Episoder

  • Celina Kurz has been playing in bands since she was in high school. Her current projects is Future Star. Former bands are True Crush and Kidnap Kids (originally Bears and Chairs) and has played in others, including The Trolls and Only A Visitor.

    Venues visited:

    The Mansion was a venue for house shows on Victoria and Adanac.

    Astorino’s was the venue for the Safe Amplification Site Society (Safe Amp 2013-2015) at the site of a former dining hall at 1739 Venables Street.

    Franklin Studios (1654 Franklin St) is an artspace which existed as a music venues for a period in the 2010s.

    Flatlands is a house on Victoria Drive, north of Venables, which hosted an annual music festival called Flatlandia starting in 2016 and continuing for several years.

    Other venues mentioned: TheTeen Raveup, the Zoo Zhop, the Moontower.

    Musicians discussed include Tommy Tone, Chris-a-riffic, Rockridge, Lunch Lady, Dogbreth, Diners, Greenbelt Collective, Nicholas Krgovich.

    Shout Back Festival! (2012, 2013 and 2014) was an anarcha-feminist, queer, radical, anti-capitalist DIY music festival .

    Circle ‘Round is a new music series organized by Celina at the Lido.

    Music clips used with artist permission.

    Kidnap Kips: Stories from You Would Run From Ratboy Grave (2009, Geographing Records)

    Trush Crush: diss appear from We Like Us (2013)

    Future Star: Karoake from cryorities (2016)

  • Veda Hille is a beloved Vancouver musician, composer, theatre maker, and performer. She first played in a band called Mudlarks and started making records under her own name in 1991. She also had a children’s band called Duplex. She has been involved in music, art, and theatre for several decades, creating and collaborating in many genres. This conversation took place on May 14th 2024.

    Venues visited:

    La Quena Coffee House was at 1111 Commercial Drive from the early 1980s until 2000. It was a non-profit political meeting hub.

    Cafe Deux Soleils (1393 Commercial Dr, ) was a vegetarian restaurant which hosted music and poetry events starting in the ‘90s, and closed in 2022.

    Edison Electric Gallery of Moving Images, an experimental film centre run by Alex Mackenzie, was near Commercial and Venables.

    The Oddfellows Hall at 1720 Graveley Street (a branch of the international frateral orgnization), held at least a dozen punk shows fom 1979 to 1984.

    The York Theatre (639 Commercial Drive), where Veda Hille stages the East Van Panto each winter, was previously the New York Theatre rock venue in the ‘80s and ‘90s before becoming the Raja Bollywood Cinema.

    Royal Canadian Legion Branch 179 at 2205 Commercial Dr.

    Music clips used with artist permission.

    Veda Hille: Neighbourhood Song from Songs About People and Buildings (1991)
    One Hot Summer from Spine (1996)
    LuckLucky from This Riot Life (2008)
    Tracers from Beach Practice (2020)

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  • Stephen Hamm played in Vancouver bands starting in the early 1980s, including Slow, Canned Hamm, Jungle, Tankhog and Nardwuar And The Evaporators. The Georgia Straight once called him ‘semi legendary.’ His current solo show is based around Theremin and Synthesizer. This conversation was recorded on April 16th 2024.

    John Barley’s, at 23 W. Cordova Street, has been a music venue under many names (including the Cruel Elephant and the Hungry Eye) until as the Hindenberg it closed in 2018.

    Bands discussed include Death Sentence, Another Kind of Blues, House of Commons, NoMeansNo, Shanghai Dog, Agent Orange, the Reptiles, The Nerve Tubes, Dayglo Abortions, Mission of Christ, Green River, July fourth toilet, Sea hags, Flaming Lips, Goo Goo Dolls, Change of Heart, Young Canadians, DOA, the Gits, Skinyard, the Dwarves, The Faith No More, Peaches, Mojo Nixon, the Replacements.

    Other Venues visited: the Savoy (2 Powell Street), the Town Pump (66 Water St), Ms Ts Cabaret (339 West Pender), the Marine Club (573 Homer St), The Backstage Lounge (1181 Seymour Street).

    Other venue discussed: Stalag 13, Luxury Bob’s, the Penthouse, the Smilin' Buddha, the Waterfront.

    Music clips used with artist permission.

    Slow: "I Have Not Been the Same" from Against the Glass (Zulu, 1986)

    Stephen Hamm Theremin Man: "Valentina" 2021

    Tankhog: "I Woke Up in Love This Morning" from House of Beauty (Zulu, 1992)

  • Gary Smith was a founding founder of the synthesizer-based Vancouver band Images in Vogue in 1981, after playing in various bands as a teenager. He went on to a later career as a music video producer and assistant director in film and TV. The conversation was recorded on March 14th, 2024.

