That "aria," an elaborate vocal solo
in opera, plus "area" equals Ayria is just one of the unusual ways
things add up for Parkin. She must be the only University of Waterloo math
grad with marketing experience and 11 years of dance classes who loves to sing
and write electro-industrial rock.
The fans know Parkin is a rare gem.
"'I've never seen a Waterloo 'mathee' that's kind of attractive,'
" they'll say.
Parkin brings the dark fun of her Ayria project to downtown London's Rage
club tonight. Six designers, five from London, will display and sell clothing
at the show.
The idea for Ayria began to take shape in January 2003. Soon, Parkin was
collaborating with Seattle-based Shaun Frandsen. Ayria's Debris (Alfa Matrix)
was released late in 2003. The title track and such songs as Disease and
Horrible Dream are the perfect Ayria mix of energetic, poppy tracks with
Parkin's flatly cheerful delivery of her bleak lyrics.
At tonight's show, Toronto keyboardist Joe Buyer of V01D steps in for
Frandsen.
With its computers, electronic sounds and instruments, the industrial genre
in rock takes in bands all the way from Germany's Kraftwerk to America's Nine
Inch Nails to British Columbia's Delerium.
"It's like a poppier side of industrial. A lot of industrial is rooted
in angry and aggressive lyrics," Parkin says of Ayria's area in the
genre. A critic mentions Ayria's combination of dance sounds and down words.
"Someone else just said that, 'The music's so poppy but the lyrics are so
melancholy,' " she says.
The melancholy goes with the genre. Industrial and electro music can be
produced in isolation, by musicians in close touch with each other via
computers, but cut off from live audiences.
For Parkin, a live show is "the payoff. It shows you that all the time
I sat in front of my computer, working on music, you people cared," she
says.
-- -- --
IF YOU GO
What: Performance by Toronto "electro-industrial-pop" group Ayria
When: Tonight (June 12), doors open at 9 p.m.
Where: The Rage, 210 Dundas St. (downstairs) (at Clarence)
Details: $10; all-ages, licensed; call 519-642-1903
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