In the vein of Sound Man and The Soundtrack of My Life, a lyrical, warmhearted, and inspirational memoir from the founder of Island Records about his astonishing life and career helping to bring reggae music to the world stage and working with Bob Marley, U2, Grace Jones, Cat Stevens, and many other icons.
Chris Blackwell, like the paradigm-shifting artists he came to support over his sixty-plus years in the music business, never took the conventional route. He grew up between Jamaica and London, crossing paths with Ian Fleming, Noel Coward, and Errol Flynn. After being expelled from an elite British school for rebellious behavior in 1954 at age seventeen, he moved back to Jamaica, and within five years, founded Island Recordsāthe company that would make an indelible mark on music, shifting with the times, but always keeping its core identity intact.
The Islander is the story of Blackwell and his cohorts at Island Records, who time and again, identified, nurtured, and broke out musicians who had been overlooked by bigger record labels, including Steve Winwood, Nick Drake, John Martyn, and Cat Stevens. After an impromptu meeting with Bob Marley and his bandmates in 1972, Blackwell decided to fund and produce their groundbreaking album Catch a Fire. Heād go on to work with Marley over the rest of his career, remain his close friend, and continually champion Jamaican culture and reggae music.
In the ensuing years, Blackwell worked with U2, Grace Jones, the B-52s, Tom Waits, Robert Palmer, Tom Tom Club, and many other groundbreaking artists. He also opened the first Jamaican boutique hotel, on the property of Ian Flemingās former home, Goldeneye, where all the James Bond books were written.
Blackwell is a legendary as well as deeply humble raconteur, and reading The Islander is like spending a day with the most interesting man in the world.
When Leeās record label, Justin Time, brought the concept of covering Dionās songbook to her, she reacted quite decisively. “I said no,” says the JUNO-winning singer. “I listened to three minutes of explanation, and I said no again. And I said no every time for days.”
“Then I had a little bit of time to think about it.”
Much like Dion has reinterpreted songs that other artists have recorded and released first like Eric Carmen, Jennifer Rush, Cyndi Lauper, Patti Labelle – the list goes on – the jazz genre has a rich history of reimagining popular music as well.
Still, how could Lee make some of Dionās classics her own?
It took a visit to New York to see family and an introduction to the inventive music of a band called Snarky Puppy to really sway Leeās mind on the matter. The Grammy-winning collective has spent years mashing and mixing up jazz, rock, world music, and R’n’B into their own wildly creative musical concoctions.
Lee now had her foundation to approach the songs improvisationally and enlisted her close collaborator, pianist, and producer Taurey Butler to dream up new arrangements. “Taurey came with wonderful boards, and I would drop in hints or thoughts about what I felt strongest about,” says Lee. “I know I was given the birth of freedom in the recordings.”
There was one very important contributor missing though. This would be the first album Lee would record without her husband and guitarist Richard Ring, who passed away from cancer in 2018. Still, while creating Because You Loved Me, Lee felt Ringās spirit in the process.
“The old guard is on the record, we’ve done so many engagements, traveled, and Richard was a part of that forever, so having them there embodied the fact that he was still among the group,ā she explains. āIt was the total support of feeling his presence. Every tune that I approached was with him in memorial, him in my thoughts, in my vision of the tune.”
Connecting with the lyrics in the songs through her own loss, Leeās loving memories of her husband fueled her unique, redefining approach to the most heartfelt Dion classics. “I’m always going to be dealing with my loss of Richard,ā she says. āSo he was always the crux of my focus, especially the tune āMy Heart Will Go On.ā He was the muse to my renditions of the tunes. āBecause You Loved Meā definitely embodied his presence in my life.”
In 1994 and 1995, Lee was honoured with the Top Canadian Female Jazz Vocalist Award presented by Jazz Report magazine. She has toured internationally and has performed with many jazz notables including Clark Terry, Bill Mayes, Herb Ellis, Red Mitchell, Milt Hinton, Oliver Jones, and Terry Clarke. Lee is also a Dora Mavor Moore Award-winning stage actress, a celebrated educator, and an author of the children’s book Nana What Do You Say? inspired by her song of the same title.
