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The Vancouver’s International Burlesque Festival kicks off this evening at the Rickshaw Theatre. Sad Mag‘s issue three cover star, Crystal Precious, is the festival’s President and one of the many talented performers slated to take the stage this weekend. Stopping for a moment in the busy week before the launch, Crystal answered some of our questions about the 2010 festival and the resurgence of all things Burlesque.

Our centerfold and Queen of Sass, Crystal Precious. Photograph by Brandon Gaukel
Our centerfold and Queen of Sass, Crystal Precious. Photograph by Brandon Gaukel

Sad Mag: Tell me about how the Vancouver International Burlesque Festival got started. Were you involved at that time?

Crystal Precious: Basically Screaming Chicken wanted to do this type of festival and came to me and we made it work—a collaboration to get all the troupes together. We are all volunteer run, non-profit, [and] our community [came] together to showcase.

SM: You’ve been on hiatus from the Board for a couple of years—what has changed in that time for the Festival? What’s new?

CP: The biggest and best change for this year is the fact that the entire festival is at one location, The Rickshaw Theatre. Instead have having all the venues all around the city and having the troupes produce, perform, and promote their own show, all they have to do is come down to the Theatre and be fabulous.

SM: Makes it easier for the crowd and festival goers, too!

CP: Yeah!

SM: Burlesque has become phenomenally popular among general audiences in Vancouver in the past few years. To what would you attribute its resurgence, and its success in Vancouver?

CP: There was need, obviously. [Giggle]. People are into it and there is something for everyone—[from] classic to weird performance art.

SM: Yeah sexual or humorous. I love it. Vancouver seems very supportive of the Burlesque community.

CP: Vancouver has been a huge support for us.

SM: You guys are saucy bitches with talent. To quote RuPaul, “Creativity, uniqueness, nerve, and talent.” What do you hope audiences will take away from the shows and workshops at the Festival this year?

CP: The main thing is that I want the audience to view Burlesque as a medium not a genre. For someone to say “oh yeah, I have seen burlesque before,” is like me saying I have seen music. Burlesque has different genres, like music has jazz, rock, et cetera.

SM: The Festival is less than a week away. What are you doing now to prepare?

CP: Well the festival is pretty much all ready. I am mostly getting ready for guests at my house. Cleaning and things like that.

Crystal Precious and Sweet Soul Burlesque perform their showcase on Friday at 11pm. RSVP on Facebook. Sad Mag will be present to support this amazing talent and give away lots of copies of issue three!

Mad House

The intrepid Brandon Gaukel and David Deveau, founders of Queerbash, blew their fans away last weekend with THE BEST QUEERBASH EVER. Hundreds of party-goers attended the event at its new venue, 917 Main (at the Cobalt Motor Inn) to catch performances by Vera Way, Raye Sunshine, and Mark Wolf.

Queerbash is an arts-focused non-profit that organizes inclusive gay dance parties once per month that feature some of the best DJs and performers in Vancouver. Proceeds from Queerbash go to support Sad Mag and the innovative Zee Zee Theatre.

Check their buzz online at theFUTURISTS and in print this week in the Xtra West society pages … and don’t miss the next event!

1988 creative. Photograph by Brandon Gaukel.
1988creative's Justin Longoz and Chris McKinlay. Photograph by Brandon Gaukel.

A hookah gurgles and gargles in Chris McKinlay’s basement. McKinlay passes the hookah to Justin Longoz, but it is largely ignored as the two excitedly launch into our conversation, often saying the same thing at the same time. Longoz and McKinlay are friends, and the film production duo 1998creative. Working for Global Mechanic, the filmmakers produced their Ten Commandments series, for which they were featured on the Huffington Post and in Juxtapoz magazine earlier this year. 1998creative and their unique films have remarkably captured the limited attention spans of web video audiences around the world.

Their internet fame—and their creative partnership—has been years in the making. Born and bred Vancouverites, McKinlay and Longoz met in grade one while attending Vancouver College, an all-boys, shirt-and-tie Catholic school. “The whole origin of [1998creative] came in high school when we would work on social studies video projects,” says McKinlay. “We got better marks than we ever had in school.”

“Period,” Longoz continues, “Whenever we did a video project, we got As.” Their long friendship would be apparent to anyone who meets them today. One instant, Longoz is complimenting McKinlay’s mad cow illustrations, the next, McKinlay is locking Longoz out of the house in the midst of brotherly warfare.

