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Last Updated: 12/22/2009

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Status: Single
City: Montreal
State: Quebec
Country: CA
Signup Date: 2/23/2008

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Thursday, December 17, 2009 

Category: Music
 

The Gleeful Doom Pop of My People Sleeping


Read the Ajisignal Article


Thursday, December 03, 2009 
Tickets for our album launch at Sala Rossa, Montreal on Friday, December 11th are available for $8 at:

Popmontreal.comhttp://www.etix.com/ticket/..online/performanceSearch.jsp?..performance_id=1127444&..cobrand=popmontreal

Phonopolis
Casa del Popolo
5185 Jeanne Mance

The show is $8 or $15 with a copy of the album at the door.

Guests:
Mountain Man Pat Jordache
Adam & the Amethysts
North, My Love

thanks.





Tuesday, November 24, 2009 

Current mood:  awake
Category: Life
hi,

my people sleeping will launch our record -feye- at La Sala Rossa on
Friday, December 11th. 



our guests will be....
Adam & the Amethysts
Mountain Man Pat Jordache (Patrick Gregoire)
North, My Love (Katherine Peacock[our ex-bandmate] and her accordian army)

doors = 8:30pm
first sound = 9:30pm sharp.
entry = $8 ($15 with album)

tickets available at: Phonopolis, Casa del Popolo, 5185 Jeanne Mance (chez moldy)



thanks for reading.

Friday, November 13, 2009 
During Pop Montreal this year, the morning of October 1st we had the good fortune to be filmed in our apartment and around the neighbourhood by Vincent Moon for la Blogotheque's series on Montreal.

See it here:  Blogotheque: Views of Montreal

When we met Vincent and crew at our apartment last month we were shy and cautious of the camera in speaking, but sure in the songs.  So, it’s calming to see the beautiful images, and have the chance to tell our story in text alongside them. 
In my people sleeping we’re all old, old friends or lovers.  We have all loved and hated each other like siblings.   
In the winter of 2007 we recorded our first EP. During that time we fell into that way of mythologizing everything—we were heavy on symbols.  Things like blue dust, time machines, seahorses, and this yellow lamp that we carried around took on more meaning than usual. We’d sing facing each other, trying to match the other exactly.  It took restraint, and ritual. 
To release the EP we needed a name.  The idea that our people were hard to reach—not present, not dead, but sleeping seemed to work for us.  The name reinforced what we were doing.  It slowed us down and spaced us out.   
By the time it came around time to making our first full length album two years later the collaboration had all but broken down. Being down in the Pines (recording studio), in the crumbling neighbourhood of Griffintown, in winter again, in emotional turmoil, we made feye, an album that sounds like a true and apt document of all those things.  Its most eerie element may actually be it’s optimism.   
The word feye means several things, but the meanings we like are "destined to die" and "possessing elfin like power".  We like that idea—that there was something supernatural going on, but that it can’t be the same anymore.  And it’s not.  In a lot of ways the band that made it broke up.  Now with it done and unreleased, we’re reinventing ourselves again. 
We invited la blogotheque into our moldy basement apartment, into our comfort zone, where we wrote our album, where we had our fights, and our meetings and our practices, and froze all winter, because it only made sense.  Most of us have lived here at some point (as well as half the Mile End music community).  We love our neighbours and our cave-like rooms, and our courtyard that smells like sausage.
We played the song Cortes because it represents us well.  It allows us to trance out. In it we’re filtering something big and messy through a minimal, repetitious music.  It’s about the sea and guilt, explorers and shame—all sad things we can space out to.
What’s been the most formative element of our music is that we’ve always practiced in apartments.  Having to be quiet makes a huge difference in composition and how you deliver songs. It’s given us control and calm, in place of abandon.
Vincent Moon sensed that, and wanted some abandon from us, so he led us out into the street.  Immediately we ran into our neighbours who didn’t think twice and came along.  We all wandered into the café across the street, and ran into several more friends.  We sang a song, everybody stopped eating to watch, and there was nothing strange about it at all—everybody knew all the words already.  That’s why making music in Montreal is so easy, and perfect.
James

Wednesday, October 28, 2009 
http://maisonneuve.org/pressroom/article/2009/sep/27/edge-island/

POP ....MONTREAL: ....EDGE ....OF ....THE ....ISLAND

....By ....DREW ....NELLES


An interview with Sister Suvi’s Patrick Gregoire and My People Sleeping’s James Irwin.

