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Tegan and Sara



Last Updated: 1/5/2010

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Status: Single
City: Vancouver/Montreal
Country: CA
Signup Date: 5/28/2004

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Wednesday, November 19, 2008 


Hello Tegan and Sara Friends out there in Cyber world, 

I hope you are all doing well! I am doing fantastic. This week I am packing up my belongings, leaving Los Angeles and heading to a far away hidden location (New Orleans.) Sara and I will be attempt to write songs together for the first time in our entire 14 year career. We think this is going to be amazing but it might be horrific. You never know! 

Don't worry we are going to document the important and moving moments as always, so you too can feel like you were there with us. 

This past month I have been in Los Angeles working hard on what will hopefully be the first Tegan and Sara book in a series of books we intend on self publishing next year! Each book in the series will not only be amazing,artistic, and packed full of Tegan and Sara essays, photos and love but it will also be reasonably priced! Ha. We hope you'll keep it in mind in the New Year!

I also just saw the new special edition online only t-shirt Emy is hard at work on! So keep your eyes on the store for new merchandise in the coming weeks!

While I've been here in Los Angeles I've been lucky enough to be able to participate in every anti-Prop 8 Rally since election night. It's been moving and memorable to have the opportunity to be involved. To stand with all the Californians who've participated has been an honor. I hope for all our sakes that the California Courts overturn this unfair Proposition and your rights are returned to you. Equality is coming. Stay strong. Stay Calm. Stay organized and be peaceful.Remember that even though the election is over and Prop 8 passed that the winds of change ARE blowing and your rights will be restored. 

Don't fall victim to pressure to act out or destroy private property. Stay on the path set out by the organizers and protected by the police. I saw so many of you marching out there and I want you to know I appreciate that so many of our fans are civil rights activists! Wherever you fall on the spectrum of sexuality you deserve the same rights and to be equal!

To those of you wondering what to do in order to get involved this next month to help please go to www.jointheimpact.com for updates and information. 

For those of you who are still interested in going to a book store near you here are my 3 choices for this winter:

The Brief Wondrous History of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz
I Love You, Beth Cooper - Larry Doyle
I Live Here - Mia Kirshner, J.B.Mackinnon, Paul Shoebridge, Michael Simons

My three choices for must have music this season is:

Ra Ra Riot - The Rhumb Line (oh my god so good)
Kings of Leon - Only By The Night (SOOOOO good)
Melissa Ferrick - Goodbye Youth (really good so it kinds of hurts but it feels good)

And if you haven't listened to the Savage Love Podcast you should. It is incredible. Sara got me into it and I really really love it. I haven't even been listening to music hardly at all because I stay up late at night listening to his pod cast instead. If you go to iTunes you can subscribe to his podcast for free. It gives you all the old episodes too.
SO GO!

Miss you all. Working hard on our new record and can't wait for you all to hear it!

Take care of each other, 

Your friend Tegan

Thursday, November 13, 2008 

Category: News and Politics
Hello Tegan and Sara Fans, 

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 15TH!!!!!!!!!!

THERE WILL BE RALLIES AND MARCHES ACROSS AMERICA
IN SUPPORT OF GAY MARRIAGE.

WE ARE MARCHING FOR EQUAL RIGHTS!

FOR MORE INFORMATION GO TO 


Please tell everyone you know and invite them to come with you. Gay or Straight we are marching for equal rights. Every person living in America deserves the same rights. You cannot put minority rights to popular vote. It's not right or fair. 

This issue is not about teachers being forced to teach gay sex ed or 
clergymen being fired for not wanting to marry gay people. That is propaganda and lies coming from PROP 8 supporters. This is about only one thing. 

EQUALITY!

THERE ARE MARCHES TAKING PLACE IN SOME MAJOR CANADIAN CITIES AS WELL....Including Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary and Sault Ste. Marie. Info is also at WWW.JOINTHEIMPACT.COM.

THANK YOU
Tegan and Sara
Friday, November 07, 2008 
No More Hate, Fight Prop 8 Rally/Protest

Saturday Nov 8th at 6:00 PM Gather at Sunset Junction in Silver Lake
Corner of Sunset Blvd. and Santa Monica Blvd, Los Angeles 90029 
For more info call 213-251-1025 or email answerla@answerla.org
Friday, November 07, 2008 

Current mood:  sad
Category: Life
........


