Category Archives: Upcoming Events

Vancouver Opera's Macbeth: Italian opera based on an English play about Scottish ambitions

Vancouver Opera's Macbeth: Italian opera based on an English play about Scottish ambitions

Vancouver Opera – Macbeth

Queen Elizabeth Playhouse
Nov. 25, 28, 30 and Dec. 2 2006

It was a cold icy night, with snow all around.  I wore my wool kilt to the opera, to keep with the Scottish theme.  Ancient Fraser of Lovat tartan for me…  Saskatchewan tartan for my companion. Dressing up for the opera…

Macbeth is set in the Middle Ages10th Century – long before the
invention of the modern kilt.  The famous Shakespearean drama was
written in 1606.  In 1847, Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi
abandoned his planned opera of King Lear, and wrote Macbeth to
celebrate his favorite poet.

Fast forward to November 2006, the debut of this
Scottish-English-Italian opera in multicultural Vancouver – long home
to early waves of Scottish, English and Italian immigrants.  This
city has long loved its opera.  This province and city was built
by Scottish pioneers, becoming home to many Scottish cultural
traditions including the BC Highland Games, world champion SFU Pipe Band and a great Shakespeare tradition of Bard on the Beach.

Macbeth certainly has all the elements for a good opera: drama, murder,
and love. It is perhaps one of Shakespeare's darkest and deepest
psychological dramas and goes far to provide wonderful scenes for an
opera.  The original libretto is amazingly loyal to Shakespeare's
original prose.  Anybody who remotely remembers studying Macbeth
at high school or university, or sitting through any of the numerous
theatrical production in Vancouver will marvel at what they still
remember.

Macbeth and his fellow general Banquo encounter witches in a
wood who foretell a future where Macbeth will be king, and Banquo the
father of kings.  This sets the world in motion for a man and his
wife who are impatient to be king, and insecure of holding that
position.  In a worldview similar to Chinese warlords of the 5th
Century's Warring States Period – Macbeth is prompted by his wife to
kill any threats to their ill-gotten throne.  It is all done in
the name to preseve power.

The scenes that follow showcase the singer's talents:  Greer
Grimsley has a wonderful strong voice that belies the tortured anguis
of Macbeth, guilty of his actions.  Jane Eaglen plays Lady
Macbeth, not as an evil woman but as a woman delighted to be on the
throne.  Lady Macbeth's famous sleepwalking scene with the famous
words “out, out damn spot” as she tries to wash the blood from her
hands, is tender and plaintive.

Burak Bilgili's Banquo has a strong presence both as a living Banquo
before his death, and even as he prowls the stage as a ghost. John
Bellemer is the young Macduff, who rallies and leads the villagers
against the tyranny of Macbeth.

The original three witches of Macbeth, have been turned into a
chorus
of about 30 or more. Costumed in red, blue or aquamarine, they move
about the stage as if they are some kind of spiritual consciousness –
neither here or there, as they disappear and appear on their whim, or
threatened by Macbeth.  A friend of mine who saw opening night's
performance, said that the chorus was wonderful.  Indeed, the
power of the voices and the movement on stage was almost
overwhelming. 

A particularly “bewitching” scene was the famous cauldron, where
Macbeth implores the witches to tell him what they know.  There is
no “physical” black caldron on stage.  Instead, there is a light
grey cloth light by red light inside, expanding and contracting with
human figures.  One by one, figures emerge from the centre to
speak to Macbeth.  Visually brilliant and theatrically amazing!

Verdi's score is not dark and pondering like many modern operas such as
the works of Janacek or Stravinsky.  It is still lyrical and
emotionally plaintive.  At times the singing was so beautiful, I
forgot to watch the surtitles above the stage.

