#phil melanson
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2024 olympics Canada roster
Archery
Eric Peters (Kitchener, Ontario)
Virginie Chénier (Montreal, Quebec)
Athletics
Eliezer Adjibi (Ottawa, Ontario)
Duan Asemota (Ajax, Ontario)
Aaron Brown (Toronto, Ontario)
Andre De Grasse (Markham, Ontario)
Brendon Rodney (Brampton, Ontario)
Christopher Morales (York, Ontario)
Marco Arop (Edmonton, Alberta)
Kieran Lumb (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Charles Philibert-Thiboutot (Quebec, Quebec)
Mohammed Ahmed (St. Catherines, Ontario)
Ben Flanagan (Kitchener, Ontario)
Thomas Fafard (Repentigny, Quebec)
Craig Thorne (Quispamsis, New Brunswick)
Jean-Simon Desgagnés (Quebec, Quebec)
Jerome Blake (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Cameron Levins (Courtenay, British Columbia)
Rory Linkletter (Flagstaff, Arizona)
Evan Dunfee (Richmond, British Columbia)
Rowan Hamilton (Chilliwack, British Columbia)
Ethan Katzberg (Kamloops, British Columbia)
Adam Keenan (Victoria, British Columbia)
Damian Warner (London, Ontario)
Marie-Éloïse Leclair (Montreal, Quebec)
Sade McCreath-Tardiel (Toronto, Ontario)
Jasneet Nijjar (Surrey, British Columbia)
Audrey Leduc (Gatineau, Quebec)
Jacqueline Madogo (Ottawa, Ontario)
Lauren Gale (Ottawa, Ontario)
Zoe Sherar (Toronto, Ontario)
Jazz Shukla (Toronto, Ontario)
Kate Current (Cobourg, Ontario)
Simone Plourde (Montreal, Quebec)
Lucia Stafford (Toronto, Ontario)
Briana Scott (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Regan Yee (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Mariam Abdul-Rashid (Oshawa, Ontario)
Michelle Harrison (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Savannah Sutherland (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Ceili McCabe (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Malindi Elmore (Kelowna, British Columbia)
Crystal Emmanuel-Ahye (Toronto, Ontario)
Kyra Constantine (Brampton, Ontario)
Aiyanna Stiverne (Laval, Quebec)
Olivia Lundman (Nanaimo, British Columbia)
Camryn Rogers (Richmond, British Columbia)
Anicka Newell (Albuquerque, New Mexico)
Alysha Newman (London, Ontario)
Sarah Mitton (Queens Municipality, Nova Scotia)
Badminton
Brian Yang (Richmond Hill, Ontario)
Adam Dong (Burlington, Ontario)
Nyl Yakura (Toronto, Ontario)
Michelle Li (Markham, Ontario)
Basketball
Luguentz Dort (Montreal, Quebec)
Nickeil Alexander-Walker (Vaughan, Ontario)
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Hamilton, Ontario)
Melvin Ejim (Rocky View County, Alberta)
Jamal Murray (Orangeville, Ontario)
Dwight Powell (Toronto, Ontario)
Trey Lyles (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
R.A. Barrett; Jr. (Mississauga, Ontario)
Kelly Olynyk (Kamloops, British Columbia)
Andrew Nembhard (Vaughan, Ontario)
Dillon Brooks (Mississauga, Ontario)
Khem Birch (Russell Township, Ontario)
Shay Colley (Brampton, Ontario)
Samantha Hill (Toronto, Ontario)
Kia Nurse (Hamilton, Ontario)
Bridget Carleton (Chatham-Kent, Ontario)
Cassandre Prosper (Ottawa, Ontario)
Yvonne Ejim (Rocky View County, Alberta)
Natalie Achonwa (Guelph, Ontario)
Syla Swords (Sudbury, Ontario)
Kayla Alexander (Milton, Ontario)
Laeticia Amihere (Mississauga, Ontario)
Nirra Fields (Montreal, Quebec)
Aaliyah Edwards (Kingston, Ontario)
Kacie Bosch (Lethbridge, Alberta)
Paige Crozon (Humboldt, Saskatchewan)
Katherine Plouffe (Edmonton, Alberta)
Michelle Plouffe (Edmonton, Alberta)
Boxing
Wyatt Sanford (Montreal, Quebec)
Tammara Thibeault (Saint-Georges, Quebec)
Breakdancing
Phil Kim (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Canoeing
Alex Baldoni (Pau, France)
Connor Fitzpatrick (Dartmouth, Nova Scotia)
Laurent Lavigne (Trois-Rivières, Quebec)
Nicholas Matveev (Toronto, Ontario)
Simon McTavish (Sydney, Australia)
Pierre-Luc Poulin (Quebec, Quebec)
Lois Betteridge (Ottawa, Ontario)
Sophia Jensen (Chelsea, Quebec)
Sloan MacKenzie (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
Katie Vincent (Mississauga, Ontario)
Michelle Russell (Halifax Municipality, Nova Scotia)
Toshka Besharah-Hrebacka (Ottawa, Ontario)
Natalie Davison (Ottawa, Ontario)
Riley Melanson (Dartmouth, Nova Scotia)
Courtney Stott (Pickering, Ontario)
Cycling
Derek Gee (Ottawa, Ontario)
Michael Woods (Toronto, Ontario)
Tyler Rorke (Wilmot Township, Ontario)
Nick Wammes (Chatham-Kent, Ontario)
James Hedgcock (Hamilton, Ontario)
Dylan Bibic (Mississauga, Ontario)
Michael Foley (Milton, Ontario)
Mathis Guillemette (Trois-Rivières, Quebec)
Carson Mattern (Hamilton, Ontario)
Gunnar Holmgren (Oro-Medonte Township, Ontario)
Jeffrey Whaley (L'Assomption, Quebec)
Olivia Baril (Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec)
Alison Jackson (Vermilion, Alberta)
Lauriane Genest (Montreal, Quebec)
Kelsey Mitchell (Strathcona County, Alberta)
Sarah Orban (Calgary, Alberta)
Erin Attwell (Victoria, British Columbia)
Ariane Bonhomme (Gatineau, Quebec)
Maggie Coles-Lyster (Maple Ridge, British Columbia)
Sarah Van Dam (Victoria, British Columbia)
Isabella Holmgren (Oro-Medonte Township, Ontario)
Molly Simpson (Red Deer, Alberta)
Diving
Rylan Wiens (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Nathan Zsombor-Murray (Pointe-Claire, Quebec)
Margo Erlam (Calgary, Alberta)
Caeli McKay (Montreal, Quebec)
Kate Miller (Ottawa, Ontario)
Equestrian
Chris Van Martels (Chatham-Kent, Ontario)
Karl Slezak (Tottenham, Ontario)
Mike Winter (Montreal, Quebec)
Mario Deslauriers (Venise-En-Quebec, Quebec)
Camille Carier-Bergeron (Laval, Quebec)
Naïma Laliberté-Moreira (Montreal, Quebec)
Jessica Phoenix (Uxbridge Township, Ontario)
Erynn Ballard (Caledon, Ontario)
Amy Millar (Perth, Ontario)
Fencing
Nicholas Zhang (Richmond, British Columbia)
Blake Broszus (San José, California)
Daniel Gu (Edmonton, Alberta)
Maximilien Van Haaster (Montreal, Quebec)
Fares Arfa (Laval, Quebec)
François Cauchon (Montreal, Quebec)
Shaul Gordon (Richmond, British Columbia)
Ruien Xiao (Markham, Ontario)
Jessica Guo (Toronto, Ontario)
Eleanor Harvey (Hamilton, Ontario)
Yunjia Zhang (Toronto, Ontario)
Pamela Brind'Amour (Sainte-Martine, Quebec)
Golf
Corey Connors (Jupiter, Florida)
Nick Taylor (Abbotsford, British Columbia)
Brooke Henderson (Naples, Florida)
Alena Sharp (Phoenix, Arizona)
Gymnastics
Zachary Clay (Chilliwack, British Columbia)
René Cournoyer (Repentigny, Quebec)
Félix Dolci (Saint-Eustache, Quebec)
William Émard (Laval, Quebec)
Samuel Zakutney (Montreal, Quebec)
Elsabeth Black (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
Shallon Olsen (Tuscaloosa, Alabama)
Cassie Lee (Toronto, Ontario)
