Acts of Volition Radio: Session Nine
After a short hiatus (the beauty of never promising deadlines), Acts of Volition Radio is back. This session is mostly comprised of Canadian indie rock and pop - but some Pedro the Lion got in there too (maybe they're Canadian in temperment).
Session Nine Playlist:
- Pedro the Lion – Backwoods Nation
- The Weakerthans – Pamphleteer
- Weeping Tile – Westray
- Sarah Harmer – Always
- Hawksley Workman – Autumn’s Here
- Hawksley Workman – We Will Still Need a Song
- Buck 65 – Driftwood
For more, see the previous Acts of Volition Radio sessions.
I'm really liking what I have heard from the Weakerthans, thanks for the tip.
I'm working on it now. Thanks for your patience (you imaginary audience).
I was about to e-mail you and ask why you'd stopped :-)
I'm downloading it right now...
I especially enjoy the inclusion of 'Pamphleteer', my favourite Weakerthans' track. You make a great point about the Ralph Chaplin allusion. It ties in nicely with another famous allusion in the tune: "A spectre's haunting Albert Street", which refers to the opening line of the Communist Manifesto.
And those Weakerthans do put their money where their mouth is, so to speak. A recording engineer I've worked with recounted a story of John K. Sampson not wearing shoes for a few years as a form of protest against something or other. I'll admit this guy has a flare for exaggeration, but I somehow don't doubt him on this one.
The passion and commitment of The Weakerthans is often imitated but never duplicated by other "socialist" Canadian rockers (who will remain unnamed) and their contribution, musically and otherwise, to Canadian culture is currently second-to-none.
Sorry for the rant... But I guess that's what the Weakerthans can do to a fella. :-)
P.S. I never noticed the monstrous cow-bell in the Weeping Tile track before. Where's Bruce Dickinson when you need him? ;-)
If there are any good places to buy/download any of their music, could you post them here?
Thanks again; I can't stop listening to songs from the last two sessions.
I've been listening to them in my car lately and -- maybe someone has said this already -- I can hardly hear your voice, too deep or quiet. Something fixable? And it's annoying cueing through each song to get the one you want, because it's all one file, but I'd also rather download one MP3 instead of eight, so maybe technology will catch up soon.
Also, I like hearing quotes from the artisits/backstory, very interesting.
I love this idea, the music, everything.
I heard Sarah Harmer recently in Starbucks, and dismissed it as generic pop
Interesting how the medium, a personal podcast with background details, gives a much more powerful effect than the same music played by a large corporation.
You make a great introduction to canadian music, from my scottish perspective.
