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canada flag
a, Off the Board, Opinion

Considering Canada Day in the context of Bill C-24

Last week, I celebrated my first Canada Day as a new citizen. My family immigrated here a little over five years ago and earlier this year, I took my oath of citizenship. Being Canadian offers opportunities, rights, and privileges that being a citizen of Bangladesh does not. Although I received a certificate that allowed me to call myself a “Canadian,” I did not automatically feel that way–I am still adapting to my new country. I’ve since watched Team Canada play at the FIFA Women’s World Cup where I proudly draped the Canadian flag over me and sang the national anthem—my national anthem. After this, and many other experiences, I was finally starting to feel more Canadian. All that changed when Bill C-24, “The Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act,” became law; rather than feeling proud, I was deeply concerned.

As it stands, the legislation gives the government the right to strip Canadian citizenship from any dual citizen for crimes such as treason, spying, and terrorism, whether it be in Canada or elsewhere. Individuals who commit such crimes and are found guilty after due process should, undoubtedly, be punished to the fullest extent of the law. Revoking citizenship, however, is an unnecessary extra measure that essentially creates two classes of Canadians. In addition to its flawed principles, the proposed implementation of the law is worthy of criticism; the revocation of citizenship would be primarily decided by the citizenship and immigration minister, rather than by the judiciary, hardly due process.

For naturalized citizens such as myself, this law is a cautionary warning that despite legally immigrating and being a productive member of society I am not, and may never be, a true Canadian.

Certain statutes within Bill C-24 are commendable. For example, there is a broadening of language and knowledge requirements to all prospective citizens aged 14-65. (it’s currently required for everyone aged 18-54) These requirements measure knowledge of history, governing institutions, geography, and rights and freedoms through a citizenship test. This amendment should help ensure that more new Canadians are able to integrate within and contribute to their communities as active citizens.

Despite a few worthy points, Bill C-24 compromises the well-being of both dual citizens and Canada’s future. For naturalized citizens such as myself, this law is a cautionary warning that despite legally immigrating and being a productive member of society I am not, and may never be, a ‘true Canadian.’ Bill C-24 reminded me that as long as my national identity is hyphenated, I will be treated as a second class citizen by the law.

The act also has the potential to limit Canada’s future growth because it is likely to act as a deterrent to immigrants. The country’s population is aging—the baby boomer generation is reaching retirement and the fertility rate has stagnated. According to a 2014 report from Statistics Canada, population increases from immigration would be the primary engine for growth in all potential scenarios (low, medium, and high growth) for the next 50 years.

Laws such as Bill C-24 risk alienating the very people that Canada needs the most to continue to grow in the 21st century. With its increased application fees and longer residency requirements, it makes the immigration process more cumbersome and increases the investment required of prospective immigrants while also warning any potential immigrants that they will not be treated equally. Canada is very fortunate to not suffer from many of the ills of the U.S. immigration system. Creating extra barriers to legal immigration, a process that stands to benefit all Canadians, is counterintuitive. Moving forward, the government should make attracting and retaining young talent, such as international students, innovators, and creative pioneers, a top priority.

Becoming a Canadian citizen was one of the proudest moments of my life. In Canada, I am a member of a free and fair democracy; however, a functioning democracy is built upon the rule of law. Section 27 of our constitution holds that multiculturalism is a central value of Canada, while Section 15 states that all citizens deserve “equal treatment before and under the law, and equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination.” Bill C-24 does not celebrate multiculturalism, it intends to marginalize those who add to Canada’s multicultural fabric and it creates second class citizens. Simply put, the Act is contradictory to the principles of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and will do more to harm Canadian society than to strengthen Canadian citizenship.

Video

The Beauty of Norwegian Countryside (Full-width Post)

This is some dummy copy. You’re not really supposed to read this dummy copy, it is just a place holder for people who need some type to visualize what the actual copy might look like if it were real content.

If you want to read, I might suggest a good book, perhaps Hemingway or Melville. That’s why they call it, the dummy copy. This, of course, is not the real copy for this entry. Rest assured, the words will expand the concept. With clarity. Conviction. And a little wit.

