Lou Reed, Velvet Underground Leader and Rock Pioneer, Dead at 71 | Music News | Rolling Stone

Lou Reed

October 27, 2013 1:15 PM ET

 http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/lou-reed-velvet-underground-leader-and-rock-pioneer-dead-at-71-20131027#ixzz2iwqjGOdI

Lou Reed, a massively influential songwriter and guitarist who helped shape nearly fifty years of rock music, died today. The cause of his death has not yet been released, but Reed underwent a liver transplant in May.

With the Velvet Underground in the late Sixties, Reed fused street-level urgency with elements of European avant-garde music, marrying beauty and noise, while bringing a whole new lyrical honesty to rock & roll poetry. As a restlessly inventive solo artist, from the Seventies into the 2010s, he was chameleonic, thorny and unpredictable, challenging his fans at every turn. Glam, punk and alternative rock are all unthinkable without his revelatory example. “One chord is fine,” he once said, alluding to his bare-bones guitar style. “Two chords are pushing it. Three chords and you’re into jazz.”

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@thearchivesband Ready To Make History

http://www.therecord.com/whatson-story/4140651-the-archives-ready-to-make-history/

By Neil Mcdonald

Toronto band The Archives are making a name for themselves seven inches at a time.

The explosive alt-rock four-piece released their new vinyl single Vol. 2 last week, the followup to the group’s Vol. 1 seven-inch release from earlier this year.

As the band’s bassist and singer Anthony Menecola explained, the release of two singles in such a short span of time was an intentional strategy.

“We wanted to have a constant stream of content, so basically what we decided on doing … is to record an EP, couple it with a live video and kind of do a couple of staggered smaller releases along with the video, just to keep a steady stream of content coming,” he said on the phone from Toronto.

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New Contest For Unsigned Canadian Singer-Singwriters

http://www.alancross.ca/a-journal-of-musical-things/2013/9/25/new-contest-for-unsigned-canadian-singer-songwriters.html

Beginning October 8, 2013, unsigned Canadian singer-songwriters can enter one original song in the 2014 Singer-Songwriter Mentor Experience, sponsored by Aspiring Canadian Writers Contests Inc. and supported by Industry Partner, Songwriters Association of Canada.

Entries will be reviewed by a panel of singer-songwriter judges: Lesley Pike, Gibson’s featured artist, 2013 Sundance London film and music festival; Luther Mallory, former frontman of Crush Luther, pop-rock band with two #1 hits on Much More Music; Katie Rox, former lead singer of Jakalope, industrial-rock band with multiple MMVA nominations; Melanie Durrant, 2013 Juno Award-nominated artist for Reggae Single of the Year; and Theo Tams, Gemini Award-nominated artist and 2008 Canadian Idol champion.

The Top 3 Grand Prize Winners will receive private online songwriting mentoring sessions with multiple Juno Award-winning artist, Luba. “I’m very proud to be associated with the 2014 Singer-Songwriter Mentor Experience,” says Luba. “I believe it will help foster great, homegrown talent and I look forward to mentoring the Top 3.”

As part of the Top 25 Finalists, the Top 3 Grand Prize Winners will also receive annual memberships to the Songwriters Association of Canada.

The 2014 Singer-Songwriter Mentor Experience will run for one year only and is modelled after the Aspiring Canadian Writers Contests Inc.’s annual poetry contest for unpublished writers (www.aspiringpoetscontest.org) whose Top 3 winners receive private online mentoring sessions with a published poet.

Video entries for the singer-songwriter contest can be submitted at www.songwritermentorexperience.org from October 8, 2013 to December 22, 2013, or until 300 eligible entries are received.

For additional prize information and entry guidelines, visit www.songwritermentorexperience.org.

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Wild ride for The Motorleague

http://www.therecord.com/whatson-story/4078235-wild-ride-for-the-motorleague/

By Neil Mcdonald

It’s fair to say that Moncton, N.B., fuzz-rockers The Motorleague have had their share of ups and downs.

Since forming in 2006 with members culled from the remains of beloved East Coast bands like The Ditchpigs, The Monoxides and Hope, the band has gone through 11 lineup changes, won two East Coast Music Awards and destroyed a van in a collision with some wildlife on the 401.

In June, the band released Acknowledge, Acknowledge on Halifax indie Sonic Records, the follow-up to their successful 2009 debut Black Noise. As the group’s lead singer and guitarist Don Levandier explained in a phone interview this week, however, recording sessions for the album actually began in 2010, with more lineup changes and all manner of bad luck responsible for the holdup in getting the album out.

