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SUMMARY:Alvvays
URL:http://www.harbourliving.ca/event/alvvays/
LOCATION:Capital Ballroom :: 858 Yates Street Victoria, 
DESCRIPTION;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:<p>The much-anticipated follow-up to Alvvays&rsquo; 2014 self-titled debut &ndash; is set for release on September 8th. Across its 10 tracks and 33 minutes the Toronto-based group dive back into the deep end of reckless romance and altered dates. Through thoughtful consideration in basement and abroad, Alvvays has renewed its Scot-pop vows with a powerful new collection of manic emotional collage.<br /><br />The album opens with the excellent strum-&rsquo;n-thrummer &lsquo;In Undertow,&rsquo; a hi-amp breakup fantasy that is both crushing and charming for its level-headedness. "You find a wave and try to hold on for as long as you can, you made a mistake you'd like to erase and I understand," sings Rankin, her voice full longing not for another person necessarily, but for what to do next. "Meditate, play solitaire, take up self-defense," Molly continues, laundry-listing some strategies for moving on. "What's next for you and me? I'll take suggestions," she deadpans under crashing waves of feedback and Farfisa.<br /><br />Replete with more songs about drinking (&lsquo;Forget About Life,&rsquo;&lsquo;Hey&rsquo;), drugging (&lsquo;Lollipop (Ode To Jim)&rsquo;), and drowning (&lsquo;Already Gone&rsquo;), Antisocialites is a multipolar period piece fueled by isolation and loss. Perversely enjoyable dark drama springs from Rankin&rsquo;s phonetic twists, quick-sung rhymes and irreverent syllable-play. &ldquo;So morose for me, seeing ghosts of me, writing oaths to me,&rdquo; the self-described introvert sings on the Cocteau-pop stunner &lsquo;Dreams Tonite,&rsquo; the song from which the album&rsquo;s name is derived. &ldquo;In fluorescent light, antisocialites watch a wilting flower.&rdquo;<br /><br />To write Antisocialites, Rankin traveled to Toronto Island -- working in an abandoned classroom by day and sleeping a fewfeet from shore at night -- to avoid a stifling heat wave in the city. &ldquo;I carried a small PA on the ferry in a wheelbarrow,&rdquo; she recalls. &ldquo;Every morning I would listen to my favorite records on the beach, then I&rsquo;d write melodies and record demos in the classroom.&rdquo; After tracking with keyboardist Kerri MacLellan and bassist Brian Murphy at Kingsize in LA, Rankin and guitarist Alec O&rsquo;Hanley continued recording and mixing in their Toronto basement. A few friends descended to play on the record, including Teenage Fanclub&rsquo;s Norman Blake.<br /><br />Antisocialites details a world of ice cream truck jingles and radiophonic workshop noise, where Rankin's shining wit is refracted through crystalline counterpoint. &lsquo;Not My Baby&rsquo; is a centerpiece, a meditation on the rapture of escape following the sadness of separation. Elsewhere, &lsquo;Plimsoll Punks&rsquo; is the band&rsquo;s answer to Television Personalities&rsquo;&lsquo;Part-Time Punks&rsquo;and a winking surf opus indictment of the self-righteous who intend to condescend. Molly wrote the rapid-fire sugar stream &lsquo;Lollipop (Ode to Jim)&rsquo; after singing &lsquo;Just Like Honey&rsquo; with Jesus and Mary Chain. &lsquo;Your Type&rsquo; is a beautiful primitive stomp about running around Paris with vomit on your feet post-Louvre ejection.<br /><br />The record concludes with a movement that is at once stark and celebratory. On &lsquo;Forget About Life,&rsquo; the apartment stands in disarray as undrinkable wine is inhaled: &ldquo;When the failures of the past multiply and you trivialize the things that keep your hand from mine, did you want to forget about life with me tonite?&rdquo; The resonant freaks in Rankin&rsquo;s tales don&rsquo;t find much resolve, but with equal doses of black humor and heartstring-tugging, Antisocialites rings a truer tone.</p>=0D=0A=
<p><a href="http://atomiqueproductions.com/calendar/alvvays/">http://atomiqueproductions.com/calendar/alvvays/</a></p>=0D=0A=
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DTSTART:19691231
DTEND:19700101
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