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Posted by the Choir Practice on Jan 18, 2008

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SCHOLARS & ROGUES

The best CDs of 2007, pt. 1

http://www.scholarsandrogues.com/2008/01/17/best-cds-2007-pt1/

Posted on January 17, 2008 by Dr. Slammy under art, entertainment, music, popular culture [ Comments: none ]

It was a pretty good year in music. A handful of artists produced absolutely fabulous CDs and a lot more managed releases ranging from "worth the money" to "are you sure that shouldn't be rated a little higher"?

Here's the format. Instead of the tedious task of actually ranking CDs - a torture I used to inflict on myself every year - we now have four tiers: The Slammy, awarded to the CD of the Year; the Platinum LP, awarded for superior achievement; the Gold LP, for significant achievement; and Honorable Mention, for things I bought and liked enough to keep. Today, the Gold LP winners and Honorable Mentions (presented in no particular order).

http://www.scholarsandrogues.com/2008/01/17/best-cds-2007-pt1/

Gold LP


The Choir Practice: The Choir Practice
Imagine if your favorite indie pop artists joined your high school choir and kicked the director out of the building. It's kinda like that. Same concept as The Polyphonic Spree, only better than this year's TPS effort. Unassuming, bright-eyed even in its dark moments - perhaps the year's most irresistibly likable CD.





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Year Zero for music in '07



Sorting the best albums from the horrific releases in the year the music nearly did.



Like lucky soldiers returning from some gawdawful war, this year's best CDs were surrounded on all sides by unspeakable horrors. Sure, most folks seem content with predictable televised karaoke, iPod nostalgia or the festering zombie remains of grunge - but for the discerning ear, well, no such peace. Here's what I loved, digging around the ruins. Check out audio slices of most of these on allmusic.com.

THE CHOIR PRACTICE

The Choir Practice: A mini Polyphonic Spree with Vancouver's loveliest voices.

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[The Adult-in-Training]

Sunday, January 13, 2008

Top 50 Albums of 2007

What a fan-freaking-tastic year for music. Everyone under the sun released an album this year! Feist, Art Brut, Deerhoof, Arctic Monkeys... For the first time Tori Amos, PJ Harvey, AND Bjork all released albums, which if this were say 1995, you would have like SO shit your pants. Hell, even Life Without Buildings came back from the dead briefly to give us a live album. Sorting through all of it took an entire year, and here for you is what I'd consider the best. Happy listening.


Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
23.
The Choir Practice | The Choir Practice
Video:
Failsafe
MySpace:
Here

Briefly: Made up over over a dozen musicians from Canada, The Choir Practice sings and sounds like a group of high school chorus students recording original material + covers. Brilliant. The album's textured vocals on top of light guitars and drums works flawlessly.

http://theait.blogspot.com/2008/01/top-50-albums-of-2007.html  



 

New Music Canada Track of the Day for January 10, 2008:

Posted by the Choir Practice on Jan 18, 2008
New Music Canada Track of the Day for January 10, 2008: The Choir Practice "Red Fox"
Posted by Lana Gay at 12:00 AM
» Post a Comment
Have you ever heard that the way you spend your New Years Eve is the way you'll spend your new year? I think it's just something that partiers use to bully friends out of their homes to get them drunk. Now if the saying is true, boy am I ever going to have an interesting new year.

You see, after dancing on bar stools and drinking 6 too many beer, I was happy to leave my local bar and head to a house party (with a lovely take-out poutine). I sauntered en route covered in cheesy gravy AND before the big rush of drunks, could it get any better? It was going to be a good year after all.

Then, 5 blocks away from the party saw a man sitting awkwardly on the sidewalk. I couldn't help but see if he was okay (poutine does cure most things). Turns out he'd broken his leg and had been lying there for an hour. Funny enough he was right beside a fire station (Firemen must be heavy sleepers, I knocked on their door forever. My dreams of a partially undressed fireman sliding down a pole to my rescue...ya, well that didn't happen.)

After calling 911 we hung out waiting for the ambulance. I figured we'd be waiting a bit, and sure enough, 45 minutes later we were contemplating if sitting on cold pavement really did cause hemorrhoids. Impatient, I ended up convincing a cab (and its passengers) to lend us a ride to the hospital. Lifting a 200 pound man in heels is now on my resume.

