Sunday, April 05, 2026

Phaeton and Ferdy Belland: an interview apropos of the Hyperspace VII pre-party, this Friday at the Cobalt

I have known Ferdy Belland almost as long as I have been writing about music. We both contributed to Vancouver's much-missed Nerve Magazine some twenty years ago, around when I saw his band the Feminists open for Nomeansno; I've seen him play bass for Bif Naked, Chip Kinman, and Duvallstar, and I caught him in Brotherhood of Lost Souls at LanaLou's last year, a hard-rocking, tuneful set I immensely enjoyed. We listen to different things, and sometimes even disagree (Ferdy thinks the Clash are overrated, and would shudder to realize I don't own a single album by Budgie), but we both share a great love for rock music, with one key difference: Belland can actually play the stuff. 

So Belland > MacInnis, there. 

Belland just celebrated his 55th birthday in Cranbrook (happy b-day, man), but the cool Vancouver news is that Phaeton, an all-instrumental prog-metal project that Belland plays bass for,  will be playing this Friday, April 10th, at the Hyperspace VII Pre-Party, sharing a bill with Edmonton's Vaegon and Vancouver bands No Faith in Fortune and Quasicosm. Founded in Kimberley and mostly based in Cranbrook, it will be their first gig ever, and one of their first shows since Colin Righton kicked cancer, which will be the focus of a Straight feature. Their recent album, Neurogenesis, is on as I type this, and it's great--sophisticated and heavy, but never indulgent of obnoxious; it's been my "headphones album of the week".

To mark the occasion, I put some questions to Belland, and at his request, rather than editing them into something Straight-shaped, am putting his answers verbatim here (minus a couple of quotes I'm stealing for that other article). 

Ferdy Belland in the Brotherhood of Lost Souls

AM: How many bands are you in, and how many have you played in in general? Where does Phaeton fit for you in your musical history? ("proggiest band I've been in?").
 
FB: Sometimes it feels like I'm in ALL the bands! But currently I'm in Phaeton, Garuda, and Brotherhood of Lost Souls.

Since 1990 I've played in over two dozen bands, and I've enjoyed every one of them: Ninepin, Cellar of the Sun, TalisMen, Buffalohead, the Jordan Stringer Trio, the Feminists, the Gentle Infidels, Anger Power Fury and the Filth, the Belushis, Stone Cold Crazy, Duvallstar, Parallel Lines, Sister Sabbath, the Skeleton Kings, the Bison Brothers, Anarcrist, the Mile High Club, Ethan Askey and the Elevators, Vintage Voltage, and the rest...it only makes me a more well-rounded musician to not be afraid to explore different styles of music. And I like a lot of different styles of music, so it's not as if I was ever slumming, or forcing myself to play in a band when I didn't really want to be there.
 
Phaeton appeared purely by chance, right out of the blue. I'd played music with Colin Righton before, and in March 2017 he brought Daniel Airth and Kevin Thiessen and myself together. Dan and Kevin and I didn't know each other before Colin rounded us up. Colin had played death metal with Dan in Chaos Logic, and he'd played atmospheric ambient instrumental prog with Kevin in Aszension, and we all hit if off personally and musically. I was beside myself with joy - I was in a band where everyone else was a true virtuoso on their instruments, and there were no obnoxious attitudes. And now here we are, nine years later. And I have to say that even though I loved all the other bands I was in, Phaeton is my personal crowning glory. This was the sort of prog-rock / heavy-metal hybrid I'd wanted to play in since I was 18 years old, and 30 years down the road the stars finally aligned. It is certainly the proggiest, most metallic band I've ever been in, and it's an ongoing challenge, both technically and imaginatively.
 
It's more than just the musical excellence for me. I mostly want to associate with other artistic types and of course I want to be friends with the people I'm playing music with. I can't fathom being in a band with people you can't stand. And Colin and Dan and Kevin are three of my best friends. What helps make Phaeton click is that there's casual personal connection, aside from the instruments and the crazy riffery. It's the best of both worlds for me, and I am very blessed.
 
Which is not to shit on what I also do with Garuda or Brotherhood of Lost Souls, by any means. In Garuda we're moving through another prog direction, with electrified sitar as the main instrument and us creating this very cool eastern-influenced psych-rock power-trio getup, which is a long conversation all unto itself. And in Brotherhood of Lost Souls, it's all hard-rocking sleaze-punk, in the Supersuckers / Nashville Pussy / Hellacopters / Turbonegro / Zeke / Motorhead / Danko Jones vein... styles I've always loved, and busted out in Vancouver with the Belushis. I have so much fun with the Brotherhood! 

It's hard to choose favorites among your children, but Phaeton is very special to me.