This Macbeth is also a co-production with Edmonton Opera and
Portland Opera and features visual projections by Jerome Sirlin, who
designed the award-winning sets for Broadway’s Kiss of the Spider Woman
It makes sense that opera should now be going “hi-tech” with visual
projections.  Sirlin has creates a forest with tree leaves waving
in the breeze, as trunks descend from above.  The projection
changes, and the scene is now instantly a castle interior. 
Following Banquo's murder, the castle walls are tinged blood red for
emotional effect during Lady Macbeth's sleepwalking scene.  This
may have been a holographic first for Vancouver Opera, but Ballet BC
experimented with set projections for last year's

Rite of Spring
which I reviewed.  Those scene projections were done by my friend Jaime Griffiths, a local graphic artist and dance collaborator.

Kilt watching at the opera?  I met one man wearing the St. Clair
tartan and one Opera Host wearing a Chinese jacket. Many people smiled
and acknowledged our kilts.  It reminded me of past opera where I
saw people donning cheong-sams and Chinese jackets for Turandot and
even kiminos for Madame Butterfly. 

Hip, Hapa and Interculturally Happening – Nov 24 to 30

Hip, Hapa and Interculturally Happening – Nov 24 to 30

Lots of stuff happening this weekend!

East Side Culture Crawl

2006 Culture CrawlNOV 24:          5PM – 10PM NOV 25/26:   11AM – 6PM

image

The
Eastside Culture Crawl is an annual three day visual arts festival.
This event involves artists who work on the east side of Vancouver, BC,
Canada in an area bounded by Main Street to Commercial Drive and from
First Avenue north to the waterfront. On this site you find complete
information about the event, including a printable map and a list of
our participating artists. Artists for 2006: Go to artist registration
at top of page for printable entry form or contact the representative
for your building for details and an entry form.

Los Cuatro Vientos
November 24, 25 & 26, 2006

Norman Rothstein Theatre, 950 West 41st Avenue, Vancouver

8pm
Download press release

“Los
Cuatro Vientos” is considered to be the company’s most prestigious and
original show to date, as well as being their first production that is
based on a non-Spanish subject. Joining acclaimed Artistic director
Rosario Ancer and Musical Director Victor Kolstee on the stage will be
renowned Dancer/Choreographer Mariano Cruceta (from Madrid), Flamenco
Guitarist/Composer Carolina Plante (based in Madrid), dancer Carmen de
Torres (from Sevilla), Gypsy singer Antonio de Jerez, Guest
dancers/choreographers Barbara Bourget and Jay Hirabayashi and
 Flamenco Rosario Members; Mariko Aramaki, Denise Canso, Alice
Gerbrecht, Afifa Lahbabi Moxness, Kara Miranda and Veronica Stewart.

Head Tax Redress:  Inside Outside

– 1st anniversary of Nov.26th protest.

Here's the latest from the Head Tax Families Society planning the anniversary of last year's
pivotal moment when Head Tax Redress became an important election issue for the 2006
Federal election. Here's my article from last year's important event:
Chinese Head Tax: Protest in Vancouver Chinatown

When: 11:00am Saturday, November 25, 2006
Where: Chinese Cultural Center - Dr. David Lam Hall
50 East Pender Street, Vancouver

New Democrat and Liberal MP's to Mark Redress with Head Tax Families:
Jack Layton and Ujjal Dosanjh to Observe Seminal Redress Turnaround
Moment

The Head Tax Families Society of Canada (HTFSC) hosts Jack Layton, Leader of
the federal New Democrats, and Ujjal Dosanjh, former Liberal cabinet minister and
B. C. premier, will observe the turnaround of the Chinese head tax/exclusion redress
struggle at a public forum. Invitees included the Leaders and Greater
Vancouver Members of Parliament of the four parties represented in the
House of Commons, the Leaders of parties and Members of the B. C.'s
legislature and elected officials from the three parties represented
at Vancouver city council.

Tandava for CBC Radio

November 25

th at 3PM.

Canadian Memorial Centre for Peace   
 
(Burrard and 15th  Ave.) with guests  Indian vocalist Sunita Bapooji &
bassist Tommy Babin. This is the closing concert of the week-long event “Sacred Spaces, Sacred Places¨, produced by CBC Radio and Radio Canada. Please call CBC to reserve free tickets. The RSVP line is  604.662.6600.