 

 

 

Address by Prime Minister Paul Martin on Bill C-38 (The Civil Marriage Act) 

February 16, 2005
House of Commons, Canada

I rise today in support of Bill C-38, the Civil Marriage Act. I rise in support of a Canada in which liberties are safeguarded, rights are protected and the people of this land are treated as equals under the law.

This is an important day. The attention of our nation is focused on this chamber, in which John Diefenbaker introduced the Bill of Rights, in which Pierre Trudeau fought to establish the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Our deliberations will be not merely about a piece of legislation or sections of legal text - more deeply, they will be about the kind of nation we are today, and the nation we want to be.

This bill protects minority rights. This bill affirms the Charter guarantee of religious freedom. It is that straightforward, Mr. Speaker, and it is that important.

And that is why I stand today before members here and before the people of this country to say I believe in, and I will fight for, the Charter of Rights. I believe in, and I will fight for, a Canada that respects the foresight and vision of those who created and entrenched the Charter. I believe in, and I will fight for, a future in which generations of Canadians to come, Canadians born here and abroad, will have the opportunity to value the Charter as we do today - as an essential pillar of our democratic freedoms.

There have been a number of arguments put forward by those who do not support this bill. It's important and respectful to examine them and to assess them.

First, some have claimed that, once this bill becomes law, religious freedoms will be less than fully protected. This is demonstrably untrue. As it pertains to marriage, the government's legislation affirms the Charter guarantee that religious officials are free to perform such ceremonies in accordance with the beliefs of their faith.

In this, we are guided by the ruling of the Supreme Court of Canada, which makes clear that in no church, no synagogue, no mosque, no temple - in no religious house will those who disagree with same-sex unions be compelled to perform them. Period. That is why this legislation is about civil marriage, not religious marriage.

Moreover -- and this is crucially important -- the Supreme Court has declared unanimously, and I quote 'The guarantee of religious freedom in section 2(a) of the Charter is broad enough to protect religious officials from being compelled by the state to perform civil or religious same-sex marriages that are contrary to their religious beliefs.'

The facts are plain: Religious leaders who preside over marriage ceremonies must and will be guided by what they believe. If they do not wish to celebrate marriages for same-sex couples, that is their right. The Supreme Court says so. And the Charter says so.

One final observation on this aspect of the issue: Religious leaders have strong views both for and against this legislation. They should express them. Certainly, many of us in this House, myself included, have a strong faith, and we value that faith and its influence on the decisions we make. But all of us have been elected to serve here as Parliamentarians. And as public legislators, we are responsible for serving all Canadians and protecting the rights of all Canadians.

We will be influenced by our faith but we also have an obligation to take the widest perspective -- to recognize that one of the great strengths of Canada is its respect for the rights of each and every individual, to understand that we must not shrink from the need to reaffirm the rights and responsibilities of Canadians in an evolving society.

The second argument ventured by opponents of the bill is that government ought to hold a national referendum on this issue. I reject this - not out of a disregard for the view of the people, but because it offends the very purpose of the Charter.

The Charter was enshrined to ensure that the rights of minorities are not subjected, are never subjected, to the will of the majority. The rights of Canadians who belong to a minority group must always be protected by virtue of their status as citizens, regardless of their numbers. These rights must never be left vulnerable to the impulses of the majority.

We embrace freedom and equality in theory, Mr. Speaker. We must also embrace them in fact.

Third, some have counseled the government to extend to gays and lesbians the right to 'civil union.' This would give same-sex couples many of the rights of a wedded couple, but their relationships would not legally be considered marriage. In other words, they would be equal, but not quite as equal as the rest of Canadians.

Mr. Speaker, the courts have clearly and consistently ruled that this option would offend the equality provisions of the Charter. For instance, the British Columbia Court of Appeal stated that, and I quote 'Marriage is the only road to true equality for same-sex couples. Any other form of recognition of same-sex relationships ...falls short of true equality.'

