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The Rat Queen-- last week's busted ankle endeavour

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Oct 9 2015- The Rat Queen- I Sort Of lIve By Myself Now And I Don't Know How To Read Treble Clef by Jordan Tucker on Mixcloud

Hey CFURs!

Apparently this week's audio was sort of a mess-- I prerecorded my show after three nights of staying up reading Lolita. I was totally wrong about that book-- it's one of the most beautifully written stories I've ever read. What a character study! In the afterword, Nabokov refers to it as his "love letter to the English language", and I would strongly agree. There's nothing better to read than a series of sentences written by someone who clearly relished writing them. Lolita is one of the funniest, most compassionate, darkest and simply beautiful books I've ever read. Also, a serial child rapist is the protagonist. So there's that.

All that is to say that in my tiredness, I apparently forgot to turn on the fader for my voice for this week's audio, as I was too busy thinking about the possibility of failures in our best intentions, be we criminals or technically-ungifted radio hosts. So- here is my show from last week. The information and songs contained wherein are a week stale, so somehow you'll just have to sally forth in your agony and wait for another week to figure out what happened with my ankle and whatever. Or, check my mixcloud page, (search Jamteezy) , and you can hear my show, but with gaps where I was speaking. If you hate what I talk about, there's blessed silence between songs. Just picture me talking about my cats or about trying to be a good person but being really self-involved. or whatever I say normally, I'm not really paying attention.

Anyways, the link above is last week's show and it works. Hurray!

Volunteer at CFUR! It'll probably be one of your best decisions ever.

Jordan

Deep Dish. Deep Songs. Suppertime. Wise hun bun.

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Time for some deep thinking songs with a deep dish casserole!

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This week's playlist highlights songs which may invoke profound life feelings and or thoughts. A tenuous list - not ever complete.

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The recipe for turkey bisquit casserole:  

The guts:

1lb left over turkey or any meat

2 carrots, diced

2 celery stalks, diced

1 onion, diced

1 garlic clove, diced

1 acorn squash, roasted and smashed

1 tbs butter

1 tbs flour

1/2 cup milk

1 tsp rosemary

1/2 tsp thyme

Bisquit topping:

1 cup flour

2 tsp baking powder

1/4 tsp salt

1/4 cup of cold butter

1/2 cup milk

  • Pre-heat oven to 400. Roast squash.
  • Layer the bottom of a deep casserole dish with cooked smashed squash
  • In a sauce pan over medium heat, saute onions, carrots and celery until tender. About 5-7 minutes
  • Add 1 tbs flour and stir until flour is incorporated
  • Add 1 tbs butter and stir
  • Add milk
  • Add rosemary and thyme and salt and pepper. Taste. Add more of a thing if you think it would taste good.
  • Add your left over chunks of meat
  • Add to casserole dish with squash
  • Now make bisquit topping
  • In a bowl, add flour, salt and baking powder. mix.
  • Cut in butter with a pastry cutter or break up butter into small bits with fingers. Create a dry oatmeal consistency.
  • Add milk
  • Stir with fork until a ball forms
  • Pat over top of the casserole
  • Bake at 400 for about 15-20 minutes. yay!

A deep playlist:    

The Sing- Bill Callahan

Heartless People - Dean Wareham

Don't Want To Go - Wax Mannequin

Nebraska - Bruce Springsteen

In The Graveyard - Sunset Rubdown

In The Graveyard pt.2 - Sunset Rubdown

Blowout (acoustic)  - Radiohead

Needles - The Pack AD

Tell Me - Sharon Van Etten

Standing Outside A Broken Phone Booth With Money In My Hand - Primitive Radio Gods (Palate cleanser)

The History of Plastic - The War On Drugs

After The Gold Rush - Neil Young

Central And Remote - Grizzly Bear

 

 

[embed]https://www.mixcloud.com/suppertime/deep-dish-deep-songs/[/embed]

 

Autumn Sweater Soup for Suppertime. Bunny loves. Lakes.