Ava Stewart (Bowmanville, Ontario)
Aurélie Tran (Repentigny, Quebec)
Sophiane Méthot (Varennes, Quebec)
Judo
Arthur Margelidon (Montreal, Quebec)
François Gauthier-Drapeau (Alma, Quebec)
Shady Elnahas (Toronto, Ontario)
Ana Portuondo (La Prairie, Quebec)
Kelly Deguchi (Lethbridge, Alberta)
Christina Deguchi (Lethbridge, Alberta)
Catherine Beauchemin-Pinard (Saint-Hubert, Quebec)
Rowing
Jennifer Casson (Victoria, British Columbia)
Jill Moffatt (Victoria, British Columbia)
Abby Dent (Kenora, Ontario)
Caileigh Filmer (Saanich, British Columbia)
Kasia Gruchalla-Wesierski (Calgary, Alberta)
Maya Meschkuleit (Mississauga, Ontario)
Sydney Paine (Toronto, Ontario)
Jessica Sevick (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Kristina Walker (Frontenac Islands Township, Ontario)
Avalon Wasteneys (Victoria, British Columbia)
Kristen Kit (St. Catherines, Ontario)
Rugby
Caroline Crossley (New Westminster, British Columbia)
Olivia Apps (Victoria, British Columbia)
Alysha Corrigan (Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island)
Asia Hogan-Rochester (Toronto, Ontario)
Chloe Daniels (Langford, British Columbia)
Charity Williams (Victoria, British Columbia)
Florence Symonds (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Carissa Norsten (Waldheim, Saskatchewan)
Krissy Scurfield (Canmore, Alberta)
Fancy Bermudez (Edmonton, Alberta)
Piper Logan (Calgary, Alberta)
Keyara Wardley (Victoria, British Columbia)
Sailing
Justin Barnes (Pickering, Ontario)
Will Jones (Hamilton, Ontario)
Sarah Douglas (Toronto, Ontario)
Emily Bugeja (North Vancouver, British Columbia)
Antonia Lewin-LaFrance (Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia)
Georgia Lewin-LaFrance (Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia)
Shooting
Tye Ikeda (Calgary, Alberta)
Michele Esercitato (Calgary, Alberta)
Shannon Westlake (Georgina, Ontario)
Skateboarding
Cordano Russell (Carlsbad, California)
Matt Berger (Huntington Beach, California)
Ryan Decenzo (Delta, British Columbia)
Fay De Fazio-Ebert (Toronto, Ontario)
Soccer
Kailen Sheridan (Whitby, Ontario)
Gabrielle Carle (Lévis, Quebec)
Kadeisha Buchanan (Brampton, Ontario)
Evelyne Viens (L'Ancienne-Lorette, Quebec)
Rebecca Quinn (Toronto, Ontario)
Cloé Lacasse (Sudbury, Ontario)
Julia Grosso (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Jayde Riviere (Markham, Ontario)
Jordyn Huitema (Chilliwack, British Columbia)
Ashley Lawrence (Toronto, Ontario)
Adriana Leon (King Township, Ontario)
Jade Rose (Markham, Ontario)
Simi Awujo (Atlanta, Georgia)
Vanessa Gilles (Châteauguay, Quebec)
Nichelle Prince (Ajax, Ontario)
Janine Beckie (Douglas County, Colorado)
Jessie Fleming (London, Ontario)
Sabrina D'Angelo (Welland, Ontario)
Shelina Zadorsky (London, Ontario)
Surfing
Sanoa Dempfle-Olin (Tofino, British Columbia)
Swimming
Josh Liendo-Edwards (Toronto, Ontario)
Yuri Kisil (Calgary, Alberta)
Javier Acevedo (Toronto, Ontario)
Blake Tierney (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Ilya Kharun (Las Vegas, Nevada)
Finlay Knox (Okotoks, Alberta)
Tristan Jankovics (Puslinch Township, Ontario)
Alex Axon (Newmarket, Ontario)
Jeremy Bagshaw (Victoria, British Columbia)
Patrick Hussey (Beaconsfield, Quebec)
Lorne Wigginton (Calgary, Alberta)
Apollo Hess (Lethbridge, Alberta)
Audrey Lamothe (Montreal, Quebec)
Jacqueline Simoneau (Saint-Laurent, Quebec)
Scarlett Finn (Toronto, Ontario)
Joannie Newman (Grande Prairie, Alberta)
Raphaelle Plante (Quebec City, Quebec)
Kenzie Priddell (Regina, Saskatchewan)
Claire Scheffel (Brantford, Ontario)
Florence Tremblay (Rimouski, Quebec)
Taylor Ruck (Scottsdale, Arizona)
Maggie MacNeil (London, Ontario)
Mary-Sophie Harvey (Trois-Rivières, Quebec)
Summer McIntosh (Toronto, Ontario)
Kylie Masse (Windsor, Ontario)
Ingrid Wilm (Calgary, Alberta)
Regan Rathwell (Ottawa, Ontario)
Sophie Angus (Toronto, Ontario)
Sydney Pickrem (Dunedin, Florida)
Kelsey Wog (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Rebecca Smith (Red Deer, Alberta)
Ella Jansen (Burlington, Ontario)
Penny Oleksiak (Toronto, Ontario)
Brooklyn Douthwright (Riverview, New Brunswick)
Julie Brousseau (Ottawa, Ontario)
Emma O'Croinin (Edmonton, Alberta)
Emma Finlin (Edmonton, Alberta)
Table tennis
Edward Ly (Lachine, Quebec)
Eugene Wang (Aurora, Ontario)
Jeremy Hazin (Richmond Hill, Ontario)
Mo Zhang (Vancouver, British Columbia)
Taekwondo
Josipa Kafadar (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Skylar Park (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Tennis
Félix Auger-Aliassime (Monte Carlo, Monaco)
Miloš Raonić (Monte Carlo, Monaco)
Bianca Andreescu (Vaughan, Ontario)
Leylah Fernandez (Boynton Beach, Florida)
Gaby Dabrowski (Ottawa, Ontario)
Triathlon
Tyler Mislawchuk (Macdonald Municipality, Manitoba)
Claude Paquet (Port-Cartier, Quebec)
Emy Legault (Montreal, Quebec)
Volleyball
Daniel Dearing (Toronto, Ontario)
Sammy Schachter (Richmond Hill, Ontario)
Luke Herr (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Nick Hoag (Sherbrooke, Quebec)
Brodie Hofer (Langley, British Columbia)
Danny Demyanenko (Toronto, Ontario)
Stephen Maar (Aurora, Ontario)
Brett Walsh (Calgary, Alberta)
Xander Ketrzynski (Toronto, Ontario)
Lucas Van Berkel (Edmonton, Alberta)
Arthur Szwarc (Toronto, Ontario)
Justin Lui (Pickering, Ontario)
Fynn McCarthy (Lake Country Municipality, British Columbia)
Eric Loeppky (Steinbach, Manitoba)
Melissa Humaña-Paredes (Toronto, Ontario)
Brandie Wilkerson (Toronto, Ontario)
Heather Bansley (Toronto, Ontario)
Sophie Bukovec (Toronto, Ontario)
Water polo
Jessica Gaudreault (Ottawa, Ontario)
Rae Lekness (Calgary, Alberta)
Axelle Crevier (Montreal, Quebec)
Emma Wright (Whitby, Ontario)
Marilia Mimides (Toronto, Ontario)
Blaire McDowell (Fernie, British Columbia)
Verica Bakoc (Toronto, Ontario)
Elyse Lemay-Lavoie (Montreal, Quebec)
Hayley McKelvey (Delta, British Columbia)
Serena Browne (Montreal, Quebec)
Kindred Paul (Spruce Grove, Alberta)
Shae La Roche (Winnipeg, Manitoba)
Clara Vulpisi (Montreal, Quebec)
Weightlifting
Boady Santavy (Sarnia, Ontario)
Maude Charron (Rimouski, Quebec)
Wrestling
Alex Moore (Montreal, Quebec)
Amar Dhesi (Surrey, British Columbia)
Hannah Taylor (Cornwall, Prince Edward Island)
Ana Godinez (Burnaby, British Columbia)
Linda Morais (Tecumseh, Ontario)
Justina Di Stasio (Coquitlam, British Columbia)
#Sports#National Teams#Canada#Celebrities#Ontario#Quebec#Races#British Columbia#Alberta#New Brunswick#Arizona#Saskatchewan#New Mexico#Nova Scotia#Basketball#Fights#Boxing#Boats#France#Australia#Golf#Florida#Egypt#Japan#Prince Edward Island#Soccer#Georgia#Colorado#Nevada#Manitoba
