The Georgia Straight

Four acts to make the Ambleside experience great

- By Mike Usinger

As concertgoi­ng experience­s go, Ambleside Music Festival is one of those you get excited about long before arriving on-site. One of the most insanely beautiful settings in all of the Lower Mainland? Check! A genre-spanning mix of platinum-shifting headliners, wildly loved local favourites, proven veterans, and much-hyped up-and-comers? Bingo.

Come for the Offspring, Mother Mother, Mariana’s Trench. But don’t miss these four acts, all of which already have us excited about next year’s Ambleside Music Festival.

CHARLOTTE CARDIN

Through a combinatio­n of hard work, welltimed breaks, God-given talent, and superior genetics, some people on this Earth seem to accomplish more than others. Enter Montreal’s Charlotte Cardin, who started out life as a model, and then, seemingly effortless­ly, shifted into music. The 27-year-old released her debut album, Phoenix, last year, and then promptly watched it rocket to number one on the Canadian charts. Getting the attention was a mix of urban electro-soul, throwback jazz, and atmospheri­c art-pop. Not to mention perfect lines like “You told me you love me/I said it back, I didn’t mean it”.

VALLEY

Things don’t always happen overnight in the music industry, which explains Valley forming in Toronto in 2014, flying well under the radar with a couple of early indie EPs, and then seemingly exploding out of nowhere during the pandemic. A Covid-ruined 2020 saw the quartet score a Juno nomination for Breakthrou­gh Group of the Year, and release the indie-pop glitter bomb that was the sucks to see you doing better EP. Valley singles like “Last Birthday” and “Oh shit...are we in love” sound like they’ve been carefully crafted for maximum impact on The Peak—all summersuns­hine hooks that make you want to turn off the air conditioni­ng, roll down the windows, and hit the Sea to Sky highway with the radio cranked and the ocean sparkling.

VIRGINIA TO VEGAS

The great thing about summer is that, unless your name is Trent Reznor, Anne Rice, or pre-makeover Allison Reynolds, it’s almost impossible to get in touch with your inner saddo. Who—besides Johnny Cash, Glenn Danzig, and Siouxsie Sioux—wants to be wearing black in August? Known to the world as Virginia to Vegas, Derik John Baker first blazed into the pop world with “We Are Stars”, a 2014 dancefloor anthem packed with feel-good lines like “Life is impossible/ So believe that you’re unstoppabl­e.” A 2016 full-length, Utopian, mixed rubber-band electro with rumination­s on love, lust, and the complicati­ons that come with relationsh­ips. So even if you show up all in black at Ambleside, you’ll be able to relate to lines like “Oh shit, it feels like you’re getting me high”.

CARTEL MADRAS

Sometimes things don’t necessaril­y compute, which is to say one has to wonder how a city famous for cowboy hats, oil-industry tycoons, and a truly shitkickin­g stampede could be home to Cartel Madras. The hip-hop sister duo of Bhagya “Eboshi” Ramesh and Priya “Contra” Ramesh bill themselves as Cowtown’s finest purveyors of “Goonda Rap” (a term which will make sense to anyone who loves Bollywood’s Agneepath, Nayakan, and Gangs of Wasseypur I and II.) On last year’s The Serpent and the Tiger the Ramesh sisters are all menacing double-codeined darkness one minute, and exotic world-music weirdness the next. Which is to say that—based on stereotype­s of the city—Calgary doesn’t deserve them. But we certainly do.

 ?? ?? Canadian singer-songwriter Charlotte Cardin is just one of more than two dozen bands and musical performers appearing at the first Ambleside Music Festival in West Vancouver.
Canadian singer-songwriter Charlotte Cardin is just one of more than two dozen bands and musical performers appearing at the first Ambleside Music Festival in West Vancouver.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada