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Truce Serve a Sonic Testament to the Metal Gods with New Single, “Holyroller”

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Canadian rock band Truce showcases their high-precision musicianship and stadium-filling sound in a sonic testament to the metal gods with their latest rip-roaring single, “Holyroller.”

The blazing new single from the Moncton, New Brunswick-based band’s meticulously crafted new album, Unentitled, the release is a labour of love accounting for various rock styles — including blues, punk, and doom.

As the band maintains, “we don’t discriminate when it comes to riffs…

“If it rips, it rips.”

Truce’s seamless musical chemistry puts forth the best qualities of all band members, with a tight playing style that is often associated with the highest performing acts in the world.

The blistering new track came together quickly and is inspired by those who talk the talk but don’t follow through on what they say. Truce‘s use of music as a means to connect with audiences based on critical issues is a deliberate choice. “Our songs usually stem from life, death, social injustice, sobriety, current events or whatever else strikes a passionate idea in our hands or mind,” they share.

The visceral lyrics on “Holyroller” are brought to life by the soaring vocal work of singer/guitarist Spencer Davis who pierces the skies with an electric performance worthy of rock legend.

“No time for ya holyroller
For not a word you say
You’ve been singing it wrong for way too long
Truth rising from the shadows
Shines a light on your ways
Righteous pay under guise of God”

Truce is the result of determination and a no-nonsense attitude when it comes to work ethic and artistic compromise. It all began when singer/guitarist Spencer Davis and lead guitarist Red Kang decided to stop covering other bands and perform original music together. Bassist Alex Lemieux had already played with Davis and Kang in other bands, so it was a natural fit. Rounding out the band is a longtime friend of the band and drummer Daniel Mills, who was brought in to keep it all together.

A sense of trust and loyalty are principles to their success not just as friends, but as experimental artists; Truce’s cohesion as a band stems from the strength of their relationship outside of music, and a general, philosophical acceptance of collaborating as bandmates. “We aren’t hobbyists or bandwagon players,” they say. “We’re lifetime, committed musicians.

“It’s extremely comforting to know we can turn any musical corner and be relevant.”

Americana Songstress Francine Honey Lights the Way Through Life With Hopeful & Soaring “Hold On”

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Life can sometimes get so hard that we must make a herculean effort to search for something to help keep us going. Award-winning Canadian singer/songwriter Francine Honey captures this acutely in her searing and soaring new single “Hold On.”

A finalist in the 2021 Blues and Roots Radio International Songwriting Competition, “Hold On” began as a theme song for the 2021 International Network of Personal Meaning (INPM) conference. INPM founder, Canadian psychologist, and professor Dr. Paul T.P. Wong had approached Honey about writing the song based on a poem he had written on the theme: How does one keep going? How does one find joy amidst sadness and grief?

“We met and I took some of his other poems and writings, and we created a theme song for the conference,” Honey says. Wong had included some beautiful lines Honey felt really spoke to the heart, including “we are made of stardust,” and our souls “can reach beyond the stars.”

“Those lines resonated deeply for me given my interest in astrophysics, my work as a healer, and my personal belief that the human spirit is magical and can overcome the biggest of challenges if we keep moving forward and never give up,” she shares. “I loved this song so much, I asked Dr. Wong if I could make a few changes and create my own version to include my belief in the healing power of music, and how a song can have the power to heal a broken heart and take us out of our depths.”

The result is a ballad that begins with piano and then builds rich layers of instrumentation that include an electric guitar, lap steel guitar, mandolin, violin, and harmonica. Honey’s warm, soothing voice threads in and out and soars above showing us, not only through the finely honed lyrics but through highly nuanced emotion, there is a way through the struggle, grief, and pain.

I want to hear that small voice whisper
To my forgotten soul
They say it’s never too late to start again
What breaks your heart will make you whole

Recorded in Nashville at Skinny Elephant Recording, “Hold On” was produced by GRAMMY Award-nominated producer Neilson Hubbard; some of Nashville’s finest musicians who have all played on Honey’s songs since 2018 — including Dan Mitchell, Miranda Lambert’s musical director — contributed the piano and background vocals.