The Emergency Room at 2:15am on New Years Eve/Day is a sight to behold. It was a gong show of post-fight brawls and intoxicating injuries, with a dash of humour. Two cat fighters with injured hands ended up across from eachother, one with her talon type nails covered in blood, the other with a blackening eye and speckles of red all over her eyeball. I saw a broken nose, toes all busted in the upright position, and a man with a broken jaw who spit half of his teeth into a small bucket. To top it all off, a very high homeless man thought his pants should remain at his knees at all times.

By the time my new pal got in to see the doctor, it was 5:30am, and I was ready to eat another poutine and perhaps have another drink. I left the hospital, and threw my iPod on shuffle. The first song to play in 2008 was "Red Fox" by
 The Choir Practice. I decided that singing and dancing down the street was in order, after all, it was a new year.



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The Choir Practice Sings Out!

Posted by the Choir Practice on Oct 30, 2007


!earshot-online home

earshot interview


The Choir Practice Sings Out!

Is the world ready for an indie-pop choir? It seems so.
By James Tennant


Anyone who works in campus radio knows that the number of CDs you receive is borderline insane. Ever seen Miracle On 34th Street, where they
The Choir Practice carves out its own styledump bags of letters on the floor? Yeah. It's like that. As a result, sometimes discs get lost in the shuffle, and they slip by unnoticed.

That did not happen with The Choir Practice. There was something so sixties about the shade of green, it made me open the jewel box. Inside, photos suggested the band were more like a soccer team. The back jacket photo looks like a still photo from a Lawrence Welk Christmas special, with white scarves and sweaters and fake cottony show.

This, clearly, was awesome.

Yet the Choir Practice's strength is not in any kind of gimmick or in their excellent group photograph design. It's in the music - a folksy, catchy choral pop that has skipped its way up the campus charts in Canada and the U.S.

The Choir itself was founded and fleshed out by Coco Culbertson. Culbertson is a Canadian indie rock stalwart; her previous groups include The Gay, the A.C. Newman Band and, briefly, The Tennessee Twin.



At interview time, Culbertson is relaxing in her latest digs – the new family farm in rural Saskatchewan. She is nine months pregnant, so it would make sense if music is not foremost on her mind, but even so, it does seem unusual. How does a person start a project, see it come to fruition, experience a great deal of initial success…and then leave it all in someone else's hands?

"Oh, I love it," Culbertson says happily. "As much as it was my baby I love it that can be shared. I did this with The Gay, too. I cold call people - I've got this really dorky idea, would you be interested? It makes it way more fun for me. I'm not the lead singer type. It's really not about me, it's about the collective, which is way more fun for my personality."

While there is some limited instrumentation on the Choir Practice's eponymous debut, Culbertson's original concept was an a-cappella, traditional choral ensemble. She claims she was inspired, in part, by meeting Pat Spurgeon and Gram LeBron of Rogue Wave. They had been involved with the Neptune Lodge, which was in turn part of something called the Immersion Composition Society.

"It's this old hippie sort of writing workshop that happens through different chapters," says Culbertson. "People who are into music would meet – all sorts of different types of musicians from pan flutes to people who just sung to theremin players, and they'd hash out your ideas as an exercise."

Though she denies being a "folkie hippie" herself, she found the idea of a random drop-in collective, where people could come and just sing along, very appealing. To form the group, Culbertson began to approach people she wanted to work with, whether they knew her or not.

"I did this with The Gay, too," she laughs. "I cold call people – 'I've got this really dorky idea, would you be interested? I think you might like me!'"

For about five months, the ensemble worked on material at Culbertson's home or, more entertainingly, in Maclean Park We're compared to the Polyphonic Spree all the time, but I can't hear it. They're Joseph and the Technicolor Dreamcoat; we're more Kate and Anna McGarrigle. in Vancouver's Strathcona neighbourhood. Passers-by probably thought the group was about to break into a rendition of "Good Morning, Starshine."

The Choir Practice have played a number of live shows, but as they average between nine and twelve members, a regular bar-circuit tour is probably unlikely (unless they are able to attach themselves to bill that features a larger band, perhaps). The size of the group might have been prohibitive to its own existence, but to Culbertson's surprise, that has not been an issue.

"It's funny because all the years I've been in bands it's been a struggle to even get a power trio together," she says. "This has been so easy. There has never less than six or seven people at practice."

There has been an effort to democratize the Choir as well, making sure everyone gets equal time and takes equal ownership, whether it is over the music or even the snappy wardrobes. Despite the fun costumes, however, the visual aspect of the Choir Practice is just that – fun – and not an attempt to be clever-clever.