Following high school, the pair attended Langara College with the intention of studying psychology and transferring to UBC. “Wherever we go, we kind of puppet the other [one] and follow to the same place,” says McKinlay. The friends soon encountered boredom with the traditional academic route, and McKinlay enrolled in a film program at BCIT. Longoz quickly followed suit. “Even when we were at Langara taking psychology, we were still doing video projects,” says Longoz.

Never ones to settle anywhere for too long, Longoz and McKinlay quickly realized that they would learn more about film through experience than in the classroom, and spent most of their time at BCIT away from BCIT. “I failed out of film school because I didn’t want to go to all the law courses and we’d be out screwing around with a video camera,” says McKinlay. Longoz laughs, “I want it to be on record that I didn’t fail film school. I passed the law classes.”

The friends abhor wasted time. For them, the best route is the one that leads quickly to the joy of creation. This explains their choice to work as a collaborative team for Global Mechanic, a relatively small studio, rather than for large institutions, which Longoz describes as “dinosaurs.” McKinlay, nods, adding, “The workflow is just archaic.” The two go on to explain the standard flow of film production. A large studio will create a concept and delegate the work to various other large studios – each accomplishing just one part of the project. “They hand it off and hand it off,” Longoz continues. “It’s a game of telephone that’s passed on and the message is lost,” says McKinlay.

Under Global Mechanic, 1998creative aspires to be a full-service film production operation. “You come to us and we can do your creative, we can do your production we can do your post-production, we can do everything on top of the fact that you haven’t gone through eight different people and the message doesn’t get watered down through each step,” explains Longoz.

Longoz and McKinlay formalized their ventures as 1998creative two years ago. The name channels their love of nostalgia—it was the year they began social studies video projects, and a year bursting with movies and music that continue to influence them today. They have worked on a variety of projects from backing videos for musicians to award-winning animation shorts, to painting murals in McKinlay’s soon to be destroyed house. The Ten Commandments, one of their most popular projects, is reflective of their religious background.

Roughly two minutes long, each stop motion short enacts a Commandment with fruit. The shorts are funny, poignant and universally relatable, much like 1998creative themselves. “Without being hyper sacrilegious or hyper-religious, we just wanted to tell the story,” says Longoz. “It’s part of the nostalgia. To go to a religious Catholic all boys school for twelve years,” says McKinlay. “Kind of influences you a bit,” finishes Longoz. “We like to take the serious part away and show it for what it is,” McKinlay continues. “… like, ‘These are the Ten Commandments—with fruit!” Longoz exclaims.

Most of their projects are released with a post on the Global Mechanic blog detailing the creative process. This is in part because of Longoz and McKinlay’s shared sentimental values. They want to share the personal investment made in their art. For a mural project, the duo created a time-lapse video of the production process in McKinlay’s kitchen. “When we did our wall mural, it could’ve just been this photoset that doesn’t tell the whole story of all the love. I look at the mural and it’s beautiful, but when I actually watch the video I have the fond memories. I hope there are people watching the video who can have that same appreciation, and be there alongside us when we create it.”

Sharing the more technical aspects of their work, Longoz and McKinlay exude a confidence that comes from experience. “I think that’s something a lot of people are afraid of—the idea that you can’t be bad and then get better,” says McKinlay. “Rather than hiding from a past project that fails or not you can actually tangibly look your past work and improve upon it. We see what we love and what we don’t love and we extrapolate what we learned from that and move forward. There’s no fear from us.”

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A wall mural by 1988creative. Photograph by Brandon Gaukel.

“Nope,” says Longoz. “I just hope that when we do stuff like that other people will see that and think, ‘well they’re not afraid, maybe we shouldn’t be afraid either!’ Because if there’s a collective sharing of how people do things everyone’s going to get better, right? You can make money off of it, but there’s no point if you’re just going to hoard it. Then, nobody learns anything.”

They just want to fill the world with great art—regardless of money. Not that they’re worried; they’re having a good time. McKinlay smiles, “successful or not, at the end of the day, you realize what makes you happy and I think for us, we’ve found it.”

Written by Rebecca Slaven.

Check out 1998creative at Global Mechanic’s Blog.

