PHARIS & JASON ROMERO TWO MORE NEW TRACKS FROM UPCOMING LP

WATCH / SHARE “CANNOT CHANGE IT ALL” HERE
WATCH / SHARE “OLD BILL’S TUNE” HERE

BUY / STREAM “CANNOT CHANGE IT ALL” + “OLD BILL’S TUNE” HERE

TELL ‘EM YOU WERE GOLD, THE NEW LP FROM JUNO AWARD WINNERS PHARIS & JASON ROMERO, OUT JUNE 17, 2022 VIA SMITHSONIAN FOLKWAYS RECORDINGS

PRE-ORDER TELL ‘EM YOU WERE GOLD HERE

Photo Credit : Patrick King // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Next month, Pharis and Jason Romero—whose old-time, country-folk, and early roots music has made them three-time JUNO Award and seven-time Canadian Folk Music Award winners— will release their new album, Tell ’Em You Were Gold, out June 17, 2022 on Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. Today, they share two more new tracks from the album, “Cannot Change It All” and “Old Bill’s Tune”.

The first song started with a banjo tuning and grew with the lyrics. Pharis wrote the words for “Cannot Change It All” after camping in the Chilcotin mountains while thinking of all the incredible people working to make the world a better, more thoughtful place.

While the prior track started on the banjo, Pharis and Jason looked to the fiddle for “Old Bill’s Tune”. “We wrote a song called ‘Ballad of Old Bill’ and the melody felt like a fiddle tune,” says Pharis. “Originally we worked this up with Josh Rabie on fiddle and John Hurd on bass; on this recording Grace Forrest takes the helm on fiddle with Patrick Metzger on bass.”

WATCH / SHARE “CANNOT CHANGE IT ALL” HERE

/WATCH / SHARE “OLD BILL’S TUNE” HERE

BUY / STREAM “CANNOT CHANGE IT ALL” + “OLD BILL’S TUNE” HERE

MORE ABOUT TELL ‘EM YOU WERE GOLD
It’s Pharis and Jason’s seventh album as a duo, and the first since 2020’s Bet on Love, which won praise from the BB, NPR, and American Songwriter who said, “To call Bet on Love anything other than masterful would be a disservice.” 

Tell ’Em You Were Gold was written and recorded in an old barn on the couple’s homestead in Horsefly, British Columbia. The barn had long been run down, and between building banjos, adventuring outdoors, and loving up their two kids, Pharis and Jason restored the building themselves, milling their own spruce, hoisting beams, and rebuilding a roof originally covered in tin printing plates. “The music made on this record was made in the spirit of that working transformation and in the spirit of the history that old barn contains,” they write in the album’s liner notes. And while the intimacy of the old building does make its way onto the record in the form of crackling stoves and tapping feet, the sense of ease that glows from the album’s center gives it the warmth of a hearth in a cold BC winter. Like many albums recorded in the past couple of years, Tell ʼEm You Were Gold is an at-home record, one where the performers’ sense of being at home with one another is obvious in their effortless interplay.

Making things by hand comes naturally to the pair: Jason has long been a highly regarded banjo-maker whose designs expand the instrument’s expressive range while respecting both its mechanical history and the music it’s frequently been used to make. When setting out to write and record Tell ʼEm You Were Gold, the duo created something where the depth and brilliance of Jason's banjos would shine on each song, where each of the instrument’s distinct personalities could be showcased through the repertoire. Jason plays seven different banjos on the album, and Pharis plays one gourd banjo guitar—all handmade by Jason in his shop. Each banjo on this record started with an idea of a sound, a feeling, or an aesthetic, and each one makes Jason play and feel a different way. They were even given names reflecting their individual character and identity: Papillon, Big Blue, Clara, Birdie, Mother, Bella, Gourdo, and The Beast.

WATCH / SHARE “SOUVENIR” HERE

BUY / STREAM “SOUVENIR” & “PALE MORNING” HERE

Nearly half of Tell ’Em You Were Gold’s 16 songs are in the public domain, but the duo make sure to note whose versions have informed their own. The duo’s take on “Train on the Island” takes inspiration from the work of Tom Sauber and Mark Graham, among others, but Jason’s delicate touch—he plays three-finger style with no picks on the song—makes his virtuosity feel gentle and companionable, and contributes to the track’s incredible warmth. On opener “Souvenir”, he lays back, following the lead of Pharis’ guitar, allowing her rhythms to pull him forward as she sings about time well spent. Jason fluidly moves between various banjo styles, displaying mastery of clawhammer and three-finger picking styles and various alternate tunings. 

