The Heatley is by no means a punk club, but it has a pretty goddamn punk rock toilet! Art in top pics by Ola Volo.
Alienated in Vancouver
(rants and observations on outsider culture, music & cinema in The Big Wet)
Monday, March 03, 2025
Punk Rock Toilets 2: The Heatley
Sunday, March 02, 2025
Punk rock toilets: the Red Gate
I love a good punk rock toilet. The Red Gate has two awesome ones. I made people wait while I took a few pictures (but I was fast about it, and, uh, some of these I was seated for!).
Rong was great tonight too!
Friday, February 28, 2025
A Decade of Devours: a Jeff Cancade interview by guest blogger Ian JR McClelland
10 years ago, Jeff Cancade created Devours as an instrumental project that blossomed into a serious vessel once his wistfully personal lyrics and vocals were added to his eclectic electronic soundscapes. Pulsing rhythms with heart and soul wash over the listener and you’re hooked and brought onto the Devours planet! 2016 brought out the first album Late Bloomer (self-released debut on cassette) and with his combined dedication to playing as many shows possible, it cemented the groundwork which lead to indie label interest with 2019’s Iconoclast on CD. Momentum was going well and big events were planned and then bang: COVID hit. Rather than let it get him down, Jeff used his angst and anxieties to stay prolific with delivering 2 brilliant releases: 2021’s Escape From Planet Devours and 2023’s Homecoming Queen both self-released on vinyl. During this same time he created his own label, “Surviving The Game.”
Ian M: Your fifth new album Sports Car Era will be out officially on March 14 but you have an album kick off show at the Rickshaw on March 8. Will you have vinyl copies of the new album Sports Car Era at the show?
IM: And you'll eventually be having three different variants of the vinyl?
D: Yes but not all at once. Just as they sell, kind of like what I did with the previous album Homecoming Queen.
IM: With every album you create, you always take your listener on a fresh new journey that's sort of unexpected but still feels like a Devours project.
D: Thanks! I want to make music that's artistic and interesting, but also somewhat commercial. I like making pop music and I don't want it to be too opaque. I am an album person. I grew up obsessed with albums. I think of albums similarly to how a fashion designer like Marc Jacobs comes up with an entire collection, like the "Spring 2025 Collection" or something. You don't necessarily just look at pieces individually, but look at the entire collection and how it works together, contrasts and compliments the other outfits within the collection. That's sort of how I write music. I'm album-minded and so I'll come up with a few upbeat songs and then I'll be like, oh, let's try a ballad to balance things. I'm more of an album person than a singles person.
D: This entire album is just about turning 40. It's about grappling with public perception, because when you're a musician and you're 40 and you haven't made it huge, then you're typically seen as old and not marketable anymore. It's a youth-driven market, right? The industry didn't want me in my 30's, so I've been putting out albums by myself and trying to forge my own path without industry or label support. I'm trying to find self-empowerment in entering my forties and being like, you know what, maybe I was never actually meant for the music industry. Luckily, I think that there are still people who will support you if you're not within the industry machine. If you look at a band like Phish or even Insane Clown Posse for instance, they're not necessarily getting reviewed on Pitchfork but they're touring and have found a way to exist outside of the machine. Those are the kinds of bands who I'm looking at. They're kind of living outside of the mainstream and outside of the industry model. There is a way to exist outside of it and it's hard, but that's sort of where I'm at.
D: Yeah, that's a really interesting question! "37 Up" is one of my favourite Devours songs. It's also one of the most depressing songs I've ever written in my life. So much of being an indie musician is fueled by the "fantasy." What would it feel like to get interviewed by a major publication? What would it feel like to tour and play big shows to people? It is like this fleeting ecstasy when it actually happens. It's like you're taking a shot of heroin or something and you want more of it and you can't get it. It can feel pretty destabilizing. Sometimes the happier people are the ones that are still striving for something but never quite get there. The song is basically saying 'be careful what you wish for'. Last summer, I got nominated for a Polaris, received some local recognition, and played a huge string of shows. That's the dream, right? It's the dream of every musician who's just trying to get anywhere in large cities in Canada where people don't usually care about them. And then when you actually get to that level and you realize that you can't even support yourself financially doing it, it's discouraging. You put so much of your heart and your soul and your bandwidth into doing it. When I think back to my 30's, I made major sacrifices relationship-wise, career-wise and I feel like my side career is sort of a mess right now because I always try to prioritize music and Devours. I don't regret anything, but the reality of being a DIY musician wears on me. The song suggests that it's almost a better head space to be in to be striving for something as opposed to actually getting it.
