Sunday, December 28, 2025

Petunia and the Vipers live at the Rio! Plus guest appearance by Sinéad X. Sanders (in my photo, anyhow)


Sinéad X. Sanders and Petunia! All photos by me. 

Great night! Petunia was happy with my Straight piece and the band was in fine form. Spank Williams, who I had never seen before, was great, too -- loose and exuberant while Petunia was vastly more controlled (but still joyful!). Lots of 20somethings on the dancefloor, which is nice to see (we older folks filled the seats); I don't think 20somethings of my day were into this kind of historically and culturally rich smorgasbord ("mixed roots music," so to speak); they wanted Twisted Sister and AC/DC and Led Zeppelin or maybe the Dead Kennedys but none of my friends had heard of western swing, for instance... It's one of the things that gives me hope about these kids, as is the number of same-sex and gender-neutral pairings on the floor tonight, unremarked upon by anyone except old farts like me lookin' to get hope from the young'uns. It works!  But mostly I just danced, and shot some photos, and shot a li'l video too, without worrying too much about how I was going to report about the night. Gotta check out that Fred Eaglesmith song about trucker speed that Spank covered, tho', I really dug it! (Rowan Lipkovits tells me that there is a rumour that Eaglesmith was the inspiration for Geoff Berner's "Phony Drawl"). Spank covered a Geese song, too! He and Petunia did alternating sets, Petunia first, then Spank, then Petunia, then Spank. I gather Spank lives in Montreal now so I'm real glad to have finally seen him; he did a song about being able to buy alcohol in convenience stores in Montreal, which is a civilized thing indeed (it was that way in Japan when I was there, too; my gal at the time and I would walk from the train station to my apartment and hit every 7-11 for a juice box of sake, and we'd be quite pleasantly buzzed by the time we got home). 


Petunia left "Bible Preacher" off his set but he did "Mercy" with a giant free jzz freakout as his closing number and that was magnificent. There was also an "Inside of You" with a full band arrangement, as discussed in the Straight piece, which I was very glad to hear. Later, as he was signing my records, Sinéad X. Sanders came over and we got a photo of them together! (I wrote about her here). 

Anyhow, like I say, great night. Been too long since I've seen Petunia (who will be back doing Mondays at the Princeton presently, but I'm glad it didn't stop anyone from coming out tonight). I'll be back at the Rio for their New Years Eve celebrations, which includes Kitty and the Rooster and Melody Mangler (written about here). Noah Walker, in the house tonight, tells me there's a new Kitty and the Rooster album coming soon, but shh, that might not be for public consumption yet. Apparently Jodie took the cover photo on the previous Petunia album (the heavy and lonesome one).

Best of my photos are here.  I bought one of the shirts with the snakes on it. It's like Petunia knows me or something (he kinda does, a little). 















Tonight was the first time I ever noticed that Petunia looks a bit like John Cazale, at least when Cazale wasn't wearing a horrible haircut (he has bad hair in so many of his movies it's kind of unusual to see him looking handsome, but he could). Mind you, I don't think Cazale ever wore one o' them fancy bolo ties, though he did wear a bowtie in a movie once. Am I off base? 


Saturday, December 27, 2025

Alienated in Vancouver top 10 (+1) for 2025

In addition to the stuff I do for Montecristo Magazine, the Georgia Straight, Big Takeover (these days for print only) and occasionally for Germany's Ox Fanzine (print only and translated into German), I keep, obviously, this very blog. It's the "unedited" me -- the more personal writing, the more spontaneous stuff, and sometimes the place I put outtakes to build on things I've done for one of the above publications. Thanks for visiting it! 

So here are my top 10 blog posts of 2025, if anyone is curious, pretty much in order, with the most-read at the top, and one that is not top 10 (but needs to be included as it relates to one of the other pieces):

Notes on Eggers' Nosferatu. It's weird, this film sort of has disappeared from public consciousness, hasn't it? But there was some keen interest at the time and this ended up my most read piece, accidentally plugging into the buzz around something current:
https://alienatedinvancouver.blogspot.com/2025/01/robert-eggers-nosferatu-impending-doom.html

Efrim Menuck and others re the sample on "East Hastings" (expansion of Montecristo article). Some of the Exu Nazares material in here is actually kind of important to me and has a bearing on an upcoming piece I'm doing. I'm presuming this piece will continue to have legs into the New Year -- the Montecristo article was my favourite thing to do of 2025: https://alienatedinvancouver.blogspot.com/2025/05/efrim-menuck-interview-of-godspeed-you.html