20151008_141536 Welcome back! To school and to cooking and to music.

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Right down to business. This week I made a very simple roasted autumn veggie soup. Leaves on soup for visual effect. Hair because I always cook with hair. So good! Paired with music which celebrates fallness and or the sounds of yellowish orange images atop dusty skies and falling leaves.

To make delicious soup a loooooooop:

1 large butternut squash, cut in half lengthwise and seeds removed

4 smallish or 2 real big potatoes

1 onion cut into 4 pieces

4 cloves of garlic, NOT peeled

3 big carrots

4 celery stalks

1 apple cored and cut into big chunks

1/4-1/2 cream

6-8 cups vegetable stock

glugs of oil and some pats of butter

lemon or vinegar

  • Pre-heat oven to 350 f
  • In a large roasting pan or cake pan or any big pan, throw all of the vegetables into that pan and add a few good glugs of oil and or lots of butter. Have the squash with the skin side facing up. Add about 3 tsp of salt and lots of pepper. Keep skins on garlic as the skin will provide a protective layer to roast the garlic in.
  • Throw into oven covered for 20 minutes
  • Uncover and bake for 25-30 more minutes, or until roasty with brown and tender.
  • In the meantime, heat up 6 -8 or so cups of veggie stock in a big pot. Use whatever stock you have if not veggie stock, or use water.
  • Veggies should be tender. Scrap out the lovely bits of squash. Squeeze out your garlic. Should be like toothpaste. Stir all veggies up and mash up. Put your hands in there and feeeeeeeeel it mon. Taste it too. Add more salt or pepper if you think it would taste better.
  • Add your mushy roasty veggies to your big pot of stock
  • Bring to a simmer
  • Blend with a hand blender or in batches with your favourite Christmas present from 2011 the MAGIC BULLET!
  • Add some cream if you want too :)
  • Season with salt and pepper. Missing a kick? Add some lemon or vinegar to bring out flavour.
  • EAT!
  • Fanciful suggestions: top with crisp bits of apple, or goats cheese, or bacon, or croutons. Or. All.

Fall inspired playlist:

  • Autumn Sweater- Yo La Tengo
  • Killing the Blues - Robert Plant & Allison Kraus
  • Hurry on Sundown - Vetiver
  • Vaseline Machine Gun - Leo Kottke
  • Unfolding Fans - Andrew Bird
  • La Dispute - Yann Tiersen
  • Anonominal - Andrew Bird
  • Backstep Indi - Pharis & Jason Romero
  • New Lonesome Blues - Pharis & Jason Romero
  • Low Street- T- Nautilus
  • If I Needed You - Townes Van Zandt
  • Chagrin Falls - The Tragically Hip
  • Lazy Music - Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band
  • Cherbourg - Beirut
  • Let It Fall - Lykke Li

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Listen to suppertime Jill on mixcloud:

[embed]https://www.mixcloud.com/suppertime/autumn-sweater-soup/[/embed]

 

 

 

Northern Wetbelt

The Province announced in July that they're thinking about creating a protected area around the Ancient Forest Trail and they're opening it up to public consultation. A few of us thought it might be a good idea to encourage them to designate this park and consider making more in the inland rainforest in the future.
Please lend your name to this letter to Shirley Bond to let her know that this is important to you!

 

Calgary Folk Fest Preview: July 23-26

Set for another weekend of live tunes, CFUR's Music Department is packing up its festiFolkFest Logoval attire (i.e. tie-dye scarves, cowboy boots and a Camelbak) and heading down to the 36th annual Calgary Folk Music Festival, which runs July 23-26. If you've never been, Calgary's folk fest takes place on an island park in the downtown called Prince's Island. Festival-goers stay for the day and the keeners (called tarpies) line up bright and early each morning with their maximum 6' x 8' tarps to grab a much-desired spot in front of the mainstage. Tarpies at Calgary Folk FestAs well as a mainstage (obviously), festival amenities include six workshop stages, food trucks (including mini-donuts), a beer garden serving Calgary's own Big Rock on tap, an artisan marketplace, a bike parking lot, and approximately 12,000 friends to party with.

