Sunday, March 08, 2026

SLIP~ons, Vic Bondi, LiquidLight and Cascade last night in East Van! Live show notes, links, and photos

 



Damn that was a great night. SLIP~ons brought Vic Bondi and LiquidLight to town, and with local openers Cascade (the youngest of whose members was 17!), played an all-ages show in East Van. I did a couple of Straight features but there's more to come with Brock in a different publication... so I'm really, really excited to dig deeper into the new EP. Here's a clip I shot from the show (should be self-explanatory) of one of their new songs, "New Answers." 


Cascade was onstage when we arrived and were very enjoyable, hard-rocking and enthusiastic and a musically perfect fit for the night. They had a guest vocalist join them for one song. Good young band! 

Vic Bondi took the stage next, quipping something about going just like that "from kids to geezers," but there wasn't much geezer to be had. Incredibly passionate and politically-charged setlist, with a lot of Articles of Faith songs, but also one by Dead Ending ("All the Way Down").He kicked things off with "American Dreams" by Articles of Faith and ended with "What We Want is Free." It was mostly his most politically-charged music that he played--"Remain in Memory" was another one--though he did do (by request) "Getting Nowhere," my favourite song off The Ghost Dances. I happened to shoot a clip of it. And he also did "New Normal Catastrophe", which we talked about here (not my title: there was a ton of political protest last night). 

Vic told a particularly funny story about members of Articles of Faith and Ron Reyes (then of Black Flag) making their way to a punk house and getting jumped by shitheels who had a crafty plan to get their beer. I can't do it justice but the punchline involved having to fight for your beer in Canada. He told a variant on the story here, but last night's was funnier (maybe because it was in-person).  

At one point therafter, I saw Vic and Brock and James Farwell hanging out so I intervened to get a photo... later I sent Vic a note that Bison had recorded in Chicago and a link to my story about that... 



...which put the idea in Brock's mind of getting a group photo with Vic, the SLIPs and LiquidLight, down from Portland. There were two people involved in taking it so not everyone is looking in the same direction for both images...! But I got a few variants.





I enjoyed LiquidLight a lot (as did Erika, who came with me, since it was my birthday; she got some great photos of her own, too). But I'm back to trying to defend myself against temptation: Must stop buying records. I don't want to learn of new good music! 

This was their first show in Vancouver, I gather. Check'em out here!


Then there was the SLIP~ons, who have reached a new peak of magnificence, but I've got nothin' exciting to add -- I put it all in the Straight piece. I did shoot some video (also the show-closing Nils cover). Mostly I just danced to "Greystone" and a couple of other songs, wondering if the SLIP~ons had secretly upped their game or something: I've always thought they were great, but last night they were greater. Really really happy to know these guys. 




Brock told a story at one point about having originally planned to do the whole new EP in order: he remembered when the Doughboys opened for Husker Du, that the band had started that tour with the intention of doing all of Warehouse: Songs and Stories in order but that by the time they got to Montreal, they'd changed their minds. But somehow in telling us that story, though he'd clearly begun it with the intent of switching things up, he decided they should just go ahead and do the whole new EP in order, regardless. So they did; plus "Heavy Machinery" and "Mosquito" off their previous EP


They tried to close the show at that point, but Brock had hinted that they  might do a Nils cover, too, and... I mean, I bought Sell! Out! Young! when it came out, you know? I hope I didn't scream "NILS" too loudly at you, there, Brock... thanks for doing the song. 

Incidentally, I finally just took the time to note that the yellow-cover version, which is what I used to have, was indeed the first pressing. At one point I sold all my records, when I was moving to Japan, so the version I have now is the red-covered one. I do not mind this at all (but the yellow is cooler). 






But speaking of classic Montreal records, the one dumb thing from the night: as I said a few days ago on Facebook, I had a bizarre coincidence, the first part of which was that I had told Brock, having run into him at Red Gate last week, that someday I was going to have to buy a copy of the Doughboys' Whatever so I could get it signed; then  (the second part) I went to Red Cat the next day and found the album just sitting there in the new arrivals bin. I had never seriously considered buying the album before, let alone told anyone I was going to, then suddenly: MANIFESTATION. 

I don't believe in any of that stuff, really--"wish for it and it will come true" and all that magical-thinking bullshit--but I do still raise my eyebrows at a good coincidence. Since I've been hangin' round Exu Nazares a little, a lot more of those are happening to me... 

The dumb part, though: having announced to Brock that I was going to get him to sign a Doughboys record, and then having GOTTEN that very record the next day, I forgot to bring it to the show!  

Well, I got my new SLIP~ons EP signed, anyway. And I'm going to see the SLIPs again at the next possible opportunity, anyhow... What a great fuckin' band... what a great fuckin' night. 

Now about that Vic Bondi show June 6th in Seattle... 


