Showing posts with label Weakerthans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weakerthans. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Ten Covers for Bruce Springsteen to Play in Winnipeg

 (Image from the crucial Springsteen2Wpg)

Bruce Springsteen is gonna play Winnipeg, Manitoba...eventually! After all, we've got a big new stadium, a fanatic fan-base and a musical history he can plunder for all those ingenious locally-themed covers he's been doing on the High Hopes Tour. A partial list of Springsteen's recent live covers would include: AC/DC's "Highway to Hell" in Adelaide, INXS' "Don't Change" in Sydney, The Bee Gees' "Stayin' Alive" in Brisbane, Lorde's "Royals" in Aukland and (with a slight twist) The Specials' "Free Nelson Mandela" in South Africa. I've ranked the potential Winnipeg covers on my list from least to most likely and have tried to strike a balance between my own personal favourites and the de rigeur local classics. For more cultural awesomeness (music, comics, film, politics etc.)

10.    Personality Crisis "Twilight's Last Gleaming" (1983)
Certainly a million to one shot, this old-school punk band with rock chops dominated Winnipeg's scene in the early 80's thanks in no small part to the antics of barrel-voiced wildman Mitch Funk, who Springsteen would surely admire if he knew of him. Plus, doesn't "Twilight's Last Gleaming" just sound like a Springsteen song title already?




9.    Terry Jacks "Season in the Sun" (1974)
Okay, Bruce (and half of the world) may still harbour mixed feelings about this sentimental song from one of Winnipeg's less celebrated pop figures but it has that epic grandeur in both the chorus and the story-line that would make it fit right into Springsteen's wheelhouse.




8.     Propagandhi "I Was a Pre-Teen McCarthyist" (1996)
Another daringly unlikely choice would be for Bruce to cover a song from the Winnipeg's political thrash lords, whose riffy song about father-son relationships and U.S. imperialism (that's just how those boys roll) is pretty catchy and would be given a twist by that Springsteen intensity.




7.    Greg Macpherson "Churchill" (1999)
While intense rocker Macpherson doesn't hide his adoration of Springsteen, his own brand of music is strikingly singular and Springsteen could do a fantastic Nebraska-esque take on this train ballad of the frozen North.



6.    Bachman Turner Overdrive "Roll on Down the Highway" (1974)
Thematically and musically this chestnut hits all the Springsteen buttons and would have the added benefit of not being "Takin' Care of Business", which at this point has just become part of the musical furniture.




5.    Jeffrey Hatcher "(Born to Be) Riding Only Down" (1995)
Hatcher is just the kind of tenacious, gifted rock n' roll lifer (like Willie Nile, Southside Johnny or Jesse Malin) that Springsteen admires and invites to share his stage. This soaring kiss-off song by The Blue Shadows (with Billy Cowsill of The Cowsills) would be electrifying in a Bruce-E-Street context.




4.    Burton Cummings "Stand Tall" (1976)
Another slightly purple bit of melodic melodrama from the seventies that would get pumped up to gargantuan-proportion by the man and his band.




3.   The Weakerthans "Anchorless"  (1998)
Bruce keeps his ear close to the ground, music-wise, so I suspect he's aware of John K. Sampson & co.'s wordy folk-rock. While the most known entry in the Weakerthans' catalog would be "One Great City", that song's "I Hate Winnipeg" chorus would make it a tough sell for a visitor, even for one of Bruce's stature. "Anchorless", on the other hand a finely-detailed song about the "small towns that we live and die in" would speak very directly to experiences shared by performer and audience.




2.    The Guess Who "Share the Land" (1970) or "Shakin' All Over" (1965)
When it comes to Winnipeg's most famous musical export it's a toss up* between "Shakin' All Over" (already a cover) which would indulge Springsteen's love of early sixties rock that he can stretch out into long vamps and "Share the Land" which plays to his love of social justice mixed with a good tune. Your call, Mr. Springsteen, your call.
*"American Woman" is not only too obvious, it's brand of anti-Americanism doesn't jibe with Springsteen's more subdued criticism of his homeland.





1.    Neil Young "Long May You Run"
There's no question that "Heart of Gold" would produce a rapturous response and be a fantastic choice (as would other Young songs including ones Bruce and Neil have sung together like "Helpless" and "Keep on Rockin' in the Free World"), but "Long May You Run' has those Bruce motifs of running and remembering that would make for an epic show-closer! Plus, Springsteen must be aware that when Bob Dylan came to town he headed straight over to Neil's first rockin' abode as soon as his show was done.  Bruce, let me just say that I guarantee you that we will lead a goddamn parade to Neil's house with you as the Grand Marshal if that's what it takes to get you to visit our One Great City.





So, those versed in Springsteen and Manitoba history, what do you make of these choices? Were there stunning choices that were missed?  Let us know in the COMMENTS section!