The lineup is fabulous this year, taking a bluegrass/country/roots edge. Here is a list of CFUR's must-see artists. See if you can match them with the one-word descriptions on the right.

 

Artists


  1. 1. Petunia and the Vipers                                                                      Legend
  2. 2. The Wooden Sky                                                                                  Plucking
  3. 3. Kid Koala                                                                                                   Calgary's-own
  4. 4. Father John Misty                                                                                Wacky
  5. 5. Pharis and Jason Romero                                                                Saxophone
  6. 6. Dragon Fli Empire                                                                               Kazoo
  7. 7. Socalled                                                                                                     Grammy
  8. 8. Colin Stetson                                                                                         Canadiana
  9. 9. Esperanza Spalding presents Emily's D+Evolution         Scratch
  10. 10. Buffy Sainte-Marie                                                                             Hazy

 

 

Workshops


1. Old-Fashioned, New-Fangled: Seems like a wild mix, but oh man, this workshop could be legendary. Dragon Fli Empire, Leftover Cuties, Petunia and the Vipers, Kid Koala.

2. Provincial Boundaries: I'm guessing this is because the artists are all from different provinces? EMBASSYLIGHTS, Hawksley Workman, Frazey Ford, Jenn Grant.

3. Strung Along: Strings of many shapes and sizes. Pharis and Jason Romero, EMBASSYLIGHTS, The Crooked Brothers, SÖNDÖRGO.

4. The Girls Next Door: Pretty self-explanatory, a girls-only jam :) Sera Cahoone, Jenn Grant, Leftover Cuties, Scarlett Jane.

 

Some friends are volunteering there this year, so if I'm lucky, I will tag along as their guest to the famed volunteer after-parties held every night after the site closes. One of my most memorable festival moments was seeing C.R. Avery's volunteer after-party back in 2011. In the "quiet" room, C.R. Avery had none of that and got everyone up dancing and crowd-surfing and rocking out into the wee hours while the sound guy slept, zonked out in his chair. Epic night. Time for a repeat.

 

Article by Alycia Mutual

Honey!CFUR Exclusive interview with underground bunny rocker

After many weeks of late night bartering which included exchanges of rare 78's, cardboard boxes, and exorbitant amounts of carrot soup, my orange tinged fingers were able to sit down with" Honey Bunny", the elusive creative genius behind the best pop-up barn dances and noise hop basement parties in the north. 20150612_224830

"Honey bunny" is a manic multi-instrumentalist, playing with bands that emerge for one night only and disband instantly. HB often leaves immediately after shows, preferring a night of burrowing to social contact.

In a rare act of social gesturing, or simply because my carrot soup had ginger in it, Honey Bunny agreed to an interview. This is it.

Jill Wagg: Honey, thanks for sitting with me. Yes go ahead, you can nibble on my laptop. Anyways, lets just get this out of the way. Your hair. Speak to that.

Honey Bunny: I knew that was coming (chuckle). Well most people like to think I was influenced by Mike Score and A Flock of Seagulls. But I wasn't even born then. I just had a crazy night one time, in Vanderhoof I think. Ya, Vanderhoof, after a insane math-rock set. I just wanted to burrow. I burrowed so hard I clawed my way into a family of marmots. Those kids know how to party. They had never seen blonde fur before and were stoked. We drank willow root sap and chewed dandelion all night. There was some wrestling. One guy ended up with a pretty hilarious beet juice tattoo of his wife on his hind quarters . When I left the party and finally surfaced around dawn in Burns Lake, my hair just kind of stayed up. It stuck. Nothing else to it.

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JW: Well it looks great. Tell us about your influences, you are known for your appreciation and talent for a variety of genres.

HB: I grew up listening to classic rock. You know my mom was really into Jefferson Airplane. I'll never forget that bass. White Rabbit was my mom's anthem growing up, you know when rabbits were finally surfacing in the music scene. Whenever I went to bed, all I could hear was Grace Slick's voice. I thought, hey, that'd be cool to do one day.