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BERNICE / Cruisin'
トロント・インディーズが話題になった時期がありました。その時期このユニットもかなり注目されていましたが、その後失礼ながらファースト・アルバム以来、個人的にはその動向を追いかけておりませんでした。本作はそのBernice(バーニス)の最新アルバムです。
メンバーはRobin Dann、Thom Gill、Dan Fortin、Felicity Williams、Phil Melansonの五人。Matthew Pencerがプロデュースを担当し、自宅で録音された作品なのだそうです。
インティメイトなメロディーと、おもちゃ箱のように遊び心にあふれる可愛らしい音の作り、そして実験精神と繊細な美意識とが共存する先進的アヴァン・ポップです。Robin Dannの柔らかく儚げな声が、まるで夢の中にあるように非現実的でいて、しかしなんとも心地よいのです。
トロントのアーティスト達って、先進性と心地よさを自然な形で融合させるのが凄くうまいですね。
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On his new album, COOKUP, due February 24, Sam Gendel and his friends and collaborators Gabe Noel and Philippe Melanson interpret R&B and soul hits originally released between 1992 and 2004 by Ginuwine, 112, Aaliyah, All-4-One, Soul 4 Real, Beyoncé, Joe, Erykah Badu, Mario, SWV, and Boyz II Men. You can preorder and get their take on 112’s "Anywhere," with Meshell Ndegeocello on vocals, at https://samgendel.lnk.to/COOKUP
"COOKUP marks another chance to convene with my good friends Phil Melanson and Gabe Noel," Gendel says. "For this occasion we hovered over a particular flavor: jams that we grew up with. We sculpted in sound our collective memories of this music. Meshell Ndegeocello took the 112 to another dimension (shoutout wayne12)."
#sam gendel#cookup#gabe noel#philippe melanson#meshell ndegeocello#saxophone#jazz#ginuwine#112#aaliyah#all4one#soul4real#beyonce#erykah badu#boyz ii men#nonesuch#nonesuch records
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Joseph Shabason - The Fellowship - no less than his life story in music; do click through to read the program notes (Western Vinyl)
Across eight tracks that mesh jazz-laced, emotive, and spacious composition with fourth-world and adult-contemporary tonality, Toronto saxophonist Joseph Shabason sketches an auditory map of the transcendence, unity, conditioning, and eventual renunciation of his upbringing in an Islamic and Jewish dual-faith household. The resulting album The Fellowship bears the name of the insular Islamic community Shabason’s traditionally Jewish parents belonged to from a time before he was even born; a mental and spiritual push-pull which continued shaping, even controlling, his outlook well into his adulthood. As a listening experience The Fellowship follows a chronological arc that spans three generations covering his parents’ early lives, his own spiritual and physical adolescence, and his subsequent struggle to eschew the problematic habituations of such a conflicted past.
Joseph Shabason: Saxophones, Flutes, Synth, EWI, Field Recordings, Percussion Kieran Adams: Programming, Percussion, Synth Thom Gill: Guitar, Piano Bram Gielen: Electric Bass, Fretless Bass, Upright Bass Hugh Marsh: Violin Phil Melanson: Drums, Electronic Drums, Percussion Naomi McCarroll-Butler: Clarinet, Bass Clarinet Michael Davidson: Vibraphone Nicole Rampersaud: Trumpet Christine Bougie: Guitar Vince Spilchuk: Trumpet on “The Fellowship” Robin Deane: Vocals
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Joseph Shabason Interview: Deep Digs or Dinner Parties
Photo by Colin Medley
BY JORDAN MAINZER
Saxophonist Joseph Shabason’s Aytche is one of the more ambitious instrumental experimental releases of the year considering its subject matter, which includes memory loss, doctor-assisted death, and the Holocaust (Shabason’s grandparents are Holocaust survivors). But the Diana band member and Destroyer collaborator, even on his debut, knows better than to bite off more he can chew. The album is sequenced in such a way that it’s never too dissonant or too easy, subsequently exploring the complexities within its subject matter. It also helps that Shabason subscribes to Brian Eno’s adage that good music can be ignored; indeed, Aytche is just as rewarding as a passive listen as it is a close listen.
All of this made me want to speak to Shabason about the album, and he agreed to answer some questions over email. Read on as he writes about his personal relationship with the album’s themes, the composition of various album tracks, the album art, and playing live.
Since I Left You: What did you hope to convey or introduce about yourself with your debut album?
Joseph Shabason: A sense of what has been getting me excited about music these days: patient, deliberate, and meditative songs that are for the most without set forms.
SILY: What is your relationship with the album's themes of degenerative illness and assisted suicide?
JS: I have two family members who have Parkinson’s disease, so dealing with degenerative illness and loss is something that is pretty constant in my life. Seeing people who were once vital and full of energy have that freedom and energy slowly taken from them really makes you think about what you would do if you were faced with the same situation. The late stages of the illness are particularly unforgiving, and in a lot of cases, you start to become demented and in a way turn into a person completely unrecognizable from who you were when you were healthy. Eventually, the illness defines who you are, which is something that I’m not comfortable with. It was that realization that got me thinking about doctor-assisted dying. As a control freak, I want to be in control of how people remember me, so for the last year, I’ve just been thinking a lot about how logical and humane the idea of ending your life on your own terms is.
SILY: For an album with such heavy themes, you also envision it in the Brian Eno school of "ignorable as it is interesting." How did you balance pouring yourself into the album with the ultimate recognition that someone's interaction with it might just be while they're cooking dinner?
JS: It was very easy. No one likes to be told how to feel or how to interact with an album--at least I don’t! So for me, I set out to make an album that could work for people on many levels. If you want to dig deep and try and pick out the instances where I was trying to convey some heavier themes, you can totally do that…but I’d be equally stoked for the album to be the din at someone’s dinner party.
SILY: I wrote in my review of Aytche that “Westmeath” “reminds me of the final room at Yad Vashem in Israel, where you look into a pool and see the hazy reflections of the surrounding walls that contain inscribed names of those who were murdered in the Holocaust--a reminder that as time goes on, history becomes harder to concretely recall.” What did you hope to convey about memory and the Holocaust with this track?