Markus Reuter interview re: Stick Men and Robert Fripp (expansion on a Georgia Straight article): this was a pretty recent story, so it's actually probably going to have a lot of life in the next few months: https://alienatedinvancouver.blogspot.com/2025/11/markus-reuter-interview-part-two-of.html

Black Flag live review, second time seeing them live, before their current incarnation:
https://alienatedinvancouver.blogspot.com/2025/01/black-flag-again-rickshaw-2025-sorry-ron.html

Russian Tim and the Pavel Bures interview (!):
https://alienatedinvancouver.blogspot.com/2025/04/russian-tim-and-pavel-bures-wild-but.html

Neil Young live review, the first night, when they screwed up the entry to the park:
https://alienatedinvancouver.blogspot.com/2025/09/neil-young-deer-lake-live-review.html

(But the part two is better -- there were no problems getting in and I got some wicked pics. This one isn't technically top 10, but I feel a bit bad that the "negative review" had the more reads): https://alienatedinvancouver.blogspot.com/2025/09/neil-young-deer-lake-live-review-night-2.html

Live review of Paul Pigat, the Vanrays, Melody Mangler and Los Furios: https://alienatedinvancouver.blogspot.com/2025/02/paul-pigat-vanrays-and-los-furios.html

Ethan Miller and Shelley Orcutt Miller (also an expansion on a Straight thing with Steve Shelley of Sonic Youth; we got talking a bit about the Crucifucks in that one!): https://alienatedinvancouver.blogspot.com/2025/09/ethan-miller-interview-unknown-unknown.html

Review of the new Thor album, which I enjoyed way more than I expected. I ended up in the rock video promoting the album, which was shot at Neptoon: https://alienatedinvancouver.blogspot.com/2025/05/thor-rock-universe-review-plus-guilty.html

And weirdly, this trivial thing I did after watching the original Conan the Barbarian movie! It's really nothing I care about, just something I blurted to keep myself entertained while Erika was in the washroom after we watched the movie (!), but it got almost 500 views this year:
https://alienatedinvancouver.blogspot.com/2025/02/seven-reasons-to-revisit-conan.html

So those were the most-read things I did that WEREN'T for the bigger publications at the top. We remain add-free over 20 years into this blog journey but I seriously wonder what effect monetizing things would have... would my search results be higher if someone was making money on it? Would *I* be making a meaningful payday? 20+ years of content... no income... am I crazy? 

Don't answer that. Happy New Year! 

Friday, December 19, 2025

House of Exu on Etsy: Christmas shopping for weirdos!

People looking for intriguing t-shirt art are directed to the House of Exu on Etsy, where there are shirts depicting occult rituals performed fluffy animals, visualizing puns, and touching on East Van branding (often with reference to crows). The founder/ artist/ silkscreener Exu Nazares (formerly of Windwalker and Technicians of the Sacred, and a key figure in Ashe Gallery, which some of you may remember) featured prominently in a story I did this year, before which I had *no idea* who ran Ashe or built the altars in the basement (which I saw firsthand in my 20s, when I was most intrigued by voodoo and such). After the holidays, rest assured that THERE WILL BE MORE TO COME ON EXU (pronounced "esshu," by the way, not "ex-su"); this is just in case you're looking for holiday gift ideas! A few of my favourite images are below: 

Rabbit Ritual:

Mystical Chinchilla: 



Unicorn Meltdown: 

Rite of Spring:

Midnight Meeting:
 Lots more to see on his website... local guy... very unique voice... buy a shirt or a hoodie or something! 

Sunday, December 14, 2025

Guided By Robots 2025: photos and notes

L-to-R: Michael, Dennis, Tony, Kevin, and Jon; all pics I am not in are by me.

So there were some massive fans of Guided By Voices in the audience at the ANZA this past night. Apparently two guys drove up (together?) from Oregon, for instance: Larry and Justin. They both did a great job of the songs they picked: Larry did "Hot Freaks" and Justin did two, "Surgical Focus" and "Death of the Party," a new song in the GBR repertoire, as I learned in doing my Straight piece. Justin was the only person to do two songs (other than Kevin Perley!). He also did the highest of the kicks that anyone did onstage--about 2/5ths the height of a "maximum Bob" kick but still, it was higher than anyone else made it! 

All of those songs, of course, were in the third part of the evening, the karaoke component, which was really fun; everyone who sang did a fine job (though the worst bungler was me -- I completely fucked up a line in "I Am a Scientist," right near the end of a clip that got shot, which ends on my fuckup, alas; I recovered a bit thereafter but it's not filmed. I'm still impressed at how commitedly I belted out the first couple verses, though). That link is now repaired, by the way -- Youtube wouldn't allow it but Facebook did. 

