Without even knowing it, you hear Laurent Guardo’s music everyday. Perusing the long list of theme music he created for TV and radio shows, one realizes he’s the man responsible for such well-known themes as Desautels, La Facture, Musicographie, and many, many more for broadcasters and channels such as Radio-Canada, RDI, MusiquePlus, Musimax, LCN, Canal D and Canal Vie, to name but a few.

Throughout his decades-spanning career, the composer, wordsmith and producer has built a solid reputation for himself that has earned him several SOCAN Awards in the TV Music category. Yet, it was a split-second decision he made when deciding what to study in cegep that saw him on his path to a career in music: “I wanted to take up science, but for some reason, at the very last second, I chose to study music instead! I studied classical percussion at the Conservatory and then a bachelor’s un Music at Université de Montréal. One of my teachers, Massimo Rossi, encouraged me to explore writing. He told me a completely lacked any technique but that I had great ideas… One thing led to another and I started composing, and then things really started to take off about eight years ago when I won a competitive bidding to be in charge of the musical themes for the news programming of Radio-Canada and RDI. That kept me very busy for four years!”

“Up to now, I’ve been quite lucky and the people who hired me pretty much gave me carte blanche.

It’s not hard to imagine that creating the musical theme for radio and TV shows is a very constraining process and that there probably are quite a few people who have their say in the final result. But despite all that, Laurent Guardo has constantly managed to preserve his distinctive signature: modern and dynamic, yet warm with a subtle tinge of world beat. “Up to now, I’ve been quite lucky and the people who hired me pretty much gave me carte blanche. Beyond the actual content of the program or its time-slot, I base my work mostly on the emotions that the creators wish to communicate. The result is that, sometimes, even though I’ve been asked for something quite techno, I’ll come back with something that’s played solely on acoustic guitar. Despite that, since the intended emotion is communicated through the music, the client is satisfied. The goal of the music is more important than the style of music or instrumentation, ultimately.”

As a matter of fact, Laurent prides himself in using mainly real instruments – including a few traditional Balinese ones he found during his musical peregrinations – instead of the widespread use of sampling and sound banks. “Some sampling can be wisely used, and I do use it myself every now and then The danger with samples is that there comes a point when everyone is using the same few sounds. Everything ends up sounding the same. When I use samples, it’s mostly sounds that I sampled myself from my own instruments which I then transform into something those instruments can’t produce. I use samples to give those sounds a twist, a colour or a shape that would not be possible otherwise. But if I use a sampled cello instead of my real cello, it’s obvious that the real cello will always sound a thousand times better. I think it’s a bit silly to use sample, especially if it’s only to avoid having to hire a musician and save a few hundred bucks…”

Laurent Guardo’s last few months, however, have seen him moving from command music between a second and a half to 45 seconds to complete creative freedom on tracks reaching nearly 10 minutes for his first album, Songs of Experience. For this trip hop and lounge influenced album – entirely self-produced, it must be said – he called upon some of the best collaborators one can dream of, such as Paul Brochu, Ranee Lee, Éric Auclair and Mary Lou Gauthier. The result is a sensuous and ethereal music that becomes the lush aural tapestry to pre-romantic poet William Blake’s (1757-1827) writing.

“The themes Blake wrote about in his poems are timeless and universal, says Guardo. They were very relevant themes at the end of the 1800s and they still are to this day. Childhood innocence destroyed by adults, the intolerance of religious fanaticism, the forces of nature, life going by, love… But beyond that, his writing has an intrinsic rhythm that I’m attuned to, to me it’s almost like the music is already in the words. Each track on Songs of Experience is like a a sound movie that tells the story and emotions that I perceive in his poems.”

In addition to that album’s follow-up, entitled Songs of Innocence – an album where, the artists says, his world music influences will be even more present and that he wishes to release within a year – he is also collaborating with Daniel Lavoie on an album of Renaissance music for which he composed all the music and wrote all the lyrics with the exception of two poems by Rimbaud. That one will be titled La Licorne captive. “It’s a long haul project and, about 18 months ago, Daniel Lavoie agreed to sing all the tracks that were inspired by old legends. There are all kinds of ethnic percussions and a mix of modern and ancient instruments such as viol and archlute. It’s almost done and I hope to release it soon. It is, however, the type of project that requires patience…”

 

Laurent Guardo is undoubtedly a craftsman and a composer whose body of work – beyond the jingles we all know and hum – deserves to be explored.