Wednesday, March 04, 2026

Vic Bondi: Toe-to-Toe with 1000 Years of Darkness


Vic Bondi in Seattle, August 2025 (all photos by Allan MacInnis)

THE STRAIGHT PIECE IS NOW ONLINE HERE

And I've added an outtake at the end of this.

Before we get to Vic Bondi -- hardcore punk singer extraordinaire, in Victoria this Friday and Vancouver on Saturday, opening for the SLIP~ons, let me just explain that my wife is a huge Alabama Shakes fan. That’s why we drove to Seattle back in August: to see her favourite band live on their reunion tour. We generally don’t think it’s a great idea for Canadians to be going south just now, but it was a special occasion. And even though our border crossing happened without incident, with ICE now flat-out murdering American citizens in some cities, we won’t be making such a journey again anytime soon.

But it sure was an interesting trip. On the way down, we stopped at a nearly abandoned Bellis Fair Mall, which would normally be buzzing with shopping Canadians. There, we went from feeling guilty about being in the USA in the first place--“visiting the evil empire”--to feeling even more sheepish about seeing how dire the effects of the informal Canuck boycott were. It was clear that businesses were hurting, that our absence was being felt. Later, a coat check guy at the Climate Pledge Arena, when he found out were down from Canada for the show, thanked us in a memorably touching way for making the trip, pleading with us (and Canadians in general), “Don’t abandon us”.

Bellis Fair Mall, at about 5pm on a Friday in August. Ouch! 

But I had designs on visiting a single Seattle resident: Vic Bondi, formerly of legendary Chicago hardcore band Articles of Faith, and also (fittingly) lyricist and vocalist of my favourite anti-Trump protest song, Dead Ending’s “IvankaWants Her Orange Back”,  a positively emasculating single that mocks “all the bald men with toupees” for their gropey, tiny-handed figurehead, whom Bondi describes as a pickpocket of the public purse.

The song was recorded during Trump’s first term in office; it would no doubt be even angrier if it were written now. Bondi said of it, when we spoke in 2022, that “That single probably is in some ways the most representative Dead Ending moment, because it is a super hardcore band and my muse tends to be pretty political, if it's not the folky melodic thing that sometimes flows in there.”

But fair warning: that song probably won’t be on Bondi’s setlist for his solo acoustic shows this coming weekend, which will largely comprise songs written for acoustic delivery, like the material off his first solo album, 1988's The Ghost Dances, which Vic and I discussed here when he was last in Vancouver. 

And while some of Bondi’s punk songs do lend themselves to acoustic re-arrangements, like “Walter Benjamin at the Border”, which he did when he opened for Bob Mould at the Rickshaw a few years ago, “Ivanka Wants Her Orange Back” probably needs a full punk band blasting behind it for maximum impact: it’s hard to get sufficiently apoplectic over an acoustic guitar, and you can’t really do the song justice without Dave Shield’s driving bass hook.

We will likely hear “What We Want is Free”, however, which Bondi played last time he was in town. He clarified in a conversation afterwards that “It’s not an Articles of Faith song when I play it by myself on acoustic guitar, it's a totally different thing.”

But those are quotes from past interviews--I have a whole new one here, in addition to a piece I've put together for the Georgia Straight, due to run in the next day or two. The following conversation took place over lunch at a cozy cafĂ© in an area with a Commercial Drive vibe, the afternoon of August 16th. It has sat patiently waiting for a gig here that I could use it to promote; I had hoped for a Redshift show, but now that that band has called it a day, I'll take an acoustic one gladly! 

Bondi is extraordinarily articulate and passionate, so we’ll present the conversation Q&A style, but with some omissions: for instance, since his surf-meets-punk band Redshift has ceased operations, it doesn’t make much sense to go into their history deeply (as mentioned in the Straight piece, his new band, Vic Bondi And His Issues, has a new EP coming out in a couple of months on Alternative Tentacles, and will be playing their first show June 6th at the Kraken in Seattle, if you’re brave enough for the trip!).

 There’s also no discussion of things like the kidnapping of Nicholas Maduro, to say nothing of the war Trump and Netanyahu have started in Iran, because none of that had happened yet. The world was a saner place, just half a year ago! But you'll find he has lots to say of relevance to the present moment. 

Commence 2025 interview...



Allan (bolded): So I wanted to ask about “Walter Benjamin at the Border.” There are a couple of versions of that song--it’s the B-side to Dead Ending’s “American Virus”, but it's also on Redshift’s album Chaos As Planned...

Vic: I’ve had that song for awhile. It’s still the fastest way to silence an audience that I know of. You get done with that, people just don’t say a word. I mean, I wrote that song in the middle of the first Trump presidency and I forget what the motive was for it, but I'm really familiar with a lot of Benjamin’s work. He wrote a fantastic essay called "Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction" in the 1930’s that is really one of the most profound philosophical works of the 20th century.