NO LUCK CLUB: PROSPERITY RELEASE PARTY


Saturday – Nov. 25

Media Club – 695 Cambie

Doors @ 8pm, $8

The No Luck Club returns to Vancouver, after a cross-Canada tour, for a homecoming cd release party.
Known as an edgy instrumental hip hop band – It was almost a year ago
this time, when Trevor Chan and the No Luck Club released a mash up
exploring the Chinese head tax and racial discrimination.  Check
out my article about the Globe & Mail article with links:
“Head-tax Hip Hop” features

Vancouver OperaMacbeth

November 25, 28, 30 and Dec 2,
All performances 7:30 pm | Queen Elizabeth Theatre
The Shakespearean English classic theatre play about a Scottish King, turned into an opera sung in Italian.
More than 3 witches… in fact a chorus of witches!  But will
anybody be wearing kilts?  I will be wearing my kilt on Tuesday
night, after attending a British Consulate reception for a visiting
Scottish Parliamentarian…  See you there!


Eastside Culture Crawl this weekend! Friday Nov 24 – Sunday Nov 26

Eastside Culture Crawl this weekend!  Friday Nov 24 – Sunday Nov 26

Eastside Culture Crawl
Friday, November 24       
5-10pm
Saturday, November 25   
11-6pm
Sunday, November 26     
11-6pm

Arleigh Wood
is one of the artists participating in the Eastside Culture
Crawl.  She combines mixed media, and also draws on her combined
Japanese and Caucasian heritage.

Janice Wong is another artist (and my cousin) working in the same building at 1000 Parker Street.  You can bet I will be visiting them both this coming weekend during the Eastside Culture Crawl.

There are 47 buildings to visit. 

Gailan Ngan Ceramics Studio is in the Strathcona neighborhood at 898 East Georgia Street at Campbell.  I have a piece of Gailan Ngan's pottery, a vase beside my bed.  I am a big fan of her father Wayne Ngan – definitely one of Canada's greatest pottery artists.

If you visit only one building… make sure it is 1000 Parker
at the corner of Parker and   This building is huge with 4
stories, just walking along each floor and down each alcove is an
adventure in itself. 

Read my article from last year:
Eastside Culture Crawl – I am no longer a Culture Crawl virgin

Arleigh sent me the below pictures and message to remind me to attend!

Her studio is #326-1000 Parker St. Vancouver

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If you miss this why not check out the Shiny Fuzzy Muddy
Show?

Friday, December 15th       5-10pm
Saturday, December 16th  
12-5pm
Sunday, December 17th    
12-5pm

Video In Studios
1965 Main Street

(between 3rd & 4th ave)

Visit our website to preview artists
www.shinyfuzzymuddy.com

Interested in taking mixed media workshops in
the New Year? 
Email or visit my website for more details (click
‘news’).
www.arleighwooddesigns.com

Take care,

Arleigh

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Beats Without Borders 2 Year Anniversary

Beats Without Borders 2 Year Anniversary

Tarun Nayar is doing some very cool intercultural events
around Vancouver.  He's keeping his ears about town – I bumped
into him last week at the
Alliance Francaise de Vancouver sponsored Pandit Vithal Rao and his
student Kiran Ahluwalia.

Beats Without Borders is now a “happening” group with violinist Kytami, dj's, bhangra dancers + musical guests.

Here's Tarun's message:

Hi all,


There's some great stuff happening over the next few days. See you on the dance floor!