Put simply, we must always remember that 'separate but equal' is not equal. What's more, those who call for the establishment of civil unions fail to understand that the Government of Canada does not have the constitutional jurisdiction to do so. Only the provinces have that. Only the provinces could define such a regime - and they could define it in 10 different ways, and some jurisdictions might not bother to define it at all. There would be uncertainty. There would be confusion. There would certainly not be equality.

Fourth, some are urging the government to respond to the decisions of the courts by getting out of the marriage business altogether. That would mean no more civil weddings for any couples.

It is worth noting that this idea was rejected by the major religions themselves when their representatives appeared before the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights in 2003. Moreover, it would be an extreme and counterproductive response for the government to deny civil marriage to opposite-sex couples simply so it can keep it from same-sex couples. To do so would simply be to replace one form of discrimination with another.

Finally, Mr. Speaker, there are some who oppose this legislation who would have the government use the notwithstanding clause in the Charter of Rights to override the courts and reinstate the traditional definition of marriage. And really, this is the fundamental issue here.

Understand that in seven provinces and one territory, the lawful union of two people of the same sex in civil marriage is already the law of the land. The debate here today is not about whether to change the definition of marriage - it's been changed. The debate comes down to whether we should override a right that is now in place. The debate comes down to the Charter, the protection of minority rights, and whether the federal government should invoke the notwithstanding clause.

I know that some think we should use the clause. For example, some religious leaders feel this way. I respect their candor in publicly recognizing that because same-sex marriage is already legal in most of the country, the only way - the only way - to again make civil marriage the exclusive domain of opposite-sex couples is to use the notwithstanding clause.

Ultimately Mr. Speaker, there is only one issue before this House in this debate. For most Canadians, in most parts of our country, same-sex marriage is already the law of the land. Thus, the issue is not whether rights are to be granted. The issue is whether rights that have been granted are to be taken away.

Some are frank and straightforward and say yes. Others have not been so candid. Despite being confronted with clear facts, despite being confronted with the unanimous opinion of 134 legal scholars, experts in their field, intimately familiar with the Constitution, some have chosen to not be forthright with Canadians. They have eschewed the honest approach in favour of the political approach. They have attempted to cajole the public into believing that we can return to the past with a simple snap of the fingers, that we can revert to traditional definition of marriage without consequence and without overriding the Charter. They're insincere. They're disingenuous. And they're wrong.

There is one question that demands an answer - a straight answer - from those who would seek to lead this nation and its people. It is a simple question Will you use the notwithstanding clause to overturn the definition of civil marriage and deny to Canadians a right guaranteed under the Charter?

This question does not demand rhetoric. It demands clarity. There are only two legitimate answers - yes or no. Not the demagoguery we have heard, not the dodging, the flawed reasoning, the false options. Just yes or no.

Will you take away a right as guaranteed under the Charter? I, for one, will answer that question, Mr. Speaker. I will answer it clearly. I will say no.

The notwithstanding clause is part of the Charter of Rights. But there's a reason that no prime minister has ever used it. For a prime minister to use the powers of his office to explicitly deny rather than affirm a right enshrined under the Charter would serve as a signal to all minorities that no longer can they look to the nation's leader and to the nation's Constitution for protection, for security, for the guarantee of their freedoms. We would risk becoming a country in which the defence of rights is weighed, calculated and debated based on electoral or other considerations.

That would set us back decades as a nation. It would be wrong for the minorities of this country. It would be wrong for Canada.

The Charter is a living document, the heartbeat of our Constitution. It is also a proclamation. It declares that as Canadians, we live under a progressive and inclusive set of fundamental beliefs about the value of the individual. It declares that we all are lessened when any one of us is denied a fundamental right.

We cannot exalt the Charter as a fundamental aspect of our national character and then use the notwithstanding clause to reject the protections that it would extend. Our rights must be eternal, not subject to political whim.

To those who value the Charter yet oppose the protection of rights for same-sex couples, I ask you If a prime minister and a national government are willing to take away the rights of one group, what is to say they will stop at that? If the Charter is not there today to protect the rights of one minority, then how can we as a nation of minorities ever hope, ever believe, ever trust that it will be there to protect us tomorrow?