Canadian singer/songwriter Deborah Lynn channels her country music influences to tell an enchanting tale about letting go of the past with the release of her touching new single, āSomething Good.ā
Foregoing the traditional take on despair in love songs, Deborah Lynn frames āSomething Goodā as a bright reflection on personal growth and overcoming the negative obstacles in life. āThis is a song about letting go of the past, learning from it, and knowing that if you are patient enough, good things will come your way,ā she shares.
Deborah Lynn effortlessly shines with her uplifting vocal presence accompanied by textured guitar work to provide a heartwarming sensibility to the song overall. The expert production work is reflected in the expertly refined sonics and unlocks the true potential of āSomething Goodā as an anthem for moving forward in life toward greener pastures.
The songwriting experience on Deborah Lynnās latest single is different from the start. āI tend to focus on the painful moments of my past when writing songs,ā she reveals. āMy producer wanted to focus on something with a positive message.ā
With that shift, the warm tone embedded within the harmonies on āSomething Goodā is complemented by the meaningful message in the lyrics.
āI must have done something right
To be where I am today
Wouldnāt change it if I could
Iād do it all the same
The road that I was on, led me astray
Something good finally came my way.ā
Born in Stirling, Ontario, Canada, Deborah Lynn has been honing her singing and songwriting skills from a young age. After years of being consumed by entrepreneurship post-college, a fateful trip to Nashville, Tennessee, would reignite the country music spark buried within. This moment would kick off Deborah Lynnās next series of adventures, who quickly rose to #1 on the Canadian Indie Country Countdown with her debut single, āRevive a Ghost.ā
Deborah Lynnās Josie Award nomination for Best Female Country Song is only the latest indication of the sensational response from audiences everywhere to a genuine artist looking to push the boundaries within country music.
Deborah Lynnās inspirational new single āSomething Goodā is available on all music platforms.
A good rule of thumb: The type of dude who has posters of babes on his wall is often not the type of dude you want to date. And Los Angeles-based pop diva Kayla DiVenere sings like someone whoās learned this lesson the hard way on her searing new single, āMegan Fox.ā
āWhy canāt you be more like herā
Your famous last words
And if weāre just taking turns
Well, Iāll go first:
You can go and get a new girlfriendā
The songās overarching theme of a talk-sing āargumentā over sparse beats is interrupted by interludes of melody, allowing the listener to experience the narratorās deep sorrow over being unfairly compared to a Hollywood actress, as well as her stomping, justified rage. āTry my best, but I always just end up fuckinā/ Stressed Iām not tryna be your second best.ā
Itās a song that reflects with unflinching honesty the prison of impossible female beauty standards. āāMegan Foxā is a fierce twist on the frustration of never feeling good enough in a relationship,ā DiVenere said. āIt outlines the insecurities of constantly being surrounded by unachievable standards of perfection.ā
DiVenere penned the song based on a wounding personal experience. āI felt like no matter what I did, I could never please this person, be good enough for them or ever give them what they wanted, no matter how hard I tried,ā she shares. āI poured buckets of my frustration out that day and wrote a mega-empowering song that I later jammed out to in my car and. let me say, it was better than therapy.ā
She adds that no one should have to be in that predicament of feeling not good enough in a relationship.
āAnd if you do, you can yell, āYou can go and get a new girlfriend!ā just like I did.ā
Well-known for her roles on hit shows such as āLaw & Orderā, Hulu’s āLove Victor,ā and Hulu’s “Light as a Featherā ā not to mention feature films such as āUnder the Silver Lakeā ā Kayla DiVenere is a teenager enjoying incredible success in her budding music career since bursting onto the scene in 2018 with her debut, āYouth.ā
At more than 1+ million streams across Spotify alone, the songstress is making an indelible mark on the industry with her innate talent, songwriting ability, acting, and showmanship. Her last single with a celebrity name, āJustin Bieber,ā about teenage fandom, garnered 1.5 million views on YouTube, and her star just keeps on rising.
A deluxe visual treasure trove of photographs, letters, diaries and more from the iconic fashion model, photographer, wife of George Harrison and Eric Clapton, and one of the most famous muses of the 20th century Patti Boyd releases My Life in Pictures on October 4, 2022.