Tarun




———————————————————————————————–
Beats Without Borders 2 Year Anniversary


Thursday Nov 23, doors 9pm
The Red Room (398 Richards)
10$ @ the door


Join
the BWB crew in celebrating 2 years of global fusion madness! With
guest DJ and producer Jacob Cino, electric violinist Kytami, local
hip-hop/bhangra crew BPM, the United Bhangra dance crew, and BWB
resident DJs. Another rocking party at the Red Room :o)


———————————————————————————————–
Tarun & Ivan Tucakov


Friday  Nov 24, 7pm
Radha Yoga (730 Main Street)
By Donation


I'll
be joining my longtime music partner, gypsy guitarist Ivan Tucakov, for
an evening of Indian. flamenco, and middle-eastern sounds at one of the
most beautiful spaces in town. Come by, eat some great food and relax!


———————————————————————————————–
STOP THE HIGHWAY Dance Party

Friday Nov. 24, 8:30pm
The Anza Club (8th & Ontario)
5-10$
http://www.GATEWAYSUCKS.org



A
fun-raiser to bring awareness about the scary throughway project
planned for the Commercial Drive area. Tons of good stuff happening,
including lots of live music, vegetarian goodies, and Tspoon the masala
mixa, BPM and the sugar dhollies doing their respective things. Miss
Bliss rounds out the night with global soundz…

———————————————————————————————–
Ongoing:
Eastern Music Nights at Chai Restaurant

3243 West Broadway (above East is East)
www.chaiateastiseast.com

Wed: fundraisers for the Afghan Children of War foundation, red hot nights with many acts from all over the city.
Thurs: fiery flamenco nights, with some of the best Flamenco musicians and dancers in the citySun:
Sufi and Indian classical nights with James Hamilton (sitar) Majid
Qayam (rabab) and some fine Persian and Indian percussionists.

Free CBC concert with Tandava at Canadian Memorial Centre for Peace – Nov 25

Free CBC concert with Tandava
at Canadian Memorial Centre for Peace
Nov 25 – 3pm


Here's a message from Lan Tung, erhu player and leader of Orchid Ensemble

Hi, Friends

Tandava is performing a concert with guests Indian
vocalist Sunita and bassist Tommy Babin at 3pm on Nov 25. Canadian
Memorial Centre for Peace (Burrard and 15th)
free tickets, but need reservation. please call CBC at 604.662.6600 for your tickets. limited space available.

Lan Tung

Orchid Ensemble
Chinese Music and Beyond…
http://www.orchidensemble.com

Vancouver Opera: Can Cultures Merge? – Whenever did cultures stop merging?

Vancouver Opera: Can Cultures Merge?
– Whenever did cultures stop merging?



NOVEMBER. 8, 7:30-9:30 PM
Opera Speaks @ VPL: 
“Can Cultures Merge?”
Alice MacKay Room, Vancouver Public Library
A free public forum

Opera is an art form that has borrowed from many cultures near and
far.  There is a tradition of “East meets West,” demonstrated as Puccini's
Turandot is set in China, Bizet's The Pearl Fishers is set in Ceylon,
and Saint-Saens' Samson and Delilah is set in Gaza.  And even
Gilbert and Sullivan's The Mikado alludes to “something Japanese” but
is really a parody of English custom and pretension.

It was only a matter of time that the Vancouver Opera should set one of
Europe's most famous operas smack dab in the middle of the Pacific
Northwest First Nations culture.

Last week, magnificently costumed opera singers performed two excerpts from Mozart's Magic Flute
opera, but they were dressed in Northwest coast First Nations
inspired designs.  The young male bird catcher character of
Papageno has now become himself a bird – a hummingbird to be
precise.  The Queen of the Night has become the mythic wild woman
of the woods – T'sonokwa.

Fantastic?  Definitely.  Absurd?  Maybe.  Cultural appropriation?  Debatable…

Chris Creighton Kelly, noted artist and cultural critic, moderated the discussion which featured panelists such as anthropologist Wade Davis, Magic Flute stage director Robert McQueen, First Nations writer and filmmaker Loretta Todd, and Marcia Crosby, professor of First Nations Studies at Malaspina University-College. 

