Alienated in Vancouver
(rants and observations on outsider culture, music & cinema in The Big Wet)
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
What a world
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Astoria Metal Night: Savage Master, High Spirits, and Oxygen Destroyer, plus two bands I did not see!
What are the odds that, by no design at all, I'd see two bands in two nights who perform masked? First the Mummies, then Savage Master..,!
Except for Stacey Savage, mind you. She doesn't wear a mask, but she does wear a costume, kinda Hammer-horror-y. Her presentation was noticeably different once she got onstage from the Ramones shirt she had sported when setting up. While it pleased me to see a metal singer in a Ramones t-shirt, it feels more respectful to post photos of her fully done-up.
I actually didn't see a whole lot of Savage Master's set last night, but I made up for it by buying two of their albums, Those Who Hunt at Night and Dark and Dangerous. And I shot their opening number. They were the band that inspired my recent post on Facebook about the scene in The Wrestler where Mickey Rourke and Marisa Tomei are talking about how great 80s metal was before "that pussy Cobain fucked everything up."
As Rowan Lipkovitz commented on that post, whatever went wrong with heavy metal probably wasn't grunge's fault. I'm not sure it was hip hop's either, which was his suggestion. All I know is, Rourke's character is right: popular just isn't what it was back then. I'm in fact a child of the 1990s, musically, but as I was growing up in the early 80s, there was tons of terrific, tuneful metal on the radio, from Maiden to Priest to Ozzy to G'nR to lesser (but still kind of fun) stuff like Quiet Riot, Twisted Sister, and the band Rourke dances to in that scene, Ratt (remember "Round and Round"? Heavy rotation on CFOX and Much Music back in 1984...).
Actually, the approach to metal in that Ratt song was the first thing that Savage Master's "The Edge of Evil" brought to mind. Mostly I think they credit for inspiration, or at least get associated with, the New Wave of British Heavy Metal (Priest, Maiden, Saxon, that sorta thing). And horror movies, of course. I would like to have a Hammer-off with Adam and Stacey (they're a couple) to see who has more blu-rays of Hammer movies in their collection (and what their faves are -- speaing for myself, I'm going for The Reptile, Taste the Blood of Dracula, Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed and Twins of Evil) But there's clearly a bit of 80's American metal in what they do, too. I wish I'd gotten to interview the band -- they got my messages too late! -- because I'd love to know what American metal acts and specific horror movies inspired them...! (Adam did, when pressed, credit The Night of the Hunter as his favourite movie. I'm more a Night of the Demon guy; was even wearing the t-shirt--but I wouldn't say it's my favourite film).
To be honest, being on the other side of a tribal division between punks and headbangers back in those pre-crossover years -- which saw people like us (the punks) randomly beaten and insulted by headbangers in Camaros and such -- I grew pretty snobbish about metal, back in the 1980s; plus I didn't really respect the meat-headedness and misogyny of a lot of metal lyrics. Even Iron Maiden, who have some amazing riffs, also have some extremely daft lyrics ("I needed time to think to get the memories from my mind?" 'Scuse me? You're going to think away your memories, from a mind that you have already told us is blank? What the fuck are you talkin' bout, here, Steve?). But I always enjoyed the music. Before I ever heard "Bodies" (the ground zero explosion that brought punk screaming into my life as a young teen) I was in love with Let There Be Rock, you know? Saw arena-rock tours for Maiden (Piece of Mind tour), saw Priest (Screaming for Vengeance) and Van Halen (The "Lock Up Your Sheep" tour) and opening acts like Saxon and Fastway and Kickaxe (okay, Kickaxe weren't so great). I only found out about punk a bit later... it came slow to the suburbs, and my parents were into Charley Pride...
But within a couple of years of my walking away from it, metal disappeared from mainstream rotation on CFOX. Even songs that had been in heavy rotation ("Run to the Hills," "You've Got Another Thing Comin'") became mysteriously unplayable, like the genre had been unofficially blacklisted; unlike all the other recycled culture from the 1980s, you NEVER hear that stuff now. And once metal was pushed back into the darkness, stuffed into its niche with pitchforks and torches, you had the rise of thrash metal and death metal and later black metal and all sorts of intense, evil varieties of metal that never had a hope of radio attention. Metallica shook that up a little with And Justice for All, I guess -- that DID get a bit of radio attention, as did the next album -- but they seem pretty anomalous. And compare "One" with Ozzy, for example... it's such a heavy, downbeat song compared to the joyousness of "Crazy Train."
So why did metal go underground, and how and why did metal become so joyless, so humourless, so SERIOUS? Maybe it was the PMRC? All I know is, the only metal I have any craving for these days dates from the 1960s to the 1980s. Just hearing "death" or "black" in the genre description of a metal band will put me off (there is actually stuff in both categories I really like but 9 out of 10 times, I don't...).
Anyhow, I wrote some of that in question form for Savage Master, who bring that 80s joyfulness back in full force, albeit with ample occult/ horror trappings, as with "Devil Rock." But menacing they are not; it presents like occult LARPing, is more Alice Cooper than Mayhem, and it's really hard to imagine anyone but the stiffest-collared Mormon getting the moral fears from this music these days. And I bet, unlike, say, that dude from Deicide, if you challenged them about not being "real Satanists," they would laugh and say, "Of course we're not! Who would want that?"
