STATUS/NON-STATUS ANNOUNCES NEW ALBUM, BIG CHANGES, SHARES “AT ALL”

STATUS/NON-STATUS NEW ALBUM, BIG CHANGES, DUE OUT MARCH 6, 2026 VIA YOU’VE CHANGED RECORDS

WATCH / SHARE “AT ALL” HERE
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PRE-SAVE BIG CHANGES HERE

Photo Credit:  Natasha Roberts // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Today, Status/Non-Status is announcing their new album, Big Changes, which, at its core, is an act of community-building. Though its songs focus on reckoning, reflection, and resistance, the album derives its strength from the people who contributed to its creation. 

Over the years, Anishinaabe musician and artist Adam Sturgeon has undergone a metamorphosis, shedding old monikers and reclaiming heritage. In 2021, the collective formerly known as WHOOP-Szo became Status/Non-Status as part of Sturgeon’s ongoing exploration of the complex roots of his family history. Together with Zoon’s Daniel Monkman (who makes a guest appearance on Big Changes), Sturgeon introduced the world to OMBIIGIZI in 2022 via their Polaris Music Prize shortlisted record Sewn Back Together. Regardless of which project Sturgeon is working on, though, the one thing that doesn’t change is how he treats it: like family, protecting it at all costs. Every reinvention, every reckoning, every return leads back to the same role: provider, protector, father.

Alongside Sturgeon, there is a host of both long-time and new collaborators and friends—like Eric Lourenco, Jessica O’Neil, and Kirsten Kurvink Palm—as well as an extended circle of artists (including Steven Lourenco and Sunnsetter’s Andrew MacLeod) expanding Status/Non-Status into an every growing collective of artists that embodies the push and pull that animates the album itself: the tension between consistency and change and living in solitude and solidarity. 

Big Changes is about survival, but also about making connections in order to endure. It is the big noise we make together when the world feels like it’s falling apart, and the harmony that comes when we keep time with one another.

The album’s crunchy first single, “At All” featuring contributions from Kevin Drew (Broken Social Scene) and Zoon, is a “self explanatory examination,” says Sturgeon. “I was starting to feel really disillusioned at the time of writing this song. Confused about the state of music and the complex world we are living in; the grind to make each day work. I decided to disappear, bunker down at home, stay in, write songs about it and invite my friends over to visit and play along. I wrote over 40 songs and this was one of the first to come out of me."

WATCH / SHARE “AT ALL” HERE
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MORE ABOUT BIG CHANGES (by Jim Di Gioia)
Big Changes comes from living through what Sturgeon describes as “a war on people and their ways of being” while engaging in the everyday domesticity of dropping the kids off at daycare, heading into work, doing chores around the house, and figuring out how to survive “what is beginning to feel like a real apocalypse.” Inspired by his in-the-moment work with OMBIIGIZI, and with over 40 rough song ideas on hand, Sturgeon recruited Dean Nelson (Beck, Thurston Moore, Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks) and Matthew Wiewel (of Deadpan Studios and engineer of Status/Non-Status’ previous album, Surely Travel) to build a home studio in the old church he lives in with his family in London, Ontario. Everything on Big Changes “Is centralized around our Monday morning recording sessions,” he says, “and this routine of caring for my young family in a disintegrating and tough city.”

For Sturgeon, Big Changes also reflects his lifelong dialogue with duality, a dichotomy “...felt through the contrast of being a mixed person,” who sees “racism perpetuated against people more visible than myself, while also not feeling like I’m Indian enough.” The record tussles with that uneasy and impossible balance of simultaneously walking in two worlds with conflicting values. It’s less a statement of intent than a lived reflection, one that acknowledges tension without resolving it. “I don’t feel conflicted about where I stand, but I’m not sure I’m always seen,” Sturgeon says, adding that, “[on Sewn Back Together, OMBIIGIZI] found balance in the dichotomy of being damaged and using it as a tool to move forward. Big Changes, however, is foreboding and inquisitive about what is to come.”

