Popping Off: A Vibrant Dive Into POP Montreal's 23rd Edition

 

Beverly Glenn-Copeland performing at the Théâtre Rialto for POP Montreal

Another edition of POP Montreal has come and gone. The festival’s 23rd edition had us zooming around the city at top speed hitting at least five shows a night, enjoying the best indie music Montreal’s scene, and its invited guests, had to offer. Experience four nights of POP Montreal in true Also Cool fashion with our post-festival review, covering Bleu Vésuve, Beverly Glenn-Copeland, YHWH Nailgun, Laura Krieg and more. 

Day One 

Our festival opener was none other than hometown hero Amery. In a custom-made gold and fuschia sequined ensemble (complete with her matching sparkly monogrammed white tee), Amery belted the synth-pop standouts from her recently released debut Continue As Amery (Arbutus), with classics like “Boring Potion” sprinkled in-between. The sold-out audience at Casa del Popolo saw Amery confidently strut into the crowd backed by her equally bouncy bandmates to define indie pop perfection. Along with a well-received surprise guest duet with Fireball Kid, the scene support for Amery and co. was palatable, with show-goers unable to resist shimmying along, smiling from ear to ear. Just when we thought the bangers were over, Amery kept spirits high, closing out with a cover of Donna Summer’s 1979 hit “Hot Stuff”.  

In between acts, we caught up with Winter and The Spirit of the Beehive at Foufounes Électriques. Winter is a Brazilian-American artist who recently moved from Los Angeles to New York, and warmed the crowd up with her dreamy shoegaze set. She also had some psychedelic notebooks for sale at her merch table, which of course came home with us after her set. Philadelphia band The Spirit of the Beehive is a longtime Also Cool fav, and offered a solid performance to an eager crowd of indie rockers. 

Next up on the Casa del Popolo bill was fellow local act Bleu Vésuve. A new artist for Also Cool, Bleu Vésuve is the project of Montreal-based singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Camille Rosset-Balcer. Upon Bleu Vésuve taking the stage, a haunting fog settled atop the hushed audience. It was almost as if the band was playing by candlelight, with Rosset-Balcer’s Mazzy Star-meets-Cat Power vocals gently meandering from the glow. Sharing entracing, dusky folk-psych from their first self-titled EP, Bleu Vésuve was a welcomed discovery from this year’s POP lineup.    

Day Two 

Spirits were high on day two of POP, knowing that living legend Beverly Glenn-Copeland would return to his university town of Montreal for a date on his final tour. The stained glass panels of the Théâtre Rialto were twinkling and the hall was filled with warmth from the anticipation of what was sure to be a magical performance. Aptly titled “The Salon Evening”, Copeland and his accompanying musical family shared an intimate performance that transported the Théâtre Rialto’s 1,500 person audience into what felt like a night of storytelling in the living room that he shares with his wife, Elizabeth.

Opening with “Ever New” from his 1986 album Keyboard Fantasies, Copeland’s otherworldly voice and presence kept our eyes glassy for the nearly two hour-long performance. Between poems written by Copeland and his wife, anthems from his latest release The Ones Ahead, and songs of perseverance and survival, Copeland’s playful storytelling and adorable back and forth with Elizabeth reminded us of the power of camaraderie and laughter. We could tell the band felt the same way, as two choir members clasped hands during Copeland’s heartfelt “(Harbour) Song for Elizabeth”. Along with fellow concert-goers, we were awestruck by Copeland’s gorgeous and humorous performance, and felt as though our lives may be forever changed. 

After wading through the post-Beverly Glenn Copeland swarm outside the Rialto, we booked it down to the Plateau to catch Nap Eyes. Shuffling shoulder to shoulder in the basement of La Sotterranea to Nap Eyes’ half-new, half-nostalgic discography felt so right. It’s been nearly a decade since we first encountered the pensive Halifax-raised indie outfit, yet it felt like no time had passed after the band’s three-year release hiatus. Songs that were the backdrop to Also Cool’s teenage years, like “Stargazer” and “No Fear of Hellfire”, were just as full of energy as if they were brand new, with the four guitars on-stage waltzing in harmony and singer Nigel Chapman’s delivery as endearingly earnest as we’d remembered. Montreal-based experimental sage Yves Jarvis joined Nap Eyes on rhythm guitar and synth, bringing welcomed oomph to the undeniably tight set. Having just signed to Paper Bag Records, Nap Eyes’ fifth record The Neon Gate is out on October 18th. 