I might be wrong, there, but... that's my suspicion, anyhow. My hope? The whole eviler-than-thou thing in metal is destructive juvenile bullshit.
But it wasn't a great night for me to be out, to be honest. I had come in exhausted to the Astoria, having slept poorly, my ears still ringing from the Mummies. I was shocked how different it all felt since I was last there. Is the neon sign new? I didn't remember it being this colourful, with the different colours... that's a real pretty sign!
I missed, more or less, both opening bands. Tuff Duzt (who I have seen before) must have gone on at 7:15 or something. I am not sure how a five-band bill makes money, TBH: the more slices in the pie, the smaller each one is, such that surely someone must have played for next-to-nothing--but the show was definitely efficient in its presentation. Hellslaught was playing as I came in but I was preoccupied with getting merch squared away. There was an amusing moment afterwards with Bruce Stayloose, the man who had pointed me at this gig, where we were looking at Hellslaught's font and trying to read it, so he could tell me who had just played. He knew that they had been called Kommand -- with a K -- at some point but had to change their name when someone else laid stake to it, but he had forgotten their new name and neither of us could figure it out, another thing about metal that kind of puzzles me. It's just this side of looking like actual letters, unlike many of the black metal fonts, say, but it's still stylized just far enough that I had to look it up later. I've read things in my alphabet soup with more ease.
Bruce knows Adam and Stacey of Savage Master and made introductions, bringing me over with my records to get them signed. The Astoria has changed since I was last there, when Flipper gigged there with David Yow on vocals. More plants, possibly fake. They made for an odd framing device for the first band I got to see. Oxygen Destroyer, dry ice, and fronds.
I think the angle of the pool tables has been shifted, too. I remember how delighted the punks that night there were to shoot pool with Flipper. I wonder if it's still free?
And it was particularly nice to see Adam and Stacey of Savage Master come right to the front to catch the band, Stacey even recording them on her phone. (There was a fun bit of business where a super-tall skinny guy who had been blocking my view realized it was HER behind him and he hugged her and got out of her way. Pretty positive crowd last night, really).
Monday, February 09, 2026
The Mummies at the Neptoon 45th anniversary show: a big surprise from Grant Lawrence, plus the Vicious Cycles and Night Court
Sunday, February 08, 2026
Night Court: Not Unicorns (interview outtakes from Germany!)
So Night Court plays again tonight at the Rickshaw. They've only just returned from a German tour. Prior to that tour, I had interviewed them (and augmented that interview with the odd quote from other places I'd written about them) to run in a German magazine. But the piece I prepared was too long! I prepared a separate piece of outtakes, but then couldn't find a home for it.
These are outtakes from these outtakes.
In fact, the whole thing is kind of synthetic, a Frankenstein interview if you will, stitched together from parts from various places, since Jiffy wasn't part of the Zoom call that took place between myself and Dave-O and Emilor, but I sent him some questions afterwards. Just treat it all as a coherent thing, and note that if you wonder at some point, "Why are Dave-O and Emilor talking about Jiffy like he wasn't there?", it's because... he wasn't there!
See you all at the Rickshaw!
Allan (in boldface, below): “Bride of Frankenstein,” the song that kicks off the new vinyl version of Nervous Birds, first came out as a single after HUMANS! on the Frater Set 7” EP. So, was it an outtake from the HUMANS! sessions?
Jiffy: No, but you’re not entirely wrong: we recorded "Bride of Frankenstein" during the same sessions as [the 2021 cassette releases for] Nervous Birds One and Nervous Birds Too. It was a song we thought deserved its own thing so after releasing those recordings, and then the HUMANS! LP, we figured it was past due!
Good to have it reinstated. It blends nicely into “Circus of Wolves.” What’s that song about?
Dave-O: That song is essentially a love letter to the band Circus Lupus from Washington DC. They’re, like, an old '90s Dischord band, and the name is already kind of meta-, because Circus Lupus is a riff on an old SCTV sketch about a circus of wolves. So they took their name from that, and we stole the name for the song back from them. But essentially, it’s a song about how much we love the band!
Emilor: I’ve never heard that band before. Similarly to how I’ve never seen an episode of Night Court in my life!
I’m really grateful that Nervous Birds is out on vinyl.
Dave-O: We were kind of always hoping that these would become an LP, because we kind of did them all at the same time, so we did think having them on one vinyl record would be ideal. The fact that that happened this year is kind of a dream come true.
I wanted to ask about a couple of your lyrics--including one not on Nervous Birds, “Not a Unicorn.” Jiffy, you wrote that based on a children’s book, right? Something you were reading to your daughter?
Jiffy: It’s based on the book series Phoebe and her Unicorn by Dana Simpson. It’s maybe not as philosophical but reminds me of Calvin and Hobbes in its cute/clever observations on life. I believe “you’re the one with the opposable thumbs” is a direct quote. Basically a comment on humans not being the magical beings that some of us think we are, which is also sort of an overarching theme of the HUMANS! album.