Folk Artist Dany Horovitz Wants to Know if You’re “Free Tonight” with Release of New Single

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Canadian folk singer/songwriter Dany Horovitz soothes the soul with a touching tale of true romance on his delightfully charming new single, “Free Tonight.”

The latest single from the Toronto-based artist’s debut album, Free Times, out April 8th, 2022, Horovitz draws on his literary inspirations and personal experience to deliver music with meaningful messages easily transmissible across social boundaries. As Horovitz puts it, the album — including “Free Tonight” — “is a carefully curated collection of stories about love, loss, and life.”

Driving Horovitz’s eloquently-told stories are his clever instrumentation and robust compositional style — a mix of familiar melodies fused with new ideas. Brimming with guitars, mandolins, and carefully-considered horn placement, “Free Tonight” livens any atmosphere where the greatest singer/songwriters of all time, like Bob Dylan and Billy Joel, are welcome.

Written in Montreal when he was a 19-year-old literary student, “Free Tonight” is one of Horovitz’ earliest and most enduring songs — an unapologetically romantic track intended to convey a simple message best summed up by Horovitz himself: “It is better to keep one truly great person than chase after all the world.”

The sweet innocence in the lyrics brings us back to another time when finding a genuine human connection was less complex.

“Close your eyes and kiss me sweet
And hold me close beneath the sheet.
That instant spark, that endless glance,
The breathless touch of true romance
Keep you and me free forevermore.”

Horovitz’s overall message on “Free Tonight” was crafted to recount a love story that embraces the romantic implications of being emotionally defenseless “with someone who accepts you for who you are, finding comfort and safety through intimacy and vulnerability.

“It’s the feeling of freedom.”

Born in Montreal, Dany Horovitz is no stranger to the Canadian music scene; with his grandfather owning a record store on St Hubert, Horovitz was exposed early and often to the albums of Canadian music legends like Leonard Cohen and Barenaked Ladies.

“Anyone who graduates from McGill with an aspiration to be a songwriter is forever chasing Leonard Cohen,” Horovitz says, who cites Cohen as his biggest lyrical inspiration. He’s quick to add, “No one’s complaining about it, mind you. Everyone’s chasing somebody, so may so you may as chase the best that ever was.”

A FACTOR artist development grant assisted Horovitz in creating and producing the debut album Free Times — which has seen radio play across Canada, the UK, Germany, the United States, the Netherlands, Australia, and more. The latest catchy single is a testament to where Dany Horovitz has been as an artist, and where he’s heading.

SASS JORDAN Announces New Album ‘Bitches Blues’

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Examining the visceral emotional territory of a pandemic and the world’s reeling in its rolling aftermath, multi-Platinum-selling and award-winning artist Sass Jordan readies herself to rock the blues once again with the announcement of her new album, Bitches Blues — available June 3rd, 2022 via Stony Plain Records.

Following rave reviews of her 2020 all-blues offering, Rebel Moon Blues, the Billboard Best Female Rock Vocalist winner mines even more of her expansive talent in the genre to deliver eight new tracks — including originals “Change Is Coming,” “Still The World Goes Round,” and more.

A pioneer of powerful, gritty female-fronted rock, Sass Jordan has worked alongside fellow greats like Aerosmith, the Rolling Stones, AC/DC, and Van Halen, among many more. Born in Britain and raised in Montreal, she launched her solo career with the single “Tell Somebody” from her 1988 debut of the same name, garnering national acclaim and a JUNO Award for Most Promising Female Vocalist. Throughout her career, she’s earned three more nominations for Best Female Vocalist thanks to albums like Racine (1992), Rats (1994), Present (1997), Hot Gossip (2000), Get What You Give (2006), From Dusk Til Dawn (2009) and her side project S.U.N.’;s album, Something Unto Nothing (2011) — along with singles like “Make You A Believer,” “You Don’t Have to Remind Me,” “Sun’s Gonna Rise” and 1992’s “Trust in Me”, a duet with Joe Cocker from the record selling Bodyguard soundtrack.

