The lush vocal harmonies and dark synth melodies of Syzzors’ beat driven dream pop won us over when we noticed them on the charts at CISM. Since their previous release, this Montreal-based band brought in an additional member, moving them to shift their songwriting style. These changes paid off, delivering six captivating tracks on their brand new, self-released album “Leo”.
Posts Tagged ‘Montreal’
ELEPHANT STONE – ” Three Poisons ” Anton Newcombe & Fabien Leseure Remix
Posted: June 1, 2015 in MUSICTags: Elephant Stone, ES3PRMX, Montreal, Rishi Dhir, The Three Poisons
Anton Newcombe of the Brian Jonestown Massacre and Fabien Leseure give their take on the title track from Elephant Stone’s The Three Poisons (2014).
Taken from ES3PRMX out June 2nd, 2015 on Burger Records (CASSETTE)/Elephants On Parade Records

Montreal’s Elephant Stone was formed in 2009 by sitarist/bassist Rishi Dhir. As one of the most highly sought out sitar players in the international psych scene, he has recorded, performed and toured with Beck, the Black Angels, Brian Jonestown Massacre, the Horrors, and many more.
Elephant Stone has released two LPs, an EP, and has toured throughout North American and Europe. They have spear-headed the Hindie-Rock movement with their deft ability of weaving together rock’n’roll, Hindustani classical, and catchy-as-all-hell pop. 2014 saw the release of Elephant Stone’s third full-length, The Three Poisons. Their strongest/grooviest release to date, Elephant Stone have this six track remix by various members of psychedelica top artists, support the release by touring the world and spreading their psychedelified Hindie- Rock mantra.
ELEPHANT STONE – “ Child of Nature ” The Tom Furse [The Horrors] Extrapolation)
Posted: June 1, 2015 in MUSICTags: Elephant Stone, Montreal, Rishi Dhir, The Horrors, The Three Poisons, Tom Furse
![SEM Video Exclusive: Elephant Stone Premieres “Child of Nature” (The Tom Furse [The Horrors] Extrapolation)](https://i0.wp.com/stereoembersmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/tumblr_nmi0k5Kp231qirsqpo1_500.jpg)
Yesterday, SEM premiered the video for Anton Newcombe and Fabien Leseure’s remix of “Three Poisons,” the first track on ES3PRMX, a collection of six remixes of songs from Elephant Stone’s breathtaking 2014 LP, The Three Poisons. Tom Furse (The Horrors’ subtractive synthesis genius) reinvents/re-imagines Child of Nature from Elephant Stone’s The Three Poisons (2014) as a house/dancefloor timebomb.
Today, we proudly present the video for Horrors’ keyboardist Tom Furse’s remix of “Child of Nature.”
Montreal’s Elephant Stone was formed in 2009 by sitarist/bassist Rishi Dhir. As one of the most highly sought out sitar players in the international psych scene, he has recorded, performed and toured with Beck, the Black Angels, Brian Jonestown Massacre, the Horrors, and many more. Elephant Stone has released two LPs, an EP, and has toured throughout North American and Europe. They have spear-headed the Hindie-Rock movement with their deft ability of weaving together rock’n’roll, Hindustani classical, and catchy-as-all-hell pop.
FLEETWOOD MAC – ” Dreams ” Live At The Bell Centre 5th February 2015
Posted: February 7, 2015 in MUSICTags: Bell Centre, Fleetwood Mac, Montreal
Stevie Nicks Rumours Era in Montreal Bell Centre Canada 5th Fébrury 2015
For a band that was once famously defined by personal drama and rancour, Fleetwood Mac’s members were almost as generous toward one another as they were to the nearly 12,400 fans who spent 2 1/2 hours in their company at the Bell Centre Thursday night.
The narrative of this tour is the return of keyboardist Christine McVie, which completes the group’s most popular lineup for the first time since 1998. She certainly received her due welcome from the audience and from her bandmates, but the quintet shared the glory, both between its members and as an ensemble.