IM: How did you come up with the name Devours? Is there a meaning to it?
IM: How do the melodies and music pop up in your head?
D: Sometimes I sit down at my keyboard and jam. Sometimes I'm biking to the grocery store and a melody pops into my head. If the hook is good enough, then I'll remember it. I have a piano in my brain, so I sometimes just make full songs in my head when I'm out somewhere.
IM: What if a lyric comes to mind?
IM: I've noticed that many of your songs often shift gears in regards to tempo changes and sometimes the songs take on a whole new structure or chapter which always keeps the listener engaged because it can be unpredictable and really interesting.
IM: Like "21st & Main"?
D: Wow, good! That's a deep cut! But yeah, I had just reached a point where I was like, I'm out of the closet now and I've experienced a few relationships and I've experienced moving from big city to big city. And I think that sometimes for artists, it just takes a bit longer. Essentially, every album that I release is a bunch of journal entries, or time capsules of what's going on in my life at the time. Sports Car Era is about turning 40 and Late Bloomer was about making sense of my life at 30. My lyrics are sort of like a glimpse into my anxieties and depression, but also happiness and joy of being alive. Lyrics are important and sometimes you just have to live a bit, because if you haven't gone through anything hard in life, it's difficult to make an album that's deep and self reflective.
IM: I love the giant Devours head in the "Sports Car Era" video! Who made that?
D: His name is Patrick Macht. He is an amazing artist and director in Vancouver. He made the videos for "Gimp Mask" and "Sports Car Era". He also has his own fashion clothing line. He's one of Vancouver's most talented artists and he made my giant Devours head. He used a big yoga ball. He made a big paper mâché head that is crazy to wear! I can't hear in it. I can't see in it. It falls off my head constantly. I can't balance it! (laughs)
IM: I'm glad you didn't break it too badly when you were stomping your cowboy boot heel into it!
IM: Let's talk about the new album coming out. There are 10 new tracks in total but there are three songs that I've heard and seen so far on your Youtube site. The first single released, "Swordswallower (Zendaya's Fortress)" is an impressive 7 minute opus which has a very brooding second half. I'd love to know more behind the meaning of the song.
IM: I really noticed that difference! It's almost like you took speed metal and electronic music and created a new genre "Speedtronica"!
D: (laughs) That's cool! Let's run with it! Yeah, I just tried to combine my influences in interesting ways. I grew up loving Hip Hop and so you can tell that there are those beats. I'm a drummer too and grew up drumming so there's always been a percussive focus on Devours. I really like 1980's balladry too so that's an influence as well. Toss emo in there as well. Devours has been really dramatic and emotional from the beginning. It's like my emotions being dialed up to 100.
IM: The second single from the album is the title track "Sports Car Era'. Now the video for that song shows that you're not shy in that video. It's very edgy, hot and hairy!
IM: You're not shy in the video!.
IM: Well, you definitely wear it well!
IM: This brings me to "Loudmouth," the third and newest single from the album. Now I wasn't really going to get into politics but is Devours into politics? I bring this up because of the American reference throughout the lyrics and the Statue of Liberty imagery in the video. How does Devours see the world right now?
D: I am trying to think positively. I do care about politics. It feels like everywhere in Western culture is becoming more conservative and right wing. It gets so easy to get lost in doom scrolling and in the news feeds and feel like the world is turning to shit. I've been trying to reflect on issues that are better now than they were 40 years ago, like mental health support, women's rights, LGBTQ+ rights. It's so easy to be negative and get trapped in the online echo chamber and think "The world is terrible now! I'm going to just disappear!" The world's always going to be kind of fucked up, but there may be good progress being made in areas that we might not realize.
"Loudmouth" isn't political. It's just about falling in lust with this person in the States who is completely wrong for me but I just want to make it work anyways because I'm infatuated. It's about our incompatibility and also just the fantasy of having distance between us. I've always had fantasies of being in LA or somewhere in the States. I think that it's just a classic case where most Canadian musicians fantasize about being in the US because that's where dreams can actually come true and you can tour properly. But also there are so many hot men in Washington! Every time I go to the bar and there is some insanely hot person, I'm like "Oh, they're probably from Seattle" and then they are. Washington is stacked!