Jordan starred in the off-Broadway Janis Joplin show, Love Janis, performed The Vagina Monologues in Winnipeg and Toronto, toured the world with A Bowie Celebration, guest-starred on NBC’s Sisters, weighed in as the only female judge on Canadian Idol for all six seasons beginning in 2003, and branded her own lines of wine and spirits, Rebel Moon Whisky and Kick Ass Sass Wine.

In 2017, she released Racine Revisited, recreating her sophomore album with an all-star cast for its 25th anniversary, and celebrated the same milestone for Rats in 2020 with a coloured- vinyl reissue. With Bitches Blues, Sass returns to a genre that’s long been ingrained in her grasp since the start. “There’s been an undercurrent of blues throughout my whole career”, she shares. “The music that I have mostly been drawn to has always had that gritty, rootsy vein running through it, and that’s why I’m enjoying making these records so much”.

As such, anticipate piercingly fierce guitar licks and defiantly driving tempos alongside Sass’ soulful signature rasp and the full backing of a glorious assortment of rambling road dogs, the Champagne Hookers — guitarists Chris Caddell and Jimmy Reid, drummer Cass Pereira, keyboardist Jesse O’Brien, and Steve Marriner on bass and harmonica. Bitches Blues is available June 3, 2022 via Stony Plain Records.

// Bitches Blues – Tracklisting
“Still Alive and Well”
“Chevrolet”
“Even”
“Still The World Goes Round”
“You Gotta Move”
“Sailin Shoes”
“Ain’t No Big Deal On You”
“Change Is Coming”

Singer/Songwriter Duo FRESH BREATH Release “When We First Met” and Announce Cross-Country Tour

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Canadian singer/songwriter duo Fresh Breath take a stroll down memory lane in an autobiographical tale of love and excitement with the splashy new single, “When We First Met.”

The latest single off of Fresh Breath’s dazzling EP, How Did I Get Here, “When We First Met” is part of the collection of six original tracks with hints of creative influence from artists like The Allman Brothers Band and Alanis Alanis Morissette.

The single came together as a regular love song at first, but was quickly repurposed to tell the true story of how this married singer/songwriting duo first met. The idea dawned on Katie Pascoe, one half of Fresh Breath, as she was listening to Paul Simon one day; she began to hum the melody into her voice memos app and decided it was the perfect song to talk about the origin story of her and her husband, the other half of Fresh Breath, Josh Pascoe.

“When We First Met” was recorded under the direction of producer Brett Humber in Kingsville, Ontario at Sound Foundry Studios. The song’s release also celebrates the accompanying official music video that features Katie Pascoe reminiscing and recalling the good times over the years while flipping through a photo album in their home. Refined pop guitars and a catchy percussive rhythm compose a harmonic backbone in “When We First Met” that complements the story of emotional discovery conveyed in the song’s message.

The intimate approach to Fresh Breath’s storytelling is captured in the wholesome lyrics which unapologetically express the kind of love that remains forever young.

“Lying on our backs in the yard watching stars
Laughing ’til the early morning dawn
Nothing’s going to touch us when we’re flying this far
I could stay right here forever in your arms
in your arms”

Katie and Josh Pascoe were not far out of high school and moved within similar friends groups when they began dating. It wasn’t long after they started playing music and honing their craft together, eventually forming Fresh Breath. Over a decade of marriage filled with boundless ventures continue to drive them as individuals and artists. They recently became semi-finalists at the Canadian Independent Music Video Awards 2022 for the song “World Gone Crazy.”

Innovative Jazz Duo The AltoRays Give Rise to the Groove with New Single “Lift”

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The best music creators are one part mathematician, one part mad scientist. They need to know how to get the right sounds out of their instrument, but also delight in mixing all of it up into an exciting, sometimes boundary-pushing concoction. The unbridled joy of skilled experimentation is evident in this, The AltoRays’ groove-driven new release “Lift.”