JS: Whoa! That’s a huge compliment. That room is a very sacred and beautiful place. When I started recording “Westmeath”, I just plopped the full, unaffected interview over that track and thought that maybe it could work as a very stark and literal coupling of words and music…but the more I listened, the more it sounded corny and melodramatic. In the end, I ended up obscuring the words and chopping up phrases of the interview so that themes were hinted at, but ultimately, the listener had room to make up their own mind about what was being talked about. I’ve spent so much time reading and looking at documentary footage of the Holocaust, and I think that it’s really important to do that and try and feel as close to that horrible event as you possibly can--trying to understand it as literally and as clinically as humanly possible. But I also think that there is a a lot of beauty in thinking about the Holocaust in a much broader and emotional way--not focusing in on the details but zooming out and just trying to feel the grief and hopelessness of it in a much less overt way. Feeling it as a massive trauma that shaped generations of survivors and their families. For my grandparents, it was an open wound, but for me, it’s more of a dull ache that sometimes flares up into something more painful. I guess I was trying to capture all of that in some way or another.
SILY: Making an album that touches on memory and perception of reality in 2017 seems to me almost inherently political despite intention. Did you intend for this album to engage with the politics of today in any way?
JS: Only in the issue of doctor-assisted dying. That’s something that is being talked about in Canada and is slowly, slowly, slowly accepted. The video for “Westmeath”, which is coming out in October, deals heavily with this topic in a pretty stark and overt way. But other than that, I was lust looking to make music that sounded good to my ears.
SILY: Many of the songs reference specific or broader motifs in other songs, from the dissonant combination of saxophone and other instruments on "Looking Forward to Something, Dude" and "Smokestack"/"Belching Smoke" to the steadiness of the title track and "Neil McCauley". How did you decide on the sequencing of the album?
JS: I wanted those three tracks to be the beginning, middle, and end of the album. Other than that, I just tried to make things unfold in a way that seemed natural.
SILY: "Long Swim" seems to me to be the album's most straightforward but beautiful track. Can you talk about that track's composition process?
JS: I had just gone for a really long swim in order to get to this diving board where I could practice gainers (back flips). It was super fucking boring, and I realized that I hated distance swimming. Immediately after getting back to the cabin where we were staying, I started dicking around with my harmonizer pedal and recorded the first breathy chords. Then, I used the exact same patch to record the counter line. At that point, I just used the track I’d made as a kind of karaoke track to solo over. After about an hour of playing over, it I realized that I was still into how it was making me feel, so I decided to record a few takes of saxophone soloing and see if I still liked it in the morning. When I listened again, I was still stoked on it but realized that it needed some percussion to punctuate how repetitive it was. So I got Phil [Melanson] up on it, and it was done. Easy peasy.
SILY: What about the character in Heat [”Neil McCauley”] made you want to title a song after him?
JS: It was less about the character and more about wanting write a song that captured the feeling of that movie--which I love!! To be honest, I had to IMBD search the character’s name when I was naming the song.
SILY: What inspired the album's title? Did you feel the title track evoked the album as a whole?
JS: It was named after a stupid band joke that Diana has with each other. “Aytche” can really mean whatever you want it to mean…which I liked the idea of for an album title.
SILY: What inspired the album art?
JS: Andre Ethier’s paintings have always been deeply inspirational to me, so when I saw that lion, I knew I had to use it for my cover art. It felt both dark but also playful and a bit sexual, which felt right!
SILY: You’ve contributed to past Destroyer albums, and [Destroyer guitarist] Nic Bragg returns the favor and contributes to Aytche. Do you hope to foster a collaborative relationship with artists where you're contributing to each other's projects?
JS: Always! It’s the best part about being a musician.
SILY: Are you playing these songs live? If so, how are you adapting them to the stage?
JS: Totally! I’ve played two gigs so far, and I have two more coming up [in Toronto]. One is the album release (Sept 29th @ The TRANZAC), and the other is a gig opening for Hans-Joachim Roedelius (Oct 17th at The Monarch Tavern), which is fucking amazing! Dude is a legend.
I have a six-piece band of amazing improvisers (some of whom played on the album) who all know that the vide is about small, slow changes and letting people get lost in the repetitive nature of the songs. Each set is different, which is such an exciting thing after playing in rock bands for so long.
SILY: I read you're working on a new album. What else is next for you?
JS: Hopefully touring…but right now, I am focusing on finishing this next album. It’s almost done. I just need to do a bunch of field recordings and interviews that I want to weave into the album. My bud Roger [Leaves] (who mixed Aytche) lent me an insane field recording rig, so over the next month I am gonna get out into nature and the city and different spaces and really try and find some interesting sonic texture to add the the new songs, which right now are deeply new agey.
#joseph shabason#Interviews#music#brian eno#parkinsons#yad vashem#holocaust#phil melanson#heat#neil mccauley#aytche#andre ethier#destroyer#nic bragg#the tranzac#the monarch tavern#hans-joachim roedelius#roger leaves#western vinyl#colin medley#diana
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FEAST IN THE EAST 73
Saturday, July 6th at Prairie Drive Park (119 Pharmacy Ave.) from 5 - 11pm This edition features a free Mango Curry dinner by Alan Kobayashi Music by: SANDRO PERRI (http://www.sandroperri.com/) One of Toronto’s most interesting & inspiring composers, Sandro Perri returns to Feast In The East in duo formation with bassist Josh Cole, percussionist Blake Howard & synth player Ryan Driver. His pop songs are layered deep in textures and full of meanderings. Synth hums and bubbles float above carefully placed percussion like some slowed down jungle dance party. Guitar notes dissipate into hums & lost flourishes. Sandro’s voice moves over the instrumentation, almost caressing it like a sheet. His music creates it’s own environment, it’s own weather conditions, with seamless movement, sounds & textures flow into each. Don’t miss this prodigy of the avant smooth. BERNICE (https://bernice.bandcamp.com/) Robin Dann & her who’s who crew of Toronto avant song slingers (Thom Gill, Dan Fortin, Felicity Williams, and Phil Melanson) pump out soulful compositions that are full of blooming vocal flourishes, airy guitar whispers and bubbling beats. Sounding like the release of some lost spirits rejoicing as they flee into the eather, Bernice creates a uniqwue atomosphere. Vocals swell and fall, as spectral guitar notes drip from the sky. Electronic drum textures pop & gurgle like a stewing bog, fermenting. Get into this beautiful ghost music. NEW CHANCE (https://newchance.bandcamp.com/) Vic Cheong’s posi beat project sees slowly flowering electronic textures mingle with bopping drum machine rhythms, and effected vocals. Lines blur between glitched vocal effects and shaking electronic beats. Whispers become spiritual drones. New age textures amped up with fresh rhythms. Vic takes you on the celestial journey merging the dance and drone zones. Installations & Environs by: Emily Grace Harrison (https://www.emilygraceharrison.com) Roxanne Ignatius (http://roxanneignatius.com) Sara Maston (https://saramaston.com) jes sachse & Khanh Tudo (https://jessachse.com / https://khanh.online) Still Boys (https://www.facebook.com/stillboyz) Dinner Menu: Mango Curry with Eddoe & Summer Gourd Served with Grilled Rice & Refreshing Bitter Melon Salad *gluten-free, nut-free, vegan Bike tune-ups by Scarborough Cycles (www.scarboroughcycles.ca) FREE All Ages RAIN DATE: Saturday, July 13th
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/405093940088845/ This Feast In The East is made possible through the support of Arts in the Parks, Toronto Arts Council, Toronto Arts Foundation, and Loblaws.
