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Disintegration

Comedié regrettée, Racine, Comedia (Haunter Records)

“Capital is at every level an eerie entity: conjured out of nothing, capital nevertheless exerts more influence than any allegedly substantial entity.” —Mark Fisher, The Weird and the Eerie.

Casio Manufacturing Corporation, the US-based subsidiary of Japanese consumer electronics company Casio Computer, announced the construction of its first North American factory complex in Tijuana, Mexico, in December 1988.

Casio set up operations on a sprawling 14-acre property, nestled next to its new neighbours, Sony, Sanyo, and Maxell, constructing a 162,000 square-foot plant in the Mesa de Otay section of Tijuana, right next to the Otay Mesa US border crossing.

The facility would be responsible for making the Casiotone line of electronic musical instruments, cheap and portable synthesizers intended to compete with products from other companies like Yamaha and Roland.

Casio chose Tijuana because of its proximity to Southern California, the world’s largest electronics market at the time, and the location of the National Association of Music Merchants, North America’s trade association representing the entire musical instrument industry.

Of course, being able to pay its staff of 200 workers $1.25 per hour, a full $4 less than the concurrent minimum wage in California, likely factored into Casio’s decision.

Nümonia with DJ CPR Annie, Le Cheval Blanc, 5 April 2025

Nümonia perform at Le Cheval Blanc for the launch of their LP, The Age of Nümonia. Photographed for NicheMTL.

America’s desire for cheap consumer goods fuelled a more than 20-year exodus of manufacturing from the United States, and from the west more broadly, beginning in earnest during the 1980s and reaching its peak around the turn of the 2000s.

General Motors laid off tens of thousands of factory workers in Flint, Michigan, leading to the economic devastation of the once vibrant auto manufacturing town about 100 kilometers west of the Canadian border, an era chronicled in the filmmaker Michael Moore’s 1989 debut documentary, Roger and Me.

GM was just one of hundreds of companies to move manufacturing facilities to countries with no minimum wage, lax labour laws, zero tolerance for union organization, lower corporate tax rates, nonexistent tariffs, and other financial incentives for business.

It became cheaper to ship products to America across long distances than to pay workers the salaries they began to demand — in order to afford the consumer goods that came to characterize modern middle-class Western life.

The Mivos Quartet presents Steve Reich’s complete string quartets, Bourgie Hall, 1 April 2025

The Mivos Quartet performs at Bourgie Hall. Photographed for NicheMTL.

Did prices follow wages, or vice versa? Did demand stimulate supply, or was demand artificially produced to justify excess?

Certainly, in the case of electronic musical instruments, there was no existential necessity for synthesizers and samplers, drum machines or computer sequencers. Musicians had made melodies just fine for thousands of years using acoustic instruments that were crafted by artisans and luthiers rather than mass-produced in low-wage factories.

Electronic music became fashionable in part because of the media that consumer electronics — namely radio, recordings, and television — facilitated. “I want my MTV” was the rallying cry of a new generation. This equation is represented by a simple formula: media + technology = desire ♾️.

The problem is that earthly production cannot increase infinitely. Eventually, we run out of things.

Greetings, Mary Garden, Espace Maurice, 29 March 2025

Christopher Gambino, “Louise quietly takes her exit” (2025). Photographed for NicheMTL.

“A base-level futurism is simply unavoidable. Radical scepticism — irrespective of its intellectual merits — does not offer a practical alternative.” —Nick Land, “Eternal Return, and After.”

Naomi Klein’s 2000 book No Logo was a manifesto that became the new millennium’s anti-globalist scripture. Suddenly, it was fashionable to reject fast fashion, disdaining name brands like The Gap and Old Navy whilst quoting low salary figures from regions like Southeast Asia and India, where many of their products were made.

Nike, Reebok, Adidas, Ralph Lauren, and Esprit were among the companies reportedly paying workers as low as 13 US cents per hour in China, where a living wage was only around 10 dollars a day. By contrast, garment factory workers in Germany in the late 1990s were earning an average of $18.50 an hour, according to Klein.