My responsibility as Prime Minister, my duty to Canada and to Canadians, is to defend the Charter in its entirety. Not to pick and choose the rights that our laws shall protect and those that are to be ignored. Not to decree those who shall be equal and those who shall not. My duty is to protect the Charter, as some in this House will not.

Let us never forget that one of the reasons that Canada is such a vibrant nation, so diverse, so rich in the many cultures and races of the world, is that immigrants who come here - as was the case with the ancestors of many of us in this chamber - feel free and are free to practice their religion, follow their faith, live as they want to live. No homogenous system of beliefs is imposed on them.

When we as a nation protect minority rights, we are protecting our multicultural nature. We are reinforcing the Canada we value. We are saying, proudly and unflinchingly, that defending rights - not just those that happen to apply to us, not just that everyone approves of, but all fundamental rights - is at the very soul of what it means to be a Canadian.

This is a vital aspect of the values we hold dear and strive to pass on to others in the world who are embattled, who endure tyranny, whose freedoms are curtailed, whose rights are violated.

Why is the Charter so important, Mr. Speaker? We have only to look at our own history. Unfortunately, Canada's story is one in which not everyone's rights were protected under the law. We have not been free from discrimination, bias, unfairness. There have been blatant inequalities.

Remember that it was once thought perfectly acceptable to deny women 'personhood' and the right to vote. There was a time, not that long ago, that if you wore a turban, you couldn't serve in the RCMP. The examples are many, but what's important now is that they are part of our past, not our present.

Over time, perspectives changed. We evolved, we grew, and our laws evolved and grew with us. That is as it should be. Our laws must reflect equality not as we understood it a century or even a decade ago, but as we understand it today.

For gays and lesbians, evolving social attitudes have, over the years, prompted a number of important changes in the law. Recall that, until the late 1960s, the state believed it had the right to peek into our bedrooms. Until 1977, homosexuality was still sufficient grounds for deportation. Until 1992, gay people were prohibited from serving in the military. In many parts of the country, gays and lesbians could not designate their partners as beneficiaries under employee medical and dental benefits, insurance policies or private pensions. Until very recently, people were being fired merely for being gay.

Today, we rightly see discrimination based on sexual orientation as arbitrary, inappropriate and unfair. Looking back, we can hardly believe that such rights were ever a matter for debate. It is my hope that we will ultimately see the current debate in a similar light; realizing that nothing has been lost or sacrificed by the majority in extending full rights to the minority.

Without our relentless, inviolable commitment to equality and minority rights, Canada would not be at the forefront in accepting newcomers from all over the world, in making a virtue of our multicultural nature - the complexity of ethnicities and beliefs that make up Canada, that make us proud that we are where our world is going, not where it's been.

Four years ago, I stood in this House and voted to support the traditional definition of marriage. Many of us did. My misgivings about extending the right of civil marriage to same-sex couples were a function of my faith, my perspective on the world around us.

But much has changed since that day. We've heard from courts across the country, including the Supreme Court. We've come to the realization that instituting civil unions - adopting a 'separate but equal' approach - would violate the equality provisions of the Charter. We've confirmed that extending the right of civil marriage to gays and lesbians will not in any way infringe on religious freedoms.

And so where does that leave us? It leaves us staring in the face of the Charter of Rights with but a single decision to make Do we abide by the Charter and protect minority rights, or do we not?

To those who would oppose this bill, I urge you to consider that the core of the issue before us today is whether the rights of all Canadians are to be respected. I believe they must be. Justice demands it. Fairness demands it. The Canada we love demands it.

Mr. Speaker In the 1960s, the government of Lester Pearson faced opposition as it moved to entrench official bilingualism. But it persevered, and it won the day. Its members believed it was the right thing to do, and it was. In the 1980s, the government of Pierre Trudeau faced opposition as it attempted to repatriate the Constitution and enshrine a Charter of Rights and Freedoms. But it persevered, and it won the day. Its members believed it was the right thing to do, and it was.

There are times, Mr. Speaker, when we as Parliamentarians can feel the gaze of history upon us. They felt it in the days of Pearson. They felt it in the days of Trudeau. And we, the 308 men and women elected to represent one of the most inclusive, just and respectful countries on the face of this earth, feel it today.

