Metis Willie Nelson, Mitchell Makoons, Expresses Gratitude to Friends in “Cold Coffee”

Mitchell Makoons (he/him) is a Roots/Rock musician from Brandon, Manitoba. Mitchell started playing guitar at the age of seven to accompany his grandfather and brother playing Metis fiddle tunes. He continues to be an active member of the Manitoba Metis community and writes songs that incorporate traditional Ojibway music and culture with modern influences.

Under his legal name of Mitchell Mozdsen, he released five EPs accompanied by their own Western Canadian tour. In early 2021, he decided to change his stage name to something that nodded to his Ojibway heritage. Makoons is an Anishinaabemowin word that means “Little Bear or Bear Cub.” Since Mitchell Mozdzen’s spirit name is “Standing Strong Black Bear,” and he is only 5’5, this name is perfectly fitting.

Anytime Mitchell was feeling low while pursuing his first Bachelor’s degree at Brandon University, it was the same three friends that helped him out of it and made him feel better. New single, “Cold Coffee,” was written to show his appreciation for them. Privileged to still have these folks in his life, the trio still play in his band today – Matt on bass, Daniel on lead guitar, and Caitlin on the fiddle. 

East coast singer-songwriter Norma MacDonald finishes the ethereal song “The Heart Wants” after 12 years in the making

On her sixth album, singer-songwriter Norma MacDonald explores new songwriting tactics, reimagines old demos, and conducts sound experimentations that expand her folk and country influences into 60s pop, Motown harmonies, and jangly early millennium indie-rock. 

The Heart Wants” was actually a song that was written back in 2011. However, it never fit in with her release at the time (her third album, Morning You Wake). Over the years, MacDonald tried rearranging and producing the song in different ways but it didn’t seem right. Luckily, MacDonald’s band and producer Dan Ledwell didn’t give up on it and saw her vision through, capturing that dreamy sound that kept slipping through their fingers until now. 

The upcoming album In Waves (Oct 27) takes listeners through the seasons, starting with winter. MacDonald wrote the bulk of the track list during lockdown in which she and partner Chad Peck (of indie-shoegaze trio Kestrels) would challenge each other to write three songs in three hours to combat their anxieties and Netflix tedium. 

ROKI, Alt-Pop Sensation, Unveils Radiant and Affectionate Single “The One” from Forthcoming EP

Alternative pop artist ROKI started writing and producing music at a young age as a creative outlet, and later headed up multiple bands. After taking a brief hiatus from music to pursue her love of filmmaking, she returned, producing new tracks with Ben Kaplan (Mother Mother) and Winston Hauschild (Wanting Qu). During the process of recording her debut solo album, MOTHER, she experienced the greatest changes and challenges of her life: becoming a mother while losing her own. The latter spun her into a darker state, and unsure how to process her grief she poured herself into her music. 

Looking forward, ROKI will be releasing a song every couple months until early 2024 when her EP Lovable drops. This EP heralds a new era of sound for ROKI – dreamier, brighter, “loved up” and hopeful for new possibilities. 

The lead single, “The One,” is about watching the person you love hold back the hurt in their life and bear it on their own to save you from feeling it too. ROKI wanted to write this song to reassure those individuals that it’s okay to feel hurt because that’s part of being human, and you should feel comfortable sharing those feelings with your partner. Whatever the reason for hurt may be, your loved ones will be here for you. 

“For these next few songs, this little era of music is definitely brighter than I usually write and release,” says ROKI. “My EP is called Lovable, which sums up this batch of songs pretty well I’d say. We are all lovable, and they are written from a place of peace, happiness, love or wanting to make a relationship work.”

Video Voyageur: 3Qs with JAXXEE

Jaclyn Hull, aka JAXXEE, seamlessly weaves through the rich tapestry of music history, blending the timeless allure of blues and soul with contemporary soundscapes to create a truly unique and entrancing musical journey. Her journey as a musician is a testament to her passion and dedication. Discovering her voice later in life, she has since embarked on a remarkable musical odyssey. Her sultry vocals are a force of nature, transcending eras and touching the deepest corners of the soul. With raw power and genuine emotion, JAXXEE‘s voice becomes an instrument of transformation, carrying her listeners to a place where trip-hop and funk merge in perfect unity.

On the new single, “so tired,” she delves deep into the universal experience of late-night self reflection. Exhausted from that constant feeling of not being enough, it is a plea for some relief. Recording live off the floor forced JAXXEE out of her comfort zone as she and producer Neil James Cooke-Dallin did things on the fly. She learned that this is the thing that makes her unique – singing from her heart and soul with the power and emotion held deep within.

1Tell us the story of this song?

I was driving and my daughter was playing her music and I heard the line ‘I’ve been so tired’ in the song she was playing (Let Go by Ark Patrol). I was heading into the studio the next day, and had a whole different song planned, but I couldn’t get this chorus out of my head and the lyrics came to me very quickly. I believed so many people could relate to this feeling of being ‘so tired.’ We are all so busy running around in the rat race; we all could just use a good night’s sleep. I know for myself, I am haunted by late-night introspection, overthinking and listening to that inner voice with its constant message that I am not enough.