“It took a pandemic!” Austin, Texas guitarist, composer, and producer Mitch Watkins says, giving silver-lining credit to the two-year, global health crisis for allowing him and Montréal-born-and-raised, now Austin-based vocalist Dianne Donovan enough time in their schedules to finally create their long-planned duo album, Back to the Light, released late last year.

The duo refers to the eight unconventional and highly collaborative songs on Back to the Light as creating a new genre category called ‘ChillJazz.’

“The music is unlike anything either of us have done before,” notes Watkins. “Instead of straight-ahead jazz, we explored every music form that has ever influenced us from Steely Dan to Weather Report, to Philip Glass to groove, R & B and pop.”

Collaborating in what they fondly call ‘Pent-Up House,’ Watkins and Donovan found the great flow of creativity to be unstoppable.

“There was something truly magical about those late-night sessions,” recalls Watkins. “The spirit was uninhibited and we’d try anything and everything.”

“Lift”, the eight-track album’s lead single, is an intriguing, ear-catching combo of those multi-influences. It’s an upwardly mobile trip into the atmosphere, riding on space-age synth melodies over a smooth, funky bass line, Watkins’ super tasty guitar work, and Donovan’s lovely and wistful, choral ooh-aah-ehh-aahs.

“‘Lift’ reflects the overall feel of the album as a cosmic, transcendent journey that you just might want to dance to,” says Watkins. “Plus, this one is a lot of fun to sing along to, as you needn’t bother with words just follow the band.”

The vocals on “Lift” and throughout Back to the Light are mostly multi-layered and wordless, creating their own soundscape.

“This is the freest I’ve ever been as a vocalist,” says Donovan. “I got to explore the multi ranges of my voice and the textures, from an all-hummed tune to all-whispered singing, to animal sounds.”

In addition to Donovan’s vocals and the instrumentation provided by Watkins, drummer Tom Brechtlein (Wayne Shorter, Robben Ford, Al Dimeola), pianist Sean Giddings (Christopher Cross) saxophonist Rob Lockart (Arturo Sandoval, Terence Trent D’Arby, Paul Anka) and percussionist, Dr. Tom Burritt also contributed their significant talents to the recording.

As a creative duo, they’re gleefully pushing right through the jazz envelope, but Watkins and Donovan both have seriously impressive backgrounds that eventually brought them together.

McAllen, Texas-born Watkins has performed all over the world highlighted by four tours with Leonard Cohen, including Cohen’s final tour. He was a member of Lyle Lovett’s Large Band for eleven years and has performed with Jerry Jeff Walker, Barry Wallace, and numerous others. The Austin Jazz Society Hall of Fame member has released 5 solo albums and has produced albums for the likes of Abra Moore, Bob Schneider, and Jerry Jeff Walker.

Montréaler, Edmontonian, and now Austinite Dianne Donovan started out as a background vocalist for Moe Berg’s facecrime, a precursor band to The Pursuit of Happiness, while she was studying jazz. She went on to sing at some of Canada and the U.S.’s most prestigious venues with Gary Guthma’s Tribute to Harry James show and has been featured on numerous radio and television shows including “Tommy Banks Jazz”. Donovan’s first album Yes and No was produced by the great Canadian jazz icon, Banks. A second solo album A Musing garnered great reviews from the likes of Wayne Arthurson of Vue Weekly, saying it has “songs that are the epitome of smooth, sensuous jazz, offering solace but leaving behind a lingering simmer.” Now making Austin her home, Donovan can be heard performing with her own combos and as one third of the vocal jazz trio, The Beat Divas.

In addition to creating music, Donovan spins it on the airwaves. She’s an accomplished daily radio show host and producer of “Classical Austin” for KFMA Radio. Additionally, she currently produces a weekly vocal jazz show, “Voices in Jazz” for CKUA Radio in Edmonton, interviewing a variety of jazz greats from Bobby McFerrin to Shirley Horn.

With all that in mind, Watkins and Donovan’s exciting and experimental collaborative album has the polished shine that can only result from two artists with deep and varied backgrounds.

