MATTHEW CARDINAL OF nêhiyawak SHARES VIDEO FOR “DEC 4th”

WATCH AND SHARE “DEC 4th” HERE

ACCLAIMED DEBUT LP, ASTERISMS, OUT NOW VIA ARTS & CRAFTS

BUY / STREAM ASTERISMS FROM ARTS & CRAFTS


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”A substantial and constantly shifting record — a sky of billowing clouds, heavy with texture and depth... an entirely wordless snowfall.” Exclaim!
"A synth-driven celestial bath of calm and wonder and gratitude, all things that feel desperately in short supply at this moment.”
CBC Music 

"Asterisms strikes an inviting balance between the cold, digital sheen of vaporwave and the unhurried melodies of Brian Eno." - Bandcamp

"A great, moody chronicle... this album will just melt around you if you let it." - Edmonton Journal 5/5

"A wonderfully introspective collection that goes great with a steaming hot mug of tea on a cold winter’s night” - Vancouver Sun

"A dazzling collection of ambient electronic music that crystallizes moments in the Edmonton-based musician’s life" - XLR8R

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Photo Credit: Heather Saitz // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Today, December 4th, Matthew Cardinal is sharing the new video for “Dec 4th” from his acclaimed debut album, Asterisms, out now via Arts & Crafts. The LP is a dazzling collection of ambient electronic audio journal entries that crystallizes moments in his life. The video was produced by director SCKUSE (Stephanie Kuse) and follows the established trajectory of her video entries for “May 25th,” “May 24th,” “July 23rd”, and “Mar 12th,” with distinct natural elements finally emerging from the abstract beauty of images processed through an old TV.

“The bed of the track is a bubbling filtered synth sound which is sequenced in a somewhat random way,” says Cardinal. “On top of that I added some more ‘cello’ courtesy of my sampler and my mooshum's fiddle, Roland organ swells, and descending Moog bass. A sound I made sings on top about halfway through the track. I recorded this in the evening, sitting on my living room floor.”

WATCH AND SHARE “DEC 4th” HERE

CLICK FOR THE YOUTUBE PLAYLIST OF ALL ASTERISMS VIDEOS

Known for his work in nêhiyawak – the moccasingaze trio whose debut album nipiy was nominated for the 2020 Polaris Music Prize Shortlist and JUNO Award for Indigenous Album of the Year – Cardinal’s first solo full-length explores "captured moments of experimentation and expression . . . asterisms drawing attention to where I was musically, mentally and emotionally at very brief passages of my life,” says Cardinal. 

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 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.

BUY / STREAM 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 is out now via Arts & Crafts on digital and vinyl formats. 

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SLOW LEAVES SHARES CATHARTIC LIVE VIDEO FOR “SINK FULL OF DISHES”

Today, Slow Leaves (Grant Davidson) is sharing the new live video for “Sink Full Of Dishes” from his latest album, Shelf Life. "This video was shot after a couple months of initial lockdown at The Forks in Winnipeg for Canada Day,” says Davidson. “I remember the feeling of unexpected catharsis from performing, if only for a skeleton film crew. Here it is for the first time since that broadcast."

WATCH AND SHARE “SINK FULL OF DISHES” LIVE HERE

Known for his ability to breathe poetry into the ordinary, Slow Leaves continues his deep exploration of the self with Shelf Life. The 10-track LP leans into themes of romantic memory, domestic duty, artistic ambition, and dreams unfulfilled, underpinning the belief that there is indeed great strength in vulnerability. 

Rooted in reflections on time, Shelf Life is a record about growing up to realize you are not the person you thought you would be. It is a collection of songs that wades between tides of past and present, success and failure, things lost and things found. The result is a collection of musical vignettes, woven together by the loose threads of a tangled life.

WATCH AND SHARE “SINK FULL OF DISHES” HERE

Recorded mostly live off the floor, Davidson teamed up with Rusty Matyas (Weakerthans), Damon Mitchell (New Meanies), and Rejean Ricard (Telepathic Butterflies) to bring the album to life.

