MATTHEW CARDINAL OF nêhiyawak ANNOUNCES DEBUT SOLO ALBUM OF AUDIO JOURNAL ENTRIES

ASTERISMS ARRIVES OCTOBER 27 VIA ARTS & CRAFTS

LISTEN & WATCH “MAY 24th” NOW

PREORDER FROM ARTS & CRAFTS

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Photo credit: Chelsea Boida // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Matthew Cardinal today announces his debut solo album, Asterisms – a dazzling collection of ambient electronic music that crystallizes moments in the amiskwaciy (Edmonton) based musician’s life. Known for his work in nêhiyawak – the moccasingaze trio whose debut album nipiy is currently nominated on the 2020 Polaris Music Prize Shortlist and was nominated for a 2020 JUNO Award for Indigenous Album of the Year – Cardinal’s first solo full-length is an audio journal that explores "captured moments of experimentation and expression" in eleven entries: “asterisms drawing attention to where I was musically, mentally and emotionally at very brief passages of my life,” says Cardinal. 

Illuminated by the first single “May 24th” and its accompanying video by multimedia visual artist SCKUSE (Stephanie Kuse) shared today, Asterisms explores emotional-sonic textures with an often gentle, dreamy tint – the glint of synthesizers dancing around atmospheric melodies and rhythmic accents.

WATCH THE VIDEO FOR “MAY 24th”

Inspired by Cardinal’s ephemeral night-time flash photography, Kuse set out to create “something soft, hypnotic, and pretty to suit the music that also reflected the dreamy and nostalgic nature of his photos,” she recounts. “I spent a few evenings out collecting footage near the South Saskatchewan River until I stumbled on the right material – wildflowers and grass going in and out of focus as the camera trailed behind. The footage was then processed through an old TV to enhance the vibrancy and to add subtle distortion.”

“‘May 24th’ is the result of experimenting with generative synthesis and syncing external equipment, playing around and having multiple sound sources playing the same melody. I slowed everything down significantly and built on top of that,” reveals Cardinal, a consummate sound-shaper both solo and in his role in the nêhiyawak trio. Coupled with its successor track, “May 25th” – a brief retro-futuristic motif – “May 24th” features alternatingly ascendant and cascading celestial strands, buoyed by dramatic swells of synthesizers that emit a spacious sigh at the song’s gentle end.

WATCH THE ALBUM TRAILER (“MAY 25TH”)

Created with analogue synthesizers, a small modular system, samplers, electric piano, and processed voice, each sonic entry came out naturally in improvisational waves, recorded often in single days if not single takes. The minimal instrumental framework, usually set up on the floor of Cardinal’s bedroom for maximum communion, created pathways through each machine to the album’s vast cloud of starry narratives. “I'm very influenced by the instruments I play,” says Cardinal. “I love the sound of reverb, the imperfect reflection of sounds and how it decays. The sounds of bells, chimes, electric piano, and cello. I find certain sounds very inspiring.”

Calling to mind the luxurious minimalism of Brian Eno, Erik Satie, Steve Reich, and Glenn Gould, and the swirling influence of Fennesz, Jim O’Rourke, Boards of Canada, and Slowdive, Cardinal creates a glacial, airy sonic universe that is personal yet evocative, subtle yet impressive. The album opening “Dec 31st” glistens with the crystalline climate synonymous with the day, while the album closing “Jul 23rd” ranges into Postal Service territory at the height of summer with a pulsing bpm that punctuates the amorphous map of moods that makes up the record. 

PREORDER ASTERISMS FROM ARTS & CRAFTS

Described by Cardinal as “music recorded mostly for myself,” the cathartic value of these instrumental compositions is found in their release. A collection of intimate contemplations becomes interpretive and intentional music, a catalyst and companion to reading, studying, working, walking, dancing, hand-holding, and sleeping. “I would like it if people listened and interpreted the music anyway they want to,” says Cardinal. “I don't think these songs need a narrative, and I think certain moods come through some of the tracks, while other moods might only be heard by individual listeners.”

Cardinal found the title Asterisms to be the perfect encapsulation of the record he made. In typography, a near-obsolete character used to draw attention to a passage, and in astronomy, a visually obvious pattern of stars, asterisms connects the tangible and the intangible aspects that define this music. On his solo debut, Cardinal creates a document of his inner reflections that flourishes into an offering of sonic refractions for our own contemplation during these thought-provoking times.