In today’s competitive market environment, the body copy of your entry must lead the reader through a series of disarmingly simple thoughts.

nxne toronto
a, Arts & Entertainment, Music

NXNE wrap-up 2015

This past week the Tribune visited North by Northeast (NXNE) in Toronto, the Canadian equivalent to Austin, Texas’ famed South by Southwest (SxSW) Festival, which showcases promising up-and-coming music in locations throughout the city. After taking in five days of indie promos and roof-shaking concerts, we’ve narrowed our experience down to six memorable and meaningful performances that defined the festival.

  • Elie's Picks

    Lucius

    This outstanding Brooklyn-based indie pop band didn’t disappoint. In recordings, lead singers Jess Wolfe’s and Holly Laessig’s voices weave together through slow ballads and pitch-perfect harmonies, but on stage they took their sound to a new level and never came down from that high. Even during renditions of quieter songs like “Tempest” and “Go Home,” every member in the five-piece band was banging some surface in full force with a drumstick or two. The show ended with Wolfe and Laessig bringing a double microphone into a small clearing in the middle of the crowd and crooning a few slower songs for an intimate ending to a memorable set.

    San Fermin

    Mixing a lot of individual aspects together is a challenge that can often come off as incoherent; in the case of San Fermin, however, unique and grandiose sound is created that’s somewhere between indie and rock opera. The eight-piece band is fronted by willowy diva Charlene Kaye and sultry bass vocalist Allen Tate. The duo is backed by a baritone sax, violin, and trumpets that erupt into delirious jazzy interludes a few times each song. Catch them at Osheaga so you can say you saw them before they were a big-font name on a festival poster.

    Cathedrals

    Cathedrals was one of a long list of openers in a long showcase at Adelaide Hall on the festival’s second day, but they still managed to steal the show. The Bay Area band has a synth-heavy, dreamy sound, looping and distorting around lead singer Brodie Jenkins’ voice. Jenkins has been singing since she was 14, and moves around the stage with a rare sense of comfort and grace. The band’s debut EP Cathedrals is out now on Neon Gold, and there is a wonderful remix version of the EP, titled “Blush.”

     

     

     

     

     

  • Dan's Picks

    Shad

    While Canadian-raised hip-hop artist Shad is relatively unknown outside of the great white north, his music has garnered a sizeable following within it. His verses provide an uplifting message that encourage an optimistic attitude for his listeners, but also successfully navigates that message away from preachiness—a problem commonly attributed to ‘positive’ rappers. Recently, Shad was anointed as the new host of the popular radio program q, illustrating his capability as a multi-faceted and competent entertainer. His standing-room only set at NXNE, at the heart of downtown Toronto in Dundas and Yonge Square, vociferously reminds us that he is as talented and as hard-working as they come.

     

     

     

     

     

    A photo posted by Shad (@shadkmusic) on

     

     

     

     

    Vince Staples

    To the section of hip-hop fans that claim “hip-hop is dead” or “it’s gotten worse since the 90s,” Vince Staples proves the doubters wrong. In 2014, Staples released his critically acclaimed EP Hell Can’t Wait—an album that powerfully addressed issues such as police brutality, drugs, gang violence, and lost love through a barrage of clever lyricism and sharp production. Staples exudes a level of poise in his live performances that is surprising for someone so young (he’s only 21). His performances inspire a kind of sweaty frenzy among his fans, and his set at Berkeley Church was no different.

    Hundred Waters

    While the quartet that forms Hundred Waters does many things well, its main strength seems to be their authenticity. Classically-trained pianist and lead singer Nicole Miglis led the indie-electro band from California through a solemn and graceful performance at the Phoenix Concert Center. It’s worth noting that out of all the people in the venue, no one seemed to be enjoying the set more than the band members themselves (a difficult task indeed considering the adoration showed by their fans). Overall, Hundred Waters’ performance was both refreshing and cohesive, something truly to be remembered.

     

     

     

     

Politics

Testing the Elements

This is some dummy copy. You’re not really supposed to read this dummy copy, it is just a place holder for people who need some type to visualize what the actual copy might look like if it were real content.

If you want to read, I might suggest a good book, perhaps Hemingway or Melville. That’s why they call it, the dummy copy. This, of course, is not the real copy for this entry. Rest assured, the words will expand the concept. With clarity. Conviction. And a little wit.

In today’s competitive market environment, the body copy of your entry must lead the reader through a series of disarmingly simple thoughts.

