Upload
parity-publishing-inc
View
222
Download
5
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
Verb Issue S252 (Aug. 9-15, 2013)
Citation preview
ISSUE #252 – AUGUST 9 TO AUGUST 15
PHOTO: COURTESY OF KAID ASHTON
ARTS CULTURE MUSIC SASKATOON
FR
EE
!R
EA
D &
SH
AR
E SMOKING SALVIA Exploring what a legal hallucinogen is all about
BROTHERLY LOVE Q+A with The Proclaimers
ELYSIUM + THE EAST Film reviews
+
WOKE UP ALONE
VERBNEWS.COMVERB MAGAZINE CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
2AUG 9 – AUG 15
SMOKING SALVIA A breakdown of this legal hallucinogen. 4 / LOCAL
CROSSFIT CULTURE Inside the workout phenomenon that’s gone worldwide. 6 / LOCAL
EDITORIALOur thoughts on using cell phones to pay for parking. 8 / EDITORIAL
COMMENTSHere’s what you had to say about Internet censorship. 10 / COMMENTS
Q + A WITH THE PROCLAIMERSIrish rockers speak out. 12 / Q + A
NIGHTLIFE PHOTOS We visit The Colonial and The Hose. 22-25 / NIGHTLIFE
LISTINGSLocal music listings for August 9 through August 17. 18 / LISTINGS
ELYSIUM + THE EAST The latest movie reviews. 20 / FILM
ON THE BUS Weekly original comic illustrations by Elaine M. Will. 26 / COMICS
OLD MAN CANYON Vancouver rockers’ haunting debut. 13 / ARTS
MENNONITE LOVEWe visit Taunte Maria’s. 16 / FOOD + DRINK
MUSICPaper Kites, Close Talker + Cruel Young Heart 17 / MUSIC
SHAKESPEARE’S BACK!On the Saskatchewan, that is. 13 / ARTS
GAMES + HOROSCOPESCanadian criss-cross puzzle, horoscopes, and Sudoku. 27 / TIMEOUT
CULTURE ENTERTAINMENTNEWS + OPINION
CONTENTSCONTENTS
ON THE COVER: FACTOROn his latest album. 14 / FEATURE
PHOTO: COURTESY OF KAID ASHTON
EDITORIALPUBLISHER / PARITY PUBLISHINGEDITOR IN CHIEF / RYAN ALLANMANAGING EDITOR / JESSICA PATRUCCOSTAFF WRITERS / ADAM HAWBOLDT + ALEX J MACPHERSONCONTRIBUTING WRITERS / R.A. PARKER + JEFF WILSON
ART & PRODUCTIONDESIGN LEAD / ANDREW YANKOGRAPHIC DESIGNER / BRANTIN FIXCONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS / ADAM HAWBOLDT + PATRICK CARLEY
BUSINESS & OPERATIONSOFFICE MANAGER / STEPHANIE LIPSITACCOUNT MANAGER / NATHAN HOLOWATYMARKETING MANAGER / VOGESON PALEYFINANCIAL MANAGER / CODY LANG
CONTACTCOMMENTS / [email protected] /
306 881 8372
ADVERTISE / [email protected] /
306 979 2253
DESIGN / [email protected] / 306 979 8474
GENERAL / [email protected] / 306 979 2253VERBNEWS.COM@VERBSASKATOON FACEBOOK.COM/VERBSASKATOON
VERBNEWS.COMNEWS + OPINION CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
4AUG 9 – AUG 15
SMOKING SALVIA
Unmasking a legal hallucinogen BY ADAM HAWBOLDT
LOCAL
T here’s an uneasiness bubbling in my chest as I put the pipe to my lips.
What the hell am I thinking? Is this a good idea? What if I end up with the trip from hell?
Thirty minutes ago I was at a smoke shop buying a gram of 10X salvia from a friendly young girl with red hair and a green shirt. “Make sure you do it in a comfortable environment,” she said. “Put on some music and enjoy the trip.”
Before I left the red-headed girl also said, “It helps if you have a friend
there. You never know what kind of experience you’re going to have.”
Sound advice, especially for someone who has never smoked salvia before. But here I am, alone. Pipe to my lips, sitting on the edge of my bed with Bob Marley playing in the background. An iPhone is propped up on my desk, taping the whole strange scene.
Here goes nothing. With a small yellow lighter I set the salvia on fire. Blue smoke curls around my knuckles. I inhale deep
@VERBSASKATOON NEWS + OPINIONCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
5AUG 9 – AUG 15
I laugh out loud. The sound is distant, with reverb and world-shattering echoes.
ADAM HAWBOLDT
@VerbSaskatoon
Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372
and hold. One Mississippi … two Mississippi …
When I get to 20 Mississippi I exhale a savage cloud of smoke. A numb sensation spreads from my head to my feet, lightheadedness kicks in. The edges of everything in the room sharpen.
But where are the hallucina-tions? Salvia is supposed to be one of the wildest hallucinogenic drugs on the market. Anxious, I pack another bowl. Light it. Inhale. One Mississippi … two Mississippi … three Mississippi —
I lose track of the count. Time and space collapse all around me like a dying star. Then it hits me, as though I’d just jumped off the back of a speeding motorcycle into the side of a brick building. Reality hic-cups and ceases to exist.
The scientific name for salvia is Salvia Divinorum. It’s also called Seer’s Sage or Ska María Pastora, and is native to the Sierra Mazateca of Oaxaca, Mexico. A member of the mint family, salvia has long been used by Mazatec shamans to induce visionary states of con-sciousness. They use it in healing sessions, to see the future, to get in touch with the spirit world and answer questions they have about life and the universe.
Thanks to the Internet, salvia has migrated from Mexico into most of the modern world. It’s legal
in Canada, it’s legal in the United Kingdom, it’s even legal in many anti-drug American states.
But this legality hasn’t stood without opposition. Many media outlets have written stories about salvia, the inherent dangers of the drug and, in a roundabout way, questioned why a hallucinogen of this magnitude is legal.
I was wondering the same thing. But instead of interviewing a bunch of people, asking them about their “horror” trips and whatnot, I figured the best plan of action was to smoke salvia and see what happened. The best way to get to the heart of things is to dig fast and deep to the core, right?
So that’s what I did.I researched the hell out of sal-
via. I learned all about its chemical
make-up, its levels of toxicity, it’s addictive qualities (the latter two being rather low). Then I learned about the six stages of salvia, denoted by the acronym SALVIA. There’s the (S)ubtle stage, where relaxation is king. There’s the (A)ltered perception stage, where
colour and textures get distorted. The (L)ight visionary stage results in eyes-closed visuals, the (V)ivid visionary stage is like a dreamlike state where you hallucinate. (I)mmaterial existence is when you become completely involved in your inner existence, and in (A)mnesic effects state you can lose consciousness.
Please don’t let me go there.
Bob Marley’s “No Woman, No Cry” is still playing in the background as the walls of the room start tear-ing apart, becoming fractured and gaping. Some sort of force that isn’t quite gravity pulls me back onto the bed. I close my eyes.
And that’s when the hallucina-tions begin.
It’s as though my body has been split into a million little pieces and being torpedoed through a winding tunnel. At first everything is dark. Pitch black. Then tiny blasts of light start to zip by my peripheral. The lights take shape. Turns out they’re not lights at all. Just shiny door
knobs. Door knobs with sculpted faces of famous authors on them. There’s Hemingway and his noble beard, Nelson Algren with his re-ceding hairline and reading glasses, Fitzgerald’s feminine profile.
Next thing I know there’s a blast of light, and I’m standing at the foot of a great silver pyramid. It tastes like bullets. And that’s the rub with a drug like salvia. It morphs colours into tastes, voices into words, texture into emotion. You’re living a different life outside space, time, reality. You exist in a life and a place beyond anything you’ve ever known. Ever dreamed of.
And standing there, looking at that silver pyramid, tasting it, the only thing I know is that the colours are brighter in this place, the shadows darker. There’s a huge statue of Hunter S. Thompson next to the entrance. But not the real Hunter S. Thompson — it’s Hunter S. Thompson the way Ralph Stead-man painted him. All angular and dripping and creepy.
The statue extends a long, bony, undulating hand, and in a soft, rumbling voice it says, “Get in there you miscreant, they’ve been wait-ing for you!”
I laugh out loud. The sound is distant, with reverb and world-shat-tering echoes. Then I melt into the pyramid, whizz past spider webs, over skeleton bones, blast through a fake stone wall, and I’m in the main chamber. The king’s tomb.
The ceiling in this place goes up. Way, way up. At the top, where the silver apex of this pyramid should be, it’s open. Bright, baby-blue stars drip down from the heavens in the black of night. In front of me there’s a ferris wheel. In each seat there’s a box. All different colours, all differ-ent tastes.