In the west, capitalism’s malaise manifested as melancholy exemplified by Radiohead’s weeping minotaur avatar, lost in a labyrinth that its own insatiable desires designed for and by itself. Buying or not buying Nike trainers produced equivalent but opposing measures of dissatisfaction. The libidinal pleasure derived from having dissolved because consuming assumed that others couldn’t.

However, instead of bowing to domestic pressure, multinational corporations simply doubled down on exploitative labour practices sensing that, like every trend, rejection of capitalism’s darkest impulses would melt away. And it did.

LEYA with Kee Avil and Deli Girls, Cabaret Foufounes Electriques, 9 April 2025

Left: Kee Avil; Right: LEYA perform at Cabaret Foufounes Electriques. Photographed for NicheMTL.

A recent New York Times op-ed written by the author Patrick McGee estimates that an American-made iPhone could cost upwards of $3,500. Nonetheless, a worse problem presents itself in the dearth of highly skilled technical labour in America that would be necessary to manufacture something as complex as an iPhone. To coin a phrase, the Rust Belt is a little rusty.

It took at least two or three decades to offshore manufacturing to unscrupulous and hungry nations. So, it may take decades more for America to starve itself back to the bottom. Globalization, once vilified on the political left, neoliberals now view as necessary to an integrated and interdependent economic ecosystem, in spite of its exploitative tendencies.

The hard right has filled the vacuum that Michael Moore once occupied. Although there is more than a rhetorical difference between cultivating local markets and punishing foreign ones. Is it possible that cutthroat exploitation is better than actually having your throat cut?

lie down with holograms, David Armstrong Six, Bradley Ertaskiran, 13 March — 3 May 2025

Gallery view, lie down with holograms, David Armstrong Six, Bradley Ertaskiran. Photographed for NicheMTL.

On 17 January 2025, the rapper Snoop Dogg DJed the first-ever Crypto Ball planned as a simultaneous inauguration party at the Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium, just a few blocks away from the White House. The President-elect was notably absent, concurrently taking to his own social network to announce the $Trump coin’s launch, a cryptocurrency that would net the new president $350 million in fees.

Nero fiddled while Rome burned. Trump, not a musician, detunes markets.◼︎

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Cover image: Gallery view, lie down with holograms, David Armstrong Six, Bradley Ertaskiran. Photographed for NicheMTL.

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All Dressed

Hold This Thread: in conversation with Kee Avil

“There is something in Montreal,” says Vicky Mettler, reaching for a more evocative term.

We are talking on the telephone about what makes our music scenes unique and how Mettler’s works weave in. Mettler, also known as Kee Avil, the Montreal-based recording artist whose eerie and weird 2022 album, Crease, impressed critics and listeners alike, recently returned home from a triumphant tour and is contemplating her next move.

Released via the iconic local label Constellation Records, Crease earned unanimous high praise: Bandcamp’s Miles Bowe called it “a debut of fiendish creativity”; Antonio Poscic of The Quietus drew comparisons with Jenny Hval, Gazelle Twin, and Scott Walker; au courant music retailer Boomkat even dropped Kate Bush’s name, describing Mettler’s record as “a widescreen set of torched, gothic wyrd rock music that falls in and out of genre with skill and grace.” One could extrapolate that description to encompass Montreal itself; this city has produced its fair share of torched and widescreen music — from Tim Hecker to Godspeed, it’s kind of our thing.

Vicky Mettler appeared on my radar when Kee Avil performed as the opening act in 2018 for Fly Pan Am at their reunion show following a more than decade-long hiatus. The gig was chaotic, held at the Mile-End art gallery Dazibao, a space not particularly designed with sound in mind. But the energy was memorable, the pre-pandemic luxuriousness of an unselfconsciously niche art-rock performance. That energy is what propelled Mettler across Europe in the fall of 2022.