All your supporting arguments must be communicated with simplicity and charm. And in such a way that the reader will read on. (After all, that’s a reader’s job: to read, isn’t it?) And by the time your readers have reached this point in the finished copy, you will have convinced them that you not only respect their intelligence, but you also understand their needs as consumers. (more…)

montreal food festivals
a, Out on the Town, Student Life

Indulging in Montreal’s summer food festivals

Residents of Montreal with big appetites will rejoice at this summer’s platter of upcoming food festivals. While Montreal’s cuisine is certainly not lacking in diversity or selection, food festivals are unique in that they often feature variations on a certain dish or type of cuisine, allowing patrons to indulge in a dish’s spectrum of taste.

  • PoutineFest

    One of the most anticipated food festivals is The Great Montreal PoutineFest, which will take place in Old Port from July 3-5. Poutine is a dish native to Quebec, which in its simplest form, consists of french fries and cheese curds, doused with hot gravy. At PoutineFest, however, restaurants will have the opportunity to showcase their creativity by infusing poutines with different influences and ingredients. Macaroni and cheese poutine, duck confit poutine, and poutine with foie gras, are just a few of the variations expected to be on display

    The Great PoutineFest will consist of 16 food trucks and booths from different restaurants. Among those attending will be the Montreal-based restaurant and bar, L’Grox Luxe, serving up both pulled-pork poutine and tofu poutine for vegetarian poutine-lovers. Planète Poutine will also be there, boasting their official seafood-themed lobster poutine. Finally, for patriotic poutine fanatics, Heart Attack Poutine will have an authentically Canadian poutine garnished with bacon and drizzled in maple syrup. While forty Montreal restaurants participated in the annual Poutine Week earlier in the year, Le Smoking BBQ is bringing the poutine craze back for by organizing PoutineFest, which will will no doubt be a great way to satisfy deep-rooted potato cravings.

  • RibFest

     

    A second food festival is the annual RibFest, which is set to occur from August 14-16 at the Pierrefonds-Roxboro City Hall Fairground and is hosted by Big Brothers Big Sisters of West Island, a charity dedicated to empowering and inspiring children. The different rib vendors will serve up their award-winning ribs while also catering to the West Island community.

    “The Montreal RibFest will have a great community feel to it as families and friends come together to enjoy delicious food and listen to fantastic live bands,” Martha Beltran, an organizer for the festival, said.

    Highlights will include Jack the Ribber from London, ON, who use their wood-burning smokers to cook 226 St. Louis style racks at once. Another company to keep an eye out for is Crabby’s BBQ Shack, the only team in Canada that slow bakes their ribs.

  • More food festivals

    Another festival to note is Montreal’s Italian Week running from August 7-16, which will feature a Best Baba Contest. Pastry chefs will compete by baking babas—small yeast cakes saturated in rum, which hail from the Naples region of Italy designed to soothe those with a sweet tooth (or multiple sweet teeth).

    Montreal will also host a Polish Week on August 8 and 9 which will include Polish cooking classes, kielbasa eating contests, and most likely mounds of pierogies.

    Charlotte Rosen, U2 Science and self-proclaimed food fanatic, enjoys food festivals because they shed a new light on the city.

    “As a Montreal resident, it’s always exciting to discover new restaurants and food trucks, and meet fellow food-lovers along the way,” she said.

    Similarly, Jonathan Motha-Pollock, U2 Arts, notes how food festivals are enjoyable because they are not just about the food but the atmosphere they foster.

    “You can go with friends, there’s always music playing, and tons of people around,” he said. “Everyone is just in a good mood because they’re full of incredible-tasting food. It makes for a really great day.”

    One of the highlights of these food festivals, aside from the abundance of delicious food, is that entrance is free! For Montrealers on a budget or tourists visiting the city, food festivals are an affordable and accessible way to explore Montreal’s cuisine in social and lively settings.

    Photos courtesy of Kodjo, Robert S. Donovan, and Finedininglovers.com

Kip Cobbett McGill University
a, McGill, News

McGill Board of Governors considers Divest McGill’s proposal

On May 21 the McGill Board of Governors (BoG) held its last meeting of the school year.

