verb issue r80 (may 31-june 6, 2013)

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ARTS CULTURE MUSIC REGINA PHOTO: COURTESY OF MEGAN THOMPSON FREE! READ & SHARE LONG LIVE AVACAL! The SCA makes history come alive SILVERSTEIN Post-hardcore from Ontario AFTER EARTH + 56 UP Films reviewed ASTRONAUTALIS DOES WHATEVER THE HELL HE WANTS ISSUE #80 – MAY 31 TO JUNE 6

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Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

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Page 1: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

ARTS CULTURE MUSIC REGINA

PHOTO: COURTESY OF MEGAN THOMPSON

FR

EE

!R

EA

D &

SH

AR

E

LONG LIVE AVACAL! The SCA makes history come alive

SILVERSTEIN Post-hardcore from Ontario

AFTER EARTH + 56 UP Films reviewed

ASTRONAUTALISDOES WHATEVER THE HELL HE WANTS

ISSUE #80 – MAY 31 TO JUNE 6

Page 2: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

VERBNEWS.COMVERB MAGAZINE CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

2MAY 31 – JUNE 6

PLEASE RECYCLE AFTER READING & SHARING

EDITORIALPUBLISHER / PARITY PUBLISHINGEDITOR IN CHIEF / RYAN ALLANMANAGING EDITOR / JESSICA PATRUCCOSTAFF WRITERS / ADAM HAWBOLDT + ALEX J MACPHERSONCONTRIBUTING WRITER / VICTORIA ABRAHAM

ART & PRODUCTIONPRODUCTION LEAD / BRITTNEY GRAHAM DESIGN LEAD / ANDREW YANKOCONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS / BAILY EBERLE, MAXTON PRIEBE, ADAM HAWBOLDT + ALEX J MACPHERSON

BUSINESS & OPERATIONSOFFICE MANAGER / STEPHANIE LIPSITACCOUNT MANAGER / BRODIE HALLETTACCOUNT MANAGER / KERRI SENKOWMARKETING MANAGER / VOGESON PALEYFINANCIAL MANAGER / CODY LANG

CONTACTCOMMENTS / [email protected] / 306 881 8372

ADVERTISE / [email protected] / 306 979 2253

DESIGN / [email protected] / 306 979 8474

GENERAL / [email protected] / 306 979 2253

CULTURE ENTERTAINMENTNEWS + OPINION

LONG LIVE AVACAL!Bringing history to life with the SCA. 3 / LOCAL

LIKE NO OTHER RACEScott Campbell, and the karting world championships. 4 / LOCAL

PUPPY LOVEOur thoughts on mandatory dog train-ing for dangerous breeds. 6 / EDITORIAL

COMMENTSHere’s what you had to say about abolishing tenure. 7 / COMMENTS

Q + A WITH BINDER TWINE & THE BALERSRegina bluegrass rockers. 8 / Q + A

NIGHTLIFE PHOTOS We visit La Bodega. 15 / NIGHTLIFE

LIVE MUSIC LISTINGSLocal music listings for May 31 through June 8. 14 / LISTINGS

AFTER EARTH + 56 UPWe review the latest movies. 16 / FILM

ON THE BUS Weekly original comic illustrations by Elaine M. Will. 18 / COMICS

BAND IN MOTIONPort Noise on making progress. 9 / ARTS

PUB FARE WITH FLAREThis week we visit Leopold’s Tavern. 12 / FOOD + DRINK

MUSICPoor Young Things, Ana Egge + Brad Paisley. 13 / MUSIC

THIS IS HOW THE WIND SHIFTSSilverstein’s new chapter. 9 / ARTS

GAME + HOROSCOPESCanadian criss-cross puzzle, weekly horoscopes and Sudoku. 19 / TIMEOUT

ON THE COVER: ASTRONAUTALISBreaking all the rules. 10 / FEATURE

PHOTO: COURTESY OF COURTNEY DUDLEY

VERBNEWS.COM@VERBREGINA FACEBOOK.COM/VERBREGINA

CONTENTS

Page 3: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

/VERBREGINA NEWS + OPINIONCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

3MAY 31 – JUNE 6

LOCALLOCAL

@VerbRegina

[email protected]

Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372

wo Viking warriors stand on a grassy knoll, poised for combat.

Dressed in gambesons and tunics, wearing metal Viking helmets and leather armour, they hold their swords and shields at the ready. Behind them the sun is setting. A heavy silence hangs in the air.

The shorter of the two, Eirikr of the Wood, grips his shield tight, and assumes his fighting stance. At first, he moves stealthily towards his op-ponent. Feints. Withdraws. And then, bang! The silence is broken when Eirikr brings his sword crashing down onto his opponent’s shield. It’s not a real sword, mind you. It’s made from a bamboo-like stick called rattan that’s splinter-resistant. But when it hits the shield with ungodly, violent force, the unnatural sounds of war echo down the grassy knoll into the field below.

But this isn’t real war. It’s not even real combat, for that

matter. It’s heavy weapon practice for the Viking warriors of the Barony of Myrgan Woods. And Eirikr of the Wood? He’s not a real Viking. No, for most of the week he’s a student and caring father named Chris Scheirer. But for a few hours every Wednesday evening, either in the gym at St. Mar-tin’s Church or in the field next to it, Scheirer meets up with his Society for Creative Anachronism pals, dons his Viking garb and sharpens his fighting skills, honing them for battle.

Founded in 1966 in Berkeley, Califor-nia, the Society for Creative Anachro-nism is a living history group dedicated

to studying and recreating life in the Medieval Ages — the operative word here being history.

“When you look at something like LARP [live action role playing], it can be history-based,” explains Scheirer, “But there’s also fantasy and crime and drama and stuff they do. At SCA, it’s strictly history-based. We don’t recre-ate specific battles of instances from history, but we recreate the way life was back then.”

The way SCA works is this: the entire realm is known as the “Knowne World,” which consists of 19 king-doms and more than 30,000 members worldwide. These kingdoms (ruled by kings, naturally) are broken up into principalities which, in turn, are di-vided into baronies and shires. Here in Saskatchewan we have the Barony of Mygran Wood (Saskatoon), the Shire of Sigelhundas (Regina) and the Shire of Valley Wold (Moose Jaw), all of which are in the Principality of Avacal, which is part of the Kingdom of An Tir, ruled by King UlfR and Queen Caoimhe.

Every year, warriors from the baronies and shires of Avacal (which spans from Saskatchewan to B.C.) meet at Quad War to engage in field battles and castle sieges, as well as heavy weapon, rapier and archery tourna-ments.

But don’t be mistaken. The SCA isn’t just a bunch of macho history buffs getting together to clobber each other with rattan weapons.

“Yeah, you have all the weap-ons tournaments and battles,” says Scheirer, “but it’s not just about fight-ing. It’s about recreating history. There are arts and science tournaments.

We’re recreating the coin-making of the day, the sewing, the candle mak-ing, the calligraphy, banner making, heraldry, the music. There’s also a feast and court — where the nobility will conduct court business.”

Lasting four or five days, Quad War (and other events of its nature) allows participants to wade back through the sands of time and get a serious sense of what life in the Medieval Ages was like. A life full of honour and integrity and courage. A life of arts, sciences, feasts and war.

Back on the grassy knoll in Mygran Wood, Eirikr of the Wood (aka Chris Scheirer) circles his practice partner. He uses his shield to parry his op-ponent’s attack, slides to the side and swings his sword, hard and fast, at his opponent’s shield arm.

“It’s all about angles,” says Gri-molfr Grjotgardsson, Baron of Mygran Wood, who is watching the evening’s action. “You always keep your eyes front to the target.”

Eyes fixed on his opponent, not where he’s aiming, Eirikr’s blow lands flush on the other person’s arm. And instinctively, nay, honourably, his op-ponent puts his arm behind his back and continues the fight one-handed.

And that’s how SCA fighting works. It’s not just pummel or be pummeled into bloodied submis-sion. There are rules and honour governing combat. If you’re hit on the arm, you tuck it behind your back and fight on. If you’re struck a blow to the leg, you drop to your knee and continue the battle until a

“fatal” blow to the head or torso puts an end to matters.