Photo by Tina Kulic
Karen Pinchin talks to Sad Mag. Photo by Tina Kulic

People clutch mugs of mulled apple cider, both with and without rum. Their breath faintly marks the air while they listen to tales from a diverse cross-section of Vancouverites. Rain City Chronicles is an evening of storytelling that could easily be a variation on standup comedy, but it is more than an audience passively watching performances. Elianna Lev, Lizzy Karp and Karen Pinchin have created an inclusive community-building event that blends humour with touching insight.

Each of the creators told a story at the premiere in December of last year, with the fitting theme of “first times.” In an effort to keep Rain City as heterogeneous as possible, the ladies have now assumed the role of backup storytellers. “This was never started as a vanity project,” Pinchin says. “We don’t want this to be a place where comedians and performers and type-A journalists get up onstage and tell self-indulgent stories.”

Born in Etobicoke, just west of Toronto, Pinchin has resided in Vancouver for just over two years, working as a freelance writer. She and Lev met as neighbours and Karp entered the scene when she wrote Lev a fan letter asking how she could become involved with her podcast, The People’s Program Project, before moving to Vancouver from Toronto. “It’s sort of like we were the Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band of writers,” laughs Pinchin. “You know those really weird moments when everything in the universe aligns to bring you together? All of a sudden we were just sitting around one day and we said we should start a storytelling night.”

The diversity in Vancouver’s residents is both its strength and flaw. What keeps the city bustling also constructs a shield. “People are sort of sick of attaching themselves to people who eventually pick up their roots and move,” says Pinchin. Rain City’s creators feel a desire to facilitate sharing among Vancouver’s guarded population. “I think there’s a hunger for that. I think people are really tired of sitting on the bus full of people wearing iPods and not having any dialogue with their neighbours,” Pinchin continues. While she has struggled with these standards, she still regards the city of Vancouver as an exciting place. “There’s a lot in this city that hasn’t been discovered, that’s still sort of really burgeoning and really coming to life and it’s what it must have been like to be in Montreal in the ’70s.”

Pinchin describes her experiences in approaching people to participate in the event: “Most hesitate insisting that they have nothing worth saying in front of a crowd but then digress into a captivating story—for example, the time they French kissed Jimmy Carter, as with Linda Solomon, who dished her experience at Rain City’s premiere. It’s such an intuitive concept that it seems redundant to say it out loud: that people are interesting and that people have interesting stories and that the only way to really build community is to communicate with one another. I don’t know why it’s so difficult for people to sometimes just let themselves open up a little bit and to tell their stories.”

The flow of Rain City’s evening speaks to the creators’ intuition. They curate the storytellers to be as varied as possible but then allow each to take control and speak about what moves them. “The most important thing is to keep it open so people can see themselves reflected in the topic. The worst thing would be to micro-manage because that would be totally egomaniacal for us to do—to say, ‘this is what your story is.’ People just need a bump in the right direction.”

At Rain City’s first event, papers were left on each seat asking for attendees to write down their stories about the next evening’s theme, “luck.” A staggering number of people wrote anonymous stories in response. “If we accomplish anything, it’s that someone is a little bit interested, that they come, that they see it’s a safe space for them to tell a story…and eventually it’ll just catch on and it’ll spread and all these apathetic, jaded, cynical people of our generation will just let a little light in.”

The creators never aspired to monetary goals. Eventually, they would like to donate the profits to local literacy charities and to host monthly installments at their dream venue, The Cultch. For now, they are happy to patiently coax Vancouver out of its shell. “We’re not doing anything remarkable—it’s the oldest form of communication in the world. All we’re doing is making a little bit of space for it. Making people stop and take a break. Just take a few hours to listen to stories, and tell stories, and share stories.”

-Rebecca Slaven for Sad Mag

The next installment of Rain City Chronicles takes place at 7:00 pm on Monday, March 29th at The Western Front. RSVP on Facebook.

http://twitter.com/raincityvan


Korey Moran's Cover for Issue Three.
Korey Moran's Cover for Issue Three.

SAD MAG ISSUE THREE LAUNCH PARTY
Friday, March 19 8pm
The ANZA Club
This is a 19+ event

Get a first look at the new issue, and meet the emerging artists beyond the pages of the magazine.

We are back at the Legendary Anza Club and we promise glamour, cheap beer, amazing entertainment, our best issue yet and Sad Smiles.

Enjoy performances by Vancouver’s “Queen of Sass,” our beautiful covergirl, Ms. Crystal Precious, the music of ok vancouver ok, DJ Lazerbomb! and DJ Tina’s Husband, and visuals by Sammy Chien.

