Monday, 21 December 2009

four/four.

Exams are finally complete. A mere four days before Christmas. Pretty late really. It doesn't feel like it, mind. It mostly doesn't feel like Christmas at all. None of the familiarities of Christmas are here that let me know it's on the way. I haven't even been watching TV enough to see the Coke adverts, let alone the snowy BBC idents. I even forgot to eat most of the chocolates on my advent calendar. I opened the presents my family sent me today as well, as it's not really feasible to take them with me to Ottawa. The feeling was mostly one of guilt. It didn't feel right opening the presents my parents got me when they are five hours in the future, 3000 miles away. Sitting in my dingy, distinctly un-Christmas room in Hamilton three days before modern life's triumphant crescendo of 2009 I can only feel disenchanted. I put it down to context though. I'm not Scrooge. Christmas is about family and mine are too far away.

I am pretty damn stoked to be going to the nation's capital, Ottawa. Where tomorrow temperature reads: highs of -10C and lows of -12C and when I posed Matt the question of 'snow?' his retort was 'lots'. Do I hear the word 'Baltic?'. It's going be awesome to see Matt and I'm kind of intrigued to see how other families, particularly Canadian ones, do Christmas. Not to mention New Years in Montreal. That's going to be a blast.

It feels good to finally have finished all my exams as well. I am pretty confident with only a days worth of revision. Successfully achieved making one stupid remark in the exam today by saying that to reduce impact on storm water systems people should piss in the shower. I tell no lie, either. In the History exam the week before I got the ludicrous word 'degringolade' in on Patrick's request. For everyone that has no idea what this means: -noun: a quick deterioration or breakdown, as of a situation or circumstance. In short, it means 'downfall'.

Time to begin this lonely 8 hour journey.



Wednesday, 9 December 2009

one/four.

Monday saw some snow, as predicted. But it wasn’t proper snow. Just some fluffly, wispy shit. The kind when you wonder when it actually reaches the ground because it seems to mostly be falling horizontally. Tuesday, it rained. If I left the library much that day a lapse in concentration would have fooled me into believing I was in Manchester. Tuesday night (Wednesday morning), however, I was woken up to a bright light (well, brighter than it should be at 3am) coming through the gap in my curtain. My eyes were greeted with whiteness! Proper snow! I went back to bed eagerly awaiting the morning only to find out Manchester had returned and melted all my snow. Cheers, Morrissey.

Probably for the best as it allowed full concentration on the scant amount of revision for the exam that I just returned from. The module had already been passed before I went into the exam, as it was only worth 25% of the overall grade, so pressure was certainly off. Nonetheless, I seemed to get slightly carried away and write one of the most anti-American things I’ve ever written; for a course on American History Since 1865. Opinions were coming out that I didn’t even know I had. I did, on the other hand, get the word ‘feminazi’ in there, as well as refer to the ‘war on terror’ as a war on an abstract noun. The joys of pass/fail years!

Anyway, I wanted to discuss some musical musings for anyone that is interested. Here are a few recommendations.

The Rural Alberta Advantage

It makes sense to begin with the first band I saw in Canada, The Rural Alberta Advantage, when they supported The Weakerthans on the 15th November and was so impressed I caught them at a headline show a couple of months later. They’re Canadian, signed to Saddle Creek Records and play a very catchy form of folk-rock that kind of makes me think of Neutral Milk Hotel if they were a bit more upbeat. There’s quite a variety of instrumentation and the vocalist, Nils Edenloff (ludicrous name) looks like Jason Statham. I don’t know what more you could want. But, seriously, this band is well accessible. Give them a go. Oh, and I have a big, fat crush on the girl in the band. She’s lovely (to look at).

Mockingbird Wish Me Luck

Aside from the fact this band are desperately missing a comma from their Bukowski-inspired name, they are awesome and similarly Canadian (Kitchener, Ontario). If I said the words No Idea, Punk News or beards you’d get the impression of the sounds they make. It’s lovely gruff, catchy punk with all the familiar comparisons: Hot Water Music, Gunmoll, Polar Bear Club etc. You know if you’ll like it or not.

The Tallest Man on Earth

Someone recommended me this man at the Fest. I’m not quite sure who as I vaguely remember it being dark at the time and if it’s dark and you’re in Florida at the Fest sobriety is never going to be likely. It could have been the guy with the Defiance, Ohio tattoo in the queue for Good Luck… but it doesn’t really matter. Either way, I’m eternally grateful. The Tallest Man on Earth is one man (Kristian Matsson) from Sweden playing awesome twiddly, finger-picked folk music in the vein of M. Ward, Bon Iver and Iron & Wine. It’s beard music for indie kids, if we want to keep with the beard theme. This video of the song ‘It Will Follow the Rain’ is pretty haunting. Thoroughly enjoyable.

Defeater

This band won’t be new to the people that like this kind of music but, regardless, I’m going to harp on about how excited they get me, and how refreshing they are in a genre that can become tiresome. Essentially, it is like Modern Life is War never broke up. Defeater’s brand of raging, passionate hardcore bears a lot of resemblance to them, and even the vocalists are both doppelgangers of EastEnders’ Martin Fowler. Defeater’s little nuance is that their records form a narrative, they’re concept albums, and not in the 70s prog-rock sense. Travels, their first release, follows a man from his birth in 1945 all the way to his death and it’s not the happiest tale. The recently released Lost Ground EP follows the character from track six on Travels (who plays the Bright Eyes-esque acoustic song in the story, which also appears on the record) and his journey to World War II and subsequent demise on his return home. It’s intelligently written hardcore punk that I really can’t stop listening to.

