• Bluesfest Day 1: Aftermath

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    What a great kickoff to an amazing festival!  Had a blast last night.  Started out with Amanda Rheaume, a festival favourite, who kicked it off in style on the Rogers Stage, just as the sky cleared after a very short torential rain pour that threatened to dampen Day 1 (and caused some pretty nasty little mud pits to form – here’s hoping a couple of dry days will fix those up!)

    Part way through her set, I did my usual first-day wander around the festival grounds to get a feel for things and orient myself to the slight variations in layout from last year – not much different, some porta-potties in different locations, a few different tents, a bit more food and some slight variations on the positioning of the Gold Circle areas and such.

    Next up was Amos the Transparent, Ottawa natives who were happy to be home playing to a crowd that was happy to have them back.  I really enjoyed their set, though it highlighted an aspect of the annual Lawn Chair debate that is one of my biggest peeves about the whole situation:  the fact that a huge section right in front of the stage is filled up and blocked off by people who are not even fans of these guys, these people have just setup early to reserve their spots for Jeff Beck, causing a great big dead space right in front of the stage with no dancing or movement at all, with the band’s actual fans pushed back or to the side.  DAMN YOU LAWN CHAIRS!

    Back over at the Rogers Stage, The Black Keys played big rockin’ crunchy guitar tunes to a lawn chair-less crowd that was happy to be shoulder-to-shoulder and bouncing around to their great big sound.  Definitely the highlight of the night for me, this two-piece (Drums and Guitar/Vocals) from Akron Ohio rock hard to pump out sound that would be impressive from a five-piece band.

    Jeff Beck is definitely a guitar god, and there was some impressive wailing going on at the main stage last night, but to me this stuff is headphone music – endless guitar solos just don’t cut it for me.  So I took a tour over to the Black Sheep Stage and caught Sergent Garcia from Paris, who had the crowd literally jumping from front to back with their Cuban dance party vibe, a great end to the first night.

    No pictures or videos from last night, since I realized right before I was leaving the house that the battery in my camera was dead.  I’ll try to do better the rest of the week, I promise.

    Tonight, I’ve got a big old list of bands to see and a big old dilemma over whether or not to catch George Clinton down at York Street, whose show will overlap both Metric and Iron & Wine at the main festival grounds.  Think I’ll have to make a game-time decision once I get down there and see how I feel.

  • Bluesfest 2009: Day 1

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    Gonna be scrambling to see everything again this year (did you see my possibly impossible list?), and getting right to it on the first day!  Here’s the rundown of day 1 for me:

    6:00pm – Amanda Rheaume
    7:00pm – Amos the Transparent
    8:00pm – The Black Keys
    9:30pm – Jeff Beck

    So I’ll just be running back and forth between the two main stages, which isn’t too bad…  There’s some other stuff I’d like to see at the smaller stages, like Monkey Junk, Eric Lindell, Tympanic… but there’s only so much I can do!  I know, I know, there’s some actual BLUES being played at the other stages that I really should see…  Actually, I’ve seen Amanda Rheaume before, so maybe I’ll take a run over to  the Subway “you’ll always be the River Stage to me” Stage for a bit.  We’ll see.  Hopefully the weather holds off for what promises to be an excellent kickoff to Bluesfest 2009 – see you at Lebreton!

  • Bluesfest: The Scourge of Lawnchairs

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    On this first day of Bluesfest 2009, which also happens to be the kickoff to the annual Bluesfest Lawn Chair debate, let’s get things started with Peter Simpson of The Big Beat’s take on the issue:

    The Official Big Beat Position is that lawn chairs should be banned from Bluesfest. They are a menace. They’re boring for the performers, they take up too much room and too many lawn chair sitters have an inexplicable belief that they’re entitled to a clear view of the stage.

    The festival is getting bigger all the time, and surely it’s now big enough that a lawn-chair ban could be sustained. If a few hundred people choose not to come because they can’t stand or sit on the ground, so be it. And perhaps there are ways to accommodate the small number of [People in Lawn Chairs] who are genuinely, medically unable to stand for long periods. There are tens of thousands of more people who are legion enough to make the festival a success without the sitting few.

    Click through for the rest, including some anecdotes of incidents involving lawn chairs and the people in them. I’m with Peter on this on – lawn chairs have no business at a festival of this size. No other festival allows them. They’re a hassle, they take up too much space, and they’re potentially dangerous. And worst of all is the attitude that the people in the chairs bring with them. Hey man, lighten up – it’s a concert – get up and dance and leave the lawn chairs at home!

  • recently on twitter.com/dsamojlenko

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    • Happy Canada Day! #
    • Yeah K’NAAN! #
    • I had a fine Canada Day, thank you very much. Sadly missed most of K’NAAN, but did catch some delicious cocktails at Metropolitan. #
    • what’s up with the monday lineup at Bluesfest – is there really going to be just one stage open? #
  • recently on twitter.com/dsamojlenko

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    • Happy Canada Day! #
    • Yeah K’NAAN! #
    • I had a fine Canada Day, thank you very much. Sadly missed most of K’NAAN, but did catch some delicious cocktails at Metropolitan. #
    • what’s up with the monday lineup at Bluesfest – is there really going to be just one stage open? #
  • Bluesfest 2009: My Possibly Impossible List of Bands to see at Bluesfest

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    I’ve been working on my Bluesfest schedule, an annual act of futility since all bets are off once the festival is actually underway – between overlapping shows, meeting up with random people who have different priorities, and just plain exhaustion and/or drunkenness, it’s damn near impossible to catch everything you set out to during the fest.

