the feelies, ray price, meat puppets, patti smith, buck owens, big star, micheal hurley, tom petty, the minutemen, the clean, moose, creedence clearwater revival, donovan, the velvet underground, sir douglas, gene clark, george jones, scott walker, iggy pop, sonic youth, raymond carver, sylvia plath, e.e. cummings.
Neye Benziyor?
a velvet countryside that has enough folk in it to rock your elders out of their rockers.
in 1833, Seneca Ketchum bought 200 acres of land on the northeast side of the Brown's Farm area, creating a settlement on Purple Hill. From what little traces and legends that have survived from the earliest settlement period, that the present town of Orangeville had it's beginnings on Purple Hill. A mile east of downtown, taverns had developed there as settlers made their way en route to the regions of Queen Bush and Georgian Bay. Purple Hill and Orangeville, when initially established were competitive settlements, Purple Hill being the older. In the late 1840's, they were linked together by the Seneca Ketchum project, a primitive log causeway that ran through the swamps of the Credit Flats. Even well into the 1850's, each settlement maintained a distinct identity.
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The cool music of Purple Hill is coming to IndieCan Radio damn soon.
Nice shit dudes.
Joe C host IndieCan Radio www.indiecan.com THIS WEEK: Canadain Music Cafe at TIFF - INDIE WEEK 2009 and lots of other cool stuff everyone who loves emerging music should know about http://www.indiecan.com/radio.htm
That was a great set at Sneaky Dee's. Blissed-out roots-rock fused with equal-parts rock, equal-parts neo-psychadelia, really making for a high-octane, high-energy live performance. A band that really blurs the line between a hypnotic shimmering guitars and twangy folk-laced Americana, making for a sprawling sound that uniquely Torontopian. Great band.
That was a great set at The Smiling Buddha, a swirling psych-folk journey, a sonic dreamscape straddling the clouds, and hovering above the earth. A rhythmic ode to compelling power.