September 27, 2009


Patrick Gregoire and James Irwin aren’t in the same band. Gregoire is a singer and multi-instrumentalist in the roiling Sister Suvi, whose album Now I Am Champion is available now. Irwin sings and plays guitar in My People Sleeping, who sound precisely like their name, and whose debut full-length Feye will come out this winter. Recently, on a rainy Tuesday night, we sat down after choir practice to talk about Montreal.
My People Sleeping plays Wednesday, September 30th at 8 p.m. at the Ukrainian Federation. Sister Suvi plays Thursday, October 1st at 1:30 a.m. at Balattou. Both shows are part of Pop Montreal.
Drew Nelles: First, James, can you tell us what you’re wearing?

James Irwin: I’m wearing just my underwear because my pants were soaking wet when I arrived.

DN: Sweet. I wanted to start off by talking about songs. Specifically, Patrick, I was wondering if you could tell us a bit about how you and Sister Suvi came up with “The Lot,” because I think a lot people in Montreal feel like you wrote it about them.

Patrick Gregoire: About them?

DN: Well, I feel like you followed me around on my bike for a night in Montreal.

PG: Yeah, it’s a pretty accessible experience. Specifically, it’s about one place in the east end—I guess it’s in the borough Anjou, at the end of Bellechasse. If you keep on going past the 25, you get to this big, empty place where the suburbs suddenly stop and the housing developments end. You walk through this hole in the fence and you’re in a giant empty field, and it’s the most empty and alone place. If you keep walking through it, you go through another hole in the fence, and you get to this big quarry, with a giant pit in it and a huge factory that’s lit up. There are these two smokestacks that spew hundred-foot flames out of it at intermittent periods. You can actually see it from the top of the mountain at night sometimes. It’s a pretty majestic place.

The other part of that song is about the edge of the island, if you keep going all the way to the easternmost part. These weird parts of the city—they are your city but you’re completely unfamiliar with them. And it almost feels like you’re on vacation. You’re like, “This is so strange. I’ve never seen this before…but it’s in Montreal! What?

DN: And James, I was wondering if you could talk about the writing process behind “Seahorse.” I remember seeing you and Ruby [Kato Attwood] play it at Patrick’s birthday party, and I feel like my heart stopped. It’s a really transcendent song.

JI: When I first got my digital piano I would play it at top volume in my room. I didn’t really know how to play it, so I would just slam it and the words just came out when I was yelling. At first it was a very loud song, and I’d yell it. It was pretty much written as it is now, but faster. Then Ruby moved back here from Halifax, and she moved into my apartment and I showed her that song. We started singing it together, and we did harmonies at first but it sounded cheesy. So we decided to just sing unison and that we should just do that all the time.

PG: That My People Sleeping patent.

JI: It was very much about me and her trying to figure out how to make something together. It felt really good to close our eyes and sing right at each other’s faces. Then we started singing with Katherine [Peacock]. She played the piano, and she immediately played all of my songs slower than I had. We all got into that idea and started to slow it down as much as possible. By the time it was recorded, the three of us had even influence on it.
 
Patrick Gregoire, right, with Sister Suvi.

DN: How long have you guys known each other?

PG: James and I? A couple of years, give or take.

JI: We actually met at Shaun [Weadick, another choir member]’s house. Patrick is a friend of my friend Carl. I was playing with Carl at the time and I remember you saying [deep-voiced Patrick imitation], “Hi James, I know you because Carl talks about you.” That was when Ruby and I first played “Seahorse.”

PG: I remember being really hypnotized by that song, even then. I was hanging out with this girl then, and she had been dating—I don’t know if this is interview material—she was dating a guy in a band that contains the word “fortress.” I was singing the lyric, “I can build a fortress,” and she was like, “I don’t want to hear that word right now.” And I was like, “No, you gotta hear this jam! It’s hot. It’s hot!

DN: I’m curious about what it’s like to be a musician in Montreal right now. Do you ever feel like you’re living in the shadow of the city five years ago, or is it liberating in a sense, now that the pressure is off and the international eye has moved on?

PG: I think the city of five years ago is living in the shadow of us. [Laughter all around.] Whatever, fuck that.

DN: I guess it is kind of an inane question, but I think it’s something that people do think about.

JI: I could see how people from the outside would want to know the answer to that question, but I don’t really know if there is one.

PG: I think that arts scenes and music scenes definitely move in cycles and waves and generations, and I see that continuing to evolve here. I think it’s a really beautiful thing that a lot of the talent that did a lot of great things and inspired the younger kids five years ago have grown up to have really great careers—and maybe moved out a little bit, and maybe aren’t such active and daily participants in the local scene. But in turn the people who really got inspired by those bands, like us, are now coming of age a little bit, and the cycle begins again.