    Luv-a-fair (1275 Seymour Street) started life as a gay dance club in 1975, but soon attracted a wide audience for its legendary DJs and great selection of alternative music. They did not often host live events but Killing Joke, the Subhumans, Sonic Youth, the Violent Femmes, Wall of Voodoo and Nine Inch Nails all played there, as well as Images in Vogue.

    Other bands discussed: Killing Joke, Skinny Puppy, Zingo, Moev, Numb, Wall of Voodoo, e, the Villains, Duran Duran.

    Other venues discussed: Graceland, Quadra Club (later Club Soda and the Starfish Room), Pharaoh’s, The Viking Hall, The Body Shop, The Cave, Gary Taylor’s Rock Room.

    Thank you to Kellarissa for the original theme music. Thanks to Glen Nelson and to Moev.


    Music clips used with artist permission
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    Images in Vogue: "Educated Man" from Educated Man EP (1982 B H & H)

    e: "Power Blackout" from The Levitation Syndrome (1981 Rogolletti Records)

    Moev: "Rotting Geraniums" (1982)

  • Bruce Dyck was the drummer in Fun 100, the B-Lines, You Say Party, They Shoot Horses and LeMaster. he is also the author of "Three reincarnations of the Smilin' Buddha Cabaret: Entertainment, gentrification, and respectability in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside 1952-84" a Master's thesis at SFU.

    Ryan Dyck was the vocalist in Fun 100 and B-Lines. He was the label manager at Mint Records and ran Hockey Dad Records.

    The Smilin’ Buddha Cabaret at 109 East Hastings Street began live as a cabaret in the 1950s. It evolved into Vancouver's iconic punk music venue in the late '70s and early 80s. It was a diy venue under the name SBC from 2013 to 2019, when it re-opened as Buddha's. It was the site of a fire in 2023 and is now closed.

    Other venues visisted: Ms Ts Cabaret, Pub 340, original Red Gate (152 E Hastings), the Helen Pitt Gallery, Honey Lounge/The Lotus/Lick, Interurban Gallery, Brandy’s, The Regent, the Balmoral, the Cobalt.

    Also mentioned: The Picadilly Pub, Burlesque House (Abbotsford), Pat’s Pub.

    Vancouver Complication is a compilation album featuring many influential Vancouver punk bands. It was released in 1979 on Pinned Records and was compiled by Grant McDonagh who was a founder of Zulu Records. “Blanc Vanc!” at the Helen Pitt Gallery, was a two night show featuring U-J3RK5 (aka the U-Jerks), Exxotone, the Shades, [e], and a Generators reunion show.

    Other bands discussed: Hot Hot Heat, The Unicorns, Three Inches of Blood, Witness Protection Program, Melt Banana, Nirvana, Fucked Up, SNFU, Blank Dogs, Pointed Sticks, Clorox Girls, Red Dawns, Tranzmitors, STREETS, the K-Tels, Glad Rags, the Skulls, the Furies, They Shoot Horses, Mutators, the Isotopes.

    Thank you to Kellarissa for the original theme music. This conversation was recorded on February 17th, 2024.

    Music clips used with artist permission.

    Fun 100: "The Government" from Hit it & Quit. 2005

    B-Lines: "Opening Band" from Opening Band LP on Hockey Dad Records. 2014

  • Ida Nilsen has played in Beans, Cunt, Great Aunt Ida, the Buttless Chaps, Radiogram, The Gay and others.

    Ida was involved with The Sugar Refinery venue as a musician, employee and owner. The Sugar Refinery was a vegetarian restaurant and music venue from the mid '90s to 2003 at 1115 Granville Street. It was known for fostering local music projects which were experimental, collaborative, and whimsical. It was the site of a 48 hour show by the band Beans, who played there dozens of times.

    Other venues visited: The Blinding Light!, an underground cinema which ran from 1998-2003 at 36 Powell Street. The Marine Club was at 573 Homer Street and lasted from 1957-2007. The site is now a parking lot.

    Other venues we passed: the Brickyard, The Gold Saucer.

    Bands discussed: The Beans, the Ids, the Molestics, Kirsten and Jim, Show Business Giants, Handsome Family, Vic Chestnut, Sawdust Collector.

    Thank you to Kellarissa for the original theme music. Thank you to George at Zum for permission to use the audio from Tired Snow. The conversation was recorded on January 3rd, 2024.

    Music clips used with artist permission.