And from behind me Hunter S. Thompson’s voice booms, “Choose a box, you degenerate. The right one will set you free.”
Set me free? Panic closes in. What if I choose wrong? What if —
Statues of gladiators emerge from the four corners of the room. They brandish their wooden rudis. Terror slides up the back of my throat. Screw the boxes. I flee the pyramid. Images starts to blur. I try to hold on to the trip, extend it, see where this is going. But after a while I realize it’s just me forcing my imagination to work overtime.
My eyes snap open and it’s over.No more terror, no more authors,
no more pyramids. Just me on a bed, sweating, heart beating a thou-sand miles an hour. And the iPhone is still recording.
Verb recommends that you do not smoke salvia, ever.
VERBNEWS.COMNEWS + OPINION CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
6AUG 9 – AUG 15
PHOTO: COURTESY OF WWW.CROSSFIT.COM
CROSSFIT CULTURE
The workout phenomenon that’s gone worldwide BY ADAM HAWBOLDT
LOCAL
I It’s all in the hip,” says coach Rebecca Winter-halt. “Use your momen-
tum to drive your body up.”Nearby, a stocky man with
slightly cauliflowered ears hangs from a black, metal pull-up rig, muscles rippling beneath his T-shirt. Using his hips, the man swings his legs out, pulls himself up. Chin over the bar. Then he low-ers himself down, then up again. Again and again. Faster and faster.
A normal person’s muscles would ache just from watching this. Chances are, a normal person would be spent and exhausted after exploding through so many pull-ups.
But not this guy. He’s just getting warmed up. After all, there’s a full, fast-paced, uber-intense workout coming up in under three minutes.
Welcome to the wonderful world of CrossFit!
The gym where CrossFit athletes train isn’t like any gym you’ve ever been in before. There are no mir-rors, no treadmills, no ellipticals, no machines that isolate muscles.
Just a big, open, spartan-like room called a box with free weights and medicine balls and a pull-up rig carefully placed around the pe-rimeter. The floor is rubber, the ceil-ing high with lengths of ropes and gymnastic rings hanging from it.
A buzzer blasts through the box, music blares, and the stocky guy from before bends down, picks up a bar with weights on it and starts doing overhead squats. Up and down he goes in smooth, controlled motions. Fast as he can. Blasting up, then easing himself back down. Bar held high over his head the entire time. When he’s finished, he moves over to the pull-up rig, uses his hips, yanks his chin over the bar. Rinse and repeat. Then back to
overhead squats. Back to pull-ups. Back to squats, then pull-ups again.
When he’s finished, the man is a mass of panting, sweating, shredded muscle. But the workout isn’t over yet. Still one more exercise to go.
As legend has it, the father of CrossFit, Greg Glassman, was tired of the two ideals of fitness: the vain gym rat and the cardio-obsessed Iron Man. So what he did was develop a beast of a workout pro-gram that mixes power lifting with Olympic weightlifting, plyometrics, gymnastics, calisthenics and much, much more.
The result has been a world-wide phenomenon.
With more than 6,000 gyms around the world (most having opened after 2004), CrossFit is easily one of the most popular workout regimes going. From Regina to Saskatoon, North America to
/VERBSASKATOON NEWS + OPINIONCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
7AUG 9 – AUG 15
@VerbSaskatoon
Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372
What we try to do is get you to do more work in the least amount of time.
JASON CAIN
Australia people walk into these spartan gyms and put their bodies through sheer hell.
Everywhere you look, after exercises are complete, people are grunting and panting, doubled over on their knees gasping for breath.
It’s the kind of workout that will push you as far as you can go, then push you some more, all the while testing your mind, heart and body.
Why do people willingly subject themselves to something like this?
“Because it works,” says the stocky guy, who is now sitting on a bench under a digital timer.
He isn’t just any guy, though. His name is Jason Cain — a former competitive wrestler, champion of the 2011 Canada East CrossFit Regionals and, along with Rebecca Winterfall (who just so happens to be his wife), the owner of CrossFit Reebok 306.
Listening to Cain speak, you might also think he was a professor of CrossFit.
Once he’s slightly recovered from his WOD (CrossFit lingo for workout), Cain stands up and starts writing on a nearby whiteboard with a red marker.
“The first thing about CrossFit is it focuses on fully functional movement.” He writes FF on the board. “We’re not machines. When in your life has anyone ever held your arm down and said lift it? Never. But you have been asked to put something on a top shelf, lift a suitcase off the ground … all those movements require your joint to be moving at the same time. That’s what we focus on here.”
Cain writes CV on the white board and continues.
“Constantly varied. We never do the same thing.,” he says. “We
change it up every day. That makes you well rounded, and allows your body the ability to train multiple days in a row.”
Next Cain writes the letters HI. “High intensity,” he says, then scrawls the equation P=W/T on the board. “Power equals work over time. It’s Grade 11 physics. What we try to do is get you to do more work in the least amount of time. The more power you generate the worse it feels on your body — in the moment.”
And if Cain’s workout is any indication (he ripped through the pull-ups and overhead squats in about three minutes, then blasted through the final exercise — max 500 rows — in 90 seconds) his body probably feels worse than anyone else’s in the gym. But that’s okay. The worse his body feels now, the better the results.
Mention CrossFit to most people and the first word that comes to mind is “cult.” They envision men and wom-en, muscle-bound and shredded, posting pictures of themselves on Facebook doing handstand pushups and flipping giant tractor tires.
But spend some time in a Cross-Fit gym and you’ll see there’s noth-ing cultish about it. If anything, it’s more like a culture or a family. Or a highly efficient team.
“It’s not so much a gym as it is a sport organization,” says Cain. “We have coaches, athletes. We all train
together, we all support each other. Classes start together and finish to-gether. If you finish you don’t just put things away and wait. You go over and you support the people who haven’t
finished yet. You cheer them on, shout encouragements, because we all know how hard it is to finish [an exercise] when there’s nothing left in the tank.”
And like any sports organiza-tion, there people like Cain who take it very seriously, push them-selves to the limit and like it when it feels as though their hearts are going to explode.
Then there the others: 65-year-old women, 16-year-old teens, or people like Whitehalt, who are just looking for a workout that works. People who simply want to walk into a gym, turn their brains off for a bit, and forget about the flotsam and jetsam of their lives.
“Sure, some people want Cross-Fit as a sport and they’ll gravitate to the people in the gym that are competitive,” says Whitehalt. “But others just want to come here for a good workout, work hard, and go home. These days people have so much going on — work, kids, everything else — that it’s nice to just walk in somewhere and be able to let it all go.”
VERBNEWS.COMNEWS + OPINION CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
8AUG 9 – AUG 15
PHOTO: COURTESY OF INCASE
PARKING POWERLet’s make parking meters smart phone-compatible
T he future is here, and it’s paying for parking me-ters with a smartphone
Ok, well not here totally, at least not yet. But the future has arrived in numerous other cities across Canada and beyond, where smartphones have modernized the way people are paying for parking. The result is a more user-friendly experience of the oft-aggravating ordeal of finding, paying for, and then returning to top up an available metered spot. After all, Saska-toon is a vibrant city with a dynamic downtown full of parking meters. And that’s why we think it’s high time the city gets on board and brings smart-phone parking capabilities to our city’s metered parking stalls.
And if you don’t own a smartphone, never fear: the meters will still retain their quaint, quarter-eating capabili-ties. So if you haven’t quite made the leap to using apps, you can still make use of any of these parking stalls (just make sure you keep enough change on hand!).
But back to the future: smartphone enabled meters make paying for parking as simple as downloading and using a simple app, which allows you to use a credit card to pay for your parking spot. Heck, you can already do this at the University of Saskatchewan, so we don’t see any reason it wouldn’t work here.
And while the bonus of not having to dig through your car for enough change to feed the ever-hungry meter is a significant one, it doesn’t stop there. Say you’re in
a meeting that takes longer than you expect, and your meter’s about to run out (assuming you’re one of those people who actually pays at-tention to when your meter is about to expire). Rather than sending out a desperate plea to the cosmos to not get a ticket (or sprinting out to your vehicle to frantically repeat the search for change), you could simply receive a notification on your phone 15 minutes before your time runs out. Then you can simply fire up the app and add some more time to your meter, preventing a possible ticket. Easy? You bet!
And aside from consumer conve-nience, paying for metered parking downtown with your smartphone provides a host of other benefits, too. You can view and print parking receipts online. You can pay in smaller increments of time and simply top up (to the maximum time allowed) when you receive your warning text. And while it’s always a bonus to pull into a stall and see a few minutes left on the meter, it’s more of a bonus to only pay for the time you need, rather than dropping in three bucks and then leav-ing after 20 minutes.