  • The Federal budget

    McGill Principal Suzanne Fortier discussed aspects of the recently announced Federal budget in her opening remarks. Fortier highlighted that the Canadian government allocated $1.3 billion towards the Canadian Foundation for Innovation and $105 billion over five years towards Canada's high speed innovation and research network, CANARIE. She also expanded on the research community's reaction to the budget.

    "Overall I think it's a fairly good budget for universities but I should tell you the research community didn't react in a very positive way," Fortier said. "The budget did not include additional commitments to research led by individuals [….] The investments made [in the budget] are for larger types of research programs."

  • Compliance with Quebec Treasury Board Loi 65.1

    Vice-Principal (Administration and Finance) Michael Di Grappa spoke to the BoG about the Quebec Treasury Board's Loi 65.1, which calls for McGill to declare its procurement of certain goods and services.

    "The act aims at ensuring the accountability for the use of public funds through reporting," Di Grappa explained.

    Within McGill's report to the Quebec Treasury Board, Di Grappa stated that McGill had declared a list of all building project contracts worth more than $25,000 that it had entered into between April 1, 2014 and March 31, 2015.

    Kip Cobbett, chair of the BoG, also underscored that McGill had amended its procedure for estimating the costs of projects.

    "Until recently, the administration was coming and seeking approval [for projects] before they had really scoped out the cost of a project,” Cobbett said. “Now we’ve authorized them to spend money upfront to get that […] so we hope we’ll have a better picture [of the cost] going forth."

  • Report from CAMSR on divestment

    Cobbett, who is currently serving as interim chair of McGill's Committee to Advise on Matters of Social Responsibility (CAMSR), spoke to the board about a petition from Divest McGill, a campus organisation that is requesting that McGill withdraw its investments in certain companies such as Shell Oil Corporation. Cobbett began by lauding the efforts of Divest McGill.

    "Let me just remind the Board that we received […] a very well-put together, […] documented petition from Divest McGill,” he said. “Divest petitions are under consideration at many universities, and many universities have reached a decision. We are still in the consideration phase. We will continue to review the submission from Divest McGill and we will invite other members of the McGill community to come to CAMSR and give us the benefit of their views and their input. It’s an extraordinarily important matter […] and it's not an easy decision."

    Stephen Strople, BoG secretary-general, stated that McGill would undertake its own research on the issue with the Royal Society of Canada (RSC), a national collective of Canadian scholars in the arts and sciences.

    "We submitted a stage one draft proposal—essentially we're looking at questions of energy systems transformations," he said. "We're also posing some applied question in the context of the petition relating to how we might best understand the efficacy and the impact and implications of the action of divestment. What are the potential goals of universities to contributing to understanding of systems changes?"

Ashley Lawrence Canada vs. Netherlands Women's World Cup
a, Soccer, Sports

From the Cheap Seats: Team Canada at the 2015 Women’s World Cup

As hosts of the 2015 Women’s World Cup, Canada has the luxury of playing a home game every time it steps onto the pitch during the month-long tournament. The electric atmosphere and the added pressure of playing in front of friends and family can be a volatile combination; the latter can test a team’s mettle and even stunt its potential (see Brazil during the Men’s World Cup last year). Luckily for the hosts, they channeled the former into an early lead just 10 minutes into their final Group A game against the Netherlands. The opportunistic Ashley Lawrence, who was one of Canada’s few effective attacking weapons throughout the game, pounced on a failed clearance in the 18 yard box and slotted a left-footed shot just past Dutch goalkeeper Loes Geurts’ outstretched hands, sending the sea of 45,000 red-and-white fans into a raucous frenzy. Olympic Stadium was on its feet.

Despite the exciting early start, the rest of the game was what you would expect from the final game of a group stage match when one team, in this case Canada, knows that a single point would see them through to the next round. The hosts’ relaxed play bordered on lackadaisical. The Dutch, on the other hand, showed a surprising lack of urgency late in the game for a team that risked going home. It was only when the Canadian backline gifted its opponents a counterattack after a botched clearance with three minutes left in the second half did the visitors tie up the score. The few pockets of orange littered across Olympic Stadium reveled in the extra point that their team had just earned.

Throughout the game, interest and excitement waxed and waned among the Canadian faithful, such as is the case in the 90 minute long tug-of-war that was primarily played in the middle third of the pitch. Sight lines in some seats were far from ideal given that Olympic Stadium was originally built for baseball. Nowadays, its future is in doubt. In many ways, Montreal, and Canada at large is an unlikely host for the World Cup. Here, soccer does not get the coverage of hockey, basketball, baseball, and even Canadian football, no matter how successful the Women’s National Team is.

