REVIEW: Boz a mixed bag
Posted on October 6, 2014 By Tom Murray Entertainment, Front Slider, Music, music
Full disclosure – we were all brought in by the promise of Silk Degrees. Okay, that might be making too much of an assumption on behalf of the audience who came out to see Boz Scaggs at the Jubilee Auditorium Monday night, but not by much. Silk Degrees, after all, was a monster hit, an […]
Tragically Hip to encore Fully Completely in Edmonton
Posted on October 6, 2014 By Mike Ross Entertainment, entertainment, Front Slider, Music
In case you didn’t get your fill of Fully Completely the first time around, the Tragically Hip is bringing it back for an encore. The reissue of the band’s third album will coincide with the “Fully and Completely tour” across Canada in 2015. The Hip plays Rexall Place Thursday, Feb. 12. Tickets go ON SALE […]
MUSIC PREVIEW: Pixies return, done Deal
Posted on October 1, 2014 By Michael Senchuk Entertainment, Front Slider, Music
The busy fall touring season continues, with notable gigs from Winnipeg’s Royal Canoe, Trust (TR/ST) and Swedish death metal act Amon Amarth on tap this weekend, revving up towards the fall’s big music festival, Up + Downtown, which takes place over the Thanksgiving weekend. Pixies are back for a show at the Shaw Conference Centre […]
EIFF REVIEW: Gone Doggy Gone a howl
Posted on October 1, 2014 By Mike Ross Entertainment, Film, Front Slider
The most sympathetic character in Gone Doggy Gone is the dog. Ooh, but Laila is such a sweet little crumbcake! With her wee sweaters and booties and her adorable little baby puppy carriage, and her humans wipe her butt with baby wipes because she sleeps in their bed, literally coming between man and wife, and […]
Kirby leaves Edmonton music scene a better place
Posted on September 30, 2014 By Mike Ross Front Slider, Music, News, news
The final story Kirby wrote for GigCity was an obituary on Doug Jenson. You can add “journalist” to the long list of things Kirby was good at. She did it because I asked her to, because she was the first person I thought of who would be able write a fitting tribute to such a […]
The Tea Party returns in December
Posted on September 30, 2014 By Mike Ross Entertainment, Front Slider, Music, music
The Tea Party is back. No, not the American political movement, which never left, but the Canadian power trio, which cut a swath through the Canadian rock fields in the mid-1990s, broke up, reformed and have since stuck to their guns and did NOT sell their Internet domain teaparty.com despite rumour of a giant offer […]
Neil Diamond in Edmonton in May
Posted on September 29, 2014 By Mike Ross Entertainment, entertainment, Music
Say what you want about Neil Diamond. Better yet, don’t. Unless it’s nice – lest his fell legion of female fandom descend upon you and give you what for! Diamond, 73, has announced a slew of dates behind his upcoming album, Melody Road, including Tuesday, May 5, 2015 at Rexall Place in Edmonton. No ticket […]
Is Glen Campbell Alzheimer’s documentary exploitive?
Posted on September 29, 2014 By Derek Owen Entertainment, Film, Front Slider, life, Music
Director James Keach’s documentary Glen Campbell: I’ll Be Me follows the country music legend’s farewell tour following his diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease in the summer of 2011. While chock full of joyful moments, it’s hard to watch the rapid descent of the great musician into dementia, as documented during a scene at the Mayo Clinic […]
EIFF REVIEW: Doc celebrates Memphis history
Posted on September 29, 2014 By Derek Owen Entertainment, Film, Front Slider, Music
How do you watch a 90 minute documentary about the recording sessions for an album no one knows about, coupled together with countless anecdotes about people most music fans have never heard of, filmed in a city that was once crucial to the development of the American 20 century musical and cultural identity, but isn’t […]
INTERVIEW: Shannon Tweed on Hollywood
Posted on September 26, 2014 By Mike Ross culture, Entertainment, Front Slider, Music
“Conquered Hollywood? It might have conquered me,” says the delightful Shannon Tweed on how she and countless other Canadians found success in American show business. The reality show star is just one subject in the new documentary Gone South: How Canada Invented Hollywood, along with people like Neve Campbell, Tommy Chong, Howie Mandel, Alan Thicke […]