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Showing posts from September, 2008

Keeping the "Peg" Rockin' in the Free World

Winnipeg has always had a healthy music community, but as the industry shifts from selling CD’s to download free music our musical community is under stress. How do you make enough money to live on if all your songs are available free to anyone with a computer? Winnipeg bands are a resourceful bunch and they understand that to be successful you need to play live, sell off the stage and they use their tunes to entice buyers and market themselves. Lets help them out this fall. Buy a local bands CD, get out and see a show, pick-up a T-shirt, button or sticker, or just by the band a beer. Careful care and feeding of our local musical crop will reap future harvests of great music. Here are some of the best new releases. Hard Rocking Bands Sick City - Nightlife Winnipeg’s Sick City upholds the cities well deserved reputation for churning out great rock bands check out the clips for “XX and XY” or “In the Millions” with its Metallica influenced grinding guitars on MARIA’s website (www.manitob...

Book Review - Neil Young Nation - Author - Kevin Chong

Neil Young has legions of fans called “Rusties” for whom Neil’s music has played a roll in shaping their lives. Some survived adolescence, drug dependency, others divorce, and all found new meanings in well loved songs as they grew older. This bond has many Rusties looking for ways to get closer to their idol. Author Kevin Chong decided the best way to explore his “Neil Fetish” was to retrace Neil’s famous journeys from Winnipeg to Toronto, Toronto to LA and to chronicle his journey in this book. Living in Vancouver, Chong had to get to Winnipeg first. Chong wanted to make the trip in an old hearse just like Young had. In true slacker fashion things didn’t work out and a brother’s Suzuki Grand Vitara subs for the far cooler and authentic hearse. Kevin Chong recruits a couple of high school buddies for one last “guys only” road trip. Fearing that their youth was slipping away in the unrelenting glare of marriage, children, and careers this assortment of slackers and stoners jumped at th...

Danny Michel - Concert Review

Danny Michel has been described as “Tom Waits meets Cheap Trick” and the packed house at the West End Cultural Club on an unusually warm Sept. night certainly got to experience some well-crafted tales and stunning guitar work. Showcasing his sixth release, Valhalla, Danny wandered on the stage to an eruption of cheers. This was an audience familiar with his wry songs and witty stage presence and you could tell they where ready to be entertained. He is a physical performer using his slim frame as punctuation and counterpoint to the lyrics. He mocks himself, he cheerleads, he dances with his guitar and puts himself out on a limb risking it all to endear himself to his fans. Danny Michel’s songs range from country-laced tales of a jailed man with 13 days left in the joint and bragging alcoholics to quirky pop songs about feeling invisible and hard-learned tales of life on the road. Danny is a master of the loop box able to produce dense layers of sound building from thumping bass/drum l...

Shelby Lynne - Just a Little Lovin'

Laid back, understated and devastatingly honest Shelby Lynne strips the pop sheen off Dusty Springfield’s 60’s catalogue showing the strength in each song by laying it bare. It feels like the songs where done late, very late, in a shuttered jazz club after the patrons have left, the chairs have been put up on the tables and night creeps toward dawn. Shelby’s sensual voice is right there in front of you, so close you can almost reach out and touch it. Simple finger picked guitars and upright bass slip around her like wisps of smoke. Beautiful. Chris Brown

Taking your iPod for a Walk

Summer for Dad’s in Winnipeg means getting outside and hanging out on a community field somewhere watching the kids play soccer, baseball or football. Many of us use the time to socialize with the other parents which is great until about the 5th week when another round of listening to some guy talk about his off shore investments just makes my head explode. It’s time to get out the trusty iPod and it’s 5,509 tunes and do a power walk circling the park while the off-spring chase a ball across emerald green grass. Bring your dog and he will love you forever. You poop and scoop right? You want to find music that gets you moving and this summer some good bets are: American Flamewhip “Activate”: You must hear the raged, savage snarling guitar licks of Winnipeggers America Flamewhip. Why? Because you gotta like any drummer that performs in a Mexican wrestling mask and a chick with more tattoos than Guns n’ Roses. The Roots, “Rising Down”: Hard-core, angry and raw The Roots lay down seriou...

