Ben Neill & Mikael Seifu – A Transcontinental Dialogue in Breath and Rhythm with “Nefasphere”

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There’s a quiet poetry in the way “Nefasphere” came to life. Fifteen years ago, in a college classroom in New Jersey, a young Ethiopian musician named Mikael Seifu met Ben Neill, a composer already known for his experiments with the Mutantrumpet, a hybrid instrument that fuses brass performance with electronic control.

Seifu was a student then, and was just beginning to shape what would become his signature sound: a fusion of ancient Ethiopian tonalities with the pulse and texture of global electronic music.

Neill was the professor, an emerging artist who had already collaborated with the likes of David Behrman, John Cage and La Monte Young.

Fast forward to 2025, and the conversation that began all those years ago has evolved into Nefasphere. The word nefas, from Amharic means “wind,” “breath,” or “spirit” and it’s an apt metaphor for what the music achieves – a flow of energy that moves through both artists, reshaping itself as it passes.

In the Worldwinds Mix, Neill and Seifu create a kind of ambient exhalation with long, flowing tones and circular patterns that expand and contract like the breath itself. Seifu’s electronic grounding draws from the Ethiopiyawi Electronic movement he helped define. It’s meditative yet propulsive, organic yet digitally alive. Neill’s Mutantrumpet threads through this landscape, with its tones resonating like ancient horns re-imagined for a new era. The effect can be felt with the African rhythmic pulse beneath the Western harmonic drift, and yet the music never settles neatly into either world.

The Moire Mix takes the same thematic DNA and refracts it through a more textural lens. Here, beats glitch and shimmer around deeper bass modulations, suggesting the interference patterns from which the mix takes its name. This version is less meditative and more exploratory – a field recording from some unseen interdimensional borderland between Addis Ababa and New York City.

What makes “Nefasphere” so affecting isn’t just its sound, but its story. This is music born from a relationship – teacher and student, mentor and mentee – that has evolved into genuine creative partnership. In Seifu’s own words, the collaboration marks “a rebirth… a reflection of the power of honest mentorship full of mutual respect and insight.” For Neill, it’s the realization of a long held artistic vision to create living, breathing music systems where structure and improvisation coexist in perfect balance.

Both versions of “Nefasphere” invite deep listening. They resist the quick satisfaction of streaming culture, instead unfolding slowly, like a landscape viewed from above. It’s music that rewards patience, music that is unmoored from trends and yet deeply of this moment.

For Seifu, this marks a luminous return following his acclaimed Zelalem EP (RVNG Intl, 2016). For Neill, it continues a lifelong exploration of evolution in his music, from minimalist composition to digital improvisation, from hardware to human breath.

But for both, “Nefasphere” is more than a collaboration. It is a shared meditation on sound as life force, a reminder that in the meeting of air and electricity, something sacred can still occur.

More About Ben Neill

Composer/performer Ben Neill is the inventor of the Mutantrumpet, a hybrid electro-acoustic instrument, and is recognized as a musical innovator who “uses a schizophrenic trumpet to create art music for the people” (Wired Magazine). Using interactive computer technologies, Neill generates unique musical and visual experiences that blur the lines between acoustic and electronic music, minimalism, and visual media. Neill has recorded thirteen albums on labels including Universal/Verve, Thirsty Ear, Astralwerks, Six Degrees, and his own Blue Math label distributed by AWAL/Sony. His first book, Diffusing Music, was released on Bloomsbury Press in 2024.

More About Mikael Seifu

Mikael Seifu is an Ethiopian electronic music producer committed to “Ethiopiyawi Electronic” – a coinage Seifu uses to describe the music he and his peers are producing in Ethiopia’s capital city of Addis-Ababa. Born and raised in Addis Ababa, he moved to the US and went on to study music production & the music industry at Ramapo College of New Jersey, a small school about 45 minutes outside of Manhattan. Here Seifu met a mentor in Ben Neill, the composer and music technologist who trained with La Monte Young. Seifu was inspired by Neill to take serious his calling in music. Mikael’s music does not westernize or electronicize extant Ethiopian music. Instead, Seifu uses Ethio-Jazz’s spirit of brewing estranged styles for his own musical tincturing. Seifu’s passion above all else is to create something befitting of its time, yet “eternally Ethiopian.” 

