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The sound of Toronto music in 2021: 20 artists you need to hear now
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Toronto s Dorothea Paas Reminds Us That Anything Can t Happen on Debut LP
Watch the video for the title track now
Published Mar 02, 2021
Singer-songwriter Dorothea Paas has been making a name for herself in Toronto over the past few years, singing alonside Badge Époque Ensemble and U.S. Girls and even doing a bit of acting. Following some DIY cassettes, she has now announced her official debut album.
Anything Can t Happen is out May 7 via Telephone Explosion Records.
The album was recorded in Toronto and Hamilton, with mixing handled by Max Turnbull (f.k.a. Slim Twig) of Badge Epoque.
In an announcement, Paas said this about the album s inspiration: I had this pre-existing feeling about the spirituality of music – the experience of music as worship, which is really hard to shake, even if you want to. Initially I wanted to get away from that because I thought it was manipulative, the way that music worked in the church to control people s emotions. But now I want to tap
Anne at 13,000 ft Is an Enigmatic Portrait of a Quiet Breakdown Directed by Kazik Radwanski
Starring Deragh Campbell, Matt Johnson, Lawrene Denkers, Dorothea Paas
Published Feb 17, 2021
7
After a string of well-received short films in the mid-2000s, Toronto s Kazik Radwanski returns with his third feature, the final entry in a character-driven thematic trilogy centred on social outsiders. After Derek in 2012 s
Tower (a coarse 30-something living in his parents basement) and Erwin in 2015 s
How Heavy This Hammer (a gradually unmoored husband and father), we now follow Anne in
Anne at 13,000 ft, a young woman quietly unraveling over the course of a few months in Toronto while developing a taste for skydiving.
Badge Époque Ensemble Announce New Album Future, Past & Present
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NOW Magazine
The best Toronto albums of 2020
We weren t able to see many of them live, but local artists still gave us a lot to listen to this year By Richard Trapunski
Dec 15, 2020
From hip-hop beatscapes to celestial R&B gong punk, local artists didn’t let their creativity dip despite all the challenges they faced during this pandemic year. It’s a shame we couldn’t support the music live and in person, but here are the Toronto albums that were filling our ears while we stayed home this year.
1.
U.S. Girls: Heavy Light
Heavy Light came out just weeks before the COVID-19 shutdown, and now it feels like a time capsule. It’s simultaneously Meg Remy’s most personal album and her most collective. Her first-person form gets unusually high usage as she sings about her teen years. The music is lush and joyful as ever, and she’s still a clear-eyed critic of American exceptionalism. She leans on a hugely talented group of musicians crammed into a studio together,
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