“This is a groovin’ journey that sings about coming out of the shadows,” says Watkins.

Back to the light, indeed. Thanks to The AltoRays.

Canadian Music Hall of Famer MYLES GOODWYN Releases “For Ukraine”

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Multi-award-winning and Canadian Music Hall of Famer singer, guitarist, writer, and producer Myles Goodwyn is raising awareness and support “For Ukraine” with the release of his poignant new single — available now.

The leader of the multi-Platinum-selling rock band April Wine was inspired to pen the track after seeing the country’s suffering amidst attacks from Russia.

“Like the rest of the world, I’m witness to the devastation and suffering caused by the needless war in Ukraine,” Goodwyn shares. “This painfully sad and tragic situation inspired me to write this song with the hope that it might encourage people to help the citizens of Ukraine who are so desperately in need of our help.”

As distinctive and immediately recognizable as his songwriting skills are prolific, Goodwyn’s vocals and guitar are joined by Bruce Dixon on bass guitar and Scott Ferguson on drum programming. “For Ukraine” arrives ahead of Goodwyn’s forthcoming collection of all-new original songs, Long Pants, set for release this summer.

In addition to Goodwyn and the other members of April Wine being inducted into the Canadian Music Hall Of Fame in 2010, he received the prestigious East Coast Music Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008 and the SOCAN National Achievement Award in 2002.

The ‘Myles Goodwyn and Friends Of The Blues’ album earned him a JUNO nomination for Blues Recording of the Year, and won the ECMA award for Blues Recording of the Year. The following year Myles released ‘Friends of The Blues 2, ‘on the way to the album being well-received and winning another ECMA award for Blues Album Of The Year.

In 2016, he released his memoir named, Just Between You and Me, which became an instant seller on the Globe and Mail’s Non-Fiction List. His second book, Elvis and Tiger — this time a work of fiction — was published in 2018.

Myles Goodwyn’s new album, Long Pants, is available this Summer, 2022.

Acoustic Rocker BLAESER Embraces the Constant of Change with New “Potential Paths” Single

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If change is the only thing that doesn’t change, then resistance to change is certainly futile. This is the universal truth rising Saskatoon acoustic rocker Blaeser explores in his thought-provoking new single, “Potential Paths” — available now.

Even though the choices we make and the paths we walk are unique to each of us, we all share the fact that change is unavoidable and can happen when we least expect it. For Blaeser — Taylor (T.J.) Lang — the global pandemic that changed everything for all of us two years ago is also what launched the creation of “Potential Paths.”

“On March 10, 2020, I was prepping to play a half-time St Paddy’s Saddledome show with my former band, Celtic rock group Crack the Lens, to 13,000 people, and had just put down a deposit on a Toronto apartment,” Blaeser remembers. “Two days later, all of that was gone as the world closed down. It really got me thinking of how quickly things change, all the paths we never get to walk, all the people we never meet — or leave behind, for that matter — as circumstances change our paths through life.”

There were a thousand variations of the man that I am today
All those endless iterations that I had to leave behind along the way

Those old “iterations” of ourselves are often left behind at a crossroads or a fork in the road we may not have seen coming. “‘Potential Paths’ directly references big events in my life where everything suddenly changed course,” notes Blaeser. “All those younger, more innocent versions of me had to disappear along the way to who I am now, just as my current self will disappear to continue that journey.”

Being open-minded and open-hearted to those course corrections is one of the takeaways from this thoughtful, melodically-memorable rock song which is also the lead single from Blaeser’s forthcoming and second full-length album, An Audio Guide to Introspection — set for release this Summer.

“10 songs of darkness and light, and the paths I did and didn’t take,” is Blaeser’s top line for the new collection recorded, mixed, and mastered by Casey Lewis at Calgary’s Echo Base Studio last October through December.

“The title came from a Twitter conversation with Dan Mangan where I said that his More or Less album was like ‘an audio guide to introspection’,” recalls Blaeser. Mangan is a big influence on Blaeser’s songwriting, in addition to other erudite and reflective Canadian songwriters like Dallas Green and Gord Downie.

