
Kal Tire - Supporting communities with Playground Project
Join Jenelle Lippai #Onthego at Dr. A.E Perry School to see features of the new playground project supported by Kal Tire Kal's replay funds. #SponsoredContent
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CTV News
36 minutes ago
- CTV News
Third edition of Troubadour Summer Concert Series underway
Crowds got their seats early in downtown Barrie for the the Troubadour Festival summer Concert Series. (CTV NEWS) Here is what to expect at the Troubadour Festival summer Concert Series underway Saturday. The sun is out and Dunlop Street is closed for 'Eats on the Streets' as Hawksley Workman is ready to rock out for the third edition of this summers Troubadour Festival. Dunlop Street will be closed throughout the night while the food festival 'Eats on the Streets' returns. The emerging artist showcase will once again shake Meridian Place starting at 6 p.m. Tia Nova, Smokey and the Bones, Ritch Mitchell are all ready to perform, setting the stage for Hawksley Workman and his band. Workman is a multiple Juno Award winner and has released more than 15 albums. In an interview with CTV News earlier in the week, Workman said fans can expect some classic songs with his style of writing. 'They're a little bit kooky, but still pretty straight forward. I mean, I have a wide vocal range and I like to sing really high, I like to sing really low,' said Workman. 'The lyrics are a bit absurd, a bit kooky. Some are a bit serious.' Hawksley Workman is expected to take the stage around 8 p.m. CTV Barrie, Pure Country 106, BOUNCE 104.1, and the Downtown Barrie BIA are excited to present the Troubadour Festival Summer Concert Series– a four-part celebration of live music with star-studded performances at Meridian Place.


CBC
40 minutes ago
- CBC
Kaytranada samples Barry White, TLC, the Neptunes and more on his new album
Kaytranada's fourth solo album, Ain't No Damn Way!, is a return to his roots. Before the Janet Jackson edits and hits with vocalists including Syd, H.E.R., Tinashe and Kali Uchis, Kaytranada was a crate-digging teen splicing up beats in his family's Montreal basement. And the new album is heavy on beats: it's mostly instrumental save a handful of chopped-up vocal samples, as he shared in an Instagram story: "Letting y'all know that this album is strictly for workouts, dancing and studying and for my people that love beats." Of course, the bedrock of any good Kaytranada tune is the production and his inspired use of samples, so even though there's no sing-along choruses à la 10% or You're the One on this record, the groove remains undeniable. Kaytranada's previous album, Timeless, was released last summer and included a whole host of guest appearances from Childish Gambino, Anderson .Paak, Charlotte Day Wilson, Rochelle Jordan, Tinashe, Kaytranada's brother, Lou Phelps, and more. The collaborators on Ain't No Damn Way! are less obvious: acclaimed jazz drummer Karriem Riggins is credited on Good Luck, and Alex Sowinski of Toronto experimental jazz band BadBadNotGood is credited on Home. On Ain't No Damn Way!, Kaytranada samples '70s soul icon Barry White, R&B-rap trio TLC, superproducer duo the Neptunes and many more — but it's hard to catch them all on first listen. Below we breakdown the exciting and unexpected samples on the Montreal producer's new album. Young, Fresh n' New, Kelis The album opener, Space Invader, samples this explosive 2001 Kelis track, produced by the Neptunes (Chad Hugo and Pharrell Williams). It was the lead single from the rapper's second album, Wanderland, but less known than her ubiquitous hit Milkshake, which came two years later. Kaytranada rarely samples an artist's most recognizable tunes, and it would be easy to not realize that breathy chant of "gotta get away sometimes" is Kelis's vocal. What's particularly interesting is that Kelis never says those words in that order in her song — Kaytranada broke down the vocal stems and rearranged the lyrics for his track. Love on a Real Train, Tangerine Dream On Championship, Kaytranada sampled this Tangerine Dream song, originally composed for the Risky Business soundtrack. Kaytranada borrows the German trio's spacey synths and gives them a soulful zhuzh on the atmospheric track. The members of Tangerine Dream have changed many times over the decades, but in 1984 when this song was released, the group consisted of founder