Connect With Ben Neill:

Website / Instagram / Facebook

da nang Capture the Joy and Heartbreak of Growing Up on Nostalgic Kids EP, Helmed by Bittersweet Title Track

Toronto emo/alt-rock trio da nang return with Kids, a nostalgic, sun-soaked EP about the messy intersections of love, loss, heartbreak, and joy. Anchoring the record is title track “Kids,” a bittersweet anthem that celebrates the rush of young love while staring down the heartbreak it’s destined to bring.

da nang’s Kids EP plays like a scrapbook of adolescence, with songs that hang together like faded Polaroids – warm, raw, and brimming with emotion. From cottage recording sessions surrounded by worn furniture and summer air, to riffs that grew into full-fledged songs almost by accident, the band leaned fully into nostalgia in both sound and spirit.

“The title track is about being in love when you’re young, knowing it’s probably going to blow up but going all in anyway,” says frontman John Thai. “It’s grief dressed up in sunshine – holding someone close while everything feels like it could collapse at any second.”

Musically, “Kids” blends bright, celebratory guitar riffs with an undercurrent of melancholy, creating a tension that perfectly captures the feeling of teenage heartbreak. The song pulls you into the past with the raw intensity of first love, while its production – meant to feel like a hot summer drive with the windows down – grounds it in the nostalgia that defines the entire EP.

Video Voyageur: 3Qs with Satya

Montreal-based pop/R&B artist Satya returns with “Realness,” a soulful, empowering anthem about finding true, unconditional love in a world that often feels chaotic and unsteady. The single blends sleek, modern R&B textures with Satya‘s warm, emotive voice – offering both sensuality and strength in equal measure.

Written by Tranell Antoine and co-written alongside Satya and Garett Raffanelli, “Realness” is rooted in the profound experience of discovering loyalty, trust, and emotional safety. For Satya, it’s about celebrating love that’s genuine, grounding, and rare. “The title captures the core essence of the song – it’s about love that is sincere, unfiltered, and unwavering,” she explains. “It’s not just romance – it’s the authenticity and depth behind it that makes it so powerful.”

With its slow tempo, layered harmonies, and intimate production choices by Domeno – from glowing synth pads to reverb-soaked backing vocals – “Realness” embodies the warmth and clarity of love at its truest form. Simple, direct, and deeply resonant, it distills the awe of experiencing something profoundly new.

Video Voyageur: 3Qs with Summer Bruises 

Calgary-based indie-rock outfit Summer Bruises are releasing their sophomore album, Out of Body, recorded at OCL Studio with producer Lorrie Matheson.

The record asks the listener to face the archetype of the predator – internal, external, figurative, or literal. From cartoonish vampiric characters in “Sang Crême Glacée” to the volatile intensity of “With Me or At Me,” the album wrestles with abusive relationships, loneliness, self-reckoning, and the desire to heal. Lead single, “Death Disco,” pulses with unrelenting energy, balancing goth-inspired tension with a sharp post-punk edge.

Musically, Out of Body hears Summer Bruisesleaning into darker textures and isolating atmospheres compared to their debut. “As the album’s music and lyrics are ‘colder’ than our debut, Light to Waste, we isolated ourselves from each other in different rooms during recording or finished our tracks individually,” explains guitarist Aaron Smelski. “This was intentional and encouraged by our producer, Lorrie Matheson. Overall, it has a colder feel – similar to a Joy Division album – than warm cohesiveness like our previous record.”

The cold, drum-machine-inspired percussion and discordant piano break open the artery of lead single, “Death Disco,” creating a danceable yet uneasy atmosphere. While much of the band’s debut Light to Waste LP came together with harmony and ease, “Death Disco” was the first time Summer Bruisesencountered creative friction. “Don’t worry – we still love each other,” they clarify, “but it was the first time we really had to navigate through tension and find a healthy way forward.”

1. Tell us the story of this song, why did you choose to visualize this song specifically? 

The origin of this song, if you ask Elyse, the vocalist and lyricist, is this: I used to wonder why some migratory birds fly at night. I’d spy the pale shadows of waterfowl on autumn nights, hear them shrieking overhead to orient themselves to one another. Just… hurling themselves at full speed through the yawning black of the lightless countryside. 

When we started writing this song, it finally occurred to me that they did it because they must. Or maybe because they couldn’t stop themselves even if they wanted to. Even if they were terrified. And maybe once they’re already up there in the dark, they can’t come down anymore. They’ve already picked up so much speed, flown so high… can’t see below them, so it’s too late to come in for any sort of graceful landing. They’d crash out.