IM: Well, but you want to get "fucked in a tree house"! ("Loudmouth" contains the most hookiest chorus with profanity since Radiohead's "Creep"!)
D: Yeah, those are my deepest desires for sure!
IM: Was that anything to do with getting fucked within the Statue of Liberty?
IM: How excited are you to be headlining and playing at the Rickshaw on March 8th?
D: I am nervous. I think that I get a little bit of stage fright if I go for months without performing. I think that it helps me to be the best performer I can be to perform often because there's no nerves and you're just used to doing it. It's been a quiet few months of not performing very much and so, yeah, it's a lot of pressure to just hop up on a huge stage. I am incorporating live drums! This is a little bit of a spoiler I haven't told people yet. But Dave Prowse, the drummer from Japandroids and I have been jamming and we're going to do it together live!
IM: This is so interesting that you're adding another musician to your live show because one of my questions I was going to ask was if you could ever see Devours as a band when performing live? Has that ever been a fantasy to do an expansion of your project?
D: I think so. I've played with people before. When I lived in Montreal, I was in a band and it was really fun. It's way more fun to play with people on stage. I'm kind of a control freak, so when I started Devours, I just thought this is my last chance of feeling like I can connect to this youth audience in Vancouver and I just need to do it my own way and not spend 10 years trying to find the right people to play with. I just had to do it my way. So yeah, it's been an interesting journey being alone on stage. I have thought of having a live drummer with me for years. This has been on my mind for a long time. I wasn't sure if I would like the sound of acoustic drums on top of the electronic recordings but Dave is an awesome drummer and it's sounding really cool! Another huge reason why I want to play with people is the logistics of touring. That's something that's held me back for so long because I've never had industry or label support saying, "Jeff, we're going to put you on the road and we'll link you up with some people." It's just me doing everything and I don't want to drive to Calgary alone. And so that's where I've tried to tour with other solo musicians where we're co-headlining a tour or something, but touring sucks alone. And so you just have to sort of turn it into a road trip and do it with a friend or with a band member. That's the other bonus of trying to do this. I'm hoping moving forward with a drummer or an extra person will make everything more fun.
IM: You should be very proud of that. Any idea why you attract such a diverse crowd?
IM: Where else will you be playing?
IM: "Mom's Car Era!"
Jon Spencer rocks the Rickshaw, plus Bad Beats, Aging Youth Gang and Lou Reed
Or something.
Monday, February 24, 2025
Seven Reasons to Revisit Conan the Barbarian (1982, with Arnold Schwarzenegger).
I had not seen Conan the Barbarian - the Schwarzenegger
breakthrough and his first major film role, released two years before The Terminator, and directed by John "Red Dawn" Milius – since I was 16,
where I believe I watched it on VHS, in the wrong aspect ratio, on an average, crappy 1980s television. I don't remember watching it more than once -- unlike, say, The Thing or The Evil Dead or any other VHS favourites of yore, which my buddies and I watched again and again. Would seeing it in the proper aspect ratio on a vastly improved TV elevate the experience? I was eager to find out, especially since Erika had never seen it.
Turns out that Conan the Barbarian is not a very good
film, but there are some things in it that gave me great pleasure, nonetheless, enjoying it sometimes in spite of and sometimes because of its flaws. For instance:
1. James Earl Jones turns into a snake. I am a mild aficionado of snake-to-human (or human-to-snake) transformation films, also including Sssssss, Hisss, The Reptile, and Dreamscape -- where David Patrick "Warriors Come Out to Play" Kelly turns into a cobra-monster:
Somehow I had forgotten about the James Earl Jones scene, but understand, when I first saw Conan, I was probably still CATCHING snakes recreationally, not musing about their representation in cinema. Realizing that, as Thulsa Doom, he leads a snake cult (and that he is a sorcerer), at the moment his facial features started to morph, I sat up and excitedly declaimed: "Is James Earl Jones turning into a snake?!"
He was!