Pharis’ lyrics shine with wisdom that’s hard won and love that’s kindly offered. “We’re always older than yesterday, but I don’t change and you won’t stay,” she sings in “Sour Queen”. The song is a showcase for her voice, too: She pushes it higher, nearly breaking it into a yodel while Jason chases the melody downward behind her. Pharis grew up in rural British Columbia singing in her family’s folk-country band, playing in the creek, and falling for ’60s folk revival and bluegrass records, and throughout Tell ’Em You Were Gold, she sings with a sweetness that never feels like affectation. Her voice is clear, bright, and informed by the sadness of a song like “Black Guard Mary” without succumbing to it. In “Cannot Change It All”, she sings an ode to the possibility of a better world with an open-eyed view of just how difficult that world will be to achieve; she carries that knowledge in her tone, never expressing it with words, but in the shadow of heartbreak that flickers through the song. 

But what shines through Tell ’Em You Were Gold the brightest is the sense of joy that Pharis and Jason have playing with one another and with their friends. They’re joined by fiddlers Grace Forrest and Trent Freeman, pedal steel player Marc Jenkins, bassist Patrick Metzger, and John Reischman on mandolin. You can hear it in the way Jenkins’ pedal steel slides like liquid among the wiry picking of “The Dose”, or in the contented exhales of “SS Radiant”, a sweet solo banjo meditation dedicated to the duo’s son Sy. Even “Been All Around This World”, a rambling song Pharis and Jason each sang before they met and sing together here, feels quiet, at rest, like it’s arrived—like they’ve been around the world, but they’re here now, and there’s no place they’d rather be than at home together.

PRE-ORDER TELL ‘EM YOU WERE GOLD HERE

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TELL ‘EM YOU WERE GOLD TRACKLIST
01 Souvenir
02 Cold Shout
03 Rolling Mills
04 Sour Queen
05 Pale Morning
06 Trains On The Island
07 Lady On The Green
08 Cannot Change It All
09 The Dose
10 SS Radiant
11 Been All Around This World
12 Black Guard Mary
13 Going To Town
14 Going Across The Sea
15 Five Mils From Town
16 Old Bill’s Tune

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LOGAN STAATS ANNOUNCES TOUR DATES, SHARES NEW VIDEO

SINGER, SONGWRITER AND INDIGENOUS ACTIVIST LOGAN STAATS, SO CALLED CANADA TOUR DATES CONTINUE JUNE 21

WATCH / SHARE “DEADMAN” LIVE PERFORMANCE

BUY / STREAM “DEADMAN”, OUT NOW VIA RED MUSIC RISING, HERE

Photo Credit : Trung Hoang  // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Acclaimed Indigenous storyteller and activist Logan Staats recently returned with his newest single, “Deadman” out via Red Music Rising following his rise to fame as the first winner of Bell Media’s ‘The Launch’. “I wrote ‘Deadman’ while in rehab,” says Staats. “It’s not about a girl; the culture is the love that I’m asking for. The love for myself. That was stolen from me - by the government, the crown, the church. When I sing ‘GIVE ME BACK MY LOVE’, I'm speaking about my culture, my pride, and my love for myself.” 

Today, Staats is sharing a live performance video of “Deadman”, a song he says when he performs live says, “I feel like I’m stepping into my skin again. Feels like I’m harnessing the power of colonial afflicted discontent.”

The acclaimed songwriter is also heading out on tour this summer on the So Called Canada Tour with stops throughout Ontario and Western Canada. Full tour dates can be found below and all tickets can be purchased here www.loganstaats.ca

WATCH / SHARE “DEADMAN” LIVE PERFORMANCEBUY / STREAM “DEADMAN” HERE

MORE ABOUT DEADMAN
As Staats’ ancestors were residential school survivors, the video for “Deadman” was partially filmed on the property of the Mohawk Institute, a former residential school in Brantford, Ont. (The ​​Six Nations of the Grand River has since called for that location to be among grounds searched for remains.) The video follows Staats through his community, including Land Back Lane, where Six Nations land defenders have mobilized to protect the area from proposed subdivision development. 

“Recently I’ve been spending a lot of time on the west coast in Wet’suwet’en territory after answering the call of the Hereditary Chiefs there and standing in solidarity with the land defenders on their sovereign ground," says Staats. "After serving an eviction notice to Coastal Gas Link, a for-profit corporation conducting illegal activities on Wet’suwet’en territory, heavily armed RCMP officers were flown in and conducted a raid on the traditional lands or 'Yin’tah'.

During that raid I was punched in the ear. My head was slammed into the frozen pavement by my braids. And I was kneed in my spine and held down while I was handcuffed and bleeding... all after I was only peacefully singing our water song and hugging/protecting a 70 year old matriarch. I was hauled off to jail along with my sister, Layla Black, several other land defenders, elders, along with members of the press. With the support of my community and people rallying across nations, I was free’d and remain steadfast and committed to defending the land from sea to sea all across Turtle Island."