But because I studied totalitarianism and because my wife's family were killed in the Holocaust, I think a lot about how people made the decision to leave Nazi Germany. What was the turning point for them? What was the point at which they said, "You know, this is going to end really, really badly and I need to get out of here." And you know, for Benjamin, as a Jew, he's chased out of Germany, he goes to Paris [just before the Nazis take it] and then he ends up in Spain and kills himself, actually not immediately at the border; he kills himself in a hotel right next to it. But I felt one night like I kind of got where he was coming from. Like, if what you're seeing now is the beginning of a 1000 years of darkness, why would you want to go forward? And that's what that song is about. It's not really about me. I'm not a suicidal person; I don't really even get depressed. But I've certainly got to the point with Trump, and sometimes I'm still there, worrying about where we're at as a world, where I'm like, "Holy fuck, this could be it: this is the end of the Roman Empire, and we're looking at 1000 years of darkness in front of us."

You know, in terms of the immediate, visible impact of the Trump presidency, we were shocked, coming down, at how much of a graveyard Bellis Fair Mall was. I mean, it was a Friday night, and it was empty. It doesn’t seem to have effected Seattle as badly, but…

Well, Seattle is a pretty big city. But Bellingham was depending on Canadians to come down and buy stuff, and you guys aren’t doing it now. So it’s really bad for them, but I don’t think anybody really blames you for not coming over the border anymore. I mean, he comes out of the box talking annexing Canada. Are you fucking kidding me?

Right. So from an on-the-ground perspective, what have you seen of the effects of the Trump presidency in your neighbourhood? Like, there’ve been no National Guard deployments or…?

Absolutely nothing in my neighbourhood, nothing on the ground in Seattle. But we went to the No Kings march; that was really something. Probably the largest demonstration that I’ve ever walked in. It was so large that halfway through, we left the march, went into this bar, had a drink, a little food, and came back out, and we were still in the march! That was a huge march. It was like, 80,000 people there. I mean… he’s got the support of rich and powerful people, and he’s got the support of really stupid people, but above and beyond that, he doesn’t seem to have a lot of support. But I haven’t seen the affects of his policies here in Seattle.

Economically? Gas prices, egg prices…?

Well, I mean, yeah, prices of everything here are very high, and they’ve gotten higher since he became president. So that is something we do see, and I expect to see more of it. And one of the weird things is, I work with a lot of people who are Indian immigrants, or they’re on a Visa, and all of them now are walking around with their passports. They’re afraid of being arrested. So for people are colour, they’re worried about getting picked up. And people who are from Hispanic backgrounds are worried about being picked up, so they’re carrying their IDs on them. But I think it’s going to come: because during his first presidency, he did all this stuff in Portland with guys in unmarked vans where he was abducting people, and here in Seattle, he set the Proud Boys and right wing skinheads on crowds; I actually saw Proud Boys in my neighbourhood Safeway, which I’d never seen in my life. So I think that’s coming this fall or this winter, because he’s got the funding to do it now. He’ll put these goons on the street; he’ll do something super-provocative, like what he’s doing in DC right now… I mean, he’s a really hateful person, man. He really is.

So having written songs like “Ivanka Wants Her Orange Back,” given how revenge-oriented he seems, do you worry that there’s going to be some sort of targeting of you?

Bring it! Bring it. I can say whatever the hell I want. I’ve never advocated violence against these guys, so they can’t tenably accuse me of anything like that. So…

Are you upping your game onstage, speaking out more?

I’ve never really done that too much. In the solo shows, I talk a lot more than I do with the bands, because with the bands I want to get the energy going, get everybody moving. So I’ve never done the Jello Biafra/ Dave Dictor "harangue from the stage". I might do some brief introduction to a song, like if I play "Walter Benjamin at the Border", I might say, ‘This is a song about a German philosopher who killed himself because of the Nazis,’ something like that. Give them some context. But I don’t normally say very much from the stage; nobody’s coming to my show to cast a vote, and the music speaks for itself anyway; I don’t really need to say something. 

Other than “Walter Benjamin at the Border,” which I know from other versions of it, I don’t really know the newest Redshift album Chaos As Planned; are the songs also pretty political?