AM: I think of you as someone who has a firm root in 70s hard rock, bands like Budgie and Uriah Heep and such. How did that start for you? What was your path into prog as a listener? (Older sibling’s or father’s record collection? I do remember growing up and hearing “In the Court of the Crimson King” on CFOX but prog wasn’t much on the radio).

FB: I grew up an artsy misfit in a blue-collar working class redneck household, but there was always music in the home. My mother was a rockabilly songwriter as a teenager back in the 1950s and she wanted to be Wanda Jackson when she grew up. She cut a 45rpm demo single as "Little Ruthie Reynolds" and was cute as a button in her crinoline skirt and cowboy boots and star-spangled Gibson acoustic, and she had an amazing collection of early rock and roll and rockabilly and country-western singles on 10-inch 78rpm shellac, which I still proudly own. My brothers were both 7, 8 years older than I was, so when I was an elementary school kid back in the 1970s they were already in senior high, and bringing home all the classic rock albums as brand-new releases: Cheap Trick, Fleetwood Mac, the Eagles, Tom Petty, Moon Martin, Electric Light Orchestra, Doobie Brothers, AC/DC, Supertramp, you name it. So my first experiences in loving music came from growing up in an environment where the living-room stereo went casually back and forth between Merle Haggard and Nick Lowe, and I accepted it all on face value. And I also got all my brothers' records as hand-me-downs when they finally moved out, so my musical education started there.


The first record I ever bought with my own allowance was the soundtrack to the MAD Magazine raunch-comedy Up the Academy, which introduced me to Blondie and Jonathan Richman and Sammy Hagar and the Babys and Ian Hunter and whatnot, and that helped broaden my musical tastes at a very young and impressionable age. As I got into my teens it just got wilder. MTV came on the air and I was introduced to all sorts of stuff: Def Leppard, Duran Duran, ZZ Top, the Kinks... my first introduction to prog in particular came from the videos for Rush's "Distant Early Warning" and Yes' "Owner of a Lonely Heart," which aren't bad places to start. And then everything changed for me when I discovered Pink Floyd. They were the first band I ever fell in love with and was obsessed with - a schoolmate leant me a cassette of The Wall and it blew my mind — this doesn't sound like Swing Out Sister at all! - and within a year I had all their albums. I was dazzled by how no two songs sounded alike, and how the songs had uncommon structures and crazy sound effects, and the lyrics were deep and cerebral. They were my gateway to the other British prog giants of the 1970s, especially Yes and King Crimson, and I dug more into Rush... which is only the Canadianest thing to do. At the same time I also glommed onto punk rock and heavy metal and dove back into earlier classic rock, and I absorbed and enjoyed it all without feeling contradictory about it. That's when I started my ravenous record collecting, and everything's gotten crazier ever since.

AM: What was your first kick as a player or composer at progressive music? Was it at all daunting for you?

I was inspired to become a participating musician through Metallica's ...And Justice for All album, which was a crucial mind-blowing experience for me. Here was angry anthems of protest, barking about environmental collapse and corruption in the courts and judgement-surveillance and the horrors of war and crazed depression, and it was all framed in jagged, angular prog-metal riffery and lengthy arrangements, with this harsh and abrasive trebly punk-like production - it was exactly the type of music I was waiting for. My first live concert experience was watching Metallica on the "Damaged Justice" tour at the Calgary Saddledome in June 1989... the same night of the Tiananmen Square massacre, and the same night the Ayatollah Khomeini died, so the historical weight of watching James Hetfield roar out "Eye of the Beholder" from 100 feet away nailed it home in ear-splitting fashion: this is what I want to do. Nothing else.
 
Playing music was indeed an anxious challenge for me at the start. I got a white Profile Stratocaster copy from the Sears catalog, and the neck was a warped baseball bat that was unforgiving on my short, stubby fingers, and the geometry of the fretboard was a maddeningly incomprehensible puzzle to me, but I had a compassionate guitar teacher who patiently walked me through the basics of 12-bar blues and the "Iron Man" riff so I had basics to build from. A bunch of my friends were also getting into musical instruments at the same time and they were all learning faster than I was, and I was scared that I'd never catch up. And then my Dad offhandedly said to me: "Why don't you try playing bass? Four strings, no chords, how hard could it be, really?" That made all the sense in the world to me, so I switched over and thought smugly: now I'm on my way! Which I was, but I soon learned to renewed terror that bass is as deep of a well as any other instrument.
 