Asterisms will be released by Arts & Crafts on October 27, 2020 on digital and vinyl formats. See below for full tracklisting.

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Matthew Cardinal – Asterisms
1. Dec 31st
2. May 25th
3. May 24th
4. Dec 4th
5. May 7th
6. Mar 12th
7. Sep 7th
8. Aug 23rd
9. Sep 11th
10. Jan 8th
11. July 23rd

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SAMEER CASH NEW LP OUT THIS FRIDAY, SHARES MUSIC VIDEO FOR NEW TRACK

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Photo Credit : Vanessa Heins // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

This Friday, Sameer Cash will release his new LP, This City, on Postwar Records. Today, he’s sharing the music video for one more song in advance of the release. “Stay In Touch” is a song “about male friendship, and about how we as boys are not given the language to articulate pain or loss,” says Cash. “Like when our friend lost his dad. Or when our form of a high school reunion was a funeral for one of our own. For those of us mourning the loss of innocence and the realization that the world was not made of us, for sensitive people who want the best for those around us. When we feel like we are not enough. When it gets too much, and when the money dries up, stay in touch with your mother, stay in touch with your high school band, stay in touch with me. 

WATCH AND SHARE “STAY IN TOUCH” (MUSIC VIDEO) HERE

Written in between bar shifts and soundchecks and recorded in a garage behind a Chinese restaurant in downtown Toronto, produced by Matthew Bailey, engineered by Chris Stringer (Timber Timbre), mixed by D James Goodwin (Kevin Morby, Craig Finn) and mastered by Philip Bova Shaw (Feist, Andy Shauf), This City is the result of the kind of heartbreaking, and redemptive work that compels us to be better.

WATCH AND SHARE “THIS CITY” (MUSIC VIDEO) HEREBUY/STREAM “THIS CITY” HERE

Sameer Cash was raised on a diet of Rock & Roll records and Hindu fairy tales. His father, born to a large Catholic family in Scarborough, Ontario, left the suburbs to follow the ungovernable religion of 1980’s post-punk. Cash’s mother, born among the mango trees of Kenya, by way of India, clung to her own upbringing through childhood memories and her mother’s cooking, seeking comfort and closure through many Canadian Prairie winters. Cash was born into an amalgamation of communities, converging at the point of least resistance: music (his father wrote and toured the world in various bands from the 1980’s to 2010’s, and his mother became a music manager, now in the industry for the past 30 years).

LISTEN AND SHARE “CHERRY RED” HERE
WATCH AND SHARE “CHERRY RED” LIVE VIDEO HERE

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These threads of identity are embedded in the delicate and powerful 9 songs that make up the debut album from Sameer Cash. This City is an album about family and place, about friendships and how they get frayed. ‘When it gets too much, stay in touch with your mother and your high school band,’ he sings near the end of the album.  

WATCH AND SHARE “DRIVEWAY MOMENT” LIVE HERE

WATCH AND SHARE “DRIVEWAY MOMENT” OFFICIAL VIDEO HERE

BUY / STREAM “DRIVEWAY MOMENT” HERE

There are intimate moments of quiet fortitude (“Driveway Moment”, “Easily”), rollicking blasts of glory (“Stay In Touch”, “Paralyzed”), and honest narratives on life and work in the city – a genre Cash has christened “gentrification ballads” (“This City”, “$3000”).  This City is an ambitiously understated album that’ll soak you in melancholy and leave you out to dry in the sun.

WATCH AND SHARE “KEEP KICKING” HERE

While surely a forerunner for one of 2020’s most exciting releases, Sameer Cash’s This City is a journey you’ve been telling yourself you need to make but just haven’t gotten around to. Now you Can. Don’t worry though, Cash has done all the heavy lifting. All you have to do is push play.