Taking it one step further, we would also like to see mobile technol-ogy come to Saskatoon that would help you find available parking stalls. Already available in cities like San Francisco or LA, Parker is one such app. Using information received from sensors in parking spaces, the app shows users the number of available parking spots on any given street using
Google maps. A time saver, indeed, but one with a green hue: not circling the block for ages looking for that elusive available spot to park your car cuts down on gas used and reduces traffic congestion.
According to the city’s website, Sas-katoon operates metered parking stalls six days a week (Monday to Saturday), from 9am until 6pm. Requiring quar-ters, loonies or toonies to work, these meters will let you park your car for 90 minutes to two hours, depending on the area. There was a time when you could call and navigate a voice menu to pay for your meter, but the contract with the company that provided that service expired and there have been no motions to replace it. We are a vibrant and dynamic city, and making our downtown parking situation more user (and consumer) friendly only serves to benefit us all.
In The High Cost of Free Parking, Douglas Kolozsvari and Donald Shoup discuss the 85 percent ideal occupancy of any downtown parking area: busy enough that it generates enough foot traffic to keep shop owners happy, with enough available stalls so people looking for a spot have a chance without endlessly circling the block, at a relatively competitive price that’s low enough to keep people coming yet high enough to encourage turn-over. We all know the reasons metered parking in this city can be aggravat-ing: high cost, lack of open spots and having to constantly top up the meter. Using technology to address these concerns — paying only for the time
you use, being able to see open spots on your phone, and being able to top up a meter remotely — would go a long way to keeping drivers happy, with the side benefits of easing traffic and reducing emissions.
So what are we waiting for; let’s get with the program and start letting people pay for parking meters with their phones!
These editorials are left unsigned because they represent the opinions of Verb magazine, not those of the indi-vidual writers.
EDITORIAL
@VerbSaskatoon
Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372
VERBNEWS.COMNEWS + OPINION CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
10AUG 9 – AUG 15
COMMENTS
Text your thoughts to881 VERB
8372
ON TOPIC: Last week we asked what you thought about Internet censorship. Here's what you had to say:
– I agree wholeheartedly that Internet censorship is a very slip-pery slope. All those countries mentioned are the most repressive governments in the world so why is Mr. Cameron even considering this?
– The government for centuries has used the line “for the good of the people”. Censoring the internet is far too much power for the government. We by no means live in a free society as we are led to believe. The government has been trying to keep the masses under their control ever since governments were put on this earth. When is enough enough people? When will we truly wake up and realize their is no such thing as a “free society”? We have to continue to fight hard for every single “right” we say we have. Lets shout from the rooftops “I am mad as hell and I man to going to take this anymore!”. Then watch how the government will step in and continue to try and control us “for our own good.”
– Proposing to censor the inter-net for the good of our children is a horrible roundabout way to push a terrifying political agenda. The second a country like Britain (wealthy, developed, etc) starts ad-vancing policy like this, we should all be very, very concerned. As the article points out, there are many ways parents can monitor/control what their children see online. It’s far more important to teach kids right from wrong than leave par-enting up to the government. This is setting dangerous precedent, and rile up everyone.
– Censoring the net is a bad idea it’s telling people what they can
and can’t view as long as you’re an adult it’s up to you what you view on the net.
– I would support the monarchy but if pm cameron gets what he wants I would support cutting our ties with britain
OFF TOPIC
– I am replying to the “Wanting to be Heard” article. I appreciated many points in the interview and I am glad she stepped forward; however I am even more disap-pointed she spoke so eloquently yet completely missed the point with the posters - they did not encourage progressive discus-sion but just ended up enraging people. Not to mention I looked at the site she listed and instead of a social discussion on equality it was nothing more than misogy-nist banter. She needs to work on her media!
In response to “Wanting to be heard,” Local,
#251 (August 2, 2013)
– I was appalled to read the interview with A Voice for Men. You should be ashamed of giving someone like that a platform to spread her vile message. How awful it was.
In response to “Wanting to be heard,” Local,
#251 (August 2, 2013)
– I appreciated the story about A Voice for Men not because I like the group (their views are despicable and mysoginistic and horrendously offensive) but because I hadn’t heard what their side was, and the more you know about the enemy the better you can destroy their ideas and re
/VERBSASKATOON NEWS + OPINIONCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
11AUG 9 – AUG 15
fute their policies. I suspect that’s why you run the story.
In response to “Wanting to be heard,” Local,
#251 (August 2, 2013)
– Your article “wanting to be heard” is very true. Having stayed at homeless for the last year and half I have heard many stories of men mistreated by women.
In response to “Wanting to be heard,” Local,
#251 (August 2, 2013)
– Loving people freaking out over your voice for men article. Read it pretty carefully, and didn’t see any sign that you endorsed the movement or advocated for that position, but people sure think you did. Lol read carefulley.
In response to “Wanting to be heard,” Local,
#251 (August 2, 2013)
– To the person last week who said cameras on cops is a huge invasion of privacy. What do cops do when arresting or questioning someone that they need privacy from their superiors or the public? I think it’s an excellent idea for camera’s on cops so they can be held account-able in those rare circumstances.
In response to “Policing the Police,” Edito-
rial, #250 (July 26, 2013)
– Your “newspaper”, using that term loosely, only has two writ-ers, and one of them only covers music so it’s not hard to figure out who wrote this article and who’s thoughts and opinions they are. ( the camera on the police artile$
In response to “Policing the Police,” Edito-
rial, #250 (July 26, 2013)
SOUND OFF
– What Joni Mitchell said about our city is absolutely correct. Saskatoon is full of bigots. There is more racism here then all of Canada
– Don’t count your chickens before they Atch. WH
– Park and Ride more than bridges would solve traffic congestion on Saskatoon’s main streets during rush hours. Leave the car at the mall and take the bus dowtown..schedule buses every 15 minutes during peak hours.
– They used to boast “The sun never sets on the British Empire!” Now the sun has set for good on the British Empire!
NEXT WEEK: What do you think of making parking meters smart phone com-patible? Pick up Verb to get in on the conversation:
We print your texts verbatim each week. Text in your thoughts and reactions to our stories and content, or anything else on your mind.
VERBNEWS.COMCULTURE CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
12AUG 9 – AUG 15
Q + A
BROTHERLY LOVE
I
Scottish duo the Proclaimers release ninth album, talk twenty-five years of music BY ALEX J MACPHERSON
PHOTOS: COURTESY OF MURDO MACLEOD
You want to write the killer song … but you also want to write the original song.
CHARLIE REID
t has been an busy year for Charlie and Craig Reid. Known to most people
as the Proclaimers, the Scottish singers and songwriters have been celebrating their twenty-fifth year as a working band by working harder than ever. After releas-ing their ninth studio album, Like Comedy, last year, the twin brothers went to work on a compilation, The Very Best Of The Proclaimers, which is scheduled for release in North America later this year and will stand as a testament to all they have accomplished. And while the band has had several songs transcend the boundaries of rock and roll, chief among them “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles),” the brothers have spent the last two decades chuck-ing out great song after great song. I caught up with Charlie, who can be distinguished onstage by his guitar, to learn a bit more about what the Proclaimers have been up to.
Alex J MacPherson: Looking at the latest record and this point in your lives and careers, it feels like you and Craig are simply interested in writing the best songs that you can write.
Charlie Reid: In all honestly, that was the only real concrete ambition. When we signed the
first recording deal with Chrysalis
back in ’87, we were unemployed, and we didn’t want to be unem-ployed any more; we wanted to go out and just play gigs, and hope-fully build a small following, and not have to be on the dole anymore. The really long-term thing was to get better at what we did, and I think we’ve done that, particularly over the last three or four records.
AJM: Which probably made pick-ing songs for the compilation, The Very Best Of The Proclaimers, an interesting experience. Songwriters tend to look forward, but you had to look back.
CR: There’s been nine studio albums, and you look back a little bit when you put a tour together. With this, we really wanted it to run like a gig, a long gig, to feel like
a performance — and also to be a statement of where we were 25 years ago and where we are now. So it’s difficult. There were some tunes we chose when we could have chosen others. But you can’t put them all on; you’ve just got to
select an overview of our experi-ence and our career.
AJM: One constant thread running through your career is this focus on vocals and on lyrics. You’ve got these lovely musical backdrops, but ultimately it’s the lyrics that are in the spotlight.
