So I will have something upcoming on The Ex, playing the Hollywood July 26th -- yes, the same night as Ak'Chamel, which is unfortunate, since these are two bands that will have overlapping fanbases, but I gather the Hollywood set is going to be an early show, and that Ak'Chamel will start late, so there is, in fact, time to do both gigs, maybe? Just a bit of a commute between them!
For my money, if I have to pick between one of the two, I'd pick The Ex; they haven't played Vancouver, I think, since their May of 1991 show with Nomeansno at the Commodore. Ak'Chamel will be back sooner than The Ex!
And the homework on this is easy: check out If Your Mirror Breaks -- especially the global-warming themed "Monday Song," for starters. If it sinks, just buy a ticket and trust me. (Gord Grdina is opening, too, with Christian Lillinger, so that's another good reason to go). That album will make up 90% or so of their setlist, so that's really all you need to go on.
If you need more words, however, I can offer a few: friends on social media were likening the songs by The Ex that I posted to The Fall and late-phase Captain Beefheart, and I can hear what they mean, and don't mind using the names of those bands as touchstones for people who don't know what to expect or why they should investigate. But the differences are more significant than the similarities. I actually know The Ex quite a bit better than I do The Fall, admire them more, care more, and find that besides some superficial sonic similarities -- think the Beefheart comparison in particular is misguided, if you really get down to it. Like, sure, you could put "Listen to the Painters" on a playlist with "Run Paint Run Run" and it would be amazing. But Beefheart was never as democratic with his poetry as The Ex, had, god bless'im, elitist and obscurantist tendencies (which maybe could be said of Mark E. Smith too?). Beefheart and Smith set out to create a cult mystique around themselves, to draw you into their influence and command your attention; I don't think either artist would ever be as heart-on-sleeve topical as The Ex get on "Monday Song", for instance. Sure, The Ex has poetry and artfulness and so forth in abundance, they also just want to be understood, want to be responsible world citizens, want to work "for the people" rather than for their own cult status, which (bless'em, y'know, but still) is more than one could say for Beefheart or Mark E. Smith... I like and listen to The Fall and love some Beefheart and wholeheartedly agree that a squid eating dough in a polyetheline bag is fast and bulbous, and I can drop that into conversation at random and sometimes do, but on the other hand, that's just a nonsense phrase for Beefheart cultists to use to signify their elite status and/ or maybe entertain themselves and or bond in their status with other people who get the joke, which ultimately is kind of... not that interesting, you know? You don't want to go away and contemplate the speed or bulbousness of that squid. There is nothing to learn from it, no deeper emotional level to access. It's just entertaining bullshit -- VERY entertaining bullshit, GREAT entertaining bullshit, and I have nothing AGAINST entertaining bullshit, some of my best friends (musically speaking) are entertaining bullshit... 80% of my record collection is entertaining bullshit...
...but The Ex is much more than that. They write in a way that resonates with me morally, intellectually, and aesthetically in a way the more exclusionary, culty, individualistic tendencies of The Fall, or Beefheart do. There, I said it. ">", you know?
Still, it's not a bad "sounds like" comparison point, if you are a noob to their music and want something to go on as a starting point. Sonic Youth might get mentioned (believe they recorded with them, tho' I don't recall liking that EP much -- a Fishtank thing). More relevant are Ethiopian jazz (they recorded with Getatchew Mekuria) and European free jazz (they've played with Han Bennink, say). Maybe Crass for the early stuff (but they are less direct). Hell, let's even mention Nomeansno, who they shared bills with? They have a bit more in common "morally" with Nomeansno, I guess... but sonically not so much...
Really, The Ex sounds like The Ex.
And The Ex, I am told, is not a band that delves into their back catalogue for the purposes of live shows, so as wonderful as some of their old songs are, you don't have to go back to 1979 to master their upcoming setlist; you can basically just focus on their current album, and maybe "Soon All Cities" and/ or "The Heart Conductor" off 27 Passports. Those two songs have been on recent setlists, as well, so we might expect them here. Much as I'd love to hear, I dunno, "The Prism Song" or "Town of Stone" or "Blueprints for a Blackout" or... I have a dozen songs from their back catalogue I'm deeply attached to, but the band DOES NOT DO THOSE SONGS, they don't have hits that they wheel out from past decades (they've been around since 1979!!!). So basically there are two albums you need to know (you could also throw in Catch My Shoe, if you like, which was their first LP with Arnold as lead vocalist, back in 2010. I doubt they will reach even that far back...!).
...though if you do WANT an old release of theirs to explore, bearing in mind that it's not going to matter to the show, maybe start with (I think) their first with Steve Albini, Turn. That's a marvelous album, one I think anyone who likes artful prosocial punk should know, but it's not, like, homework or anything.
And if you want another song they will play in Vancouver, note that I'm really excited to hear off If Your Mirror Breaks, "Wheel" is my other favourite; I always love the songs Katherina sings.
Tickets here!




































































