LUKA KUPLOWSKY SHARES VIDEO FOR “STARDUST (REPRISE)” 

NEW LP STARDUST OUT TOMORROW ON NEXT DOOR RECORDS

WATCH AND SHARE “STARDUST (REPRISE)” HERE  (CW: NUDITY)

PRE-ORDER STARDUST HERE

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Photo Credit: Melissa Richards // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Luka Kuplowsky’s Stardust is out this tomorrow, October 2 via Next Door Records, and ahead of its release, Kuplowsky is sharing the eponymous song along with the arresting visual accompaniment for “Stardust (Reprise)” (CW: fabricated nudity). The final single, delving into death, legacy and the afterlife, along with it’s striking visual component, exemplifies the depth and deliberation that the Canadian songwriter imbues into his songs and every aspect of his craft. The video was produced by Colin Medley, who has worked with the likes of Yves Jarvis, Andy Shauf, U.S. Girls, Alvvays, The Weather Station and more. Kuplowsky has offered a glimpse into the process behind the song and video below:

“I wrote ‘Stardust’ at the end of 2016 reflecting on the passing of Leonard Cohen, David Bowie and Prince. The song muses on death and legacy, imagining the artist’s afterlife as cosmic stardust brushed off an angel's shoulder. The song is a key to the record; a musical reference; a space of consolation; a lifting off. It is the record’s guiding light. After attending an exhibition of the artist Evan Penny and his sculpture of the hanging Marsyas, I imagined a video that extended the song’s thoughts on art and legacy through the Greek myth of Apollo and Marsyas. 

In Ovid’s account of the Greek myth, Marsyas, a polymath satyr, challenges the god Apollo to a musical contest. Apollo eventually bests his earthly rival by playing his lyre upside down. Having won, Apollo, the god of reason and harmony, flays Marsyas alive, peeling his skin in excessive violence.

For me, the figure of Marsyas indicates the nearness and distance between an artist like Leonard Cohen with a form of spiritual energy, while at the same time emphasizing the pain, suffering and hubris that feeds into their art. Marsyas' peeled skin represents some sort of externalization of the song - a part of the songwriter that peels off and confronts the artist with their distorted reflection of reality.

The video by Colin Medley juxtaposes Marsyas' hanging body with album covers of Leonard Cohen distorted and animated through the "flayed skin" of Penny's "Body Mirror". I also appear singing "Stardust" into my own warped reflection.”

WATCH AND SHARE “STARDUST (REPRISE)” HERE  (CW: NUDITY)

Stardust continues where we left off with Kuplowsky’s Judee Justin Arthur Mary, the reimagined covers EP from earlier this year. With many of the same players as the EP – Evan Cartwright (Andy Shauf, U.S. Girls) on drums, Thom Gill (Martha Wainwright, Sam Amidon) on electric guitar and organ, standout jazz player Josh Cole (Josh Cole Quartet, Sandro Perri) on fretless bass, Bahamas’ Felicity Williams (Bahamas) and Robin Dann (Bernice) for backing vocals, and Brodie West (Broken Social Scene, The Ex) on alto sax – Stardust sees Luka incorporating strings and horns to accompany the jazz-inflected folk sound that he explored on his EP. The album is truly a cinematic exploration of song by Kuplowksy, who works as an adjunct professor of film in Toronto. His narratives often twist and weave through realism and melodrama, romanticism and surrealism. Kuplowsky has an ability to create non-linear narratives that both feel complete and can leave your head spinning with a simple lyric; such as the standout line on the eponymous “Stardust”, where Luka sings, “Did I make an angel blush, with my suffering, my loss?”. Kuplowsky explains his heady vision for the new album, saying:

“In Stardust, the voice is a planet and the band, satellites in orbit.

The songs find their flow in this dance, finding balance not in cohesion but rotation.

Similarly, the lyrics are not necessarily narrative or linear, rather they are spheres of thought and contemplation.