Tickets are $10 (at the door). Grab the first copies of the magazine and party with us! Cheap booze! RSVP on Facebook

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Creative Director Brandon Gaukel photographs Crystal Precious. The Queen of Sass. Photograph by Tina Kulic.

Check out photographer Tina Kulic‘s behind the scene photographs of Issue Three’s cover shoot. Sad Mag’s Brandon Gaukel photographs our cover star, Crystal Precious on location at Vancouver’s legendary after hours club, The Dollhouse. Watch here, or on YouTube.

Special thanks to The Dollhouse, writer Jeff Lawrence and photographer Tina Kulic.

Issue Three comes out March 19, 2010 and is filled with shiny black and white art. With of course some shades of grey!

IMG_3953
Poerty is Dead's Editor Daniel Zomparelli sandwiched between Sad Mag's Deanne Beattie and Brandon Gaukel

Sad Mag loves magazines. It is even more exciting when your friend starts up a new Vancouver publication!

The Sad Mag team was very happy to attend the launch of Poetry is Dead at the Grace Gallery on Superbowl Sunday.

If you would like to learn more about editor Daniel Zomparelli’s take on poetry and learn about the magazine check out here.

“I am waiting for the zombie poetry to come back and seek revenge on the world that killed it.”-Daniel Zomparelli

In the next couple of weeks we will around town. The city is a buzz with some culture thanks to you know what. But importantly keep March 19th free, we have many surprises up our sleeve.

If you wanna be in tune to what Sad Mag is doing in this great city of ours, follow us on Twitter! We also love fans on Facebook.

Mad love,

Sad Mag team.

This week in my blog about Vancouver artists, I bring you Andrew Schick. A fresh face on Vancouver’s art scene and one talented illustrator. Schick’s enthuthiasm and energy radiates off the pages of our Winter Issue. Schick shared some new work and we talked randomly about art and Vancouver.

New Work by Andrew Schick
New Work by Andrew Schick

Sad Mag: What do you think of drawing in the art world today?

New work by Andrew Schick
New work by Andrew Schick

Andrew Schick: I think that drawing is really exciting right now. The need for an illustrator to have a cohesive style is fading and I think that is a good thing. Now (and probably always), the best illustrators are conceptually witty (first), and technically proficient (second). Artists like Jillian Tamaki, Noma Bar, Monsieur Pimpant and Andy Gilmore really stand out because they have a core idea before they dazzle you with technical virtuosity.

SM
: What are some things you are looking forward to this year? Movies, books, art shows?

AS: Watching Where the Wild Things Are again, because it captures childhood so accurately and it made me cry like a baby. I am reading The Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie right now and it is so jam-packed with beautiful images that I never want to put it down. The entire book is so dreamlike and it makes you want to paint and draw and read at the same time. I’m also visiting my illustrator-friend in Amsterdam (during the Olympics, actually), which will be rad. So I’m excited to check out the art/design scene over there, which is awesome apparently.

SM: Do you have any creative New Year’s resolutions?

AS: They are always the same: read more, don’t leave things until the last minute, and sign up for a credit card (or else the world will continue to not let me do anything). Actually, I’d like to work on getting a design internship at Vancouver Magazine for next summer, that’s my main resolution.

SM: In regards to the article you illustrated, how do you feel about the arts cuts? Do they affect you directly?

AS: They affect us all, actually. It’s frustrating that the arts are still seen as dispensable when times get tough, especially when you hear the political, rhetoric-ridden justifications from Kevin Krueger and Stephen Harper. I remember listening to either Kruger or Moore on CBC Radio, talking about how they’re making the choice to feed starving students over funding the arts, as if it’s an either-or scenario, when all the evidence shows that it’s not. Also, if I see another “Economic-Action-Plan” billboard, I’m going to throw up in my mouth.

New Work
New Work by Andrew Schick

SM: What are you working on right now?

AS: School. Now that graphic design/illustration has become such a trendy profession, it’s so important and really difficult to stand out. Right now, my only concern is a strong portfolio.

Make sure you check out Schick’s LJ and here are the images that Schick created for Sad Mag.

-Brandon

The Sad Mag Team. Photography by Rob Seebacher
The Sad Mag Team. Photography by Rob Seebacher

Sad Mag is taking the holidays easy. Some of our team is flying to California and some of us are retreating to the Fraser Valley for family time. Festive cheer is around us and we raise our (several) glasses to you Vancouver! Sadmag.ca returns full force in 2010. New posts, new content, interviews with Vancouver’s interesting and insights into Issue Three.