The song “Big Changes” brings these big ideas and concepts down to street level, reflecting the daily realities of life just outside Sturgeon’s own front door. “This song is about my hood, where I live and raise my family and what I see when I walk out the door,” he says, describing a neighbourhood “mired by gaps in the system” and burdened by housing crises, addiction, and lateral violence. Caught in the crossfire between bureaucratic inaction and a community’s will to survive, “Big Changes” expresses how people are forced into change simply to keep going, whether that change leads somewhere better or somewhere harder doesn’t really matter. What matters is endurance, adaptation, and the resilience to find ways to live with what’s left.

Despite its title, one thing that Big Changes doesn’t mess with is the music. Status/Non-Status hold fast to their intuitive and fluid style, their musicianship grounded in connection, familiarity, and an overarching trust in the power of their glorious noise. If anything, Status/Non-Status is more refined on Big Changes, summoning a sound that’s deliberate while retaining the untamed energy that first inspired them. Crunching guitars clock the daily grind of the nine-to-five on opening track “At All”, while bursts of ’90s indie-rock energy collide with sugar-coated power pop melodies on “Peace Bomb”. Ominous shades of gothic blues hang in the air on the title track, while the yin and yang of male and female harmonies (supplied by Broken Social Scene’s Kevin Drew and Rachel McLean) on “Blown Again” temper abrasion with warmth. On “Basket Weaving”, a collaboration with Odawa poet and artist Colleen “Coco” Collins, contemplative acoustics and ambient synth textures intertwine with anthemic rock flourishes in an exploration of “ancestral experience of reconnection.” The influence of Canadian noise-rock pioneers Eric’s Trip runs like an undercurrent through Big Changes, especially in its community-minded spirit. That lineage comes full circle on the delicate lullaby ballad “Good Enough”, featuring Eric’s Trip Julie Doiron. “Working with Julie Doiron, my teenage hero and favourite bass player,” says Sturgeon, “is something I could only ever dream of. I don’t take accomplishing my dreams for granted,” he adds. “I am just so lucky Julie is such a giving and wonderful community member.”

Read the full album bio by Jim Di Gioia at www.killbeatmuic.com/statusnonstatus

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BIG CHANGES TRACKLIST
01 At All
02 Peace Bomb
03 Big Changes
04 Blown Again
05 Basket Weaving
06 Arnold
07 Good Enough
08 Bones
09 Bitumen Eye’s
10 Bitumen Eye’s II
11 Tom Climate

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FLEUR ELECTRA ANNOUNCES NEW EP, STRIKE THE MATCH, SHARES NEW SINGLE

FLEUR ELECTRA’S UPCOMING EP, STRIKE THE MATCH, OUT FEBRUARY 27, 2026 VIA VICTORY POOL RECORDS

WATCH / SHARE “WEATHER GIRL” (MUSIC VIDEO) HERE
BUY / STREAM “WEATHER GIRL” HERE

PRE-SAVE STRIKE THE MATCH EP HERE

Photo Credit : Kirk Lisaj // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Fleur Electra is the dream-pop project of Toronto-via-Saskatchewan aesthete Anna Klein. Starting her “colourful, girl-pop era in the depths of 2020 chaos,” Fleur Electra was born out of the early pandemic, defined by Klein’s sensual and sonically adventurous bedroom production. 

Since releasing her debut In Technicolor in 2022, Klein has been performing around Toronto and crafting captivating visuals, honing her artistic magic. She self-produced, wrote, recorded, and mixed her acclaimed 2024's In My Room—a small miracle of an album, considering a house fire destroyed the very bedroom in which these songs were written (while almost nothing was recovered from the fire, this album of songs were saved from a damaged hard drive). Klein went through profound growth from this experience, and though her artistic powers were continuing to develop, her belief in herself was waning. Klein's mental health was worsening, and trying times had her feeling like she was at a dead end—until the ideal producer came along.