Maybe that’s not as glamorous as David Bowie getting involved and the New York Times snooping around, but it’s a continuous cycle and it was going on long before people were supposedly discovering Montreal. There were bands doing really amazing things ten years ago that built the foundations that are still going strong now. You look at institutions like the Hotel2Tango and the Sala and the Casa, and those come out of another era, even older than the one you brought up.

DN: That’s kind of what I mean: the actual act of international attention can change the dynamic itself. There’s obviously been a lot going on in the city for years, but the moment that existed five years ago—I’ve heard people talk about how that ruptured the dynamic in some sense.

PG: You could look at it that way, but I think it’s kind of counterproductive to do so. A lot of really amazing things came out of that too. I don’t think our youth culture and counterculture is ruptured. I think it’s going strong, and what always made this town a great place for music continues to exist. There is still an alienated, overeducated Anglophone underclass that has nothing to do with itself except fucking sit around singing in choirs on Tuesday nights and working minimum-wage jobs. That’s not going to change in spite of any band blowing up.

JI: None of this would have happened if not for Godspeed [You! Black Emperor] and the scene before. To look at it that way—a scene and then a scene and then a scene—I’m sure that it’ll happen again. In terms of actually living here at the time, I remember it being uncomfortable. Some people, when they get attention, react by taking advantage of it, and some people get really jaded about it. Being around people who had both reactions was a little bit weird for me to personally sort out—whether or not I would be able to handle it.

We made our album with Dave [Bryant], who was in Godspeed, and he doesn’t really know anything about what’s happened since—I don’t mean to say he’s ignorant, he gets Arcade Fire, but he doesn’t really understand particularly why people at that time were interested—and his influence changed our music to a huge degree. It totally ended up being all ambient and post-rock. He drew our songs out, really. I think it’s funny that we accidentally wound up going backward into that influence. We never intended that.

Another anecdote is that I just played a show and these guys from Philadelphia came screaming up to us afterwards. They were like, “We’re so excited to see a Montreal band, man!”

PG: Where was the show?

JI: It was at the Divan Orange.

PG: Oh, it was in Montreal.

JI: Yeah, and they were just visiting. We had just played and they were like, “We just knew we were going to see an awesome Montreal band!” Whatever the idea of what that is, I don’t see us fitting into it, so it was strange.
 
James Irwin, middle, with My People Sleeping.

DN: Finally, could each of you say something nice about the other one?

PG: James earlier touched on the combination of My People Sleeping’s vocal sound, and I think that’s my favourite thing about their band—the ghostly drag-queen aesthetic that it has. I’ve heard the word androgynous word used about it, and I think that’s the really beautiful thing about having developed such a tight vocal sound. They’ve almost abandoned their individuality and lost themselves into music that is transcendent. You used that word earlier and I think that’s an apt description because they rise up and out of their bodies. It’s really cool. [Self-conscious laughter.] “It’s really cool. Groovy.”

JI: Literally, Sister Suvi is my favourite band to go watch. It’s the most fun thing to do, of all my friends’ bands—but not just of my friends. And then getting to know him better, Patrick is just the coolest, nicest guy. He’s a very humble and very intelligent dude.

PG: Aw, shucks. Why’d you have to end us on that?

Tuesday, March 17, 2009 

Current mood:  played
Category: Pets and Animals



20090220ghosttree.jpg

MP contributor and photo-taker Niki Hyde braved the mini snow storm
on Wednesday night to bring you the scoop on out-of-town freak folkers
Ghost Bees and in-town up-and-comers My People Sleeping. Niki probably
wouldn't advise me uses this many dashes to introduce her post.




There is nothing that breaks the spirit of a Montréaler like the
inevitable snowstorm following our first blush of spring. Nevertheless,
in the heart of a snowstorm, I found myself shoulder to shoulder with a
packed house of my rugged compatriots who braved the blizzard for a
triple-bill of ghostly folk at Le Cagibi. Ghost Bees
were the obvious draw for the show, once again bringing their brand of
spooky songwriting to our fair city. The east-coast duo first emerged
as a blip on the scene during this year’s Pop Montreal where they
played to an enthusiastic crowd at Casa del Popolo.
This
time around they’re bidding adieu to our belle ville before heading off
to the European wilds for a tour that will have them hit France,
Germany and the UK. For opening bands they picked wisely, choosing two
local groups with a strong following. They complimented the Bees
delicate sound with rockier riffs on the same themes. Although the
Ghost Bees played a nice atmospheric set, the real stand out
performance of the night was by Montreal’s own My People Sleeping.