Then I got into some indie stuff in my early 20's. I went to the Academy of Rodent and Critter Arts down south. It introduced me to so many new people and music. I was a huge fan of Neutral Milk Hotel, what Jeff Magnum was doing at the time was unlike anything I heard.  Then I met a really great friend of mine, Flop. Flop loved hip hop. We hopped all night to Dead Prez, a new dance was even created that night on campus called herpppin. It was kind of weird.

 

living legends

My mind was blown when I heard "White Rabbit" mixed into these beats. Living Legends, Rabbit Hole. Changed my life to hear such an influential song so fresh.I thought, if these guys can mix genres, I can too. So I bought an electric guitar. I learned how to play "Snake" by Frightened Rabbit, some indie folk about lost love or a really great pet, I still don't know. Anyways, after learning that song I never looked back. Then I started playing root rock and it just came together.

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JW: Wow what a story.

HB: Ya.

JW: Ok well I don't want to keep you much longer. Who are you diggin right now?

HB: Probably the coolest most unique sound I've heard in a while is Old Time Honey, from Montreal. Jugs and crackely sounding things, waltzy folk and a hint of gospel. Strong vocals. A guy named Speedy. I've always had good times with guys named Speedy. They'll be at some pub or something, Nancy O's . I would go but I got a good burrow route picked out.

JW: Awesome. Well thanks so much Honey Bunny.

HB: Party On.

That was an interview with underground bunny rocker Honey Bunny. To see Honey's favourite new band, Old Time Honey, catch them on July 27th from 8-11 at Nancy O's in Prince George.

old time honey

 

 

 

Pretty Fly Weekend at Arts on the Fly

Arts on the Fly 2015 -CampCFUR's Music Department took the backroads through valleys and ranchlands down to Horsefly, BC last weekend for the 10th annual Arts on the Fly Festival. Though the campground was full, we lucked in and set up camp in a nearby field surrounded by ripe saskatoons, which provided an added boost of antioxidants each morning. Yum!

Arts on the Fly 2015 -Pharis and Jason Romero

On Friday at sunset, we watched the Little Horsefly Country Band jam out with Horsefly residents Pharis and Jason Romero (who are known not only for making custom banjos but also for their kick-ass string plucking). They were joined on stage by silhouetted Horsefly neighbours bear, moose, crow, goat, rabbit, and wolf.

Arts on the Fly 2015 -Miss Quincy and the Showdown

Miss Quincy andArts on the Fly 2015 -Miss Quincy solo the Showdown took the stage  next and, as usual, wowed the crowd with their raunchy blues and mesmerizing stage presence. The show ended and the crowd definitely wanted  more.

Luckily, they had two more shows on the 'Tweener stage (a.k.a "in between" acts) the next day: a solo act from Miss Quincy highlighting her country and bluegrass roots from up in the Peace, and another act late Saturday night that drew just as much crowd as the mainstage.

Arts on the Fly 2015 -EntengadosHeadlining Friday night were fiesta band Entangados. On the Canadian festival circuit this summer all the way from Argentina, they donned clown suits and bounced on stage with their groovy mix of ska, rock, and cuarteto.Arts on the Fly 2015 -Horsefly River

Saturday was a scorcher. 35C and sunny/smoky. We started the morning with a refreshing swim in nearby Horsefly Lake and quickly realized that between acts, most of the festival-goers would be found cooling down in the Horsefly River. Secretly, we wished the acoustic stage would wander down to the shore and play for us while we basked in the river.Arts on the Fly 2015 -Doug Koyama

Another tactic to stay cool included finding whatever shade is available. Experimental artist and festival MC Doug Koyama did just this, choosing a nice, contemplative spot next to the mainstage where this introspective sign helped us remember which direction is "sky" and which direction is "earth." In case we get dehydrated, start seeing mirages and lose track of time and space.Arts on the Fly 2015 -FestivalgoersArts on the Fly 2015 -Lexi Marie

Mid-day, Lexi Marie of Lillooet, BC took the stage and roused the crowd with her powerful vocals and soulful folk. The audience listened thoughtfully to her stories of adversity, resilience and strength.