The Vancouver Opera website states the questions:

Can artists find common ground through artistic endeavour?  When does
exploration of another culture become exploitation and appropriation?
When and how does mere ‘inclusion’ became true collaboration? This
forum will explore how creative artists and performers collaborate
across cultural lines, and what importance such collaboration may hold
for the future of humankind.

The evening began slowly as each of the panelists explored the reasons
and questions to why they were on the panel.  McQueen explained
how the Vancouver Opera set about to invite and find collaborating
First Nations artists to work with them in creating an “impossible
idea.”  By relocating the Magic Flute, which was originally set in
Egypt and full of Masonic ritual, to the Pacific Northwest – it had to
be adapted to fit First Nations culture and mythology.  First
Nations writer/filmmaker Loretta Todd and professor Marcia Crosby, felt
it was also necessary to address how culturally sensitive or
appropriate it was to adopt First Nations culture.  On the other
hand, they also pointed out that they didn't know that much about
opera, and neither admitted anthropologist Wade Davis. 

But did this matter?  If more people become interested in opera, or
become more interested in exploring First Nations culture and stories,
then this is a good thing.  Davis explained that our world is
losing cultures on an astonishing rate.  Cultural diversity is
important for us to see things and issues from different perspectives. There used to be 500 Aboriginal Nations in North America before the arrival of Europeans, many have disappeared or become assimilated.

Crosby asked the question “When did cultures stop merging, so that we
had to ask the question 'Can cultures merge?'” This raised an important
point, because I personally feel that culture is like a river.  We
don't see where it starts high in the mountains… and it never is the
same when we walk through it again (to paraphrase Plato or Heraclitus)
and it ends in the large globally shared oceans.

The evening really picked up when the audience challenged the panelists
with questions and statements.  Issues addressed were
appropriation of culture and also ethnic minority issues in a white
dominated culture.  Creighton-Kelly summed it up aptly when he
said we are just beginning to scratch the surface before he wrapped up
the evening.

I was one of the people who spoke to the panel, and I was surprised at the clapping for the recognition of the name “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” when Vancouver Opera marketing and development officer Doug Tuck introduced me to the audience as he handed me the microphone.  But then “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” is getting more well known as a blending of Scottish and Chinese traditions and cultures.

“I love what the Vancouver Opera is doing,” I stated to the audience,
and spoke of the impact that the Vancouver Opera touring production
Naomi's Road” had on sharing the Japanese Canadian internment
experience with thousands of school children.  “It is a sharing of
Japanese Canadian culture with White mainstream culture, so yes…
cultures can merge. Author Joy Kogawa told me that in Tofino, people in
the audience were crying.  Japanese Canadians were very touched to
see their culture portrayed on stage.

“The real benefit is that we are talking together in forums like
this.  We can share and listen to each other's stories, and our
cultures are merging now.  And it will continue. 

“I really want to know how the school children across BC are receiving the touring version of Magic Flute today in the schools.”

Vancouver Opera general director James Wright responded by saying that
while it is still early, the students at the schools are responding well, and are
interested in learning about First Nations culture – some are not.  I expect that
many First Nations students will take pride in seeing their culture and traditions represented.  At the same time, I expect there to be critics
of cultural mis-appropriation.  In the end… discussion is
good.  Sharing is good.  More people witnessing and
experiencing these events and issues is good. And in the end, First Nations culture is recognized as an integral part of Vancouver and BC culture and history.

Next Opera Speaks is Wednesday Night at Vancouver Public Library.
 
Opera Speaks @ VPL: “Power and its Abuses”
A free public forum about Verdi's “McBeth”

CBC Radio’s Mark Forsythe
as he moderates a discussion about the nature of political power and
its abuse, in both Shakespeare’s day and in our contemporary society. 
Panelists include UBC global issues expert Michael Byers, SFU criminologist Ehor Boyanowski and SFU Shakespeare scholar Paul Budra.