Cecile Believe closed out the night with a stunning performance, gracing the stage in all white and butterfly wings fluttering around her eyelashes. Friends and fans screamed lyrics back at her as she performed tracks off of her most recent EP Tender the Spark along with classics like “Bitch Bites Dog” and “Show Me What”. Cecile also performed “My Forever”, her collaborative track on SOPHIE’s posthumous self-titled album, which had the crowd in tears. The show kicked off Cecile’s Canada-US tour, where she’ll perform alongside Sega Bodega in the coming weeks. Explore her tour dates here.

Day Three 

Freak Heat Waves kicked off day three at Théâtre Fairmount opening for HOMESHAKE. Set up in the middle of the stage, facing each other, the duo masterfully weaved live samples in with their various boards and blinking machines to create an enthralling set that had everyone grooving. HOMESHAKE started the set with a fake phone call before launching into their beloved stoner-rock sound, keeping cool despite a bit of a rowdy crowd screaming “let’s fucking go” in heavy Quebecois accents. The show began the band’s final tour in its current configuration, and felt like a nice call back to 2017-era Montreal.

We then marched over to Casa del Popolo, where Yves Jarvis put on a predictably beautiful show, before heading to La Sotterranea across the street just in time for YHWH Nailgun’s set. As predicted, the New York quartet quickly became one of our favourite discoveries from the festival, with their chaotic yet tightly controlled experimental set. Zack Borzone’s slightly possessed vocals paired with Sam Pickard’s immaculate drumming made for a captivating, high-energy musical force that had the whole room buzzing.

Day Four 

Laura Krieg opened the night at La Sala Rosa with a spooky dark-wave solo set, and got the room full of goths moving. We then ran downstairs to La Sotterranea for Ribbon Skirt (FKA Love Language), who’s newly-embraced grunge rock sound was amplified by their energetic stage presence. We also made sure to buy an embroidered camo hat from their new merch run before going back upstairs to see Mothland’s prince Alix Fernz, who commanded the crowd with his electrifying Queb-punk set. The night continued with Fireball Kid and Ura Star singing songs of friendship and quintessential partypop antics at L’Éscogriffe. 

We wrapped up our tour de POP with a swift BIXI across the Mile End back to the Théâtre Rialto. Selector and dreamscape conjuror, Nabihah Iqbal flawlessly spun icy, melancholic silk from her 2023 record DREAMER, followed by force of nature Ouri, who sheathed the audience in a transcendental, neoclassical mirage. 

POP Montreal

Website | Instagram


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Also Cool's POP Montreal 2024 Top Picks (Nabihah Iqbal, Beverly Glenn-Copeland, knitting and more)

 

Amery via POP Montreal

The 23rd edition POP Montreal takes over the Plateau/Mile End this week from September 25th-29th. With over 200 artists performing across 20 venues, along with film screenings, a Kiki Ball, a panel symposium and more, the world-renowned music festival promises a five-day whirlwind of unforgettable programming. From living legends to POP first-timers, discover Also Cool’s must-see acts from this year’s lineup through our Top Picks selections below, along with our official POP Montreal playlist.

Pop star and illustrator extraordinaire Amery hits Casa del Popolo with her perfect soundworld, ready to hot wire the night. She began releasing music as Alpen Glow in 2020, after years playing in punk groups in Newfoundland and as half of Montreal pop duo Born At Midnite (Arbutus). Recorded in Montreal by David Carriere (TOPS, Marci), Patrick Holland and Kristian North, her debut album Continue As Amery is a blast of melodic joie de vivre. Sandford brings her punk and DIY credentials into sharp focus on 8 perfect pop odes to city living, making mistakes and figuring it out as you go along.

Amery plays Casa del Popolo on Wednesday, September 25th at 8:15pm.

Nap Eyes via POP Montreal

Nap Eyes have been on the AC playlist rotation since our high school era, with their 2015 album Whine of the Mystic serving as a soundtrack to our senior year. The Nova Scotian icons make crooked, literate guitar-pop, perfect for nostalgic self-reflection. Nap Eyes songs resonate because they manage to balance the cryptic and the quotidian delicately, rendering a compellingly honest equivocation without evasiveness, a relatable ambivalence without apathy. As a result, both lyrically and musically, their music articulates the urgency of youthful grace. It’s the sound of being young and alive in the city, a tenuous and impermanent counterpoise of recklessness and anxiety, archness and earnestness.