My first real band was Ninepin, back when I was 20, and right from the get-go there was proggy elements in there. My good friend Aaron Granville-Martin was the main guitarist and composer, and he took influence from Metallica's golden years and Soundgarden's Louder Than Love era and combined them into a precocious hybrid that you'd never expect would form in a small podunk town like Cranbrook. But I rose to the challenge and dutifully ground my way through this excitingly complicated tunes, which was way different from the more straightahead punk and grunge stuff the other teenage garage bands were doing in town at that time. That band also included lead guitarist Eldritch Priest, who's now a professor of music at Simon Fraser University and a leading figure in the Canadian avant-garde compositional world, as well as Aaron's brother Ryan, who currently drums for the Great Lake Swimmers and hobnobs in the Rheostatics circles. So I got into the prog approach right away.

The next serious band for me was Cellar of the Sun, which formed in Nelson BC when I attended music school. That was with Ezra Cannon, who later reinvented himself as a punk icon as Ezra Crack of Leftover Crack, and Dale Butterfield, who's now the live drummer in Junior Boys. That band wrote lengthy and intricate songs that combined elements of Jane's Addiction and Smashing Pumpkins and Fugazi and Sunny Day Real Estate..."emo-prog," maybe? That's where I really came into my own as a bassist. We recorded two amazing albums that hardly anyone listened to. The first band I toured the United States with, and I still miss it. I'm always the most musically comfortable when I'm challenged.

AM: Was there ever a time when you were more into punk or metal or such and prog seemed too cerebral or self-indulgent? You have mentioned wanting not to alienate kids who are into punk or metal… I think that is kind of important to what you do in Phaeton; it's ambitious, but never does it seem self-indulgent.
 
FB: I got seriously into punk and metal at the same time I got into prog, and I didn't consider it schizophrenic to love it all simultaneously. I found connective tissue through it all to latch onto. My favorite punk bands were the more technically accomplished ones, like the Dead Kennedys and NoMeansNo and Bad Brains and Television, but I also love the Stooges and the Sex Pistols and the Dead Boys; you can't deny visceral immediacy, which I dive into in other bands I play with. There is admittedly a big heap of prog that gets too boring and meandering for me, and that's where I tune out. Geoff Barton and I had a good conversation once about how prog is most effective when there's punch to it. Feel free to get as extensive and intricate as you want, but there's a point where emotional expression ends and you just end up whacking off. Which is only fun for yourself.

I'm a people person, and I take seriously the traditional shamanistic and holistic values of the connection between performer and audience, and it's a rare privilege for me to be a musician. And connecting with people is far more important to me than alienating people by being some arrogant egotist with a bass. Not to say that I compose from a pop-mercenary mindset - it's not as if Phaeton's going to appear on American Idol, or record jingles for Hot Topic; but if I don't enjoy listening to what I've recorded as a music lover, I'm certainly not going to enjoy performing it. Look how NICE I'm playing, Ma!


AM: Do the band members of Phaeton have different favourite bands or orientations? There’s a real heavy-metal element that surfaces; is that the influence of any one member? I assume the title Between Two Worlds references the tension between prog and metal?

FB: That's correct. The four of us have a lot of common influences, but we all have different musical tastes. And it all compliments the creative whole. Colin's our in-house authority on all things metal: he's into metal the way the Pope is into Catholicism, and he's always raving about new bands he discovers every week in the tech/death worlds, but he's not monochromatic in his taste; he's a huge Tom Petty fan too, so go figure. Kevin is very much immersed in the classic prog of the 1970s and the neo-prog of the 1980s, and even though it makes sense that he'd be a fan of Phil Collins through the Genesis connection, he's also an unashamed Huey Lewis fan. Dan cut his teeth on grunge acts: Alice in Chains was huge for him. And he's a devoted fan of Jeff Loomis and Guthrie Govan. The others have introduced me to music I either ignored or was unaware of, and in turn I'm doing my best to turn them on to Budgie and Sparks and the Sensational Alex Harvey Band. They all smile politely and nod at the right times.


AM: Are there bands that are divisive?

FB: Well, we don't necessarily do the snotty teenage sneer at anyone's musical favorites. There's stuff we like better than others, but for the most part it's very fun when we all set the instruments aside and hang out as friends and just talk Music Music Music. It's what I loved when I first became a musician and it's still a heartwarming joy to me now. I mean, I don't see the others getting into Matthew Sweet the way I am, sorry to say, but you gotta take the sour with the, er, sweet.

AM: Curious if “Magma Chamber” is a nod to Magma? Magma had played Vancouver back in 2015, which was a couple of years before Between Two Worlds came out. [Aside: I interviewed Christian Vander when that show happened].