Pattie Boyd (born 1944) was at the epicenter of the London music and pop-culture scene in the 1960s and 1970s. Pattie Boyd: My Life in Pictures features over 300 photographs and artworks, with Boyd sharing full and intimate access to her personal archive for the first time. Former wife of George Harrison and Eric Clapton, Boyd is famously the inspiration for Harrisonās āSomethingā and Claptonās āLaylaā and āWonderful Tonight.ā Boydās love of photography developed around the time of her marriage to Harrison. She documented their life together, and later also her second marriage to Clapton, capturing a vast archive of images not just as part of two of the most famous marriages of all time, but also documenting their close friends and contemporaries, including Twiggy, David Bailey, Mick Jagger, Billy Preston and the Beatles.
Boydās archive also includes letters from her marriages and from friends, including John and Yoko. It includes diary entries, artifacts and artworks, most famously the original Layla album cover painting by Emile Frandsen. It features extensive photographs from her early modeling career for Vogue and Vanity Fair among other publications, giving a fascinating snapshot into the sea change that occurred in the modeling industry from the postwar demure black-and-white approach to the psychedelic, short-skirt, swinging ā60s. It includes portraits and photographs of Boyd taken by some of the greatest photographers of the 20th century, such as David Bailey, Eric Swayne, Terence Donovan, Robert Freeman and Robert Whitaker. The pictorial feast is further animated by Boydās accompanying stories and recollections.
As a four-time Emmy-nominated actress, Emmy-winning producer, and the first transgender woman of color to have a leading role on a scripted TV show, Laverne Cox uses her voice to amplify the message of moving beyond societal expectations to live more authentically. She wears a triple-threat original design, featuring a deep red tulle gown gracefully draped over a dazzling, silver metallic bodysuit. Her hair is swept into glamorous Hollywood waves while dramatic makeup completes her look. You can get it here.
Following this monthās release of their new album EAR CANDY via Misfits Records in collaboration with Demented Punk, anime-meets-NY punk rock collective OSAKA POPSTAR are excited to reveal the animated video for its rocking and infectiously sweet original single, āLost & Found.ā
Written, produced, and directed by OSAKA POPSTARās frontman and longtime Misfits and Ramones collaborator John Cafiero, the cartoonized video for āLost & Foundā stars actor/comedian/musician Fred Armisen (Portlandia, SNL, Documentary Now) as the main character ā a lost and lonely soul seeking out an unattainable love, all while paying homage to Saturday morning breakfast cereals, the Partridge Family, the Archies, and the Monkees ā all of which are artists OSAKA POPSTAR cover throughout EAR CANDY.
Find an exclusive Q&A with Cafiero below outlining the process of creating the video.
EAR CANDY is fronted and produced by Cafiero (vocals), with Dean Rispler (The Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black) on guitar and bass, Jon Wurster (Superchunk, The Mountain Goats, Bob Mould) on drums, and features guest backing vocals from indie rocker Colleen Green. It is available now across all digital platforms and on CD and Limited-Edition candy swirl ābiteā vinyl (as seen in the above cover art and included featured in the āLost & Foundā video). Its CD and vinyl versions also include a download card with MP3s and a digital full-color 32-page variant first issue of the upcoming āSweetie Candy Vigilanteā comic book exclusive to this release. Get your copy now at https://store.osakapopstar.com.
OSAKA POPSTAR recently unveiled a deluxe expanded and remastered edition of their debut album, OSAKA POPSTAR AND THE AMERICAN LEGENDS OF PUNK, which features a backing lineup of punk rock legends Jerry Only (The Misfits), Marky Ramone (Ramones), Dez Cadena (Black Flag) and Ivan Julian (Richard Hell & The Voidoids) along with a special guest appearance from the late outsider music icon Daniel Johnston. The band followed up its release with a collaboration with Grammy Award-winning artist āWeird Alā Yankovic for Record Store Day Black Friday 2021 to release a āblistering, accordion-tinged coverā (Rolling Stone) exclusive 12-inch split, BEAT ON THE BRAT which immediately sold out and was listed as one of the Top 5 and Top 10 Record Store Day releases across several notable media outlets including iHeart Radio News.
