Published on
June 3, 2008 in
Live Music and New Release.
Tags: aslatua, Banff, Blues, Calgary, didgeridoo, djembe, drum, Electronic, Folk, OM Cooking, Reggae, Shane Philip, Vancouver Island, Weissenborn.

Swelling in primordial pulses and wholloping whoops, the tacit tones of Vancouver Island’s Shane Philip’s didgeridoo hold the power to still listeners into silence or encourage audiences to rise up in a tribal swell of intoxicating spirit — with sometimes but a heartbeat in between. Meanwhile his hands will be skilfully juggling between shaking up rhythms with his aslatua, driving the dance floor with his djembe and sliding out grooves on his Weissenborn-style guitar while his foot taps in earthshaking electronic kicks wherever they might fit. He is a one-man show weaving sounds that inspire audiences anywhere he goes.
Continue reading ‘Shane Philip in profile: Bursting with high energy’
Published on
May 26, 2008 in
Awards, Featured, Festivals and Live Music.
Tags: Clarendon, Folk, Healey's, hip-hop, House Concert, Jazz, Joni Mitchell, Layah Jane, Lethbridge, Moonshine Cafe, New Music West, Ontario Arts Council, Ontario Council of Folk Festivals Conference, Ontario Independent Music Award, Ottawa Folk Festival, Peterborough, Reggae, Samba, Soul, The Slice Bar and Grill, The Supermarket, Toronto City Roots Festival, Toronto Independent Music Awards, Toronto Indie Music Week, Trip-Hop.

Singer-songwriter Layah Jane is a hearty young musician with a mission. With soulful vocals and a poetic, articulate tongue, Layah’s sound recalls Joni Mitchell, Rickie Lee Jones and Ani Difranco, with a resonance all her own.
Continue reading ‘Layah Jane in profile: A resonance all her own’

The origin of Timekode is in the bytes that began travelling through samplers and drum machines in the early eighties. MIDI timecode is the data that keeps sample loops, filtered basslines and drum hits moving in unison – it’s the glue that holds together a culture based on pulling together bits of the past to make the sounds of the future. Continue reading ‘TIMEKODE’
Published on
February 20, 2008 in
About Trans Canada Radio.
Tags: Afro, Beats, Breaks, Canada, Funk, House, Jazz, Location, Music, Reggae, Soul, Venues.
THE ROOT
For those who have never had the fortune to drive it, the Trans-Canada highway is a long, slow and detailed journey. This route is rarely the fastest, but can be the most memorable way to traverse Canada.
I recently had the fortune to take the wrong turn driving from Toronto to Ottawa and landed myself on this highway. Listening to a CD of an Ottawa afro-funk band, I quickly drew the parallel between Canada’s music industry and one of the worlds longest highways. Relaxed and natural, yet constant and strong! Canada’s artists are bred to know that there is a long road that lie ahead.
TRANS CANADA RADIO is proud to celebrate Canada’s Current Cultural artists and their locations! Traveling across Canada’s vast surface and finding the best of the under and above-ground artists who are rooted in, Soul, Funk, Reggae, Beats, House, Breaks and all that afro-Jazz… and where to check them out in your favorite Canadian city!
Pack your bags! We’re going on a road trip!
Sara Ainslie (editor)