Verses and choruses circle an idea rather than move towards a foregone conclusion. 

Let's extend this metaphor further in another direction.

Stardust is indebted to the creativity of Joni Mitchell, Arthur Russell, John Trudell, and Ryan Driver (among others).

Think of influence not as a mask or screen, but also an ORBIT.

You gotta create your own gravity, or else you're just drifting…

Forever an apprentice in song, 

Luka Kuplowsky”

LISTEN AND SHARE “NEVER GET TIRED (OF LOVING YOU)” HERE

With his wonderful new album Stardust, Luka Kuplowsky makes a refreshing argument for the relevance of acoustic music as a place to hold thought; an open space to place impeccably chosen words, ideas and images. A young songwriter with a calm, conversational delivery and an effortless, un-showy grasp of poetry; Kuplowsky humbly picks up the same threads of inquiry that did Cohen, asking the big questions about love, meaning and consciousness. Musically, Stardust triangulates between Hejira and Late for the Sky, finding connections between the purity of simple melody and the tangled modulations of jazz. Luka Kuplowsky makes a music of contemplation, a music alive to the everyday possibilities of epiphany and revelation, an unhurried music that moves with the gentle and curving rhythms of thought.

From the first note, Stardust feels fresh and immediate, and this immediacy is no accident. The album was recorded in just two days, in a studio with almost no isolation, with an all-star band of musicians drawn from the rich jazz and improvisational scenes of Toronto. Vocals and nearly everything else was recorded live, in an act of pure trust, and the album truly captures a performance, an assembly of players discovering the songs in real time.

~ written by Tamara Lindeman (The Weather Station)

WATCH AND SHARE “CRAZY LOVE” HERE

PRE-ORDER STARDUST HERE

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STARDUST TRACKLIST
1. Do I Have to Be
2. Never Get Tired (of Loving You)
3. Stardust
4. Crazy Love
5. Rough Times
6. City By My Window
7. Positive Push
8. Sayonara Blue
9. Skyline
10. Stardust (Reprise)
11. Be New

LUKA KUPLOWSKY ONLINE
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DANA GAVANSKI RELEASES NEW VIDEO FOR “TROUBLE”

DANA GAVANSKI SHARES VIDEO FOR “TROUBLE” FROM 2020 DEBUT LP, YESTERDAY IS GONE, OUT NOW FLEMISH EYE

WATCH AND SHARE “TROUBLE” HERE

LISTEN / STREAM YESTERDAY IS GONE HERE

BUY / STREAM WIND SONGS HERE

“Yesterday is Gone sits alongside the works of contemporaries like Joan Shelley and Brigid Mae Power, her delicate voice rising and falling through these elegant psych-folk songs” Uncut

“Dana Gavanski casts a spell on listeners with her psych-washed folk songs.” - Exclaim! 

“Her honeyed vocals tiptoe around whimsical lyricism about the changing of the seasons and the slow burn of time” - Beatroute 

"a comforting album that is a perfect companion for these trying times. ... listening to this album will bring us solace and some welcome sonic surprises" - Cups N’ Cakes

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Photo Credit : Tess Roby  // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Today, ​Dana Gavanski shares a video for her song “Trouble” directed by ​Laura-Lynn Petrick (Weyes Blood, TOPS, Jessica Pratt). The electrifying cut from her 2020 debut ​Yesterday Is Gone, shot on a Super 8 camera on Kodak colour negative film. The video bathes us with a warm reminiscent summer vibe, we’ve all aimlessly explored with no direction or an end goal this year and that’s ok. When you watch “Trouble” you are following the fruitless exploits of a vagrant as he rides a motorbike, jumps in lakes, starts a fire and eats a candy necklace.  How we miss the summer sun already.

"Trouble is a playful peek inside the life of a kind of outlaw, it's a lone adventure - unbounded by society's mundane grip,"​ says Petrick.