The Sound That Shook a City

On April 1st 1978, to the driving beat of Deep Purple’s “Highway Star”, radio in Winnipeg changed forever as a young upstart rock FM station called CITI FM tried to blow the collective minds of a cities youth. CITI FM was the first hard-rock station on the FM band in the “Peg” and they were determined to make their mark. But no one could have predicted the impact it would have on a cold, isolated, prairie town full of teens itching for something new, fresh and relevant to their generation. Winnipeg had a reputation as a hard rockin’ town and new bands like Streetheart, Mood Ja Ja, Harlequin, and the Pumps had begun to pack clubs in River City building on a previous generation of trail blazers like the Squires, Guess Who, Sugar and Spice, Mongrels, the Fifth and Brother that had come before. Hotel bars like The Norlander, the St. Vital, and the Zoo shook with the Winnipeg sound. Line-ups around the block in 40 below weather where common and at times out drew the touring acts foolish eno...

Wailin' Jennys - Firecracker

www.wailinjennys.com Winnipeg’s Wailin’ Jennys have released a deeply personal set of songs on Firecracker. This new recording reaches back to honour the tradition of both the place they come from and the traditions of the female folksinger genre. There are echoes of other Winnipeg songwriters here like Heather Bishop and Nancy Reinhold formerly of the Wyrd Sisters. Yet it presents each of the Jenny’s three writer’s individual style clearly and creatively. Nicky Mehta’s direct songs of love and growth, Ruth Moody’s beautiful and delicate images sung with her country tinged soprano and newcomer Annabelle Chvostek’s complex and crafted offerings. Musically these women continue to explore as Nicky adds harmonica to her usual guitar work. Annabelle brings fiddle and mandolin to the mix and Ruth adds banjo to a couple of tracks. Even with the exit of the talented Cara Luft the Jenny’s have delivered a recording that cements their place as Canada’s finest folk vocal group. Chris Brown

Amy Winehouse - Back to Black

www.amywinehouse.co.uk Rehab, the first song on Back to Black never made addiction sound so good. Amy Winehouse is the kind of soul singer I have not heard since Macy Gray’s breakout album. When a she intones in each chorus “What kind of fuckery is this” in Me and Mr. Jones well that’s just poetry ain’t it? Farting horn work, choppy guitars, driving bass and poppin’ drums make this a funky stew that Amy eats up like a gourmet meal. The style harkens back to the girl groups of the 1960’s and is both confessional and blunt. Amy’s voice is rich and mature as she shuns the vocal acrobatics so common to R&B singers. Back to Black is filled to over flowing with pain and heart break. Love is a Losing Game speaks from experience and hard-won wisdom about the futility of loving the wrong man. Perfect. Chris Brown

Amos Lee - Supply and Demand

www.amoslee.com The first thing that hits me about Amos Lee is that he has a voice that sneeks up on you. He has a silky upper register that gives him a Motown feel while his regular voice is rootsy and relaxed. Lee lets his simple folk based tunes find a gentle soulful place and most have a subtle groove that will put a smile on your face. Songs like Freedom speak the truth with lines like “Freedom is seldom found, by beatin’ someone to the ground”. Night Train feels like a song you’ve known and loved for a long while. Supply and Demand is about balancing your life between work and family cause “you know you ain’t comin’ back down”. If you are old enough to remember James Taylor or young enough to have discovered Xavier Rudd you might like Amos Lee too. Chris Brown

Corb Lund - Hair in my Eyes like a Highland Steer

www.corblund.com Corb Lund is a country throw back…way back…past Dwight Yoakam, past Elvis, to Buck Owen, Bob Wills, and Wilf Carter. Lund’s songs sound like 1940’s traditional country twang tunes as they spin out tall tales about obsessive card playing, crazy Calgary cowgirls , pick-up trucks stuck in the mud, hurtin’ Albertans, Oiler hockey games, and drinking before noon. Each tune is seriously twisted with lines like “good Copenhagen is better than bad cocaine” or “always keep an edge on yr knife son, cuz a good sharp edge is a man’s best hedge against the vague uncertainties of life”. This country music will make those quaffed and squeaky clean Nashville country stars pale and puke which to me is a good thing. If your guilty pleasure is listening to chicken picking guitar and old western music while sippin’ a beer, feet up on the railing of the porch, and pullin’ your dirty ball cap down over your eyes… Corb Lund is your boy. Corb Lund plays the West End on Sept. 24th. Chris Br...