Corb Lund has never been one to turn out cookie-cutter country songs. Instead, the Alberta-born singer-songwriter always explores a range of styles and subject matter on record. His latest, Cabin Fever, is no exception.

Partly, that’s a product of his approach to songwriting; one informed by his “country boy” work ethic and the DIY method employed by his old band, 90’s loud alt.rockers The Smalls. “I have more in common with indie rock bands in terms of process,” Lund explains. “That’s a scene where you’re encouraged to find your own unique sound – the weirder the better.”

 “I have more in common with indie rock bands in terms of process. That’s a scene where you’re encouraged to find your own unique sound.”- Corb Lund

Lund definitely has a sound all his own, and a talent for telling offbeat tales that’s garnered him critical acclaim, the CCMA Award for Roots Artist or Group of the Year for seven years straight (2004-2010) and a growing audience in Canada, Australia, the U.K., Ireland and Europe. With the release of both 2009’s Losin’ Lately Gambler and now Cabin Fever in 2012 on the American-based label New West Records, he’s also experiencing a groundswell of support in the U.S.

Much of Cabin Fever was written following the death of his uncle and the failure of a long-term relationship, while Lund was holed up in a remote cabin he’d built in the foothills of the Rockies. While he maintains those events didn’t specifically inform the themes and ideas he explores on Cabin Fever, he admits they may have contributed to the “general darkness” of some tracks. They also may have had something to do with the record taking him longer to write, he adds.

When he began working on songs for Cabin Fever three years ago, initially, it was slow going. The closer he came to recording, however, the more material began to flow, including lead single “September.” As for why that happened, he says, “No reason really, I think it was just random. There’s a cycle, right? I try to write, write, write all the time, and sometimes it doesn’t work. Some songs I write are just better than others. I throw out all kinds of stuff.”

“I try to write, write, write all the time, and sometimes it doesn’t work.”- Corb Lund

While Lund spent weeks at a time alone in his mountain retreat, that environment was only partially responsible for the record’s darker offerings, like “Gettin’ Down on the Mountain” and “Dig Gravedigger Dig.” “It would be romantic to say that,” he says, “but honestly, all I need to get writing done – assuming the juices are flowing – is to be by myself. It could be an apartment in the city or somewhere in the woods, but the isolation did have a little bit of an effect.”

All that said, Cabin Fever definitely treads the line between light and dark. Even the compact murder ballad, “Priceless Antique Pistol Shoots Startled Owner,” has elements of Lund’s wry sense of humour. “I’ve always been a fan of records that have a wide range, not just stylistically, but in mood,” he says. “It’s as important to have dark songs as fun ones. I’ve always been an album guy. That’s why I spend a lot of time on sequencing. The flow is really important.”

So, too, were the contributions of Lund’s long-time band The Hurtin’ Albertans (guitarist/multi-instrumentalist Grant Siemens, upright bass player Kurt Ciesla and drummer Brady Valgardson), and the approach they took to the recording process with producer Steve Christensen.
“Half the time I have a pretty good idea what a song going to sound like when I bring it to the band,” says Lund, “but the other half of the time they surprise me and put a whole different spin on things. And Cabin Fever is almost all live, even the vocals – no click track, no black magic at all.”



Since the ‘90s Toronto has always been a Mecca for diverse hip-hop talent, and currently at the forefront of those new faces is Toronto rapper JD Era.

This Mississauga-born MC’s skills have already attracted the attention of some big names south of the border. Last year, he was hand-picked by hip-hop royalty Raekwon of Wu-Tang Clan fame to join the roster of his new label Ice H20 Records.

Era’s first mixtape No Handouts, released in April 2012, was well received by critics and fans. Soon after, he joined the Staten Island MC on a 40-date Canada/U.S. tour, winning new fans along the way, and even rocking the North by Northeast festival free outdoor mainstage at Dundas Square in Toronto with Raekwon and fellow Wu-Tang legend Ghostface Killah.

Scheduled to play live at Canadian Music Week 2013, Era’s also hard at work readying a mixtape sequel to No Handouts, as well as preparing his debut full-length album.