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Event 

Title:
Young Rival, Peace, Hard Feelings, Smoke Stack Jacks
When:
Wed, Aug 19
Where:
The Slice - Lethbridge
Category:
Rock

Description

 Starts— Approximately 9 p.m.

Cover— $8 

 

http://www.myspace.com/youngrival

http://www.youngrival.com/

Hamilton rock quartet Young Rival are touring in support of their upcoming  full length CD. They are influenced by classic rock like the Beatles and Kinks as well as ’60s garage rock.

 Hard feelings— http://www.myspace.com/toothextratction

Ex current members of hut tub time machine, the wpp, indigo thumbprint, cadeaux, nocturnal emoticons, taxes, and white loaf.  AB:" In 2007 I had started recording my own songs, without Rick and Devon. My buddy Steve played bass on the first recording, and I played drums and guitar and sang on it. I didn't really have a clear idea of what I was doing at that time. So time went on, wrote some more, and finally in the winter of 2008 Devon and Rick and I had our first practices...so it sort of turned into a real band instead of me kinda just fucking around in the studio."--from three chords no more blog

 FROM BEATROUTE MAGAZINE VANCOUVER: Hard Feelings as comfortable as an old shoe By Spencer Brown There is something to be said for comfort. Sure that new pair of shoes looks good, drinking at that new pub makes you seem hip, dancing at a club to your friend’s electronic project impresses the 19-year-old girl who doesn't know half the bands in your record collection, strategically placing that edgy book on your table at the coffee shop raises an eyebrow, and pedaling around on your $2,000 custom cruiser bicycle embodies your sense of style while you exercise marginally. But do you really like any of those things? Your beat-up pair of Chucks or Vans, your dark and dank watering hole where the regulars know you, eating perogies, and punk rock are similar, if not superior, to the aforementioned activities. They’re comfortable and better – they’re honest.

The East Vancouver three-piece punk band takes the simplest of things – guitar, bass, drums, and three bodies – and makes forceful, direct music with them. The brainchild of Al Boyle, Hard Feelings was born from the fact that Boyle “had some song ideas that didn’t go with any other bands I was in, and I decided to make it a recording project. I recorded all the instruments except bass, where I asked my friend Steve Matheson (the WPP, Ghost House, Weathered Pines) to play on it.” Luckily, the “recording project” status was redacted.

“About a year (went) by, I changed my mind and decided to make this a real band,” remembers Boyle.

“I asked Rick O’Dell (Taxes) and Devon Clifford (You Say Party! We Say Die!) to learn two songs I had, and see how they like it. That was last year, and together we have written about 16 songs. After our first couple of rehearsals, things gelled, and I never would have done this alone or as a recording project. In late spring we recorded live off the floor at the Hive with Jesse Gander.” Listening to Hard Feelings, there is a definite feel of a certain time period in punk rock, before the genre exploded into the mainstream. Boyle admits, “I would have to acknowledge the (San Francisco) Bay Area sound, because I got into playing music at age 14, which was 1994. Remember ‘94? I love early Green Day and Rancid for sure, but I would say as a band and individuals we all like Fugazi, X, the Replacements, and a boat load of other bands that don't sound like Crimpshrine or whatever…but I do think we always had a rough idea of a “three-piece punk band” sound. “Plus, individually we have played in a lot of post-punk bands. Rick and I used to play in Taxes. Rick and Devon used to play in Cadeaux.”

Listening to Hard Feelings’ songs, it’s evident they channel all their mentioned influences without hijacking them outright. While some may sniffle at the idea of punk rock, Boyle defends it with an obvious sense of DIY ethic and lack of self-consciousness about current trends: “Punk rock is totally still valid. If you like punk rock, play punk rock because it’s valid to you. Do what you want to do and what makes you happiest. People say punk rock is a youth culture movement, but I disagree, because at what age do you have to stop? Is NoMeansNo stopping? Am I going to? No.” As for playing punk rock in notoriously cutthroat Vancouver, “(a) lack of venues…is nothing new. Things open up…things close…(we) got to have a positive attitude in this city. I think Vancouver has some of the best bands I know at the moment, but I am biased because most of them are my friends,” laughs Boyle. Some things, you never outgrow. Your favourite beer will always be your favourite beer, your best-loved book will always be that book, and your favourite records will always be your favourite records. And if you ever form a band that sounds like your favourite records, you’re probably playing in Hard Feelings. 

 

Peace — http://www.myspace.com/peacevancouver

Venue

The SliceMap
Venue:
The Slice   -   Website
Street:
314 - 8th Street South
ZIP:
T1J 2J6
City:
Lethbridge
State:
AB
Country:
Country: ca

Description

403-320-0117

Not only do we have the best pizza in town, we are also the center of Lethbridge's NightLife.

We are the only bar in town featuring live music every day of the week. Canadian touring artists, local legends and new emerging artists, everyone stops here.

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