Nap Eyes play La Sotterenea on Thursday, September 26th at 7:30pm. 

Beverly Glenn-Copeland by Brianna Roye

New-age vanguard and living legend Beverly Glenn-Copeland returns to Montreal with his first collection of new music in nearly two decades. With his recently released full-length The Ones Ahead, the Canada-based, Philadelphia-born singer-songwriter and composer rediscovers his breakout 1986 album Keyboard Fantasies. Having just celebrated its one-year anniversary, The Ones Ahead is Glenn Copeland’s captivating piano ballad opus. Now in his late 70s, The Ones Ahead is a prolific testimonial to the artist being told that he “would not be successful until [he] was very old” by his mother at a young age. 

Beverly Glenn Copeland plays Théâtre Rialto on Thursday, September 26th at 7:45pm. 

Los Bitchos via POP Montreal

Los Bitchos is back, better than ever, and ready to get you dancing. Since the launch of their much-loved debut album, Let the Festivities Begin, with City Slang in February 2022, the London-based, pan-continental women instrumental four-piece (featuring Western Australian-born Serra Petale, Uruguayan Agustina Ruiz, Swede Josefine Jonsson, and South London-born Nic Crawshaw) has captivated audiences worldwide. If you’re into 70s-80s-inspired cumbia, you’ll love this dynamic girl group.

Los Bitchos play MDP sur De Gaspé on Friday, September 27th at 7:00pm.

Freak Heat Waves via POP Montreal

Weirdo sonic collagists Freak Heat Waves take the stage with their delightfully uncategorizable Mondo Tempo for an anticipated live performance alongside Montreal expat Homeshake. Hailing from Victoria, British Columbia, the pair’s refined collaboration is palpable on their ambitious 5th release. Dusky, burned-out and deliciously groovy from top to bottom, Mondo Tempo effortlessly glides between steamy disco and hits of dub on Freak Heat Waves’ astral FM dial. 

Freak Heat Waves play Théâtre Fairmont on Friday, September 27th at 8:00pm. 

YHWH Nailgun via POP Montreal

YHWH Nailgun translate a primitive raw spirit into a modern form. The New York-based quartet hit hard and fast, and have been making the rounds at festivals like SXSW all year long.

YHWH Nailgun plays La Sotterenea on Friday September 27th at 8:30pm.

Sydanie via POP Montreal

Toronto-born hip-hop savant Sydanie made an everlasting impression on Also Cool since she graced the stage at the 2021 summer edition of Debaser’s Pique festival in Ottawa. With her unapologetic flow and electric dexterity, the Jamaican-Trinidadian rapper delivers gripping verses within her inventive spin on hazy trap meets grime meets electronica. With a long-anticipated LP Electric Circus in the works for 2025, we’re itching to catch this masterly emcee take the stage before its release.

Sydanie plays Piccolo Rialto on Friday, September 27th at 11:00pm.

Alix Fernz via Pop Montreal

Get your liptstick out for punk scene sweetheart Alix Fernz, taking over La Sala Rossa alongside Edith Nylon and our darkwave crush Laura Krieg. Singing about bar life, psychosocial disorders, drug addiction and fear, while drawing inspiration from high heels, lipstick, transvestism, fashion and weirdos, the singer-songwriter lays out along masqued syllabic beats the accounts of a coming-of-age in an era wherein likes and memes are all the rage.

Alix Fernz plays La Sala Rossa on Saturday September 28th at 8:00pm.

knitting via POP Montreal

Hot off the press is knitting’s debut full-length Some Kind Of Heaven, produced by Scott Monro of Preoccupations. Released earlier this month on Canadian west coast label Mint Records, Some Kind Of Heaven is the Montreal band's best (yet). Some Kind Of Heaven serves up fizzy-yet-tense alt-rock with an uncompromising spirit, both wrestling and embracing the familiar woes and self-discoveries of the 20-somethings years. Needless to say, the group’s delightful pairing of self-deprecation and crescendoing, grungy instrumentals have us hooked. 

knitting plays L’Hemisphère Gauche on Saturday, September 28th at 8:00pm.  

Nabihah Iqbal via POP Montreal

Musician, writer and beloved NTS radio broadcaster Nabihah Iqbal travels all the way from London, England to share her celestial fusion of shoegaze and cold wave. Her sophomore LP DREAMER was one of Also Cool’s top albums of 2023 for “[traversing] spacey dream sequences with 80s synth pop sensibility,” with Iqbal’s ethereal vocals embroidered throughout. Iqbal will follow her live set with a DJ performance to close out the night. 