Klein explains: “I got a random Instagram DM from Alex Black Bessen”—an LA producer whose credits include Alex G and BENEE—“and he said, ‘I’m going to be in Toronto, and I would love to meet with you if you’re down.’” As soon as Klein and Black Bessen met up, it was clear that they were meant to be collaborating: “It was one of those immediate connections—like, have we met before?” Klein couldn’t believe how easy the artistic collaboration felt: “he could hear my sound and my vision, and he knew how to take it to the next level.”

“Next thing I knew, I was in California in a cabin in the woods, having the most beautiful time,” Klein smiles. Klein and Black Bessen—along with producer-percussionist Tim Voet—poured over Klein’s hard drive of demos in their cozy studio, building these sketches into the delicious alt-pop vignettes of her new album, Strike The Match. Expanding upon the intimate, laptop-in-bedroom production of Klein’s demos, percussion expert Voet added “these beats I never could have dreamed of,” Klein explains, as the trio shaped these songs. “They still felt so close to me, but living a whole new life.”

Today, Fleur Electra is sharing “Weather Girl” from the EP which “is one, if not the, truest of love songs I’ve ever written,” says Klein. “It’s about my platonic love for my best friend, and the story of us. It’s a charming, pure-hearted tune heavily inspired by yacht rock and my inner child. This song has an essence of youth, and nostalgic demeanor. It’s imaginative in its visual imagery, and so accurately represents the way I feel about the one-of-a-kind relationship that we share. Additionally, it was important to me to create an atmosphere where people might feel free to let their own inner child wander into a moment of blissful sentiment.”

WATCH / SHARE “WEATHER GIRL” (MUSIC VIDEO) HERE
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MORE ABOUT FLEUR ELECTRA 
Many songs on Strike the Match consider relationships from Klein’s past. Whether it’s the pissed-off “Best of the Worst,” which details an addiction to being with someone who brings out the worst in you, or the sweet “Weather Girl,” an ode to a friend (“when she twirls, with the sun in her hands, she’ll shine again and again”), Klein’s songs distill years of reflection into dream-pop hymns. These songs shimmer with growth, as Klein flirts with deeper understandings of how she operates and what she needs. These interpersonal reflections interweave with reflections on Klein's relationship with herself, her journey with mental illness, and moments of burgeoning confidence. “The title track distills the album’s themes,” Klein reflects. “It is the breakthrough at the end of a time of endurance, hardship, and discovery." 

Klein’s journey with Fleur Electra traces back to her prairie roots. Growing up in Saskatoon, then moving to isolated, small-town Saskatchewan at age 10, Klein leaned hard into imaginative creation: “it felt like I was entering a different world when I was making music.” The eighth of ten kids, Klein and her siblings would inspire one another with flashes of creativity: drawing portraits, singing made-up songs around the house, and acting in elaborate self-scripted videos. Precociously aesthetic, Klein couldn’t hear a song without mentally pairing it with a visual. As soon as she started producing her own music at 12 years old, her interests in sonics and visual art collided, reflected in the gorgeously crafted music videos and graphics of Fleur Electra.

WATCH / SHARE “STRIKE THE MATCH” HERE
BUY / STREAM “STRIKE THE MATCH” HERE

Klein’s early recording sessions in Audacity also provided a counterweight to her religious upbringing. Heavily in worship music, Klein “grew up listening to a lot of Christian rock bands and singing in church.” Though her perspective on religion is nuanced and ever-evolving these days (“I know that I don’t know, and that maybe we weren’t meant to know”), Klein’s music as Fleur Electra seeks to strike at the same power of communally sung hymns in church, similarly crafting music that “cuts through the vulnerability, just gets there, straight to the point.” While Sunday morning services strive to bring you close to God, Fleur Electra’s music beckons you, with similar frankness and vulnerability, to reckon with your own internal turmoil, relationships, and percolating joys.

