Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Great Weekend

Hey everyone,

Summer is almost here. Actually, it is here. Taiwan is having some of the hottest weather I've ever experienced. I am constantly soaked in sweat, as our apartment has no air conditioning. But I can't really complain about hot weather, since I have gone without it most of my life. This past weekend was busy and lots of fun. I had two different gigs with two different bands. I've been extremely busy with music lately. It's been fantastic.

Here's a picture from Friday night. Newt and the Slacks played at a bar called 89K. We played very well but it was mostly for Taiwanese guys watching the World Cup and paying no attention to us. This is during one of our songs called: You guessed it, The Devil.

This shot is from Peace Fest, a music festival in Longtan. It's with a band called Militant Hippi. Very fun show. It was a little sloppy on our part but the crowd loved it and were dancing for our whole set.

I feel like an egotist putting this one on but it's such a great shot. Lindsay took it and the smoke in the background looks cool. I'm still relatively new to the music scene. Smoke machines still excite me.
And look who showed up. Met up with Nicki about a half hour after the Militant Hippi set. He missed it unfortunately. But it was great seeing him and the night was still young at that point. Ended up partying till five in the morning and all through the next day.
I actually emailed this shot to Vice Magazine today. Is this guy serious? Absolutely every article of clothing he has on is ridiculous. The shirt is priceless, as are the jeans, but check out those rubber boots. And I believe he has a pink scarf tucked into his little shirt as well. I mean, come on.

There's a little update for you. Lindsay and I will be in B.C. in less than a week and in N.B. not too long after.

see you soon,
Geoff

Friday, June 09, 2006

Who'll Stop the Rain?

June and July in Taiwan is the rainy season. It rains continuously every day for weeks on end. Sometimes it lets up for a bit but then it comes crashing down again. The hardest rain I've ever seen. The picture above is a major street in Taichung. The brown part in the upper half of the photo is basically a river of mud flowing down the road. It gets very depressing and frustrating.

Anytime I go out on my scooter I get drenched and come home soaked. My wet clothes are hanging all over the house. On the way to school today, a road was unexpectedly washed out and we had to take another route, which in turn made us late. During the drive, I deejayed from the iPod, all songs about rain (Who'll Stop the Rain by CCR, Rain Down On Me by Blue Rodeo, November Rain by Guns 'n Roses and Dry the Rain by the Beta Band. That was as far as I got but I feel a good compilation CD coming on. Jimi, are you reading this?) And of course, events get cancelled. This Friday I had a gig in Kaoshung with Newt and the Slacks then the following day, the other band I'm in, Militant Hippi, were playing at a Peace Festival up north in a place called Longtan. One was cancelled and one was postponed. So I'm sitting here right now on a Friday night in front of my computer. I don't even want to leave the house.

If all this rain has done anything, it's made me start thinking about summer. I can't wait to be home and have been trying to make some plans. Evolve looks great and so does the Shoreline Festival. I'll be home on July 12 or 13 or something - just in time for the Wilco show at the Playhouse. Then I'll be going to Newfoundland with my family for a few days. Newfoundland is the only province I've never been too and I'm very excited.

For the first ten days of July we will be in B.C. Our tentative plan is this: July 1st in Vancouver, July 2nd and 3rd in Saltspring Island, July 4th, 5th, 6th in Victoria, July 7th, 8th and 9th in Kelowna and then July 10th, 11th and 12th back in Vancouver. I hope you guys are around. I'll email you soon and maybe we can start planning some stuff.

Looking forward to seeing everyone,
Geoff

P.S. Si, I hope you don't mind me using your song title method for my subject.

Thursday, June 01, 2006

Penghu Island

A couple of weeks ago, I had the chance to do something very cool. One of the bands I play in, Militant Hippi, got a gig in a place called the Penghu Islands. On the above map, they are the islands to the west called Pescadores (I have never heard that name for the islands before but it's the only good map I could find). It's not an easy place to get to.

I got work off Friday and Stefan the guitarist, his girlfriend and I (Lindsay stayed in Taichung) took off to catch the ferry at 6:00AM. We met up with the rest of the band Paul, Dong-Yang and Michael and headed off to Chiayi where the ferry was supposed to leave from. It was a beautiful day, no wind at all but when we got there the ferry service had been cancelled because of a typhoon that had blown through a couple of days before (why it wasn't running that day, I have no idea). So we sped down to Kaoshung where there was another company had a ferry service. It wasn't running either (must have been a coast guard decision or something - no boats at all on this clear, beautiful day). We didn't think we were even going to make it but we eventually went to the airport as a last resort. All seats were booked but we ended up flying stand-by.

It was my closest experience or at least a tiny little nibble at what being a famous musician on tour would be like. A guy picked us up at the airport, and took us to a house he had rented out for us for the weekend. Then we get to the concert and it's on the waterfront for this fireworks festival the town was having. The stage was huge (as of now, I have no pictures. Lindsay owns the digital camera. But I will hopefully get some off Michael). There wasn't many people when we started playing and you can't really see out into the audience when the lights are on you but after our first set, I look out and there must have been two thousand people there. It was awesome. Don't get me wrong, there weren't groupies throwing bras up on stage or anything. In fact, it would be the equivalent of playing a Canada gig in a park back home or something. There were families, old people, kids, town drunks, etc. in the crowd. But cool nonetheless.

The rest of the weekend we played a couple of bar gigs. Everyone on the island seemed to dig our sound and the funny thing is, is that we are a very new band. We only had four songs and weren't prepared for this show at all. But I would start some bass riff or Stefan the guitarist would launch into a groove and everyone would join in and Michael and Paul would start singing gibberish (they can't understand English so it doesn't matter) and it all came together. We pulled it out of thin air and basically have six or eight new songs now. So that's that. There's some more gigs lined up in the next couple of months and I can't wait.

On Sunday, Michael and I flew back to Kaoshung and picked up the car. Our car, which isn't in great shape, always overheats and we constantly need to fill up the thing (radiator thingy?) with water. So in the parking lot of the airport I open the hood, take off the cap and fill it up with water. Then we are on our way. About twenty minutes into the drive, on the number 1 highway - the busiest highway on the island, the car starts to shake and I can't accelerate anymore. So I start to pull over to the side and as I'm doing so, it stalls. I put it in park and get out. Open the hood and there's smoke everywhere and there's water spurting out of the radiator thingy...and next to all that is the cap. I had forgotten to put the damn thing on! Not a good thing to do and I will never do it again. I fried some part of the engine and water mixed with the oil. It ended up costing 15000NT (about 500 bucks) and it took four days to fix. Michael and I had to take the train home.

So my first big concert was an expensive one. But it was worth every penny ... or NT, I guess I should say.

Geoff