FB: Ha! No, not directly. Kevin and I are big Magma fans, but Kevin came up with that title while describing the subterranean workings of an active volcano. I was first introduced to Magma by [former Scratch Records honcho] Keith Parry; I dragged him along to a Styx concert at the River Rock Casino back in 2009 and we had a whale of a good time. He only lived a few blocks away from me in Hastings Sunrise, so after the show we went back to his place and stayed up until dawn, picking records from his towering shelves - we were so wired and gleeful - and he played me Magma's Mekanik Destructiw Kommandoh and I was immediately hooked. Stephen McBean was room-mating with Keith then and locked himself in his room all night while Keith and I raved about Bo Hansson and Triumvirat. Good times!

AM: There are some interesting words in your song titles -- even the bandname Phaeton is unique and cool, though when I Googled it, I was initially surprised to get “a horse-drawn carriage” as an answer. I had to go deeper to find the reference to antiquity:

Phaethon (Greek: Φαέθων, "radiant" or "shining one") is a figure from Greek mythology, known as the son of the sun god Helios (or Apollo). He is famous for attempting to drive his father's sun chariot, failing to control it, and threatening to burn the Earth, resulting in his destruction by Zeus.

There’s other references to Greek myth, like Tethys, in your song titles. So is someone in the band really steeped in classical writing? With no lyrics, do song titles assume greater importance or are they kind of arbitrary? (Do any of them have interesting stories?).

FB: I've always been fascinated with astronomy and mythology since childhood, and to my delight when the four of us got together I discovered they were also cool with nebulae and centaurs. We chose Phaeton as the band name due to that also being the hypothetical proto-planet that supposedly orbited between Mars and Jupiter; tidal forces eventually shattered the planet and it became today's Asteroid Belt. We originally wanted to name the band Theia, after the other hypothetical proto-planet that collided with Earth back in its molten-primordial days and formed the Moon, but at the time there were two or three other prog / metal bands named Theia, so Phaeton we became...even if occasionally people ask if we're sponsored by Volkswagen.
 
And yes, the celestial and cerebral elements play a big part in our overall songwriting concepts. The song titles aren't arbitrary. The music gets worked out first and then there's emotional reflection of what the music's telling us, and the titles emerge accordingly. It's along the lines of how instrumental jazz tunes are named.
 
I named "Tethys Rising" after the moon of Saturn; I'm a big fan of Chesley Bonestell's classic space-age futurism illustrations he did back in the 1950s, and one of his most famous paintings is a beautiful rendition of the view of Saturn from the surface of Titan, looking like the full moon in our sky but with orbital rings; I use that image on my computer desktop screen. But unfortunately, latter-day space probes have shattered the myth and revealed that Titan is actually covered by this annoying opaque orange fog, so you can't see shit. So I thought the view would be better from Tethys.



AM: Where did the concept of the "Isochron" come from, and is it relevant in any way to the song structure?

FB: That's from Kevin. If an isochron, by definition, is a set of initial conditions for the system that all lead to the same long-term behavior, then the structure of the "Isochron" tune parallels that: it kicks off with the main riff, it moves through other riffs which are melodic variations of the initial theme, explores a number of dynamic rises and falls, and then concludes by returning to the main riff again. Aren't we clever!

AM: How does the band compose? Are you working on songs equally, or is someone sending around demos? (Is there one member who is the songwriter?).

There's a few different approaches we take. Kevin basically lives inside the Cube -- his studio enclosure -- and he'll surprise us every few months by fleshing out full demos of a completed tune. Dan is a 24-7 Riff Machine; he's always got one of his many guitars in his eager mitts and it's one of the very few times in my musical experience where I've watched someone truly channel the muse and relay messages from the Aether through distorted overdrive...he's got this bottomless vault of riffs and sketches and parts that we sift through, and oftentimes Colin acts as the Ulrich to Dan's Hetfield and takes a hand with arranging the bits into cohesive structures.

There is an overall agreement about maintaining collective collaboration, though. Everyone has the right to speak up if they have better ideas of how the song should flow, but even if the idea isn't used in the end, we do our best to keep everything on an even keel. It's important to us as friends and bandmates to eliminate any points of resentment that might arise. We've all been in earlier bands where things went south due to personality clashes and alpha-prick horseshit, and we'd rather avoid that.
 
It's an elastic creative process, but it's also even-keeled and democratic, and it works for us. Nothing sounds disjointed, though. Colin's octopus-tornado attack on the drums really ties everything together. And we're drawing from different stylistic elements: there's djent in there ["a subgenre of progressive metal characterized by high-gain, palm-muted, downtuned guitar tones that create a "djent" onomatopoeic sound"], and neo-classical melodicism, and thrash, and tech-death, and the more soft-washy mellow-prog colorings, and it all flows together into Phaeton.
 
