Friday, July 1, 2011

canada day

i've spent a lot of time digging up and championing unsung canadian music history. w/ the help of US-based record label light in the attic records (taste the iron-y?), we've been able to legitimately re-release some of our nation's most unique and previously undocumented sound heritage. the six-album jamaica-toronto series and doug randle's songs for the new industrial state are just the beginning... w/ two current extensive CDN reissue projects on the go (*more details soon), i am proud to say we'll be pushing even further into the vortex... these upcoming releases will reach deep into my record collection and showcase the long hours spent on the road from coast-to-coast looking for near-extinct vinyl artifacts, connecting w/ good people, learning the stories behind the records, presenting sound+vision w/ the respect it deserves, and sharing the treasure w/ open-minded music lovers world-wide in a total celebration our culture...

the cancon cannon (the guess who, anne murray, bryan adams, etc...) is already well established, it's minutiae preserved for future generations. let's take the time to document the lesser known pioneers of canadian music, whose efforts, equally important, often lay dormat in the basements, attics, and minds of this country. w/ much of today's music a reference to the past (and eternally preserved via an endless wave of electronic photos, sound files, etc...), it is very important that we save our fragile and vanishing pre-digital musical history now, before it's lost to the sands of time... so that when future generations of music lovers look back to this crucial and formative era, that they know the true trajectory of our cultural lineage...

so here's to the canadian music makers known and unknown, to our rich fabric of music and art, and that we'll be enjoying it for many years to come...

love,
sipreano

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