    Great Aunt Ida: "Water and Bones" from Our Fall

    Beans: "All-Emcompassing Dust" from Tired Snow EP

  • Scott Morgan is best known as the electronic music project loscil. He previously played in Meet Daisy, Thee Crusaders, Destroyer, The Multiplex and others.

    The Blinding Light! was an underground cinema which ran from 1998-2003 at 36 Powell Street. Founded by Alex MacKenzie as a follow-up to his Edison Electric Gallery of Moving Images (1995-1997), the space housed a cafe, a gallery and a 110-seat cinema. It showed new and classic underground and avant garde films, hosted nights to bring your own 8mm films and hosted experimental bands with a visual element.

    Other venues visited include the Cruel Elephant (23 W. Cordova St), The Town Pump (66 Water St), Amnesia (356 Water St), Blim (23 w Pender), @ Gallery (425 Carrall St).

    Other venues mentioned: The Edison Electric, Helen Pitt Gallery, Archimedes Club, Station Street Art Centre, Or Gallery.

    Other bands mentioned: Steel Pole Bath Tub, Thinking Fellers Union Local 282, Negativeland, the Jades, Jesus Lizard, Pearl Jam (Town Pump show 1991), The Rose Chronicles, The Odds, Dick & Jane, Mudhoney, Helmet, Superconductor, Marc Ribot, Shiny Greedy, Slowhand, Strategy, Growing, Sinoia Caves.

    The conversation was recorded on January 26th, 2024.

    Music clips played with artists' permission.

    Loscil: Triton from submers

    Ticker Tape Parade: Audience with the Pope

    Destroyer: M.E.R.C.I. from Thief

  • Lindiwe Coyne performed as Wandering Lucy in the 1990s and her music came out on K Records. Her Discorder cover story is here. Her live set on CiTr’s Live from Thunderbird Radio Hell is here.

    The Malcolm Lowry Room was at 4125 Hastings Street in Burnaby, operated by the writer Michael Turner as a music venue in the mid-1990s. It was previously the North Burnaby Inn, a stripclub.

    Other venues discussed: The Good Jacket, The Starfish Room, the Treehouse Lounge at the St Regis Hotel, Edison Electric Gallery of Moving Images, the Blinding Light!, St Michael’s Multicultural Anglican Church (409 E Broadway), the Sugar Refinery.

    Other musicians mentioned: Bob Wiseman, Bob’s your Uncle/Sook Yin Lee, Lisa Marr/cub, the Smugglers, the Colorifics, Built to Spill, Calvin Johnson, Dub Narcotic, Beat Happening, Halo Benders, Mecca Normal, Furnace Face, Trenchmouth, Fitz of Depression, Link, Shadowy Men for a Shadowy Planet, the Sadies, Fifth Column, Phonocomb, July Fourth Toilet, Ticker Tape Parade, Hard Rock Miners, Dan Bejar/Destroyer, Neko Case, DOA.

    K Records is a legendary independent record label founded in 1982 in Olympia, Washington. Yoyo A Go Go was a festival they put on for the first year in 1994.

    Thank you to Jean Smith.

    Music clips used with artist permission

    Wandering Lucy: Lady Genius from Leap Year (1996, K Records)

    Mecca Normal: Ribbon from Flood Plain (1993, K Records)

    Wandering Lucy: I Know One Thing from Leap Year (1996, K Records)

  • Nicholas Krgovich has played in the bands p:ano, Burquitalam Plaza, Slavs, No Kids and also under his full name. This conversation was recorded on November 14th 2023.

    The Sugar Refinery was a vegetarian restaurant and music venue from the mid '90s to 2003 at 1115 Granville Street. It was known for fostering local music projects which were experimental, collaborative, and whimsical. It was the site of a 48 hour show by the band Beans, who played there dozens of times.

    Ms T’s Cabaret was at 339 West Pender. The building began life as it started life in 1906 as the Myers Hall and later held the city’s first purpose-built bowling alley, the Canadian Cycle and Motor Co, the Canadian Legion, the Boilermaker’s Hall, and the Marine workers’ Pender Auditorium. During the 1960s the Auditorium was booked by music series, including the Afterthought, and was the site of an early Grateful Dead concert. The building was home to Vancouver’s earliest drag bar, BJ’s, open from 1970 to 1983, and later, the Vancouver Club Baths also opened in the basement area. After being sold, it took on a western theme as Saddle Tramps before converting to a lesbian bar, Ms. T’s, which also had music shows. It was demolished after a fire in 2003.