Q&A WITH OSAKA POPSTARās JOHN CAFIERO
ā Congrats on creating the āLost & Foundā animated video, which you wrote, produced, and directed. What inspired you to take this approach and why do you feel itās the best visual to represent the song?Ā
āThanks. Iām a bit of an art junkie, and over time, have amassed an extensive roster of surreal characters in the Osaka Popstar universe. I like to weave them into the fabric of what we do, and animation is an excellent outlet for that. In fact, to date, every Osaka Popstar music video has been fully animated. The irony here being that initially, I was planning to do this particular video in live-action, but the more time passed, it eventually evolved into a fully animated video.
āAlthough I have a background producing and directing live-action, I’m a former animator as well, and I’ve always loved the medium. There are no limits, no boundaries, and anything can happen beyond the confines of reality. I love making the impossible possible and spinning things into surreality tends to be a lot of fun.
āI think the video distills the core of the song into terms everyone can relate to, but in a fun and entertaining way, while simultaneously capturing the vibe of not only the song itself but Osaka Popstar generally ā and the new record. Iām thrilled with how it turned out, and I hope others enjoy it as much as I do when they see it. So far, the reaction from those whoāve seen it has been amazing, and the guys in the band were blown away by it.ā
ā In creating the video, were there any challenges and how did you handle them?Ā
āSome of the challenges were ensuring my key concepts would be realized within the storyline, and also ensuring we captured not only the likenesses, but the essence of everyone that was transported into animated form. Not to mention, wrapping it all by the recordās release date, while living up to my high standards and expectations. Iām genuinely passionate about everything I do, and I believe that’s the key to making it all gel in the end. The process is fun, but itās hard work and involves a lot of hours and extreme attention to detail. I tend to be relentless in ensuring the end result lives up to its full potential, and I think we accomplished that with this video, in a fairly quick turnaround time too.ā
ā The video stars the animated Fred Armisen. Can you tell us about how you know Fred and what inspired you to ask him to use his likeness in the video?Ā
āFred and I have mutual friends and met briefly at the first Misfits reunion show in 2016. On the flight home, we ran into each other at the gate in the airport. As fate would have it, our seats were assigned right next to each other on the flight, and weāve kept in touch ever since. Iāve always liked his work, and we have a lot of common interests. His favorite bands are my favorite bands, (bands who would turn out to become an integral part of my life and career), and weāve both been huge John Waters fans from an age many would consider too young to have seen his films. John jokingly once told me he could have been arrested for me seeing Pink Flamingos when I did!
āThe basic premise of the video was inspired by real-life events! I was waiting in my car parked outside of a supermarket in NYC, and a guy in a business suit passing by, stopped at the picture glass window of the storefront and, while gesturing to someone inside, started doing all these absolutely crazy and ridiculous dances ā and Iām talking full throttle! I had no idea what he was up to, but I was mesmerized by it. It turned out that he was trying to get the attention of a girl working the checkout line. Making it more bizarre is that he was well dressed and very reserved looking; someone youād never expect to behave that way. He was so over the top, it was absolutely absurd and surreal, like a scene from a movie. As I was watching it, I thought… this is my music video⦠and I immediately had Fred in mind to play the main character. Starting with that basic premise, I embellished on it, and developed it into what you see.
āWhile Fred has done a lot of incredible work, and given a lot of amazing performances, it was his role in an episode of the IFC series āDocumentary Nowā called the Globesman, that would impress on me that he was the perfect person to play this character.
