JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates the 58th anniversary of Scott Weiland’s birth.
Throwback: Happy 67th Birthday, Simon Le Bon!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Duran Duran frontman Simon Le Bon’s 67th birthday.
Live Footage: Blue Moon Marquee and Northern Cree Performing “Rollin’ and Tumblin'” at JunoFest ’25
Over the course of four albums, 2016’s Gypsy Blues, 2019’s Bare Knuckles & Brawn, 2022’s Scream, Holler & Howl and last year’s New Orleans Sessions, the acclaimed Duncan, BC-based duo Blue Moon Marquee — A.W. Cardinal and Jasmine Colette — have firmly established a unique sound that meshes elements of the blues, jazz, jump jive, folk, country, swing and Indigenous soul — without anything sounding out of step. Thematically their work often touches on the underbelly of society, woven with elements of Indigenous storytelling and poetic cadence.
For a lot of folks the traditional powwow music of Turtle Island may not immediately come to mind as sonically syncing up with the aching wail of Mississippi Delta blues. That is until you remember their shared rhythmic structure — a steady, simple, heavy and propulsive pulse that seems older than time itself.
Blue Moon Marquee’s AW Cardinal and Jasmine Colette were reminded of this connection while watching the documentary Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World, which featured a segment with Tuscarora/Taino activist and singer/songwriter Pura Fé singing along to a recording by legendary bluesman Charley Patton. The clip helped the band’s Cardinal connect the dots between his Woodland Cree heritage and his love of the blues.
At last year’s Juno Awards ceremonies in Halifax, NS, the duo and Northern Cree‘s Joel Wood celebrated wins for Scream, Holler & Howl and Sing. Pray. Love., respectively and agreed to collaborate. The result is the recently released Get Your Feathers Ready, a unique collaboration between Blue Moon Marquee and the 9-time Grammy Award-nominated powwow and Round Dance group.
After the two acclaimed groups got together to run through songs during an afternoon near Maskwacis, AB, the album’s material was recorded in a breakneck eight-hour recording session the following day, live off the floor.
For Blue Moon Marquee’s Cardinal, the recording sessions were both a dream and a homecoming: He’s from the same region of Canada as Northern Cree — Treaty Six Territory, which comprises large portions of Alberta and Saskatchewan — and he’s a longtime fan. Cardinal, who grew up in Rocky Mountain House, AB carefully guarded his Indigenous identity to avoid trouble, but the new album is the result of a steady transformation and proud acknowledgment of his identity. “Over the years, through music and meeting Northern Cree, it’s given me strength and pride in who I am and that side of my culture,” Cardinal says.Â
“As a child I attended powwows but lived in town—I wasn’t immersed in the culture,” Cardinal says. “So to be able to be part of something like this is an incredibly soul-nourishing opportunity. It was one of the most fulfilling musical and spiritual experiences I’ve ever had. I’ve devoted my life to music, and the best way for me to get in touch with my roots is through song—Get Your Feathers Ready is the sound of that full circle moment.”
For both groups making music together and bridging the slim gap between two long-running and profoundly spiritual traditions as providing fertile ground for transformation — to help one see themself, not just as an individual, but part of a human lineage that extends millennia and held together by the timeless and ancient alchemy of the drum.
Album single “Rollin’ & Tumblin'” perfectly encapsulates the album’s timeless groove and deeply spiritual sound and approach in a way that not just makes inherent sense but is profoundly moving.
The live footage was shot at Vancouver’s Hollywood Theatre during their JunoFest ’25 set earlier this year.
Throwback: Happy 74th Birthday, Bootsy Collins!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Bootsy Collins’ 74th birthday.
Throwback: Happy 114th Birthday, Mahalia Jackson!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates the 114th anniversary of the birth of Mahalia Jackson.
New Video: Errol Eats Everything Teams Up with Furious Evans and Blu on a Brooding, Hard-hitting Remix of “Beyond Yonder”
Errol Eats Everything is an emcee and Black entrepreneur, who’s actively trying to reshape the music landscape while enacting positive change in the community.
Released earlier this year, his self-titled album is a bold manifesto, which seems him addressing systemic injustices, personal struggle and the continuing fight for freedom and equality with the album’s material voicing the bitter frustrations of a society that routinely fails its marginalized and struggling. His work demands listeners confront the harsh realities of their life and then asks them to find the strength and resilience to raise about them, reaffirming hip-hop’s enduring power to challenge, uplift and transform.
For a period of time, the emcee and entrepreneur stepped away from music to focus on community-building, creating solutions that have positively impacted the lives of young Black people while solidifying a hard-earned role as a visionary leader.
The Beyond Yonder Remixes EP sees Errol Eats Everything collaborating with Blu, Don Von Jovi, Rome Streetz, Planet Asia, Brother Ali and a lengthy list of others on a series of remixes of Errol Eats Everything LP track “Beyond Yonder.”