    Other venues mentioned: The Royal, the Starfish Room, 1067 jazz club, Blim, The Blinding Light!, Richard’s on Richards, Graceland, Luv-a-fair.

    YIMP fest is an annual show at Falaise park since 2021.

    Bands mentioned: The Secret Three, Radio Berlin, Beans, Adrian Orange, Slavs, Tujiko Noriko, Belle and Sebastian, Looper, The Strokes, Interpol, Yo La Tengo, Smog, Blonde Redhead, Red House Painters, Peaches, Low, Luscious Jackson, Cibo Mato, Butter 08, Bettie Serveert, Six Organs of Admittance, Joel R L Phelps, the Radio

    Thank you to Kellarissa for the original theme music. Thank you to Geooge at Zum.


    Music clips used with artist permission.

    p:ano: "All of November, Most of October" from When It’s Dark and It’s Summer (2002)
    Beans: "Alpaca Llama" from Tired Snow EP (2000 Zum Media)
    Burquitlam Plaza: "Round One" from Big On Fall (2003)

  • Larissa Loyva has played in p:ano, Kellarissa, Fake Tears, the Choir Practice, How to Dress Well, Destroyer, Dream/loss. Jonelle Aspa has been in the bands Sontag, Hen Party, Anybodys and Dream/loss. Both are involved in organizing Girls Rock Camp Vancouver. This conversation was recorded on December 29 2023.

    The Secret Location was a venue, rehearsal space and artists’ studios collective located at 841 E Hastings St between 2003 and 2021.

    Other venues discussed include Red Gate, the Astoria, 333, Merge, 360 Glen, the Emergency Room, CBDB’s, the Black Lab, Goodie, Franklin Studios.

    Other musicians discussed: Nu Sensae, White Lung, Twin Crystals, Fortress, Anju Singh, Holzkopf, Whip of the UFO, Channels 3 and 4, N.213, Shearing Pinx, Diane, Monashee, Baptists, Cult Babies, Winona Forever.

    Huge thank you to Kellarissa for the original theme music.

    Music clips used with artist permission

    Kellarissa: Carrying On from Flamingo (2008, Mint Records)

    Anybodys: RFK (2020 version) from Acts of Endurance (2021)

  • Harley Rothstein’s first band was the folk duo Russ and Harley. He then played in the psychedelic rock bands The French Hand Laundry, Pacific Nation and My Indole Ring. The conversation was recorded on August 30 2023.

    Russ and Harley played at The Bunkhouse, a folk music coffee house at 612 Davie Street in the 1960s.

    The rock bands played at The Retinal Circus at 1024 Davie Street in 1967 and 1968. The club was operated by Jim Allan, Blaine Culling and Roger Schiffer. Memorable shows there included Country Joe MacDonald and the Fish, Bo Diddley, Muddy Water, Charlatans and the Velvet Underground. Some of the local bands which played are Pacific Nation, The Painted Ship, Mock Duck, Papa Bear’s Medicine Show, The Collectors, Mother Tucker's Yellow Duck, My Indole Ring.

    Video of six psych bands filmed for three episodes of the CBC show on Let's Go.

    The Kitsilano Theatre was at 2114 W 4th Ave. Since 1958 it has been the Russian Community Centre, and in 1966 was often rented out to The Afterthought, a concert series which put on shows at various venues over the decade.

    Huge thank you to Kellarissa for the original theme music. And thank you to Vancouver's Regenerator Records.

    Music clips used with artist permission.

    Harley Rothstein: Karen’s History Book from Songs of Love and Humanity (2023). The song was written in 1968 by Harley, Russell Precious and Stan Persky for the band The Pacific Nation.

    Mother Tucker's Yellow Duck: I (from The Cool-Aid Benefit Album [1970] re-released in 2010 by Regenerator Records)

    Mock Duck: Do Re Mi (from The Cool-Aid Benefit Album [1970] re-released in 2010 Regenerator Records)

  • Adrienne LaBelle has played in The Barcelona Chair, Aunts and Uncles, Movieland, Garbage Dreams, Supermoon, Lazy Bear.

    Venues visited: Red Gate (855 East Hastings), 121 Heatley, Hoko’s (362 Powell), The Astoria (769 E Hastings), Spirit Vegetable studio (876 Cordova Diversion), Ironworks Studio, the Zoo Zhop (223 Main Street), Chapel Arts (305 Dunlevy

    Other venues mentioned: La Casa del Artista, Toast Collective, the Cobalt, Little Mountain, Railway Club, Red Cat Records, The Waldorf, Pat's Pub

    Also mentioned: the Wind Whistles, Johnny de Courcy, Lié, They Shoot Horses Don't They, Ian Mackaye, Japandroids, Chris-a-riffic, Kidnap Kids, Apollo Ghosts

    Music Waste is Vancouver's diy music festival which started in 1994.