āFred and I ran into each other when I was in the process of mixing Ear Candy. I played him a rough mix of the song and told him the concept I had in mind. At the time I was considering shooting this as a live-action music video. He dug it and immediately agreed. When I later switched gears and decided to do the video fully animated, I still wanted Fred to star in the role. I explained and asked if he remained interested. He was, and the rest is history.ā
ā Are you able to tell us what Fred has said about the video after he saw it?Ā
āFred said that he loved the video and thought the song was great. I was thrilled. Fred was the first person to see it.ā
ā Can you give us a few sentences about the storyline of the video?Ā
āA lost and lonely soul wanders through a world of faceless people and things, but the one constant dynamic he sees everywhere he goes are the vibrant ads for his favorite red licorice. He falls for the poster girl who appears in the ad campaign, thinking sheās beyond his reach, if not beyond reality⦠Until he wanders past the storefront window of a supermarket and spots her working the register inside. He sets out to win her over in his own, goofy, but charming way. All the while Osaka Popstar appears in animated form, popping up in the most unlikely of places, providing the soundtrack to the storyāwhich features cameos from the Osaka Popstar Devil Dogs, the Kawaii Black Metal Trio, Sweetie Candy Vigilante, and more, including homages to Saturday morning breakfast cereals, the Partridge Family, the Archies, and the Monkees. The latter three bands all having a kinship with Osaka Popstar in that they reach beyond the confines of the average band, existing in a universe of their own, while simultaneously existing in ours.ā
In his much-anticipated and latest album focusing on the inequities of life in North America housed in his most musically eclectic collection to date, Canadian artist, songwriter, and producer David Bray releases his new album, Land of Extremes.
The 18-track LP features the newly unveiled single, āSome Day (feat. Lorraine Reid),ā and is the final installment in the Toronto-based musicianās āCrowded Isolationā trilogy of three separate releases. Including Land of Extremeās predecessors ā 2016ās Night Rains and 2018ās Crowded Isolation ā the project has been in the works for more than a decade and ranges musically from contemporary R&B to Soul, rock, and folk.
As a poet and a storyteller, David Brayās unique artistic vision has established him as one of Canadian musicās leading songwriters. Approaching his craft more like an author than that of a normal tunesmith, the quality of the words and more traditional concept of literacy enhancing context and story structure are key goals for Bray.
As such, his compelling lyrical flair combined with an ear for musical hooks has been hailed by critics and industry veterans alike. With his work airing on 100+ stations around the world, in addition to online streaming sites, itās clear Bray never compromises on the superb infectious music which is the bedrock of the collection.
Land of Extremes has multi-JUNO Award-winning and Platinum-selling producer and composer Chris Birkett (Steve Earle, Sinead OāConnor) on board as associate producer and engineer.
Helping flesh out his songs are some of Brayās illustrious friends ā including Bill King (Linda Ronstadt, Pointer Sisters, Martha Reeves, Janis Joplin), Garth Hudson (The Band), Justin Abedin (Jacksoul, Nelly Furtado), Colin Linden (Bruce Cockburn, Bob Dylan), David Bradstreet, John Dymond, Gary Craig (Bruce Cockburn, Jann Arden), Paul Reddick, and The Extreme Horns that are Gene Hardy, Christian Overton, and William Sperandei ā as well as Motown legend Bob Babbitt (Marvin Gaye, Gladys Knight, Stevie Wonder), who passed away after recording with Bray, plus Brayās longtime partner and collaborator, Lorraine Reid.
From his early work with Daniel Lanois, Eugene Martynec, and John Capek, to his more recent work with Jeff Healey, Kim Mitchell, Daniel Lanois (U2, Bob Dylan, Peter Gabriel), and a host of other all-star musicians ā including those who contributed on the album ā David Bray has earned his well-deserved reputation.
Land of Extremes ā including āSome Day (feat. Lorraine Reid)ā ā is available now via The Pangaea Music House and Under Duress Music.
// Land of Extremes Tracklisting
1. Who Can You Trust? 4:36
2. Iāll Be Flying 3:10
3. Claustrophobic 3:57
4. What Comes Next 3:16
5. Normal Is 3:36
6. Some Day featuring Lorraine Reid 3:43
7. Overdue featuring Lorraine Reid 3:17
8. Live It Up A Little 3:38
9. Land Of Extremes 3:46
10. Furious World 3:00
11. Only You featuring Lorraine Reid 3:35
12. Under Duress 3:36
13. Speaking As One 3:30
14. So, In Conclusion 3:58
15. Come The Fall 4:37
16. Child Mother 3:11
17. I Donāt Know Why 5:17
18. Nothing Left featuring Lorraine Reid 3:44
The countdown is on; North by Northeast Music Festival (NXNE) has announced its initial list of Showcasing Artists invited to perform at this yearās music festival June 14th – 19th in Toronto.
