YACHT sees the mystery lights

By Julia MacGregor

Besides creating catchy electro-dance tunes, YACHT is also a belief system open to everyone. After having experienced the supernatural Mystery Lights in Marfa, Texas, which inspired their 2009 album See Mystery Lights, Jona Bechtolt and Claire Evans have embarked on the latest transformation of YACHT, adding a live band to their 2010 tour called The… Continue reading YACHT sees the mystery lights

Rural Alberta Advantage hit up urban Alberta

By Andrew Williams

The Rural Alberta Advantage just might be the most critically successful part-time band in Canada. While they have been featured on countless best-of-’09 blogs, all the members of the band have some kind of job or commitment on the side. Lead singer Nils Edenloff is a computer programmer by day, backup vocalist and keyboard player… Continue reading Rural Alberta Advantage hit up urban Alberta

Awards connect Calgary’s best bluesmen to Chicago

By Ken Clarke

For over 50 years, Chicago’s Maxwell Street has been famous for their Friday Night Blues and Fish Fry. Musicians from the Mississippi Delta would migrate to the area and electrify their sound, making Chicago world famous for the blues. On February 19, the Black History Month Foundation of Canada, in conjunction with the Black American… Continue reading Awards connect Calgary’s best bluesmen to Chicago

Dinos look to right ship for playoffs

By Curtis Taylor

In a weekend that looked so promising, the University of Calgary men’s volleyball team came away with nothing but disappointment. Perhaps distracted by the prospect of clinching the number one seed and hosting the Canada West Conference final four, the Dinos dropped both games over the weekend to the Brandon University Bobcats. The Dinos may… Continue reading Dinos look to right ship for playoffs

Goyette feels Olympic excitement, talks of pressure of the maple leaf

By Jon Roe

Danielle Goyette wishes she could be in Vancouver for the start of the Olympics. That’s probably a natural reaction for any former Olympic athlete, considering how rare the opportunity to compete in front of home fans on the highest and brightest stage in the world is. “Its getting closer to the opening ceremony,” says the… Continue reading Goyette feels Olympic excitement, talks of pressure of the maple leaf

Dinos need to win out, help for playoffs

By Jon Roe

They’re more than halfway there, but they’re definitely living on a prayer right now. The Dinos women’s hockey squad needs to win all four of their remaining games to have a hope at making the playoffs in their first season since returning to Canadian Interuniversity Sport (and get a little help from the University of… Continue reading Dinos need to win out, help for playoffs

Can the games solve Canada’s weight problem?

By Eric Mathison

The Olympics has a bad reputation. With its nationalism, its history of human rights being sidelined wherever it goes — Vancouver included — and the incredible amount of money spent, thinking the entire thing is unjustified is a defensible position. In spite of these problems, there is one upside to the Olympics that is often… Continue reading Can the games solve Canada’s weight problem?

Five rings of globalism and greed

By Rinaldi Gulinao

When the Olympic cauldron is lit this Friday in Vancouver, not everyone will be celebrating the flame as a symbol of human spirit, knowledge and life. For some, the modern Olympics are an over-bloated and over-commercialized affront to the ancient games. Nowadays, they argue, the human story of sacrifice in pursuit of triumph and perfection… Continue reading Five rings of globalism and greed