It is not the only snake scene in the film. It is interesting how they combine really great photography of live action snakes, in a few places, with scenes involving mechanical snakes on a par with the mechanical tarantulas in The Beyond. You get excited when you see how well-photographed the big snake in the film is, the first time you see it, and think, this snake is going to be awesome! And then the film cuts to the “action” shots with the mechanical one, and "awesome" is no longer the word you have in mind. Put it this way, it is on par with Ken Russell's The Lair of the White Worm:
But this marks a significant point in the film's development: When the snake scene arrives, you realize that up til that point, you had actually been kinda-sorta suspending your disbelief, which you only realize you'd been doing when it becomes totally impossible to continue thus: Oh, shit, THIS is what I'm watching? ...but the movie actually becomes MORE FUN from this point on, where suspending disbelief is replaced with guffaws and raised eyebrows. The mechanical snake will be your guide, leading you to these richer, weirder waters...
And weirder yet, the snakes in this film become explicitly phallic when Jones stroke a snake and it stiffens! There is a very striking closeup of his hands around the shaft, pulling it straight, whereby it turns into an arrow, a weapon, which – help me unpack this in terms of phallic symbolism? -- he then shoots into Valeria, Arnold's love interest, killing her. (Has their been any queer criticism of this film? Are there any Freudian interpretations? Was Milius reading Freud? …this actually seems possible).
We'll return to queer content presently, but suffice to say, for now, that that's a lot of snakes for one movie. And I like snakes.
2. There is an element of unintentional camp. Even IF it is NOT an intentional, campy, tongue-in-cheek film like we will see soon thereafter as Schwarzenegger becomes a BRAND, post-Terminator… Even if Milius quite possibly took some of this seriously, or at least expected his audiences to, or thought they would in ways that seem, oh, I dunno, quaint? Naïve? Charming? Maybe a bit, uh, hubristic? Even despite all that, Conan develops an aspect of “unintentional camp” (contra the intentional camp injected into Total Recall or so forth). You feel a bit bad laughing at it, because you realize you weren’t actually intended to, but you can't help yourself!
In contrast, Conan actually makes me feel greater appreciation for Red Dawn, which is ten times the film, if also absurd; that film is probably a must-watch, if you haven't seen it lately, as way of putting dogwhistle histrionics about "communism" in their place. Someone should remake it and give Jordan Peterson a cameo.
Oh, wait, they already remade it? Nevermind.
3. There is a gay pickup scene. Speaking of queering Conan, there is, also stretching things in implausibly entertaining ways, a bit of brief homoerotic content which never would occur in later Brand Schwarzenegger product, and which gets described on Youtube as the weirdest scene in the film. It ends in casual violence against the gay man that speaks of how banally homophobic the times were, or at least John Milius, but FOR A BRIEF MOMENT, a priest of the snake cult hits on Arnold, and Arnold smiles at him and gives him a bit of a come on, smiling and saying something like, "why don't we talk over there where it is more private," which, I dunno about you, put ALL SORTS OF IMAGES in my head, like suddenly I had flashbacks to Derek Jarman's Sebastiane.
Once they are alone, Schwarzenegger seduces the priest further by saying he's "shy" and playing hard to get; as the priest does indeed -- with no references to oysters or snails to be had -- move in for a kiss, just as the more homophobic members of the audience are starting to clench their asses shut and sweat (and/or salivate a little, because these things are never simple), Arnold decks him, dashing hopes for a bit of man-on-man action, and steals the priest's robes. Not the payoff I wanted -- sexual tension climaxing in violence in lieu of sex -- but for a second there...
Question: Is there a Milius autobiography? Was he raised Catholic? Did he have any bad experiences with priests? Does this have any bearing on this scene?
4. Arnold Schwarzenegger punches a camel. Again, this is not necessarily meant to be a "good" thing about the film, but it is somewhat, um, exceptional, and I confess, in a singular, WTF way, when this happens -- especially if you have not been prepared for it -- it is pretty entertaining: Conan and his friend are wandering around town stoned on some sort of Cimmerian hallucinogen ("the Black Lotus"), so camel-punching seems like a good idea at the time. Who among us has not been there? And if you watch carefully, it's a pretty obvious stage punch, with sound effects added afterwards, including a laugh that Schwarzenegger can be seen not giving. Though the camel does fall down afterwards, that COULD still be a well-trained animal -- it is not a clear case of animal cruelty. But do a quick Google of "animal cruelty Conan" and it takes much of the fun from the film: I am sorry to report, the film was made in Spain, land of the bullfight, where there were no animal cruelty laws to be had, so horses are tripped, a dog gets kicked, and more. And rather than drawing heat for the filmmakers, the camel punch apparently was regarded as an entertaining moment, because there is a follow-up to this scene in Conan The Destroyer where Conan sees the same camel again, says, "I'm sorry for what happened last time," and gets spit on, whereupon he gets angry and hits the camel anew.