Though they tied on Monday night, in many ways Team Canada has already become victors in this World Cup.

But something different was evident on matchday at Olympic Stadium. It’s clear that this is an extremely important tournament for the future of Canadian soccer. The two best players against the Netherlands, Lawrence and stalwart centre-back Kadeisha Buchanan, are aged 20 and 19, respectively. Canada’s veterans, led by 11 time Canada Soccer Player-of-the-Year Christine Sinclair, were fairly silent during the game. Sinclair, the matriarch of Canadian soccer, is a truly visible star in a country that cares most about athletes that lace up skates. Her impact on soccer in Canada goes far beyond 225 caps or 154 goals while wearing the maple leaf. It extends to the culture created that was on display on Monday night. A culture visible in the numerous Sinclair no. 12 jerseys and the palpable excitement among mothers and daughters, families and fans. During Sinclair’s career, which started in 2002, youth soccer participation rates have increased to the point that soccer is the most popular sport among children aged 5-14 and the most popular team sport among girls aged 3-17. Soccer has gained traction as a much cheaper alternative to hockey, and as baseball’s interest among youth has diminished significantly, a North America-wide trend.

On match day little separated Canada, the no. 8 ranked team in the world and a global soccer minow, and the Netherlands, the no. 12 ranked team and a global soccer powerhouse. The home team’s backline was fairly inept with the exception of Buchanan, who was left to clean up many of her teammates’ mistakes after they took their early lead. The Dutch, who controlled 54 per cent of possession on the game, had 12 of their 16 shots after half-time when Canada was willing to sit back in its own half and defend. The ineffectiveness of the team’s defenders will limit Canada’s potential to advance into the latter rounds of the knockout stages no matter how many fans attend its games; defensive lapses like the ones that occurred so frequently against the Netherlands will be punished far more decisively.

Canada may have squandered its lead and only managed a draw against the Netherlands but it did what it had to do to make it to the knockout stages. Though they tied on Monday night, in many ways Team Canada has already become victors in this World Cup. The team will likely bow out in the quarter-finals, but Soccer Canada will probably reap the true benefits of this tournament a generation down the line. Watching a World Cup game is a once in a lifetime opportunity for many fans, casual or otherwise, and an overwhelming emotional experience that can change the cultural landscape of a sport

a, McGill, News, SSMU

McGill Senate demands increased transparency in budgetary allocations

  • Questions regarding student services funding

    At the April 22 McGill Senate meeting, Students’ Society of McGill University (SSMU) President Courtney Ayukawa, Vice-President University Affairs Claire Stewart-Kanigan, Arts & Science Senator Chloe Rourke and Arts Senator Jacob Greenspon voiced concerns over the allocation of provincial government grants specified for student services in light of an $11 million budget cut imposed on McGill by the Liberals.

    “Whereas, the Deputy Provost (Student Life and Learning) stated that in the event that the most recent budget cut by the Quebec government was above the $5-6 million projected by McGill, government grants designated as for ‘services for students’ that previously were distributed exclusively to Student Services may begin to be distributed to other student-serving units to protect the “core mission” of the University,” the question read. “Will government grants designated as for ‘services for students’ be disbursed to units beyond Student Services in 2015-16 given the most recent cut?”

    In response, Deputy Provost (Student Life and Learning) Ollivier Dyens described the current financial state of McGill Student Services.

    “We estimate that Student Services will close [fiscal year 2015] with a $100,000 surplus,” he explained. “Student Services is utilizing $1.5 million of the approximately $6 million surplus to fund [fiscal year 2016] operations. This use of the surplus is meant to cover all of the normal additional costs to operations as well as the government imposed cuts.”

    Dyens continued to explain that the proposed redistribution of government grants to more general areas of student services was created to allow generalised services to continue existing despite provincial budget cuts.

    “The government grant we receive is meant to fund services to students, […which] include units such as the Dean of Students, Service Point, Advising, the Libraries,” he explained. “If we face unsustainable [provincial budget ] cuts over the next few years, we may be forced to reallocate a portion of the government grant to ensure the viability of services to students. We would be able to do so only because Student Services has an accumulated surplus of more than $6 million. This is not a long-term solution and is only meant as a potential emergency measure to ensure that all services will be maintained.”