CR: I suppose we’re traditional in the way we put a lot of things together. I wouldn’t call us perfectionists … When it comes to getting the words, the words have got to feel right. The song has got to be the right tempo to let the words be heard. I think it needs to come across right. You should be able to sing the song just with a guitar and the two of us.
AJM: Broadly speaking, Like Comedy has some uptempo rockers and some
ballads. Was it intentional to sort of split it down the middle that way?
CR: You want to write the killer song, obviously, but you also want to write the original song. Originali-ty’s important to us. I suppose when
we do a gig the majority of what we do is uptempo, but we have written a lot of ballads over the years as well, and I think that’s an important part — I’m always suspicious of people who only ever have happy songs or only ever have sad songs. It just strikes me as somewhat odd.
AJM: In a lot of cases, bands from the U.K. have trouble in North America. What has allowed the Proclaimers to flourish here for more than two decades?
CR: I think the lyrics have helped. Hopefully there’s some humour in what we do, something that makes the songs stand out. Also, we sound different. We can never get away
from that. We were always deter-mined to sound the way we were and not alter anything at all. So the accent comes across. And I think for us it was about performance — something that communicates with people. It was just honest, and I think that resonates with people.
The ProclaimersAugust 22 @ The Odeon$29.50+ @ Odeon Box Office or theodeon.ca
@VerbSaskatoon
Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372
@VERBSASKATOON CULTURECONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
13AUG 9 – AUG 15
ARTS
J
M
SHAKESPEARE ON THE SASKATCHEWANArtistic director Mark von Eschen on the growth of Saskatoon’s classic summer festival BY ALEX J MACPHERSON
ett Pace, a singer and songwriter from Vancouver,
spent the last four years mak-ing music with a rotating cast of friends and acquaintances. Late last year, he decided to strike out on his own. “It was the first time I got to be completely free with the creative process,” he says of Phantoms & Friends, the EP he released under the moniker Old Man Canyon. “Being alone with your vision is a really powerful place to be in. It’s often scary to begin something on your own, but diving into it without doubt is infinitely rewarding.”
Phantoms & Friends, which was released in April, consists of five
sepulchral songs Pace spent the best part of a year writing, gentle meditations on the past and the pres-ent. Although the sparsely beauti-ful arrangements land somewhere between brooding alt-country and darkly jubilant pop, Pace says he was open to ideas — and that most of the sounds on the record are the product of his collaboration with producer, and now band member, Dave Meszaros.
“We really took our time creating the record and just experimenting with anything we felt called to try,” he says. “With that freedom to just play around, I think some really pure great stuff came out of it.” The songs on Phantoms & Friends are generally
simple, but the arrangements are sublime: sparse yet rich, foreboding yet strangely compelling.
Like Elliott Smith, who routinely double-tracked his vocals to add another layer of depth and complex-ity, Pace is fond of layered vocals. The arrangements on Phantoms & Friends are powered by guitars and pianos, but derive their strength from soaring choruses, the sound of many voices singing as one. This is most evident on the title track, as a series of austere guitar chords swell into the soaring chorus, the tension amplified by an airy gang vocal.
Ultimately, Phantoms & Friends is about the rupture between past, present, and future. Pace wrote most
of the songs at a difficult time in his life — “I was going through some big shifts,” he says — yet the path to redemption is never blocked by despair. “For me this collection of songs is really about just surrender-ing to that unknown future and be-ing okay with where you are,” Pace muses. “It’s about trusting that the
next step will present itself when you are ready to see it.” Perhaps more than anything else, Phantoms & Friends proved to Pace that the path is now clear.
Old Man CanyonAugust 16 @ Amigos CantinaTickets at the door
@VerbSaskatoon
Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372
ark von Eschen has been a part of Shakespeare
on the Saskatchewan for more than two decades. In that time, the current artistic and execu-tive director has seen the annual festival celebrating the greatest writer of them all grow from a small celebration of Shake-speare’s titanic legacy into a provincial institution and an unmistakable sign of summer in Saskatoon. He remembers 1990 as a pivotal year.
“The first year that I was involved was the first year we
had flush toilets, and that was a big thing,” he says with a laugh, explaining that in the beginning audience members were required to bring their own chair. Since its inception, Shakespeare on the Saskatchewan has had what von Eschen calls “a number of financial crashes” — yet it has survived and flourished. “The first year I worked for the company, we were at 180 seats in the main tent. Now, we’ve grown to 282 seats doing two full-scale productions in repertory.”
“For quite a few years we tried to get into the B-string plays, and
I was looking at things in terms of balancing risk and adventure,” von Eschen says. “Since last year, we’re turning back toward the curriculum plays again, because the truth of the matter is you can have a fabu-lous production of Henry IV, but as soon as you put a man’s name with a number behind it, people stay away in droves.”
But this problem is not limited to Shakespeare’s histories. For years, Shakespeare has been perceived as “difficult,” probably because his language sounds dated. This is a misconception, von Eschen insists.
“Shakespeare is part of who we are, part of our basic culture,” he says. “We might understand ourselves better if we understand that connection.”
This is why this year’s productions — Macbeth, a cautionary tale about the corrupting influence of choosing the easy path, and A Comedy of Errors, a finely wrought farce about mis-taken identity — as well as the rest of Shakespeare’s works are so important. “People sometimes ask me, ‘Why don’t you do Shakespeare with English accents?’” von Eschen muses. “The reason is that Shakespeare is about us. It’s not about people long ago and
far away. All of his stories are about people we know, and one of the great joys of doing a contemporary version of Shakespeare is that it makes it easy to make that connection.”
Shakespeare on the SaskatchewanThrough August 25 @ the riverbank, near the Mendel Art Gallery$20+ @ shakespeareonthesaskatchewan.com
PHOTOS: COURTESY OF THE ARTIST
ARTS
PHANTOMS & FRIENDSA haunting debut from Vancouver group Old Man Canyon BY ALEX J MACPHERSON
VERBNEWS.COMCULTURE CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
14AUG 9 – AUG 15
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE »
G
WOKE UP ALONE
The one thing I’ve been really lucky with is being able to collaborate with people all over the world…
GRAHAM MURAWSKY
PHOTO: COURTESY OF KAID ASHTON
Factor and friends explore death, despair on his most ambitious project to date BY ALEX J MACPHERSON
FEATURE
raham Murawsky, who produces and
performs under the name Factor, is sitting in a Saskatoon café, drinking a cup of coffee and talking about his latest project. A sprawling concept album featur-ing ten of his closest musical associates and a live band, Woke Up Alone is his first solo record since 2010’s Lawson Graham. It is also the most ambitious project he has ever undertaken. Conceived as an exploration of the blackest depths of despair and desperation, Woke Up Alone traces the story of a man strug-gling to accept and understand his wife’s death. The album,
which was released just a few hours before our conversation, positions Murawsky as one of
the most innovative producers in the country. It is also an example of how hip hop is growing and evolving. Technological advance-
ments and a collective desire to expand beyond the lines of genre and style have made the
music industry more democratic than ever before; Factor is on the leading edge of these changes because he refuses to be limited
/VERBSASKATOON CULTURECONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
15AUG 9 – AUG 15
PHOTO: COURTESY OF KAID ASHTON
@VerbSaskatoon
Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372
by convention or tradition. He acknowledges his place in the evolution of the hip hop he loves, but is unafraid to bend the rules. In the end, Woke Up Alone is the product of a world where the only thing that matters is raw creativity.
“I think it’s very important to find yourself, have your own sound, define your sound,” Mu-rawsky says between sips of coffee, the relentless buzz of his iPhone the only reminder that Woke Up Alone is creating a stir across the country. “It might seem like a little bit longer road at the start because it might be easier to just sound like someone else and get the ball rolling, you know? But in the long run, I think having your own thing is so important.” Murawsky began experimenting with samples and hip hop beats in 1998; within a few years, he was collaborating with rappers from across North America and shaping his sound into a rich collection of punchy drums, lus-cious sonics, and an unmistakable soul sensibility. Although he has spent the last decade working flat out, producing albums by other art-ists and refining his craft, late last year he decided to make another album for himself. But instead of calling a bunch of his favourite rappers and releasing a compila-tion, he decided to try something much more ambitious — a fusion of hip hop convention, sample-free performances by live musicians, and a strong narrative arc.
Woke Up Alone emerged as a play in five acts. Murawsky came up with the idea while thinking about the things most people try
hard to avoid — life and death, faith and magic, redemption and despair. After settling on the basic idea, a man’s unwillingness to part
with his wife, he realized he could define the structure of the record by moving through the five stages of grief, as proposed by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross in On Death And Dying. This was the catalyst. As the con-cept began to emerge, Murawsky set about casting the roles. Kirby Dominant, who is based in Oak-land and previously collaborated with Factor, was an obvious choice for the unnamed protagonist. “Me and Kirby have been doing songs together since 2001,” Murawsky says, referring to their side project Paranoid Castle. “We’ve known each other for twelve years and he’s one of my best friends. He even lived at my house for a month.” Af-ter casting Dominant in the leading role, Murawsky began searching for other characters.