AM: I am assuming that your background in music journalism is why you end up doing the interviews? Is “Tethys Rising” your only compositional contribution so far?

FB: All four of us are intelligent and articulate, but the others are more private people than I am. My spirit animals are Tigger and Foghorn Leghorn, which comes across in my personality, and I'm always eager to babble endlessly to people, so for the most part they leave it up to me to deal with the media. Colin and Dan and Kevin always have interesting things to say, but they'll get into public discussion whenever they're comfortable with it. But I'm not the official spokesperson by any means. I do my best to not misrepresent the others, or say anything libelous or defamatory that'll get us hung in the public square. So far, so good!
 
During our first few years I was too busy being in awe of Dan and Kevin as riff-writers and composers to get my shit together and write something myself. They aren't intimidating personalities as such, but I was too creatively insecure to write anything to bring to the band that I thought was good enough. I was given free rein to work my own basslines around what they'd written, and find my own instrumental voice, which I do on our recordings. It wasn't until the pandemic arose and I had all this free time unwantedly on my hands that I finally told myself to shit or get off the pot. And so I came up with "Tethys Rising" and presented it to the others, and to my joy they were enthusiastic and complimentary about it. I had most of the riffs and parts and structure worked out, but again I encouraged Kevin and Dan to add their own thoughts to it. Kevin made subtle but effective changes to the arrangement and added the jazzy dynamic breakdown that leads off the bridge section, and Dan came up with these elegiac solos which just made the tune's climax really sing. It was a huge thing for me. I finally felt complete within the band.
 
We're currently working on a new tune of mine named "The Follower" which will be included in the next album. And I have other sketches and parts and riffs which Dan and Kevin are eager to help me morph into finished tunes. And they in turn have stuff of their own which are developing into new finished tunes. This band never stops thrilling me to pieces.





AM: The Straight piece will focus on Colin's cancer, his epic composition "Clouds of Mercury," and its non-inclusion on Friday, but is there anything else to say about the April 10th set? Any final words on Colin's cancer ordeal?

FB: We were all frightened for Colin when he went through his cancer, and unfortunately that wasn't his first time, but it was certainly the worst. What made it all more despairing for us was that it happened while the pandemic lockdowns were still in force, so nobody except for immediate family was allowed to visit him in the hospital. But he outfought the cancer and survived and he's still in remission, and I hope to whatever gods may be that that's the last time he has to deal with that. Talk about channeling power through obstinacy. And so if he was inspired to conceive a 22-minute sprawling epic which charted the emotional rise and fall of what he went through, then he's well within his rights to do so, Phaeton or no Phaeton.

[As for the show,] we'll be playing selections from all three of our albums, so for the curious folks of Vancouver they'll get a healthy dollop of the full Phaeton experience. We first came out of the gates with our vision and our style fully fleshed out, so it's not as if we'll ever dismiss stuff from the first album as juvenilia. I have a soft spot in my heart for the Between Two Worlds material, since by recording a second album we proved we weren't a flash in the pan, and we pumped up the original Phaeton approach into heavier tunes. Neurogenesis was a big step, and we knew we were onto something when Derek Sherinian collaborated with us... and we're growing an audience, slowly but surely.

We're very excited to be playing our very first Vancouver show. I haven't played the Cobalt in 20 years, and I'm glad that it's hosting metal shows again. A true gem among legendary Canadian venues, and sentimental me can already smell the urinal cakes from here. [Heads up, Ferdy: it smells much better than when you last played there!] And we'll be sharing the stage with very good bands - Vaegon, No Faith in Fortune, and Quasicosm - and it's exciting to see that Vancouver's still as artistically vibrant as it ever was. Vancouver is my true emotional home, and I will always cherish the long years I spent living there and loving there and rocking there, and this will be a true homecoming for me, and I want it to be a welcoming experience for Kevin and Dan and Colin.


Tickets here! Happy birthday, Ferdy!

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Enormous Changes Afoot for Immigrants, International Students, and Educators

As we inch closer towards a US ground war in Iran, with 3500 US marines lingering offshore...

As prices for gas shoot up, meaning not only that driving around is going to get increasingly expensive, but the prices of anything that gets transported by fossil fuel are going to get increasingly expensive...

As we approach what some people are already cheerleading as World War III...

...I face a very interesting juncture. Personally, professionally, financially. 

See, starting a couple of years ago, the Liberals under Trudeau (and Marc Miller) decided that our immigration targets were badly off, and decided to start dismantling certain things that had long been in place, changing not only the number of immigrants being allowed into Canada, but the options available to them once they get here. 

They did not do this in a delicate, gradual way, but rather, a slash-and-burn one. 