So one of the things with Redshift was, when I started playing with Adam [Gross] and Mike [Catts], who were the other guys in Redshift, neither one of them comes from a hardcore background. Most of my life, for my musical career, I’ve played with other guys who were from that same milieu, that same background, that same generation. But these guys actually aren’t. Mike is a jazz bassist and Adam plays R&B and rap, so I met these guys where I took this project on where I participated in a theatre orchestra band. And the other guys in the orchestra can read music; I can’t, so it was challenging for me. But that’s why I did it; I wanted to try something new, see if I could actually stretch my playing into something like that, as opposed to just being the guy that just hacks at the guitar, I’d have to play with some nuance and finesse. So I met them in that, and we hit it off; and one of the musics that we had in common, that we all liked, was surf music. So this band is [or was; I here must reiterate that as of 2026, Redshift has called it quits] kind of like a punk surf, quasi-surf kind of thing, so on this record, there are a lot of instrumentals where I’m just playing guitar, I’m not singing. And at this stage, I really like that, because if I’m playing a 60 minute or 70 minute set, I don’t have to be shouting the whole time. I can lay back and just work on the guitar, catch my breath a little bit. It puts a little more nuance and complexity into what I’m doing. All of this stuff is kind of of-a-piece with the other music that I’ve done in my career, but it gave this band kind of that surfy cast. We created this “astro-surfer” kind of brand. It’s fun. It’s very Dick-Dale-style surf music, which means it’s super-aggressive. This is not happy-happy-happy fuckin’ Beach Boys stuff!

But it’s not, like, Agent Orange surf, either.

It’s harder than Agent Orange!  But it’s of a piece with a lot of my other political stuff: ‘All Your Rich Sons’, the chorus of that is, ‘all your rich sons will burn’. "SiCbUrN" is, "aren’t you glad to know you got nothing but a sick burn", like all these guys online simping and pimping for rich people: yeah, you got a sick burn, great.

I don’t know what a sick burn is.

Ah, that’s because you must not have a 24 year old daughter that tells you the slang. A sick burn is when, you know, you insult somebody great, but it also means when you get insulted. And there’s “Starter War.”

What inspired that?

It’s just generic: let’s just start a war. There’s a reason that Netanyahu will never end the war in Gaza; it works for him. Perpetual war. So yeah.

Actually, since you’ve brought that up, I’ve been having a fight online with a Vancouver street punk singer named Bugsy Faithfull, who sings with a band called Toy Tiger. He’s very political, and he’s doing important things in Vancouver, and interesting stuff. Like, he put a stencil of [Spanish anarcho-syndicalist] Durruti’s face on the inside wall of the Cobalt. But I wouldn’t know Durruti to see him! So I was impressed. But I’ve also seen him onstage leading chants like "From the river to the sea," and even riffing on that Bob Vylan thing about the IDF. And I mean, I have Jewish friends who are getting upset in the audience, and… like, using slogans like that might bring you closer together with people who already agree with you, but I don’t think those are good movement-building slogans.

(Durruti has the red cap, to the right of the door)

Yeah, I… I was in Israel six or seven years ago. A company that I was working with got bought by an Israeli company. So I worked for about a year for an Israeli company, doing the technical hand-off between the company that they bought and the company that they had. And as part of that, I went over there and did some work. And it’s a police state. I really didn’t like it, because half the population is Arab, but they’re all subjugated and treated like second-class citizens. And they do all the work. It’s like the Mexicans here: they do the construction work, all the difficult stuff. And then the Israelis, they’re in software and whatnot. The Jews. 

And they do racial profiling as a matter of course, which sort of works: it was very interesting, going through Ben Gurion airport. You’d think the security would be super-tight, but they have this process of figuring out who is a terrorist from who isn’t; basically a guy will come and ask you three questions. And I guess they’ve learned how to do this from asking three questions of you, to decide whether you’re a potential terrorist or not. And that’s it.

(image of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill)

What three questions?

I don’t remember the questions, but I’ve gotten interrogated worse by US Customs! So it wasn’t a big thing. But the country itself, some of the people there are really lovely, and the country is very lovely.  Jerusalem is an amazing city, Tel Aviv is beautiful, Dead Sea was amazing. But the political situation there is not tenable. And they’ve normalized the catastrophe [see the upcoming Straight piece for a discussion of the Articles of Faith song "New Normal Catastrophe", which Vic is here referencing] When you’d go out to dinner with them, they’d all have a discussion of what it was like in the IDF, because everyone has to serve; it becomes formative in the lives of young people. And so they all have stories of friends that were killed, and what they learned or got out of the IDF when they were in it. So they’re routinized and mainstreamed all of these oppressive policies.

And when I was there, there was a terrorist event right by my hotel. I watched it on TV; it was absolutely spectacular, because the Arab guy was just spraying bullets on the street, and this Israeli cop, absolutely dauntless, walks straight down the street, bullets flying around him, and shoots the guy dead. It was unbelievable to see.

You saw that first-person?

No, I saw it on TV, but it was right by my hotel. And the whole city went into lockdown, and they closed the borders. 

