Crystal Crescent beach in Halifax NS, October 2017.

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Crystal Crescent beach in Halifax NS, October 2017.
Metz at the Marquee October 18, 2017 for Halifax Pop Explosion.
Let Me In Basia Bulat, Daniel Caesar, and the revelation of the human voice
Basia Bulat opened her show at the Halifax Pop Explosion on a quiet note. She stepped onto the stage alone and, after a smile at the packed room, began gently plucking at her charango as she dove into “It Can’t Be You.”
It was a brave move: Bulat’s headlining set at the Marquee Ballroom found her in front of a chatty, energetic crowd that might not otherwise jive with subtle stripped-down folk songs. And most of the set that followed her opening song reflected this, as Bulat’s three-piece band joined her to give her songs rhythmic substance that many in the audience bopped, swayed, and otherwise danced along to. Bulat’s latest album, Good Advice, provided plenty of fodder for this upbeat tone, and songs like “Infamous” and “In The Name Of”—among the best in her catalogue—sounded better than ever in the context of a full band.
Still, the quiet “It Can’t Be You” was the song that set the tone for the night, and it’s no coincidence that it was the night’s most instrumentally sparse. The song allows Bulat’s voice to exercise its full range of motion, from lilting falsetto to impassioned yelps. Within seconds, heads turned back towards the front of the room and folks who had been chatting at the bar paid all of their attention to the notes floating up towards the chandeliers. It was all her voice.
And what a voice it is: an electric signal floating through the air, a burst of energy ambiguous in its source but joyous in its release, a beacon under foggy blue lights. Bulat’s voice has this effect. It’ll stop you in your tracks and pull at your heartstrings and wash away your cynicism. And she’ll sing to you about the deepest melancholy with determined eyes and a smile on her face.
It was in this early moment of recognition that my mind snaps back two nights, taking up memories from Daniel Caesar’s joyous performance at the Carleton on Thursday and projecting them into my experience of Bulat’s. There was a lot to love about Caesar’s performance, from his incredible band’s willingness to improvise and jam at Caesar’s command to the unbelievable energy that filled the packed venue. Still, as with Bulat’s performance, the clearest memories I have from his show are all connected to his stunning vocal performance.
The room felt as if it was filled with a different gravity, like the rising tone of his voice was pulling our bodies up with it. In my memory, I picture the way he danced with the mic stand and the way his mouth would contort following his voice’s command; I picture his vocal chords making a puppet out of his limbs as they danced across his terraced melodies. All of us in the room—including Caesar himself—were at the mercy of his voice. It felt good to be directed like this, to be held in the embrace of a sound that was so comfortable.
Certainly Bulat and Caesar have stories to tell with their voices and the appeal of their respective works lies in so much more than the tones that they sing. Still, I’d be remiss to see their voices as simply an instrument or a vehicle for lyricism. Yes, the voice can be both of these things, but what Caesar and Bulat showed at Halifax Pop Explosion was bigger than that: this was the human voice as a truly visceral force. I saw the voice as magnet, as an open hand, as a vessel for sexuality. And as I let their voices in, I felt more connected with these musicians than I have in a very long time.
— Brennan McCracken
Cheryl Hann is ‘allowing herself complexity’
Cheryl Hann is a force.
As well as drumming in the eccentric and bouncy post punk band Old and Weird, she takes care of the electronic drum and noise components in wacky pop group Heaven for Real. She has had significant success as a solo stand up comic, and as part of the comedy troupe Picnicface. And as if that wasn’t enough, she is also currently working on her PhD in Halifax.
The Arts Abstract caught up with Cheryl ahead of her appearances at Halifax Pop Explosion this week. Here’s our conversation about the artist/audience relationship, music, comedy, and gender politics.
GS: I keep hearing people say that stand up comedy is taking the place of music when it comes to cultural critique—being the voice of dissent. How do you approach working your political values into your comedy?