There are few nations whose citizens cannot look to Canada and see their own reflection. For generations, men and women and families from the four corners of the globe have made the decision to chose Canada to be their home. Many have come here seeking freedom -- of thought, religion and belief. Seeking the freedom simply to be.

The people of Canada have worked hard to build a country that opens its doors to include all, regardless of their differences; a country that respects all, regardless of their differences; a country that demands equality for all, regardless of their differences.

If we do not step forward, then we step back. If we do not protect a right, then we deny it. Mr. Speaker, together as a nation, together as Canadians Let us step forward.

Currently reading:
The Death and Life of Great American Cities
By Jane Jacobs
Release date: 1992-12-01
Wednesday, November 05, 2008 

Current mood:  aggravated
Category: News and Politics

*************SPECIAL BULLETIN*************

Proposition 8 Protest Rally & Street Closures
Wednesday, November 5th

As deeply disappointed as we all are that California voters passed Proposition 8, we must not allow that disappointment to linger. This vote is a temporary defeat in the long march toward equal rights for all citizens in America.

Please join me for a protest rally tonight at 7 pm on San Vicente Blvd between West Hollywood Park and the Pacific Design Center (647 N. San Vicente Blvd. West Hollywood CA 90069) as we move forward towards restoring equality for all in California.

San Vicente Blvd, between Santa Monica Blvd and Melrose Avenue will be closed tonight starting at 6 pm. San Vicente south-bound traffic will be directed to make left or right at Santa Monica Blvd. Signs have already been posted to help divert traffic.

Tuesday, November 04, 2008 
HEY EVERYONE! Its Election day in America. Please make sure you go out and cast your vote. Every vote counts. In countries like Australia its MANDATORY to vote. So please be diligent about leaving work/school early and getting your VOTE ON!

Especially those of you in California we need your votes!  All of the Propositions you'll vote on are important but PROP 8 is so important to us. 

We hope you'll vote NO on PROP 8.

It is ridiculous that at this juncture in time we are still debating whether or not all people are equal and deserve the same human rights as their neighbor regardless of who they chose to have sex with. Please vote NO on PROP 8 so Sara and I and all Gay people can marry the person we love and want to be with. Equal rights for everyone!

Love your friends 
Tegan and Sara
Saturday, October 25, 2008 
hello friends,

a brief note...to be followed by something involving multimedia...and exhausting grammar deficient sentences... in the near-ish future...(next week)

our dear friends "an horse"...my favorite band on earth right now...have arrived safely in north america and are blowing minds on the eastern shores of the united states as we speak. i apologize for not alerting you sooner...you still have ample opportunity to witness their greatness in person! dates follow this paragraph. i rarely, and with much less fever, promote/pimp what sends my heart racing but i feel compelled to drive the masses towards this band. if i was a teenager i would buy a poster and put it over my bed. but im just a nerdy late twenty-something and find it more appropriate to just carry a photo of damon and kate in my wallet. respectable. i adore them. please go see them. and tell your friends. also, their new album is available on itunes. it is SO good. please buy it.

thank you to all who came out and supported or last run of dates in the usa. i've been telling relatives and friends that it was potentially my most favorite string of shows ever. in ten years. so amazing. light show! old songs! much political debate! i will miss the "regulars". and i will miss jimmy johns. and also dallas from city and colour. and also that piece of shit who called us fucking bitches in LA. i trained in the art of karate and i swear to god i will fuck you up if i ever see you in person. but with my mind. i hate violence.

ok friends, a full run down of both joyful and enraging tour moments will be unveiled soon. im also starting an online book club. it mostly means ill tell you what i buy and read each month. inspired by my hero nick hornby's polysyllacbic spree column from the believer magazine. so many of you ask about what i am reading and im excited and blushing at the thought of turning a few of you into bookworms. old school.

im getting old, i just tried to compose a sentence about the leaves changing colour outside of my window. OLD.

xxoo

skq

AN HORSE- REARRANGE BEDS!
Album out on iTunes October 21st, 2008 (SO GOOD)


AN HORSE DATES!!!