Danny Michel - Valhalla

www.dannymichel.com I admit it; I am a huge Danny Michel fan. He is one of those artists who you just KNOW has a monster album in them and with each release I hold my breath hoping that this is the breakthrough that will make Danny a star. Well …. Valhalla ain’t it. Not that there aren’t great songs here. The single Midnight Train is catchy and accessible. Black Tornados offers lines like “She sells gun shells by the sea shore” and “I’m coming home to your sweet potatoes and black tornados”. The Danny Michel shows I remember (9 and counting) have been just him playing one of his numbered tele’s and over working a smoking loop machine creating dense layers of sound above which he delivers each gem of a song. On his albums you lose that unpredictability and his off-kilter phrasing, Danny has to make room for other instruments, structure and personalities dumbing down his best qualities. Damn! Chris Brown

Dwight Yoakam - Blame the Vain

www.dwightyoakam.com Dwight Yoakam has never strayed from his deep country roots and that’s a great thing. The songs on Blame the Vain are thoughtful, playful and soulful. Girls getting wild with spray paint, heartbreak, drunken reasoning, Elvis impersonations, and denial are all are bathed in twangy, vibrato soaked, guitars and mournful harmonies. Dwight’s time in the spotlight seems to have past, but listening to this disc he seems not to have noticed or to care. She’ll Remember has an unexpected synth and spoken word opening that morphs into a straight country my-baby-broke-my-heart tune that plays with tempos and styles. When I First Came Here is a gritty, pounding tune that embraces the memory of a good woman and is one of the gems on this collection. There are more good songs here than bad and in a time of such disposable music I will return to this disc for years to come. Chris Brown

John Mayall - Living In The Palace Of The King

www.johnmayall.com Straight up, this is the best John Mayall recording in years. This disc is full of hard driving blues from the opening note of the Freddy King classic You Know That You Love Me until the furious and fabulous instrumental Cannonball Shuffle. Living in the Palace of the King is a joy and features Mayall’s high-pitched vocals, Robben Ford’s fiery, spitting guitar leads and big horn section blasts. Mayall dedicates this record to his idol Freddy King and he does him proud. I learned to play harmonica listening to Mayall harp lines from 1970’s USA Union and I have to say this record had me running for my harp box, mic and Garnet amp. Mayall even tells us what key the band is playing in on every song. Here’s to keeping the neighbors awake. Chris Brown

Amy Rigby - Little Fugitive

www.amyrigby.com Little Fugitive is a quirky record from a smart, cynical, and thoroughly likeable singer/songwriter. American Amy Rigby is a talented and mature songwriter who has written tunes for artists like They Might be Giants, Ronnie Spector, and Laura Cantrell. On this album she captures perfectly the weirdness of liking your ex’s new wife, dancing with Joey Ramone, and dealing with needy men. Amy is biting, sarcastic and humorous while being incredibly insightful. Sonically, she is part rock, part pop, mixed with a little punk and a dollop of folk. Give this cocktail a good shake and pour into 12 perfect little tunes. There are no throwaways here. So, if you are looking for a whip-smart record that’s poignant and makes you smile Little Fugitive is a gem. Chris Brown

New cordless telephones

Cordless phones have taken over from the corded models on most of our homes and if you remember them as having a limited range and poor sound quality you need to take a look at the latest models. The biggest change has come in the frequency range they operate in. The oldest version operated in the 46-49 Megahertz range and due to the small number of bands in this range there was lots of cross talk and little privacy. Analogue phones moved up to 900 Megahertz range but still had problems with sound quality. If your neighbor happened to have their baby monitor on they could periodically hear you on your cordless phone. Digital phones entered the marketplace at this time featuring voice encryption and an enhanced signal strength letting you use them in the backyard or garage. The third generation of cordless phones operated in the 2.4 GHz range and suffered from interference with microwaves and home WIFI wireless systems. Range was again extended and voice quality improved. The newest tec...

