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indie pop rock toronto band jeff ontario jam jay craig jones uncle seth musicface tara thompson moonah hegins
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Toronto area indie band. Adventurous performance meets great songs.
From its inception in 1999, Uncle Seth hasn’t stopped performing its “exuberant and accomplished mix of pop, rock, acoustic folk, twisty grooves, tender ballads, and pretty melodies, topped off byrousing vocals” (PIC Press). The band is composed of Tara Thompson (lead vocals), Jay Moonah (bass/harmonica), and Chris Patheiger (drums/percussion). Uncle Seth’s 2002 album Lame Suburban Poetry received rave reviews, finished third in the 2003 Songs Revealed Competition, and was heard on CBC Canada-wide. The 2005 EP Forgive & Forget, Volume One captures their distinctive sound with three live and three studio-produced tracks. Melodic songwriting, inspired lyrics, adventurous instrumentation, and lively vocals make this band a stand-out, which is why they were named Dose Magazine’s Artist of the Week in April 2005. Uncle Seth has honed its live performance to “a show, as opposed to playing a list of songs”, and forging a relationship with the audience is key to Uncle Seth’s on-stage success. But the changing music industry has inspired Uncle Seth to be innovative in its approach to recording. “MP3 devices have changed the way people listen to music,” explains Jay. So Uncle Seth recorded a brilliant, bouncy cover of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now” available on iTunes and the band’s web site and released it online. The single has garnered attention from podcasts and online shows, inspiring Uncle Seth to continue releasing both covers and originals in this format. Uncle Seth’s considerable creative output, evolving stage show, growing audience, and new online method of delivering music signals an exciting and intriguing future for the band. Tara Thompson’s charm, wit, and powerful voice make Uncle Seth’s live performances not to be missed. Her honest delivery has been described as “a breath of fresh air” (Andy Creeggan of Barenaked Ladies and Brothers Creeggan). A classically trained trumpet player, Tara began singing at a young age. She studied singing in school, took private lessons, sang with choirs and in musicals, and was conductor of the York Region Children’s Chorus. Jay Moonah provides “superb harmonica styling” (Independent Weekly), self-empowering lyrics, and boundless energy. Having played guitar and organ from a young age, Jay has since added harmonica, accordion, harmonium, keyboard sitar, melodica, and bass to his repertoire. “Anything thrust in front of me I can figure out well enough to play,” he says. Chris Patheiger brings his extensive talent, education, and performance experience to the band. Chris attended Humber College for drum kit, but quickly became interested in Afro-Cuban percussion and hand-drumming. Getting his roots from songwriting bands and artists, Chris says, “I gravitate towards good songwriting, good performance execution, and good drummin
Song Info
Genre
Rock Folk Rock
Charts
Peak #408
Peak in subgenre #36
Author
Tara Thompson & Jay Moonah
Rights
This recording is licensed under an Attribution-No
Uploaded
January 11, 2005
Track Files
MP3
MP3 2.5 MB 128 kbps 0:00
Lyrics
Well, I woke up, you were gone. If you could measure our relationship to TV it was 2 episodes long. Like some kind of sitcom. I can hear the laugh track. ‘Cause you said you loved me and I believed it, guess that makes me the ass. Well, Ha Ha. Then you woke up, you thought "what’s her name?" and is that the same girl or has her character changed? And I said, "is it the lighting? Cause I’ve never seen you before". But then again they all look the same as they run out the door. Now cut to a flash back scene with the unknown face. With the conversation boring and alcohol pouring let’s get out of this place. So you wink and I smile. Try not to fall down the stairs, wait can we edit that out and add a casual flip of my hair. And oh, who knows. How the middle of this story goes. ‘Cause I’m feeling pretty good and we’re having a laugh and I’m looking pretty hot through the bottom of your pint glass. With no interruptions. No commercial breaks. Things are blurring by and "baby it’s getting late". Or is it getting early. "Where the F**K are my pants?". I better hurry this up cause act threes his song and dance. And oh, who knows. How the middle of this story goes. ‘Cause I’m feeling pretty good and we’re having a laugh and I’m looking pretty hot through the bottom of your shot glass. And all I know, is that I woke up.
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