We had, at that point -- and still have, at a greatly reduced scale -- something called the LINC program ("Language Instruction for New Canadians"), by which recent immigrants can get government-funded English language instruction as part of their journey to citizenship. It is set up in unusual ways, designed, I would argue, more by bureaucrats than educators. I could go off the rails complaining about the so-called PBLA system and the underlying philosophies of instruction laid forth in the Canadian Langauge Benchmarks document, which I invite you to peruse at your leisure -- but this is not the time: suffice to say, I have taught LINC classes, grappled with the model, and found it wanting. 

True confession: there is at least one Iranian woman in her 70s who can barely get "Can I help you" right, is just as likely to say "Can I help me?", who is now a citizen of Canada because of her skill and generosity as a baker (specifically at making baklava), because it just seemed cruel and unusual to submit her to language instruction that was delivered in such a haphazard, back-assward, incoherent, a-systematic fashion (I say this as the person who was designing the actual classes, but doing so under considerable contraints: teaching LINC is like trying to teach swimming with one leg tied behind your back to the opposite arm). She was never going to deliver anything more than badly broken English as a result of her LINC experience. I worked with her for months, and finally gave up, gave her her level 4, and changed classes. But I hope she is still making baklavas and doing okay; ten years later, I don't remember the names of any other students in that class, but thank you for sharing your pastries, W____, (not just with me, but with the whole class, mind you... though she did make extra for the teacher). You may not remember a single lesson I taught but I remember your baking well.

Pro-tip: If ever you go to a bake shop and the person behind the counter asks "Can I help me?" instead of "Can I help you", get excited: the baklava will be astonishing.  

Anyhow. 

Regardless of how wonky it is, how ineffective it is, how bizarre the tenets of the Cult of LINC are -- the majority of English-language education for immigrants, for decades, has followed this model, here in Canada. Students, provided they are Permanent Residents -- not just visitors, and not yet citizens -- get free instruction, which they can use towards attaining citizenship. The model has been in place since the 1990s, and is still there now, but vastly fewer people are teaching these classes these days, not because someone figured out that LINC is basically a cargo cult, but because the Liberals canceled tons of contracts. Including the one at the school I have been working at, as a tutor, since I left the LINC system in 2017. There's lots online about it... 

...but it was only the first part of the assault. Having blown up the language instruction for immigrants, next, the Liberals turned on the international students, changing the terms by which they could study in BC, making it vastly harder for anyone who had come here with a plan in place to work and study until they could earn Permanent Resident status to be able to actually make their dream a reality. There is an Auditor General's Report to be read here, which I have only skimmed, but the upshot is, the changes were vastly more destructive than they were ever intended to be; in 2025, under their new rules, the Liberals still expected around 250 thousand applications for study permits in Canada, but actual numbers dropped below 100 thousand (BC experienced a 66% drop in international student numbers, apparently). One Redditor I think correctly surmises, "they under-estimated how many students were only choosing Canada for school because they felt it was easy to immigrate permanently this way. Once you strip out the incentive, the entire program collapses." 

Yep. So suddenly schools that had been full of international students had empty hallways; instructors were laid off, and administrators found themselves in a very challenging situation: how to keep schools afloat that had been dependent for most of their income on, on the one hand, government-funded language instruction and on the other, well-paying international students?

The educational landscape in BC will still be feeling the effects of Liberal policy for a long time (I am basically bookmarking things for myself at this point, since I haven't read them, but, like, see here, or here, or here). I don't know the half of it -- I have a very dim understanding of our political machinery and matters of running schools. 

What I do know is, in order to keep the college alive, the school where I work is buying out a bunch of its staff, which will in the short term cost them a great deal, but in the long term, maybe save them. 

With World War III at least potentially on the horizon... with an insane, quasi-fascist kleptocracy having become entrenched down south... with Canadian economic instability looming...

I'm about to be jobless.

Sort of. I've accepted the buy out. It's decent enough that I'll be able to clear my debts and shake a few things up in my life that need shaking. And I've got a temporary plan B in place: I'll be officially starting a position at a used bookstore on Main Street this April, where I've occasionally casually taken a shift here and there over the years (basically when the Minimalist Jug Band had a gig, unless it was a gig I was also involved in). But the rate of pay is vastly less and the hours are few.

I'm not quite sure how that's going to shape up, but the record stores of Vancouver will also be impacted. Also possible I'm going to be doing less writing. Hell, you might even discover that there will be ads on this blog, at some point. I may have to MONETIZE. (Ugh!). 

Interesting times, anyhow... 