Nabihah Iqbal plays The Rialto Hall on Saturday, September 28th at 10:00pm, followed by a DJ set at Piccolo Rialto at 11:30pm.

POP Montreal

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Alpen Glow's Latest Single "Boring Potion" Serves Up Disco-Pop Candor

 

“Boring Potion” single art by Amery Sandford

It’s an ongoing joke here at Also Cool HQ that we are all deathly terrified of being perceived. We are, of course, never alone – no matter your creative discipline, it’s a common predicament to be stuck in the fear, annoyance, or outright disinterest that comes with establishing yourself and your artistic outputs as a Brand ™. Enter Alpen Glow with “Boring Potion”, a sparkling disco number that wraps these grievances in a hyper-saturated sheen.

Alpen Glow is the loner pop project of Montreal-based visual artist and musician Amery Sandford (also of BBQT and Born at Midnite). Her work as Alpen Glow is characterized by an interest in the constructed persona and escapism into digital realities, as reflected on releases like debut EP Amertape 2020. Sandford’s music balances refreshing sincerity with an appreciation for the transcendent qualities of a good pop hook. A winning recipe!

Amery Sandford of Alpen Glow. Photo courtesy of Tess Roby

“Boring Potion” unites listeners with its bright keys and light-hearted rumination. The track’s musings implore us all to explore our varyingly-tormented relationships with press cycles and story shares. On the makings of the track, Sandford explains:

“I made this song last winter when we had curfew at 8 pm every night in Montreal. These depressing circumstances manifested in me a very intense figure skating addiction, and everyday I would go to the park by my house and twirl around to F.R. David's Words album. It totally inspired this disco track that I made to let out some frustrations about feeling obligated to constantly self promote online.”

Complementing the release of “Boring Potion” is a charming visualizer video, also concocted by Sandford. Viewers take a trip inside the unofficial Alpen Glow bar, a 80s-tinged fever dream of dancing chalices and wildlife portraiture. Between this space and the Amerbar depicted in “Saturday Nite”, we propose a bar crawl. Drinks on us.

Watch the “Boring Potion” visualiser below!

Alpen Glow

Instagram | Bandcamp | YouTube

Spotify | Apple Music | Website

Rebecca Judd is the features editor of Also Cool Mag.


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Born at Midnite Shares New Single and Video for Spirited Pop-Banger "Pop Charts"

 
Born at Midnite, Amery Sandford (left) and David Carrier (right), photo courtesy of Arbutus Records

Born at Midnite, Amery Sandford (left) and David Carrier (right), photo courtesy of Arbutus Records

Montreal’s faux-vanity duo Born at Midnite, composed of Amery Sandford (Alpen Glow, BBQT) and David Carriere (TOPS, DVC Refreshments), made a splash back in 2020 with their bouncy & beachy self-titled debut. Today, the pop aficionados share “Pop Charts,” the first earworm off their new 7” of the same title, out on Arbutus Records July 23rd, 2021.

“Pop Charts” plays off of the band’s signature “unsponsored product-placement-punk” sound and method. Atop 80s-clad samples, synths and sparkling guitar, the self-described pseudo-anthem bemoans artificiality in the entertainment industry with a tactful self-awareness; completed by Sandford’s campy vocal performance and a saxophone solo from special guest Mitch Davis. Born at Midnite says the track “was written cynically after hate-bingeing the Netflix tour-de-faux Westside, a show that parades a handful of insecure influencers who are tasked to create a hardship themed musical in an LA nightclub.”

To complete their commentary, the pair premieres an equally hilarious music video alongside the single, directed by Raphaël Sandler, with animations by Sandford. In the video, Carriere plays Sandford’s manager, and sells her out by replacing her with an AI robotic-pop star called Amerbot. After Amerbot soars to the top of the interplanetary charts, the real Amery confronts her sleazy manager and combats Amerbot in a legendary showdown in the name of artistic integrity.

Watch Born at Midnite’s video for “Pop Charts” below

Born at Midnite

Instagram | Bandcamp | Spotify

Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter (she/her) is the co-founder and managing editor of Also Cool Mag. Aside from the mag, she is a music promoter & booker, and a radio host & DJ.


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