The release of Shelf Life follows Davidson’s critically acclaimed works Enough About Me (2017) and Beauty Is So Common (2014), both garnering heavy rotation on CBC Radio 2. The Winnipeg Free Press described Enough About Me as “a gentle breeze of exquisite playing and keen observations that will reward listeners again and again and again.” The album also garnered Davidson a nomination for a Western Canadian Music Award.

WATCH AND SHARE “MISS YOU” HERE

WATCH AND SHARE “SENTIMENTAL TEARDROPS” HERE

Every song is an invitation to step inside Davidson’s inner world—a space of beauty and wisdom, coloured outside the lines. With warm voice and guitar, Davidson uncovers a humanity that shines in even the darkest corners. 

BUY / STREAM SHELF LIFE HERE

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Photo Credit : Grant Davidson  // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES
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BERNICE SIGN TO TELEPHONE EXPLOSION, ANNOUNCE NEW ALBUM

TORONTO EXPERIMENTAL FIVE PIECE SIGN TO TELEPHONE EXPLOSION FOR UPCOMING LP, EAU DE BONJOURNO, OUT MARCH 5, 2021

LISTEN AND SHARE “GROOVE ELATION” HERE

BUY / STREAM “GROOVE ELATION” HERE

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Photo Credit : Colin Medley // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Bernice is the experimental pop vessel of musician/songwriter Robin Dann and her longtime collaborators Thom Gill (keyboards, guitar), Philippe Melanson (e-percussion and drums), Daniel Fortin (bass) and Felicity Williams (voice). Together and apart, they have performed with Martha Wainwright, Andy Shauf, Lido Pimienta, Bahamas, KNOWER, and Beverly Glenn Copeland among many others, which led to them being referred in the press as “Toronto’s ever-evolving backing band.” 

In their own right, however, they have repeatedly proved to be far more than the sum of their considerable parts. Bernice’s Polaris Music Prize-nominated 2018 LP Puff: In the air without a shape received major international attention, described as an “analytical, self-dissecting monument to ephemerality” by The New York Times, and “a fascinating musical conversation” that blends pop and R&B influences with C86 aesthetics by Pitchfork, alongside high praise from outlets like NPR, FADER, and Stereogum, and many more. 

Nearly three years on from that release (for Bernice a rapid turnaround by comparison to the seven-year gap between their 2011 debut and Puff), the band return with their third full-length, Eau de Bonjourno, out March 5 from Telephone Explosion (figureight records EU/UK). It marks their first collaboration with producer Shahzad Ismaily, the acclaimed multi-instrumentalist who has worked with artists as varied as Laurie Anderson, Lou Reed, Elvis Costello, Iggy Pop, John Zorn, and Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy. While their genre reconstruction remains distinctly Bernice, Dann’s lyrics bring a newfound focus to storytelling in the present moment, compassionately meeting ourselves where we are, and finding joy in spaces that are familiar but ever changing. 

Eau de Bonjourno, according to Dann, “openly plays with the shape of a pop song,” drawing on the band members’ backgrounds in jazz, subverting rhythmic formulas, and resting in grooves that sit just outside of predictable. Instead of letting instruments take extended solos, the tone is set on opener “Groove Elation” with brief blurts of synthesized sax, patient passages of space, or clusters of beats, tenderly held together by Dann and Williams’ intimate vocals. 

“Think of this song as a ripple through many decades of a life,” Dann says. “A silver goblet shines on pink woolen stripes. Maybe this is enough! Maybe we have all that we need to groove. Whether you slept well, stayed up, spoke up or stayed quiet, you’re here now and we should ‘groove it for sure’. Let us take you there: floating on the surface of a loving feeling.”

LISTEN AND SHARE “GROOVE ELATION” HERE

BUY / SHARE “GROOVE ELATION HERE

The album’s sound is experimental in its truest definition, chopped up like musique concrète and then delicately placed back together with the loving touch of a scrapbook collagist. 