There’s no new album to promote (although one is in the works), and the most recent numbers in Thursday’s show were from the 1987 disc “Tango in the Night”, with more than half of the set list drawn from the 1975 self-titled release and 1977’s world-conquering “Rumours”. But this didn’t feel like a nostalgic evening. The performance was absolutely contemporary.
The crackling energy was there from the walk-on to The Chain, while drummer Mick Fleetwood’s clockwork timekeeping, John McVie’s strapping bass and Lindsey Buckingham’s swampy guitar telegraphed that the band’s locked-in interplay hadn’t diminished.
Stevie Nicks made an early note that this was the 51st show of the tour. “In the beginning, I would have said: a) ‘Welcome, Montreal,’ and second, ‘Welcome, Chris.’ … Today I think we can say, with caution abandoned, ‘She’s ba-ack!’ ”
Charismatic even when she was rooted in place, Stevie Nicks went on to lose herself inside Dreams before Buckingham — the only member to routinely venture to the lip of the stage — led a bracing Second Hand News as if the 38-year-old cut was being shared for the first time. Although Christine McVie’s upper-register vocals were a touch strained in Everywhere (but appealingly earthy everywhere else), that sunny delight was also rejuvenated, and stripped of its ’80s gloss.
The title track’s marching-band strangeness of “Tusk” remained delightfully odd — and not just by this group’s classicist standards — with Christine McVie on accordion, Buckingham playing the madman card to the hilt, and three auxiliary players contributing more than the almost imperceptible shading offered elsewhere. Nicks’s carefully possessed lead in Sisters of the Moon was supplemented by haunted harmonies from an understated trio of backup singers.
The quick-change pacing of the show’s first hour or so turned far more casual in the back half, starting with an intimate acoustic section that could have taken place in a club setting. Buckingham made conversation before his solo performance of Big Love, once “a contemplation on alienation and now a meditation on the power and importance of change.” True to his words, the solemn but flashy fingerpicking was a revelation, and far removed from the slick original. Nicks joined Buckingham for Landslide, stunning in its stillness, before the duo added a note of darkness to Never Going Back Again.
Over My Head saw the return of the full band, the introduction of Fleetwood’s front-of-stage “cocktail kit” and a reminiscence from Christine McVie about the time spent “sort of floundering, looking for a new guitarist” before Buckingham joined for the eponymous 1975 album. Setting up Gypsy, Nicks offered a history lesson of her own, a touching recollection of window shopping at San Francisco’s Velvet Underground rock-star clothing boutique before she was a star herself. The songs-and-stories format may have helped slow the show’s momentum, but they also helped make one of the top-selling bands in the world seem approachable.
The home stretch included a number of extended showcases: Gold Dust Woman climaxed with Stevie Nicks swaying across the stage in a glittering shawl; Buckingham enjoyed a caustic centrepiece in I’m So Afraid; Mick Fleetwood had the stage to himself for a crazy-eyed shamanic routine in the middle of World Turning.
But of course, Go Your Own Way and Don’t Stop were the real climactic crowd-pleasers. The quintet’s camaraderie was at its strongest in the former, with the tireless Buckingham speeding around Nicks, who had donned a bejewelled top hat, and careering into John McVie.
Christine McVie returned for a second encore of Songbird, delivering her most tender vocal of the night accompanied only by Buckingham. It was a poignant final word.
Montreal Band Heat have been labelled as a band to watch for 2015, This young quartet is treading on familiar turf, starting with Velvet Underground’s groundbreaking songbook and ending somewhere around the first Strokes record. But it’s rare to see a band this new sound so polished, or able to put their own slack spin on the Waiting for the Man template without coming across as overly fawning.The Sound of Heat is the sound of confusion. Tuneful but tone-deaf; beat-down and blown out of porportion. It’s a neat scotch and a mess of a life. You can find it scrawled on bathroom walls, hastily jotted down on cocktail napkins, deleted from your browsing history, lacing your designer drugs. It’s a couple bedroom demos turned into a Montreal 5-piece rock band, Now here’s the sixty-four thousand dollar question: “Do you remember rock n roll radio?”
