Mediocre Minds and Greg The Egg

Not so long ago, at the newly dubbed 1168 Place, punk rock emerged in prince George once again. Luckily for all lovers of Rock & Roll, both Garrett Perry and Greg the Egg we're on scene to capture the action.

Greg came roaring out his den with his traditional BC Lions foam head growth on full display. He thrashed the night away with his vintage Air Guitar ↓

none of this would be possible without the steady hand of Garrett Perry on camera. Thanks fellas!

Catch the Air Guitar in action on Greg's show: LIVE Fridays 2-4pm, repeated everyday at 1am, and 8-10pm Saturday

Don't forget Garret Perry's CFUR double feature with Co-Host/Host-Host Karl Wyssen: Classic Canadian Rock Thurs 7-8pm and Sat 1-2pm, The Garrett & Karl Show 2000 LIVE Mon 7-9pm, Fri 7-9am.

Whither Music Festivals?

There has been a debate percolating in the CFUR office for a while now. It has incurred heated battles and large divisions. Relationships have ended, friendships have been forever strained, forever changed, after long sworn friends learned they were on opposite sides of this contentious battle. It was been long and bloody, indeed. We entered as genial radio hosts, nary a hair displaced on our side parted, dark-rimmed glasses-bearing heads. we have emerged, weary and broken, with distant gazes and memories of brutal fisticuffs. but we press on, soldier on, because we must defend the side that is ours, the side that is in all of our hearts. The sides are, of course, those who are pro music festivals, and those who are not. It's not really that heated, I've just been reading a lot of A Song of Ice and Fire lately (that's Game of Thrones for you show watching plebeians) and wish I was George R.R. Martin. But, back to festivals and the controversy.

Both points of view have merit. For me, I like festivals because you can access a whackload of your favourite artists in one place, You can make a bunch of new friends while listening to those artists, you can drink beer, and getting there and being there is an adventure and an experience. You might run into old friends, bring some with you, and get to know a new town or valley. Often, artists you would have never thought of as collaborators will bop in on one another's sets, making festivals an exercise in constant reinvention and creativity.

For some nameless others, there are other points to be made. It's expensive. You have to buy food for a stretch of days. Either you get swept up in the madness and you're so hammered that you barely remember the shows, or you're too sober and the excitement of seeing St. Vincent is neutralized by a frat bro puking on you from three feet away. If it's an open air festival, the acoustics are generally terrible, and you listen to watered down, warbly versions of your favourite songs because the musicians, like everyone else, are hammered.

For some, the answer is an in-town, multivenued location. Artswells does this very excellently: they've got multiple concert halls where artists can play their sets without compromising sound quality. The shows are still intimate, and the town benefits economically. This, however, requires an entire town to surrender their auditory peace of mind and walking areas to a barrage of mostly young people, in varying degrees of sobriety and undress.

For others, going to individual shows is more appealing: take a flight to Vancouver, see the Danny Brown concert, spend the night in a hotel, and fly back the next day. It's neat, it's simple, and you can fully experience one show. You don't have to decide which of your favourite artists are more with seeing if they have conflicting time slots. You don't have to deal with other people's tents or bad cooking smells. Get in, get out.

None of us really have the best answer: it comes down to personal preference. If you're more of an introvert, maybe stick to one show. If you're into the festival experience, hit up something with tons of art, like Burning Man. If you want to dance, try an EDM festival. If you want to experience local culture, try a small festival close to home. The key point is: if you're going to a music event this summer, make sure you know what you're in for. Don't head to Lollapalooza and expect quiet tea and reflection hour by the serene lake. Don't go to the Kanye West show with your tent and a 24 pack of beer. Do have fun, whatever you do, and do be safe. Music should be fun. Have a wicked summer!

Suppertime Presents: Slow Low and Long Songs- Slow Cooked Sweet and Sour Pork

 

 

Time to test your patience and pull out your slow cooker! This week were making slow cooked sweet and sour pork. Tender bits of porkiness, sweet pineapple, and crisp vegetables make this dish a beautiful treat after a long day. Accompanying this dish is a playlist filled with some long, slow, sweet ( with a touch of sour) songs. Enjoy!

4 Pork chops, cubed

1 onion

2 stalks of celery

2 carrots

1 bell pepper of your choice

½ can of pineapple chunks

1/4 cup brown sugar

1/4  cup water

1/4 cup vinegar

1 tbs soya sauce

2 tbs cornstarch

  • Dice up your veggies into big chunks
  • Dice up your meat into big chunks
  • Put into a slow cooker – if you have 8 hours, use the low setting, if 4, high, if somewhere in between, start with the cooker on high for an hour or two then lower it down for the last portion of cooking
  • In a bowl, mix up your brown sugar, water, vinegar, and soya sauce, add to slow cooker put the lid on and wait!
  • With 1 hour left to cook, take half the liquid from a can of pineapple and put into a cup. Add the cornstarch, stir, and add that mixture to the crockpot. Add half the can of the pineapple (the whole can if you are so inclined to intense pineapples tastes)
  • After an hour with th e freshly added cornstarch and pineapple, your creation shall be ready to devour. ENJOY!