And then we went to Jerusalem during Ramadan, during this lockdown, and Jerusalem was totally empty, which kind of great if you were a tourist: you didn’t have to wait in line anywhere. But it was eerie, because the only people that were in Jerusalem that day were the Arabs that were up on the Mount of Olives, taking service, and just us, and then legions of Israeli military everywhere in the street. It’s super intimidating to walk past a cadre of eight fully-armed submachine gun people, right? 

And this is what Trump’s trying to routinize in the States now. It’s nuts. So my experience with Israel was really a mixed bag. I really liked a lot of the people I worked with, I thought they were wonderful, and obviously since my wife is part Jewish, we have a lot of Jewish friends and family. But what Israelis are doing over there is not civilized. They’re starving ch:ldren to death in Gaza. On the way over here, I was listening to the Ezra Klein show, this podcast, and he had this guy on who was a legal expert in genocide, because genocide has a legal definition in international law, and he was talking about whether what’s happening in Gaza meet the definition of genocide or not, and he’s like, "Well, I can’t give you that decision, the international court has to give you that decision. They haven’t done that yet." Which was a very legal way of framing it. But from what I’ve seen online, pictures of people starving to death, this cannot be a policy that is in any way humanitarian or justifiable… so… young people have a tendency to get super-hyperbolic, so… "From the river to the sea," "Fvck the IDF"… Bob Vylan--who I really like--he got some pushback on this, but if you listen to that man’s music, where would you think he was going to come from? Or that duo’s music.

But I don’t have anti-Israeli songs, or pro-Palestinian songs. What Hamas did on October 7th was objectively wretched. It was abominable. But there’s got to be some modicum of proportionality here. It’s not proportional to kill 1200 Israelis and then kill 62,000 Palestinians. And keep it going! And Netanyahu’s doing it for political reasons, because… when I was there, people hated him. He’s just a dictator that’s maintaining his hold on power by destroying the lives of a minority. It’s horrible. So to me if the anti-Israeli protests tend to the hyperbolic and the intimidating, on college campuses and so forth, that actually seems proportional to me. What seems disproportional to me is to de-fund the universities because of it.  Or taking these guys and putting them in a detention facility for months and months…

That’s not happening in Canada.

Because you have adults in power up there! And the elbows up thing was great.  Or when you guys started to boo the national anthem, I was like, "That seems appropriate to me!" Fuckit, why should they cheer. 48% of the American vocal public voted for this asshole. Why would you feel comfortable about Americans in the face of that.

It’s a funny thing for a punk rocker to say, but we’re in the midst of an incredibly juvenile moment in the history of the world, where culturally, a lot of anti-adult stuff that was super-cool and fun, when it was in Repo Man, has now become the dominant modality of adults who should know better. Trump is going to have a cage match on the White House lawn on the fourth of July next year. It’s just… I’m not saying there shouldn’t be mixed martial arts or cage matches, if that’s your gig that’s fine, but I don’t think it belongs on the White House lawn, and I don’t think you should make policies like this, that are just adolescent incitements to piss people off. I don’t know if he was ever serious about annexing Canada. He couldn’t be, because there’s no legal framework for doing that. I don’t think he’s going to send the US military to fight a war against Canada, and I don’t think US servicemen would fight it.

But that’s the other thing with militarizing DC: every one of these guys that’s having to march around at 2am now in his uniform because Trump wants it to make some show is hating that guy right now. It happened in LA, too: all of those guys that got set down, that’s why it didn’t last very long: the guys, the boots on the ground, were like, "What the fuck are you doing? Just stop." It’s this kind of infantile adolescent cultural politics. Like, Hegseth… these guys are drunks, they’re not adults at all!

And I’m nobody’s censor. I’ve been playing punk rock for 45 years. It’s not like I’m not pretty well versed in sex and drugs and rock’n’ roll. But I don’t raise my daughter that way, and my music is not the same as the work I do in software. When you’re a functional adult, you behave like a functional goddamn adult, right? And these ch:ldren, these boys, really, and these ridiculous women, too, like Kristi Noem and Pam Bondi… Jesus Christ, put on your adult pants and behave properly. Like, there is a real climate crisis; we were just talking about the wildfires... You’re not going to solve that by ignoring it. If you don’t address it now, sooner or later you will have to, so it’s better to be proactive and adult about it, than ‘drool, baby drool.’ Everything gets reduced to a bumper sticker of stupidity…

It reminds me of how George W. Bush was allowed to get away with his war in Iraq. My thought then was, “We’re fucked. If these people can get away with these things with no consequences, then the next time they’re in power, it’s going to be worse.” It’s only going to embolden the next generation of hustlers. And here we are…

