PONDERCAST EP 172 : AGAIN PLEASE

“Just bought my first ticket to a live music show,” says Laurie Brown. “I am so excited. This is a big step back to the kind of normal that I have truly missed.”

We have all had enough time locked away to know what feels important to us. On Episode 172 of Pondercast, we explore what happens when the music dies. Don’t worry,there’s a happy ending here. It’s coming back! Only this time around – we have changed. “Please world, I want some more.”

LISTEN TO PONDERCAST EP 172 : AGAIN PLEASE

Every Monday morning Laurie Brown will post a new 20 minute Guided Meditation. Meant for everyone - no experience necessary. Great way to start meditating, and a great way to find support and encouragement for your practise.

LISTEN TO PONDERCAST GUIDED MEDITATIONS HERE

Pondercast is able to expand their offerings because of the support you have helped build on Patreon. We are really hoping that this new season will move you to become a monthly donor at www.patreon.com/Pondercast or, a one time donor on our website at www.pondercast.ca

For those of you who have already taken the Patreon plunge, thank you - your support has made this happen.

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Recently, Killbeat Music partnered with the team at Pondercast to bring you Ponderbeat, a series of special episodes featuring selections curated by Brown from some of Killbeat’s latest releases. The ninth episode of Ponderbeat is live now, featuring music from Allison Russell, Dana Sipos, Treephones, Aasiva, Charlie Houston, Joseph Shabason, and more.

 LISTEN TO KILLBEAT’S COLLABORATION WITH PONDERCAST - PONDERBEAT EPISODE 09 HERE

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JEAN-MICHEL BLAIS SHARES “doux” FROM NEW ALBUM

AUBADES, THE POST-CLASSICAL ICON’S FIRST ENSEMBLE RECORD, OUT FEBRUARY 4, 2022

LISTEN / SHARE "DOUX" HERE
BUY / STREAM “DOUX” HERE

PRE-ORDER AUBADES HERE

Photo Credit : William Arcand // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

aubades, the new album from post-classical piano icon Jean-Michel Blais, marks the Montreal-born musician’s transition from pianist to composer, as he writes for an ensemble for the first time in his career. Written during the pandemic and following a breakup, Blais has used his distinctive musical voice to create a defiantly uplifting record with glistening instrumental textures and warm major tonalities. The album’s title refers to the “aubade”, a Middle Ages morning love song about lovers separating at daybreak, a dawn serenade. 

Jean-Michel Blais has been a celebrated figure in the post-classical piano world since the release of his critically-acclaimed debut album II in 2016. He attended Quebec’s prestigious Trois-Rivières Music Conservatory but left after two years of study, exhausted by the restraints of the traditional music curriculum. Blais then travelled widely before retraining as a special education teacher. Whilst working as a teacher, he returned to music on his own terms, rediscovering his passion through improvising on the piano. These improvisations formed the basis of a recording career that has earned him two Polaris Music Prize nominations, a #1 on the Billboard Classical chart and a Time Magazine top ten album of the year. 

LISTEN / SHARE "DOUX" HERE
BUY / STREAM “DOUX” HERE

“doux” single artwork // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Despite the difficult global and personal backdrop, Blais described the time writing this album as a “fruitful moment of creativity for me. We started having hares in the park, beautiful butterflies flying everywhere. It was a time of lots of blossoming, and also a moment when I blossomed from being a pianist into a composer.” Musical ideas captured in over 500 recorded piano improvisations were transformed by Blais into 11 compositions performed by a 12-person ensemble. During the composition process, Blais collaborated with Alex Weston, former music assistant to Philip Glass. The musicians were recorded with close-up microphones, creating a richly intimate atmosphere that captures the human behind each instrument, from the mechanics of the woodwind keys to the snap of a double bass string. 

Blais also consciously found himself leaning towards major tonalities, which he believes are surprisingly rare in modern classical piano music. “With this album, I was definitely responding to certain trends,” Blais reckons. “For example, the fact that the solo piano tends to sound melancholic. That’s good, but I’ve done that already, I wanted to go beyond that.”

LISTEN / SHARE "murmures" HERE
BUY / STREAM “murmures” HERE

In aubades, every instrument is given moments of expression to an extent that took the players by surprise. Blais says, “there’s often been this dominant idea in classical music that one instrument is the chief, the king of all the instruments, and the others are in the background merely supporting.” He was inspired by more democratic musical textures from the Renaissance and Middle Ages, as well as the social democratic artistic ethos of the English 19th century poet, designer and activist William Morris and the Arts and Crafts movement. 

Jean-Michel Blais will be taking aubades on the road in 2022. Full tour dates can be found below.

PRE-ORDER AUBADES HERE


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AUBADES TRACKLIST
murmures
passepied
nina
flâneur
ouessant
if you build it, they will come
amour
yanni
absinthe
carrousel
doux

2022 TOUR DATES
Mar 27 - London, UK - Purcell Room
Mar 30 - Hamburg, DE - Nachtasyl
Mar 31 - Berlin, DE - Planetarium
Apr 1 - Cologne, DE - Altes Pfandhaus
Apr 2 - Copenhagen, DN - XXX
Apr 4 - Oslo, NO - Röversatden
Apr 6 - Amsterdam, NL - Concertgebouw
May 6 - Clermont-Ferrand, FR - La Comédie
Jul 9 - Montreal, QC - Montreal Jazz

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STATUS/NON-STATUS REVEAL POWERFUL NEW VIDEO FOR “GENOCIDIO”