“My music, currently, is equal parts Tragically Hip, fingerstyle guitar virtuoso Jon Gomm, and City & Colour,” he says, adding, “If all I’ve got is one guitar, I want to get as much out of it as I can in terms of fingerstyle techniques, and if all I have is one voice, I want to make every word meaningful and memorable.”

Blaeser comes by his devotion to artistic innovation and improvement honestly after a lifetime immersed in music. Born in Saskatchewan and raised near Calgary, the naturally talented, multi-instrumentalist had worked his way through learning piano, drums, saxophone, keyboards, bass guitar, and then electric guitar by the end of school.

“By the time I graduated, I had bought a crappy old electric and was jamming power chords in my first band with some high school friends,” he reminisces. “Our first show was in a small-town coffee shop, which we filled but where we absolutely did not fit the vibe. Video exists of this event, unfortunately.”

As he worked his way toward a bachelor’s degree in Linguistics from the University of Calgary and began his professional life afterward, music wove in and out of the picture for Lang as he went through — you guessed it — life changes. A one-year move to Vancouver in his mid-twenties included his first busking experiences.

“My first busking sessions in Vancouver were notorious failures, with my very first donation being a fruit and cheese platter from the Starbucks down the street.”

In 2012, Lang became the bass player for Crack The Lens and rediscovered the joy of making music which, in turn, ignited more songwriting and finding his solo artistic voice as Blaeser.

“For me, songwriting is about the little details, the turns of phrases that change a generic tune into an emotional punch that sits with you. The ones that bring the whole thing down to earth and pull away a curtain on something that’s been right in front of you. Connections and complexities.”

Encouraging connection through his songs and performances while giving everyone something to reflect on is page one in Blaeser’s 2022 planner.

“Potential Paths” from the forthcoming An Audio Guide to Introspection is available now.

Morcheeba Announce Ontario Tour Dates For 2022

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In March 2020, Skye and Ross of Morcheeba were nearing the end of another long tour – they can go years without visiting the same country twice – and the diary suddenly emptied. The pair are used to spending most of each year on the road. Once, they’d only play countries where their record company had an outpost. Now, they can see from the streaming platforms where people are listening and travel there to play.

“Cape Town was amazing,” remembers Ross of their 2018 South African gig. “We played at the beautiful Kirstenbosch Gardens in Cape Town with Table Mountain as the perfect backdrop. We had 5,000 people all singing along. North Africa, central America too. We try to get around the world as much as possible and love playing new places.”

Tourbus parked, they began writing what became their tenth album ‘Blackest Blue’. By December 2020, they’d finished 10 lustrous new songs touching on disintegrating familial and romantic relationships, love and kinship, the world around and the consolations of cannabis. On tour, Morcheeba is Skye (vocals), Ross (guitar), Dom Pipkin (keys), Skye’s husband Steve Gordon (bass) and Skye’s eldest son Jaega Mckenna-Gordon (drums). In the studio it’s mostly just Skye and Ross – he plays guitar, lap steel, bass, keyboards and percussion. Skye started playing the cello during lockdown, whenever she had a little time to herself. “It’s an instrument I’ve always wanted to learn”. Ross encouraged her to play it on the album and she does on ‘Falling Skies’.

Ross found lockdown idyllic at first. Writing on an acoustic guitar, sending ideas between his and Skye’s home studios in south London and Surrey. Spending time with his wife and kids, reading books about forests, psychedelic plants and quantum physics. “I had more time to play guitar,”

he says happily. “It put me back in touch with feelings I hadn’t had since I was a teenager. When I started playing as a kid, it was a solitary thing, a meditation to transcend whatever shitty time I was going through”.

The duo let go, writing and playing what they felt like. “I had a poem I’d written about my free diving experience in Thailand,” Skye says about lead single Sounds of Blue. “‘Oh Oh Yeah’ is a song about getting stoned. Back in the day we didn’t think about singles and the ‘need to hear the chorus in 30 seconds’. You’d have seven, eight-minute songs. So we went for it.”