Sunday, 6 December 2009

eh?

I’ve been in Canada for three months and three days and am yet to update the blog that I had every intention of keeping furiously up to date. Apathy is mostly my enemy, but sometimes a welcome friend. Either way I’ll kick it in the testes for now and make some general ramblings about my time in the Great White North, my nose dive into vegetarianism, the greatest weekend of my life and the benefits of studying when you only need to achieve 50 per cent.

I’d like to first clarify that contrary to my last blog post. I am not in Western Ontario but in fact in Southern Ontario.

This image illustrates it pretty well. Hamilton is nestled next to that big red, Soviet star that is Toronto, which is closer to the east anyway. Canada is stupid big. That is something that I’ve had to come to terms with rather quickly as the sense of scale is radically different from anything I’ve experienced before. In the nervy weeks before boarding the Canada-bound plane I spent a substantial amount of time rigorously looking at Google maps of Hamilton. From what I could ascertain McMaster University campus was a 10-15 minute walk from Downtown Hamilton. In reality, it’s a twenty minute bus ride and completely not walkable. Not that there’s much reason to venture into the dreary shit heap that is Downtown, but I’ll come back to that. Similarly, whenever a Canadian gives you the time that it takes to from walk A to B that time needs to be doubled at bare minimum. After some consideration of why the hell Canadians were so constantly misinformed it came down to the fact that they drive absolutely everywhere, thus, times are given as a drive length. And I think I’ve seen more Hummers than hatchbacks.

Canada is also not as beautiful as I was expecting. I’m not quite sure what exactly I was expecting but it was not this. Driving along the motorways, looking out the window all you can see is flat, boring fields and electricity pylons (pylons to Canadians means traffic cones as well – unbelievable). Not to say that there aren’t some awesome spots. Algonquin National Park was incredible, especially at the beginning of autumn when the leaves are all different shades. Even in Hamilton there are some pleasant spots, it being the waterfall capital of world and all that. It’s pretty strange getting used to cities being completely different. There’s nothing historic about them, they’re all so planned, in their grid format with the general consensus being to make every building massive and ugly. When they do try to do something more pleasant and old fashioned it comes across very contrived. Even so, there is still something quite appealing about the whole ‘metropolis’ city vibe. The feeling of insignificance when standing at the foot of the huge high-rise buildings tearing into the sky that greet you as you leave the Union station in downtown Toronto is something I had never really felt before. I’m looking forward to getting out east, in Quebec, which is supposed to have a much more European outlook.

I do, actually, quite like Hamilton. I had a lot of people local Canadians laugh at me when I said I was going to study in the Hammer, including the guys from The Flatliners. The city is famous for its smoke stack skyline and fervent heavy industry. Sort of like Sheffield, before Sheffield became at all cultured. Understandably, I did not have high expectations and downtown is, all things considered, horrible. Full of people that have ruined themselves on drugs, tearing around Jackson Square on their wheelchairs whilst trying to utter inaudible sentences to people that dare get too close. It's quite scary. Luckily, very little time is spent downtown. The areas around campus, such as West Dale and Dundas, are much more pleasant, and the campus itself is spacious and quite pretty, despite the nuclear reactor. In the same way that I prefer Leeds over London, it doesn't have the sense of anonymity that you get when wandering around Toronto that can be quite intimidating.

Despite all this complaining, I am actually having a good time. Believe it or not. The novelty of living in another country is enough but I’ve met some stellar folk, had some fantastic boozy times, been to a shed load of shows, and visited a lot of places whilst still managing to keep up a respectable grade. I look back pensively at the heat of September and wonder why the hell I didn’t go to Australia. The ground is starting to get frozen, I have to wear more clothes as each week goes by and the murmurs of the oncoming snow are endemic. It was minus 1 this afternoon and it’s only getting colder. At least I’ll have my first, and probably last, white Christmas in Ottawa.

Vegetarianism has been an overwhelmingly, satisfying decision. I’ve been meat free for three months and two days. Sadly, the swan song of my carnivorous diet was some drossy casserole on the flight over but, since arriving in Toronto and consuming my first Harvey’s veggie burger, the name of the game has been falafel, soy substitutes, fruit, soup and nuts. It’s been pretty easy, to be fair. Only the occasional craving for a bacon and egg sandwich makes itself known when I’m nursing a malt liquor induced hangover. I implore anyone to give it a try. If you have any interest in environmental issues, being vegetarian makes a difference, no matter what people say to the contrary.

Reference to my time spent at The Fest in Gainesville is imperative, I believe. This was some of the best times I’ve had in my life. Knocking about sunny Florida, 40z and PBR in hand, alongside three of my best friends, seeing my favourite bands among the friendliest posse of idiots I’ve ever come across at a festival. Highlights:

  • Salad from Michigan.
  • Iron Chic
  • Hotel parties.
  • House shows.
  • Beating my PB at ‘time spent crowd surfing’ during Defiance, Ohio's second set of the weekend.
  • The cheapest beer I’ve ever come across.
  • Crusties.
  • Bowling around Gainesville at 3am in my boxers.
  • The Kickstand.
  • Vegan steak.
  • The beautiful girl from Italy whose name is long lost among myriad inebriated memories.
  • Luke Faggetter confirming that he is, by far, the biggest twat I know.
  • The sense of solidarity.

I wish the Fest was everyday.

My ramblings have about run their course, I think. I’ll actually try to keep this up-to-date now…

But hopefully shorter, and written better. I've been writing this too long to even bother reading through.

P.S. I have a moustache.