Arts on the Fly 2015 -Sam Tudor

Although we were lost on the backroads of the Cariboo-Chilcotin on Friday night and missed festival favourite Sam Tudor's set (come to think of it, we were so lost that we decided to turn around when we passed his remote hometown of Gavin Lake and realized for once and all that we were definitely headed in the wrong direction), we were lucky enough to catch him again on the 'Tweener stage Saturday afternoon. Even more lucky, he played our favourie song, "Modern New Year." We've pretty much been listening to it on repeat here at CFUR for the last month straight.

Arts on the Fly 2015 -Pharis and Jason RomeroArts on the Fly 2015 -Drum and Bell Tower

After the dinner break, the temperature finally cooled enough for Drum and Bell Tower to get everyone up and dancing. Brent Morton's psychedelic folk-rock was the perfect kickstarter to the festival's evening finale. The entire crowd sang along to his anthemic, "Very Star." And that was that, we were swept into the festival's oscillating rhythm.

Arts on the Fly 2015 -Dawn PembertonThe evening continued with a bang, especially when Quesnel's own Bottoms Up Burlesque burst onto the stage, dotting it with layers and layers of shiny outfits and wearing the most creative pasties we've ever seen (i.e flower petals and bananas). To top it all off, they ended the show with a chainsaw spraying glitter. If you ever get a chance to see them, they rock.Arts on the Fly 2015 -Salty J and Co. 'Tweener

Next up was Dawn Pemberton. She had everyone gettin' funky and groovy and her authentic demeanour made us hope she could stay on stage forever and emanate more warmth. We danced and danced and danced. It seemed we couldn't get enough of the 'Tweener stage this weekend because the highlight of the night was Salty Jo and Co.'s bluegrass reunion, which included Sam Tudor, fiddler Tegan Wahlgren, Marin Patenaude, and Brent Morton. They took a rowdy turn back to a 1950s country sound and we all sang along to mischievous tunes of whiskey and cocaine.

Art on the Fly 2015 -Bush Party

When the night ended, we had no energy left for an after-party. Completely ready to hit the sack. This was good timing because some much-needed rain arrived just as we got into our tents and it didn't stop until morning. The party did continue for a large group of 16-21 year-olds who flock in their trucks to Arts on the Fly each year and celebrate with a laser bush party. We never saw them at the festival, but word is they show up every year and party alongside Arts on the Fly partiers. We got along great and had fun sharing the river and sharing tunes. Horsefly's calm, homesteading atmosphere returned Sunday morning when we woke up to deer passing by as we packed up our tents.

Arts on the Fly 2015 -Calm Morning After

Missed Arts on the Fly? You can always catch it next year, or head to one of many festivals around northern BC, like Artswells or Bella Coola Music Festival or Robson Valley Music Festival or Music on the Mountain. Most of the bands who played Arts on the Fly are on the summer circuit so they should be easy to find on stage somewhere. Cheers from CFUR and the next stop for us is Artswells!

Article by Alycia Mutual

Old Time Honey!

Nancy O's Restaurant  Monday, July 27

8:00pm - 11:00pm

bb3Old Time Honey is organic and raw, taking it back to where good music began by defining their own jug band and cajun sound. Born on the streets of Montreal, in the form of sultry banjo playin' (Aly), one-of-a-kind washboard percussion (Squirrell) and joining them for this tour, Prince George's very own purveyor of musical rapture, Scott Dunbar on the washtub bass! Fans young and old agree, Old Time Honey's soulful singing and danceable rhythms make for a live music experience not soon forgotten. Whether playing a large festival stage or an impromptu street corner, this trio knows how to captivate and animate a crowd. The trail they leave behind of smiles and scuffed dancin' shoes grows larger every day!