    Mint Records an independent record label in Vancouver founded in 1991.

    Steve Louie has been documenting the Vancouver music scene since around 2007.

    Shindig is UBC radio station CiTR’s annual battle of the bands, going since 1984.

    Safe Amp was the Safe Amplification Society, a non-profit which worked to create an all-ages venue in Vancouver in the early 2010s. They established a venue at Astorino's for several years.

    Fake Jazz is a long running experimental music series in Vancouver. It continues today after a few hiatuses.

    Huge thank you to Kellarissa for the original theme music.

    Music clips used with artist permission.

    Supermoon: Powersuits from Comet Lovejoy (2015, Alarum Records)

    Movieland: Politics of Ecology from blows up (2013, Green Burrito Records)

    Garbage Dreams: Tooth & Nail from Demonstrations (2018)

    This conversation was recorded on December 12 2023.

  • Chris Alscher AKA Chris-A-Riffic played with the band They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? and has performed as a solo artist for several decades. He is a radio host on CiTR, the University of British Columbia radio station, with his show Parts Unknown which has been on the air for over two decades. We walk down Main Street from 29th avenue to 22nd avenue, discussing Little Mountain Gallery, Chroma Books, Blim and more.

    Chroma Books was a bookstore upstairs at 4424 Main Street which opened in 2002 and occasionally had shows of experimental and lo-fi music.

    They Live Video, at 4340 Main St, hosted bands in the 2010s.

    Little Mountain Gallery was at 195 E 26th Ave built in 1930. It became an art space known as the Butchershop Collective in 2001 and Little Mountain Gallery was established in 2006. After music shows, it became an underground comedy club. It was demolished in 2023 despite the attempts of arts groups to preserve it.

    Lucky’s Comics was a comic and bookstore at 3972 Main Street which has now relocated eight blocks north.

    Other venues mentioned are The Regional Assembly of Text (3934 Main Street), Blim (opened in 2003 in the old BC Electric Building at 23 W Pender, then at 197 East 17th Ave and now at 115 E Pender St, an art shop, no longer a venue) Solder and Sons (247 Main Street), Chris’s shed, the Java Joint (Surrey), the New York Theatre now the York Theatre (639 Commercial Dr).

    Bands mentioned include Apollo Ghosts, Chain and the Gang, Charlamides, Fanshaw (Olivia Fetherstonhaugh), Kellarissa (Larissa Loyva), Tygh Runyan (Beans), crys cole, Nicholas Krgovich, connect_icut, Collapsing Opposites, the Diskettes, Tough Age, Darto, Weed, Hemogoblin, Cascadia, Smithy Ramone, Kidnap Kids (formerly Beggars & Chairs), Better Friends than Lovers, Marta McKeever, the Unicorns, Swamp Camp, Sandro Perri (Polmo Polpo), Gal Gracen. Rose Melberg, Leah Abramson, Search Parties, Holtzkopf, Cub, Gob, Sparkmarker, NoMeansNo, All State Champion, Tricky Woo, Ahna.

    Huge thank you to Kellarissa for the original theme music.

    Music clips used with artist permission.

    Chris-a-riffic: Late Night Vietnamese Restaurant from Treats (2019)

    Apollo Ghosts: Things You Go Through from Mount Benson (2010)

    Kidnap Kids: Kids from You Would Run from Ratboy Grave (2009)

    This conversation was recorded on September 24 2023. Our unexpected audio guests were Jarrett Evan Samson and Lauren Smith of the band Tough Age.

  • Welcome to In Search of Lost Venues, where I walk through a neighbourhood with one or more Vancouver musicians, talking about the sites and locations of their favourite venues, places where significant events occurred, both personal and artistic.

    In this season you will hear conversations with:

    Chris-a-Riffic about Little Mountain Studios and other venues on Main Street Adrienne LaBelle about the second Red Gate, Hoko's, the Zoo Zhop and more Nicholas Krgovich about the Sugar Refinery, Ms T's Cabaret and the Starfish Room Lindiwe Coyne about the Malcolm Lowry Room Harley Rothstein about the Retinal Circus and the Bunkhouse Jonelle Aspa and Larissa Loyva about the Secret Location Ida Nilsen about The Blinding Light!, Railway Club and Sugar Refinery and more!

    You will hear stories from the late 1960s until the present day about the local music scene and the urban landscape in which it takes place.