WATCH AND SHARE “TROUBLE” HERE

On the heels of a support run with Damien Jurado and with a summer of touring and festival dates ahead, Serbian-Canadian songwriter Dana Gavanski released her debut album ​Yesterday Is Gone in March just as everything shut down. She redoubled her efforts to release ​Wind Songs,​ ​an EP of covers, this past August. Culling together a selection of diverse influences, Wind Songs showed Gavanski taking on the likes of King Crimson, Chic and Judee Sill, which Folk Radio U​K call “​a blissful listen from start to finish.”

BUY / STREAM YESTERDAY IS GONE HERE

BUY / STREAM WIND SONGS HERE

VIDEOS FROM​ ​WIND SONGS

“I TALK TO THE WIND” ​(KING CRIMSON COVER) ​

“AT LAST I AM FREE” ​(CHIC COVER) 

“JANO MOME” ​(SERBIAN FOLK SONG)

VIDEOS FROM​ ​YESTERDAY IS GONE

“YESTERDAY IS GONE” 

“ONE BY ONE” 

“CATCH” 

“GOOD INSTEAD OF BAD” 

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KIWI JR. SIGN TO SUB POP RECORDS INTERNATIONALLY, SHARES VIDEO FOR NEW SINGLE “UNDECIDED VOTERS”

WATCH AND SHARE “UNDECIDED VOTERS” HERE

“UNDECIDED VOTERS” AVAILABLE NOW ON ALL DSPS FROM KIWI CLUB RECORDS IN CANADA, AND WORLDWIDE THROUGH SUB POP

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Photo Credit: Jamie Rajf // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Toronto’s Kiwi Jr. are getting set to release their sophomore LP in 2021 on the band’s own label Kiwi Club and worldwide via Sub Pop. Ahead of that release is “Undecided Voters”, Kiwi Jr.’s darkly comic new single and official video, which is available today.

Shot live on location at a candidates debate between two horse jockeys in a church basement, the “Undecided Voters” video plays with the absurdity of elections as sport and entertainment. Kiwi Jr. provides the soundtrack to the sordid affair, while local news reporters stalk the perimeter trying to piece together the scene inside.

Kiwi Jr. has this to offer on the single: "We all know UNDECIDED VOTERS: democracy's driftwood, the third planks in the flotsam that purple the pie chart, always on sight and never a part of the scene. Placing imminent demise neatly to one side, KIWI JR. concentrate on the real Issues: the terrible alliance between King Crab and the timezones; 3D printing causing mass sculptor redundancies; and the playlist at the Duane Reade. After all, who is it we're really voting for: Spartacus or the dead?”

WATCH AND SHARE “UNDECIDED VOTERS” HERE

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“Undecided Voters” Artwork // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Kiwi Jr. is Jeremy Gaudet (mic, guitar), Brohan Moore (drums), Mike Walker (bass), and Brian Murphy (guitar).

PAST PRAISE FOR KIWI JR.

"Delightful as fuck” - NOW

"Naive enough to be charming” - Exclaim!

"With easy hooks, surprise structural twists, and a gift for non-sequiturs, the Canadian quartet’s debut is a vivid portrait of the big-city struggle...Gaudet has such a witty way with one-liners, and the band is so effervescent in their execution, that it’s easy to overlook the elevated level of craft at work." - Pitchfork

“With a vim and focus that recalls early Strokes… tautly tuneful jangle channels the Modern Lovers, the Cars and Pavement with hooks that dig in deep and stay there.” ★★★★- MOJO

"Each [song] is filled to the rafters with deliriously catchy riffs.  [It's] one of those rare albums that gets better the more you play it as all those wonderful throw-away lines get lodged in your head until the next one knocks it out.... There is something about Kiwi Jr. that is hard to ignore. They sound like a mixture of all the best bits of R.E.M., The Kinks, The Strokes, The Modern Lovers, Pavement and Lou Reed..." [8/10] - CLASH

"A sweet sunshine hit of melody-forward songwriting..." - PASTE

KIWI JR. ONLINE
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