This translates to this concept of succumbing to ones desires or instincts, maybe even being lured into it, realizing you’ve fallen into something, something you can’t climb out of or don’t know how to, but not being able to find the brake pedal. It’s about spiralling out of control, and the regret that comes with it. 

Why did we choose to visualize this song? It sort of happened through sheer luck. KC Caywood from SAIT’s 2023 Film and Video Production Program approached us with a fully-fleshed idea for a vampire music video, and as soon as we were presented with it, we knew that Death Disco would be the perfect fit. 

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

KC Caywood was the visionary behind this video and would certainly be able to answer this question more thoroughly than anyone from Summer Bruises can, but I know she referenced Herk Harvey’s ‘Carnival of Soul’s (1962) stylistically, and probably some other old horror films from that era. Summer Bruises did not actually have much creative input regarding the video, but we are thrilled with how it turned out!

3. What was the process of making this video?

We were involved in the filming part for one night, so I can’t speak to what KC and the film crew’s process was, but I have filmed short films in the past so I’ll take an educated guess that there were probably a lot of very long hours, late nights, and heaps of caffeine to keep the crew fuelled. That’s usually part of the process. A lot of heart involved, too. That entire film crew was brimming with heart and enthusiasm, even though they were running on maybe just a handful of hours of sleep. We filmed the band’s part in one night – the vampire ball where the band is playing music for all the dancing vampires and their soon-to-be victims, and honestly? It was a blast. KC had us sit with the hair and makeup expert, who dolled all four of us up, then we did a bunch of takes, pretending to play Death Disco on our respective instruments. The pretending part felt kind of silly, yet we really leaned into it. After filming the band’s parts, the rest was in KC and the film crew’s capable hands. 

Midnight Channel Summon Cosmic Catharsis on Jazz Odyssey LP Alien Love Songs feat. Monster-Sized Highlight “Shelly”

Lethbridge, Alberta’s Midnight Channel aren’t just playing jazz – they’re reimagining it, tearing it apart, and letting the pieces orbit through time, memory, and love. Their new album, Alien Love Songs, is a sprawling, groove-heavy collision of blistering horn lines, meditative melodies, and the emotional messiness of being human.

Featuring the monstrous, mystifying focus track “Shelly,” the record explores romantic, platonic, spiritual, and self-love as well as the aching absence of it. It’s as inspired by anime and inside jokes as it is by Don Cherry, Makaya McCraven, or Miles Davis’s electric era. The result? A chaotic, transcendent, deeply personal take on the jazz album.

Alien Love Songs was recorded live-off-the-floor in an empty church and later refined at Studio One at the University of Lethbridge. The result is a sonically raw but emotionally rich document of the band’s collective evolution.

“We’re lucky to have a community of talented friends and producers who helped us bring this to life,” says drummer Drake McCheyne. “The whole thing felt collaborative, grounded, and real.”

As the album explores themes of longing, grief, joy, and disconnection, it never loses its sense of mischief or play. “When we first started playing original music, we’d joke before going on: ‘Ready to scare them?,’” says tenor saxophonist Stuart Dalby. “That attitude actually helped us stay true to what we want from songwriting and performing. It reminds us to focus on what we love, not what other people might think.”

Boys Night Out Return with “100% Ghosts,” a Hopeful and Emotive Post-Hardcore Anthem

Boys Night Out have officially returned with their brand new single, “100% Ghosts” — a cathartic, high-energy blend of alternative and post-hardcore that captures the band’s trademark mix of raw emotion, technical musicianship, and unforgettable hooks.

100% Ghosts” is inspired by the importance of moving forward, even when it feels impossible. The song presents a two-chapter story: the first half acknowledges the fear and vulnerability of confronting personal demons, while the second half builds toward a resolution, propelled by gang vocals, screaming, and surging instrumentation that remind us to keep going.

The title itself was born from a playful moment – vocalist Connor Lovat-Fraser joking about his wife’s ghost sightings on tour buses and in venue green rooms. Paired with the song’s themes of perseverance, however, it became the perfect way to encapsulate the message.

Produced, engineered, and co-written by longtime BNO collaborator Scotty Komer – who also played bass on the track – “100% Ghosts” reflects everything fans have come to expect from the band: handclaps, gang vocals, alliterative lyrics, a balance of clean singing and screaming, and a sound rooted in punk rock, hardcore, and pop.

“Personally, this song makes me feel positive and excited for what the future holds,” says vocalist Connor Lovat-Fraser. “It was deeply cathartic to write and sing during the recording process. I can’t wait to perform it live on stage.”