While the album version of “Beyond Yonder” sees Errol Eats Everything spitting righteously conscious bars delivered with an MF DOOM-like flow over a DJ Premier-like production featuring a lush and soulful sample paired with tweeter and woofer rattling boom bap. The Furious Evans remix of “Beyond Yonder” features Errol Eats Everything and Blu trading bars over a production that retails the tweeter and woofer rattling boom bap of the original, but places it all within a brooding It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot-era DMX-like production.
Directed and edited by Marquan Ford, the accompanying video for “Beyond Yonder (Furious Evans Remix, feat. Blu) is set in a world of sex and vampires, inspired by Blade and Vampire Tales.
Throwback: Happy 64th Birthday, Chad Smith!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith’s 54th birthday.
Throwback: Happy 81st Birthday, Jon Anderson!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Jon Anderson’s 81st birthday.
Throwback: Happy 99th Birthday, Jimmy Heath!
JOVM’S William Ruben Helms celebrates the 99th anniversary of the birth of Jimmy Heath.
New Audio: Play Paul Reimagines the Work of Beloved French film Music Composer Francis Lai
Over the course of an incredibly lengthy seven-plus decade long career, acclaimed and pioneering French film score composer Francis Lai (1932-2018)’s work spanned across and meshed several different styles and genres, including orchestral music, jazz, electronic music and avant-garde experimentation.
Throughout his career, Lai displayed an uncanny ability to anticipate technological advancements and developments in music — and to quickly adopt or adapt to them. He was among the first to embrace and incorporate electronic instruments in his compositions and arrangements as soon as they emerged, boldly pushing the boundaries of what film scores sound like. Unsurprisingly, that readiness to boldly push sonic boundaries in his work attracted filmmakers, musicians, the cognoscenti and others interested in forward-thinking work.
Among his dozens of film scores and soundtracks, his compositions for Claude Lelouch‘s films, Un homme et une femme (1966), L’Aventure c’est l’Aventure (1972) and Les Uns et les Autres (1981), as well as David Hamilton’s 1977 film Bilitis and his Golden Globe-winning and Oscar Award-winning score for Arthur Hiller‘s 1970 film Love Story are known globally — with the Love Story score being one of the more popular scores written and recorded. Unsurprisingly, Lai is one of the world’s best-selling film music composers, selling over 130 million records globally.
And although he died back in 2018, the acclaimed French film score composer’s work still remains incredibly popular. After a Paris tribute concert, the Francis Lai Orchestra embarked on a fall 2023 tour across Japan, playing shows in Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya — with filmmaker Claude Lelouch attending the Nagoya show.
He has over 3 million followers on Spotify, proving that his work has managed to transcend generations while inspiring a global audience. Recently, his score for Michel Boisrond‘s 1968 film La Leçon Particulière went viral, becoming one of TikTok’s top tracks while amassing over 200 million streams on Spotify and Deezer. And adding to his reach across multiple generations, contemporary artists have remixed and reinterpreted his work.
Play Paul is French touch pioneer, making his debut in the disco house scene in the electronic production duo The Buffalo Bunch, alongside Raw Man back in the 90s. The duo quickly made a name for themselves and the attention of the acclaimed and internationally renowned duo Daft Punk with each member signing them to their respective labels — Thomas Bangalter’s Scratché and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo’s Crydamoure. Play Paul began to stand out on his own with an attention grabbing remix of Phoenix‘s “If I Ever Feel Better.”
By 2003, Play Paul stepped into the spotlight as a solo artist. And as a solo artist, the French tour pioneer moved towards a more underground and electronic dance music-leaning sound. He released material through prestigious labels like Gigolo Records and Kitsuné while working on remixes and reworkings, furthering establishing himself as a key figure in the global electronic music scene.
Play Paul recently contributed to a remix compilation, paying tribute to Francis Lai and his work Play It Like Francis, which was released earlier this month. His contribution to the compilation saw him tackling a Lai deep cut, Lai’s theme for Claude Lelouch’s 1978 film, Robert et Robert, “Concerto pour la fin d’un amour.”
Anchored around a looping, brooding yet breathtakingly gorgeous piano figure and a swelling string section, Lai’s “Concerto pour la fin d’un amour,” slowly builds up in intensity, evoking classic film scores — and a swooning romanticism. The Play Paul remix, manages to retain the original melody while completely reimagining it, giving it a decidedly 70s disco/glam feel, seemingly inspired by Station to Station-era Bowie. The result is a reworking that sounds as though it could have been released around the time of the original that inspired it, and subtly contemporary.
Video Interview: DahL’s Nassir Liselle
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms interviews DahL’s Nassir Liselle.
Throwback: Happy 89th Birthday, Bill Wyman!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Bill Wyman’s 89th birthday.
Throwback: R.I.P. Dave Ball
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates the life and music of Soft Cell co-founder Dave Bell.
Throwback: Happy 88th Birthday, Yvonne Staples!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates the 88th anniversary of the birth of Yvonne Staples.