     

     

  • McGill University Budget

    Provost Anthony Masi explained that the University had to respond to last-minute budget cuts from the Quebec government. Despite these cuts McGill managed a $4.3 million surplus for the 2014-2015 fiscal year. According to Masi, the University’s two fiscal priorities for the upcoming 2015-2016 will result in a project deficit for the year.

    “We plan to honor all of the salary commitments that have been made, which will cost $22 million more next year,” Masi said, adding that McGill would also have to tackle maintenance needs. “In order to address those needs, The Board of Governors has approved a [proposal] to issue debt up to $400 million, to be repaid over a 40 year period.”

    Masi continued to explain that future operating budgets will also be responsible for repaying capital as well as interest.

    “In light of these burdens, the University has, for the first time in a decade, an annual deficit lower than that of the prior year,” explained Masi. “Unfortunately, due to these new budgetary impositions, the projection for the 2015-2016 fiscal year is a $4.7 million deficit.”

     

     

montreal biodome
a, From the BrainSTEM, Science & Technology

From the BrainSTEM: Montreal Museums Day

As a student, being able to immerse myself in Montreal’s rich network of museums—without having to pay anything—is an exciting proposition. On May 24, when the Board of Montreal Museum Directors hosted the 29th edition of La Journée Des Musées, Montréalais: Montreal Museums Day, I had to participate.

The Biodôme, one of the participating museums, where living creatures are affected by these masses of people shouting and shuffling through its enclosures, should rethink its participation in Museum Day. The Biodôme’s main selling point is its lack of large fencing separating people and animals. Unfortunately, this absence of barriers creates a shared ecosystem consisting of dozens of screaming children and shuffling adults, not the proper ecosystem for any wild animal.

According to Liberation BC—an animal rights group based in Vancouver—wild animals in stressful situations will often start “chewing, licking, and self-mutilation, as well as rocking, swaying, pacing in regimented circles, head-tossing and neck-stretching, and air-biting.” On such a crowded day, the animals were stressed and retreated into the hidden spaces of their enclosures resulting in a cycle of frustrated children and adults pounding on glass enclosures, screaming, crying, and even shaking trees, all in the hope of seeing interesting and exciting animals. Throughout these fits, no staff, trainers, or security were available to put an end to the deplorable behaviour of their guests—and this was upsetting, to say the least.

The ethics of keeping wild animals in captivity has already been fiercely debated. Museum Day highlighted that while better than a standard cage, the Biodôme’s enclosures were far from ideal for the animals.

''No matter how good the cage is, you can't recreate the wild—it can't be even a pale shadow of the natural environment, with the same species of prey and predators,'' said Eric Pianka, a zoologist at the University of Texas, to the New York Times. ''An animal in a zoo is totally out of context, like a word without the rest of its sentence.''

While wildlife conservationists encourage the shift from cages to more natural habitats, the Biodome is too small to host the animals it contains. Originally a 1,620 m2 velodrome used for cycling events during the 1976 Olympic Games, it was refurbished and made into a zoo afterwards. One of its larger inhabitants, the Canadian Lynx, will roam up to five kilometers a day and have territories upward of 50 km2 in the wild. If the Biodome were to give just one of its 4,500 animals a proper habitat the Lynx would need free reign of the entire centre. The Biodôme’s four other exhibits offered more of the same. The animals were either absent or looked under-stimulated, overweight, and sad—be it Atlantic Puffins from the Labrador Coast or River Otters from the Laurentian Maple Forest. The flux of visitors for Museum Day played a part in my forgettable experience of the Biodôme; however, these high prices, run-down conditions, blasé staff, and droves of strollers and people seem to be common occurrences for the animals throughout the year.

The Montreal Science Centre, my next stop, was host to a startlingly small amount of science. One of its permanent exhibits, Les moulins de l’imagination, is actually nothing but a collection of ‘Do-Nothing Machines,’ similar to Rube Goldberg machines—that is, an over-engineered machine that serves little purpose, designed by an artist named Florence Veilleux.