Friday, March 27, 2026

See Dude Cervantes and the Panchos AND Blues for Greeny: a great night in White Rock

Blues for Greeny, March 26 2026, all pics by Allan MacInnis

Do you love hot guitar-driven blues rock? Do you like to see two guitarists, completely engaged with the act of live performance, both adept but distinctively different from each other, playing into each other, trading lead and rhythm parts between songs, opening their structures up into extended, propulsive jams that build and build and peak then sail along at some delirious sky-level plateau for ten minutes then hook back into the groove and build and build and build some more, taking you to an even higher plane, which angles upwards into the sun until you fucking explode?

Do you especially love it when they're clearly totally enjoying this process, too, grinning and leaning into it, where you can tell they are doing this 100% because they LOVE it? 

If so, go see Dude Cervantes and the Panchos this Friday, March 27th, at LanaLou's, then go see them again as Blues for Greeny at the Rickshaw. Then if you can get to Nanaimo and Duncan and Powell River and Roberts Creek... you get the idea: see as many of these shows as you can!  

That becomes particularly imperative if you also love "The Green Manalishi (with the Two-Pronged Crown)". (Goddamn what a great song that is). That was their show closer tonight and they knocked it out of the park. I was very happy my camera had maxed out its storage so I could just dance! 


And make no mistake: whether it is Dude Cervantes and the Panchos or Blues for Greeny, it's the same band; the former does originals, the latter does covers. I only saw the latter tonight, but I am utterly confident that tomorrow (the Dude Pancho set) is going to be even greater, because as much fun as the band was clearly having laying into the blues tonight, it's gonna mean all the more for them when it's their own songs they're playing, eh?  


Extra treat if you like to see shit-hot FEMALE blues-rock guitarists. They seem to be hard to come by -- lots of great female vocalists and songwriters, but when it comes to shit-hot female guitarists in the blues vein, so far I've only seen two, Ellen McIlwaine and Sue Foley. Loved both, but Nicole Cerminara was more intense than either of 'em tonight out in White Rock. She's from Ontario. She's not a regular member of the band -- is just filling in for one person who couldn't make it on the tour; and she has no other gigs out here for the time being, nothing else I can point you towards. But you have abundant chances to see her on this tour, especially if you're on Vancouver Island or up the Sunshine Coast; this band is doing justice to touring BC, driving around old-school with their t-shirts and vinyl in back, hitting a new town every night (except Sunday, so far!). 

TBH I liked her leads a bit better than Cervantes', but he's great too! (Maybe I have some gender bias here, because I am simply not used to seeing women COOK the way she did).


Even though the trek to White Rock is an ordeal, I'm so glad I went. The Beer Shack had stopped serving food, so dinner was a fuckin' nanaimo bar that I had in my backpack, which kinda sucks, because I spent almost two hours on buses and Skytrains to get there and I was kind of hungry. Then it was another hour and a half to get home. 

But I have zero regrets (and two new records and a t-shirt: they have merch). Sometimes the pleasures you earn mean more. 

Oh, by the way, I wrote this for the Straight, and I shot this clip tonight, from the second half of their set. It was even better live. 

Having had a very busy week last week, musically, I had, in fact, planned to take this weekend off from concert going, but Dude Cervantes has completely altered that plan. No regrets there either. 

BC tour dates (nothing in Victoria it seems!). One or both bands play each night. Don't worry which, just go! 

Mar 27 - Vancouver, BC @lanalous
Mar 28 - Vancouver, BC w/ BFG @rickshawtheatre
Mar 29 - Nanaimo, BC w/ BFG @thequeensnanaimo
Mar 30 - Duncan, BC @duncanshowroom *
Apr 1 - Powell River, BC @carlsonloft *
Apr 2 - Roberts Creek, BC @robertscreeklegion219 *


Thursday, March 26, 2026

Great

So we have selected, between standard time and daylight savings, the variant where the cat decides to wake me up before 7am. Great. 

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Gerard Van Herk last night at LanaLou's!! (plus links to Otway, Braineater and more)


Gerard Van Herk with Eric Lowe, live at LanaLou's, by Allan MacInnis

So I had limited room on my camera and on my battery and two gigs to contend with. I shot one John Otway Band video, one I, Braineater video, one Nightflower Orchestra video... 

...but I also saved space for TWO Gerard Van Herk videos, here and here. I don't have a whole lot of time for writing at the moment, but will try to add more to this space later! 

What a wonderful night of music; so pleased to have been able to help a little (and get my What is Sociolinguistics? book signed!!!).  










Saturday, March 21, 2026

Braineater EARLY SHOW Tonight, opening for John Otway, plus where to read my writing lately!

 

Hi! 

I haven't been posting here much, which means I haven't been letting my blog followers know about a bunch of the stuff I've been doing online, and have discovered that as a result a couple of people who read this blog are unaware of major stuff I've been doing on the Georgia Straight website.  They just thought I wasn't writing much!