20090220mypeople.jpg

My People Sleeping
are James Irwin, Ruby Kato Attwood, Katherine Peacock Pat Bastedo and John Ancheta. Irwin, Bastedo and Ancheta help the band launch their
aural sneak attack by providing a simple framework to the delicate
vocals provided by Peacock and Attwood.

20090220cagibiart1.jpgBeginning
dreamily, they build over time into a surprisingly driving and at times
even epic sound. Songs like “Yes, No, No, No, No” and “Tom, Tom”
demonstrate the band’s potential, coming to a fever pitch of carefully
orchestrated chaos. The slinky “RR Hood” got the crowd moving –as much
as they could in the cramped space—and steamed up the windows of Cagibi
like a couple of high-schoolers making dirty in a parked car.

I’d like to see what these kids can do with a bit more space, Cagibi
was a great choice for the intimate Ghost Bees—who played their
breathless ballads in near darkness—and opener Valleys,
but it felt a little constrained for My People Sleeping. Something like
Sala might give them enough space to explore some of the energy we felt
a frisson of last night. Attwood told me that the band are wrapping up
their album over the weekend so doubtless we’ll be hearing more from
them in the coming months.

photos of the ghost tree, my people sleeping and the cagibi by niki hyde

Thursday, December 18, 2008 

Current mood:  handsome
I(heart)Music did a poll asking music bloggers and DJs to vote for the hottest bands in Canada...we made the almost in pile...meaning we got votes but didn't make the final cut.

read about it here: http://www.iheartmusic.net/serendipity/index.php?/archives/1346-Also-receiving-votes....html
Monday, December 08, 2008 

Current mood:  animated

Friday, December 5. 2008



Wake up to My People Sleeping





Friday, October 24, 2008 

Category: Blogging

Quick hitters:: My People Sleeping



As the opening notes of Seahorse echo in your headphones, you are struck with a sense of uneasiness. Sure over the course of the song, the percussion, hand claps and pleasantries the song offers helps you settle in, but the ominous off-kilter piano that grabs you ear really makes you wonder what waits tucked around the dark corners of the song. And to be completely honest, hearing the boy/girl vocals and echoing harmonies does nothing to ease my discomfort.

The quartet builds the song perfectly – a well placed, resonating note in the distance, repeating vocal lines and hand claps that move closer and gain strength all contribute to the mood – and the five-minute track surges forward and never lets the listener’s attention drift. Every time you think it's going to be ok, they add something that makes you question everything you've heard.

After hearing a few songs, it becomes obvious that My People Sleeping explore the battles between security and terror; man versus machine. The human emotions James, Ruby Kato and Katherine present with well executed vocal interplay – think stripped down, minimal Mother Mother - constantly try to get a solid foothold as they battle the cold, robotic synths. For every calming note, a chaotic one follows quickly. For every relaxing reprieve, there is a rushed breath of anxiety and remarkably My People Sleeping is able to do this with a fairly consistent tempo.

That attention to detail, especially as they constructs lo-fi melodies (despite the large amount of sounds and textures they play with), is crucial. Unlike many bands in their nascent days, My People Sleeping seems to have an understanding of their sound, where they want each song to end up and a sense of individuality that is all too often lacking. Tracks like R.R. Hood and Momma Frankenstein may be quick ditties on paper, but the songs offer a great glimpse of what My People Sleeping can accomplish. R.R. Hood starts with swirling vocals, but the drum machine clap and keep type synth line gives the song a jump start and transform the mood completely.

I think the highlight of the self-titled EP - at least what I've heard - is Time Machine. The song, a slow moving four minute effort, encapsulates the immense potential of the band. Vivid images are drawn out with beautiful, slow, moving three-part harmonies and terrific strings, but any warmth is stifled in the man versus machine composition the band prefers and as they repeat, "we could go back" over and over again, you start to wonder if you would, even if you could.
Tuesday, September 09, 2008 

Current mood:  awake

Song of the Day: My People Sleeping - Seahorse

My People Sleeping - Seahorse

'I can make a fortune from your face, I could build a fortress in your rib cage' - Another song, another lovely sentiment. I'm always interested in songs that can get under your skin while having the least amount of music behind it possible…but looking at the list of instruments My People Sleeping claim to use, maybe they just have a special way of embedding it all deep behind the melody. Evidently still a well-kept secret, My People Sleeping are an unsigned quartet from Montreal that have given me what is already looking like a contender for the best song I'll hear all week.