Nothing in SCA combat is choreo-graphed, though. Everything is done with speed and force, precision and instinct. Which, like every other full-contact sport out there, can lead natu-rally to injuries, like broken hands or split fingers. But for the most part, SCA weapons warfare is regulated for safety and fair play. “It’s also a good way to let off some steam,” mentions Scheirer, after his sparring session.

What he doesn’t mention is that SCA fighting, nay, the entire SCA expe-

rience, is also a good way to escape the hubbub of everyday life, to embrace the idealism — the sense of honour, integrity and courtesy inherent in the Medieval Ages— that has a hard time existing in the modern condition. Chris Scheirer doesn’t mention any of this — but he knows.

T

The Society for Creative Anachronism brings history to life BY ADAM HAWBOLDT

LONG LIVE AVACAL!PHOTO: COURTESY OF ADAM HAWBOLDT / VERB MAGAZINE

Page 4: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

VERBNEWS.COMNEWS + OPINION CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

4MAY 31 – JUNE 6

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE »

LOCAL

y breath comes in short, ragged gasps. The muscles in my

arms are on fire. My hands ache from grasping the wheel. I can feel sweat running down my back. The air rushing past my helmet is a muffled counterpoint to the roar of the engine. I clench my teeth and turn into the next corner.

As I sweep past the apex, my wheels running up onto the red and white striped kerb, I loosen my grip and allow the kart to move across the track. Then I press my foot down on the throttle. The kart, which consists of little more than a seat and an engine welded to a tubular frame, hurtles down the straight, the asphalt less than an inch beneath me. I glance at the timer mounted on the steering wheel: one minute and three seconds — almost ten seconds off the pace at the Martensville Speedway. The sweet surge of acceleration reminds me to think about the next corner, a difficult 180-degree bend known as a hairpin.

I brake hard and turn in. Every fibre of my being is screaming that I’ve left it too late, that I’m going too fast, that I’m going to crash. I turn hard and hold on, hoping the little slick tires can find some grip. Driving a racing kart is an astonishing experience — exhilara-tion and terror bound up with a shot of adrenaline that left me shaky for an hour afterward. It is a feeling Scott Campbell knows well.

Campbell, who is 34, has been rac-ing karts for more than two decades. His father was a successful kart driver, and Campbell’s switch from racing BMX bikes to racing karts was inevita-ble. Then he started to win. “I was kind of at the front of the racing right here in the club right away,” he recalls. “I would even be fast against some of the

senior guys when I was a junior. Then we started doing some of the regional races and I was still winning.”

The best racing drivers are united by their desire to win at all costs, a combination of innate ability and utter ruthlessness that manifests every time they get behind the wheel. Campbell is at a loss to explain where his competitive impulse comes from. “I think it’s really an extension of you,” he says. “You want to strive to be the best at all times. My wife doesn’t like playing board games with me, because I’m so competitive. It’s just this thing inside me.” This tendency emerged early. Campbell was at or near the front during his first races; he soon became so good that

he was forced to seek out competition elsewhere. In 2003, he qualified for the Rotax Max Grand Final, the world championships for karts carrying Rotax Max engines — two-stroke motors capable of carrying the fragile contraptions well past 120 km/h.

Because all karts in the Rotax Max Grand Final use the same chassis and

engine, raw ability is the only thing that matters. More than 15,000 racers around the world attempt to qualify; fewer than 300 make the cut. “It was a little hectic,” Campbell says of his first attempt at qualifying, in 2002. His dreams were shattered when a racing incident left him struggling for pace near the back of the pack. He never had a chance, and left dejected — but determined to improve. In 2003, the qualifying sessions started badly and got worse. In the pre-final, which determines the starting grid for the final, Campbell was leading when his kart made contact with debris from an accident. “I hit it and spun out, off the track. The second-place guy hit the same thing, and he spun out and hit

M

LIKE NO OTHER RACE

Scott Campbell’s journey to the karting world championships BY ALEX J MACPHERSON

…I’d never had that emotion, the feeling of winning something like it.

SCOTT CAMPBELL

PHOTOS: COURTESY OF CODY SCHINDEL

Page 5: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

@VERBREGINA NEWS + OPINION

5MAY 31 – JUNE 6

@VerbRegina

[email protected]

Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372

me. It blew my chain off, bent my rad, and I was done. I was just crushed.”

This incident forced Campbell to start from the back row of the grid. When the green flag dropped there were more than 30 karts arrayed in front of him, all piloted by drivers hungry for success. He put his head down and drove the race of a lifetime. “I drove all the way up to second place,” he says, a smile crossing his face. But his ordeal was far from over. A controversial penalty, for an incident behind him, cost Campbell a spot. He finished third, just outside the qualifying line. Once again, he drove back to Saskatchewan brimming with frustration and disappointment. “But then,” he says, “a month and a half later, the guy who ended up winning withdrew his spot because he couldn’t get a passport. And I was able to go to the world championships.”

Campbell’s first trip to the Grand Final, held at Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt, was an eye-opening experience. Kart-ing has for years been dominated by Europeans. They start driving early, and the best drivers go on to race in Formula One. “When you’re here and you’re the best in your country you think you’re going to be really fast,” Campbell says. “I went there and learned so much, even after I’d raced for so long.” Campbell qualified forty-first.

Between 2003 and 2009, Scott Campbell raced at the Grand Final, which is held in a different country each year. In 2010, at Muro Leccese in Italy, something astonishing hap-

pened. “I qualified on pole, I knew I was going to be quick,” Campbell recalls. “It was close. I had two guys right on my butt in that final, and it was all about protection — try not to let them pass me, don’t let them pass me.” As the karts screamed into the final corner Campbell knew he was going to win. The surge of emotion that accompanied the chequered flag was overwhelming. “When you come across that line, the emotion — I’d never had that emotion, the feeling of winning something like it.”

To experience the sensation of driving at high speed around a rac-ing circuit, I borrowed a kart from Ty Campbell, who last year won the Briggs and Stratton Senior Four-Stroke Division. He was just 16 years old. After a short briefing, I struggled into a borrowed racing suit, strapped on a helmet, and followed Ty out of the pits. The kart made a big impression, and so did the young driver in front of me. I drove as hard as I felt I could — and couldn’t keep up. But the thrill was immeasurable.

“If you’re not having fun, it’s not really worth it,” Scott Campbell told me when I drove back into the pits after what felt like several hours of pushing my body and mind to the absolute limit. “That’s one of the things about racing go-karts: you want to make sure you’re having fun at all times.” He ought to know. In a career spanning many hundreds of races, at his home track in Martensville and abroad, Scott Campbell has reached the pinnacle of the sport. In Martens-

ville, home of the Saskatoon Kart Racers Association, he is something of a hero. Children entering the sport, many of whom are still in elementary school, admire him. Campbell, who will make what he expects to be his last appearance at the Grand Final later this year, is happy to help.

“I try to now help out anybody that needs it, because I’ve experi-

enced it all around the world,” he says, pointing out that karting is a relatively inexpensive community-based sport, where teams often include members of several genera-tions. “Now, I just want to help out, do as much as I can to try and give someone else that opportunity. One of my ultimate goals would be if we had someone else on our team to go

[to the world championships], just to have that experience. It’s like no other race you’ve ever been in.”

CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

Page 6: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

VERBNEWS.COMNEWS + OPINION CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

6MAY 31 – JUNE 6

EDITORIAL

@VerbRegina

[email protected]

Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372

EDITORIAL

ot so very long ago, while getting out of a taxi late one evening,

one of our staffers saw a Rottweiler roaming the street near his house. When it saw our staff member exit the cab the dog lowered its head, began salivating, and charged.

After a short run and some quick intervention by the cabbie our em-ployee escaped unscathed, but the in-cident inspired heated debate around our non-existent water cooler. And the verdict we came to was that something should probably be done about so-called “dangerous dogs” — or rather, with their owners. You see, currently in Saskatchewan nearly all municipali-ties have the ability to pass bylaws to regulate or prohibit certain classes of animals within the municipality. But we feel laws like this are ineffective, impinge upon our freedom, and don’t address the root of the problem: ir-responsible dog owners.

Our spooked staffer aside, dogs can cause real trauma. In March, an eight-year-old child was attacked on a property near Indian Head. In 2012, two children were attacked at a park in Regina. And two years ago, a three-year-old girl was killed during a dog attack south of the Battlefords.

