everytime we cross into the land of eagles and freedom.

After playing in Minneapolis we made a night drive to Winnipeg for a show at the Royal Albert Arms Hotel. After that show we made an all night drive (14 hours) to Calgary for the last show of the tour at an all ages venue called Comrad Sound. Very fun and we had a crazy dance party sing-along at the end of the set. We capped it all off with 3 cases of Steam Whistle and a max relax at Matt's (from TCD) place.


stage 1


stage 2


stage 3


the kids are alright once you get to know them


elbows


Sweet Bean (aka Aaron from TCD) is a super dude. Here's a dirty shirt sharpie shout out to him


Adam (the legs) Lamb laying it down


cue the close quarters moshing


and unrelenting head banging


Matt looking cool


Scott and I looking pretty haggard


This trip would not have been possible without the radness of Omar at High Low Gas in Calgary. He saved our bacon.


hello B.C.

my, what gorgeous scenery you have


you can sort of see the bear that is running across the highway


Julian's place - 2nd to last stop on the home stretch / remember the Party Snake

As we're home now this tour blog will whither, but I am working on a new idea in the same vein and will harass you with it if you so desire . . .

A few thank yous -

Trevor Seaby in Kamloops
Adam, Aaron, Matt and Josh of Calgary's This City Defects
Neil (aka Zipline) in Edmonton
Skot in Saskatoon
Alex from Calgary's Monkey (and the rest of Monkey for that matter)
Adam, Andrew, Marc and Jerome of Vancouver's Castle Grey Skull
Emily in Windsor
Scott's Aunt Stephanie in Toronto
Kate in Montreal
The Diving Bell in Montreal
Dorian and Chris of Montreal's Cinema L'amour
Jack in Kingston
Kevin in Hamilton
B414 and Stoneface in Lansing

I'm sure there is more but my brain is still running at about 60%. When we remember what happened over the last month we'll throw more up.


and for the future? The West Coast in the fall . . . I hear it's lovely in autumn.