Cutting the cords

With our ever-increasing digital life it seems we have more and more cables to deal with. You can free yourself from a few of them by investing in a wireless router and connecting all the computers, printers, back up drives and even your TV wirelessly . Let’s start with the cheapest and easiest solution the wireless internet and email connection. First you’ll need a high-speed connection from MTS or Shaw and their free supplied cable box, a computer with a free USB port, or built in wireless modem and a wireless router. Many companies make routers and I have used D-Link, Belkin , Linksys and Apple and I have found some to be so tough to set-up I have had to call in experts ( Linksys ) and others so simple I was up and running in minutes. These days I like Apple’s Time Capsule, which works with both PC’s and Macs. I like it because it combines the latest Wireless G technology with a server grade hard drive for backing up your precious files. Many router companies make wireless route...

Online Chat

Online Chat, its something your kids can do without thinking but does it have an application for a more mature user? This week’s column will delve into the online chat world and show you how you can make good use of this technology both at work and at home. Online chat is live communication between two or more people online. It can be typed text, live audio or streaming video. Most PC users will be familiar with Instant Messenger and Mac users will know iChat. As with most internet related issues the speed of your internet connection will determine which type of communication will work the best for you. Hi-speed internet connections through MTS or Shaw allow those with a camera attached to their laptop or desktop to engage in two-way visual communication. To make use of this technology you need a webcam (many PC and all Mac laptops come with one built in) the software program (iChat is free with any Mac purchase as part of the iLife suite) a speedy internet connection and finally an a...

Bytes and Pieces

Over the next two issues I will be discussing some additions to your digital life that can make things easier, more convenient or more useful. Laptop users If you own a laptop and work on it regularly at home you’ll notice a few things. The screens can be a bit too small for office work, the keyboards feel cramped and some keys may be missing or do double duty, and the audio quality out of your laptops speakers may not be the best. Adding Visual Real Estate By adding a monitor to your setup you can increase the amount to screen space you have making working on a laptop much more enjoyable. Monitors range in size from 17 inch to 30 inches or more. There are many to choose from so what’s important? The first thing you want to look at is what is the maximum size your laptop can drive? My 13-inch Apple MacBook can drive up to a 24-inch screen while my MacBook Pro can drive over a 30-inch display. Native resolution is the resolution that your new screen feels most comfortable displaying. LC...

Taking your laptop out for coffee

Internet café’s like Bar Italia on the Corydon strip are the perfect place to take your new laptop out for a cup of coffee. The place is packed with officeless workers checking email, surfing the net or writing the next great Canadian novel. Mini meetings abound as small groups of folks get together Friday afternoons to run through their To Do lists over a cappuccino, diet coke, glass of red or a cold beer. Many have their ears covered by headphones pumping in their own brand of motivation as they type. I like light, smaller over-the-ear headphones and my current favourites are a set of iGrados. If you’re in the market for a new laptop going to an Internet café and looking at what other people are using is a good way to do some practical research. A quick look around today reveals two black Dell laptops, a grey Toshiba, two silver Apple MacBook Pros and a white Apple MacBook. When you fire up your laptop and ask it to look for a network to join you will soon find that it has spotted th...

Make your computer sing

Last issue we looked at some of the less well-known features of iTunes. This issue I thought it might be fun to show you how to turn your computer into a wonderful stereo system and add a great portable MP3 player. iTunes will be at the heart of each system as it makes finding, organizing, playing and getting music simple. iTunes is available free from Apple at: http://www.apple.com/itunes/download/. It can be used on PC’s or Macs and you don’t need an iPod to take full advantage of having music available on your computer. The Budget System You can get a great basic computer from Dell Canada (www1.ca.dell/com) for as little as $319.00 plus the cost of a monitor. If you want a Mac you can grab a Mac Mini for $649.00 but you will need a keyboard, mouse, and monitor. Both these computers have a soundcard that would put to shame most expensive computers from only a few years ago. Purchase a set of Altec Lansing VS2120 speakers for $9.99 from Future shop and you’re rockin’. An iPod shuffle...

iTune Tricks

If you are one of the many people who found a new iPod under your Christmas tree this year you’ll want to get it connected and start downloading music, videos, audiobooks and movies. We’ve all looked at iTunes but even if you’ve had an iPod before many people have never purchased from iTunes or discovered its many secrets. Let’s dive in and have a look. The INFO window. Have you ever got a CD from a friend filled with new music and popped it into the computer only to be confronted by Track 1 to 12 with no song titles and no artist names? You can’t import the songs without this info, as it won’t be properly filed. Fixing this one is easy. First don’t say yes when the dialogue box appears say NO. Then if the CD is all the same artist and album highlight all the songs on the CD and right click. See the Get info line? Click it. Here is your info window. You need to select the INFO tab and there you want to fill out the Artist, Album Title, Year and Genre. Then click OK. Now the whole CD ha...