Dubious Suggestions: Fred Penner "The Cat Came Back", since even bad ideas, like Springsteen doing a beloved kids song, can make for good entertainment, The Crash Test Dummies "Superman's Song" who's solemn lament for the original superhero would fit Springsteen's vocal and narrative range nicely and Venetian Snares "Winnipeg is a Frozen Shithole" the longest of the long-shots for many, many reasons which are none too hard to discern.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

John K. Samson: When I Write My Master's Thesis (2012)



Weakest Weakerthan (more HERE) John K. Sampson has gone solo, if only temporarily. on Provincial (stream here). About the song's central track,  "When I Write My Master's Thesis" Samson says:

"I went to this bar called The Pit and Bob Dylan’s When I Paint My Masterpiece came on the jukebox. The first lines are, ‘Oh, the streets of Rome are filled with rubble,’ and that’s when I thought of line: ‘Oh the streets of Grand Theft Auto San Andreas are filled with smoke,"’ he says with a smile.
   
When I Write My Master’s Thesis  — recently featured as a song of the day on NPR — cleverly riffs on When I Paint My Masterpiece almost line for line; Dylan’s "She promised that she’d be right there with me/When I paint my masterpiece" became Samson’s "She said she’d come back home/When I write my master’s thesis," for one example.  (via)

  John K. Samson - When I Write My Master's Thesis by Epitaph Records


On Provincial, Samson delivers a fascinating musical survey of the landscape of his home province of Manitoba and it should offer something for fans and admirers to pore over for years to come.



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Tuesday, September 20, 2011

The Weakerthans with Sarah Harmer: CBC Sessions (2005)



Yesterday we talked up Greg Macpherson (see HERE), one of Winnipeg's favoured lefty-indie-punk sons. So that seems to be as good as reason as any to remind you of Winnipeg's more famous lefty-indie punks sons, The Weakerthans (more HERE). What we have for you today is a CBC session of the band playing a set alongside Toronto alt-country heroine, Sarah Harmer.

The Weakerthans with Sarah Harmer, Glenn Gould Studio, Toronto, 18 November 2005

1) My Favourite Chords
2) Reconstruction Site
3) Psalm for the Elks Lodge Last Call
4) Utilities
5) Night Windows
6) Swinging Party (The Replacements cover)
7) Reasons
8) Past-Due

Sarah Harmer with The Weakerthans, Glen Gould Studio, Toronto, 18 November 2005

1) I am Aglow
2) Escarpment Blues
3) Weakened State
4) Islands in the Stream (Bee Gees cover)
5) Gone for Good (The Shins cover)
6) I’m a Mountain
7) Lodestar





You are now invited to leave some Weakerthans words behind in the COMMENTS section  (which is where you'll find the CBC session link).


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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

The Weakerthans at The CBC (1999-2004)

"I have always considered The Weakerthans to be a punk band.That's where our roots and the foundations for the music that we make are planted."
John K Sampson
And being rooted in punk has made all the difference. Unlike a lot of the band who've tried to mimic The Weakerthans deceptive quietude, the band's punk rootedness (not to forget country and folk - John is a massive John Prine fan) keep them from the dullness that haunts so much indie-folk. Another less discussed Weakerthan strength, is drummer Jason Tait. One of keys to a great punk band (or most any band, really) is great drummer and Tait is certainly one of those. Not only does he give the up-tempo songs drive, he never lets those sad, lilting songs of Samson's get lost in the ether. Once, early on in their career at a show at The Royal Albert, I saw Tait jump from behind the kit to shut down a heckler who was screaming play, "Play some punk". After Tait's tongue-lashing the be-mohawked loudmouth slunk away forthwith.

(For a story about a more dedicated Weakerthans fan check out the front page of today's Winnipeg Free Press!)


The dozen songs here originate from three CBC sessions recorded in 1999, 2002 and 2004 and all of them add a little something to our understanding of the band, though I''ll be damned if I can tell you what it is in each case.



The weakerthans - civil twilight


At the CBC link is in the comments


Speaking of comments, if you want to hear MORE rare Weakerthans leave us some words about the band!!


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Monday, December 13, 2010

The Weakerthans: Radio Sessions (2010)


Not all Winnipeggers love their hometown heroes, like The Weakerthans. We can be real scythe-down-the-tall-poppy types here. The disgruntled can borrow sneering words from The Globe and Mail or Pitchfork (how often are those two sources cited at once?) to mask our jealousy. We sometimes seem out to prove that a prophet might really not be accepted in their own hometown, even if that hometown is the prophet's deepest obsession. But, all haters aside, the band's base here, where the muddy waters meet, is devout. In fact, so popular are they locally, they can sell out a week-long series of shows where they perform each of their albums in their entirety. So I suppose this particular poppy can Stand Tall.




What we have here today is a Australian radio session from February 27th 2010 that shows off the band's "concise" side.



Setlist:
1. Intro
2. Tournament of Hearts
3. Night Windows
4. Sun In An Empty Room
5. The Reasons
6. Bigfoot
7. Pamphleteer
8. Psalm For The Elks Lodge Last Call

Radio Sessions 2010 link is in the comments

Speaking of comments, leave us you take on the Weakerthans phenomenon.