This may in fact be the first instance of "Brand Schwarzenegger's" development, where someone was watching with a pencil in the back row during a screening, taking note of what audiences liked, with the intent to repeat the formula next time. If you are curious, both scenes are compiled here, and also a "bonus" of a horse getting punched; Tracy "Plate of Shrimp" Walter is Conan's companion in the second film, and remembers the camel punch to Conan, even though he wasn't in the first movie.
5. Valeria wrestles cartoon demons. Later in the film, demons attack Arnold when he is being resurrected and have to be fought off by his companion, Valeria, who is played by Sandahl Bergman -- y'know, from Hell Comes to Frogtown? She is the one on the chain:
That ridiculous little film would make a fine follow up to Conan, as would the Den cartoon from Heavy Metal... but in 1982, Bergman did not realize she would soon be relegated to quasi-ironic b-movie roles, and does a fine job in the action scenes of Conan, which she, like Arnie, plays straight; though it's interesting to note, in terms of looks, she's nowhere near as conventionally beautiful as a female actor would have to be to net such a role nowadays -- she's no ScarJo; but then, Arnold's not exactly a standard leading man, either. It's an interesting thing, suggesting that 1982 may not have been as backward as one thinks...
Still, as game as she is, the resurrection scene has her fighting CARTOONS. The demons are animated; the figure in the centre is one such example (it doesn't look that much better on blu-ray!):
This is absurd enough that Erika and I actually hit rewind and did the scene a second time (you can see the whole scene here). Or maybe Erika was falling asleep at this point, and I was, like, "Wake up, you gotta see this!"
There were a few moments like that ("wake up, he's stroking his snake and it's stiffening!").
6. The sets look just like sets! Speaking of bad effects, consistently in this film, the set designs look like nothing so much as set designs. Cecil B. DeMille would have pshawed The film tries for sweeping Hollywood spectacle and instead ends up looking more like Circle of Iron (y'know, where David Carradine, in one of a few roles, plays a kung-fu fighting monkey?). Not a good thing, per se, but again, this is somewhat entertaining to observe!
7. Max! Finally: not only had I forgotten that James Earl Jones turns into a snake, I had forgotten ENTIRELY that Max von Sydow was in this film, in maybe the film's most delightful role: the thieves are brought before Max, as King Osric, expecting to be punished for having stolen some jewels, only to discover that the person they stole from was Max's enemy and he is delighted (and wants to hire them to do another job!).
I had just played Erika a go-to Bergman of mine the other week, with von Sydow in it – Shame – and was delighted that in fact, that film worked for her; I did not know how she would take Bergman, but she enjoyed the film immensely. (It’s a weirdly feminist film -- Shame, that is, not Conan. Did people see the Ukrainian anti-war film Klondike? It is in many respects a descendent of Shame).
As extreme a contrast as it is to go within a short span from Max in Bergman to Max in Conan, he's delightful, playing the role as if he were a benevolent Viking patriarch, laughing and jocular. Perhaps because it's the opposite of what you're expecting, his scene is hilarious. While it is quite possible James Earl Jones may have felt contempt for the material – you cannot tell from his workmanlike performance how he truly feels about it, though he is very entertaining to watch -- it is vibrantly clear, especially if you know a bit about von Sydow, that he is HAVING THE TIME OF HIS LIFE playing Osric, possibly having even more fun than he did as Ming the Merciless. He has complained in interviews about being asked to play the same sort of role again and again; Osric is about is as far from the "von Sydow stereotype" as you can possibly get. You feel happy for him, and find his enjoyment infectious.
There are other fun things you notice when watching Conan, mind you, from horrific hairstyles, especially on Jones, to some decent swordfight choreography, but the "unintentional camp" factor ratchets up if you turn on the subtitles and try to imagine Milius actually WRITING some of the lines in the film as dialogue: there are some real doozies, a level of pretension that one does not normally encounter in a film like this. You may notice other odd quirks of language that way, too, like when James Earl Jones calls Conan and his band of thieves "infidel defilers": doesn't that imply that they go around defiling infidels? I don't think that's what he meant!