Ultra Light Laptops

Ultra light laptops have become quite the status symbol with jet setting business types. All are lightweight, but too many are light in features too. The latest ultra lights do away with large capacity hard drives, DVD drives, multipul USB ports, and screen size trying to shave ounces and save users shoulders and backs. Let’s have a look at one of the most technologically advanced Apple’s new MacBook Air to see what the future holds for ultra portables. The Macbook Air weighs only 3 pounds as compared with the 5.4 pounds of the MacBook Pro. It sports a 13.3 inch screen the same as a MacBook but is only .76 of an inch thick at its thickest and an amazing .16 at its thinnest point. Many ultra lights use much smaller keyboards with tiny keys. This can be a problem for many users who are conditioned to typing on a full-sized keyboard. The MacBook Air comes with a full-sized keyboard that illuminates in darkened airplanes or study halls. Multi-touch track pads are soon coming to a laptop ne...

Bit Torrents

If you’ve ever tried to move a huge file through email you know what a huge pain it can be. Most email programs might let you exchange a photo or two by email but anything bigger gets rejected. So how do you move those huge files like movies, videos or presentations? Bit Torrents that’s how. Bit Torrent is not a program it’s a method of transferring huge files using a peer-to-peer file sharing system. Much of the Bit Torrent traffic is the illegal sharing of copyright protected materials but there is lots of legal and interesting public domain stuff out there too from episodes of your favourite TV Shows to educational how to videos. Bit Torrents are different from Napster, Limewire and Kazaa file sharing software you may have seen before. Bit Torrents download bits of the program you want from a multitude of hosts not one. It breaks down the file into a multitude of packets and grabs packets of data from whoever has them. Even as you download a file parts of your new file are being sha...

New Televisions

Purchasing a new TV has got a lot more complicated than ever before and the last few years has birthed a whole pile of new myths so lets have a look shall we? TV Types CRT’s Your Dad’s TV is now called a CRT Television. There is nothing wrong with this tube type of TV if all you do is watch broadcast TV, use a VCR to tape your favourite TV shows and rent the odd DVD. The best news is that these sets have tumbled in price and a 27” is less than $300. LCD TV’s This technology is the same as the screen on your laptop. They range in size from 20 inches up to 60 or so. The good news is they are great in sunny rooms (less glare) and use 20% less energy. Plasma TV’s These have really improved in the last couple of years. They have better blacks than LCD’s but are very reflective, heavier than an LCD and use more power. There used to be a concern about how long they’d last but the newer models will go for over 60,000 hours or 24 years. LCOS Same as an LCD but uses silicone for extremely long l...

Where Have All The Video Stores Gone?

Last week the Jumbo Video store at Stafford and Pembina began to sell off its movie stock and prepared to close their doors for good. You may have noticed that there are fewer video stores in your neighborhood as they find it harder and harder to compete with online offerings and the looming switch from DVD to Blue-ray discs. Does this mean that you will finally have to give up your VCR and purchase something new? Well, yes and no. If you are looking for movies to rent you figured out a few years ago that all the video stores had switched over to DVD. But if all you want to do is record your favourite TV show, videotape is fine and there is no indication that videotape will become harder to find. If you currently own a DVD player will you have to invest in a Blue-Ray player this year? No, Sony’s Blue-Ray has just won it’s protracted battle with it’s rival Toshiba’s HD-Disc and customers have been sitting on the sidelines waiting for there to be a clear winner before investing in either...

Apple's iPhone

The cellphone used to come in two flavours - a simple phone with maybe a cheap camera or a “smartphone” that gave you access to your email. The problem with the later was there was little that was “smart” about these devices. They had challenges linking up with your computer to sync to your address book; the email worked fine, but the small keyboards and typing with your thumbs made for some hilarious messages; the menu’s where endlessly deep and useless features abounded. When was the last time you used your cellphone as a calculator? I hindsight it is clear that this was a technology ripe for revolution and, as we have seen in American, that revolution came in the form of Apple’s iPhone. Recently analysts have revised their sales projections up from 14 million phones sold worldwide in 2008 to over 14 million, while 2009 is expected to be even better, with 24 million iPhones sold. Why? What is it about this phone that makes it the phenomena that it is? Every one has a theory, but the...