āWeāre back and taking over more than 20 of Torontoās top live music venues,ā NXNE Founder and President Michael Hollett reveals. āWe want to make it very easy for people to come back to live music and experience stage-hopping like festivals used to be.ā
The festival is committed to gender equity and BIPOC representation, boasting a diverse lineup that reflects the festivalās core theme, āTalent is Everywhere.ā NXNE also makes great music accessible and inclusive to all; no artists are asked to pay to apply, all performers are paid, and admission to Club Shows in 2022 is extremely low-cost.
Full festival five-day passes are just $20 ā an inflation-defying $9.99 less than in 1995 when NXNE launched. āThatās actually cheaper than when it first started,ā Hollett notes. āGiven the pummeling the live music scene has taken over the last two years, we wanted to remove financial barriers to attending NXNE to best connect artists with audiences. You can see live music all week for the price of a movie ticket and popcorn.
āWe canāt wait to present these great acts to the world,ā Hollett continues. āItās time to experience live music again ā and listen to the future at NXNE.ā While further announcements of NXNEās full lineup will follow, passes are currently available for sale at nxne.com.
A partial list of artists invited to perform include:Ā
NXNE is proud to work with their supporting partners of this year’s festival including Slaight Music, Indie88, Gladstone House, Steam Whistle, Bulova, White Claw Hard Seltzer, Long & McQuade, Yamaha, Exclaim, Grassroots, along with showcase sponsors KW TheMuseum, The City of Brampton, Music Manitoba, and WKBO The Bridge ā with funding made possible by FACTOR, Canada Summer Jobs.
NXNE will take place Tuesday, June 14th – Sunday, June 19th in Toronto.
Rooted in pulsating beats and flowing vocals, Canadian alt-indie rock duo Blackout Orchestra masterfully deliver a soothing shoegazer with the release of their new single, āUnfound.ā
Like its recently released predecessors, the new single represents yet again the lavish eclecticism solidified on their forthcoming album, Beauty Sleep; āItās Fineā and āTonguesā lead the charge of singles between last year and Valentine’s Day 2022, with each providing introspective insight into Blackout Orchestra as songwriters and their ability to vocalize the full range of the human experience. āUnfoundā continues that journey, breaking out in unassuming, melodic undertones ā soon blending the lush harmonies of Ben VanBuskirk (vocals, music) and Morgan Thompson-Reid (vocals).
āāUnfoundā was a bit of a turning point in making the record, coming late in the game,ā says VanBuskirk. āI knew a girl in high school ā she transferred in and back out within about a month, but we became really close in that time.
āWe were the only āgrungeā kids at our school, listening to Fugazi and Velvet Underground,ā he continues. āI remember she had Kid A on vinyl and I thought she was just the coolest person ever. After she moved, she was quite transient ā going from city to city so I never knew how to reach her, but for years every now and then a package would arrive in the mail with these beautiful ramblings, art, knick-knacks, and mixtapes.
āEventually they stopped coming, and I honestly have no idea what happened to her. The song is sort of a fictionalized look at where we ended up ā these idealized punk rock kids who thought we’d never āsell outā; that we’d always be these creative weirdos and never compromise.
āI wonder if she ever found a way to navigate the āadultā world, and what each of us might have gained and lost along the way.ā
Blackout Orchestra burst onto the scene in 2021 with the release of their debut album, I Will Want You When We Are Ghosts. A self-described chronicling of heartbreak and recovery, their upcoming sophomore release Beauty Sleep navigates āfinding your footing after a fresh start.ā
āThe last album was very much about hitting bottom and the slow climb back up,ā VanBuskirk explains. āThis record is the continuation of that ā when you get your life together, it isn’t āhappily ever afterā… Life keeps happening; there are still the ups and downs of day-to-day life, those quieter battles that happen between the big moments of your life.
āI was particularly interested in taking softer acoustic sounds and marrying them with minimal electronic beats and flourishes, to further add to the feeling of being between two worlds,ā VanBuskirk continues.
The morose realization that youāre alone is a sentiment explored on the track. But this satisfying prose from Blackout Orchestra churns the tides of ālongingā to satisfaction in being āUnfound.ā