November 15, 2006 7:30pm
Alice Mackay Room
Vancouver Public Library, Central Branch

Alliance Française de Vancouver brings Kiran Ahluwalia and Pandit Vithal Rao to Vancouver

Alliance Française de Vancouver brings Kiran Ahluwalia and Pandit Vithal Rao to Vancouver


I have learned that the ancestry of bagpipes goes back to India… but
I haven't quite learned the cross-over history of the French and
Indians yet.

This announcement was sent to me from Alliance Française.  I think
they heard that I speak better french than I speak
Chinese….  

Kiran Ahluwalia is great! 
While she specializes in traditional ghazal and Pujabie folksongs, she
has also done a world music cross-over album titled “Beyond Boundaries.”

I first saw her in the jazz opera Quebecite, written by George Elliot
Clarke
(Afro-American-MicMac First Nations Canadian) and D.D. Jackson
(Afro-American-Chinese-Canadian).  Incidentally, George and D.D. are writing a new jazz opera about Pierre Trudeau!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Alliance
de Vancouver is proud to announce the first
Vancouver appearance of one
of the grand masters of Indian vocal tradition


Pandit
Vithal Rao

presented
by Juno Award-winning singer Kiran Ahluwalia,

8
p.m. Thursday, November 16, at the Roundhouse Community Centre
181
Roundhouse Mews, Yaletown, Vancouver .

Juno
Award-winning singer Kiran
Ahluwalia presents an evening of
exquisite Indian vocal music, featuring her guru Pandit Vithal Rao, a grand master of the ghazal, romantic poems set to
music.

Born in 1930, Vithal Rao spent his early years as a
court musician in the palace of the last prince of
Hyderabad . Kiran will act as host ,
sing a duet or two with her teacher, and lead a Q &A session after the
performance. She will also tell stories from the extraordinary and colourful
life of Vithal Rao, one of the jewels in the crown of Indian culture, who is
visiting Canada
for the first time in 32 years.

At the
Roundhouse Community Centre, Yaletown,

Thursday, November 16.       8 p.m.

Tickets $22 in advance ($25 at door)

Banyen Books, Sophia Books, Zulu, Highlife, and
Alliance Française.

Also by phone at 604 231 7535 or online at  www.ticketstonight.ca.

More info at www.kiranmusic.com

image

 

Globe & Mail: “Head-tax Hip Hop” features Trevor Chan in Toronto

Globe & Mail: “Head-tax Hip Hop” features Trevor Chan and No Luck Club in Toronto Head-tax hip hop

Trevor Chan and the No Luck Club created a hip hop / mash up, titled “Our Story” that
addresses the head tax issue, using actual historic sound bites that
were racist descriptions about keeping Canada “White” and about the
threat of the “Yellow Peril.”  It is the 2006 equivalent version
of a protest song.

Earlier this year on January 14, I wrote about their musical/oratoria montage: “Our Story” head tax sound bites and turn table hip hop by No Luck Club

Now the Globe & Mail is writing about them, as they invade Toronto,
bringing the head tax issue to the ears of Toronto's hip hop and just
plain head tax hip culture.


Head-Tax Hip Hop
Special to the Globe and Mail

November 3, 2006

'We don't want Chinamen in Canada. This is a white man's country and white men will keep it so." The speaker's voice, sampled from our not-so-distant past, is but one of many shocking historic sound bites that Vancouver instrumental hip-hop trio No Luck Club spread throughout the cinematic beatscape of Our Story on their just-released album Prosperity.

Using found sound from old educational records and documentaries, No Luck Club's founding brothers Matt and Trevor Chan assembled a politicized "head-tax mash-up" about Canada's former anti-Chinese immigration policies.

"It's us. It's what we're about. It's our history. No one talks about it, but it happened," Trevor Chan explains. "[Our parents] have got their heads down -- they're just working, working, working. But we grew up in a multicultural society, so we're of the mind that you have to say something. What the hell? We're the only race this has happened to."

The Chan family was personally affected by the Chinese head tax and subsequent Exclusion Act. Beginning in 1885 -- after the completion of the railway, of course -- about 82,000 Chinese immigrants were charged up to $500, roughly two years wages, to enter Canada. Then, from 1923 to 1947, the government banned Chinese immigration altogether.

