Vancouver Folk Music Festival

The Scalpers Are Cheating The (Vancouver Folk Music) Festival

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Submitted by deleted on Wed 2006-07-19 13:43 #

I had to look that word up...

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Submitted by sillygwailo on Fri 2007-12-28 15:47 #

This photo, if maybe a little incongruously, adorns a blog post about what constitutes cheating in World of Warcraft.

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Submitted by sillygwailo on Sat 2008-06-14 11:54 #

Buzz Bishop writes about getting good concert tickets, adorning his post with this photo.

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Submitted by sillygwailo on Mon 2009-02-09 02:03 #
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Submitted by buddha_barrow on Sun 2011-07-31 23:03 #

It means ticket touts - people who sell tickets at a higher price than the official price. Hair today, gone tomorrow.

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group: Vancouver Folk Music Festival
Under Heavy Manners as Seen from the Vancouver Folk Music Festival Soundboard

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Submitted by sillygwailo on Mon 2008-07-14 13:04 #

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group: Vancouver Folk Music Festival
Vancouver Folk Music Festival Wristband

Wearing a wristband even after the event makes me feel like a big man.

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Vancouver Folk Music Festival 2006 30-Second Video

Vancouver Folk Music Festival 2006 30-Second Video

I spent a few hours during the Saturday of the Vancouver Folk Music Festival Weekend, and took some 30-second video of some of the performances.

She Was Adamant That the Crowd Sing Louder

Rachael and I attended Feist's Vancouver stop on a tour which has her playing later with her old band, Broken Social Scene as well as playing with Bright Eyes (who I either don't understand or who I think sucks). At one point she stopped the show as one of the fans up front passed out, but she seemed to recover with good humour. Also she was adamant that the crowd sing louder the parts she wanted it to sing, and I guess it was at that point that I realized that bands often use the crowd's singing along as another instrument to accentuate the experience both for the fans and for the performers.

She did her usual trick of recording a few bars of her singing, then recording harmonizing over her singing, and then singing over the looped harmonizing. At one point she recorded then looped her playing guitar, playing guitar of that loop. She is better suited to a club like the Commodore, as she felt more comfortable with the crowd than she did at the Vancouver Folk Festival.

The logical extension of her trick is for a single person to record a bar or two of each instrument live in front of the crowd, then sing over the instrumentation. (The first person that comes to mind who could pull this off is not Feist, who can play the drums—she's not very good—but Dave Grohl.) The logical conclusion however, is for a single artist to record the loops onstage including vocals, then join the crowd and do whatever physical activity the type of song necessitates (moshing for loud rock/punk, dancing for funk or electronica or just something upbeat, sway mindlessly to 'alt-rock', etc.).

The opening acts, Jason Collett and New Buffalo, generally had nothing near the quality of Feist. Let's put it this way: the drummer for the former, when it wasn't Feist (who as we've established, is not very accomplished), was the best part of the opening acts

We didn't know it at the time, but we ended up sitting behind a booth with 4, for lack of a better term, annoying bitches. I'm all for girls-nights-out and having a good time at a concert, but drinking too much before the main show even starts, trying to sneak smoking a cigarette with security looking over your shoulder not once but twice, and clapping to a beat that's definitely not the one coming from the stage is something you should have quit doing by the time you graduate high school.

Vancouver Folk Music Festival
Expensive, but has a really interesting-looking lineup.