“Touring does give me energy,” Mettler says. “I came back from the last tour and there is something inspiring about it. You go on tour and that’s all you’re doing. That resets me a little bit. I don’t have all the rest of life; it just kind of gets put on pause. And I come back and I’m usually inspired. I’m more energized than tired. I could tour every day — for a long time.” Mettler stops to laugh: “But I also like coming back home.”

One of the most outstanding visual features of Kee Avil’s live performance is her crocheted costume, which Caro Etchart, the textile artist behind Argenta Crochet Lab, designed. Etchart brought her slow fashion brand from Argentina to Montreal in 2021 and has since worked to create an astonishing collection, including the distinguishable garments that serve Mettler’s music in surprisingly tangible ways. Kee Avil’s mask, in particular — half moth-eaten lace helmet, half spiderweb — is indeed an unsettling presentation piece.

image credit: Caro Etchart

“I have a few outfits that I’ve been wearing,” Mettler says, “and I feel like the mask is always striking. When I do it, it works well. Caro makes everything — tops, skirts, gloves. It’s kind of nice to be able to mix and match all of these pieces and see what comes up. I feel like we really get along in what we like, so it’s very easy to find stuff that works.”

Etchart tells me via email that their creative partnership fits hand-in-glove. “I have always been intrigued by costumes and characterization,” Etchart says. “The first mask that I ever crocheted was actually the one that started my experimental crochet project. When I first met Vicky, I was in the middle of a huge mask exploration, and the fact that she sees beauty in them, too, was crucial to start working on the outfits. One of them was definitely going to have a crochet mask, even more, a complete crochet outfit.”

Etchart’s ensemble appears in the live video for “HHHH,” creating just the right amount of creepiness to accent Kee Avil’s serpentine sound. “I simply find masks fascinating,” Etchart says, “and it feels really easy to become someone else or get into character just by covering or decorating your face. A lot like a second skin, but that was somehow hidden. Very beautiful and dramatic.”

“I like the idea of having a mask on,” Mettler admits.

“I would be curious to know, actually, what it’s like to see it. I’ve only worn it twice live, and it makes me feel different, so I’m still figuring out if I like it. Or what works about it and what doesn’t, and how to adapt it to make it better. I feel like it does separate me from the audience in a way. But sometimes I like the setting of the show. If there are no visuals and no projections, I will wear something like that when there’s nothing else in the background. That adds a visual element that I like.”

Mettler’s music is composed just as intricately as her wardrobe, sonic fibres intertwined in remarkable balance. I ask how she does it. “I compose while recording, basically,” Mettler says. “The last record was song-by-song. It was a discovery of what the record should be. I write a song, we do it; I write a song, we do it.”

Mettler then scrubs over her rough tracks with sound designer Zach Scholes. “It helps us to discover the sound of the music, really. Each song is different, too. Like, the source material can be different. Some are more guitar-oriented and some are more electronic-based. It’s really about discovery — how to write songs. I wanted to push that more and I didn’t really know how, so I was figuring it out. I feel like recording at the same time helps because you can add things and take them away quickly if you’d like. I like hearing things and being able to do edits right away.”

Is a new album in the works in 2023? “I feel like that’s the goal, but we’ll see.”

A sense of composed spontaneity is what characterizes Kee Avil’s recordings, and also what places her rightly amongst some of this city’s more legendary artists — and on the roster of a record label that to a certain extent defines Montreal’s storied independent music scene.

“It’s a specific sound,” Mettler opines, tying together the strands of our impure-laine aesthetic. “I feel like maybe we have more space or something here. There’s a way of living that’s different in Montreal. It’s still cheaper than, say, Toronto or New York. I think that somehow affects it, like, how many people can do this stuff. Different cities have different sounds. But there is a Montreal sound.”

Mettler pauses in thought: “I love Montreal. It’s its own thing.”◼︎

Cover photo credit: Carole Méthot

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