Calgary V-Fest wraps up

From Canoe.ca

Organizers and fans praise the prowess of Canadian bands as our nation’s greatest entertained 18,000 fans

By LISA WILTON

Gord Downie, lead singer of the Tragically Hip, showed why they\'re still Canada\'s biggest band. (STUART DRYDEN/SUN MEDIA)There were a few more clouds in the sky and the temperature was cooler, but the second day of Virgin Fest still attracted 18,000 local music fans to Fort Calgary yesterday.

Calgary’s inaugural Virgin Music Festival wrapped up with the cream of Canada’s music crop making up the bill.

“The music depth here is so rich and so diverse, it’s wonderful” said Virgin chief marketing officer Nathan Rosenberg about the line up.

“Canadian bands can really hold their own against the best of Britain and U.S.”

Though the festival ran smoothly for the most part, there were a few issues.

Festival-goers complained about the lack of toilets and the long lineups to get into the beer gardens.

“There are lots of toilets, but people miss some of them,” countered Virgin Festivals director Andrew Bridge.

“But that is something we will have make people better aware of next year.”

Bridge said Fort Calgary’s hilly, riverside location posed some logistical dilemmas, but felt they had done a good job of addressing the problems.

High beer and food prices were another bone of contention with some music fans.

“I think $7 for a hi-ball or beer is kind of excessive,” said 22-year-old Michael Rodgers. “What can I do? It’s a festival.”

But Rosenberg said that food prices were on par with how much it costs for take out and Bridge noted that the beer gardens were always packed with people.

There were very few medical or police emergencies during the weekend. Heat stroke hit a number of people on Saturday, but Rosenberg said festival staff made sure people were keeping hydrated.

“There were a handful of people thrown out for being drunk and disorderly,” said Bridge.

“But I think the number was something like 15. A really small percentage.”

While there was more of a buzz around the site for Saturday’s headliners The Flaming Lips and Stone Temple Pilots, the hype was still strong for a number of yesterday’s acts, including The New Pornographers and The Tragically Hip.

Thirty-five-year-old Melissa Halaska brought her daughter Arianna to the festival. It was the 12-year-old’s first concert and she was thrilled to be able to see some of her favourite bands.

“She’s here to see The Spades, 10 Second Epic and City & Colour,” Halaska explained.

“I’m here to see Matthew Good.”

Halaska said the $150 she spent on the day passes for her and her daughter was well worth it.

“Definitely. It’s been pretty good so far so I think it’s a great deal.”

Local bands The Summerlad and Chixdiggit were the first acts of the day.

Chixdiggit nabbed the main Virgin Mobile Stage and while there wasn’t a large crowd that early in the afternoon, they made sure each and every person was singing along to their catchy pop-punk.

Smart-aleck singer KJ Jansen called-out those who didn’t comply and accused those who were sitting on picnic blankets of being from Edmonton.

The Constantines took the stage next and treated the audience to a surprise appearance by Hip frontman Gord Downie during their final song, Do What You Can, from their latest release, Kensington Heights.

Montreal’s Stars snappy pop music was lot on many of the rock fans in the crowd. But those who ‘got it’ couldn’t help but fall in love with Amy Milian’s sugary sweet vocals and Torquil Campbell’s Morrissey-esque belting.

City & Colour fit in perfectly with yesterday afternoon’s laid-back vibe, but was dull as dishwasher. Singer and songwriter Dallas Green has an incredible voice but his stage presence is about as exciting as a civic election.

By the time Matthew Good hit the stage last night, the entire crowd was on its feet for the first time that day.

Those who had taken in both days of the festival for were no doubt tired by the time The Tragically Hip hit the stage last night. But the Hip faithful danced, yelled and sang at the top of their lungs as the band kicked off their set with Yer Not the Ocean from their latest release, 2006’s World Container.

The Tragically Hip were sleek, professional and maybe a little predictable. But they showed exactly why they are still this country’s biggest band.

If Calgary music fans were thrilled with this weekend’s V-Fest, festival organizers were just as ecstatic and were already considering bringing the festival back to the city next year.

“We always say that if we can get the talent and we can get the venue and get all the pieces working together we’ll do it,” Bridge said. “We’re not going to put on a sub-standard festival. We want to make sure we can give festival-goers the best experience they deserve.”

