Bruce Peninsula - Crabapples (live) @ Neat Coffee Shop, Burnstown, ON - Oct 17, '09 - Video
PUBLISHED:  Oct 26, 2009
DESCRIPTION:
http://bruce-peninsula.com
http://myspace.com/brucepeninsula
http://www.neatfood.com/ *

Bruce Peninsula closing their set with the stomping Crabapples. Captured at their legendary performance at the Neat Coffee Shop in Burnstown on October 17, 2009.
Review here: http://www.neatfood.com/?q=news/bruce-peninsula-simply-nails-it

Bruce Peninsula here is:
Neil Haverty
Matt Cully
Misha Bower
Andrew Barker
Leon Taheny
Amy Learmonth
Ivy Mairi
Tamara Lindeman

Thanks to bradm for the audio.

*I highly highly highly recommend checking out the Neat Coffee Shop if you are in the Ottawa-area or passing through. Its one of the best venues I've been to. The atmosphere and hospitality is astounding. The coffee shop in the front has some of the tastiest treats and soul-warming drinks. It has a very "neat" setup, in that you are given a small name tag so you can place your name on your chair or stool, go grab some food, enjoy the show. The stage is setup in an old-school-house revamped to fit all musical needs. And if you are a performer, the cozy attic/dressing/rehearsal room fulfills is just what you need before a show.

...and they have the best hand dryer in the washrooms.
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Dreamt up by Misha Bower and Matt Cully in the summer of 2006, Bruce Peninsula has slowly mutated, elaborating on the Alan Lomax archives that initially inspired them and taking a new turn every time a new member or instrument is added to the mix. Since their second show, Bruce Peninsula has ballooned out to include a large cast of hoot-and-hollerers. The band mutates often but the last couple of years has seen contributions from Neil Haverty, Andrew Barker, Steve McKay, Leon Taheny, Kari Peddle, Daniela Geshundheit, Katie Stelmanis, Caseey Mecija, Maya Postepski, Isla Craig and Doc Dunn (the latter two no longer perform with BP but are honourary members for life). The instrumental elements have expanded into new terrain (unlike most folk bands, prog isn't a dirty word for this band), but Bruce Peninsula's focus is devoted to the singing, first and foremost. Singing from the gut, singing with gusto, singing the way we were made to sing The early, simple call-and-responses have given way to more elaborate harmonies and compositions over time, but the teachings of those timeless old recordings from the American south remain in tact. There is no denying the power and conviction of old spiritual singers like Vera Ward Hall or Washington Phillips. And while each member of the band may have their own take on the powers that be, the words those legends sang (and, more importantly, the way they sang them) have forever converted Bruce Peninsula into devotees of the church of song. The surge of experimental music in Toronto has been equally important for Bruce Peninsula, bestowing upon them a wide-eyed, anything-goes mentality. Purists may argue that the blues or folk tradition can't be properly expressed without an old steel string and a slide, but this band has never been too concerned with trying to crack open closed minds. And so, a march of metalophone, lap-steel, zithers, and bells. Of drums and sticks and any other oddities of interesting and pleasing tone. Voices blaring all the while. Bruce Peninsula have spent the last year travelling through churches and slums to make A Mountain Is A Mouth, their forthcoming debut LP. They also dropped a 7" somewhere along the way. in the hands of engineer Leon Taheny (ohbijou, Final Fantasy, Germans), these recordings have turned into tiny mountains and the band is ecstatic that soon it will be let out into the world.
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