Oct 25 2008         6:00P CMJ Music Marathon, ~ The Living Room  New York, New York

Oct 28 2008         8:00P The Abbey,  Chicago, Illinois

Oct 29 2008         8:00P The Pike Room, Detroit, Michigan

Oct 30 2008         8:00P Mad Hatter, Covington, Kentucky

Nov 1 2008          8:00P The Basement, Nashville, Tennessee

Nov 2 2008          8:00P Local 506, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Nov 5 2008          8:00P Opolis, Norman, Oklahoma

Nov 6 2008          8:00P Bash Rip Rock’s 2, Lubbock, Texas

Nov 7 2008          8:00P Hailey’s,   Denton, Texas

Nov 11 2008        8:00P The Echo, Los Angeles, California

Nov 12 2008        8:00P The Independent, San Francisco, California

Nov 14 2008        8:00P Kilby Court, Salt Lake City, Utah

Jan 8 2009            8:00P Enmore Theatre, Sydney, New South Wales

Jan 9 2009            8:00P The Palace Theatre, Melbourne, Victoria

Jan 11 2009         8:00P  HQ, Adelaide, South Australia
Thursday, October 23, 2008 
Over the next six weeks, Tegan or Sara will post a blog on AOL Spinner about an experience that made them either laugh, rage or cry. Tegan starts it off this week with a blog about why she likes to cry. Check it out over the next few weeks...

http://www.spinner.com/2008/10/22/laugh-rage-cry-with-tegan-quin/
Friday, September 12, 2008 

Current mood:  anxious
Category: Jobs, Work, Careers
summer vacation is officially over!

before i get carried away typing, my official business is to announce our australian headline dates in january 2009:

AN HORSE will be joining us!!! www.myspace.com/anhorse

also, THE JEZABELS! www.myspace.com/jezabelsband

Jan 8 - Sydney, Metro Theatre - Licensed / All Ages
Jan 9 - Melbourne, Palace Theatre - 18+
Jan 11 - Adelaide, HQ - Licensed / All Ages

Fan presale will run for 24 hrs.

Starting at 12 noon, Wed Sept 17 and finishing at 12 noon Thu Sept 18

General sale opens at 9am on Fri Sept 19

Pre-sale password: CALLITOFF

Sydney & Melbourne: http://premier.ticketek.com.au/shows/show.aspx?sh=TEGANSAR09

Adelaide: http://www.venuetix.com.au/teganandsara/

+++

ALSO, our new video for "call it off" will debut on AOL spinner on monday september 15th!

http://www.spinner.com/

+++

and FINALLY, the second show in nyc (october 6) is now officially a part of the amnesty international's "small places tour". purchasing tegan and sara merchandise will benefit the charity directly!

http://www.amnesty.org/en/universal-declaration-human-rights-anniversary/small-places

+++


i started having work dreams last night. mostly these involve me and all of the members of my extended family in a van. the kind of van where plotting your escape route is essential. the kind of van where cigarette burns scar the inside of the windows and make you think of seagull shit rotting. the kind of van where seat belts would only impede your body's quick exit when the wheels stopped turning. the kind of van where a petri dish of danger and disease mix with wild abandon. so imagine that van. then imagine me, my band and crew, my extended family and the occasional natural disaster in the rear view mirror...

The truth is, subconscious fear of forced intimacy and serious vehicular accidents aside, we don't even tour in a van anymore. (!!!) And all extended family is forced into the cargo bays of our tour bus. i actually feel wildly excited about the prospect of air conditioning being shuttled through my sleeping lungs. the sound of ted's body being thrown into the bunk above me and the click clack of his ipod selections echoing down the vertical corridor we share with nine other adults...like summer camp with the dangers of excessive interstate speeding! im tired of independance! im ready for communal living!

the fabulous ladies of "northern state" once told us a detailed account of attending a liberal arts college in which nudity was legally permitted when cooking for roommates. fact: i have managed to go almost TEN years without seeing a band/crew/fan/co-worker in any state of undress. except when we went watersliding in edmonton last fall. but i was hella depressed, and can't even remember the nudity and tube rash adorning most of our bodies.