"Our family was separated by the Exclusion Act. Our great-grandfather was to come over and then bring his wife and kids, but you weren't allowed to bring your spouse over for decades," Chan says.

He notes that his parents didn't really "get" their hip-hop take on the topic: "They said "Oh, that's kind of interesting.' But what they did get was the press that surrounded it -- we actually had a lot of coverage in the Chinese media."

Head-tax redress has been a hot-button issue, especially in Vancouver, after two decades of protests finally earned an apology from Prime Minister Stephen Harper during the summer. The first three $20,000 compensation cheques went out on Oct. 20, but with the "symbolic" payments available only to the estimated 400 survivors and widows, rather than their descendants, the redress campaign continues.

When not providing the soundtrack for petition-signing parties, the Chan brothers and third member Paul Belen, a champion turntablist also known as DJ Pluskratch, have been struggling to get their music careers off the ground after their band name proved too apt.

While in high school back in 1989, the Chan brothers started their still-going-strong hip-hop radio show Straight No Chaser on Simon Fraser University's CJSF FM. Inspired by the cut 'n' paste sound collages of artists such as Coldcut and DJ Shadow, they eventually started recording their own music with Matt providing turntable cuts and scratches and Trevor working the laptop beats and samples. In 2000, they sent a demo to 75Ark, a well-respected American indie hip-hop label run by Dan (The Automator) Nakamura, best known for producing the first Gorillaz record.

"They got back to us a week later and said, 'Let's do something,' " Chan recalls. After signing a three-album contract, the brothers began working on a planned trilogy loosely based around the Chinese deities of good fortune.

But their luck proved fleeting when 75Ark folded the following year, just before their debut Happiness was set to drop. They found a new home with Ill Boogie Records, but soon after No Luck Club's first album finally came out in the fall of 2003, that label also closed its doors.

After adding DJ Paul Belen to their lineup in 2004, they got back to work on a follow-up album. But after so many label snafus, they decided to release Prosperity independently, although "it was a decision we made kicking and screaming, my friend."

This scratch-laden and beat-based sophomore opus further advances their virtuosic widescreen sound, bolstering their already eclectic retinue of jazz, funk, techno, classical and spy soundtrack samples with new Bollywood and Latin flavours.

Speaking of widening their geographic scope, the night after No Luck Club's CD release party at Toronto's Supermarket on Nov. 8, the trio will appear at the Rivoli to perform a world music show originally commissioned for the Vancouver Folk Festival.

"They probably thought we were going to take old folk records, throw on a drumbeat and start scratching over top," Chan says. "But we thought, 'Let's take our collage approach and expand it.' Usually we draw from funk and rock and electronic music, so we apply the same methods but take percussion from North Africa, combined with Indonesian gamelan music and throw in some Indian string instruments.
You create this crazy mess."

But though their album revels in Chinese culture through political sound bites and kung fu samples -- "people who watch Hong Kong films and know Cantonese might recognize some and be like, 'Oh my God, that's so badass' -- there's no Chinese instrumentation to be heard.

"This is something I really want to do, but I don't want to mess it up," Chan says. "Our grandfather and uncles do play traditional Chinese instruments so we did grow up listening to that. But I want to improve my production chops so that when we do create music using those elements, we're doing it a service rather than taking away from it," he says.

"We've got to represent."

No Luck Club plays a CD release party Nov. 8, 9 p.m., $6. Supermarket 268 Augusta Ave., 416-840-0501. The group plays a CBC Radio 3 taping Nov. 9, 8:30 p.m., $6. The Rivoli, 334 Queen St. W., 416-596-1908.


Jeff Chiba Stearns LIVE on MTV Canada starting Nov. 9th

Jeff Chiba Stearns LIVE on MTV Canada starting Nov. 9th


Jeff Chiba Stearns, film animator and creator of “What Are You Anyways?”, will be appearing on MTV Canada on Nov. 9th, Thursday 3:30pm PST, or  6:30pm EST.