 PRE-SAVE THIS CITY LP HERE

PRE-ORDER THIS CITY HERE

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THIS CITY TRACKLIST
01 Keep Kicking
02 This City|
03 Nothing At All
04 Cherry Red
05 Driveway Moment
06 $3000
07 Paralyzed
08 Stay In Touch
09 Easily

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YUKON BLONDE ANNOUNCE FIFTH STUDIO LP, VINDICATOR, SHARE NEW SINGLE

VINDICATOR OUT NOVEMBER 13, 2020 VIA DINE ALONE RECORDS

WATCH AND SHARE “YOU WERE MINE” LYRIC VIDEO HERE

PRE-ORDER VINDICATOR HERE

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PHOTO CREDIT : Erika Saul  // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

After ten years since forming and five LPs in, Yukon Blonde have been characterized in a lot of different ways. They emerged as a guitar-heavy rock band with their debut self-titled LP in 2010 and by the release of On Blonde in 2015, Yukon Blonde were experimenting with slick, ‘80s inspired pop elements like those heard on the album’s driving hit single “Saturday Night”. More recently, on 2018’s Critical Hit, the Vancouver-based five piece band turned their attention to mood making, largely ditching their guitars in favour of synths and drum machines to build danceable, multi-dimensional soundscapes. 

With their fifth release, Vindicator, Yukon Blonde rewrite their story again. Jeffrey Innes (vocals/guitar/keys), Brandon Scott (vocals/guitar), Graham Jones (vocals/drums), James Younger (vocals/bass/keys), and Rebecca Gray (vocals/keys) douse keyboard melodies and relaxed grooves with psychedelic hues that are both playful and expansive. 

With singles “In Love Again” and “Get Precious” already racking up the plays around the globe, today the band are sharing another new single, “You Were Mine”. “We were all on Galiano island for this recording,” says Innes. “James brought the initial idea to the table, and after several hours of jamming, eating Scooby-snacks and drinking Churchill martinis, it started to fall apart in the most perfect way imaginable. I feel like this song somehow epitomizes the spirit of a successful collaboration in our band. Words like ‘compromise’ had no place in that session; everyone sings leads at some point, everyone plays everything. It’s certainly among our favourites from the record.” 

WATCH AND SHARE “YOU WERE MINE” LYRIC VIDEO HERE

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“You Were Mine” Artwork // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

From the opening track, Vindicator will immediately put you under a joyful spell and then never let you go. “We’re more mature and comfortable with ourselves now and we know that we can try something new even at this stage in our career,” explains Younger. “We completely deconstructed the narrative of the band and made the music that felt good at the moment.” 

Vindicator is the first Yukon Blonde album written, recorded, and produced entirely by the band. It took shape in their jam space in East Vancouver, a cabin on Galiano Island, in a closet at Younger’s home, and in Innes’ kitchen. But this DIY ethos has always been the backbone of Yukon Blonde who are curious artists with a passion for honing their craft. 

BUY / STREAM “IN LOVE AGAIN” HERE
WATCH / SHARE “IN LOVE AGAIN” LYRIC VIDEO HERE

The in-house approach to Vindicator allowed Yukon Blonde to stretch themselves creatively and experiment with sounds and styles in ways they haven’t before. The band share vocal duties and Innes, the band’s primary songwriter, lets his lyrics, which touch on everything from love to redefining your relationship with social media, drive the shape of the songs. 

BUY / STREAM “GET PRECIOUS” HERE
WATCH AND SHARE “GET PRECIOUS” LYRIC VIDEO HERE

Admittedly, making Vindicator by themselves was a creative risk but it’s one that’s paid off. Even the album title is a nod to how Yukon Blonde feel about the record’s outcome. As Innes notes, “You don’t really need to compete with yourself, you just need to challenge yourself.” 

“It’s a very rewarding feeling taking control of yourself and your creative ambition,” adds Younger. “It’s something that you can ride high on because expectations were met and fulfilled and that’s a joyous thing.” 

PRE-ORDER VINDICATOR HERE

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VINDICATOR TRACKLIST
It's What You Are
Fickle Feelings
YGTT
You Were Mine
Play Along
In Love Again
Good Times
Fuck It
Your Heart's My Home
Get Precious
Big Black Cloud

PRAISE FOR YUKON BLONDE

"Future house party rocker status." - PASTE

"Erratic and lovesick." - Noisey

"If Wayne Coyne teamed up with Phoenix." - Clash

"Would feel at home on a 1980s John Hughes soundtrack." - SPIN

"An inherently sunny quality, drawing heavily from 1970s American radio rock." - NPR 

"Forget the folk, what we have here is harmonized rock with considerable punch." - Consequence of Sound

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