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Nellie McKay releases her first album of new material in 13 years

Hey Guys Watch This is the New Yorker’s first album of new original material since 2010.

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Titus Andronicus at 917 Main

-photos by James Hay (Titus Andronicus concert photo gallery)

Boy, do I love Titus Andronicus. The bit where the evil bitch mother eats her spoilt-rotten children in a delicious meat pie is, well, delicious. And the bit where the virginal Lavinia (was that her name? Sounds pretty Shakespearean to me) gets raped, then has her hands cut off and her tongue cut out, well that bit is pretty gory too. I love gore – not enough art has fake blood by the gallon, if you ask me. No, at the end of the day it probably isn’t the most subtle of Billy Boy’s plays, but it’s a damned good spectacle to witness.

But that doesn’t really help you gauge whether Titus Andronicus, the band that Shakespeare named his first play after, was any good when I saw them last night at 917 Main [formerly Vancouver’s metal/noise home, the Cobalt. -ed.] Ah man, you’re putting me on the spot here – was it any good? “I dunno,” I cry, close to tears now, “I can hardly remember the set!” I remember the lead singer going on a rant about something, I think it was about the American/Canadian border control giving him a hard time because they asked him to empty all the goods out of his massive beard.

Titus Andronicus at 917 Main, April 1 2010. James Hay concert photo

Titus Andronicus at 917 Main, April 1 2010. James Hay concert photo

Anyway, it left a slightly bitter taste in the mouth, and seemed to retard the set a bit. Apart from this passage, the show flowed pretty well, mixing new and old tracks, with an emphasis on the new album tracks. This seemed to please a fair few in the ground, because almost everything was received with hand-jiggling enthusiasm, but if you want my honest opinion (of course you do), I prefer the first album, The Airing of Grievances, because it’s more gritty and punky than the new one, and because it allows me to reminisce about all those times it got played in my house at university, and how being drunk and shouty is boss.

And for me, that’s when the Glen Rock, New Jersey band is at its peak, when it’s shouty and I’m drunky. Fortunately Titus Andronicus has a decent front man for this – really he was the only person on that stage who drew the eye, with his loads of fidgety energy and frantic little guitar solos. Oh, and they were a pretty tight band. And they have some pretty cool songs.

So did I enjoy the set? Yeah, I suppose I did a bit, but all these positive factors somehow don’t add up to a great show. It isn’t going to live on in the memory as Shakespeare’s blood-and-guts-fest does years after I read it. The Titus Andronicus (the band) that I’m going to remember down the line will be the one on its tasty, anthemic debut album, the one that we foghorned out in our dingy student flat and which gave us such cheap thrills.

Titus Andronicus at 917 Main, April 1 2010. James Hay concert photo

Titus Andronicus at 917 Main, April 1 2010. James Hay concert photo

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