“There was just delay after delay after delay getting that record made,” he said, while waiting to soundcheck before a show in Kingston, Ont. “We were definitely in what people call ‘record hell,’ just with this epic record that’s never going to come out. You know, people quit the band, it’s like, ‘The band’s got no future, the record’s never going to come out,’ and it was a pretty dark time.”

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Dolby Laboratories founder, Ray Dolby, dies

http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/story/2013/09/12/arts-dolby-ray-dead.html

Ray Dolby, an American inventor and audio pioneer who founded Dolby Laboratories, has died at the age of 80.

The company said Thursday that Dolby died in his home at San Francisco. He had been living with Alzheimer’s disease for several years and was diagnosed with acute leukemia this summer.

Dolby founded his namesake company in 1965 and grew it into an industry leader in audio technology. His work in noise reduction and surround sound led to the creation of a number of technologies that are still used in music, movies and entertainment today. The innovations also turned Dolby into a rich man with an estimated fortune of $2.3 billion US, according to Forbes magazine.

“Today we lost a friend, mentor and true visionary,” Kevin Yeaman, president and CEO of Dolby Laboratories, said in a statement.

Yeaman said that Dolby invented an entire industry around delivering an experience in sound. His work ranged from helping to reduce the hiss in cassette recordings to bringing Star Wars to life on the big screen in Dolby Stereo.

Dolby held 50 U.S. patents and won a number of notable awards for his life’s work, including several Emmys, two Oscars and a Grammy.

He was awarded the National Medal of Technology from former U.S. president Bill Clinton and was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in the U.S. and the Royal Academy of Engineers in the U.K., among other honours. In 2012, the theater that serves as home to the Academy Awards was renamed the Dolby Theatre and the Ray Dolby Ballroom was named in his honour.

“Ray really managed to have a dream job,” said Dagmar Dolby, his wife of 47 years. “Because he could do exactly what he wanted to do, whichever way he wanted to do it, and in the process, did a lot of good for many music and film lovers. And in the end, built a very successful company.”

Achievements came from love of music, arts

Dolby was born in Portland, Ore., and his family eventually moved to the San Francisco peninsula. It was there that he started his professional work at Ampex Corp. working on videotape recording systems while he was still a student.

After graduating from Stanford University, he left Ampex to study at Cambridge University. Following his time as a United Nations adviser in India, he returned to England and founded Dolby in London. In 1976, he moved to San Francisco where the company established its headquarters.

Dolby’s co-workers described him as an inspiring and thoughtful man, who cared passionately about engineering.

“To be an inventor, you have to be willing to live with a sense of uncertainty, to work in the darkness and grope toward an answer, to put up with the anxiety about whether there is an answer,” Dolby once said.

He is survived by his wife, Dagmar, his sons, Tom and David, their spouses, Andrew and Natasha, and four grandchildren.

Dolby and his wife were active in philanthropy and supported numerous causes and organizations. The Ray and Dagmar Dolby Regeneration Medicine Building at the University of California, San Francisco’s Stem Cell Center and the Brain Health Center at California Pacific Medical Center were opened with their support.

His family described Dolby as generous, patient, curious and fair.

“Though he was an engineer at heart, my father’s achievements in technology grew out of a love of music and the arts,” said Tom Dolby, son, filmmaker and novelist. “He brought his appreciation of the artistic process to all of his work in film and audio recording.”

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Downtown comes alive with sounds of indie music : @koimusicfest

KOI Music Festival

By Robert Reid

Nothing breeds success like success.

Just ask Cory Crossman.

Four years ago Crossman and his brother Curt had a bold idea.

The co-owners of Queen Street businesses Arc Clothing and Civilian Printing dreamed up a one-day, indie music festival.

Called The Kitchener Ontario Independent Music Festival — KOI (like the fish) for short — the ear-thumping, music bash was not aimed at fortysomethings or babyboomers.

After all, Sun Life Finacial UpTown Waterloo Jazz Festival, TD Kitchener Blues Festival and Cambridge’s Mill Race Festival of Traditional Folk Music already had that demographic covered.

No, the Crossman’s audacious plan was aimed at a younger audience who eschewed polite music in all its pasteurized forms for rawer, rougher fare — indie rock, hip-hop, pop punk, metal, hardcore, reggae, ska and blues with an edge.

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