Charlie Winston rocked!
by keightydid on 2010-11-21Sound Academy - TorontoRating: 4 out of 5The show was energetic and a lot of fun. Bedouin Soundclash sounded great. I would go to see Charlie Winston again, very entertaining!
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Bedouin Soundclash In Concert
Though they formed in the Canadian college town of Kingston, Ontario, Bedouin Soundclash have always felt more spiritually in tune with another Kingston — the one located about 1,800 miles south in Jamaica. The band's love of reggae sounds is embedded right into their name, which was taken from a 1996 album by experimental dub artist Badawi.
On their scrappy 2001 debut Root Fire, Bedouin Soundclash picked up right where The Clash left off nearly two decades prior, finding the common musical language between reggae's clipped guitar riffs and punk's streetwise grit. The band's 2004 follow-up, Sounding a Mosaic, saw them collaborating with a bona fide rasta-punk legend — producer Darryl Jenifer of D.C. hardcore pioneers Bad Brains.
The album proved to be the group's pop breakthrough, with singer/guitarist Jay Malinowski smoothing out his natural rasp to showcase the gentler, more congenial qualities of his voice. The album's opening track — "When the Night Feels My Song" — was a sweet, acoustic sing-along that sounded like it could've been pulled from Bob Marley's unplugged repertoire. Despite (or maybe because of) it being completely out of step with everything else in heavy rotation on modern-rock radio at the time, the song became a massive crossover hit across Canada and the U.K.
Continuing their fruitful partnership with Jenifer, the band released Street Gospels in 2007. It yielded a two more hit singles in the breezy, island-tinged "Walls Fall Down" and the jangly, busker-ready "St. Andrews" (featuring guest growls from Alexisonfire/Gallows member Wade MacNeil), earning a Pop Album of the Year nomination at the Juno Awards.
The band's success spurred the establishment of their own record label, Pirates Blend. It launched with the 2010 release of Malinowski's solo debut, Bright Lights & Bruises, a more piano-oriented singer/songwriter affair.
Later that year, Bedouin Soundclash released its eclectic fourth album, Light the Horizon, which featured "Brutal Hearts," a smoldering duet with indie-pop phenom Coeur de pirate that led to her and Malinowski collaborating on the short-lived project Armistice. After sitting out most of the ‘10s — during which Malinowski unveiled his ambitious art-rock band, The Deadcoast — Bedouin Soundclash resurfaced in 2017 with the single "Clock Work," an anthemic hit of piano-driven soul that sees the band continue to stretch their elastic sound.
The show was energetic and a lot of fun. Bedouin Soundclash sounded great. I would go to see Charlie Winston again, very entertaining!
Second time seeing Bedouin Soundclash at sound academy and both were amazing shows! This time around it was nice to see the place full for this great Canadian band! Great venue for live music. Never heard of Charlie Winston and was pleasantly surprised! Really great stage presence and great crowd interaction! All bands that played Friday night gave it their all and the crowd responded nicely! Every get a chance to see Bedouin at sound academy jump all over it as you won't be disappointed!
It was a fun concert! Great atmosphere created by the two opening bands! Charlie Winston was great, he even jumped down to us and walked around. Bedouin Soundclash was amazing! They sounded just as good as they do is in cd!
The opening act Charlie Winston and Bedouin Soundclash were both excellent. The drummer for Bedouin Soundclash (B S) is truly amazing. At times I was like does he have a third arm somewhere cause there were so many different sounds he was making. The singer was also very good with his scratchy voice that wooed. The bassist also very excellent, kind of reminded me of Sting's bass playing during his Police stint. All in all a very good night for awesome music. The last song everyone joined in, it was just amazing. I hope they come back soon.
Charlie Winston blew me away, despite the fact that we waited almost two hours to see him from when the show was supposed to start. As for BS...well, can't tell you, because after waiting 45 mintues to see the band, I left. I don't understand how a band of three takes 45 minutes to set up. I thought the set up for each act was excruitaingly long. I was extremely dissapointed in the event. Wish there was a way to get my money back.