time for band rehearsals. i am packing up my vacation life...goodbye bike, goodbye 36 san pellegrino glass bottles used for apartment bowling on lonely weekend nights, goodbye strange seasonal neighbor who painted a clown/totem pole crying on his front door last night, goodbye wet socks and snowy bunny ear tv channels, goodbye plants that grow no matter what neglect and damage is suffered under searing sunny afternoon skies, goodbye tower of summer reads (highlights: "atmospheric disturbances" by rivka galchen..."bottomless belly button" by dash shaw...."against interpretation and other essays" by susan sontag...) goodbye hot nights and bender sessions of the savage love podcast on itunes (dan savage i love you), goodbye montreal.

looking so forward to touring with 'girl in a coma' and 'city and color'. looking so forward to seeing all of you. looking forward to the spastic panic of rehearsals out west...and learning some serious classics from the vault (and late 90's). looking forward to hearing your hands making clapping noises. looking forward to wearing a jacket again.

soon,

skq
Currently reading:
Against Interpretation and Other Essays
By Susan Sontag
Friday, August 15, 2008 

Current mood:  accomplished
Category: Art and Photography
Dear Tegan and Sara fans,

Its Tegan! Sorry I haven't written in so long. For the first time ever in our career I have taken a step back and
I've been trying to have a real summer vacation. Here are some of the things I have done so far:

1. Played an amazing show in Vancouver at the Under the Volcano Festival!
2. Spoke at the Pacific Audio Visual Institute about my career and what I do when I'm not
on tour or making music. (nothing)
3. Made multiple trips to 7-11 for slurpees.
4. Danced at many bars in and around Vancouver and LA for money. (kidding, sort of)
5. Shot a new video for CALL IT OFF!
6. Confirmed a show in Columbus Ohio with Death Cab for Cutie on October 8th as well as
added a date in Omaha on the 10th of October!
7. Didn't practice the song I wrote for Augusten Burroughs in response to the intense excitement/pressure
I feel building inside of me in preparation for our Spin Book Club Event at Housing Works in NY on
the 4th. (thank you for helping us sell this out already!!! we have a couple tickets to give away next week)
8. Cracked the whip to ensure our catalog is now available EVERYWHERE in the world on ITUNES!!!!
Check your home country's store to find This Business of Art (2000), If It Was You (2002), So Jealous (2004), and The Con (2007)!
9. Went surfing with Sara in Tofino British Columbia. www.surfsister.com.
10. Got a bit sun burned sitting on my roof with my mom multiple days.
11. Wrote a bunch of news songs and then let NO ONE hear them!
12. Got my first manicure!
13. Went swimming in a lake!
14. Talked extensively about getting my drivers license.
15. WENT TO COMIC CON! WITH CHAD FROM NEW FOUND GLORY!!!
16. Listened to Rachael Cantu's new songs and thought....geez if I were a record label person I'd give
HER a record deal ASAP!
17. Slept with the light on for more than 2 weeks because I was too lazy to get an electrician in to
rewire my ceiling fan that's broken.
18. Got an electrician to finally come over and fix it and magically the night before it started working again.
19. Saw Angels and Airwaves at the Commodore as well as the Faint and had an amazing time!
20. Saw the Macbeth catalogs with "the Tegan" and "the Sara" shoes that are finally coming out and will be available
this fall!!!
21. Missed touring and wrote really long and extensive emails to the band and crew daily.
22. Started planning what old songs we are going to play with City and Color and Girl in A Coma.
23. Wrote a list of things I did to our Fans on Myspace.

So this concludes my blog to you guys.

Be well, wear sunscreen, and if you live in Australia, buy your tickets to one of our upcoming festival dates and stay tuned for a few headlining dates!

Tue 30 - THE FALLS FESTIVAL (Lorne, VICTORIA)
Wed 31 - THE FALLS FESTIVAL (Marion Bay, TASMANIA)
Sat 3 Jan - SOUTHBOUND FESTIVAL (Busselton, WESTERN AUSTRALIA)
Wed 7 Jan - BYRON BAY ARTS AND MUSIC FESTIVAL (Byron Bay, NEW SOUTH WALES)

Also...if you live in the US register to Vote!!!! Oh and if you are doing nothing right now...get up....go out side and enjoy your life. It goes fast!!!


xoxo Your friend,
Tegan
Currently reading:
Atmospheric Disturbances and Other Sad Meteorological Phenomena
By Rivka Galchen