“We’re always trying to find a sound that already should have existed but didn’t,” explains Ross. “A song that went missing sometime in 1969, an obscure Morricone-esque soundtrack… Skye sounds like sweet molasses, so we wanted to mix that with a gravelly male voice as a contrast.”

Falling for the rich, traditional yet modern quality of American folk group The Barr Brothers after seeing them live a couple of times, Ross contacted singer Brad Barr, sharing a few ideas before alighting on a sketch of a gorgeous piano ballad that became ‘Say It’s Over’. Brad came with the first two lines, and said “…it is fair to say it’s a breakup song…”

Then Ross was listening to the radio and heard a song so good he had to pull the car over to Shazam it. “It sounded like an old Mississippi blues record!” It was singer-songwriter Duke Garwood. Ross enlisted him for the closing duet ‘The Edge of the World’. “Duke’s voice is very deep and rich which suited it perfectly. We wanted that kind of voodoo vibe,” Ross enthuses. “He makes most of his records in the Mojave Desert with Mark Lanegan but he’s from Hastings.”

‘The Moon’ is a cover originally by Irena Žilić, a Croatian singer-songwriter. Ross fell in love with the song when they shared a bill in Zagreb with Irena and asked her permission to cover it. Skye added another verse to it and that is where the album title ‘Blackest Blue’ came from.

Perhaps Skye’s gloriously unruffled vocal tone means some people don’t catch the darkness in lyrics like; “Put your knife away, I’ve already cut my heart out”, from the album opener or the despairing; “Ain’t gonna lie, feel like I wanna die”, from ‘Killed Our Love’. There’s plenty of hurt that walks with the hope when Skye sings.

The band saw intense protesting up close in Chile, first stop on their 2019 south American tour. Skye and Steve were sightseeing in Santiago on the afternoon of the gig, moving through the estallido social, a noisy but good-natured demonstration against social inequality. As day dimmed into night, the protest darkened into rioting. Peaceful banging of pots and pans became soldiers firing rubber bullets and tear gas at protestors. There were already too many fans queuing at the venue to cancel the gig. And no way to get there but on foot, through the fires and riot police, past the burned-out buses blocking the roads, even though Skye’s son was recovering from a broken ankle. Weeks later, he’d get stopped by security at Gatwick when they found traces of explosives from the riot on his crutches. “I walked with my dress over my face,” Skye says; “our local rep was obviously panicked, which made me even more nervous. My heart was racing, my eyes sore from the tear gas.”

Despite the chaos, the gig went well, charged by a strange and surreal energy. By the end, all the roads around the venue were shut and filled with armoured vehicles, so the band played on, taking requests from the fans, then everyone hung out until it was safe to leave. It reminded them that, whatever happens in the world outside, there’s nothing like the healing power of music to bring us all together.

When Skye was writing lyrics for ‘Falling Skies’, she was thinking about her family, Black Lives Matter and the very white village they’ve made a home in. “I don’t know if it was paranoia,” she says; “but I looked at people and wondered, do you hate black people? It made me a lot more aware of where I was living. Having chats with the other black family in

the village, wondering if we should move somewhere that had more diversity.”

Skye was brought up by white parents in East London, supposedly temporarily, but she was never able to go back to her biological mum. “I was six weeks old when I came to my foster parents.” Skye had a happy childhood, although growing up in a white family made her aware of race in a way that most children never are. “I always felt like apologising for being black,” she remembers. “Wanting not to alienate white people. I was a quiet child growing up. Studying fashion helped to bring me out of myself.”

It was 1994 when Ross met east Londoner Skye at a party, she ended up dating his mate who mentioned that Skye could sing. Skye was not happy about it. “Why did you tell them I could sing?!” Her only experience was a local singing class, some backing vocals in a funk band, and one try at busking in Covent Garden. She wasn’t ready to sing into a microphone, or in front of people – but it was a chance remark that changed their lives. Ross and his brother Paul wrote and recorded their debut single ‘Trigger Hippie’ with Skye which effectively started the group Morcheeba as a trio and got them an indie record deal. They released the acclaimed debut album ‘Who Can You Trust?’ in 1996 and inevitably started playing live with a first gig at The Jazz Cafe in London.