WATCH AND SHARE “GENOCIDIO” HERE

STATUS / NON-STATUS (FKA WHOOP-szo) NEW EP, 1, 2, 3, 4, 500 YEARS, OUT NOW VIA YOU’VE CHANGED RECORDS AND THE GRIZZLAR

BUY / STREAM 1, 2, 3, 4, 500 YEARS HERE

READ ADAM STURGEON’S ESSAY ON THE NEW NAME, STATUS/NON-STATUS

VISIT THE NEW IMMERSIVE WEBSITE HERE 

Photo Credit : Olde Nightrifter // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Earlier this year, Status / Non-Status, (the new name for the ongoing musical work of Anishinaabe community worker Adam Sturgeon (Nme’) and his longtime collaborators), released their new EP, 1, 2, 3, 4, 500 Years, out tomorrow via You’ve Changed / The Grizzlar. Today, they are sharing the new video for “Genicido” from director Travis Welowszky.

On the video, Welowszky says, “From atop the makeshift mountain, a grim presence looms above the life below. A meditation on the endless, encroaching empire.

The creatures traversing this plane are plastic and placeless; conjoined to their terrain as playthings in the tableaus of glorious exploiters. The understudies of colonial rule, silhouetted across a hill, obscure serenity by way of simulation; scrambling signals.

Colonial esoterica. Banal evil in list form. Silence: the cause to the resounding pain.”

Sturgeon says, “The crown skull of existence is consumption while genocide seeps into the cracks of our everyday. We’re beginning to see beyond the veil and there isn’t a whole lot more to say about it; Calling out and into our own mirrored reflections; the land, the air, the food and the children.” 

WATCH AND SHARE “GENOCIDIO” HERE

Status / Non-Status have also launched a new website for the project in which you can immerse yourself in a tactile, educational, and archival collage experience. Visit it HERE.

MORE ABOUT STATUS / NON-STATUS (FKA WHOOP-szo)
Status / Non Status spent a decade carving a path through Canada’s DIY scene before leveling up thanks to 2019’s acclaimed long player Warrior Down (You’ve Changed Records). This album confronted Sturgeon’s complex family history and identity and was long listed for the Polaris Music Prize among numerous other accolades. Now, the band emerges renewed, with more stories to share …

Adam is ‘non-status’ as defined by the Canadian government. Adam’s grandfather Ralph made the difficult decision to enfranchise in order to support himself and his family by joining the Armed Forces. Enfranchisement was the government’s term for the legal process of turning in one’s Status Card, terminating one’s Indian Status, and becoming instead a Canadian citizen. It was a pillar of the government’s assimilation policy and a requirement for any Indigenous person who wished to enlist. 

WATCH AND SHARE “500 YEARS” HERE

In the name of providing a better life for himself and his family, Ralph was required to forsake his Anishinaabe roots, an all-too-common experience for Indigenous peoples across Turtle Island. Acts of colonial violence such as enfranchisement, the residential school system, and the Indian Act  have resulted in disconnection amongst generations of Indigenous people from their communities, languages, land, and identities. Today, new voices are rising up and — through acts of reclamation via art, language, music, and community — taking back spaces that have been dominated by settler culture for so many years. 

Who is native enough? Who ‘counts’ as Indigenous, and who does not? These questions swirl through the Canadian arts discourse today, impacting every medium and revealing fundamental inadequacies within our current identity-defining systems. For Adam, the proof is in the work; his commitment to telling his family’s story with integrity and truth informs every aspect of his music and his life. Now a father to his own young son, it is the future that allows Adam to dig further into his roots. 

“When we tell stories, we have a responsibility to tell the truth. Do the necessary work to earn trust. Share your experience as one voice within a greater circle … and find a home.”

READ ADAM STURGEON’S ESSAY ON THE NEW NAME, STATUS/NON-STATUS

WATCH AND SHARE “FIND A HOME” HERE


ABOUT 1, 2, 3, 4, 500 YEARS EP
Set to the resonance of an unearthed whistle in the Jalisco province of Guadalajara, Mexico.

While the plastic grocery bag that housed these ancient artifacts would suggest otherwise, we could not in a good way nor in superstition employ such a spiritual apparatus that had been gifted many centuries ago to the lands we were visiting. The cracked and phallic fragments accompanying the whistles were other worldly in their own right, sitting atop a dresser turned Altar by our guide Alvaro Moreno in his tiny apartment upon our arrival; some cannabis, an old band photo, a favourite record, and a bag of clay objects older than anything we’d ever touched. 

For two weeks, the band held up in a van and studio before finally being guided to the original home place known now as Guatchimontones to deliberate our own place within the mess of time. Life is messy but on paper it all looked so real and yes, a circular pyramid (La Iguana) on the foothills of deities, community and freshwater was where we in fact stood. That was real, but only in that today it resembles a pillaged and half assed attempt at honouring a long forgotten and desecrated people. That story doesn’t belong to us, but we wanted to ensure that we could come pay our respects and learn about the place we travelled. 

As our guide Alvaro walked us, drove us and educated us of his life and city, we ourselves felt like the Lost Ones. Children, not warriors, unaware of every crack at our feet and every hole in our understanding. Unlike that of the local artists, professors and activists, silenced and disappeared from the walls of their own institutions.

Generally a safe city; divided in half by class, colour, and an old river turned stink pipe; staying, wandering through the streets and monuments like the strip malls and theme parks of our Canadian youth. New parents calling home to loved and little ones.  

And so after 500 years……

For what?


BUY / STREAM 1, 2, 3, 4, 500 YEARS HERE

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