So let’s approach the situation from a sensible angle. Dogs who attack cannot be solely blamed for their be-haviour, even if they belong to a breed that many deem “dangerous.” There are simply too many factors that im-pact these incidents, everything from

heredity, early experience, socializa-tion, and victim behaviour, that need to also be considered. After all, for every animal you hear labelled “dangerous,” there are countless loving and well-behaved members of the same breed. So instead of supporting a knee-jerk “ban all dogs” approach, we propose a plan that focuses on education.

If you consider the stats for dog at-tacks in the U.S. and Canada between 1982 and 2012, you’ll notice something obvious: the top two breeds on the list represent substantially more incidents than the rest. According to the editor of Animal People, the top two types of purebred dogs responsible for the most deaths and/or maimings during those two decades were Pit Bull Terrier (1,306 incidents: 204 deaths, 1,102 maimings) and Rottweiler (346 incidents: 78, 268). Given that the next six dogs on the top

ten list are only responsible for 329 incidents combined, and that all other breeds caused deaths in the low single digits, it’s clear that better educating owners of Pit Bull Terriers and Rott-weilers would have by far the largest impact on public safety.

So we suggest that prospective owners of those breeds be required to

take a course in basic dog rearing and safety, and then be able to pass a test on responsible dog ownership before being allowed to adopt a new compan-ion. After all, in the wrong hands some dogs have a much higher potential to become dangerous weapons.

Society already regulates other po-tential dangerous weapons in the same fashion, based upon the likelihood that people may be hurt. For example, if you want to purchase a gun, you must first pass a course in basic training and safety. And if it’s a type of gun that statistically causes more deaths or could more easily lead to greater mayhem if used improperly (think eas-ily concealable handguns), there are additional regulations with which you must comply.

If guns are too sinister a comparison for you, think about motor vehicles.

No one would argue that vehicles are inherently “bad” or destructive, but to suggest that we should then allow anyone to operate a motor vehicle without any sort of training or certi-fication is ludicrous. And again in the case of vehicles, if you want to operate one that could cause more problems in the hands of the inexperienced, such

as a big rig, you need to take additional training courses and achieve extra certification, at your own expense.

Now this may sound like we’re in favour of eventually requiring training and licensing for owners of all dog breeds, but since our chief concern here is safety, we’re not advocating that. After all, it’s hard to argue that owning a small, animal like a Chihua-hua is as dangerous as driving a small car without doing driver’s ed or using a long gun without having taken a basic firearms safety course. So generally we think the system of dog ownership is fine as it is. It’s only owners of the dog equivalents of handguns and big rigs that we’re concerned with.

And that’s the important thing to remember: the onus is on the owner.

If you want to own a type of animal that has been known to hurt and kill people, then you must be able to prove that you can do so responsibly — any-thing less could lead to trouble and is a grave disservice to the dog.

Owning a dog is a privilege, not a right. It’s time we started treating it as such.

These editorials are left unsigned because they represent the opinions of Verb magazine, not those of the indi-vidual writers.

N

PUPPY LOVEOwners of statistically more dangerous dogs should take mandatory training courses

PHOTO: COURTESY OF NICOLE HOLLENSTEIN

And that’s the important thing to remember: the onus is on the owner.

VERB MAGAZINE

Page 7: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

/VERBREGINA NEWS + OPINIONCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

7MAY 31 – JUNE 6

COMMENTSCOMMENTS

Text your thoughts to881 VERB

8372

ON TOPIC: Last week we asked what you thought about abolishing tenure. Here's what you had to say:

POWERED BY THE CREW AT MOGA MOBILE

– Tenure is a contractual agree-ment between the university and professors. You cannot just arbitrarily get rid of it. Would you support firing senior union mem-bers because they are no longer as productive? And junior academ-ics are more likely to go for jobs at universities with tenure than without. You also ignored research, which is a significant part of get-ting tenured. Professors do a lot more than teach.

– It would be a good idea to abolish tenure(lifetime appointments) for university professors. No job is safe these days & theirs shouldn’t be any different. They would be kept on their toes more & perhaps they wouldn’t slack off & be com-placent as much. :0

– Agree to an extent about swap-ping out tenure with a shorter term, performance based contract. A nurse wouldn’t allowed to keep treating patients if they aren’t doing there job properly just be-cause they have a contract for job security, etc.

– Your article is ill-informed journalism. Tenure for academics is the same as a permanent job for any other worker. Thus, an academic may be dismissed for cause or laid off because of re-dundancy. Academics have very long probation, usually around 6 years, unlike the few months probation for other workers, and performance is assessed regularly for promotion and merit. You are conflating tenure and academic freedom, which allows academ-ics to challenge the orthodoxy of their disciplines and university administration. That is different

from tenure which simply means a permanent job. Your proposal for renewable contracts would make it much more difficult for univer-sities to attract and retain high quality professors. Your proposal would therefore jeopardize, not improve, the quality of education. Tim Quigley Professor Emeritus of Law University of Saskatchewan

– Interesting argument for ab-solving tenure though not revo-lutionary; it has been discussed quite a bit in the past. Bet you’ll get hate mail! If I was a prof I wouldn’t like it.

OFF TOPIC

– Just read your story on sex addiction. Its good to see tough subjects out there and it most likely will help someone else with this addiction. The person was very courageous to let his story out and I pray he keeps on the healthy path.

In response to “Might as well face it, you’re

addicted to sex,” Local #78 (May 17, 2013)

– Really enjoyed stephanie pool-ers ideas and outlook on anar-chism. we need more people like HER in this world.

In response to “Anarchy in the SK,” Local

#79 (May 24, 2013)

– Stephanie Pooler is a thought-ful, well spoken woman and I thoroughly enjoyed reading her interpretation of anarchy. Really opened my eyes up to something I didn’t know about before good job Stephanie!

In response to “Anarchy in the SK,” Local

#79 (May 24, 2013)

– Just like any political party/belief system/ way of thinking, there’s many factions within an umbrella group. Not what I was expecting when reading about anarchy, and was pleasantly surprised.

In response to “Anarchy in the SK,” Local

#79 (May 24, 2013)

SOUND OFF

– I used to believe different but 55 yrs on this planet has shown that except for rare exceptions most humans are stupid dark selfish little things, barely more than ani-mals. And its not a lack of capacity to be something more. Its a choice people make because rising above the animal takes effort!

– History tells us that we have always killed each other. Zombie

cults recreate the very real fear that millions of us have experi-enced and continue to experience.

– Booze allowed in theaters? Might cause troubles with drunks but at $23 a ticket might attract a higher class of drinkers only time will tell.

– BOOZE AT THE THEATER? WOOHOO

– WTF? No more contests in the Verb? That’s what made it differant from the Metro I think I’ll be read-ing Metro now it has new papers every day.

– A winner never quits and a quit-ter never wins.

– The guy who perdicted that the Blades wouldn’t make the playoff got it right go cry somewhere else you bunch of sissy choke artists!

NEXT WEEK: What do you think of manda-tory training for dangerous dogs? Pick up a copy of Verb to get in on the conver-sation:

We print your texts verbatim each week. Text in your thoughts and reactions to our stories and content, or anything else on your mind.

Page 8: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

VERBNEWS.COMCULTURE CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

8MAY 31 – JUNE 6

Q + A

BINDER TWINE & THE BALERS

B

Regina bluegrass group on the culture of Kentucky bluegrass and the joy of learning BY ALEX J MACPHERSON

But what really got me was that pure, acoustic, no-frills playing…

ANTHONY BZDELL

PHOTO: COURTESY OF BIRDSONG COMMUNICATIONS

@VerbRegina

[email protected]

Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372

luegrass music is unusual because it developed not as a

source of mass entertainment, but as a means for friends to entertain themselves. Created in kitchens and barns across Appalachia, blue-grass has remained more or less unchanged for the last century, de-spite the ways in which recording has broadened the horizons. Bind-er Twine and the Balers is a group of guys from Regina who share not only a love of the traditional tunes that make up the bluegrass canon, but also a desire to play music that pushes tradition into the modern era. They have been entertain-ing crowds across Saskatchewan with rapid-fire flatpicking and manic clawhammer — the grist of Kentucky bluegrass — for several years. I caught up with guitarist Anthony Bzdell to talk about play-ing bluegrass in 2013.