This is the thing: you’re getting a lot of conservatives now in the states arguing that Trump isn’t a true conservative. The Cato Institute is trying to back off of him now that he’s shaking down companies; he just shook down NVIDIA for 15% of their profits, right? As he gets worse and worse, the conservatives are like, ‘He’s not a real conservative.’ Yeah he is! This is what you guys created. Let’s just go back to the election of 2000. The Bushes stole that thing, and they did it through the Supreme Court, and that what you’ve been doing for the last ten years, too. If you provide legal rationales for this really wretched behaviour that doesn’t align with the concept of the consent of the governed… it’s this issue of consent; that’s at the heart of democracy, that the people who are being governed agree to the mechanisms by which they’re being governed. And participating. You take that consent away, and now you have to force people to do things. Which is where they’re going. But these guys who are in many cases rapists already, they don’t have any sense of that notion, of the consent of the governed, at all. The people who should know better, who are in the Supreme Court, who are lawyers, have ignored it, because they’re going on junkets with rich conservatives, right?

So what do you think will happen?

Well, it’s going to get worse before it gets better, you know that that’s going to happen. The real question is, when does it bottom out? When does it really get so bad that… because they have no vision of the future. The progressive vision of the future was that everybody has innate abilities and talents and the way that has a society that runs with minimal coercion and maximal result was to find those gifts and skills and diverse advantages that people have, and put them in a position to realize them, right? So the progressive concept was always that we’ll liberate the skills and talents of individuals to the best result of society. These guys that are behind Trump don’t have any vision of the future except force. So they’re going to take these detention camps and turn them into slave labour camps. They’re going back to the 19th century. It’s only a matter of time before you’re going to read articles about how ‘well, they have a path to citizenship in Alligator Alcatraz that includes working for three to four years at slave wages in the agricultural groves of Florida.’ That is coming, because they don’t have a progressive vision. Their vision of capabilities and possibilities is rooted in an extremely negative view of human beings and their potentiality. Because they’re pretty bad people, so they’d naturally want to extend that world view out to others and assume that everybody is as bad as they are. That’s why he’s always accusing the Democrats of the things that he’s doing!

So they have no vision of a future, and that’s why at the end of the day, none of this will go anywhere. Because it’s so reactionary and so reactive and it’s so short sighted. There’s no fifth-dimensional chess here. These are dumb, dumb people who are doing just what they need to do to get to the next week or the next month. They don’t have philosophies. They don’t have articulate notions of anything. They’ll try out some half-baked person like Curtis Yarvin to give some of their ideas the imprimatur of legitimacy, but they have no intellectuals. They have no thoughts. They have no version of the future that will be interesting to anyone. So it’s going keep going down, and at some point it’s going to bottom out somewhere. I don’t know how much damage occurs in the process. I don’t know whether the world becomes completely uninhabitable; I have a 24-year-old daughter, and I’d like her to have a better life than I’ve had; right now it’s not looking good, right? So I don’t know how bad it gets. We can only pray that it doesn’t get to catastrophic levels of bad… but it already is for some people. It sort of creeps its way through the body politic, starting with the most vulnerable, then hitting whatever targeted group… because it can’t fix itself. What he’s doing with tariffs is wretched, and it’s not going to improve anything, until he stops doing it, but he can’t stop, because that’s his whole idea.

 What do you think will happen with Netanyahu? Because it seems to me that increasingly people are just equating “Zionism” with “Israel” and saying that Israel is invalid. And who is making that happen, right?

You already have 60,000 people dead. At some point this does become self-destructive. If the Israelis don’t get rid of him in any near term, I think they’re going to be doomed. I have a Medium article that I wrote about this when I was over there in Israel. But as for Zionism, I used to teach this class at BU; I team taught it with Benno Weiser Varon, who was an Israeli ambassador to various Latin American countries. And one of things we taught was the rise of Zionism and Theodor Herzl; Zionism is a modernist variant of the Hebraic tradition, but I think it’s always been pretty dysfunctional. The Israeli project itself, again, is very retrograde and retroactive: “We’re going to go back and colonize the land of our ancestors.” Well, you’re not the only one with ancestors that live there, you never have been, so you have no exclusive purchase on that land! And so that’s always been a pretty reactionary model, and the Israeli democracy idea, where they were making progress, where they were incorporating the Arab people and other peoples in the area as part of an Israeli democracy, that could have been a successful project, because it would embrace all the legitimacies around the historical lands, that area, and it would ask consent of all the people of all the people who are participating in that society. But if you continue to just say, I’m going to run a police state, I’m going to run an apartheid state, and I’m going to do that for a very small group of men: it’s going to fail! It will fail. You cannot--I’m sure Stephen Miller, the world’s greatest Jewish N*zi, I’m sure for him you can force people to do what you want; in his mind, and Donald Trump’s, you can make them do it. But you can’t, at the end of the day.