CH: I think comedy has a lot of potential social value, and if done well can be an amazing tool for cultural critique. Of course, not all comedy does this work. In the same way that some songs are literally just like, “Girls, Girls, Girls,” and express the worst parts of Western culture, some jokes are just about butts and penises and do almost no work at all. But a good comic can broach serious issues of race, gender, sexuality, and colonialism in a comedy show, and can do so with relatively little difficulty because comedy has this great dynamic of trust and play.
When you raise a contentious issue, the audience trusts that you’re not directly challenging them, or making a moral judgement about them, so they are more receptive to difficult concepts. Then it’s like, if you can get a straight, white dude to laugh about the absurdity of a racist, capitalist patriarchy, then that means that in that moment, he has admitted to himself the truth of that absurdity. That is a powerful tool for pushing people to consider their own privilege and how it contributes to the oppression of others.
GS: Does one medium’s audience seem more receptive than the other?
CH: I find comedy is a far more effective medium for this kind of critique, if only because the nature of comedy requires your full attention and engagement. Comedy demands you focus specifically on the words being used, and that you process those words deeply, so you understand their complexity—so you “get the joke.”
Music doesn’t impose this kind of engagement on its audience. Participating in a musical performance is better if you give it your full attention, but it’s not required. You can go to the bar, talk to your friend, focus just on the drummer—you can miss the artist’s intention. This is a lot harder to do at a comedy show.
GS: When you joined Old and Weird they were already a band who had established themselves and what they were doing. What most attracted you towards them as musicians, and what made you want to be a part of it?
CH: Before I joined Old and Weird, I was already a big fan of the band. I was really drawn to the experimental, free-form nature of their music and the way the band challenged a lot of the more limiting notions of what or how a song should “be”. I appreciated then—and even more now—the way each member of the band approached songwriting, and how clearly their personalities came through in the music. Sometimes, it can feel like the artist gets lost in the attempt to produce palatable art. I felt like Old and Weird’s music was as challenging and complex as the people who created it. Listening to those songs made me feel closer to the artists who made them, rather than more distant. The more I listened, the more I was like, “Wow these people seem really funny and smart,” so when they approached me about joining the band, my decision to sign up was as much about wanting to become better friends with them as it was about wanting to play songs I loved, haha.
GS: Dealing with sexism and misogyny is obviously a very real part of being a female artist. I don’t want to ignore your work to make you talk about that, but at the same time, I feel like someone’s experiences in feeling excluded or not welcome can drive their practice, or even shape it—I know it absolutely does for me. Do you feel that your identity as a woman has become part of your work, and if so, how does it appear and manifest?
CH: I definitely feel that my gender influences my work, and the spaces where I perform it. I think I try to play a lot with the audience’s concept of gender, as well as my own. It’s tough sometimes, though, because as much as I use comedy as a platform to discuss issues of gender, I don’t want my perceived gender to be the foundation of my practice. Like, as a feminine comic in 2016, people expect that your comedy will be somehow an expression of your gender, or an outline of your thoughts on it. I don’t want to feel like I have to get up on stage and be a funny “woman,” when I just want to be a funny person.
Maybe that conflicts with everything I’ve said so far, but I’m going to allow myself that complexity.
—Grace Stratton
~
Catch Cheryl’s Pop Explosion sets at Art Bar: Thursday at 8 PM with Old and Weird, and Friday at 8 PM with Heaven for Real. She’s also doing a solo stand up set at the Halifax Public Library (Paul O’Regan Hall) on Saturday at 7:45 PM.
Header image: Michael Doucette.
Halifax Zine Explosion is happening October 21-23, 2016 in Halifax, Nova Scotia! Events include:
Friday October 21 - Fundraiser show for Anchor Archive Zine Library at Radstorm featuring zine readings, patch making, and music (6050 Almon Street)
Saturday October 22 - Halifax Zine Fair at Halifax Central Library, including workshops and over 30 tablers (5440 Spring Garden Road)
Sunday October 23 - Workshop and open discussion amongst white queers about addressing white privilege in queer spaces, hosted by sari of Hoax Zine at Venus Envy (1598 Barrington Street)