The lyrical questions posed in the song echo this emotional turbulence – pondering whether faltering leads to fading, or perhaps acting too boldly risks losing those around you. In the second verse, the song scrutinizes the façade we often put up, especially in the context of our social media-driven world. It questions the authenticity of what’s presented, wondering if what we see is genuine or merely a charade, and if the smiles we wear conceal the depths of our pain.

2. What was the inspiration behind this video (visuals, storyline, etc.)? 

I wanted the video to be real, honest, raw and authentic to stay true with the roots of my artistry. So what better way than to capture and share the day in which we arranged and recorded the song at Burning Rainbow Studios. I had hired some of the best studio musicians on the West Coast and this video documents us all playing together for the first time. The song needed a classic soul vibe, and we recorded with this era in mind. Recording in a live off the floor style pushed me beyond my comfort zone, requiring me to adapt on the fly. I wanted the video to tell the story of a truly memorable day working in an incredibly supportive environment.

3. What was the process of making this video?

I had spent a lot time on Instagram researching and finding videos that captured the vibe and recording styles that appealed to me. I was particularly inspired by the Mahogany Sessions. I wanted to capture close up magical moments of the musicians in their element and those details of them playing on the guitar, keys etc. I shared these ideas and examples with videographer Shane Battley, who had worked closely with my producer Neil James Cooke-Dallin before. Shane immediately understood and came in on recording day ready for it all and stayed the whole 4-hour session. From there, I left it in Shane’s very capable hands and I was pretty much ready to sign off upon receiving his first edit. I loved the essence and story that was told in the video right away.

Video Voyageur: 3Qs with Jiants

Jiants is a three piece indie/pop band from Toronto lead by the songwriting of ex-professional skateboarder Jesse LandenJiants performs a unique blend of nostalgic sounding lo-fi indie pop songs complete with great hooks and soaring leads. Once hailed by Paste Magazine as “a band to watch,” they have just finished their fourth album, Tall Tales, and it’s their best effort yet. The record was engineered and produced by Gavin Gardiner (The Wooden Sky) at All-Day Coconut Studios and is set to be released November 10th, 2023.

Their latest single, “Moon Lit,” is a dreamy yet driving track. Jesse explains:
Moon Lit” is about walking up to the fact that you might just be chasing the nostalgia of imaginary summer love. It’s about catching yourself dreaming of lustful, humid, summer nights that keep you in a perpetual loop of hypothetical excitement for the unknowns just around the bend. But this time something feels different. There’s a slow unraveling reality that these kinds of nights are now filling you with emptiness and maybe don’t serve you as well as they used to.

1. Tell us the story of this song, why did you choose to visualize this song specifically?
The story behind this song is basically just chasing some kind of imaginary nostalgia of summer love. It was written about a series of events while dating over last summer. We pick it as a song to make a live video for because we thought it consistently sounded good when we played it as three. We asked Julie Title to sing her back ups from the studio recording and I think it added a lot.

2. What was the inspiration behind this video(visuals, storyline, etc.)?
The location of the video was a wood shop/record label called Tibet Street records.in Toronto.  I had previously seen a live show at this location and thought the room had a great feel for a video.

3. What was the process of making this video?
It’s a little tough making a good sounding live performance video and to be honest it was a little risky to sing with no real monitor or head phones to hear yourself.  But with the help of Andrew Collins and Mitch Fillion helping with the video and  having everything mixed at All day coconut studios by Gavin Gardiner I think it all worked out pretty well for the budget we had.

Psych Rockers CACTUS FLOWERS Debut “Dead Moon Rising” from Upcoming LP out 11/17

Among the latest to emerge from a Texas psych-rock tradition that goes back more than fifty years, Houston’s Cactus Flowers announce the November 17th release of their sophomore full-length Elation with leadoff single “Dead Moon Rising.” 

Once again, frontwoman/bandleader Jessica A.M. channels the power of a live volcano through her guitar rig, her tone pouring through your speakers like scorching lava. Meanwhile, her mystical lyrics convey a dreamlike, starry-eyed romanticism spiked with a bite of attitude. 

Raised by a mom who photographed bands for Rolling Stone during the magazine’s counter-culture heyday, Jessica was, believe it or not, a late bloomer when it came to playing rock music. Originally, her path seemed to point in the direction of her formal violin training. 

But once she discovered the electric guitar in college, the die was cast. And when she met drummer and musical soulmate Mark Carcamo, a chemical reaction catalyzed, giving rise to Cactus Flowers’s intoxicating cocktail of psychedelia, fuzz, doom and classic rock. 

“It took me like 7 or 8 years to craft my sound,” Jessica explains. But once it clicked, there was no turning back. 

Recorded by Grammy-winning producer Steve Christensen (KhruangbinSteve Earle), Elation is a super-charged, almost monolithic realization of the band’s vision, which now includes bassist John Griffith (who produced the band’s debut full-length, 2019’s Incantations). 

Fittingly enough, the band wrote the bulk of Elation on numerous desert drives from Texas to the West Coast. Taken together, the songs take the listener on a fuzz-soaked musical journey of inner self discovery.