In my software career, when I was managing people, people would always say to me, “What is your secret to managing people,” and I’d be like, “I don’t manage anybody. I find what they’re good at and I let them do it. ” And then I don’t have to manage anybody! And writ large, that’s the concept of democracy. Writ large, that’s Charles Fourier, the Phalanx from the 18th Century, from the Enlightenment. That concept has a lot of validity, because no one wants to do things that they don’t like, and everyone has skills that are differentiated, and if you give some leeway in society for people to try their skills in different areas, to find something they like, then you’re going to have a good, positive, functioning society. If you force people to do things they don’t want to do, then it’s not.

And nobody per se likes to collect garbage or wash dishes, but I did them when I was younger. You can do that stuff for limited periods in your life, as part of a trade-off as you’re finding your way through things. But you can’t create entire castes of people who do nothing but work for the betterment of other people. It’s absolutely inhuman, and sooner or later, the sheer inhumanity of it will come back to bite those elite classes. It always does. It’s the persistent record of history.

You're actually kind of an optimist. 

I’m a historian, I have a PhD in history, and I taught history for about a decade, and that is the persistent record of history. You run societies like this, they fail.


Vic Bondi opens for the SLIP~ons Friday at the Lucky Bar in Victoria, along with Liquid Light; and then with Liquid Light and Cascade in Vancouver at... well, see here




Post-script/ addendum/ outtake:

whattaya know, the Straight cut a part from the piece I submitted. Gotta admit, their version flows better. But you might want this outtake, too:


[In response to Steve Albini's criticism of Articles of Faith], Bondi has pointed out that Big Black’s first EP is pretty derivative of Gang of Four (which scans), and noted the tinniness of Albini’s typical sound (which I agree with, though I kind of dig how abrasive Albini records can be). He also had, most significantly, righteous ambivalences about some of Albini’s band names, like, uh, Rapeman. Bondi told me back in 2022, “The whole point with Rapeman was to shock people with that name, and it's a pretty shocking name. But it's also really… Why? Like—you' re shocking the wrong people. The people that are going to get really cranked out about a band called Rapeman are probably women who've been raped. So you're hitting the wrong folk with that message!”

Those comments were published, albeit in German, when I interviewed Bondi last: but so too were some surprisingly conciliatory comments Bondi made about Albini. Bondi acknowledged, for example, that Albini’s “business practices were pretty fucking righteous” and that “he took that hardcore ethic really to heart” saying independent while Bondi went to work for Microsoft (Bondi, who has worked both as a history professor and in software, was involved with the Encarta project; he’s also been a history professor and was a teaching assistant for Howard Zinn!).

Albini was still alive at that point, so it seemed at least possible that someone might have pointed the interview out to him. So when I had the chance to sit down to lunch with Bondi in Seattle a few months ago--in anticipation of some future Vancouver performance where the conversation might be useful--I asked him if Albini had responded to those comments, or if he’d had further interactions with
him. “No, I didn’t. The thing that was kind of bad about Albini dying was I had it in the back of my mind at some point that I would do a real left-turn on everybody’s thinking and I’d have him do one of my records! And that would just blow everybody’s minds. That’s not going to happen now.”

RIP, Mr. Albini: nice to still be talked about, eh? (And To All Trains is a great fuckin’ record to go out on).


Saturday, February 28, 2026

Jeffrey Lewis and the Voltage at the Fox, Vancouver, last night!!!

That was an amazing gig. Some very fulsome psych rock interspered with solo quirky antifolk. Jeffrey gave a shout out to Rob Frith and I, playing "LPs," which I had mentioned in the Straight piece (Rob had come at my suggestion, along with fellow Neptooner Keith McCafferty, who had last seen Jeffrey in Galway). He did a couple of old favourites like "Back When I Was Four," getting a hearty laugh from Kristy Lee Audette with the line about being 128; and "The Last Time I Did Acid I Went Insane," with vastly expanded lyrics. The four"low budget films" were the story of Champion Jim, a bio of Alan Moore (whom Jeffrey has met and who has seen Jeffrey's "movie"--he showed us photos!), a bio of Sitting Bull, and finally, the classic "Creeping Brain". Probably I danced most for "Except for the Fact That It Isn't", but there were also at least three brand-new songs in the set, one involving frogs, the other about Jeffrey's many decades of sexual failure ("Me and Sex"), and a song about being the dregs or something, which I couldn't quite catch. The sex and frog songs were especially amazing... some of his funniest, most appealing, most revealing writing... and I like both sex and frogs a ton...

It was maybe my favourite Jeffrey Lewis performance, of the six I have caught. I did shoot some vid, but I wrote the initial draft of this at a food court in a mall, having the "Breakfast of Shame," when you havent slept and dont want to keep your wife awake with your coughing and farting and restlessness, so you go to the only place you can and type a blogpost on your phone... though I am thinking I will go back home to bed for a bit, because I slept very poorly, and have a long day.