“I had to pick people I knew well enough and felt fit the part,” he says, pointing out that the char-acters are defined only by an iden-tity like “False Prophet,” “Devil,” and “Voice of Reason.” Because he asked each performer to write lyrics that touched on one aspect of the story, it was crucial that he picked people whose creative vi-sion jived with his own. “The one thing I’ve been really lucky with is being able to collaborate with people all over the world and get to know them on a personal level.” The list of artists who contributed to the project is extremely diverse and includes Astronautalis, Ceschi, Nomad, Myka 9, Open Mike Eagle, and Evil Ebenezer. Murawsky also recruited Jeans Boots, the nom de guerre of Saskatoon-based art-ist Jeanette Stewart, to play the wife’s ghost. “I’ve been working with Jeans quite a bit, and I really like her,” he says. “She’s one of my Saskatoon favourites.”
Murawsky’s decision to include Jeans Boots is a reflection of how his musical ideas have grown and evolved. He rose to prominence in the early part of the last decade, when underground hip hop was still underground and the over-whelming majority of beats were constructed from samples — audio tracks extracted from one context and levered into another. In 2011, he released a sample-free album called Factor & The Chandeliers,
which featured performances by bassist Enver Hampton and guitarist Lévi Soulodre. It was his first experiment with sample-free production and inspired many of the sounds on Woke Up Alone, much of which was constructed around live instruments played by Hampton and Soulodre. “I’m trying to go away from samples a bit,” he muses. “I mean, I still love samples. I love the way they sound and I love the dust and the air on records. The texture of the music when it’s sampled off vinyl.”
Virtually all Factor productions hint at the hidden relationship between hip hop and other styles of music, from folk and pop to rock and funk, and Murawsky recogniz-es that he is on the cutting edge of this movement. His decision to in-clude live bass and guitar parts, as well as plenty of live synthesizers, allows Woke Up Alone to capture the gritty sound of the basement re-cordings he loves without sacrific-ing the sonic depth and clarity of a mainstream production. The album also benefits from its use of familiar structures — verses, choruses, bridges — which allow each song to stand on its own or form part of the greater narrative arc. And from the opening notes of the title track, it is clear that Woke Up Alone is an extraordinary achievement — both a synthesis of two different worlds and the culmination of ev-erything Factor has spent his career working toward.
The story begins with “The Empire Has Fallen,” on which Kirby Dominant explains his life with and separation from his wife before falling into a vicious cycle of doubt and despair. After a short interlude, various sinister characters offer necromantic solutions to the problem and send Dominant’s protagonist spinning out of control. The listener is left feeling helpless as a series of tragic events sends the protagonist marching toward his own demise, further and further away from the warm embrace of reality. There is a certain restlessness to the album, a tension that flirts with resolution without ever settling into predictabil-ity or normalcy, that makes listening to Woke Up Alone a visceral as well as a philosophical experience.
Murawsky spent a year making Woke Up Alone. Today, on the day of its release, he is proud to have achieved so much yet eager to accomplish even more. “It was by far the most ambitious record,” he says. “At any moment it could have derailed.” After a pause he laughs and says, “When I finished it I was like, I’m never making another con-cept album. But it was worth it. It was what I wanted it to be. And I’m happy it came out.” Over the course of his career, which began more than a decade ago, Murawsky has worked tirelessly to perfect his art. He has collaborated with dozens of artists from around the world. He has produced records for Myka 9 and Moka Only, and worked closely
with Def 3. Woke Up Alone is better than anything he has ever done, yet he has a novel way of looking at it. “I still think there’s so much further to go,” he says, leaning forward, his eyes lighting up. “I’m barely starting out right now. I feel like this record is definitely the start of something else.”
FactorAugust 29 @ The Hollows$TBD
VERBNEWS.COMCULTURE CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
16AUG 9 – AUG 15
FOOD + DRINK
MENNONITE MUNCHIES
LET’S GO DRINKIN’ VERB’S MIXOLOGY GUIDE
ST. DILL MARTINI
Are you a martini fan? If so, what’s your favourite kind? A regular martini? Dry martini? A blind pilot, a gimlet, an Irish martini? Personally, I like my martinis dirty. So here’a slight variation on an old favourite.
INGREDIENTS
2 oz vodka.5-1oz kosher pickle brinevermouth (splash)10 mustard seeds1 baby kosher dill pickle1 sprig of dill
DIRECTIONS
Put vodka, pickle brine, vermouth and mustard seeds in shaker with ice. Shake well. Skewer the pickle, add to a chilled martini glass. Pour in the martini. Garnish with dill and serve.
TTaunte Maria’s serves tasty, homemade cooking BY ADAM HAWBOLDT
Photos courtesy of Adam Hawboldt
@VerbSaskatoon
Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372
he Mennonite religious group was named after Menno Simons, an
Anabaptist religious leader in the 1500s.
I know this because it’s typed in black ink on the white laminated menu I’m holding.
Where I am is Taunte Maria’s, a Mennonite family restaurant on Quebec Avenue. It’s a quaint little place, the kind of place you feel at home in. It features a maroon and green colour scheme, an old green and white stove near the kitchen, and an antique sewing machine by the door. There are benches along the walls, tables in the centre and a menu with loads of information on it. Information that was previously unknown to me.
For example: did you know the German Mennonites speak low-Ger-man (Plautdietsch), a language that is relatively young? Yeah, me neither.
Or how about rebspaa, kjielkje, plumemoos and rollkucken? You know what they are? I didn’t, but according to the menu they are all Mennonite dishes — spare-ribs, noodles, fruit soup and fritters, respectively.
Eager to sink my teeth into some Mennonite food, I scanned the menu looking for something that caught my eye. The cottage cheese vereniki (cheese pockets) certainly did. So too did the schinkenflesh (ham steak with pineapple) and the Taunte Maria’s special (six pero-gies, two cabbage rolls, two pieces of farmer sausage, sour cream and grilled onions). But in the end I
went with a dish called Noodlin Mett Schmaunfat.
Sounds fancy, right? It’s not. Nor is it meant to be. Taunte Maria’s isn’t the kind of restaurant that relies on fancy names and fancy dishes. Nah. What you get when you sit down in one of their maroon booths is unpretentious homemade cooking. Just like mom makes.
And you know what? It’s pretty darn good.
The Noodlin Mett Schmaunfat was a heaping plate of homemade noodles smothered in cream gravy and served with fried onions and thick, juicy strips of perfectly cooked bacon. And in case you’re wondering, the bacon was the star of the dish. (But then again, when isn’t it?) The rest of it was good, sure. But the bacon brought the whole meal together.
It came with a side of summa borscht, which the waitress told me “is THE soup to have around here.”
She wasn’t kidding. With huge pieces of potato and farmer sausage, and laced with dill, this soup was one big bowl of smoky, dilly deliciousness.
Man, I wish my mom knew how to make soup like that.
Taunte Maria’s8-1724 Quebec Avenue | (306) 343-3334
@VERBSASKATOON CULTURECONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
17AUG 9 – AUG 15
MUSIC
PHOTOS COURTESY OF: THE ARTIST/ THE ARTIST/ THE ARTIST
COMING UPNEXT WEEK
CLOSE TALKER
These exciting, up-and-coming indie-rockers are certainly making a name for themselves. Although Will Quiring, Matthew Kopperud, Chris Morien, and Jeremy Olson have only been on the scene for a short while, their debut album, Timbers, bespeaks an incredible talent that has only just been tapped into. Featuring a lush soundscape layered with edgy vocals and luxurious melodies, Timbers resonates with listeners, leaving them wanting more. Don’t thing these four young guys are just a studio band, though. Thanks to hours spent honing their live performances on stages across Western Canada, Close Talker is certainly a group to check out in person. Hit them up when they blow the roof off Vangelis next week. Tick-ets at the door.
@ VANGELISSATURDAY, AUGUST 17 – $10
Cruel Young Heart is a pop rock trio hailing from Vancouver, British Columbia. Formed in 2010, the band has recently dropped their self-titled EP, engineered and produced out of the famed Mushroom Studios. This three-piece — James Blackmon (vocals), Andrew Blackmon (drums) and Mark Armstrong (guitar), offers sharp and catchy songs that are laced with thick drums, wicked lyr-ics and a seductive blend of dance synth and guitars. Known as a band whose style is as appealing as their tunes, their live shows offer an aes-thetic and sonic escape you won’t soon forget. These guys are emerg-ing on the fast track to success, so head on down to Amigos to catch ‘em doing what they do best. Tickets available at the door.