Such is clear on Strike the Match, which is ultimately a testament to Klein “finally getting started on my life.” Not only is Klein reclaiming the fire that burned down the apartment where she recorded her previous record; you can hear her growing from emotional, spiritual, and psychological fires that made her who she is today.  Upbeat and playful, Strike the Match opens a door to peace, escape, and self-reckoning through dancing in your bedroom. It can make you feel something you didn’t know you needed to feel, as well as a reminder that, when all’s said and done, “life is hard, but it can be beautiful. We're all just trying to have a good time while we're here.”

WATCH / SHARE “COULD BE BETTER” HERE
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PRE-SAVE STRIKE THE MATCH EP HERE

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STRIKE THE MATCH TRACKLIST
01 Best Of The Worst
02 Could Be Better
03 Cutting Corners
04 Get It Right
05 Weather Girl
06 She Comes Back
07 Strike The Match

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RAE SPOON RETURNS TO COUNTRY ROOTS FOR NEW LP, ASSIGNED COUNTRY SINGER AT BIRTH

Photo Credit : Laurence Philomene // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Assigned Country Singer At Birth is Rae Spoon’s thirteenth solo album and marks their return to country music. It’s arguably not any safer than it was in the early 2000’s to be a transgender country singer, but there's no room for doubting their connection to it when you hear them sing.

The album is equally subversive and relatable, a testament to the fact that country music is as expansive as the people who are connected to it. Songs about trans folks, harm reduction, disability, inclusion, religious trauma, solidarity and opposing colonial land occupation may seem antithetical to traditional country, but they are as much a part of Spoon’s experiences as love songs, trucks and beer.

Today they share the album’s first single, “Can’t Fail Me” featuring Cassia Hardy, which arrives with a video directed by Rae Spoon. “Can’t Fail Me” is a song that “embraces the intense clarity and urgency of sharing space with people without knowing how much time there is left,” says Spoon. “I’ve spent years living close to my own death and the deaths of others. Some of the most connected moments I’ve had are when we meet each other without a lot of expectation or withholding. So much living happens during sickness and near death. It's a love song for sick, Disabled and oppressed people who care for and hold each other.

“Often a liminal relationship with time feels like trying to float without flailing, like I do in the accompanying film. The footage is from a shoot on the unceded traditional territory of the T’Sou-ke First Nation (Sooke, BC). The lake is near a hospital I spent a lot of time institutionalized in for cancer complications.

“Cassia Hardy is the featured vocalist. She's a prolific musician from Treaty 6 (Edmonton) that I have a lot of respect for. I wanted to sing with her because of our shared experience of being from a place that is both home and politically/institutionally hostile to us and people we love.

“Releasing this single on my 45th birthday helps me celebrate that I'm still here while acknowledging the combination of privilege and luck that allowed me to live this long. I view my survival is a responsibility to keep trying to make pathways easier for people who have a more difficult time.”

WATCH / SHARE “CAN’T FAIL ME” FT. CASSIA HARDY HERE
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On Assigned Country Singer At Birth, Rae Spoon’s musical influences from traditional country, to pop, gospel, bluegrass, electronic and experimental coalesce into unique combinations. Producer and drummer, Alaska B of Yamantaka Sonic Titan, Pantayo (both short-listed for the Polaris Prize twice) and collaborators Robyn Grey, Evelyn Charlotte Joe, Laurie Torres, Thanya Iyer, Christine Bougie and Gambletron deliver nuanced performances that gel seamlessly with Rae's humour and heartbreak. Vocalists Lydia Persaud, Kimmortal, Cassia Hardy, Theodore Walker, Louie Sanchez, Rosina Kazi, Kue Varo, Lianne Hall and Stewart Legere form a chorus of vocal support that illustrate the visceral power of people coming together to sing for change.

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ASSIGNED COUNTRY SINGER AT BIRTH
1 Country Music Breaks My Heart
2 Assigned Country Singer At Birth
3 Pray
4 Last Cigarette
5 Can't Stop Lightening (feat Kimmortal, Louis Sanchez)
6 All Drugs Safe Legal And Free
7 Ostomy Cowboy
8 Not Too Sick To Love
9 Can't Fail Me (feat Cassia Hardy)
10 Hyper Country (feat Theodore Walker Robinson)

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