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AHL Transactions - Dec.20
Signed to PTO:
Devin Williams | San Antonio Rampage
Signed to SPC:
*Ryan Horvat | Springfield Thunderbirds
Reassigned by NHL to WJC:
Eeli Tolvanen | Milwaukee Admirals → Finaldn
Filip Zadina | Grand Rapids Griffins → Czech Republic
Recalled from Loan by NHL:
Radel Fazleev | Lehigh Valley Phantoms → Philadelphia Flyers
Conor Garland | Tucson Roadrunners → Arizona Coyotes
Tyler Gaudet | Milwaukee Admirals → Nashville Predators
Adin Hill | Tucson Roadrunners → Arizona Coyotes
Anton Lindholm | Colorado Eagles → Colorado Avalanche
Ryan Lomberg | Stockton Heat → Calgary Flames
Buddy Robinson | Stockton Heat → Calgary Flames
Phil Varone | Lehigh Valley Phantoms → Philadelphia Flyers
Returned on Loan from NHL:
Kerby Rychel | Calgary Flames → Stockton Heat
Reassigned by NHL from ECHL:
Michal Moravcik | Brampton Beast → Laval Rocket
Recalled from Loan to ECHL:
Jordan Ernst | Kansas City Mavericks → Stockton Heat
Alex Gudbranson | Newfoundland Growlers → Toronto Marlies
Drew Melanson | Maine Mariners → Hartford Wolf Pack
Bryan Moore | Toledo Walleye → Grand Rapids Griffins
Scott Pooley | Newfoundland Growlers → Toronto Marlies
Reassigned by NHL to ECHL:
Evan Fitzpatrick | San Antonio Rampage → Tulsa Oilers
Ondrej Vala | Texas Stars → Idaho Steelheads
* Previously released from PTO
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Dancing in crystalline light! - Here's a #R3D frame from the #crystalline project by @oneiga with @tokinacinemausa, @hannahmermaid and @creativeprecisionlighting. The vision for the shoot was to explore a liminal world of mixed light, bioluminescence, and prism refraction. All the lighting effects in this project were achieved practically, using a combination of body art, costuming, and lighting design. Much more to see shortly.. . . Shot underwater on RED MONSTRO using @tokinacinemausa Vista Primes including the rare 18mm, 25mm, 50mm, and 100mm macro in @gates.underwater housings. Lit with @digitalsputnik and Lightly processed with IPP2 ... if you're headed to NAB, be sure to stop by Tokina's booth for a glimpse. I can’t wait to share the rest. . . So grateful for the crew of legends that helped pull this project off. Director / Producer / DP: @Oneiga Camera Ops: @snapamap @jenny.baumert @oneiga Muse: @hannahmermaid Body Art: @lana_chromium MUA: @abbywoodmanartistry Styling: @blondeonyxmusic 1st AD: @mistyfair Key Grip / Gaffer: Adrien Oneiga Best Boy / 2nd Light Op: @touchpattern Chief Lighting Technician: @creativeprecisionlighting 2nd rigger: Jag Schumacher Consulting Grip: Paul Lambiase Water Stagehand / BTS : @waller_underwater @brettsphoto BTS: @narventures @hugobordes @dronegear PA / Jr. Booty Glitter: @jessiseymour Sponsors + Friends: Tokina Cinema Digital Sputnik @reddigitalcinema Gates Underwater Products Creative Precision @schneideroptics ACME Grip Co. Ryan Avery Phil Holland Marcel Melanson Eryc Tramonn . . . #cinematography #underwaterphotography #colourful #vibes #fashion #fashionfilm #creative #ledlighting #setlife #filmmaking #portraits_ig #inspiration #lensculture - #hannahmermaid #HannahFraser #underwater #UnderwaterModel #mermaid https://ift.tt/2GIcsih
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NHSAVES UPDATES HOME ENERGY AUDIT PROCESS
Home Heating Index Tool and Streamlined Online Application Process Makes it Easier for Customers to Realize Incentives and Energy Savings.
MANCHESTER, NH – With fall just around the corner, NHSaves is making it easier than ever for residential customers to assess their home’s energy efficiency and qualify for incentives through the introduction of a new and improved online tool and application process.
The updated Home Heating Index (HHI) tool is part of the NHSaves Audits and Weatherization program, which can be found at https://nhsaves.com/programs/energy-audits-weatherization/. The easy-to-navigate tool helps customers determine if their home qualifies for an audit that could ultimately help them earn incentives and rebates, as well as heat and cool their home more efficiently.
NHSaves, a collaboration of Eversource, Liberty Utilities, New Hampshire Electric Co-Op and Unitil, helps New Hampshire residents, businesses and municipalities reduce energy costs and protect our environment.
“The tool brings people into our retrofit weatherization program, which improves the efficiency of the home by tightening it up, adding insulation and making it more comfortable,” says Matt Minghella, Residential Program Manager at Liberty Utilities. “This also allows the home to consume less energy for cooling.”
The HHI tool identifies homes with high energy usage per square foot. Using the online tool, customers simply plug in their heating usage over one year, the conditioned square footage of their home, their provider and zip code. Customers are then provided with an index of their home’s energy efficiency. The online tool simplifies the application process by taking it entirely online.
“The process was very old school before and my gut feeling is it might have turned people away,” says Frank Melanson, Supervisor, Energy Efficiency at Eversource. “Now things are much smoother.”
“In the past, folks had to print, sign and mail in the application with copies of fuel-use records,” says Phil LaMoreaux, Energy Solutions Program Administrator at New Hampshire Electric Co-Op. “Now they can just upload an image.”
Meaningful incentives, established contractor relationships and access to low-interest financing contribute to significant savings of up to $4,000 on overall improvement costs. Through enhanced weatherization tactics supported by NHSaves, customers save on all of their energy use, including electricity for cooling during the summer, as well as on oil, propane and wood heating costs during colder months.
The HHI tool and weatherization program is a part of the Home Performance with ENEGRY STAR® program, a comprehensive, whole-house approach to improving energy efficiency and comfort at home that can save customers on energy costs. The program was recently honored by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE) with the Exemplary Program Award as one of the leading energy efficiency programs in the United States
Due to low fuel prices, some natural gas customers may not qualify for the full Home Heating Audit. Liberty Utilities and Unitil natural gas customers who can upgrade at least one home heating zone to a WiFi thermostat may qualify for a newly launched efficiency assessment called a “Visual Audit.” This abridged audit still determines the home’s energy efficiency and provides homeowners with the direct installation of efficiency products like LED light bulbs and pipe wrap, as well as a check on insulation.
“Customers who go through this program will see immediate benefits through their utility bills and through the fact that their house will be more comfortable and quieter because it’s better insulated,” says Ben Stephenson, Program Coordinator, Customer Energy Solutions for Unitil.
To use the Home Heating Index tool and see if you qualify for the NHSaves Home Performance with ENEGRY STAR program, go to: https://nhsaves.com/programs/energy-audits-weatherization/.
NHSAVES UPDATES HOME ENERGY AUDIT PROCESS posted first on Green Energy Times
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Toronto-based musical project is featured on Pitchfork with a new haunting and heartbreaking track. The group features top-level talent: singer/songwriter Robin Dann, Thom Gill, Colin Fisher, Dan Fortin, Felicity Williams, & Phil Melanson. Strongly recommended.
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Devils overcome Alex Ovechkin’s 700th goal to clip Capitals
With power and a prodigious shot, Alex Ovechkin now stands where few in the NHL have been.
He became the eight NHL player to score 700 career goals, reaching the milestone in the third period of the ’ Capitals’ 3-2 loss to the Devils on Saturday at Prudential Center.
“It’s a special moment,” Ovechkin said. “When you get closer you start thinking when it’s going to happen. Finally, it’s over so we don’t have to talk about it anymore. We’re going to move on.”
The 34-year-old Russian forward one-timed a slap shot from the right circle that went in off the left post 4:50 into the third period, tying the game at 2. It was his 42nd goal of the season, one behind Boston’s David Pastrnak for the league lead, and came on his second shot on goal of the game.
“It was obviously a matter of time, but that was a huge goal for us at the time,” said Todd Rierden, in his second season as Capitals coach after serving as an assistant the previous four. “Amazing to be able to watch it live and in person. To be able to go through the last six years with [Ovechkin] has been amazing to watch. Certainly a superstar in my time, the best goal-scorer that I’ve ever seen.”