Over the next few years the band went global with ‘Big Calm’ (1998), ‘Fragments of Freedom’ (2000) and ‘Charango’ (2002) and the brilliance of signature songs ‘The Sea’ and ‘Rome Wasn’t Built In A Day’. They produced an album for Talking Heads legend David Byrne, got film soundtrack work from Morcheeba fan and Oscar-winning director Steven Soderbergh and in 2003 were the first western band to do a full tour of China. But Skye was ousted from the band that year when Ross’ brother DJ/producer Paul wanted to change direction, and she didn’t feature on ‘The Antidote’ (2005) or ‘Dive Deep’ (2008).

Meanwhile, Ross moved to LA in 2006 and built a studio in the Hollywood Hills for recording with Morcheeba and soundtrack productions. “I spent a lot of time out in the desert taking psychedelics and living out some acid rock fantasy,” he concedes. After releasing two solo albums ‘Mind How You Go’ and ‘Keeping Secrets’, Skye agreed to return to Morcheeba in 2009. The albums ‘Blood Like Lemonade’ (2010) and ‘Head Up High’ (2013) followed. Paul then left in 2015 turning the band into a duo.

Since then the pair have become closer and they got back to work, first making an album as Skye & Ross, then ‘Blaze Away’ (2018) as Morcheeba. “The connection we have now is great,” Skye reveals. “We understand each other, and we’re both hard working. Our agent might say, ‘oh it’s a gruelling schedule, sometimes five gigs in a row…’ and we’ll both immediately say YES!”

Ultimately, “Blackest Blue is about finding a way through the darkest of times and emerging the other side changed but intact.”

Morcheeba Ontario Dates
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2022
PHOENIX CONCERT THEATRE – TORONTO, ON

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
ALGONQUIN COMMONS THEATRE – OTTAWA, ON

My Next Read: “SURRENDER: 40 Songs, One Story” By Bono

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Bono—artist, activist, and the lead singer of Irish rock band U2—has written a memoir called ‘SURRENDER: 40 Songs, One Story’ and it comes out November 1, 2022: honest and irreverent, intimate and profound, Surrender is the story of the remarkable life he’s lived, the challenges he’s faced, and the friends and family who have shaped and sustained him.

Bono reads an extract from his book in an animation which illustrates an extract from the chapter titled ‘Out of Control’, in which he tells the story of starting to write U2’s first single on 10th May 1978 – his 18th birthday, exactly 44 years ago today.

“When I started to write this book, I was hoping to draw in detail what I’d previously only sketched in songs. The people, places, and possibilities in my life. Surrender is a word freighted with meaning for me. Growing up in Ireland in the seventies with my fists up (musically speaking), it was not a natural concept. A word I only circled until I gathered my thoughts for the book. I am still grappling with this most humbling of commands. In the band, in my marriage, in my faith, in my life as an activist. Surrender is the story of one pilgrim’s lack of progress. . . With a fair amount of fun along the way.” — Bono

As one of the music world’s most iconic artists and the cofounder of the organizations ONE and (RED), Bono’s career has been written about extensively. But in Surrender, it’s Bono who picks up the pen, writing for the first time about his remarkable life and those he has shared it with. In his unique voice, Bono takes us from his early days growing up in Dublin, including the sudden loss of his mother when he was fourteen, to U2’s unlikely journey to become one of the world’s most influential rock bands, to his more than twenty years of activism dedicated to the fight against AIDS and extreme poverty. Writing with candor, self-reflection, and humor, Bono opens the aperture on his life—and the family, friends, and faith that have sustained, challenged, and shaped him.

Surrender’s subtitle, 40 Songs, One Story, is a nod to the book’s forty chapters, which are each named after a U2 song. Bono has also created forty original drawings for Surrender, which will appear throughout the book.