Alex J MacPherson: You guys come from different backgrounds. How did you get involved in Binder Twine and the Balers?

Anthony Bzdell: I’m one of the new mem-bers. Our banjo player, Jack [Dublanica], Sean Farr, our mandolin

player, and Trevor Bennett — they all played in a group called the Barn Cats for years. That’s the root of the group. They wanted to play more traditional bluegrass, so they made some changes,

and they found me through one of the music stores. I moved to Regina from a small town, and was teaching in town, and just through word of mouth they got in touch with me. I was holding out for a bluegrass band!

AJM: You have played a ton of dif-ferent styles, from rock and blues to jazz and pop. What’s the appeal of playing bluegrass?

AB: From a guitar perspective? To tell you the truth, it all started when I was just starting guitar. I grew up in the ‘80s; that’s when I was really learning how to play, and there was a lot of big hair bands and lots of

flash. But what really got me was that pure, acoustic, no-frills playing, and the only thing that you really need is that skill and dedication. That’s what really drew me to it.

AJM: The other aspect has to be the cul-ture surrounding bluegrass music, too.

AB: Exactly. It’s all inclusive. It was pretty apparent to me. I’ve taught at this music camp at Kenosee Lake, Kenosee Lake Kitchen Party, and

the thing that really stands out is the students and the teachers, they hang out with each other, and the real basis of that is we’re all students — it’s just that some of us have been doing it for longer.

AJM: What’s it like playing with the other guys?

AB: Everyone’s such a great player in this band, and has extensive experi-ence in all kinds of different styles of music. We’re all pretty busy people, and when it comes time to rehearse the big thing is you’ve got to have your part down. We push one another. It’s a fun experience. And as musi-

cians, that’s how we get better. Playing with better players is the key to that. But you’re part of a team, and you don’t want to let the team down.

AJM: What about picking tunes? There are some like “Foggy Mountain Break-down” most people will know, but there are so many songs that are known only to veterans. What’s your process like?

AB: We look a lot at what Bill Monroe has done. We’re big Ralph Stanley

fans. And, of course, Earl Scruggs and Lester Flatt. We look at tunes that do touch on the traditional, because that’s what we set out to be — a traditional bluegrass group. And then we look at some of the people that have evolved that style of music, right from when Bill Monroe started, and we look at how they hang onto that tradition but take it a little step further.

Binder Twine and The BalersJune 8 @ The Exchange$15 (advance) @ Vintage Vinyl, Bach and Beyond, Buy the Book; $20 (door)

Page 9: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

@VERBREGINA CULTURECONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

9MAY 31 – JUNE 6

ARTS

P ort Noise is a band in mo-tion. Born from a pair of

Regina high schools and raised in the heady days of confu-sion and possibility that follow graduation, the four-piece rock band is still trying to nail down a definitive sound. But their sonic experiments are a revealing portrait of a band poised on the edge of something bigger.

The band’s debut album, As Lies Bind, is an exploration of sounds and textures. “Needle,” which opens as a gentle acoustic ballad before surging into a distortion-laden chorus, follows the trajectory established by numerous radio-friendly hard rock bands. “Apathy” fuses a thunderous metal riff to bass player Angus Livingstone’s wavering vocal line. “Walls Collide” feels a bit like an oldschool punk song before a towering wall of noise smashes into the mix.

“It was very much a natural thing,” Livingstone says of the band’s experiments, adding that each of the members — guitar-ists Chris Johnston and Andrew

Strilchuk, and drummer Matthew Garthson — contribute a variety of influences to the band. “We were never really intending to go into any sort of classified genre. It was just sort of natural.”

Livingstone says the band is working on a follow-up to As Lies Bind. But, he adds, their status as an independent band means making records is never assured. Working outside the record label umbrella has advantages, but it is a peril-ous course for an untested group. According to Livingstone, simply finding venues is a struggle.

“It’s becoming increasingly dif-ficult,” he says. “Here in Regina, we lost the Distrikt. The scene is on its last legs here, and we really need

to do something to keep it going.” These problems are compounded when it comes time to tour. Booking a national tour is a major headache under the best of circumstances; for a band like Port Noise, it is unfath-omably difficult.

But Livingstone plans to soldier on, to continue writing and record-ing and developing a more concise sound. “We love the music, first and foremost,” he says. “And we’ve grown so much in the last two years that looking back now, it’s a totally different world we’re in musically. I wouldn’t trade it for anything.”

Port NoiseJune 7 @ The Exchange$TBA

PHOTO: COURTESY OF ERIK SIRKE

PHOTO: COURTESY OF UNIVERSAL MUSIC CANADA

lbum sales have been deci-mated by the rise of the sin-

gle, but Silverstein, a post-hardcore band from Ontario, have built their career on the depth of albums — and according to drummer Paul Koehler, that isn’t going to change.

“At least for us, the important thing is making records, not making singles,” he says. “If we were a band that was successful making singles … it would probably be different for us. But we’ve always made records. People who are into our band are buying the record, and that’s what they’re invested in.”

This is apparent on This Is How The Wind Shifts, the group’s sixth full-length studio album. A concept album, This Is How The Wind Shifts is framed as two sides of the same coin. Each song on the front side of the record is paired with one on the back; their titles run together, creating

a longer phrase, but the perspectives are noticeably different.

The titles tracks, “This Is How” and “The Wind Shifts,” can be played simultaneously, creating a song that captures the essence of the record — the contrast between escapism and acceptance. But This Is How The Wind Shifts contains more than mere sonic trickery. It also captures the scope of the band’s career. “Hide Your Secrets” references Silverstein’s early years with its pop influences. “Stand Amid The Roar,” on the other hand, is edgy — and it was written by the new guy, guitarist Paul Marc Rousseau.

Following the departure of long-time lead guitarist Neil Boshart, the band called Rousseau, who hurled himself into the fray. “It can definitely be worrisome, especially at the begin-ning of the creative process,” Koehler says. “Anybody can learn the songs, perform them live. But when it’s the creative process, it’s a scary time for any band. But the nice thing is he jumped in, and had written a song. That broke the ice immediately.”

More importantly, Rousseau’s contribution rejuvenated the band; the group came closer together and made

the best album of their career. This Is How The Wind Shifts is exactly what an album should be: a look back at previ-ous experiments with broad concepts and engaging sounds, as well as a hint at how much more can be achieved.

SilversteinJune 9 @ Exchange$25 @ Vintage Vinyl, Ticketedge

@VerbRegina

[email protected]

Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372

BAND IN MOTION Port Noise are making progress BY ALEX J MACPHERSON

THIS IS HOW THE WIND SHIFTS A new chapter in the history of Ontario post-hardcore outfit Silverstein BY ALEX J MACPHERSON

A

Page 10: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

VERBNEWS.COMCULTURE CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

10MAY 31 – JUNE 6

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE »

FEATURE

CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE »

WHATEVER THEHELL I WANT

I think that the wave of exciting … creativity that’s going on in rap music is not exclusive to rap music at all.

ANDY BOTHWELL

ndy Bothwell is a genuine innovator in an industry saturated

with forgettable clichés and tired banalities. But Bothwell, who performs as Astronautalis, does not seem particularly inserted in progress for the sake of progress. He just wants to make music that thrills and inspires him — and in a career spanning more than a decade, that is exactly what he has done.

“I make whatever the hell I want,” Bothwell says from a tour stop in Germany, his languid drawl cutting through a bad Skype connection. “That’s sort of an oversimplification. But when you feel your inspiration pull you one way, you go that way. You make a record that inspires you, a record that thrills you. When you have an idea, you chase it down. That’s all there is to it.”

Bothwell, who is 31, has been on the cutting edge of rap music since

the early part of the last decade. After emerging from Jacksonville, Florida, he set about impressing fans and critics with his distinc-tive brand of genre-bending rap. His first album,You and Yer Good Ideas, was released in 2003; each

of his subsequent records, includ-ing 2011’s This Is Our Science, has upped the ante significantly.