    This year’s addition of the Byward Blues shows in the Market area really throw a wrench into the works – I’d love to catch more of the shows down there, but when there’s stuff going on at both sites, I can’t imagine finding a way between them that would be convenient and quick enough.  Some of the late night shows will be good though – I’m glad that Thunderheist is doing a late show on July 12, since earlier in the day they’re scheduled against Girl Talk – a difficult choice I wasn’t looking forward to making.

    Without further adieu, what follows is my Possibly Impossible List of Bands I want to see at Bluesfest 2009:

    The Black Keys
    Jeff Beck
    Marie-Josee Houle
    Holy Fuck
    Ana Miura
    Metric
    George Clinton and Parliament
    Iron & Wine
    Ben Harper and Relentless7
    RJD2
    Graham Walsh (HOLY FUCK) DJ Set
    The Stills
    The Proclaimers
    Sam Roberts Band
    Arrested Development
    DeVotchKa
    Jackson Browne
    United Steel Workers of Montreal
    Hey Rosetta!
    Lee Scratch Perry
    Matisyahu
    Land of Talk
    King Khan & BBQ Show
    Girl Talk
    Neko Case
    Thunderheist
    Broken Social Scene
    Joe Cocker
    Los Lonely Boys
    Thunderheist
    Mistress Barbara
    Kid Koala
    Stone Temple Pilots
    Ice Cube
    Xavier Rudd
    Spam Allstars
    Arkells
    Silent Disco
    K’NAAN
    KISS
    Skydiggers
    Shout Out Out Out Out
    Busta Rhymes
    LIVE
    Mick Taylor
    Styx
    Les Claypool
    CAKE
    Hollerado
    Ludacris
    Drive-By Truckers
    Lynyrd Skynyrd
    Handsome Furs
    The Dead Weather
    Yeah Yeah Yeahs

  • Bluesfest 2009: FOOD!

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    Just checked out the Vendor List for Bluesfest 2009, and I know it’s a strange thing to get excited about, but wow there’s going to be some great food this year!  Check it out – There’s Thai food, Indian food, Carribbean food, Moroccan, there’s Organic Foods, The Works, there’s Ribs, and Panini’s, and Greek food, and Shawarmas, Mexican food, Piccolo Grande, Kettle Corn, Chocolate Fondue, Mini Doughnuts, BeaverTails, Joeys Only Fish ‘n Chips, Kinki-Mambo will be serving Maki, and so much more…

    When you spend so much time every day at the fest, it’s nice to have a variety of food options, even better if some of them are even on the verge of being sorta healthy choices…  Needless to say, I’m really looking forward to a lot of things at Bluesfest this year, not least of which is the food.  Took the bus by the site yesterday on the way to Canada Day celebrations, and seeing the tents start to go up got me a lot more excited – only a week away!

  • My Infinite Summer: Week 1

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    Well, we’ve hit the first of our first Infinite Summer scheduled milestones, page 63 on Friday and page 94 yesterday. (I notice that the reading schedule allows for bigger chunks to be read over weekends, presumably because normal people probably have more time to read on weekends, but I’m so not normal, so I’m going to go ahead and aim to finish up all my Monday milestones by the Friday previous.) So far, I’m on schedule – though just barely (got most of the way through on Friday, but didn’t pick up again until late Sunday night when I jammed out the last couple of pages). Considering that I got a head start on the first week’s reading, this doesn’t exactly bode well for the rest of the summer. Guess I’ll just have to try harder.

    So I survived the first 97 pages! (I actually read-ahead 3 pages Sunday night – woo!) This beats my previous attempt at reading this book by about 10 pages, so that’s something!

    So far so good – there’s some really great stuff here – I loved the Erdedy the weed addict section, and the 8 page footnote (plus footnotes) of James O. Incandenza’s filmography, Wardine, the “professional conversationalist,” Hal’s introduction, the corporate sponsored year names, the Quebec separatists connection and the really bad cross-dresser, and so many more really funny, beautifully written moments.

    It is all a bit overwhelming. It really does kinda feel like you’re just floating around the surface of the narrative as Matthew Baldwin suggests. I get the distinct feeling that there is so much more here that a deeper reading could reveal, but I’m just trying to stay afloat and find my way through the dense  narrative and structure.  But it’s all just so much fun as well!

    So, week one is done.  I’m going to have to work hard to keep on schedule, particularly the next couple of weeks – with Canada Day tomorrow, and then Bluesfest starting next week (!!), my reading time is going to get really limited.  I’m very motivated right now – I’ve made it through what a lot of people consider to be the toughest part of the book, the first 100 pages or so…  So I’m just going to keep powering through and see where I end up next week.  Wish me luck!