“We have an impulse to open doors that you might not expect, and that translates from groove to melody to lyric,” says Dann. “Phil and Thom have this strong aversion to building a beat that sits there in front of you and does exactly what you expect it to do. We come out of so many musical traditions and are trying to make something that’s not a direct descendent of any of them. We’re trying to make the music that feels like us right now.”

The album was written at an artist centre on the Toronto Islands, a short ferry ride from the city across Lake Ontario, over the course of a month in a repurposed school portable. Dann welcomed the band into her writing process over a concentrated time period for the first time, sharpening their focus “with the intention of creating a group of songs that speak to each other and tell a collective story.” Between writing sessions the band would skinny dip and cook, often with Madonna’s personal chef, who Dann says “was at the artist center writing a novel not about Madonna, but not not about Madonna.” 

It was this idyllic location where Dann met the feathered friend that inspired “Lone Swan”, a bird who followed her along the beach, or perhaps vice versa. Its subdued, weightless sound and straightforward lyrics of romantic longing were an experiment in themselves, as she attempted to write “a folk song that anyone could sing with a larger than life meaning.” This guiding theme of deconstructing identity is also found in “It’s Me, Robin”. While practicing the ancient Indian principle of ahimsa (non-violence towards herself and all living beings), she speaks to our vulnerability and multiplicity with the belief that “we are always a product of all the people around and who came before us.” 

Dann imagines these songs as vessels, inspired by visionary sci-fi author Ursula K. Le Guinn’s book The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction. Redefining the notion of a creative work from a phallic tool used to inject singular meanings, she now sees them as containers for portals into moods and worlds that are individual to each listener. “You present a basket and then we’re all inside it,” she says. “There’s feeling in it for me, is there feeling in it for you? When it’s done, the basket falls away and we move on to the next. It’s thinking of these songs as one large shape that holds us instead of moving along a linear time-space pathway.” 

In late 2019, Bernice traveled to Brooklyn to record the album with Ismaily, who members met through previous collaborations with Sam Amidon and Leif Vollebekk. Like their writing sessions during Dann’s artistic residency on Toronto Island, they aimed to record in a concentrated time period to generate a cohesive sound over 10 days in the studio. With a shared understanding of the language of jazz and a boundless musical imagination, Ismaily brought a fresh, energizing dynamic to the group of musicians who have known each other for fifteen years. “Rather than wasting time by breaking things apart and talking about them, he encouraged us to just keep going,” says Dann. “We embraced things that felt good and didn’t question them.” 

Ultimately, it is this playful spirit that continues to guide the music of Bernice. Pulling from their jazz schooled education in improvisation, the five members create ad hoc games to stir their minds at all moments when they’re together. “Big Mato” began from a conversation one morning on Toronto Island when Dann shared the anecdote that her nephew used this term to refer to oversized tomatoes. As they riffed on lyrics about waking up in the morning craving a salad and choosing ingredients, this evolved into a euphemism for love and intimacy. Its delivery is earnest and straight faced, while the song’s feeling remains effervescent. 

“I think that’s the only way to make art,” concludes Dann. “If I take myself seriously, nothing good will come of it. I have to come from somewhere that feels like pure imagination, turning off the self-critic, and finding flow. All of those words that artists use a lot to me just mean finding joy. When we make music together, we look for things that make us laugh and groove and that feels great.”

PRAISE FOR BERNICE

"Analytical, self-dissecting... a monument to ephemerality" - New York Times

"The most familiar genre labels can only partially categorize Bernice’s sound” - Pitchfork

“One of Toronto’s great off-kilter pop hopes” - The FADER

“Deeply textured, largely experimental songs filled with wondrous and mysterious sounds” - NPR Music




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EAU DE BONJOURNO TRACKLIST
1 Groove Elation
2 It’s Me, Robin
3 Big Mato
4 Dry River Bed
5 Lone Swan
6 Empty Cup
7 Personal Bubble
8 Your Beautiful House
9 Infinite Love
10 We Choose You

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