Because Bothwell was trained in theatre, and not in music, he sub-scribes to few rules or conventions. Instead, he operates like a sponge, soaking up ideas and imprint-

ing them with his own distinctive stamp. And his entrance into the world of rap music could not have come at a better time. Unlike rock and pop, the structures of which were established in the 1960s, rap has not yet been hardened by time

and experience. When Bothwell started making music, white per-formers like the Beastie Boys were a novelty, and the idea of making a career out of music “seemed auda-cious and impossible.” Today, rap offers something for everybody. The tension created by outsiders

FEATURE

No rules, no boundaries for genre-bending rapper Astronautalis BY ALEX J MACPHERSON

A

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/VERBREGINA CULTURECONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

11MAY 31 – JUNE 6

PHOTO: COURTESY OF MICHAEL SPEAR HAWKINS

PHOTO: COURTESY OF CABOTHWELL

has given way to a sense of limit-less possibility, a tantalizing idea that the absence of rules will keep the music flowing. “I think rap music is at one of its most thrilling points right now,” he says. “It’s re-ally just becoming excitingly strati-fied, and there’s some rap music for everybody.”

This Is Our Science, his latest record, captures the spirit of this

evolution. Bothwell considers himself a rapper, and most of the songs on the record are anchored by his glassy delivery and penchant for percussive phrases. But his choice of unconventional musical backdrops shows that his vision is broader than any one genre or

style. “Contrails,” a collaboration with Tegan Quin of the rock band Tegan and Sara, hints at the spiky architecture of electronic music in the 1990s before settling into a comfortable groove — a pair of arpeggiated guitar licks cast against an airy synthesizer line. (Bothwell’s collaborations, like his albums, transcend genre; he says he wants to cut a track with Dr. John.)

In some respects, “Contrails” is closer to indie rock than rap. Bothwell’s dense verses are punctu-ated by a simple chorus, repeated several times, which accentuates the tension between his drawl and Quin’s airy alto. It’s the same story on “Thomas Jefferson,” which juxta-poses sparse verses with a half-sung shoegaze chorus that soars higher than anything he has ever released. “The River, the Woods,” sounds like a straightforward rap song — until Bothwell’s perspective, which feels like an ode to Fitzgerald’s “fresh, green breast of the new world,” reveals a depth absent from most contemporary rap.

Many artists claim to bend genres and fuse styles. More often than not, this is what happens when a pair of similar ideas run together. Bothwell’s music is much more sophisticated. By explor-ing the tension between poles, he paves the way for a musical vision that transcends the borders of genre, style, and form. This Is Our Science is music in motion, the manifestation of raw creativity in a world without rules.

This freedom is the essence of Bothwell’s project. “I think that the wave of exciting innovation and cre-ativity that’s going on in rap music is not exclusive to rap music at all,” he explains, pointing to the revolution in technology that has made the tools of creation accessible to anybody with a few hundred dollars and a good idea. “I think it’s happening in all music, in all creative mediums. If you have an idea that’s good enough and a work ethic that’s hard enough to support it, then you’ll be able to do something exciting — something that is unique and targets an audience you wouldn’t normally be able to target [like] ten years ago.”

Innovation is often misun-derstood. Artists who break new

ground are seen as outsiders, doomed to exist on the fringes until the rest of society catches up. Bothwell has skirted this trap by writing lyrics that are accessible and relatable. Many of his songs address the problems of modernity in terms that appeal to our most ba-sic impulses — greed and empathy, self-preservation and compassion, equality and progress. His lyrics frequently explore the moments of rupture, the seconds before and after tranquility is shattered by vio-lence and chaos — and the seconds when decisions have to be made. Bothwell takes time to write about people dangling from the fraying thread of existence, people on the edges of oblivion, but he does not see himself as a political agent.

“I don’t know if I really feel my-self taking on that sort of respon-sibility,” he says after a pause. “I don’t see myself as a voice for the voiceless. I see myself as a voice for my voice, and my interests tend to cover a pretty wide berth and go in all different directions, and a lot of times I pick up some hitch-hikers along the way. But I don’t see myself as a Woody Guthrie.” Instead, Bothwell writes about things that interest him: travel, art, politics, history, science, and above all, change. His relentless tour schedule opens him up to countless new experiences, and he enjoys his status as an observer. “I write about what’s exciting,” he says. “Some-times that excitement comes from other people’s lives, sometimes it comes from my life, sometimes it comes from history, sometimes it comes from other science, other art. It’s more or less just writing the songs that thrill me, that inspire me, and that’s the only way I know.”

Bothwell’s reluctance to be iden-tified as a political actor, despite the fact that his songs are laden with political and social commen-tary, stems from his aversion to telling people what to do. This Is Our Science is appealing because it leaves the difficult decisions to the listener; Bothwell merely lays out the facts. “I really try to avoid writing songs that tell people what to do,” he says. “I find most of those songs stupid. I think that they’re very naïve and I think that they’re

very arrogant. I’d rather just show people a picture and let them de-cide what they should do with it.”

This Is Our Science is two years old. Bothwell says a follow-up is in production, but he won’t give too much away. “I’m writing not neces-sarily a strictly journalistic approach, but thinking more like a reporter from the front lines of the rest of the world,” he says. “I’m particularly fascinated with places that are sort of in transition, places that are teetering on the edge of success or failure. It’s an interesting time to be alive and it’s an interesting time to see these parts of the world, and I get a lot of inspira-tion from these places — and that’s what I’m generally writing about.”

Ultimately, it doesn’t matter what he writes about. Bothwell will continue to do whatever the hell he wants. Music will change and evolve. And so will Astronautalis.

Astronautalis @ MoSoFest Only show in SaskatchewanJune 15 @ Amigos Cantina (Saskatoon)$15 (door) or free with MoSoFest Priority Pass

@VerbRegina

[email protected]

Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372

Page 12: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

VERBNEWS.COMCULTURE CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

12MAY 31 – JUNE 6

12MAY 24 – MAY 30

FOOD + DRINK

PUB FARE WITH FLARE

L

@VerbRegina

[email protected]

Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372

LET’S GO DRINKIN’ VERB’S MIXOLOGY GUIDE

BACON CHOCOLATE VODKA

You’re probably thinking: chocolate and bacon … umm. But trust me, the smoky flavour of the bacon makes chocolate do things it never knew it could.

INGREDIENTS

2oz Bakon Vodka2oz chocolate liqueur1oz Irish creamA splash of cream

Photos courtesy of Maxton Priebe

DIRECTIONS

Combine in a cocktail shaker and shake with ice. Strain and pour into a sugar-rimmed martini or rocks glass.

eopold’s Tavern, which is named for the Duke of Al-bany, isn’t just providing a

different take on pub fare; they are taking it to a whole other level.

It was a food dream come true. First came the pulled pork, which had

been slow roasting all night, generous-ly heaped in between two homemade buns, and crowned with fresh, tangy, homemade coleslaw. A pile of skinny double-fried Yukon gold fries graced its fragrant side. Next up was the aru-gula beet salad, with red beets, walnuts

and goat cheese. Shortly after came the bucket o’ bacon; literally, a cute tin bucket full of thick-cut Canadian bacon, paired with a much smaller bucket of real maple syrup.

As if this feast was not enough, a mushroom poutine, with huge pieces of melted cheese, button mushrooms and homemade vegetarian mushroom gravy, and a veggie burger with Leop-old’s signature Caesar salad on the side completed the food party.

“Everything we do is made in-house. We try to have a very high standard of food,” said head chef Matt Hovind (formerly of Table 10 and Bushwakkers).

Shedding all reviewer pretensions, I dove into the food like I’d been starv-ing for days, “trying” each dish again and again. The arugula salad surprised me with its unique and refreshing mint flavour, and the mushroom gravy on the poutine blew me away. But it was the veggie burger that took the top spot and made me invite Hovind to live in my kitchen. Although he de-clined, it was still undoubtedly the best veggie burger I have ever had … and I’ve had my share of delicious veggie burgers. It was a well-balanced, per-fectly sized, savoury taste bud party of spice, cilantro, and black beans, all topped with a mix of Monterey Jack, mozzarella and cheddar cheese

between two crispy-on-the-outside-fluffy-on-the-inside buns.

After all that came the dessert: a chocolate and vanilla ice cream sundae topped with a mixed berry raspberry vodka compote, Guinness chocolate sauce, and butterscotch made with real butter and scotch (you guessed it: in-house).