Is there anything else written based on fantastic sources, or, say, science fiction?
Dave-O: I mean, on HUMANS!, there’s “Robot Brain.”
That song always makes me think of Philip K. Dick and his concern about people becoming androids. So I guess I think of robot brains as a bad thing, something to resist?
Dave-O: I don’t know that I’m judging it one way or the other, just the idea that these things are seamlessly finding their way into our lives; we’re using robots all the time, in our computers. And every time we use glasses, we’re a cyborg, in a way. But it’s not a judgement, necessarily; just noticing as these things enter our lives and take up more and more of our inner and outer environment without us even really noticing it. And then one day we’re going to wake up and have a robot brain, and it’s going to feel the same. It’s just happening, whether we resist it or not.
Emilor, I know you’ve described yourself as a Luddite. How do you feel about these issues?
Emilor: I hate them. I hate it! They just do this stuff and don’t think about the repercussions of it, of people not being able to be able to work because they’ve been replaced by a machine or an AI… Anybody who has ever had to communicate with an AI chatbot knows, it’s never been helpful. The AI is like, “Has this been helpful?” Never! I’ve never received good assistance or help or information. I would rather we went back to paying human beings to communicate with other human beings. I think there are things that AI is very very good for, like, if you have to analyze an incredible amount of data, or do things that no human being could do in our lifetime, for medical purposes and stuff like that, it’s great; use it for that. But why are we using AI to replace human-to-human communication, or for art, or music? It’s gross and unnecessary. Not to mention the fact that every time you do an AI--“I want to make a cow with three udders!”--the amount of power that it’s using and the environmental repercussions of the way that it’s been rolled out and trivialized and normalized without any idea of the human or environmental consequences… it’s not surprising; capitalism is always going to do the worst that it can do. But it’s such a multifaceted problem that we haven’t even begun to see the consequences of… what a time to be alive. I have opinions!
I assume this relates to the song “CaptainCaveperson” a bit?
Dave-O: Yeah, for sure. Jiffy wrote those lyrics, but yeah. I interpret the song as, “The world is fucked, so what are you gonna fuckin’ do? You’ve got to do something.”
Emilor: You tidy up the cave.
Dave-O: It’s almost Buddhist in a way.
Another really entertaining video you did was for “Surfin’ Iona.” I think of that as Emilor’s song, because she’s all over the video, but I have no idea who wrote it.
Emilor: I didn’t write that song, but I enjoy singing that song. To my knowledge, it’s just a love letter to Iona Beach, where you can enjoy a lovely afternoon of looking at the airplanes [the beach is near Vancouver International Airport] and stroll along the sewage pipe. It’s a wonderful tourist destination that most tourists never make it to. They’re too busy looking at the Steam Clock in Gastown.They should be lookin’ at the shit pipe. If you want to have the full Vancouver experience, you have to learn how we don’t treat our sewage, we just pump it into the ocean. That’s the meat and potatoes of what we’re proud of in Vancouver. There’s something for everyone at Iona Beach.
How did that song get written?
Dave-O: I think Jiffy just said, “Do you have anything surfy?” I sent him some music, and he sent that back. The video was fun.
Emilor: It feels like it was ten years ago!
Dave-O: It wasn’t particularly warm that day, but we danced around on the sewage pipe in the mud. Jiffy’s wife was the director of photography.
I haven’t been. Not sure I want to go.
Emilor: What, I didn’t sell you on it just now?
Dave-O: It is actually pretty cool around there. It’s just hilarious that it happens to be on a shit pipe. Bu it’s not too far from the Reifel bird sanctuary, which is a nice place to go. You’re guaranteed to see some birds you don’t regularly see.
Not rifle like “rifle.”
Dave-O: No, it’s pronounced like “rifle,” but…
Emilor: I think they could do with a re-brand.
Dave-O: It’s true, although you don’t generally shoot birds with rifles, anyways.
Emilor: Unless you’re trying to just create confetti.
Dave-O: That’s why the birds are so nervous! The nervous birds at the “rifle” bird sanctuary.
Night Court's bandcamp is here. I would post a link to the show but it's way sold out and all my friends already have tickets (except Betty. Someone help her? Yes, that Betty, who did you think I meant?).
Thursday, February 05, 2026
Of Night Court, Code-22, and poetry at the Alf House (Daryl Gussin, James Norman)
Note: This post has been rewritten since I can't figure out where the original violated the "Community Guidelines" -- they don't exactly tell you what you have to remove/ change.
I had figured Night Court might play last night. Their set was unannounced but the reasons for that were obvious: they had just returned from Germany, have a big gig this Sunday, and the space was pretty small, all of which, to one who reads the signs, lines up to indicate an unannounced gig. This happened in the damp, graffiti-covered basement of an East Van punk house that has been around forever (but that I had never been to before; nor had Emilor!).
Between Code-22 and Night Court came two poetry readings, which had been the primary focus of the Night-Court-free gig poster. You'd assume Daryl Gussin was the headliner!


















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