CRUEL YOUNG HEART
Hailing from Melbourne, Austra-lia, folk indie darlings The Paper Kites are poised to have quite the sum-mer. Following on the heels of their first two EPS, Woodland and Young North, the quintet — which features the talents of Sam Bentley, Christina Lacy, Dave Powys, Sam Rasmussen and Josh Bentley — are releasing their first album at the end of August. States is a remarkable debut record, drenched in sonic soundscapes and diverse textures, as evidenced on the infectious single “St. Clarity” or the seductive rock flourishes of “A Les-son From Mr. Gray.” The Paper Kites will be touring this new record this fall, so catch their show with Reuben and the Dark at Amigos at the begin-ning of November. Tickets available through ticketedge.ca.
– By Jeff Wilson
PAPER KITES
@ AMIGOSTHURSDAY, AUGUST 22 – $TBD
SASK MUSIC PREVIEWThe Symphony Under the Sky is back! This annual event celebrates our symphony while previewing music that will be appearing in the Regina Symphony Orchestra’s upcoming sea-son — all for free! Pre-Symphony entertainment includes Sylvia Chave, Alex Runions, Keiffer and the Curiosity Club, and Vudu Hounds. The event also offers kids’ activities, art workshops, a musical petting zoo, and more. Come and celebrate with the RSO on August 18, from 11am -7pm, in Regina’s Wascana Park.
Keep up with Saskatchewan music. saskmusic.org
PHOTO: COURTESY OF STEPHEN WOLFE
@ AMIGOSFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 – $10
VERBNEWS.COMENTERTAINMENT CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
18AUG 9 – AUG 15
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE »
LISTINGS
The most complete live music listings for Saskatoon.
AUGUST 9 » AUGUST 17
9 10
16 1714 1512 1311
S M T W T
FRIDAY 9HOUSE DJS / 6Twelve Lounge — Funk, soul
& lounge DJs liven up the atmosphere at
6Twelve. 9pm / No cover
WEAK ENDS / Amigos Cantina — These
hardcore punk rockers from Saskatchewan
are having their album release party! 10pm /
Tickets at the door
DJ AASH MONEY / Béily’s — DJ Aash Money
throws down a high-energy top 40 dance
party every Friday night. 9pm / $5
SCREAMLYNE / Buds — A badass Saskatch-
ewan rock quintet. 9pm / Cover TBD
BPM / Diva’s — Resident DJs spin electro/
vocal house music. 10pm / $5
DJ ECLECTIC / The Hose & Hydrant — Local
turntable whiz DJ Eclectic pumps snappy
electronic beats. 8pm / No cover
DJ STIKMAN / Jax Niteclub — Kick off your
weekend with all your favourite party hits..
9pm / $5 cover
DJ BIG AYYY & DJ HENCHMAN / Outlaws
Country Rock Bar — Round up your friends
‘cause there’s no better country rock party
around. 8pm / $5; ladies in free before 11pm
PENNY REIGH / Piggy’s — A little badass
rock to start your weekend off right. 9pm /
No cover
JENNIFER LANE / Prairie Ink — A singer-
songwriter and poet from Saskatchewan.
8pm / No cover
STUCK IN THE ‘80S! / Prairieland Park Exhi-
bition — Hit up the Bud Big Rig beer gardens
for some ‘80s classics.
GREAT BIG SEA / Prairieland Park — Iconic
Canadian rockers! 8:30pm / Free with Ex
admission
WEST OF HELL, WRATHED, LAVAGOAT / Rock
Bottom — It’s the Demon Sent 2013 Tour.
9pm / Cover TBD
DUELING PIANOS / Staqatto — Terry Hoknes,
Neil Currie and Brad King belt out classic
tunes and audience requests. 10pm / $5
PARTY ROCK FRIDAYS / Tequila — Featuring
DJ Anchor. 9pm / Cover TBD
DJ NICK RUSTON / Uncle Barley’s — Come
and check him out! 9pm / Cover TBD
CLASSY CHASSYS / Vangelis Tavern — This
local rockabilly four-piece will bring you a
little rock, blues, punk and jazz. Also appear-
ing are rock act Blackwater. 10pm / $10
SATURDAY 10HOUSE DJS / 6Twelve — Resident DJs
spin deep and soulful tunes all night. 9pm
/ No cover
DJ AASH MONEY + DJ CTRL / Béily’s —
These two DJs throw down a high-energy
top 40 dance party. 9pm / $5 cover
SCREAMLYNE / Buds on Broadway — A
badass Saskatchewan rock quintet. 9pm /
Cover TBD
SATURGAY NIGHT / Diva’s — Resident DJs
spin exclusive dance remixes. 10pm / $5
DJ KADE / The Hose & Hydrant — Saska-
toon’s own DJ lights it up with hot tunes.
8pm / No cover
DJ STIKMAN / Jax Niteclub — Ladies night
with DJ Stikman and the Jax party crew.
9pm / $5 cover
FACTOR / Odeon Events Centre — This local
hip hop producer will be rocking it at the
Odeon. 9pm / $15
DJ BIG AYYY & DJ HENCHMAN / Outlaws
Country Rock Bar — Round up your friends
‘cause there’s no better country rock party
around. 8pm / $5
WAYNE BARGEN / Prairie Ink — Rocking
some finger-style acoustic guitar and a set of
originals. 8pm / No cover
BURTON CUMMINGS / Prairieland Park —
The Guess Who’s frontman will be playing
the SaskTel Grandstand for the Ex! 8:30pm /
Free with Ex admission
DUELING PIANOS / Staqatto Piano Lounge
— Terry Hoknes, Neil Currie and Brad King
belt out classic tunes and audience requests,
from Sinatra to Lady Gaga. 10pm / $5
PENNY REIGH / Piggy’s — A little badass
rock to start your weekend off right. 9pm /
No cover
MOSTLY WANTED / Rock the Bottom — Also
appearing are special guests We Are Proto-
types. 9pm / Cover TBD
DJ ANCHOR / Sutherland Bar — It’s the
world famous video mix show! 10pm /
Cover TBD
SEXY SATURDAYS / Tequila — A night of hot
tunes. 9pm / Cover TBD
DJ THORPDEO / Uncle Barley’s — Spinning
hot tunes all night. 10pm / Cover TBD
ADOLYN, BREATHE KNIVES, CATGUT, SOUL MATES / Vangelis Tavern — A hardcore
night with badass bands from Calgary,
Edmonton and beyond. 9pm / $10
JAMAICAN REGGAE AND DUB PARTY / The
Woods. Bringing a little island heat to Saska-
toon. 9pm / No cover
SUNDAY 11INDUSTRY NIGHT / Béily’s — Hosted by
DJ Sugar Daddy. 9pm / $4; no cover for
industry staff
DJ KADE / The Hose & Hydrant — Saskatoon
DJ lights it up with hot tunes. 8pm BLUES JAM / Vangelis Tavern — The Vangelis
Sunday Jam offers great tunes from blues to
rock and beyond. 7:30pm / No cover
MONDAY 12GORGEOUS BLUE DOGS / Buds — Get your
night started right! 9pm / Cover TBD
DJ AUDIO / Dublins — Spinning dope beats.
9pm / Cover TBD
TUESDAY 13THE SEEKERS / Buds — This four-piece will
blow your mind! 9pm / Cover TBD
DJ SUGAR DADDY / The Double Deuce
— This crowd favourite has always been
known to break the latest and greatest tracks
in multiple genres. 9:30pm / $4 cover
DJ NICK RUSTON / Dublins — Spinning dope
beats. 9pm / Cover TBD
OPEN MIC / Somewhere Else Pub — Come
out to show your talent. 7pm / No cover
WEDNESDAY 14HUMP WEDNESDAYS / 302 Lounge & Dis-
cotheque — Resident DJ Chris Knorr will be
spinning all of your favourite songs. 9pm /
No cover until 10pm; $3 thereafter
THE SEEKERS / Buds — This four-piece will
blow your mind! 9pm / Cover TBD
DJ MEMO / Dublins — Spinning dope beats.
9pm / Cover TBD
DJ KADE / The Hose & Hydrant — Saskatoon
DJ lights it up with hot tunes. 8pm
THE AVENUE RECORDING COMPANY PRES-ENTS OPEN MIC / Rock Bottom — Hosted
by Chad Reynolds. Sign up and play at this
weekly event. 10pm / No cover
CJWW KARAOKE / Stan’s Place — Your tal-
ent, aired on the radio! 9pm / No cover
WILD WEST WEDNESDAY / Outlaws —
Hosted by DJ Big Ayyy & DJ Henchman.