"It's not smug," says Culbertson. " There's no irony in it whatsoever, there really
There's no irony in it whatsoever says Coco Culbertsonisn't I don't own a Polyphonic Spree record. We're compared to them all the time, including by our own label, but I can't hear it. They're Joseph and the Technicolor Dreamcoat; we're more Kate and Anna McGarrigle."

Still, there has been at least one wardrobe issue that made Culbertson bristle…

"After I left Vancouver, they did a show in muumuus," Culbertson says, referring to the performance at the NCRA's annual awards show in June. "I can't believe I missed it! It's the only thing that suits my figure. They wait until the big Shamu whale has retired to birth, and they break out these wicked muumuus. I was like, 'You bastards!' I think they planned it."

***

Coco Culbertson, her husband (New Pornographers drummer) Kurt Dahle are pleased to welcome the newest member of the family. Clement Ace Helge Dahle was born during the lunch hour on a very hot July afternoon, shortly after this interview.

"Now we have 2 sons, both named after drummers.," says Culbertson. "Boy I sure have a house full!"

According to Culbertson, she, Kurt, Levon and Clement are all doing swimmingly.

Failsafe: History of a Song

Posted by the Choir Practice on Oct 30, 2007
"Failsafe: History of a Song".

Podcast 125 – Language Arts

Entry Image

Posted by Grant Lawrence on Oct 12, 2007
1 comment | » Post a Comment

Ever signed a cheque with a name that's not yours?

Failsafe.

Folks, I want to let you know that this Podcast contains one of my favourite pieces that we have included on the show so far: "Failsafe: History of a Song". Simply put, we chart the story and evolution of a little-known but superb Carl "AC" Newman song... from its first performance in session here at CBC Radio 3 several years ago, to its inclusion as a cover on the Choir Practice album, to the completely re-worked version on the latest New Pornographers album Challengers.

Through conversation with Newman, and Coco Culbertson from the Choir Practice, we learn that each subsequent version was a direct result of that which preceeded it, though no version of "Failsafe" sounds the same, or even contain the same lyrics, beyond the incredibly catchy main melody.

Also on the show, Victoria band Immaculate Machine present a very special and exotic fortune cookie surprise for all of our ears, but specifically mine. As well, we'll preview CBC Radio 3's next big live event: our showcase from the 15th Annual Halifax Pop Explosion next weekend!

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THE CHOIR PRACTICE GEORGIA STRAIGHT CD REVIEW

Posted by the Choir Practice on Apr 30, 2007

CD REVIEW

The Choir Practice
By Adrian Mack
Publish Date: April 26, 2007
in The Georgia Straight

The Choir Practice on Mint Records:

For most of us, choir practice was a nightmare-a screaming drag of epic
proportions made up of flat singing and the smell of wet kids in overlit
assembly halls. Mercifully, the Choir Practice's eponymous debut doesn't
invoke those feelings, instead conjuring a sort of a '60s utopia of
beautiful and talented women, tambourines, and men in crisp white pants.
No big surprise, really, since this Choir Practice comes from the Mint
Records sunshine factory. Led by the Gay's Coco Culbertson and Larissa
Loyva of P:ano, along with 12 colleagues and friends, including Ida
Nielsen, Love and Mathematic's Shane Turner, and photographer Karin Bubas,
the Choir Practice is equal parts goofy and uplifting, as well as self-
consciously kitschy in the manner of a lot of Mint product.
The rhapsodic vanilla gospel of the New Seekers-mixed with Godspell and
the quavering infant voices of the Langley Schools Music Project-seems to
have inspired this bunch. Culbertson provides most of the songs, and her
efforts are smart and often funny. "Pretty" and "Up All Day" stand
out-especially the latter, which is a sugar- candy sibling to the Lovin'
Spoonful's "Daydream". Carl Newman also provides one striking track, the
woozy "Failsafe", while Loyva's three songs give these voices their most
satisfying workouts, especially the euphoric "I See Things" and the
stately "Things I Say", with its exhilarated chorus rising above a Hammond
organ. The hypothesis is that a bunch of people singing their lungs out is irresistible, and based on this it's hard to argue the point.

http://www.straight.com/article-87465/the-choir-practice

Jarvis Cocker and The Choir Practice

Posted by the Choir Practice on Apr 18, 2007

Jarvis Cocker May the 1st 2007 at
Commodore Ballroom
/Vancouver  

with Guests The Choir Practice

The Choir Practice
[6 tracks available]
Play

About The Choir Practice

The Choir Practice is the love child of Coco, Marcy, Larissa and Ida.. After meeting at a summer camp for choral singing and swinging up island....the gang began to grow. The rest is history. We are a diverse group of singers, singing.

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