Nice of Bryn Peaker to share the video with me! He came right over to my table to let me know he'd shot it. I also shot a few vids of the band proper, but most I'm just going to send to the band; but here's two from the first half, a Pollard solo song ("Flat Beauty") and "Echoes Myron," and here's "Jane of the Waking Universe," though, from early in the second set, just before my battery crapped out. All photos of the band below are by me, while photos of me are by Bryn. Speech impaired karaoke is now a thing! 

Pics with me in them are by Bryn Peaker; thanks!

I learned some stuff tonight, aside from a few GBV songs I didn't know. When I was getting someone in the band -- Michael? Chris? to come over to my table and sign my gig poster, so that I could tuck it into my Propeller reissue, Larry offered me a fascinating story about the original cover variants of that album. His version -- as filtered now through me, with the caveat that my mind was somewhat altered in a few ways last night, not restricted to alcohol -- went something like, Bob's wife was losing her patience with all the time and energy and family resources Bob was pouring into his band, so she made him promise to quit. They had a two-year-old child and the band's previous efforts had gone nowhere, so it was just time to give up and focus on his home life. This left him without the budget to finish the cover art for the album GBV had just recorded, so he gave the members of the band blank covers and had them go home and create unique one-off art for the fronts, which were pasted and painted and otherwise inserted onto the blanks (Justin, who owns one, confirmed that stuff was just pasted on it collage-style). 500 albums were made, and no two had the same cover (!). Some of the variants are online here, but apparently, because some were sent to radio stations, not all copies have been recovered or seen; of the ones that are known to exist, Larry has two, but Justin's is signed by Robert Pollard, so he wins). 

Anyhow,  Propeller was supposed to be their last album, but it was the one that in fact got them noticed and signed, which led to Bee Thousand. You can, incidentally, hear the album here; the bandcamp (at the moment) anyhow uses the cover art for the current reissue. 

If I understood Larry correctly, Pollard also got his Grade 5 class to colour and/or highlight the back cover drawings (one of which was a basis for the t-shirt Larry was wearing; note, if you try to spot him in the photos below, he's the one who looks a bit like David Cronenberg, if David Cronenberg were singing "Hot Freaks").

You can also see some of the variants, with auction prices, on Popsike. Sells for upwards of $5000 these days, in those first pressings; I'll make do with the cover art on my copy, which is based on an original variant. (Apparently every reissue in history has used a different one). 

So that was educational. It was also really essential, if a bit sad, to learn that we may have seen the end of Guided By Voices as a touring unit -- news I clearly had not gotten at the time of my Straight article, where I wheedle for Bob to bring the band here. It was never officially announced, but Justin and Larry both reported that Pollard had told fans that if they wanted to see the band one last time, they better get down to Dallas, back in October of 2024. They're still making records, but GBV's touring days may be done!   

Many, many people had very cool Guided By Voices t-shirts on; I had none, so I wore the shirt I wore when I went to see GBV in Seattle. (There are some fun bad photographs there, by the by). Even gladder to have seen them, now. Guess it may be my only time doing so.             

It sure won't be my only time seeing Guided By Robots, though. Just great! Good friends singing great songs... how did that line go again? Everyone was really complimentary about my article and friendly, and a few fellow audience members offered me drunken love (no, not the carnal kind; but I ssure hugged more people than I expected I would, tonight. When do you hug strangers at a concert? I think I like these GBV-people). 

"Tight Globes" and "Rally Boys" were my favourites of the songs I didn't know at all, but I'm going to check out that Keene Brothers album, too. 

Oh, and Chris Walters, a sometimes-drummer for the band, chatted with me a bit about how he used to get friend requests for Chris Walter all the time. I apologized for leaving him out of the story I did for the Straight, but I couldn't confirm his name anywhere. He joined me for "I Am a Scientist," because, as with me, that song was the gateway drug; when I told him I had signed up for that song, he told me a story about hanging out with a friend in Kits, hearing that song on the radio, and then excusing himself to pop down to Zulu to buy a stack of Guided By Voices CDs, that very day. Robert Pollard has also said the song was really important for him, calling it "the first song that showed some maturity in my ability as a songwriter." I was glad to hear it in the band's own set!

Note: If you want to use these photos and you write for a publication that runs ads and generates income, please at least have the courtesty to ask --- unless you're in the band; I hope at least one of these shots is useful to you. I couldn't get a photographer out, so I just did the best I could... I photograph better than I sing...! 

Great night -- can't wait til next year! 

Photos in reverse order, except for the ones of me at the very bottom. 


























My phone died before I could shoot any of the other karaoke singers, but thanks again to Bryn for shooting me! See y'all again next year. 

(by Bryn Peaker)