But Leopold’s is more than amazing food. Their beer menu is varied, and you have the option of drinking from a Das Boot, which is way more fun than drinking from a pitcher. The intimate space inside is inviting, while the patio out back, with its twinkling lights and fence, makes the experience feel like a backyard party.

“What we are doing is making it so you can come at any time, enjoy some good, inexpensive food and have a few beverages. We want peo-ple to feel the inviting atmosphere at 11 a.m. and again at one a.m. on the same day,” said owner/operator Greg Hooker. “We are working on becom-ing the neighbourhood tavern.”

Leopold’s Tavern 2330 Albert Street | (306) 525 5367

Leopold’s Tavern provides delicious food in a homey atmosphere BY VICTORIA ABRAHAM

Page 13: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

@VERBREGINA CULTURECONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

13MAY 31 – JUNE 6

MUSIC

PHOTOS COURTESY OF: THE ARTIST/ THE ARTIST/ THE ARTIST

COMING UPNEXT WEEK

POOR YOUNG THINGS

You like straightforward, no frills rock music? Then you’re going to dig Poor Young Things. A pop-rock quintet out of Toronto by way of Thunder Bay, Poor Young Things is a hard-working, raw rock band that came out swinging with their debut album, The Heart. The Head. The End. Since then, they haven’t let up one bit. Touring the country from coast to coast, Poor Young Things have honed a brand of no-gimmick music that’s reminiscent of Canadian rockers like Joel Plaskett, Matt Mays or The Dudes. It’s the kind of music that wins awards (Sirius XM Emerging Artist of the Year) and a fan base that continues to grow with each passing sweat-filled show. Don’t miss them when they swing through Regina next week.

@ THE EXCHANGEWEDNESDAY, JUNE 12 – $TBD

Ana Egge may be considered an American singer/songwriter, but she was born right here in Saskatchewan. In Estevan, to be precise. Not long after being born, though, she moved to North Dakota with her family, then New Mexico. But regardless of where she was born or grew up, Egge has proven over the years to be one heckuva songwriter and multi-instrumen-talist. Playing the guitar, mandolin, bottleneck slide guitar and piano, Egge puts on a folk show that’s laid-back and thought-provoking. Her latest album, Bad Blood, was produced by Steve Earle and is full of intimate, engaging songs about pain and hardship, The songs from this album strike a chord with any-one who has a heart.

ANA EGGE

If you’re a fan of country music, how can’t you be a fan of Brad Paisley? He’s easily one of the biggest, bright-est and most successful country acts working today, and his 18 #1 singles, roomful of awards, and the fact that all of his albums have gone at least gold surely attests to that. Known for playing infectious songs laced with humour, pop culture references and unforgettable choruses, Paisley’s latest album, Wheelhouse, is a departure of sorts for this laid-back musician. Full of difficult and uncomfortable songs like “Accidental Racist,” “Southern Comfort Zone” and “Those Crazy Christians,” Wheelhouse takes Paisley’s trademark wit and thoughtful lyrics, and uses them to examine what it is to be a Southerner in this day and age. Tickets through Ticketmaster.

– By Adam Hawboldt

BRAD PAISLEY

@ ARTFUL DODGERSATURDAY, JUNE 8 – $TBD

@ BRANDT CENTRETHURSDAY, OCTOBER 24 – $63+

Keep up with Saskatchewan music. saskmusic.org

SASK MUSIC PREVIEWIt’s time to register for the Stickman Drum Experience, happening June 27-July 1 at the Cedar Lodge on Black Strap Lake! Stickman is a multi-day drum camp that provides an immersive experience for a wide range of ages and abilities. 2013 artists include Scott Pellegrom, Matt Halpern, and more. See www.stickmandrumexperience.com to register and for more information.

Page 14: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

VERBNEWS.COMENTERTAINMENT CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

14MAY 31 – JUNE 6

LISTINGSLISTINGS

The most complete live music listings for Regina.

MAY 31 » JUNE 8

31 1

7 85 63 42

S M T W T

Have a live show you'd like to promote? Let us know!

GET LISTED

[email protected]

FRIDAY 31THE GREAT FOLK NIGHT / Artesian on 13th

— Featuring Hello Lady, The Dead South,

Kory Istace vs. The Time Pirates and The

Empire Associates. 8pm / $20

COAL CREEK BOYS / Artful Dodger — Gritty

alt-country from Alberta. 8pm / Cover TBD

GUIDEWIRE / The Club — Local EDM artist

who’ll make you move. 7:30pm / Cover TBD

DJ JUAN LOPEZ / Envy Nightclub — This

DJ loves requests, nothing is off limits.

10pm / $5

ONE BAD SON / The Exchange — With Val

Halla, Automatic and The Snake Oil Sales-

men. 7pm / $25(advance), $30(door)

DJ PAT & DJ KIM / Habano’s Martini & Cock-

tail Club — Local DJs spin top 40 hits every

Friday night that are sure to get you on the

dance floor. 9pm / $5 cover

BIG CHILL FRIDAYS / Lancaster Taphouse

— Come out and get your weekend started

with DJ Fatbot. 10pm / Cover TBD

ADAM’S RIB / McNally’s Tavern — Rock n’

reggae jam band. 10pm / $5

DIANA DESJARDINS / The Pump Road-

house — A sassy country songstress. 9pm /

Cover TBD 

BILLY GRIND / The Sip Nightclub -  Alt-

country from right here in Regina. 9pm /

Cover TBD 

CHRIS HENDERSON / Whiskey Saloon — A

country act that’s big on talent. 8pm / $10

DJ LONGHORN / Whiskey Saloon — Come

check out one of Regina’s most interactive

DJs. 8pm / Cover TBD

SATURDAY 1DJ JUAN LOPEZ / Envy — This DJ loves

requests, nothing is off limits. 10pm / $5

KYLESA, BLOOD CEREMONIAL, WHITE HILLS, LAZER/WULF / The Exchange — A

metal marathon in Queen City. 7:30pm /

$20 (ticketedge.ca)

PRETTY ARCHIE / Lancaster Taphouse —

Folk, bluegrass and country from Cape

Breton. 9pm / No cover

ADAM’S RIB / McNally’s Tavern — Rock n’

reggae jam band. Also appearing: the Ross

Neilsen Band. 10pm / $5

DIANA DESJARDINS / The Pump Road-

house — A sassy country songstress. 9pm /

Cover TBD

BILLY GRIND / The Sip Nightclub -  Alt-

country from right here in Regina. 9pm /

Cover TBD 

JAM SESSIONS / Smokin’ Okies BBQ —

Promoting blues and country blues, come in

and play or listen and be entertained. 2pm

/ No cover

CHRIS HENDERSON / Whiskey Saloon — A

country act that’s big on talent. 8pm / $10

SUNDAY 2CRAIG CARDIFF / The Club — This soft-

voiced singer/songwriter is from Ontario.

8pm / Cover TBD

NORTHCOTE / The Exchange — A singer/

songwriter from BC. Featuring Matinee and

The Crackling. 7pm / $13 (ticketedge.ca)

MONDAY 3OPEN MIC NIGHT / The Artful Dodger —

Come down and jam! 8pm / No cover

MONDAY NIGHT JAZZ / Bushwakker Brew-

pub — Featuring the Ministry of Groove.

8pm / No cover

THE SUPERSUCKERS, LYDIA LOVELESS, BLACK THUNDER / The Exchange — Punk,

alt-country, stoner rock ... it’s all here. 8pm /

$20 (ticketedge.ca)

TUESDAY 4TROUBADOUR TUESDAYS / Bocados —

Come check out some live tunes from local

talents every week, then bring an instru-

ment and partake in the open mic/jam

night. 8pm / No cover

WEDNESDAY 5WEDNESDAY NIGHT FOLK / Bushwakker

Brewpub — Featuring Luke Blu Guthrie.

9pm / No cover

JEFFERY STRAKER / Casino Regina — Open-

ing for Seinfeld’s Jason Alexander. 8pm /

$60+ (casinoregina.com)

AUTARIC, DESECRATE SCRIPTURE, XUL / The Club — Hard-driving metal, all night.