Wayne Gretzky leads the career list with 894 goals. He is followed by Gordie Howe (801), Jaromir Jagr (766), Brett Hull (741), Marcel Dionne (731), Phil Esposito (717) and Mike Gartner (708).
Damon Severson scored the winning goal for last-place New Jersey with 1:59 left off a cross-ice pass from Nikita Gusev.
As for the Devils, they may have finally found a winning formula in this poor season. Just put Mackenzie Blackwood in goal.
Blackwood made 36 saves in winning his fifth straight start.
Blackwood downplays the success, saying his teammates are playing well and he had benefited working with goaltending coach Rollie Melanson.
“He’s pretty technically great, so he’s helped me out a lot,” said Blackwood, who is 6-0-1 in his last seven starts. “Helped me with my game and I think as of late, I’ve been fortunate that we’ve been getting the results, so I don’t think anything will change.”
During his winning streak, Blackwood has allowed five goals and posted two shutouts.
“Blackie made some big saves when it was 1-0 (San Jose) to keep it tight,” Devils interim coach Alain Nasreddine said.
source https://truesportsfan.com/sport-today/devils-overcome-alex-ovechkins-700th-goal-to-clip-capitals/
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Every Chris Neil Teammate
OHL
Brett Angel (1997-99)
Ryan Armstrong (1998-99)
Scott Atkins (1996-97)
Alex Auld (1997-99)
Michael Barber (1998-99)
Colin Beardsmore (1996-97)
Scott Behrens (1997-98)
Luc Belliveau (1996-97)
Brendan Brooks (1997-98)
Matt Carmichael (1996-98)
Steve Chabbert (1997-99)
Mike Cirillo (1996-99)
Ryan Cirillo (1996-98)
Lee Cole (1996-97)
Dwight Cormier (1996-97)
Rob Davison (1997-99)
John Dean (1997-99)
Sean Degagne (1998-99)
Tomas Dolak (1997-98)
Chris Eade (1998-99)
Omar Ennaffati (1997-99)
Adriano Fiacconi (1996-98)
Aaron Fox (1996-97)
David Froh (1996-97)
Ryan Gardner (1996-98)
Brett Gibson (1997-99)
Trevor Gillies (1996-98)
Oak Hewer (1998-99)
Allen Hitchen (1997-98)
Warren Holmes (1998-99)
Samu Isosalo (1998-99)
Denis Ivanov (1997-98)
Mark Jerant (1997-99)
Michal Krupa (1997-98)
Greg Labenski (1996-99)
Josh Legge (1998-99)
Mike Loach (1996-97)
Steve Lowe (1996-97)
Ryan MacDonald (1996-97)
Scott MacKenzie (1998-99)
Morris Marshall (1996-97)
Peter McCague (1996-98)
Dean McIntosh (1996-97)
Luc Messier (1998-99)
Jim Midgley (1996-97)
Todd Miller (1997-98)
Lorne Misita (1998-99)
Steve Montador (1996-98)
Jaret Nixon (1996-97)
Matt Osborne (1997-98)
Tony Pappas (1996-98)
Jeremy Pedder (1997-99)
Geoff Peters (1997-98)
Jamie Piercey (1996-99)
Ryan Power (1996-97)
Mark Provenzano (1996-97)
Bobby Reed (1997-99)
Tyler Rennette (1996-98)
Rodney Richard (1997-99)
Scott Roche (1996-97)
Jeff Scharf (1996-97)
Carson Smith (1996-97)
Gabriel Spilar (1998-99)
Rob Stanfield (1997-98)
Valeriy Svoboda (1996-97)
Ryan Taylor (1996-97)
Troy Turyk (1996-97)
Chris Van Dyk (1996-97)
Dustin Virag (1996-97)
Jamie Vossen (1996-97)
Rich Vrataric (1996-97)
Nick Vukovic (1997-99)
Jeff Washbrook (1996-97)
Casey Wolak (1997-98)
Scott Wray (1996-99)
UHL
Denis Afinogenov (1998-99)
Cory Banika (1998-99)
David Beauregard (1998-99)
Robin Bouchard (1998-99)
David Bouskill (1998-99)
Kevin Boyd (1998-99)
Bob Brandon (1998-99)
Joe Dimaline (1998-99)
Denis Emilyantsev (1998-99)
Mike Feasby (1998-99)
Scott Feasby (1998-99)
Nick Foley (1998-99)
Joel Gardner (1998-99)
Dale Gignac (1998-99)
Chad Grills (1998-99)
Jan Klimes (1998-99)
Sergei Kharin (1998-99)
Denis Khlopotnov (1998-99)
Lubos Krajcovic (1998-99)
Igor Malykhin (1998-99)
Chris Maillet (1998-99)
Mike Masini (1998-99)
Don McSween (1998-99)
Rob Melanson (1998-99)
Frankie Nault (1998-99)
Jason Pain (1998-99)
Andrei Petrakov (1998-99)
Andrei Petrunin (1998-99)
Vadim Podrezov (1998-99)
Grant Richison (1998-99)
John Vary (1998-99)
Mark Vilneff (1998-99)
Joakim Wassberger (1998-99)
Paul Willett (1998-99)
ECHL
Chad Alban (1999-2000)
Scott Cherrey (1999-2000)
Jason Clarke (1999-2000)
Benoit Cotnoir (1999-2000)
Dave Craievich (1999-2000)
Steve Debus (1999-2000)
Jason Elders (1999-2000)
Sean Farmer (1999-2000)
Hugues Gervais (1999-2000)
Dereck Gosselin (1999-2000)
Russ Guzior (1999-2000)
Josh Harrold (1999-2000)
B.J. Kilbourne (1999-2000)
Jeff Kozakowski (1999-2000)
John McCabe (1999-2000)
Jason Metcalfe (1999-2000)
Dennis Mullen (1999-2000)
Tom Nolan (1999-2000)
Chad Onufrechuk (1999-2000)
Anders Sorensen (1999-2000)
Bobby Stewart (1999-2000)
Lee Svangstu (1999-2000)
Mark Turner (1999-2000)
David Van Drunen (1999-2000)
Mitch Vig (1999-2000)
Ian Walterson (1999-2000)
David Whitworth (1999-2000)
IHL
Dave Baseggio (1999-2000)
Frederick Beaubin (1999-2000)
Vyacheslav Butsayev (1999-2000)
Ivan Ciernik (1999-2000)
Danton Cole (1999-2000)
John Emmons (1999-2000)
Mike Fountain (1999-2000)
Erich Goldmann (1999-2000)
Konstantin Gorovikov (1999-2000)
Kevin Grimes (1999-2000)
John Gruden (1999-2000)
Jani Hurme (1999-2000)
Kory Karlander (1999-2000)
Shane Kenny (1999-2000)
Derek King (1999-2000)
Dieter Kochan (1999-2000)
Mike Maurice (1999-2000)
Jason McBain (1999-2000)
Jason Metcalfe (1999-2000)
Kevin Miller (1999-2000)
Todd Nelson (1999-2000)
Warren Norris (1999-2000)
Ed Patterson (1999-2000)
Rostislav Pavlikovsky (1999-2000)
Robert Petrovicky (1999-2000)
Philippe Plante (1999-2000)
Michel Picard (1999-2000)
Dennis Pinfold (1999-2000)
Karel Rachunek (1999-2000)
Travis Richards (1999-2000)
Darren Rumble (1999-2000)
Yves Sarault (1999-2000)
Petr Schastlivy (1999-2000)
Konstantin Shafranov (1999-2000)
Jeff Shevalier (1999-2000)
Andrei Sryubko (1999-2000)
Chris Szysky (1999-2000)
David Van Drunen (1999-2000)
Buddy Wallace (1999-2000)
AHL
Brandon Bochenski (2004-05)
Danny Bois (2004-05)
Derek Campbell (2004-05)
Regan Darby (2004-05)
Ray Emery (2004-05)
Jesse Fibiger (2004-05)
Denis Hamel (2004-05)
Andy Hedlund (2004-05)
David Hymovitz (2004-05)
Gregg Johnson (2004-05)
Pat Kavanagh (2004-05)
Chris Kelly (2004-05)
Neil Komadoski (2004-05)
Josh Langfeld (2004-05)
Brian McGrattan (2004-05)
Arpad Mihaly (2004-05)
Jan Platil (2004-05)
Brian Pothier (2004-05)
Grant Potulny (2004-05)
Christoph Schubert (2004-05)
Jason Spezza (2004-05)