Their other permanent exhibits include Cargo; a history on the process by which boats dock into Montreal, idTV; an interactive exhibit allowing children to produce a TV show; Clic!; something I can only describe as a glorified playpen, filled with building blocks and toys; and Science 26; an “A is for Animation, B is for Brain-style” interactive exhibit. The exhibits were colourful and eye-catching, and the Centre beautiful, spacious, and elegant. But both the permanent and temporary exhibits offered very little actual scientific information. The main temporary exhibit, Fabrik, allowed children to build cars, bridges, and other engineered creations. On one hand, this definitely encouraged creativity, imagination, and teamwork for the children. On the other hand, their exhibits and this type of environment could easily be recreated at a playground with a box of Legos.

While designing exhibits that could successfully enlighten and educate in a broader sense can be difficult, it’s not impossible. Captivating tools like Tesla coils—that create beautiful electrical bursts by using resonant circuits—could teach important lessons about physics. Fun chemistry projects—like the iodine clock—that uses simple and safe ingredients to create bright and fun chemical reactions, are exciting and informative.

For art history museums, an event like Montreal Museum Day is the perfect opportunity to get to know their exhibits, without having to pay the price. For other types of museums, like the Biodome, where the livelihood of their exhibits—namely, animals—require quiet and calm to thrive, an event like Montreal Museum Day is destructive: It puts unnecessary strain on not only the guests and staff but also the exhibits. The price these animals pay—so that guests don't have to—is ultimately too high for a place like the Biodome to participate in Montreal Museum Day.

florence + the machine how big how blue how beautiful-min
a, Arts & Entertainment

Album Review: Florence + the Machine – How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful

 
 
 
 
 

Much of the lead-up to How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful, the highly anticipated studio album from British indie-rock band Florence + the Machine, has included an overemphasis of the album’s stripped-back sound. No stranger to bombast, the band’s previous two albums were high on drama, jam-packed with existential lyricism, and filled to the brim with grandiose instrumentals.

In a recent press release, frontwoman Florence Welch stated that “the new album became about trying to learn how to live [in reality] rather than trying to escape it.” She seemingly follows up that statement during “Caught,” in which she states, “it’s one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do.” Unfortunately, this conflict in the album’s creation is painfully present throughout the entire album as the songs tread a treacherous line between underwhelming and overwrought.

That the record has taken on a much more self-aware and introspective approach in the thematic and musical arrangements is momentarily clear within the opening song, “Ship To Wreck” in which Welch asks, “Oh my love remind me, what was it that I said?” over a much more soft-rock oriented sound in comparison to the band’s orchestral past efforts. However, the subsequent track, “What Kind Of Man,” begins with breathy vocals before awkwardly switching to an aggressive section that leans heavily on guitar and drums. The track continues on into an overwrought and grandiose climax—something the band claimed to have left behind—with Welch howling over seemingly dozens of brass instruments.

 

 

What follows is nine underwhelming songs that blend into a rather melancholy but musically chaotic whirlwind of vague ballads, disinteresting 70s drivetime rock, and undercooked production. Even Welch’s vocals, which are noticeably restrained, are still too much when set against the subdued and dreary backdrop of the songs in this collection. Additionally, many of the ‘new’ themes of water, religion, and self-worth were all explored in the band’s 2011 record, Ceremonials, where the over-the-top production was much more fitting with the explosion of emotion conveyed. On How Big…, the same answer-seeking lyrics and soaring vocals aren’t supported: instead, Welch is left searching, high above the reality that she tried to encapsulate and ground herself in with this record.

In leaving behind the overly dramatic arrangements that once made the band so notable, Florence and the Machine have left themselves with a pastiche sound that makes even the aforementioned track, “What Kind Of Man,” a breath of fresh and drama-filled air. One song, “Third Eye,” does break from the melancholy formula. The result is that Welch lets go completely and accepts that she’s at her best when going full-scale with her music. Her dramatic layered vocals are supported by galloping drums and a fantastic combination of claps, guitars, and piano riffs. But even this song sums up the album’s confused existence perfectly: “I am the same / I am the same / but I’m trying to change,” she shrieks. This juxtaposing agenda is as long-winded and vague as the album’s title: It’s very big, very blue, but not very beautiful or cohesive.

 

Standout Tracks: Third Eye, What Kind Of Man, & Ship To Wreck

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