 

A slow, low, sweet and sour mix:

Timber Timbre – Black Water

Al Green – How Can You Mend A Broken Heart

Plants And Animals – Lola Who?

LCD Soundsystem – Somebody’s Calling Me

Animal Collective – Street Flash

The Beatles – Hey Jude (Notable Nod)

The Chameleons – View From A Hill

Timber Timbre – Hot Dreams

Sunset Rubdown – Dragon’s Lair

 

LISTEN ONLINE HERE!

FOLLOW RECIPE BLOG HERE!

 

 

Suppertime!

Tastes and Sounds of Spring a Ling

Thai Lettuce Wraps

 

With one of our first weekends full of sunshine and that distinct northern spring smell of dog poo and garbage defrosting, I thought it seemed fitting to celebrate with a nice spring show. This lettuce wrap recipe mirrors the easy breezy bright tastes of the bright music. Make these with our without meat!

For the filling:

3 cloves of garlic minced

½ inch fresh ginger

½ onion finely diced

A shake of chili flakes (more if you like it spicey!)

8 or so mushrooms diced

¼ yellow pepper diced

¼ red pepper diced

1 cup bean sprouts

½ cup tofu or any meat you wish

2 tbs soy sauce

1 juice of lime

1 tsp fish sauce

1 tbs or so sugar

For garnish

Fresh cilantro

Peanut Sauce:

2 tbs peanut BUTTER

1 tbs oil

1 tsp sugar

Squeeze of lime

However much hot sauce you like ( I use tobasco)

Chopped green onion

  • Heat oil in a large frying pan over mediumish heat
  • Add garlic, ginger and chili flakes, heat until fragrant
  • Add tofu, fry for 5 ish minutes
  • Add all the veggies except for the bean sprouts, fry for 3 minutes or until beginning to be soft
  • Add soy sauce, fish sauce, lime and sugar
  • Fry for 3 more minutes
  • Reduce heat, add bean sprouts and cook just until bean sprouts are wilted
  • Serve in pieces of ice berg lettuce

 

A spring a ling happy playlist:

Jens Lekman – A Post Card to Nina

The Arcade Fire – Brazil

King Khan and The Shrines – Welfare Bread

The Ruffled Feathers – Canals of Suzhou

Rostam – Wood

Vetiver – More of This

Van Morrison – Astral Weeks

Beirut – The Bunker

American Royalty – Matchstick

Yan Tiersen – Les Deux Pianos

Waxahatchee- Coast to Coast

Clap Your Hands and Say Yeah – Blue Turning Into Grey

Yo Le Tango – Centre of Gravity

 

Check out the show online!

some people are just... artists...

Chad VanGaalen

 

Calgary may not be B.C.'s favourite city to the West, but we can credit it with at least one musical entity: the genius that is Chad VanGaalen. With seven albums to date, arguing against his stature as an established musician loses all credibility. By one means or another, he's seen the world on accord of his artistry. Well travelled for a reason, his performances leave an impression. As if that wasn't enough, just enough to let him just be a musician, he had a desire to score the soundtrack to sci-fi film. When no one cared to let him do this, he simply made his own. Check out the animation this man is capable of ↓

Unreal! Or surreal? After that, I can only assume "Tarboz," couldn't do anything but amaze. It appears CVG has rejected what we normally accept in our routine lives, demanded a change, and seen to it himself. Congrats CVG, you're awesome!

Suppertime Presents: Mo Honey Mo Problems - MOTOWN

This week I focused on a recipe using honey and the sweet sweet sounds of Motown. This is a fancy tasting bread- though easy to make. Great with some butter and honey on top with a cup of coffaa!! Recipe adapted form  Fanny Farmer Cookbook, 1979

 

2 cups of flour

1 tsp baking powder

1tsp baking soda

1 tsp salt

1tsp cinnamon

½ tsp dry or fresh ginger

¼ tsp nutmeg

1 egg

½ cup honey

1 cup milk

  • Put all ingredients into a bowl
  • Mix for 20 minutes with an electric mixer
  • Pour into greased bread pan
  • Bake at 350 for 40-50 minutes

A Motown Playlist:

The Temptations – Get Ready

Barrett Strong – Money ( That’s What I Want)

Smokey Robinson and The Miracles – Shop Around

Smokey Robinson and The Miracles – You’ve Really Got a Hold On Me

Smokey Robinson and The Miracles – The Tracks of My Tears

Gladys Knight and The Pips – Midnight Train To Georgia

Marvin Gaye – Heard It Through the Grapevine

The Supremes – Where Did Our Love Go

Cake – Short Skirt Long Jacket ( Palate Cleanser)

Stevie Wonder – Fingertips Pt 2

Stevie Wonder – Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I’m Yours

The Spinners – It’s A Shame

The Jackson 5 – I Want You Back

Martha and the Vandellas – Heat Wave

The Temptations – My Girl

Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings – Without a Heart

The Flying Lizards – Money ( That’s What I Want)