Edgar Froese, Christophe Franke and Johannes Schmoelling. Things Fall Apart, Steve Monite Steve Monite's 1984 Afro-boogie song Things Fall Apart provides the bones for Kaytranada's vibey Things. The song starts off with an echo of Monite singing, "Things are getting so bad," before stabbing synths come in. Kaytranada takes a quick moment at the 2:20 mark of the original track and loops it repeatedly as the percussive core of his new creation. And this is not the first time the producer has sampled this particular song: older fans will recognize the bright synths at the 1:48 mark because he used them in the 2018 Lou Phelps and Jazz Cartier track, Come Inside. Black Boy, Cappadonna Shine Your Light For We is rooted by a vocal sample from Black Boy, the 1998 track from Cappadonna, a member of Wu-Tang Clan. Specifically, Kaytranada samples the chorus, sung by Tekitha Washington: "Black boy in the ghetto streets/ Black boy, no more suffering/ Black boy, shine your light for we." The track contains some sampling inception: Cappadonna, née Darryl Hill, samples his father, Barry White, on Black Boy, using White's 1976 song You, I Adore, and the celestial strings pop up in the melody of Shine Your Light For We. Let's Do it Again, TLC On the final track on the album, Kaytranada flips TLC's CrazySexyCool cut Let's Do it Again, produced by Babyface and Jon-John Robinson. Swinging drum kicks that have become the producer's signature ring out on Do It! (Again!) as T-Boz and Chilli's pitched-up and sped-up vocals accentuate the groove. The original 1994 song is a sultry R&B slow burn, but Kaytranada takes the pleading bridge and turns things up a notch for a dance-floor heater.


CBC
3 hours ago
- CBC
How BAMBII uses her 'DJ brain' to produce genre-blending electronic music
BAMBII is a Toronto-based DJ and producer whose innovative, genre-defying sound won her electronic album of the year at last year's Juno Awards. Since then, she's opened for Jamie xx and performed at music festivals around the world, like Glastonbury and the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland. But BAMBII's journey into music was anything but clear cut. Unlike some artists who found support from a record label early on, BAMBII achieved her music dreams by carving out her own space in the electronic music world. More than 10 years ago, she founded JERK, a wildly popular rave series that centres queer and Caribbean communities. Those parties helped her become a better DJ while also allowing her to play the music she and her friends wanted to dance to. "I was DJing for like two seconds," BAMBII tells Q guest host Garvia Bailey in an interview. "I had no idea even truly, actually, how to DJ. I just knew I needed to hear these songs in this space.… What that grew into and the responsibility of it came later." WATCH | BAMBII's full interview with Tom Power: After her DJ sets started blowing up, the next step for BAMBII was to learn music theory and how to produce her own songs. Her Juno-winning EP, Infinity Club, mixes global club music with Jamaican genres such as dancehall, reggae and dub. Now, she's back with her follow-up, Infinity Club II, which proves just how expansive electronic music can be. "People don't know how varied or conflicted the electronic space is," BAMBII says. "It's very much a faux pas and very much taboo to bring in different sub-genres into that space as a DJ or even as a producer…. I'm not consciously trying to actually make a statement. It's just representative of how I grew up and the travel I've done, which is pretty extensive as a DJ." Growing up in Toronto as an only child, BAMBII was listening to an eclectic mix of music, from Bruce Springsteen to Buju Banton. "Basically anything my mom was listening to, I was listening to," she says. "I feel like my mom kind of set the tone for having an eclectic taste. I mean, I wouldn't even label it. Just being open-minded." WATCH | Official video for Mirror: In many ways, her approach to producing music is the same as her approach to DJing. "I produce with DJ brain and I feel the best thing about DJs is their ability to hold their memories," she says. "As a DJ you have about 2,000 favourite songs. You're very familiar with large amounts of music and you're very familiar with patterns in music, and obviously genres and sub-genres…. It's taking you a bunch of different places [and] it's making unlikely connections."