9pm / $10

MATT EPP AND THE AMORIAN ASSEMBLY / Lancaster Taphouse — The Learning to Lose

Control album release. 9pm / Cover TBD

JAM NIGHT AND OPEN STAGE / McNally’s

Tavern — Come on down and enjoy some

local talent. 9pm / No cover

THURSDAY 62 BEATS & A HAT / Artful Dodger — Pre-

sented by DJ Verbal & E-Major, come enjoy

two DJs with guest performances the first

Thursday of every month. 7pm / $5 in

advance or at the door

STRIKER / The Club — Heavy metal out of

Edmonton. 7:30pm / Cover TBD

DECIBEL FREQUENCY / Gabbo’s Night-

club — A night of electronic fun. 10pm /

Cover $5

PS FRESH / The Hookah Lounge — With DJ

Ageless and DJ Drewski. 7pm / No cover

OPEN MIC NIGHT / King’s Head Tavern

— Come out, play some tunes, sing some

songs, and show Regina what you got. 8pm

/ No cover

BLACK DRINK CRIER / McNally’s Tavern — A

local original. 8:30pm / $5

THE SERVICE / Pump Roadhouse — A

rockin’ four-piece from Winnipeg. 9pm /

Cover TBD

DJ LONGHORN / Whiskey Saloon — Come

check out one of Regina’s most interactive

DJs as he drops some of the best country

beats around. 8pm / Cover TBD

TIM ROMANSON / Whiskey Saloon —

Country done right. 10pm / $5

FRIDAY 7LA HORA LOCA WITH DR. BIRD AND BLUE BEAT / Artful Dodger — Come check it out!

8pm / Cover TBD

CRAWLING FROM THE ASHES, VIRID / The

Club — Local alt-rock groups. 7:30pm /

Cover TBD

YES WE MYSTIC, DANNY GOERTZ / Creative

City Centre — Indie folk from Winnipeg

and Regina. 7pm / $10

DJ JUAN LOPEZ / Envy Nightclub — This

DJ loves requests, nothing is off limits.

10pm / $5

PORT NOISE, BRAINDEAD ROMEO, MAJETIK / The Exchange — A trio of Regina rockers.

8pm / $5 from band members

DJ PAT & DJ KIM / Habano’s Martini & Cock-

tail Club — Local DJs spin top 40 hits every

Friday night that are sure to get you on the

dance floor. 9pm / $5 cover

BIG CHILL FRIDAYS / Lancaster Taphouse

— Come out and get your weekend started

with DJ Fatbot, who’ll be doing his spinning

thing every Friday night. 10pm / Cover TBD

SEAN BURNS BAND / McNally’s Tavern — A

talented singer/songwriter from Ontario.

10pm / $5

THE SERVICE / Pump Roadhouse — A

rockin’ four-piece from Winnipeg. 9pm /

Cover TBD

ALBERT / Pure Ultra Lounge — Appearing

every Friday night, come listen to Albert as

he does his spinning thing. 10pm / $5 cover

DJ LONGHORN / Whiskey Saloon — Come

check out one of Regina’s most interactive

DJs as he drops some of the best country

beats around. 8pm / Cover TBD

TIM ROMANSON / Whiskey Saloon —

Country done right. 10pm / $5

SATURDAY 8ANA EGGE, DON AMERO / Artful Dodger

— Two creative and innovative musicians.

8pm / Cover TBD

MANDY EBEL, SEAN FOLK / The Club — An

award-winning singer-songwriter will

be performing her soulful, edgy vocals.

8:30pm / $5+

DJ JUAN LOPEZ / Envy Nightclub — This DJ

loves requests, nothing is off limits. 10pm

/ $5

BINDER TWINE AND THE BALERS, GRAIN REPORT, THE RUSTY AUGERS / The Ex-

change — Badass bluegrass. 7:30pm / $15

(advance), $20 (door)

SEAN BURNS BAND / McNally’s Tavern — A

talented singer/songwriter from Ontario.

10pm / $5

THE SERVICE / Pump Roadhouse — A

rockin’ four-piece from Winnipeg. 9pm /

Cover TBD

DREWSKI / Pure Ultra Lounge — Doing

what he does best, every Saturday night.

Come on down and dance the night away

with this local DJ. 10pm / $5 cover

TIM ROMANSON / Whiskey Saloon —

Country done right. 10pm / $5

Page 15: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

/VERBREGINA ENTERTAINMENTCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

15MAY 31 – JUNE 6

NIGHTLIFENIGHTLIFE

FRIDAY, MAY 24 @

LABODEGALa Bodega Tapas Bar & Grill2228 Albert Street(306) 546 3660

MUSIC VIBE / An eclectic mix of electronic, Mexican, and more — changes nightlyDRINK OF CHOICE / Martinis and wineTOP EATS / Steamed mussels and pollo pizzaSOMETHING NEW / Monday nights tasting feature: $35/person, and you can sample many items from La Bodega’s menu

Photography by Bebzphoto

CHECK OUT OUR FACEBOOK PAGE! These photos will be uploaded to

Facebook on Friday, June 7.

facebook.com/verbregina

Page 16: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

VERBNEWS.COMENTERTAINMENT CONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

16MAY 31 – JUNE 6

16MAY 24 – MAY 30

new sci-fi action movie starring Will Smith and directed by M. Night

Shyamalan? It’s gotta be good, right?

I mean, most of Smith’s sci-fi films have been pretty darn good so far. Think about: I Am Legend, Inde-pendence Day and the Men In Black franchise are both entertaining as all get out of here. Even I, Robot wasn’t too shabby.

And M. Night Shyamalan … sure his movies have been, ahem, less than stellar lately, but any time a guy directs a movie like The Sixth Sense (or even Signs, for that matter), you have to hold out hope that he has the ability to pump out a good film from time to time.

But here’s the thing about hope: sometimes what it leads to is misery.

Take Smith and Shyamalan’s new flick, After Earth, for instance. If you sit through all one hour and 40 minutes of this new Sony “franchise,” there’s a solid chance you’re going to be miserable by the time the final credits roll.

Why? Well, let’s get into that in a minute. First, let me tell you what the movie is about. Actually, let me begin

by telling you about the backstory — it’s by far the best part of the movie.

Okay, so here’s the deal. Once upon a long time ago, Earth was evacuated after an environmental catastrophe. But don’t worry, the human race has survived and is cur-rently living on a new planet called Nova Prime. Thing is, a race of vicious aliens known as Ursas consider Nova Prime their home and birthright and,

for the past thousand years or so, have been trying to kill us in order to get the planet back. This is important because, before the movie begins, an Ursa has killed Cypher Raige’s (Will Smith) daughter. This has brought ten-sion to the Raige household because the son, Kitai (played by Smith’s real son Jaden) thinks his dad blames him for the incident.

Anyway. When we first meet these characters they are on a mission

and their spaceship crashes to Earth. The ship is torn apart, Cypher’s leg is broken, and his son (who, unlike his general dad before him, is having a

tough time as a cadet in the United Ranger Corps) is sent on a mission to retrieve a rescue beacon from a part of their ship that has broken off, so they can beam out a distress signal.

Eyebrow-raising sci-fi action then ensues.

Wait a second, no it doesn’t. In-stead of amping up the man-against-hostile-environment tension, After Earth spends the next hour or so talking your ear off with father-son

dialogue. Seriously. There are only two action sequence that deserve note in the whole movie — one with deranged apes and a final battle that doesn’t live up to the hype.

To make matters worse, it’s almost as though Smith (whose charisma and talent is undeniable) was sleep-walking through the entire movie. So much so that his name, Cypher, is more fitting than you can imagine.

Now, I’m not a seer or anything, but something tells me Sony’s After Earth “franchise” is not destined to be.

FILM

A

…After Earth spends the next hour or so talking your ear off…

ADAM HAWBOLDT

Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372

@VerbRegina

[email protected]

PHOTO: COURTESY OF COLUMBIA PICTURES

Summer sci-fi blockbuster, After Earth, fails to deliverBY ADAM HAWBOLDT

ABORT MISSION

AFTER EARTH

DIRECTED BY M. Night Shyamalan

STARRING Will Smith, Jaden Smith,

Sophie Okonedo + Zoë Kravitz

115 MINUTES | PG

Page 17: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

@VERBREGINA ENTERTAINMENTCONTENTS LOCAL EDITORIAL COMMENTS Q + A ARTS FEATURE FOOD + DRINK MUSIC LISTINGS NIGHTLIFE FILM COMICS TIMEOUT

17MAY 31 – JUNE 6

illiam Shakespeare once remarked that “We are all

time’s subject.”And when it comes to the people

involved in the Up film series, nev-er have truer words been spoken.

