PUP, SWG3, Glasgow review - controlled chaos from Canadian punks

★★★★ PUP, SWG3, GLASGOW Controlled chaos from Canadian punks

A no-frills set demonstrated the Toronto quartet's skill with a chorus and a mosh pit

According to PUP lead singer Stefan Babcock, the Toronto foursome practiced together a grand total of twice before embarking on their current UK and European tour.

Given the band’s well-known habit for disagreements and teetering on the edge of imploding, that might have been a wise decision. It didn’t affect the show itself, for while the group’s history is littered with chaos, this was a lively but controlled display. 

Music Reissues Weekly: 1001 Est Crémazie

101 EST CREMAZIE Privately pressed Canadian jazz album resurfaces for its 50th anniversary

Privately pressed Canadian jazz album resurfaces for its 50th anniversary

It would have been hard to pick up a copy of the album credited to and titled 1001 Est Crémazie in 1975. Just 500 copies were pressed. It didn’t reach shops but was circulated amongst the musicians playing on it, their friends, families and fellow students at Montréal’s Collège André-Grasset, the school at which those on the album were pupils.

Light of Passage, Royal Ballet review - Crystal Pite’s cosmic triptych powers back

★★★★★ LIGHT OF PASSAGE, ROYAL BALLET Crystal Pite’s cosmic triptych powers back

Total music theatre takes us from the hell of exile to separation at heaven’s gates

“Cry sorrow, sorrow, but let the good prevail”. The refrain of Aeschylus’s chorus near the start of the Oresteia is alive and honoured in Henryk Górecki’s rhetoric-free symphonic memorial and Crystal Pite’s response to the dynamism under its seemingly static surface. 44 dancers of all ages, soprano, orchestra and design all work towards a timeless work of art, resonating now but bound to hold up in whatever future remains to us.

Album: Basia Bulat - Basia's Palace

★★★ BASIA BULAT - BASIA'S PALACE Canadian singer's seventh album musters dreamy pop that simultaneously arrives and floats away

Canadian singer's seventh album musters dreamy pop that simultaneously arrives and floats away

Canadian singer Basia Bulat has tried on various musical hats during her career but is most associated with singer-songwriterly folk-pop. Her last album was the melancholic, string-swathed The Garden but with Basia’s Palace, her seventh album, she seems in a jollier frame of mind. She has veered into overtly electronic pop before, especially on her 2016 album Good Advice, but this time it’s a bubblier, warmer version. Then again, these nine songs still find room for heartache.

Album: Tim Hecker - Shards

Finessed expressiveness as a compilation of soundtrack work coheres

The question of personality in abstract and ambient music has always been a fascinating one. Without conventional signifiers of expressiveness, and especially in the age of AI, it’s easy for people to think “a computer could have done that”. Indeed, there’ve been plenty of musicians from Brian Eno levels of prominence on down who have played with this, using algorithmic generation, anonymity and so forth as part of the project.

Album: The Weeknd - Hurry Up Tomorrow

The Canadian superstar's latest is mopey and overlong but has its moments

The Weeknd is a global megastar, one of the biggest music sensations of the age. Last year, his compilation, The Highlights, was the second best-selling album in the world, and he has 27 songs with over a billion streams on Spotify, which is a record. His latest album is the third part of a trilogy which started, back in 2020 with After Hours.

Album: The Weather Station - Humanhood

Canadian singer-songwriter makes sense of a period of crisis

Four of Humanhood’s 13 tracks are short, impressionistic mood pieces. Between 48 seconds and just-over a minute-and-a-half long, they mostly lack singing. Instrumentation is jazzy, leaning on piano and wind instruments. Drones and white noise evoke ocean spray or wind. In one case, a wordless vocal edges towards articulating recognisable syllables.