Jeff recently won the inaugural award for Best Animated Short for the first annual Canadian Awards for Electronic and Animated Arts (CAEAA).  We recently chatted when we bumped into each other at the Vancouver Asian Film Festival on last Saturday morning.

http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2006/9/18/2338517.html

Here is Jeff's message:

Hi Everyone,

I just wanted
to let you know that I will be in Toronto appearing live as a guest on
MTV Canada's show MTV LIVE this Thursday, Nov. 9th. 

I will be discussing mixed-race and Hapa identity with a possible
focus on my animated film, “What Are You Anyways?”  The inteview, which
will be around 3-5 minutes, airs nationally on MTV Canada at 3:30pm in
the west and 6:30pm in the east this Thursday.  The show is an hour
long and I will appear sometime within that hour.  The episode I am on
is repeated countless times throughout the night and on the weekend. 
If you miss the first broadcast it will broadcast again later.  The
show's topic is “Mash-ups” and if you're interested check it out. 

Now, I just hope I don't get cut by some rapper.

-Jeff

Busy Weekend: Friday Night Canadian Club Gala, Saturday VAFF, Sat night Gonzo theatre

Busy Weekend:  Friday Night Canadian Club Gala, Saturday VAFF, Sat night Gonzo theatre

This weekend was very busy.  Reviews of these events will be up as soon as I can.


Canadian Club Vancouver
100 year anniversary Gala was on Friday night, November
3rd.  I am a board member, and am enjoying the friendship and
networking of these wonderful people devoted to helping make Canada
proud and recognizing our achievements as a nation and as a
culture.  The event was at the Westin Bayshore, and featured a
keynote by Lt. Governor Iona Campagnolo, history of the Canadian Club,
dance demonstration from Dancesport BC, and the Dal Richards Orchestra.

It was a great fun evening that celebrated the history of the club, 100
years ago.  Of course it was great for networking… But the
surprise feature was the re-patriation of the Richardson bagpipes from
Scotland, organized by Canadian Club Vancouver past-president Andrew
Winstanley, with an introduction told by Patrick Reid.  MC was
club member Cam Cathcart, an ex-CBC news reporter/producer.


Vancouver Asian Film Festival
, Saturday morning program featured films
Canadian-Chinese by Felix Cheng, and Between: Living in the Hyphen by
Anne-Marie Nakagawa, plus a panel discussion featuring UBC English
Assistant Professor Glenn Deer, author/editor Alexis Kienlen, UBC
English instructor Chris Lee, and Georgia Straight editorial assistant
Craig Takeuchi.

The films each explored sensitive topics of identity. 
Canadian-Chinese explored the relationship of language to first and
second generation immigrants, as director Felix Cheng interviewed his
parents and friends about the process of learning to speak Chinese and
his resistance of it when he was younger.

Poet Fred Wah, was featured in Between: Living in the Hyphen, speaking
about growing up mixed-race, and finding his own place in a Canada that
initially wanted to homogenize everybody into a White Anglo-Saxon
culture during the 1950's when he grew up.  Several other
interview subjects discuss growing up as products of racial hybridity,
and how they move between the ethnic cultures of either parent, as well
as mainstream White Canada.

Saturday Night, we went to see the theatre play Gonzo.  British
internees are housed in a Japanese prison of war camp in Shanghai,
China, and cared for a Japanese soldier named Gonzo.  Written and
directed by Gordon Pascoe, who grew up in the Ash prison of war camp in
Shanghai.  This play was based on his memories of actual
events. 

It is a lovely play that celebrates human kindness amongst the horrific
circumstances of WW2.  Pascoe finds a way to intertwine the
evacuation of Jews from Europe to China, the internment of
Japanese-Canadians in British Columbia, the pivotal war battles in
Africa, Europe and the Pacific into the tiny confines of a camp housing
British women and children.