WATCH / SHARE “DEADMAN” (OFFICIAL VIDEO) HERE

BUY / STREAM “DEADMAN” HERE

MORE ABOUT LOGAN STAATS
In 2018, veracious Mohawk singer-songwriter Logan Staats was chosen from 10,000 hopeful contestants vying for a spot on musical competition show ‘The Launch’. Before an audience of 1.4 million viewers, Staats won, officiating the breakthrough that would lead him to Nashville and Los Angeles, and to his single “The Lucky Ones” winning the Indigenous Music Award for Best Radio Single. “The Lucky Ones” also occupied #1 in Canada. 

In the years between now and then, Staats has come home, making the intentional decision to re-root at ​​Six Nations of the Grand River. “I wanted to bring my songwriting back to the medicine inside of music, to the medicine inside of reclamation,” he says following a phase of constant travel and intensity. 

To Staats, music is a healing salve, contemplatively composed and offered to listeners in need of comfort. Since returning home, Staats has been able to create music authentically again, reclaiming his sound through honest storytelling and unvarnished, sometimes painful reflection. 

SO CALLED CANADA TOUR
Tickets Available : www.loganstaats.ca

Jun 21 - St. Catharines, ON - FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre
Jun 21 - Mississauga, ON - National Indigenous Peoples Day
Jun 30 - Iqaluit, NU - Alianait Arts Festival
Jul 07 - Kamploops, BC - Tk’emlups te Secwepemc
Jul 08 - Cache Creek, BC - Hat Creek Ranch
Jul 10 - Orillia, ON - Tudhope Park
Jul 22  - Ohsweken ON - The Gathering Place By The Grand
Jul 28/29 - Edmonton, AB - Edmonton Expo Centre
Aug 12 - Dunster, BC - Robson Valley Music Festival
Aug 13 - Grand Prairie, AB - Bear Creek Folk Music Festival
Sep 30 - Hamilton, ON - Oktober West

LOGAN STAATS ONLINE
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PONDERCAST : HOME AND AWAY

LISTEN TO PONDERCAST : HOME AND AWAY

GET ‘THE SIGNAL’ EXPERIENCE EVERY MONTH WITH ‘PONDERCAST RADIO’ - SPECIAL CONTENT FOR PATREON SUBSCRIBERS

SUBSCRIBE TO GROUND LEVEL - THE NEW PODCAST FROM LAURIE BROWN

LISTEN TO PONDERBEAT EPISODE 11 HERE

SUBSCRIBE TO PONDERCAST ONITUNES / SPOTIFY / YOUTUBE

If you took a core sample of Laurie Brown’s latest episode of Pondercast, Home And Away, you would find:

  • The Twilight Zone

  • An Anarchist Plot to solve the housing crisis

  • What drones and tree swallows have in common

  • The unlikely story of the origins of Monopoly

  • How our need to belong turns inward over time

And, a big question to ponder: What would you be willing to do to find a home for your family?

LISTEN TO PONDERCAST : HOME AND AWAY

In other Pondercast news, we just released a new edition of Pondercast Radio for our Patreon supporters. Two hours of new music that plays out just like a radio show, on either your paid Apple Music or Spotify account.

MORE ABOUT PONDERCAST RADIO
For Season 5, a few new things are happening while some others are getting their own spotlight. First, the Pondercast team is bringing you something entirely new yet a little reminiscent of times past. Pondercast Radio uses an innovative hack of streaming technology to bring you a once a month ‘radio show’ which you can stream at any time. The show will include a new playlist of music and Laurie’s introductions for your dining and dancing pleasure.  The episodes play out exactly like radio, feel like Laurie’s old show The Signal - and you will get a 2 hour show of new music for you to fall in love with every month.

Pondercast Radio is available only to those who support Pondercast via Patreon at any level. Supporters must also have a paid Spotify or Apple Music account to access Pondercast Radio. If you have a paid account on Apple Music or on Spotify, then you can get our monthly ‘radio’ shows delivered to your inbox.

SUPPORT PONDERCAST VIA PATREON HERE

The other big news is the new podcast Ground Level which is out now. Pondercast is moving all of their weekly guided meditations to a brand new podcast. So if you have been meditating with Laurie, subscribe to Ground Level wherever you get your podcasts to be sure you don’t miss an episode. Look for interviews and other content to help navigate these strange days. 

SUBSCRIBE TO GROUND LEVEL - THE NEW PODCAST FROM LAURIE BROWN

SUBSCRIBE TO PONDERCAST ONITUNES / SPOTIFY / YOUTUBE

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 eleventh episode is available now featuring music from Kyla Charter, Donovan Woods, Cassidy Mann, Scott Hardware, The Weather Station, and more.

LISTEN TO PONDERBEAT EPISODE 11 HERE

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