Anyhow, I am on my cellphone, so I will let you look up my other vids and such (though I will link one of openers Roundelays, who are very fun). I did a story on them too... and will have another later today on the Still Spirits gig... 

One weird note: I have been having a fair number of coincidences lately, and the pleasing/ piquant one last night was a cover of Gang of Four's "Damaged Goods", which I had listened to in full earlier in the day when it came up on my phone's shuffle feature. Only Gang of Four I have listened to in months, and then suddenly Jeffrey was playing it with the Voltage. Weird, huh? 

Photos!












I can't tell which of those are okay because, again, mall food court/ cellphone (actually I'm checking them now before I head out, having come home to nap, and they look okay enough). Photos and videos don't really cut it, though.  

Oh, another minor coincidence: Mike Usinger had mentioned a favourite song by Jeffrey, the one about eating at restaurants when you are alone (like me, sorta, now) and I was bummed because I thought it was a great song and I don't have that album... then I bought a live-in-studio "bootleg" CDr off Jeffrey's merch table, without even checking the songs on it, and there it was!

Apparently Bellingham will have EVEN MORE merch options... Jeffrey Lewis and the Voltage play again tonight...! 

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Two gigs one night: Chris Corsano and John Brennan vs the punks around the corner at Red Gate!

So that was a fun night, which started all of a block from the Hargrove, where I was on the guest list for the John Brennan/ Chris Corsano show (which I wrote about here). I had an hour to kill and was having a fast biryani at Chai Wagon -- a yummy and affordable Indian street food place on the corner of Main and 2nd -- when Noelle Chaos came in and asked me if I'm going to Red Gate, another half-block up the street. "Nope, I'm going to the Hargrove. What's happening at Red Gate?" 

Turns out Jesse LeBourdais was playing with his band the Long Winter. Jesse is a terrific, under-sung singer songwriter, unique and passionate and real, but though I've seen him a half-dozen times, I've never before tonight seen him with a full band (including Elliot of Freak Dream et alia, who I enjoyed chatting with before the show). I wasn't able to see their whole set but I happen to have caught video of their newly-dropped single. Having time to kill anyhow, I paid $20 and spent my evening hanging out at Red Gate when things weren't happening at the Hargrove, then zipping back to the Hargrove when there was a lull at Red Gate (literally a two minute walk). There were other bands at Red Gate that I don't know -- Night Mirrors, who make music that, I dunno, struck me as the Evil Twin of the Cure's Faith album; a Calgary band called Julius Sumner Miller, who are weirdly  named after a scientist and TV personality that I know nothing about (but see here); and a band named Dead End Drive-In, after a pretty good Ozploitation dystopian movie that I happen to have seen, who make music that suggests (Brock Pytel, who I ran into at the venue, said) Paul Westerberg meets Weezer, but who reminded me more of Titus Andronicus, though I could hear what Brock meant! 

I caught a bit of each act, and 40 minutes of the second set by Brennan-Corsano. The punks were much easier to take in, less demanding comfort food -- a cheeseburger with bacon by comparision with the epicurean pleasures and unfamiliar flavours offered by Brennan and Corsano, who created something very intense and propulsive, but also at times very subtle, making sounds that often did sound (for obvious reasons) like two virtuoso drummers playing with maximum focus and intensity, but also occasionally sounded like there were stringed instruments involved (were cymbals bowed, maybe?) and once or twice even like there were wind instruments in the mix (which may or may not have had something to do with a dangly tube hanging out of Chris Corsano's mouth for part of the set? I was seated at the back and couldn't always see what was making what sound!). 



On one of my pop-ins, between Brennan/ Corsano sets, I scooped up a bunch of EarthBall records and one other project by Brennan, and got my one Orcutt-Corsano record signed by Chris, but (sorry!) I dodged buying the Corsano-Brennan album itself: while it's fascinating and rewarding music to hear made live (and really piquant that it's come out on Mint Records!), I simply don't have the headspace for music that requires such an intense concentration in my daily listening (in contrast to the magical mudbaths of EarthBall, which I can just wallow in, reveling in the organic decadence). Still, it was something to see! (And, you know, my friends who are all over Stomu Yamashta and such would probably dig the album intensely; I confess to being a failed aesthete, these days, am at least 75% vulgarian in my sonic diet, have lost all pretentions of being an athelete of perception. But see the video for "Dim," off Buzzing With Rumors, here; Kim Alpert provided live video art with the performance tonight, as well). 

Oh, and I found more Moloch! tags in the Red Gate bathrooms (I had previously seen them at Alf House). I'll be looking for them everywhere now! Very glad I ran into Noelle: two gigs tonight were better than one (and I'll be writing more about Jesse in a couple months...). 

I don't think I'll be doing much else writing-wise for the blog for a bit. Lots of other things going on, and mostly they're going to be for the Straight...