Teahing the Newbie

We all have those folks in our lives that need a bit of help bringing a computer into their lives and call on us. Sometimes it’s a simple question; other times it’s a broader education that’s needed. Here is how I begin teaching those around me that ask for some help. Most people call with a specific question and this is where I start. Assisting them with their problem makes them grateful and until we deal with their issue they are usually not in the headspace to think about what they need to learn. New Computers have dispensed with manuals or have such limited ones that they are useless. The result is lots of folks don’t understand the basics. I do all the configuring of their email accounts, wi-fi, and ISP accounts before the teaching begins as this is confusing and once it’s done they rarely need to worry about it again. I also load their purchased software. Most home users purchase a computer to gain access to the internet and email so I usually start here. I bring my Apple laptop ...

Headphones

We have spent a lot of time talking about getting music into an iPod or other MP3 Player but precious little about getting it out and into your ears. Much of what comes out of your iPod or ….doesn’t is a result of the sampling rate you set your iPod to record at. It is automatically set to record at 128 kilobytes per second (kbps) but can be adjusted to record at 256 kbps if you dive into the preferences found under the iTunes menu. You’ll have to click the advanced tab and look under setting. This pane will also allow you to switch from Apple’s ACC file format to MP3, WAV or AIFF file formats. The higher the sampling rate the better the recording but…there’s always a but…the files will be huge and you’ll not get as many songs on your shinny new iPod. ACC vs. MP3 MP3’s will play on anything and ACC files will play only on iTunes and iPods. ACC sampling is generally thought to make better recordings at lower sampling rates than MP3’s. If you are an audiophile you’ll want to bump the sa...

Going Wireless

Many of us are finding we have more than a single computer at home and the majority of recent computer sales have been laptops. This means that we don’t want to be tied to the wire coming out of the wall to access the internet. We want to be able to sit on the couch and surf CNN as we watch the presidential primaries. Going wireless is getting easier and cheaper with each passing month so let’s take a look at some of our options. You will hear wireless home networks referred to as Wi-Fi (wireless fidelity) networks. Number Confusion Older wireless systems used a lower radio frequency range around 2.4 GHz. These would include 802.11b and 802.11g. These operated in the same frequency range as some cordless telephones and microwaves. If you are getting static on your cordless phones and have an older wireless system it’s time to upgrade. The new standard is in the 5GHz range and its sexy new designation is 802.11n. These romantic numbers give you a clue as to the transfer speed of the dev...

Vista vs. Lepoard

If you’ve been watching television you’ve probably seen the new Apple ads that claim their new operating system Leopard is faster and better than Microsoft’s Vista. Is it true and if so what makes it better than the PC standard from Microsoft? First some disclosure, I do all my writing on Mac’s. I have worked on PC’s for years too and own a Dell machine that currently uses XP. Vista was launched a year ago (Feb. 2007) is the current standard on most new PCs. Sales to consumers who own a PC using XP have been disappointing. The uptake compared to when Microsoft launched XP is down anywhere from 41% to 56% when compared apples to apples (pun intended). Demand from Dell customers has forced the company to offer customers the option of purchasing a new machine with XP loaded rather than the newer Vista version. This can’t be good. Vista was released after 5 years of development and the expectations had been quietly building. Security was a priority as XP, Explorer and Outlook had become pr...

Subwoofer's

Much of today’s music features digitally produced or enhanced bass response – which means your existing speakers, with their small speaker cones just can’t reproduce the low tones with any fidelity. Many of us have stopped listening to our home stereos in favour of streaming music out of our computers. We buy a small set of computer speakers and are disappointed with the results. So how can we add some “oomph” to our bottom end without chucking our existing speakers? The answer lies in a sub-woofer. These are speaker enclosures specifically designed to deliver these lower, bass frequencies. Many computer speaker systems come with a subwoofer as part of the package. Many are fine, but I encourage you to ensure you try them out before plunking down your cash. You want a system that works for your application. If all you are doing is playing music at your desk at home while you surf the net you don’t need much power or size. But if you want to use it to add onto your home stereo and you w...