Drawing equally from acts such as The Jesus and Mary Chain, Echo & The Bunnymen, and The Strokes, Heat streamline their influences into a mercurial 3 guitar sound. The result is a stream of catchy, dense rock and roll.
mixing tuneful angst and humid fuzz into their 90s grunge rock ethos, Montreal based duo Solids garnered comparisons to Japandroids and No Age. Blame Confusion is an onslaught of melodic fuzz-driven riffs and fervent drumming as Xavier Germain-Poitras and Louis Guillemette attack their ennui with distortion, heavy pulsing rhythms and pedal-charged power chords. The band “forwent a bassist in favor of a pedal that mimics a bass amp, a deliberate decision that reflects Solids’ ethos: the grandest sound with the least digits. From the ethereal hammering and squeals that flip us over sideways into the record, the listener will have the distinct feeling of boarding a panicked, ignited train that can’t afford—or maybe doesn’t want—to slow down.”
LYDIA AINSWORTH – ” White Shadows “
Posted: December 22, 2014 in MUSICTags: Lydia Ainsworth, Montreal, Right From Real
Lydia Ainsworth’s pop experiments sound like they’re made for big screens. Close your eyes while listening to her recent debut, “Right From Real“, and the considerable power of her orchestral strings, horns, and dense, wordless harmonies transports you to a dark cinema, where surreal images tumble like falling skies, and it’s not quite clear what comes next
So it makes sense that the Toronto-based Ainsworth is a composer of film scores who studied at both McGill University in Montreal and New York University, where she finished graduate school in 2012. At McGill, she once composed a Philip Glass-inspired score for a 50-piece orchestra; at NYU, she studied with Joan La Barbara, a pioneer of extended vocal technique who sung for John Cage, Steve Reich, and Judy Chicago. It was La Barbara who encouraged Ainsworth to sing on the film scores she was making, which she did for the first time in 2011. That same year, when a friend asked Ainsworth to perform at a party, she began writing her own songs in earnest. “I didn’t have any material,” Ainsworth explains of that first Brooklyn gig, “so I wrote a couple of songs and got a little orchestra together.” Those songs, “White Shadows” and “Candle”, became the seeds of Right From Real.
A self-described perfectionist, Ainsworth spent two years creating her debut LP. Owing to the record’s meditative quality, Ainsworth would take her demos and walk with them for hours around her Bushwick neighborhood, near the Montrose L train, over the Williamsburg bridge and back, clearing her mind to find perspective. She was inspired by “the notion that the impossible is possible, and is all around if you only look hard enough,” searching for a middle ground between beauty and terror. The resulting collection has the appeal of pop eccentrics like Kate Bush or Bat for Lashes, if refracted through the skewed kaleidoscope of her label, Montreal’s Arbutus Records, which released early work from a kindred spirit, Grimes.
This has quickly become one of my favourite and most played albums this year the orchestration is just incredible.
MOONFACE – ” Everyone Is Noah “
Posted: December 19, 2014 in MUSICTags: Jagjaguwar Records, Montreal, Moonface, Spencer Krug
Since January 2010, Spencer Krug has used Moonface as a venue for home-recorded instrumental and conceptual experimentation, expanding the ideas he developed collaboratively with Wolf Parade and Sunset Rubdown. Releases under this moniker have come quickly, each distinct from the other. The “Dreamland” EP and “Organ Music Not Vibraphone Like I’d Hoped” were conceptual excursions merging instrumental and thematic fixations. After moving from Montreal to Helsinki, Krug teamed up with the Finnish band Siinai to create a lush rock record–2012’s “Heartbreaking Bravery”–driven by the dark despair of a breakup. Staying in Helsinki, Krug set off on yet another creative departure, driven by a rediscovery of love and a reconsideration of the Moonface persona he’d created for himself. The quietly stunning “Julia with Blue Jeans On” is the fourth Moonface release, bringing a degree of intimacy and self-reflection unlike anything Krug has produced to date.
