The Matinee play good time upbeat country folk

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The matinee’s Mike Young on banjo. Photo by Richard AmeryA busy week began Wednesday, Jan. 12, on the Slice’s brand new stage with two excellent Vancouver based roots/country rock bands.


 The Gastown Royals were up first with some upbeat folk-country including a stand -up bass.
 They reminded me of a more acoustic White Cowbell Oklahoma, partially because  they all sported cowboy hats and alternated lead vocals including  the soulful lead singer, who  also played some excellent harmonica.


 They ended their set with a  cover of Bob Dylan/ The Old Crow Medicine Show’s  “Wagon Wheel,” then were called back for an encore of J-Z’s “99 Problems.”

 The Matinee were up next with a set of upbeat, foot stomping  country-fried Sadies style country rock, which included a couple newer songs from an upcoming records.The Matinee performing a mult-person drum solo. Photo by Richard Amery
 They played several of their own songs including a Ryan Adams cover and “one from our older catalogue ” called ‘50 bucks,’  which incorporated a few countrified bars of  Pink Floyd’s “Another Brick In the Wall Part 2,” done Luther Wright and the Wrongs’ bluegrass style, for which the lead singer  donned a banjo.

 They  played another older song “Red Wine And Whiskey,” as well as Johnny Cash’s ”Jackson.”

 


 And for a touch of humour added Ween’s “Piss Up A Rope,’ and promised a free CD for the first member of the audience to identify the artist.


 Four of the band members then took the opportunity to hammer out a  drum solo midway through another one of their  older songs and wound down their set just before midnight with  “the first song we ever wrote,” then followed that up with an encore of “the second song we ever wrote.”

— By Richard Amery, L.A. Beat Editor
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 20 April 2017 12:15 )