Ha: no, that is no so. 

I feel like it will benefit more people if I write for that website rather than this one, the pay being about the same. The hyperlink to see (pretty much) everything I've done there, with the most recent at the top, is: https://www.straight.com/user/591  

You can bookmark that link and use it to find my most recent stuff there any ole time.  

At the moment, if you haven't seen it, the I, Braineater piece is really good, in particular, but if you're accessing this website sometime well after March 21st, you can find that here. Jim's a great interview; there's a really cool thing in a past Big Takeover, as well (the issue with Bob Mould on the cover) where we talk about his work with Art Bergmann, Buck Cherry, Ron Reyes, Chris Crud, and such. That's more his backstory -- how he started in both music and art. 

Photo by Cat Ashbee

The context of the new piece is more his return to recording after a long time away. It's really kind of a part two to a piece you haven't read part one of. I do recommend seeking out that part one, it's a super-cool story and illustrated with a bunch of Jim's art. And it particularly focuses on I Here, Where You!

I love I Here, but it's like Nomeansno's Mama, a singular oddity, an outlier. The new album is his masterpiece. True, it repeats a lot of material from Artist Poet Thief and elsewhere, but it does so with a crazy-deep sound, with actual bass (the missing instrument on Artist Poet Thief).  It's really really great. Like, I'm almost as excited for it to come out as that motherfucking New Modernettes record that we're all salivating for, which is now old enough to leave home, get a job, and get married. 

Very early Braineaters lineup by bev davies; Art on organ, Buck on guitar, Ian Tiles (we think!) on drums and Dave Gregg on guitar. This is one of the photos we were looking at in Jim's kitchen when Cat took the other photo, above! 

Can't speak to that Modernettes record, but it will be months til the Braineater album comes out, of course, but the Otway gig tonight will mark the debut of the new lineup (with guitarist Rod Bruno). There are still tickets. You'll be paying more than you usually would, of course, since there's a full touring band headlining, but you seriously won't regret seeing Otway, though; he's one of the most exuberant live performers out there. (A second Otway article should go live later today).  

One local punk who I will not name here has commented that the addition of a real guitarist is going to change everything to how they present. I have seen the trio-form version a few times, and while I truly enjoy Jim's new material (and old) and am glad he's back, I wasn't completely sold on the trio form as a live act -- there was a missing piece. Rod Bruno might just be it (I know I've seen him with Trailerhawk but I'm not sure where else I might have seen him). 

Oh, and by the way, if you're looking for an Artist Poet Thief, there was one in the middle of the new arrivals at Beat Street yesterday for $30. There's also a Doughboys' Whatever in the used punk section! 

No blame if you're doing another gig tonight -- I don't even know who the Koffin Katz are, so I can't say I feel like I'm missing out -- but do note that the Otway/ I, Braineater/ Nightflower Orchestra show is an early show. Music will start at about 7:15. Braineater will be up by 8. It will all be over by 10ish (in time to make LanaLou's for a bit of 64 Funnycars, if you go quickly! 

If you missed it, I also did a recent piece on Gerard Van Herk (there's a correction in it so if you read it before, read it again). He follows 64 Funnycars. Otway will be so done his set by that point that, who knows, he might come down for that! (Would be fun -- I'll try). Call it the John Otway afterparty. 

Wherever you end up tonight, I hope it rocks. (People who don't know Otway should look up his Urgh! clip and/ or try some of his videos. "Bunsen Burner" is pretty fucking fun. 

Monday, March 16, 2026

Busy week ahead

There's much to do. I have gotten some cool David Hathaway quotes about Elizabeth Fischer that are for this blog, and a vintage photo from Bev, but I have too much "more pressing" writing to get to. The blog will fall by the wayside, probably til Sunday.

Had a sneak preview of the new I, Braineater record. It's stunning. Talked to Jim at length about it. That's tonight's project: distill it down. 

Might be doing a review of Jesse Welles about his sold out show at the Commodore Thursday... if I get in! That remains to be seen. 

Have an article to square away about the Rong/ Hamm/ Caveman and the Banshee show on the 20th.

And I have another Otway thing to do, one last piece of press before the show on Saturday, also involving I, Braineater. That's going to be quite the gig! 

Oh, and I might try to put some posters up for that. In the rain, but at least that means the Poster Guy won't be postering over them for a few hours. 

Not sure how I'm going to juggle all that and still have a wife, a dayjob, a cat, an apartment, and a body. It's a lot! 

But life does feel meaningful at such times, you know? I like life to feel meaningful. What did you do this week, Al? I served my community. 

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...