Charlie Stephens (2004-05)
Billy Thompson (2004-05)
Antoine Vermette (2004-05)
Anton Volchenkov (2004-05)
Greg Watson (2004-05)
NHL
Daniel Alfredsson (2001-04, 2005-15)
Craig Anderson (2010-17)
Tyler Arneson (2005-06)
Magnus Arvedson (2001-03)
Alex Auld (2008-12)
Chris Bala (2001-02)
Cody Bass (2007-09, 2010-11)
Brendan Bell (2008-09)
Andre Benoit (2010-12)
Ben Bishop (2012-13)
Mike Blunden (2016-17)
Brandon Bochenski (2005-06)
Danny Bois (2006-07)
Peter Bondra (2003-04)
Radek Bonk (2001-04)
Dennis Bonvie (2002-03)
Mark Borowiecki (2011-13)
Derick Brassard (2016-17)
Benoit Brunet (2001-02)
Alexandre Burrows (2016-17)
Bobby Butler (2009-12)
Chris Campoli (2008-10)
Matt Carkner (2009-12)
Cody Ceci (2013-17)
Zdeno Chara (2001-04, 2005-06)
Jonathan Cheechoo (2009-10)
Alex Chiasson (2014-16)
Ivan Ciernik (2001-02)
Fredrik Claesson (2015-17)
Mike Commodore (2007-08)
Mike Comrie (2006-09)
Cory Conacher (2012-13)
Mike Condon (2016-17)
Erik Condra (2011-15)
Joe Corvo (2006-08)
Jared Cowen (2009-15)
Matt Cullen (2009-10)
Stephane Da Costa (2010-13)
Toni Dahlman (2001-03)
Kaspars Daugavins (2011-13)
Greg De Vries (2003-04)
Chris DiDomenico (2016-17)
Shean Donovan (2007-10)
Chris Driedger (2016-17)
David Dziurzynski (2011-13)
Ryan Dzingel (2015-17)
Patrick Eaves (2005-08)
Ray Emery (2002-04, 2005-08)
Andreas Englund (2016-17)
Mike Fisher (2001-04, 2005-11)
Nick Foligno (2007-12)
Martin Gerber (2006-08)
Matt Gilroy (2011-12)
Scott Gomez (2015-16)
Sergei Gonchar (2010-13)
Derek Grant (2012-13)
Colin Greening (2010-14)
Eric Gryba (2011-14)
Jyrki Jokipakka (2016-17)
David Hale (2010-11)
Denis Hamel (2003-04, 2005-07)
Andrew Hammond (2014-17)
Ben Harpur (2015-17)
Dominik Hasek (2005-06)
Martin Havlat (2001-04, 2005-06)
Dany Heatley (2005-09)
Ales Hemsky (2013-14)
Josh Hennessy (2006-08, 2009-10)
Chris Herperger (2001-02)
Shane Hnidy (2001-04)
Mike Hoffman (2011-17)
Marian Hossa (2001-04)
Jody Hull (2001-04)
Jani Hurme (2001-02)
Alexei Kaigorodov (2006-07)
Erik Karlsson (2009-17)
Matt Kassian (2012-14)
Chris Kelly (2003-04, 2005-10, 2016-17)
Rob Klinkhammer (2011-12)
Zenon Konopka (2011-12)
Mike Kostka (2015-16)
Alex Kovalev (2009-10)
Filip Kuba (2008-12)
Joel Kwiatkowski (2001-03)
Brooks Laich (2003-04)
Patrick Lalime (2001-04)
Simon Lajeunesse (2001-02)
Josh Langfeld (2001-04)
Martin Lapointe (2007-08)
Guillaume Latendresse (2012-13)
Curtis Lazar (2014-16)
Pascal Leclaire (2008-11)
Brian Lee (2007-11)
David Legwand (2014-15)
Robin Lehner (2011-15)
Curtis Leschyshyn (2001-04)
Francis Lessard (2010-11)
Mike Lundin (2012-13)
Clarke MacArthur (2013-17)
Shawn MacEachern (2001-02)
Tomas Malec (2005-07)
Dean McAmmond (2006-08)
Max McCormick (2016-17)
Brian McGrattan (2005-08)
Curtis McElhinney (2010-11)
Steve Martins (2001-04, 2005-06)
Andrej Meszaros (2005-08)
Marc Methot (2012-17)
Milan Michalek (2009-15)
Mike Morrison (2005-06)
Bill Muckalt (2001-02)
Alexander Nikulin (2007-08)
Brad Norton (2005-06)
Filip Novak (2005-06)
Lawrence Nycholat (2006-08)
Jim O’Brien (2011-13)
Jean-Gabriel Pageau (2012-17)
Nick Paul (2015-17)
Serge Payer (2003-04, 2006-07)
Ricard Persson (2001-02)
Andre Petersson (2011-12)
Dion Phaneuf (2015-17)
Chris Phillips (2001-04, 2005-16)
Alexandre Picard (2008-09)
Brian Pothier (2002-04, 2005-06)
Tom Preissing (2006-07)
Martin Prusek (2001-04)
Matt Puempel (2014-16)
Tom Pyatt (2016-17)
Karel Rachunek (2001-04)
Rob Ray (2002-04)
Wade Redden (2001-04, 2005-08)
Peter Regin (2009-13)
Luke Richardson (2007-08)
Jamie Rivers (2001-02)
Charles Robinson (2015-16)
Randy Robitaille (2007-08)
Andre Roy (2001-02)
Jarkko Ruutu (2008-10)
Bobby Ryan (2013-17)
Sami Salo (2001-02)
Oleg Saprykin (2006-07)
Peter Schaefer (2002-04, 2005-07)
Petr Schastlivy (2001-04)
Christoph Schubert (2005-09)
Ryan Shannon (2008-11)
Jakob Silfverberg (2011-13)
Todd Simpson (2003-04)
Bryan Smolinski (2002-04, 2005-06)
Derek Smith (2009-11)
Jason Smith (2008-09)
Zack Smith (2009-17)
Brad Smyth (2002-03)
Jason Spezza (2002-04, 2005-14)
Viktor Stalberg (2016-17)
Cory Stillman (2007-08)
Mark Stone (2011-17)
Andy Sutton (2009-10)
Marek Svatos (2010-11)
Joey Tetarenko (2002-03)
Kyle Turris (2011-17)
Shaun Van Allen (2002-04)
Vaclav Varada (2002-04, 2005-06)
Phil Varone (2015-17)
Julien Vauclair (2003-04)
Antoine Vermette (2003-04, 2005-08)
Anton Volchenkov (2002-04, 2005-10)
Chris Wideman (2015-16)
Patrick Wiercioch (2011-15)
Jesse Winchester (2007-12)
Colin White (2016-17)
Todd White (2001-04)
Tommy Wingels (2016-17)
Juha Ylonen (2001-02)
Mika Zibanejad (2011-16)
Ilya Zubov (2007-08)
#Sports#Hockey#Celebrities#Canada#Ontario#1990s#Hockey Goalies#Michigan#Alabama#New York#NHL#Ottawa Senators
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La Minette d’ Ever Meulen, contribution à l’expo collective Ever Meulen & Friends à la Seed Factory! https://www.facebook.com/events/305020599965532 Une exposition rétrospective des oeuvres de Ever Meulen + les images en hommage à Ever Meulen réalisées spécialement pour cette exposition par des illustrateurs belges et internationaux : Robert Armstrong (USA), François Avril (FR), Serge Baeken, Arnal Ballester (SP), Johnny Bekaert, Charles Berberian (FR), Cecile Bernaerts, Rotraut Susanne Berner (DE), Jan Bosschaert , Pierre Bouillé (FR), Randall Casaer, Laurent Cilluffo, Serge Clerc (FR), Luc Cromheecke, Reinhart Croon, Serge Dehaes, Phil De Kemmeter, Jacques de Loustal (FR), Gerda Dendooven, Pieter de Poortere, Rika Deryckere, Lode Devroe, Johan Devrome, Goele Dewanckel, Gert Dooreman, Juan d’Oultremont, Jack Durieux, Laurent Durieux, Jean-Manuel Duvivier, Brecht Evens, Stijn Felix, GAL, Loïc Gaume, Philippe Geluck , Evert Geradts (NL), Jochen Gerner,Olivier Grenson, Alain Goffin, Josse Goffin, Victor Hachmang (NL), Eric Héliot, HugOké, Emmanuel Kerner (FR), Max Kisman (NL), Eric Lambé, Mieke Lamiroy, Ivan Lammerant, Jean-Louis Lejeune, José María Lema de Pablo (SP), Pascal Lemaître, Sisca Locca, Jeroen Los, Dominique Maes, Gudrun Makelberge, Javier Mariscal(SP), Jean-François Martin, Lorenzo Matotti (IT), Luc Melanson (CAN), David Merveille, Steve Michiels, Walter Minus (FR), Guy Mortier, NIX, OXOlaterre (FR), Albert Pepermans, Eliza Pepermans, Philippe Petit-Roulet (FR), Piccolo (FR), Alain Pilon (CAN), Patrick Regout, Etienne Robial (FR), Rocco (FR), Jean-Claude Salemi, Jean-Grégoire Savayan, Tom Schamp, Piet Schreuders (NL), Tom Schoonooghe, François Schuiten, Teresa Sdralevich, Bruno Seys & Filiep Vandewiele, Irma Smeets, Jeroom, Frow Steeman, Joost Swarte (NL), Art Spiegelman (USA), Luc Tegenbos, Frédéric Thiry, Max Tilgenkamp, Olivier Saive, Brecht Vandenbroucke, Teun van den Wittenboer (NL), Karolien Vanderstappen, Patrick Van der Stricht , Jan Van Der Veken, Phil Van Duynen, Pieter van Eenoge, Peter Van Eyck, Cis Verhamme, Sander Vermeulen, Benoît Van Innis, Jurgen Walschot, Chris Ware (USA), Jan Werkt, Peter Willems, ZAK, Isabelle Vandenabeele, Max (F. Capdevila) (SP)