In 1964, the series began with 7 Up — a documentary about 14 seven-year-olds from all over Eng-land. Rich, poor. Urban, rural. Ath-letic, artistic. The aim was to find schoolchildren from all walks of life to represent (some say critique) the post-war class system. Since then, filmmaker Michael Apted has gone back every seven years to meet up with the 14 subjects and make another documentary about their lives.

Well, not all 14. After 21 Up, filmed in 1977, Charles dropped out of the series. And Peter, John and Symon have all missed install-ments. But for the most part, all the people in the original documentary have participated in the series every part of the way.

And what a series it is!Not only is it one of the boldest,

most ambitious documentary proj-ects ever to be filmed, but the Up series is arguably one of the best,

too. Simply put, it is an epic piece of filmmaking that captures and chronicles the human condition.

Now, five decades after the first film, Apted is back with the eighth installment of the series, 56 Up. And if you’ve followed the series from the beginning, watching this film is almost like getting reac-

quainted with old friends or going to a family reunion. If not, don’t worry. 56 Up — which runs a rather long 144 minutes — will catch you up to speed on the lives of all these people through pictures and quick back stories.

When we meet these people this time around, at the ripe old age of

56, things have changed a lot since the last film.

How?Well, if you remember, in 49 Up

all of them just seemed so miser-able. Like life was weighing uber-heavy on their shoulders. They dreaded turning 50, many of their lives were in flux.

But now all that’s changed. Now, the participants seem somewhat content. At ease with life and their places in it. Okay, not everybody. Jackie has fallen on economic hard times and ill health. And Neil — the guy who spent earlier episodes homeless and jobless — always seems to be walking the razor’s edge. Yet for the most part, things seem good in the Up universe.

Though, at one point or an-other during the film, the idea of “what could have been” seeps in and remains until well after the final credits roll. It’s as though these are people who have played their hands, taken their paths and know it’s impossible to go back and change what’s been done.

But they are at peace with this idea. So much so, it’s almost as

though a sense of content melan-choly governs the entire movie. It lacks a lot of the oomph and brash-ness of earlier installments, but it’s still a fascinating watch and a darn good documentary.

56 Up will open at Regina Public Library on June 6; for show times and more information, please visit www.reginalibrary.ca.

PHOTO: COURTESY OF FIRST RUN FEATURES

[56 Up] lacks a lot of the oomph and brashness of earlier installments, but it’s still a fascinating watch…

ADAM HAWBOLDT

56 UP

DIRECTED BY Michael Apted

CINEMATOGRAPHY BY George Jesse

Turner

144 MINUTES | NR

56 AND COUNTINGLatest installment of the Up series a testament to time and human nature BY ADAM HAWBOLDT

W

Feedback? Text it! (306) 881 8372

@VerbRegina

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18MAY 31 – JUNE 6

© Elaine M. Will | blog.E2W-Illustration.com | Check onthebus.webcomic.ws/ for previous editions!

COMICS

Page 19: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)

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19MAY 31 – JUNE 6

HOROSCOPES MAY 31 – JUNE 6

SUDOKU CROSSWORD ANSWER KEY

A B

ARIES March 21–April 19

Feeling tense lately, Aries? It’s time

to get rid of the stress, so do what

needs doing, whether it be jogging, hitting

a punching bag, meditating, whatever.

TAURUS April 20–May 20

You have a certain natural charm

that causes people to gravitate to

you, Taurus. You know you do. It’s best to

put it to good use this week.

GEMINI May 21–June 20

Someone may jump down your

throat this week, metaphorically

speaking. Don’t get too defensive — they

may have a point.

CANCER June 21–July 22

You could be feeling emotional

from time to time this week,

Cancer. Don’t let it get the better of you, or

you’ll become an emotional wreck.

LEO July 23–August 22

This may not be your forte, Leo,

but at some time this week some

self-sacrifice is going to be needed.

Don’t hesitate.

VIRGO August 23–September 22

You may be tempted to do some-

thing you know you shouldn’t do

this week, Virgo. Though it may be hard to

resist, try to tread carefully.

LIBRA September 23–October 23

Humility: that’s the key word

for you over the course of the

next week, Libra. You are awesome, but

please try to keep this in mind.

SCORPIO October 24–November 22

You’re known for your strong

willpower, Scorpio. In the days

ahead, you’re going need every ounce of

it. Temptation will be lurking everywhere.

SAGITTARIUS November 23–December 21

Discouraging things could start

happening to you soon, Sagittar-

ius. Keep your head up, stay strong, and

you’ll be able to weather the storm.

CAPRICORN December 22–January 19

Be tolerant of other people’s opin-

ions and social and political posi-

tions this week, Capricorn. You may find a

kindred spirit where you least expect to.

AQUARIUS January 20–February 19

Doubt may come to plague you

soon, Aquarius. And while it may

be disheartening, you’ll learn a lot about

yourself if you pay close attention.

PISCES February 20–March 20

Good things come to those who

wait. You know that, Pisces, so

why have you been so dang impatient

lately? Ease up, and all will come to be.

SUDOKU ANSWER KEY

9 6 2 3 4 1 3 4 7 9 3 2 5 7 6 1 9 8 3 6 8 4 5 2 2 5 7 8 1 8 9 6 7 1 4 5

7 3 5 1 8 4 5 6 2 8 3 4 7 2 9 5 8 4 1 9 7 6 7 5 3 9 6 4 2 1 9 6 8 3 1 2

CROSSWORD CANADIAN CRISS-CROSS

ACROSS 1. Large group of relatives

5. Coat of ___

9. Pale sandy colour

10. The end of life

12. Once in a while

13. Medicine chest

door, usually

15. Out of sorts

16. Welcome words to

a hitchhiker

18. Adam’s wife

19. Symbol of a country

21. Group of games in tennis

22. It goes from stem to stern

23. Physical features of a

piece of land

25. Vestibule

26. Calm excited feelings

28. Supply used as it is needed

31. Grown with

natural fertilizers

35. T, on some tests

36. On the contrary

37. Cooked thoroughly

38. Take in food

39. Assume as a fact

41. Place for a

hospital patient

42. Strong supporter

44. Gloomy

46. Lacking experience

47. One who lives outside

the parental home

48. Lawn intruder

49. Protuberance

DOWN 1. Place for a

wine collection

2. Movable cover

3. Full of excitement

4. An opponent that

cannot be beaten

5. Come clean

6. Bridle strap

7. Cause damage to

8. Address part

9. Favourite at the ball

11. Be suspended

12. Put through a sieve

14. Be dependent on

17. Flimsy

20. Prayer of thanks said

at a meal

22. Work dough with

the hands

24. Invite

25. Humpty Dumpty is one

27. Skilled worker

28. Put your foot down

29. Wedding dress part

30. Make illegal

32. Drug a racehorse to

prevent it from winning

33. Chemically unreactive

34. Surrender

36. Uninterested

39. Macadamize

40. Kind of list

43. Be recumbent

45. Strong coffee

TIMEOUT

© WALTER D. FEENER 2013

A

B

9 5 6 2 3 4 1 8 72 1 3 7 5 8 6 4 94 7 8 9 6 1 3 2 55 3 7 6 1 2 4 9 81 9 2 4 8 7 5 3 66 8 4 3 9 5 2 7 13 2 9 5 7 6 8 1 48 4 5 1 2 9 7 6 37 6 1 8 4 3 9 5 2

4 7 3 5 1 6 9 8 29 1 8 4 3 2 7 5 66 5 2 7 9 8 3 4 11 3 7 6 8 4 2 9 55 8 4 1 2 9 6 3 72 6 9 3 7 5 4 1 83 9 5 2 6 1 8 7 48 2 1 9 4 7 5 6 37 4 6 8 5 3 1 2 9

Page 20: Verb Issue R80 (May 31-June 6, 2013)