Music

Len Dobbin, the most important audience member in Montreal's jazz scene. Illustration by Aislin.

Remembering Len Dobbin, Montreal's most important jazz listener

In early fall of 1950, Len Dobbin stepped out of a listening booth on Rue Ste-Catherine in Montreal to find himself confronted by five New York jazz enthusiasts seeking potential founders for a satellite jazz appreciation society. Only 15 years old at the time, Dobbin had never met enough fans to think the project would… More »

Tumblr reflects contemporary pop culture: not so much like blogging, more like collage. Illustration by Dave Donald.

High and low culture collide in a glorious mess on Tumblr.com

[Editor's note: If you're curious, This Magazine has its own Tumblr blog. Visit quote.this.org] I have never left a cinema with as big a grin on my face as when I watched the spectacularly awful Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. Every complaint I had heard was spot-on—that the acting was abysmal, the plot incomprehensible, the… More »

"Sitting Bed" (2006) by Life of a Craphead. Photo courtesy the artists.

"Conceptual comedy" duo turn jokes into art as "Life of a Craphead"

For Toronto’s “Making Room” art show in 2006, Amy Lam and Jon McCurley—the duo who call themselves Life of a Craphead— erected a bed sitting on a couch. The couch was large and blue and the bed sat as a human would, folded at the waist, with two wooden legs on the ground. It looked… More »

Quebec City "hip hop historian" Webster. Photo courtesy Webster/Abuzive Muzik.

Quebec's "hip hop historian" raps about Québécois black heritage

Quebec city’s recent 400th anniversary celebration was quite a spectacle — Paul McCartney, Celine Dion, treasures from the Louvre, and even the occasional nod to diversity like the multicultural rap show, Hip hop tout en couleurs (Hip hop in all Colours). For the most part, though, the Quebec black experience went unacknowledged. For “Webster” Aly… More »

Cover of Tim Hecker's latest album, Imaginary Country. Released by Cranky, 2009.

Listen: Tim Hecker's sonic geography

Quebec artist’s electronic soundscapes are rooted in our home and native land LISTEN: “200 Years Ago” from Tim Hecker’s An Imaginary Country On September 30, 2006, as part of Toronto’s interactive art celebration Nuit Blanche, Montreal musician Tim Hecker hid 10 speakers in the branches of a tree across from the Mercer Union art gallery…. More »

The web allows immigrants to straddle two worlds like never before. Illustration by Matthew Daley.

Found in translation

The web allows immigrants to straddle two worlds like never before As in so many immigrant families, weekend mornings in my house always meant one thing: “our shows” on TV. We are of Indian descent, and the sounds of the latest Bollywood hits were a staple of our Saturdays and Sundays, as much a part… More »

Woodpigeon's sophomore album, Treasury Library Canada. Available from Boompa Records

Woodpigeon: Please Feed the Birds

Calgary band is big in Europe, but home is where their hearts are Woodpigeon may very well be the biggest Canadian band you’ve never heard of — literally and figuratively. The eight-member Calgary collective’s wistful, lyrical alt-folk has been drawing capacity crowds and garnering deafening buzz in the U.K. and Europe over the past year,… More »

Red vinyl diaries

The Vertical Struts, named from a photo of the remaining stubs of one of the World Trade Center towers, are a two-man (Raymond Biesinger and Trevor Anderson), ’50s-style garage-rock combo from Edmonton. They are self-proclaimed throwbacks with songs about boys who love boys, boys who love girls and socialism. They recently released their first single—recorded in Edmonton by Veal’s Nik Kozub—solely on seven-inch vinyl.

Lords Of The New Church

From the godfather of punk to the underground’s fairy gothmother, meet the leaders of a lifestyle revolution, whose style and attitude long ago transcend the mainstream