V Fest Calgary…or How Gord Downie Taught A City To Move

From MuchMusic.Com

One thing’s for sure: Calgary’s festival organizers know how to pick headliners who are true performers. This Gord Downie character sure knows how to work a stage.

But first, let’s backtrack a second. I’m no Tragically Hip connoisseur by any means; I know Poets is the video with the cats and Ahead By A Century is that one that Much played a lot the year it came out (yes children, there was a time when we played videos by The Hip). Alas, there are few other Hip songs I can name or recite – but that doesn’t mean I can’t enjoy the legendary Canadian band when they’re mere feet in front of me. Aaaaaaand I did.

Sometimes a performer is a PERFORM-AIRE. Sometimes they just give it to you in all facets of stage prowess. And sometimes Gord Downie comes along and chews on a kleenex and acts like a primate right in front of your face. No, seriously – he played monkey for a short while. And he twirled and jumped and kicked his mic stand; he posed and skulked and jammed and saaaaaaang. When you’ve got a camera in your hand, this kind of stage presence is gold. I was laughing and snapping away, grinning ear to ear.

Alas, I cannot tell you their set list, on account of the aforementioned lack of Hip knowledge – but if you were there, leave a comment relaying what you remember, and I’ll share it with the peoples. Alls I knows is that the open venue was more packed than I had seen it all weekend; all eyes and ears were glued to a band that truly knows how to put on a show. And Gord is a maniac (in the best possible way)!

SETLIST: 2008-06-22 – Calgary, AB (Virgin Fest)

At Fort Calgary as headliner at Virgin Fest

01: Yer Not the Ocean
02: My Music at Work
03: Grace, Too
04: The Drop Off
05: It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken
06: Ahead by a Century
07: In View
08: Gift Shop
09: Courage (For Hugh Maclennan)
10: World Container
11: Long Time Running
12: Poets
13: Springtime In Vienna
14: Bobcaygeon
15: Nautical Disaster
16: Fully Completely
17: Family Band
18: New Orleans Is Sinking

Encore
19: The Lonely End Of The Rink
20: Wheat Kings
21: At The Hundredth Meridian

SETLIST: 2008-06-21 – Belleville, ON (Zwick’s Park)

At Zwick’s Park as part of The Big Music Fest

01: Yer Not The Ocean
02: My Music At Work
03: Grace, Too
04: The Drop Off
05: It’s A Good Life If You Don’t Weaken
06: Ahead By A Century
07: In View
08: Gift Shop
09: Courage
10: World Container
11: Long Time Running
12: Poets
13: Springtime In Vienna
14: Bobcaygeon
15: Nautical Disaster
16: Fully Completely
17: Family Band
18: New Orleans Is Sinking

Encore
19: The Lonely End Of The Rink
20: Wheat Kings
21: Blow At High Dough

A Tragically Hip Motorhome

North Shore Times | Thursday, 12 June 2008

LIKE NEW: The old North Shore Bedford restored.

Jane Warren is still using the same bus that took her to school in the 1960s.

But these days it’s being used as a motorhome by Ms Warren and partner Steve Greaves.

The couple, who live on the Coromandel, have revamped the Bedford bus that was owned by the North Shore Transport Company until 1985.

It took Ms Warren from Devonport to Takapuna Grammar in the late 1960s and early 70s.

Mr Greaves’ cousin bought the bus from Murphy Buses in the late 1990s.

He changed the petrol engine to diesel, stripped the interior and fitted it with wood panels from the Toyota car factory.

It was then reluctantly sold to Mr Greaves.

The ownership papers revealed it was Ms Warren’s old school bus.

Mr Greaves says it had been totally restored inside but the exterior was a bit neglected and still had the original blue paint from its time in Devonport.

The earlier red and grey was visible underneath the peeling paint.

A panelbeater and car painter, Mr Greaves has spent the past year sanding back the old paint, masking, and painting the bus.

It now has a charcoal grey base, red up to the windows, silver on the upper sides and a grey roof – and power steering.

Ms Warren and Mr Greaves named the bus Tragically Hip after a Canadian rock group. Mr Greaves lived in Canada for 18 years.