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 Suppertime is a radio show broadcast from Prince George BC on Cfur 88.7. Combining glorious music and super food. Just eat it! Sundays 6pm-7pm live on 88.7 FM

LISTEN ONLINE HERE CHECK OUT THE BLOG HERE

Colonel Chris Hadfield, Rock Star Astronaut, Visits Prince George

Last week's blustery Saturday morning, people of all ages curved around the side of the Prince George Exploration Place to meet a Canadian icon. Retired Astronaut, Colonel Chris Hadfield, had landed in Prince George to promote his new book,  An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth: What Going to Space Taught Me About Ingenuity, Determination, and Being Prepared for Anything. Colonel Hadfield became famous as the first Canadian to do a spacewalk, and for commanding the International Space Station. While on board, his youtube videos, tweets and Reddit Ask Me Anything sessions reinstilled a curiosity in space that had long been forgotten.

You can check out Colonel Hadfield's youtube channel here: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtGG8ucQgEJPeUPhJZ4M4jA/videos

Over two hundred and fifty people, young and old, had gathered in the rain to get their books autographed. One of the employees, Chad, breathlessly told me that Hadfield had been on a whirlwind tour, having arrived in Prince George that morning from San Diego, and heading to Halifax the day after. He had no time in between any of his commitments: Hadfield stayed long past his allotted autograph session, moving off of his stage and among the crowd to ensure that no book was left unsigned. I even saw him sign a little boy's fighter jet, telling him, "that's an F18. I used to fly those. want me to sign it? Here, hold it by the other wing, so you don't smudge it." He was the picture of warmth, his kindness and courtesy with each person exemplary of the best of what Canadians hope to be. If I sound kind of in love, it's because I kind of am: this man was just so wonderful. He'd be an exceptional person even if he weren't an astronaut. He took the time to create a moment with every single person there. I saw him hug a girl who called him her hero, and I saw an old lady running away cackling that he was cute after he shook her hand. It was pretty special to see a whole community get so united over one marvellous person.

I really would recommend that you read his book: even if you're not interested in voyages in space, he's a beautiful writer and it has some excellent lessons. The Prince George Public Library has five copies available for loan. If you're not much into reading, definitely check out his youtube page, he does a lovely cover of David Bowie's Space Oddity.

 

I'll leave you with some words by Colonel Hadfield :

Decide in your heart of hearts what really excites and challenges you, and start moving your life in that direction. Every decision you make, from what you eat to what you do with your time tonight, turns you into who you are tomorrow, and the day after that. Look at who you want to be, and start sculpting yourself into that person. You may not get exactly where you thought you'd be, but you will be doing things that suit you in a profession you believe in. Don't let life randomly kick you into the adult you don't want to become.

Flowshine - Good People (Live on CFUR)

Winding their way through Highway 1, the Columbia Icefields on 93, the majesty of McBride, then into our own forested bowl, Flowshine arrived from Calgary, AB. Here's a clip from that chilly November day.

They went on to give a solid performance later that night at, the now defunct, Riley's Pub. Rock n' Folk Psychedelia echoed throughout the bowl that night. To refill your sonic cup, visit their website. To hear our conversation with the trio, visit the Mixcloud Feed.

In memory of Frankie Knuckles: 1955-2014

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It all started in the year of 1977, at the Warehouse nightclub in Chicago. Frankie Knuckles, the Godfather of House music, was a resident DJ playing 8 to 10 hour sets at the revolutionary nightclub in The Windy City. People left the club exhausted from dirty dancing to the constant 4/4 beats all night, courtesy of the experimental mixing proficiency of Knuckles. He would mix the popular disco songs of the 70’s with his own sound; the rhythmic beats from his 909 drum machines, to create music that no one had ever heard before. Although gay black men mostly visited The Warehouse, the music became so popular in the area that a whiter and straighter crowd came more frequently. Knuckles said that: “My fondest memory is the mixed crowd. Racially, ethnically, sexually. That was the best thing.”

http://www.mixcloud.com/R_co/frankie-knuckles-live-the-warehouse-28-08-1981/

The Warehouse was strictly about the music, and from 1977 to Knuckles last year of residency in 1982, it was ONLY about the music. After a night out at the “House”, everyone would head down to the record stores asking for “house” music. In 1982, Knuckles made his own nightclub: The Power Plant; and after years of this genre refining movement, it was the latest craze with the younger population. Knuckles knew that house was here to stay, and boy was he right. Unfortunately, Frankie Knuckles passed away last week (Mar. 31), and the electronic dance music family couldn’t be in any more shock. Anyone who has ever gone to a nightclub that plays any genre of EDM, you can thank Knuckles; he was a true pioneer. Already, DJ’s around the world are planning tribute shows and remixes in memoriam of the legend. Although he has left us, his style and dream of house music still thrives. It may have not quite reached the pinnacle that he had dreamt, but it is well on its way. Over the coming years, you will see a drastic change to electronic dance music. Artists such as Tchami and Oliver Heldens may just take the world by storm, with their bouncy, deep house vibes, all influenced by the one and only Frankie Knuckles.

 

https://soundcloud.com/platform/frankie-knuckles-60-min-boiler

 

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