9pm / $4; no cover for industry staff
DUELING PIANOS / Staqatto Piano Lounge
— Terry Hoknes, Neil Currie and Brad King
belt out classic tunes and audience requests,
from Sinatra to Lady Gaga. 10pm / No cover
KALLE MATTSON / Vangelis Tavern — Some
folk rock from a musician from Ontario. Also
appearing is Six Moons Later. 9pm / $10
door, $8 advance
THURSDAY 15MAJICAL CLOUDZ / Amigos —A musical
project and performance event you don’t
want to miss. Also appearing are Moon King.
9pm / TBD
DAYBREAK / Buds — Badass tunes for your
listening pleasure. 9pm / Cover TBD
/VERBSASKATOON ENTERTAINMENTCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
19AUG 9 – AUG 15
Have a live show you'd like to promote? Let us know!
GET LISTED
THROWBACK THURSDAYS / Earls — With
Dr. J. 8pm / No cover
DJ KADE / The Hose & Hydrant — Saskatoon
DJ lights it up with hot tunes. 8pm
THUNDER RIOT W/CONKY SHOWPONY / Rock Bottom — Come dance the night away.
9pm / $5
HEARD IN THE MOUNTAINS / Rock Bottom
— With special guests The Pistol Whips.
9pm / Cover TBD
TRIPLE UP THURSDAYS / Tequila — Featur-
ing DJ Dislexic. 9pm / Cover TBD
OPEN STAGE / The Woods — Hosted by
Steven Maier. 9pm / No cover
JEN LANE / Vangelis — Also appearing is
Sarah Burton. 9pm / $10
FRIDAY 16HOUSE DJS / 6Twelve Lounge — Funk, soul
& lounge DJs liven it up. 9pm / No cover
OLD MAN CANYON / Amigos — Also ap-
pearing is Kirby Criddle. 10pm / TBD
DJ AASH MONEY / Béily’s — DJ Aash Money
throws it down. 9pm / $5
SCREAMER / Buds on Broadway — High
energy classic rock. 9pm / Cover TBD
BPM / Diva’s — Resident DJs spin electro/
vocal house music. 10pm / $5
DJ ECLECTIC / The Hose — Local turntable
whiz pumps snappy beats. 8pm / No cover
DJ STIKMAN / Jax — Kick off your weekend
with all your favourite party hits.. 9pm / $5
DJ BIG AYYY & DJ HENCHMAN / Outlaws —
Round up your friends. 8pm / $5; ladies in
free before 11pm
JOMAMA / Piggy’s — A rock and country
trio. 9pm / No cover
NEIL ROSTON / Prairie Ink — A blues and
folk duo. 8pm / No cover
TERRI ANN STRAONGARM / Stan’s Place —
Country tunes. 9pm / Cover TBD
DUELING PIANOS / Staqatto Piano Lounge
— With Terry Hoknes, Neil Currie and Brad
King. 10pm / $5
PARTY ROCK FRIDAYS / Tequila — Featuring
DJ Anchor. 9pm / Cover TBD
DJ NICK RUSTON / Uncle Barley’s — Come
and check him out! 9pm / Cover TBD
PURDY BIRD + MORE / Vangelis Tavern —
Start your weekend off right. 10pm / $8
SATURDAY 17HOUSE DJS / 6Twelve — Resident DJs spin
deep and soulful tunes. 9pm / No cover
DUMB ANGEL+ MORE / Amigos — Four hot
acts for one hot price. 10pm / Cover TBD
DJ AASH MONEY + DJ CTRL / Béily’s —
These two DJs throw down a high-energy
top 40 dance party. 9pm / $5 cover
SATURGAY NIGHT / Diva’s — Resident DJs
spin exclusive dance remixes every Satur-
day. 10pm / $5
DJ KADE / The Hose — Saskatoon’s own DJ
lights it up with hot tunes. 8pm / No cover
DJ STIKMAN / Jax Niteclub — Ladies night
with DJ Stikman. 9pm / $5 cover
DJ BIG AYYY & DJ HENCHMAN / Outlaws —
Round up your friends. 8pm / $5
JOMAMA / Piggy’s — A rock and country
trio. 9pm / No cover
WIRES AND WOOD / Prairie Ink — A local
trio that rocks. 8pm / No cover
THE USUAL + MORE / Rock Bottom — A
night of heavy, awesome tunes. 8pm / $15
TERRI ANN STRAONGARM / Stan’s Place —
Country music for your soul. 9pm
DUELING PIANOS / Staqatto — With Terry
Hoknes, Neil Currie and Brad King. 10pm / $5
DJ ANCHOR / Sutherland Bar — It’s a video
mix show! 10pm / Cover TBD
SEXY SATURDAYS / Tequila — A night of hot
tunes. 9pm / Cover TBD
DJ THORPDEO / Uncle Barley’s — Spinning
hot tunes all night. 10pm / Cover TBD
CLOSE TALKER / Vangelis — These four guys’
star is on the rise, so get out and see them do
their thing. Also appearing is Boreal Sons.
10pm / $10
BRIAN MCAREAVEY / The Woods — Acous-
tic is where it’s at. 9pm / No cover
VERBNEWS.COMENTERTAINMENT CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
20AUG 9 – AUG 15
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE »
he year is 2154 and Earth is a smoking ruin. Coated in grime and
overflowing with trash, Los Angeles is the epicenter of a decaying plan-et, kept alive by little more than the demands of a massive prison industrial complex. The wealthy have fled. They live in orbit, safe in their own private Elysium, a gleaming space station aboard which luxury is a way of life and the blights of the Earth below are a distant memory. This is the premise
of Elysium, a film by Neill Blom-kamp, the current enfant terrible of dystopian science fiction.
Elysium is a film about the most basic instinct of all. The action opens when Max DeCosta (a compact and depilated Matt Damon) becomes the victim of an industrial accident while trying to abandon a life of crime. He is left with a noxious cancer and an emotionless warning from the medical robot: five days to live.
Like most people, DeCosta wants to live. Unlike most people, DeCosta is prepared to enlist the services of Spider (Wagner Moura), an unsavoury
gangster, to help him sneak aboard Elysium, where advanced medical techniques can save his life. The plan revolves around an attempt to kidnap his former boss, played by William Fichtner, and hijack his identity. He acquires a powerful exoskeleton and many guns to help him. But he is on a collision course with a pair of villains desperate to preserve their sanctuary.
Jodie Foster, who is delightfully awful, plays Delacourt, Elysium’s unscrupulous head of security. The heavy work is done by an equally
ruthless agent named Kruger (played by Sharlto Copley, who also appeared in Blomkamp’s debut feature, District 9). Think of DeCosta as an exoskeleton-clad John McClane, Delacourt and Kruger as two versions of Hans Gruber, and you won’t be far off the mark.
Elysium is laden with stunning visuals, and the world it presents is rarely gratuitous. It is closer to a bleak portrait of the future that most people care to admit. But do not be gulled into thinking it is a political screed cloaked in explosions and gunplay and images of an extraordinary orbiting paradise. DeCosta is not some political crusader;
he’s just a guy who doesn’t want to die. And Elysium is a film about class only in the loosest sense; at its core, Elysium is a story of life and death, and why living is important.
Regrettably, the purity of this idea is polluted by problems. The script feels forced, as if Blomkamp overlooked the weight of man’s desire to live in his quest to inject the film with epic quali-ties. And the action is interrupted by a number of flashbacks, most of which are unnecessary and detract from the simplicity of DeCosta’s mission.
Don’t see Elysium if you’re desper-ate to have your political agenda reinforced by Hollywood. But do see it if you want to be entertained. See it if you want further evidence that nasty, brutish, and short is a bad way to live. See it if you want to watch another great film from Blomkamp, who is fast becoming the brightest light in big-budget sci-fi.
FILM
PHOTO: COURTESY OF TRISTAR PICTURES
TLife and death in Blomkamp’s dystopian thriller. BY R.A. PARKER
ELYSIUM
DIRECTED BY Neill Blomkamp
STARRING Matt Damon, Jodie Foster,
Alice Braga + Sharito Copley
109 MINUTES | 14A
HANGING BY A THREAD
@VerbSaskatoon
Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372
…at its core, Elysium is a story of life and death…
R.A. PARKER
@VERBSASKATOON ENTERTAINMENTCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
21AUG 9 – AUG 15
hen it comes to revenge, how far is too far?.