#evermeulen#seedfactory#siscalocca#exposition#exibition#Brussels#Illustration#ligneclaire#hommage#collective#art
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A mock movie poster inspired by a story written by a friend very near and dear to my heart.
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Devils overcome Alex Ovechkin’s 700th goal to clip Capitals
With power and a prodigious shot, Alex Ovechkin now stands where few in the NHL have been.
He became the eight NHL player to score 700 career goals, reaching the milestone in the third period of the ’ Capitals’ 3-2 loss to the Devils on Saturday at Prudential Center.
“It’s a special moment,” Ovechkin said. “When you get closer you start thinking when it’s going to happen. Finally, it’s over so we don’t have to talk about it anymore. We’re going to move on.”
The 34-year-old Russian forward one-timed a slap shot from the right circle that went in off the left post 4:50 into the third period, tying the game at 2. It was his 42nd goal of the season, one behind Boston’s David Pastrnak for the league lead, and came on his second shot on goal of the game.
“It was obviously a matter of time, but that was a huge goal for us at the time,” said Todd Rierden, in his second season as Capitals coach after serving as an assistant the previous four. “Amazing to be able to watch it live and in person. To be able to go through the last six years with [Ovechkin] has been amazing to watch. Certainly a superstar in my time, the best goal-scorer that I’ve ever seen.”
Wayne Gretzky leads the career list with 894 goals. He is followed by Gordie Howe (801), Jaromir Jagr (766), Brett Hull (741), Marcel Dionne (731), Phil Esposito (717) and Mike Gartner (708).
Damon Severson scored the winning goal for last-place New Jersey with 1:59 left off a cross-ice pass from Nikita Gusev.
As for the Devils, they may have finally found a winning formula in this poor season. Just put Mackenzie Blackwood in goal.
Blackwood made 36 saves in winning his fifth straight start.
Blackwood downplays the success, saying his teammates are playing well and he had benefited working with goaltending coach Rollie Melanson.
“He’s pretty technically great, so he’s helped me out a lot,” said Blackwood, who is 6-0-1 in his last seven starts. “Helped me with my game and I think as of late, I’ve been fortunate that we’ve been getting the results, so I don’t think anything will change.”
During his winning streak, Blackwood has allowed five goals and posted two shutouts.
“Blackie made some big saves when it was 1-0 (San Jose) to keep it tight,” Devils interim coach Alain Nasreddine said.
source https://truesportsfan.com/sport-today/devils-overcome-alex-ovechkins-700th-goal-to-clip-capitals/
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Devils overcome Alex Ovechkin’s 700th goal to clip Capitals
With power and a prodigious shot, Alex Ovechkin now stands where few in the NHL have been.
He became the eight NHL player to score 700 career goals, reaching the milestone in the third period of the ’ Capitals’ 3-2 loss to the Devils on Saturday at Prudential Center.
“It’s a special moment,” Ovechkin said. “When you get closer you start thinking when it’s going to happen. Finally, it’s over so we don’t have to talk about it anymore. We’re going to move on.”
The 34-year-old Russian forward one-timed a slap shot from the right circle that went in off the left post 4:50 into the third period, tying the game at 2. It was his 42nd goal of the season, one behind Boston’s David Pastrnak for the league lead, and came on his second shot on goal of the game.
“It was obviously a matter of time, but that was a huge goal for us at the time,” said Todd Rierden, in his second season as Capitals coach after serving as an assistant the previous four. “Amazing to be able to watch it live and in person. To be able to go through the last six years with [Ovechkin] has been amazing to watch. Certainly a superstar in my time, the best goal-scorer that I’ve ever seen.”
Wayne Gretzky leads the career list with 894 goals. He is followed by Gordie Howe (801), Jaromir Jagr (766), Brett Hull (741), Marcel Dionne (731), Phil Esposito (717) and Mike Gartner (708).
Damon Severson scored the winning goal for last-place New Jersey with 1:59 left off a cross-ice pass from Nikita Gusev.
As for the Devils, they may have finally found a winning formula in this poor season. Just put Mackenzie Blackwood in goal.
Blackwood made 36 saves in winning his fifth straight start.
Blackwood downplays the success, saying his teammates are playing well and he had benefited working with goaltending coach Rollie Melanson.
“He’s pretty technically great, so he’s helped me out a lot,” said Blackwood, who is 6-0-1 in his last seven starts. “Helped me with my game and I think as of late, I’ve been fortunate that we’ve been getting the results, so I don’t think anything will change.”
During his winning streak, Blackwood has allowed five goals and posted two shutouts.
“Blackie made some big saves when it was 1-0 (San Jose) to keep it tight,” Devils interim coach Alain Nasreddine said.
source https://truesportsfan.com/sport-today/devils-overcome-alex-ovechkins-700th-goal-to-clip-capitals/
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