Vancouver Review Round-Up: The Good, The Bad & The Ugly

It’s been a couple days since we got back from our western sojourn with pals Death From Above 1979. It was a total blast, with a wealth of highlights including great shows, much partying and even a trip to the gun range for some face time with some heavy ordinance.

As far as the shows went, we had a great response from the crowds with mosh pits all three nights and lots of people coming up to us after we played. Thanks to everyone who said hello — we totally appreciate it.

But as the immediacy of the events recede, it’s now time for the honoured tradition of trolling the internet to gauge the response. We couldn’t find any mention of the Edmonton show, and of the four or five Commodore reviews, three made mention of Biblical.  In the spirit of the gun play that started our adventure, we present Biblical: The Good, The Bad & The Ugly.

The Good:
Georgia Straight (Weekly)

Things started off, however, with the classic-rock stylings of the group’s Hogtown pals Biblical. Featuring Grainger’s brothers-in-arms, bassist Nick Sewell and six-stringer/keyboardist Andrew Scott, both from his solo backup band the Mountains, Biblical barrelled through fuzzed-out psych-blues and the occasional punky blast, which got the Commodore crowd primed for the resurrected main course.

Just the facts, m’am. I’d expect no less from a legitimate publication like the Straight — they’re a Vancouver institution.  This paragraph totally sums up who we are, what we did and why we were there.

The Bad:
Vancouver Music Review (Blog)

As fans new and old arrived, some wearing vintage DFA1979 tees and some buying them new at the merch stand, fellow Toronto band Biblical took the stage. I honestly can’t be surprised that DFA1979 would pick a hard rock band to open, so I knew I would have to grin and bear it. Biblical was like a cliche 80′s rock band you see in a movie. Long hair, all male, gruff voices and loud guitars.

I don’t even know if this is bad — I’m just going by ‘grin and bear it’. In fact, we’re all pretty stoked about being ‘like’ a cliché 80’s rock band. Does he mean like Jeff Healy in Roadhouse? If you have some better ideas leave them in the comments.

The Ugly:
3am Revelations (Blog)

Opening the night was Biblical, who were pretty much the epitome of a generic hard rock band. Imagine Eagles of Death Metal with all satire stripped, and less talent, and that’s pretty much what it was. They started off with some power chords before the vocals came in, a gruff, clichéd growl, and nothing in their set really sounded all that original, a few times their influences rubbed through a bit too much. While I am not sure I would classify them as “bad”, they were definitely generic and forgettable.

I went back and forth a bit about whether this should be Bad or Ugly. I decided on Ugly since this guy seems to really have it out for us.  Have a quick look around his blog to see what he deems worthy of coverage — there was absolutely no way this guy possessed the musical vocabulary to understand where we were coming from.  While noting that our ‘influences rubbed through a bit too much’, it’s hard to believe he has any idea of what those influences might be. I’m actually tempted to send him a record, but alas — in his bearded, bespectacled world, there is no room for our brand of satire-free rock.

*Update: Twitter user @onefuctwop has pointed out the reviewer’s Last FM playlist has Barenaked Ladies as his ‘2nd most played’ artist. Ugly indeed!

That concludes our round-up.

Love,
Biblical