Wanna take a look at the brand new Issue two? Download here.

Pick up your jaws, ladies and gentlemen: these dapper fellows sound just as good as they look behind their turntables, not that they are mindful of appearances. Lazerbomb! and DJ Jeff Leppard just want you to party like no one is watching.

Hailing from small towns around B.C., all three men found Vancouver was not quite what they were anticipating. “When youfirst move out here it’s a shock because you’re expecting a lot more; then you get over that and you find out about the secret stuff—[the stuff] that you have to know people in order to find out about,” explains Dan Parker, who comprises Lazerbomb! along with Eric Cairns. “I went to the Morrissey because it was the only decent place to have a drink,” adds Cairns.

The Morrissey is just one of many downtown venues Cairns, Parker, and Jeff Lawrence list when discussing the nightlife they first experienced after arriving in Vancouver. Lawrence, known at the table as Jeff Leppard, talks about his happy discovery of DJ Dickie Doo’s Sunday nights at Shinean oasis of hip hop that, unlike other queer nights, doesn’t limit their music to traditional disco glam.

This disregard for expectations is the common ground between Leppard and Lazerbomb!, and its the quality that sets them apart from the rest. “I love playing two songs that you would never think would go together: some gangster rap followed by Roy Orbison,” Parker says. Lazerbomb!’s Sunday nights at the Narrow are host to many guest DJs who relish the opportunity to let loose and dust off beloved dormant tunes. “The nights that seem to flourish the most are those where the DJs play everything.” Cairns continues, “We play shit that we think is awesome… but also a variety. There’s no point in limiting yourself to one genre.”

Lazerbomb!’s and Jeff Leppard’s organic sets reflect their transition from party-goers to party-makers. Both Cairns and Parker have been interested in DJing for some time. Cairns often filled the DJ role for friends’ parties and fundraisers, while Parker’s interest piqued when residing in Brighton—England’s DJ capital. After Brighton, Parker found Vancouver to be a difficult scene to break into.

“You gotta be friends with people who throw parties, or throw parties yourself,” says Parker. The DJ scene requires an abundance of energy, a night owl nature, and the ability to party all the time. “You have to show support for everyone else so that they’ll show support for you,” confirms Cairns. The imperative for self-promotion is the one lackluster requirement felt by all three. “I didn’t really promote myself much. You feel dirty,” says Lawrence. “We do it shamelessly now,” laughs Cairns.

Lawrence also experienced some tough times when starting out. “A friend and I thought, ‘Let’s do a fundraiser and we’ll learn to DJ,’ and a lot of people showed up. It was at the Gecko Club, which was the shittiest club that only lasted about six months… We thought it’d be cool but then the interior was covered with lizards.”

Lazerbomb! first fused together when throwing a few back at the Narrow one March. Cairns and Parker, who had been friends for three years, struck up a conversation with some Irish folk and threw around the idea of DJing a St. Patty’s night. “We made some promises that night in an inebriated fashion and then figured we should actually follow through,” says Cairns. They made good on their promise and have been a regular fixture at Narrow since.

Lazerbomb! was also the DJ for Sad Mag’s July 1st fundraiser, during which they completed an eight-hour DJ marathon. “We got shut down to Conga by Gloria Estefan,” says Cairns. “The neighbour even came out on her porch [and commented], ‘You guys were great! Where else do you throw parties?” adds Parker.

Lawrence now DJs every Friday at Junction and although this upcoming Thursday is his second Sad Mag stint, he is a familiar feature at the Anza Club. Lawrence delves into his love for the Anza Club and the way it forces attendees to commit to the party. “People come to the Anza to party their faces off.” Cairns nods in agreement saying, “It reminds me of a teen dance. You’re there because you’re just having a good time and you don’t care who’s looking. You’re not at a nightclub, so it doesn’t matter since you’re not there for that vibe to begin with.”

This is one secret everyone should be in on. Come check out what Lazerbomb! and DJ Jeff Leppard are bringing to Vancouver’s Eastside at the Anza this Thursday at Sad Mag’s holiday party! Details here.

Lazerbomb! DJs Sunday nights at the Narrow

DJ Jeff Leppard can be found every Friday night at Junction

-Rebecca Slaven for Sad Mag