That’s the question The East — a slick, grimy espionage thriller by Zal Batmanglij — asks of the audience. And how you answer that depends on your political agenda, your social/environmental concerns, your comfort with violence, your sense of right, your moral code, etc., etc.
See, The East is about a group of eco-terrorists who cling to the
old “eye for an eye” adage — espe-cially when it comes to getting even with the people they perceive to be wrongdoers in society.
See, when a pharmaceutical firm releases a new drug with hor-rible side effects, the eco-terrorist group decides to force the bosses of that firm to overdose on their own drug. When a corporation is found responsible for dumping poison in waterways, the group shoves the higher-ups into those toxic waters. When a major oil company has a spill, the group floods the CEO’s mansion with oil. You get the picture. This is a serious group who
commit serious acts in the name of saving the environment.
If you can even call them a group.Led by a long-haired, bearded dude
named Benji (Alexander Skarsgård) these eco-terrorists (who call them-selves The East) resemble a cult more than they do any activist group. Benji radiates personal magnetism and people flock to him and become his followers, living with him in a cabin in the deep woods of Louisiana (or at least that’s where the film was shot).
Needless to say, people in posi-tions of power aren’t really picking up what The East is putting down. So a private security company decides to send a spy to infiltrate their cult (ahem! I mean group) and take them down. Enter Sarah (Brit Marling, who co-wrote the screen-play with Batmanglij).
As the star of this show, Sarah leaves her boyfriend (Jason Ritter) behind and starts living off the grid in hope of coming into to contact with The East.
Eventually she does and is welcomed into the group. Soon, like everyone else, she falls under the
spell of Benji and things begin to happen.
What things? You’ll have to watch the movie to find out. But rest easy knowing that The East is a pretty darn good thriller. It’s taut and gritty and has its finger firmly planted on the pulse of our times. It’s also hip and cool. Everything you want a thriller to be.
In fact, it had the potential to be a great thriller. One of the best of the last few years. Problem is, though, in the third act of the movie, instead of ramping up the tension and pushing the audience to a breaking point, Bat-manglij and Marling decided to get preachy. Enviro-preachy. Which, in and of itself, is fine (we all have our viewpoints). But it really took the piss out of an otherwise vigorous — and well-acted — thriller.
The East is currently being screened at Roxy Theatre.
PHOTO: COURTESY OF FOX SEARCHLIGHT PRODUCTIONS
W
Slick new thriller asks how much is too much. BY ADAM HAWBOLDT
THE EAST
DIRECTED BY Zal Batmanglij
STARRING Alexander Skarsgard, Ellen
Page + Patricia Clarkson
116 MINUTES | PG
THE EAST
@VerbSaskatoon
Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372
[The East] is taut … and has its finger firmly planted on the pulse of our times.
ADAM HAWBOLDT
VERBNEWS.COMENTERTAINMENT CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
22AUG 9 – AUG 15
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE »
NIGHTLIFE SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 @
THECOLONIALColonial Pub & Grill3-1301 8th Street East(306) 343 8881
/VERBSASKATOON ENTERTAINMENTCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
23AUG 9 – AUG 15
CHECK OUT OUR FACEBOOK PAGE! These photos will be uploaded to
Facebook on Friday, August 16.
facebook.com/verbsaskatoon
Photography by Patrick Carley
VERBNEWS.COMENTERTAINMENT CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
24AUG 9 – AUG 15
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE »
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7 @
THEHOSEThe Hose & Hydrant612 11th Street East(306) 477 3473
@VERBSASKATOON ENTERTAINMENTCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
25AUG 9 – AUG 15
CHECK OUT OUR FACEBOOK PAGE! These photos will be uploaded to
Facebook on Friday, August 16.
facebook.com/verbsaskatoon
Photography by Patrick Carley
VERBNEWS.COMENTERTAINMENT CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
26AUG 9 – AUG 15
© Elaine M. Will | blog.E2W-Illustration.com | Check onthebus.webcomic.ws/ for previous editions!
COMICS
/VERBSASKATOON ENTERTAINMENTCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS FILM NIGHTLIFE COMICS TIMEOUT
27AUG 9 – AUG 15
TIMEOUT
HOROSCOPES AUGUST 9 – AUGUST 15
© WALTER D. FEENER 2013
CROSSWORD ANSWER KEY
ARIES March 21–April 19
An unexpected turn of events
could land you in hot water. If you
keep your cool, though, you’ll be able to
escape unscathed.
TAURUS April 20–May 20
A new arrival in your life could
yield a hilarious outcome. Get
ready to laugh, Taurus. Who knows how
this will end up?
GEMINI May 21–June 20
Appearances can be deceiving,
Gemini. Reserve judgement
until you are in possession of all
the information.
CANCER June 21–July 22
Love is in the air, Cancer. If you’ve
got it, enjoy. If you don’t, keep
your eyes open. Things could get very
romantic, very soon.
LEO July 23–August 22
You could be asked to take on
an outrageous task, Leo. You’ve
got what it takes to succeed, so put your
mind to it.
VIRGO August 23–September 22
Being alone has its benefits, Virgo.
Take the freedom of solitude, and
really think things through. Then plan
your next move.
LIBRA September 23–October 23
A new adventure could have you
visiting never-before-seen shores.
Take this opportunity while you can,
Libra. Fun abounds!
SCORPIO October 24–November 22
There’s something you’ve been
wanting to get off your chest. The
time is now, Scorpio. Speak your mind,
and enjoy your peace.
SAGITTARIUS November 23–December 21
You may be required to step up and
be the hero (or heroine) this week,
Sagittarius. Don’t doubt in your abilities.
You can make this happen.
CAPRICORN December 22–January 19
Your good luck is unstoppable this
week, Capricorn. Chase whatever
dreams you want — things are comin’ up
Millhouse for you. You got this!
AQUARIUS January 20–February 19
Your creative energies will be con-
suming you this week, Aquarius.
Might as well go with it, cuz you’re not
gonna get anything else done.
PISCES February 20–March 20
A long-overdue reunion will yield
an unexpected outcome. If it seems
overwhelming at first blush, just chill.
Things are never as dire as they seem.
SUDOKUA B 1 2 6
8 7 2 5 7 6 4 5 3 4 9 5 3 2 7 1 8 8 9 7 14 3 9 8 6 4 5 6 1 9 3 2
4 2 1 5 3 9 7 6 2 8 7 5 9 1 2 6 3 4 8 2 3 8 7 1 3 5 9 6 7 5 6 1 4 4 8 9
ACROSS 1. Gravy dish
5. The majority
9. Drum played with
the fingers
10. Clear the
cribbage board
12. Lobster claw
13. Experienced sailor
15. Church part
16. Female animal
18. Deep mud
19. Pod vegetable
20. Carrots and turnips
22. Canada’s neighbour:
abbr.
23. French farewell
25. Soft-shell clam
27. Very old
29. Height of a human
32. Brief but vigorous fight
36. Set of parts
for assembling
37. Woman’s handbag
39. Gun the engine
40. Monopoly token
42. Soap ingredient
43. Giving off a strong
unpleasant smell
44. Contradiction
46. Poor person
48. Do the foxtrot
49. Like a gymnast
50. Unpleasant look
51. Without others
DOWN 1. Art of growing
miniature trees
2. As soon as
3. Geological period
4. Upper body
5. French bagpipe
6. Joined together
7. Unwanted e-mail
8. Boring quality
9. Two-legged animal
11. Spiny bush
12. Code word for P
14. Paraphernalia
17. Socks, stockings, and
tights collectively
20. Hoist a flag on
a flagpole
21. Good judgment
24. Corrode
26. Had a meal
28. It’s like a doughnut
29. Lose traction
30. No longer interested
31. Having no key,
in music
33. Multiply by three
34. Conical tent
35. All through
38. Calyx part
41. Baseball team
43. Damage beyond repair
45. Pass perfectly
47. Before the present time
TIMEOUT
CROSSWORD CANADIAN CRISS-CROSS
SUDOKU ANSWER KEY
A
B
5 1 4 3 8 2 9 6 78 9 3 6 7 1 2 5 42 7 6 4 5 9 1 8 31 4 9 7 6 5 3 2 83 5 7 2 1 8 4 9 66 8 2 9 4 3 5 7 14 3 8 5 2 7 6 1 99 2 1 8 3 6 7 4 57 6 5 1 9 4 8 3 2
8 4 2 7 1 5 3 9 65 9 7 4 3 6 1 2 83 6 1 2 8 9 7 4 54 8 9 1 5 7 6 3 27 1 6 3 4 2 5 8 92 5 3 6 9 8 4 7 11 3 5 9 2 4 8 6 79 7 8 5 6 3 2 1 46 2 4 8 7 1 9 5 3
VERBNEWS.COM