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Summer concert series returns to downtown Barrie with some hometown high notes

Summer concert series returns to downtown Barrie with some hometown high notes

CTV News2 days ago
After Dean Brody took over Meridian Place last month, the Troubadour Festival Summer Concert Series is set to return to downtown Barrie with another emerging artist showcase headlined by The 99s.
The emerging artist showcase will feature three bands including Goofus, Sydney Riley, and Dorene.
David Bechard, guitarist for Goofus, is excited to open the showcase and pumped the crowd.
'We range from very soft, melodic songs to high energy, loud, heavier songs or heavier rock songs,' said Bechard. 'So, there's going to be a bit of diversity in our set, but I think, honestly with that said, there's something there for everyone.'
As a band, this is Goofus' first outdoor festival and are excited for the challenge.
'Just to get that exposure within the community is incredible because I find so much of our fan base is coming from that smaller music community or that local community,' said Goofus drummer James Reich. 'We get to see each other play live and everything, it's just it's incredible, so the fact that we get to support it and be a part of it this weekend is incredible.'
Sydney Riley will also be featured in the showcase and is looking forward to performing for the crowd.
'We don't get to perform in public a lot for our hometown like this, so it's going to be really fun to engage with the community in that sort of way and represent what local music has to offer,' said Riley, adding the downtown location is the ultimate outdoor venue.
'Meridian Place is honestly one of the best live venues that we get to play in, so it's the perfect location,' said Riley. 'It's the middle of downtown, if you're going to get dinner beforehand, you can just walk on by, and you'll be able to see us.'
Riley said the band's music offers something for everyone.
'We try to be as engaging as possible, so it's going to be lots of big bangers and just lots of excitement,' said Riley. 'Not very much sad songs.'
Punk rock band Dorene will also take the stage and is ready for the big moment. '[The audience] can expect some loud guitars and loud drums. A bit of pop, a bit of blues, a bit of rock,' said drummer Gray Laine.
'A fair bit of original, some classic Canadian covers as well, keep people happy and mix of that,' added guitarist Vincent Eagan, who also sings in the band.
Headlining this week's festival is The 99s, with vocalist Carleigh Aikins, a Barrie native.
'That's the place where I kind of cut my teeth performing, right on that strip on Dunlop at all the venues and bars,' said Aikins. 'So, you know, it's always feels like a full circle moment to get to come home and have a good time with friends and family.'
The 99s bring a throwback vibe where the audience can sing along and enjoy the nostalgia of older music.
'Saturday will feel like going to the town square and putting a coin in the jukebox and you kind of don't know what you're going to get,' said Aikins. 'But that's kind of the joy of it, like a radio dial. It's a nostalgic kind of trip down memory lane and It's always fun to watch the crowd experience these songs that maybe they forgot they loved or that they have a core memory with.'
Open Air Dunlop will once again close Dunlop Street Saturday at 10 a.m. with Classics in the Park on display along downtown leading up to the emerging showcase.
CTV News Barrie, Pure Country and Bounce 104.1 are proud sponsors of Troubadour Festival Summer Concert Series.
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How Eadweard Muybridge revolutionized photography and got away with murder
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How Eadweard Muybridge revolutionized photography and got away with murder

Eadweard Muybridge is best known for his iconic series of photos of a horse in motion that proved it fully left the ground while running. But Muybridge also took impressive landscapes of Alaska and Yosemite National Park, invented cutting-edge photography techniques used in Hollywood blockbusters, and quite literally got away with murder after finding out his wife was having an affair — all of which caught the attention of Canadian animator and graphic novelist Guy Delisle. "I knew Muybridge, but I didn't know all of this life. And I thought, wow, that's crazy. He had gone through so many things that I thought this could be a good subject for a book," said Delisle. Delisle's latest graphic novel, Muybridge, tells the story behind the man whose books, Animals in Motion and The Human Figure in Motion, are still used by animators as reference books today. Here's part of his conversation with Day 6 host Brent Bambury. Let's talk about the images in Animals in Motion, especially the most famous ones of the horses running. When you look at those images, what do you see? There's kind of a strange mix because they look very modern, but you can tell that they are from a very old time and it's back in the days where … they had no instant photo. And he still managed to achieve that for the first time with the horse, so that's why this sequence is very symbolic because that's the achievement of his lifetime. I think he spent seven years just achieving that. And after that, he applied the technique that he developed for the horse at full speed on everything that's moving, basically, animals and humans. But back in the 1800s, there was this unresolved question about whether all four of the horses' hooves leave the ground at the same time, or is one of them always touching the ground to support the animal.... Why was it so important to Edward Muybridge to be able to answer that question? It was not so much important to Muybridge, [but] actually to his sponsor, who was the richest guy in the United States at the time, Leland Stanford, the guy who actually opened up Stanford University later on. He was very rich and he [bred] horses and he was really enthusiastic about horses. He wanted to know exactly how the horse moved in order to breed them better. And it's a bit technical, it's hard to imagine, but it was a big subject at the time between horse people. And he asked Muybridge because he was a famous photographer.… He asked him to take a picture of a horse at full speed. So he had to go to a speed of 1/1,000th of a second to have something clear with not a blurry photo. So they tried and it took a long time, but Stanford is not the kind of guy who you can say no to. So Muybridge had to invent a few things to achieve that. 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It was like a guillotine system, which goes down very quickly. And he was able to go to one at 1/500th of a second with that. Then at one point, after a few tries he said, "We have to put like 12 cameras in a row. And while the horse is passing in front of these cameras, there's going to be a little wire going to trigger the camera and the horse is going to take the picture while he's running in front." The system worked … so you can see actually that the horse for a few steps is floating. It's not touching the ground. So Stanford had his answer and that was first time, actually, that people would see something that the camera could see, but not the eye could see. So it was quite a breakthrough. While he was away taking photographs, working on commissions, his wife had an affair. Muybridge finds out about this affair and he shoots and kills the man with whom she was having this affair. Muybridge goes to trial for murder and he gets off. Why? What happened? 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