Torontonian/Bostonian

A little space to reflect on life in my tale of two cities...and more

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Hip, and the Art of Cool

Something struck my mind the other day while walking through Central Square - the difference between cool in Toronto and cool in Boston. Now both towns have their fair share of hipsters, renegades and wannabees, and yet there is a clear difference. And I think it all comes down to effort.

Cool in Boston is artsy, edgy, rejection-of-the-mainstream cool. Labels (except retro band shirts) are rejected for clothing. But your threads must be cutting edge (fresh from H&M - no label there), or just-saved-from-the-garbage-dump retro. The weirder the band you know/follow, the cooler you are. You gotta live in some urban-student ghettoesque place like Brighton, Allston, Southie, Somerville or Central Cambridge (and only Central if you MUST live in Cambridge). Odd understanding of the locals and misfits is a plus.

But all of this knowledge, clothing hunting and gathering, and urban scoping can take a lot out of a person which relates to my point about effort. It takes a tremendous effort to be so damn cutting edge here.

Yet for all their hipster cool, the kids are desperately holding on to a secret - the effort they put in is a rejection of their upbringing. Because for all the poverty, ghettoisms and urban streetwear chic, they are in fact a bunch of upper middle class kids who grew up in the 'burbs, in respectable houses with parents who were prone to putting letters behind their names for professional purposes (PhD, MD, etc).

The cool kids of Boston don't live in real poverty, they don't live in the real ghetto and they can have their cake and eat it too. Its all pretty fake and contrived really. Cool as conformity - a very specific sort of genre. Cool seperates you from the townies, the sports fans, the JCrew kids and the old money.

Now in Toronto you're going to find that same group of people - the suburban kids who grew up on a strict diet of mowing the lawn on Saturday, cruising the mall regularly and dreams of wheels to get them around the vast sprawl of the GTA. But (and here's the point) people in Toronto aren't trying that hard to be cool as grown ups.

For one thing, the whole "poverty is liberty" mantra is dead in the water. The cool ones in Toronto want money. They want exotic vacations to Namibia, Southern India or Brazil (to buy them some cred with their doctor, accountant or taxi cab driver from one of those places). They want the cool stuff you can only buy at the high-end urban chic shops on Queen and in Yorkville (because Linda Reeves or Marilyn Dennis might drop by). They want the condo on King or College. Failing that they want the apartment at Yonge and Eglington, at the very least. They want to eat out at the top tier restaurants. They want this stuff, and aren't afraid to tell you about it.

In Toronto weird bands are the mainstream (everyone knows to hang at the Drake on Friday night - you never know when members of Broken Social Scene might show up), clothing is supposed to look chic and high end (otherwise Holt's would have been out of business centuries ago) and having the ability to brag about seasons tickets to the Leafs matters way more than the weird neighbours you got next door or the homeless guy who will sing for your dollar.

Toronto is cool because you don't have to try so hard. The wonderful thing about loving diversity (and we do tend to presuppose this relates only to ethnicity) is that everyone is given equal opportunity to be cool for 3.5 million very different, very unique reasons. Cool doesn't mean conformity - it means individuality.

Cool? In Boston you do have to try. In Toronto you already are.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Dang! Polarissssssss!

It has to be said that sometimes it can take me a looooong time to clue into things - like that if A +B = C, then C - B = A. Not to get too mathematical about this, but ain't a one way street - and for all of my "Canada please discover America through my eyes," I can equally say "Yo Americans - this is Canada!" with the blog. So today, I'm doing just that through just a small part of wondrous Canadiana...

So America - let me tell ya something! You are great at many things, but (by my measure) you pretty much suck at music. I know, I know you've had your hits. You've revolutionized a number of genres and even created a few more. But in the era of American Idol, you're all so pop oriented I think you've forgotten that integrity and music can work well together.

Enter Canada! And America - stop thinking Bryan Adams & Celine Dion!

The nominees for the Polaris Prize - the self described prize awarded to any LP produced in Canada for artistic merit alone (regardless of album sales) - on the long list were recently announced, and present a great beginners guide to indie Canadian music. I'm not endorsing this because I believe in the artistic merit of the prize - but the list is so extensive and so interesting it is honestly worth giving each of the bands here a listen.

Most of the musicianship here is available through the regular neighbourhood channels brought to you by the friendly internet (MySpace, LastFM, etc). Here are a few I picked out:

The Constantines - Kensington Heights
One of my favourites (even if they do suck when you meet them in person - long story) are long time stalwarts of the indie rock scene in Toronto. Although they grew out of Guelph, ON they pay tribute to Toronto and surrounding areas with this one - odes to a "New King" (of Kensington?) and "Credit River" (hometown glory!) are superb! But whateveryoudo DO NOT LISTEN to the Feist duet --- HORRID!
http://www.myspace.com/constantines

Buck65 - Situation
I hated this dude for a long time - but, times change and dark, dark rap/elecrtonica now has a place in my life :) Buck65 is not for all. He is dark and has a habit of oversampling on some of his tracks. But there are grand moments of brilliance - "Dang!" should be everyone's anthem. Awesome stuff where it lies.
http://www.myspace.com/buck65

The Acorn - Glory Hope Mountain
One of my finds out of the Long List is this little band from Ottawa, ON. A folk band at heart, they put together some awesome sounds: a little African rhythm here, some Brazilian influences there tied together with some mad guitar bits - its all worthwhile. The contrast between tracks like "Crooked Legs" and "Flood Part One" couldn't be more stark - and more brilliant.
http://www.myspace.com/theacorn

Caribou - Andorra
These dudes are not my thing - but they will definitely find a following. For band with an earthy name, they seem to have their heads (and music) in the clouds. They describe themselves as Psychedelic Rock, and certainly their music hearkens back to a sixties/seventies groovethang. Its a little Doors, a little Beach Boys.
http://www.myspace.com/cariboumanitoba

Holy F**K - LP
Another GREAT PICK by the Polaris people. A great band with a bad name, these guys have put together an electronica soundscape that cannot be beat anywhere. It's symphonic, it's hip, it's drums, it's bass. Awesome. Just awesome, brilliant stuff. Take a listen to "Korock" and "Lovely Allen" and you will be saying the name of the band....
http://www.myspace.com/holyfuck

Cadence Weapon - Afterparty Babies
An original choice for sure, and speaks to the artistic merit thing. An album that is rough around the edges, but has some great strides as well. There are honestly moments where you can't imagine this is a studio album and must have been recorded in someone's basement. Hip Hop/Electronica/Rap all mixed in there is yet again some oversampling taking place here. But a track like "Hustlin' Hustler" is ace rap.
http://www.myspace.com/cadenceweaponmusic

Hayden - In Field and Town
Folk rock for a chill Saturday morning. Instrumental music, with superb lyrics. Its all worth it to chill to...at least if you're a girl...I'm thinking it might be girlie music...if you're a guy take a listen anyway its music to get you laid by....
http://www.myspace.com/hayden

Sadies - New Seasons
One of the few country-influenced acts on the list, the Sadies do it the right way (no twangy things here). They instead present fresh, lyrical ballads (with some good mixing to keep things interesting), these are songs that sharpen the senses. It's chill music again, with some great accoustic sounds
http://www.myspace.com/thesadies

And many, many more....