Tag Archives: blues

101.9 DAWG FM Live at the 15th Annual Maple Blues Awards

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101.9 DAWG FM became the first commercial radio station to cover the maple Blues awards live yesterday.

J-man interviewed nominees, winners, presenters and some hall of fame blues musicians from around the world.

101.9 DAWG FM became the first commercial radio station to cover the maple Blues awards live yesterday.

J-man interviewed nominees, winners, presenters and some hall of fame blues musicians from around the world.

Hamilton, Halifax and Hogtown Celebrate Maple Blues Awards!
Ottawa’s Monkey Junk take three awards!

(January 17, 2010) Toronto, ON – Canadian blues artists from coast-to-coast were well represented at the 14th Annual Maple Blues Awards gala in Toronto last night as a sold-out crowd of blues lovers gathered to celebrate Canadian Blues at Koerner Hall.

Ottawa’s Monkey Junk took the lead with three wins, including Electric Act of the Year, Harmonica Player of the Year (Steve Marriner) and Drummer of the Year (Matt Sobb). East Coast blues giant Matt Andersen walked away with two Maple Blues Awards for Entertainer of the Year and Acoustic Act of the Year. Another young East Coast bluesman, Garrett Mason, took home the Guitar Player of the Year award.

Hamilton’s Rita Chiarelli was presented the Blues With A Feeling Award (lifetime achievement) by Frederic Lamoureux from the Montreal Jazz Festival and the president of legendary blues label Alligator Records, Bruce Iglauer. Chiarelli, who has been dubbed the “goddess of Canadian blues”, received the award for her long and vibrant career as one of the premier female blues musicians in Canada. Following a moving tribute video Hamilton native, Richard Newell a.k.a King Biscuit Boy received a posthumous Lifetime Achievement Award for his outstanding contribution to the blues in Canada and internationally, accepted by his son Richard Oddie and brother Randy Waller.

Other highlights include Female Vocalist of the Year for Toronto’s Shakura S’Aida, an internationally recognized singer whose performance earlier in the evening had the audience spellbound. The award was presented by popular CBC personality George Stromboulopoulis and MBA winner Matt Andersen, who also presented Recording of the Year to Toronto’s Downchild. Toronto’s Julian Fauth was presented the award for Keyboard Player of the Year by legendary blues keyboard player Curley Bridges and Dave Booth, a.k.a Daddy Cool, now back on the air waves at Whistle FM. Keith Picot, of the Vancouver based band The Twisters was presented with Bassist of the Year by Montreal blues singer Dawn Tyler Watson and Bill Wax, host of XM Radio’s popular program Bluesville. The Maple Blues Awards gala featured outstanding performances from winners and nominees Jack de Keyzer, Tom Lavin, Matt Andersen, Shakura S’Aida and Dawn Tyler Watson, all backed by The Maple Blues Band.

The Blues Booster of the Year award, a very special Maple Blues Award honouring outstanding contribution to the Canadian blues music industry was awarded to Gord MacAulay, Chair of the Saskatoon Blues Festival and a long time serving board member of the Saskatoon Blues Society.

Now in its 25th year, The Toronto Blues Society is a non profit membership organization dedicated to the promotion and preservation of the Blues. The Maple Blues Awards is Canada’s national blues awards program. Its goal is to promote blues music across Canada, and to recognize outstanding achievement in the field.

WINNERS OF THE 14TH ANNUAL MAPLE BLUES AWARDS

ENTERTAINER OF THE YEAR
Matt Andersen

ELECTRIC ACT OF THE YEAR
Monkey Junk

ACOUSTIC ACT OF THE YEAR
Matt Andersen

MALE VOCALIST OF THE YEAR
John Mays

FEMALE VOCALIST OF THE YEAR
Shakura S’Aida

NEW ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR

Mike “Shrimp Daddy” Reid

RECORDING OF THE YEAR
Downchild / I Need A Hat / Linus
Producer – Don Walsh

BLUES WITH A FEELING AWARD (Lifetime Achievement)
Rita Chiarelli

BB KING INTERNATIONAL ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band

GUITAR PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Garrett Mason

HARMONICA PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Steve Marriner

PIANO/KEYBOARD PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Julian Fauth

HORN PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Chris Whiteley

DRUMMER OF THE YEAR
Matt Sobb

BASSIST OF THE YEAR
Keith Picot

SONGWRITER OF THE YEAR
Paul Reddick & Colin Linden

BLUES BOOSTER OF THE YEAR
Gord MacAulay

SPECIAL LIFETIME ACHEIVEMENT AWARD
Richard Newell

-30-
For more information contact:
Sarah French
Sarah French Publicity
sarah@sarahfrenchpublicity.com | 416-566-4188
Jordan Safer
The Toronto Blues Society
info@torontobluessociety.com
(416)538-3885

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CRTC UPHOLDS DECISION FOR ALL BLUES RADIO – DAWG FM

CRTC UPHOLDS DECISION FOR ALL BLUES RADIO – DAWG FM

Ottawa, August 11, 2009 – The CRTC today decided to uphold the licence issued to DAWG FM, Canada’s first All-Blues radio station, after a reconsideration process that has taken close to a year.

On November 21, 2008 Minister of Canadian Heritage, The Honourable James Moore, in a news release announced that Order in Council P.C. 2008-1769 returned the original licence decision to the CRTC for reconsideration sighting the consideration for the needs of Francophones in Ontario.

As part of the reconsideration the CRTC also issued a licence to a group of Franco-Ontarians that launched the appeal.

Frank Torres, President of DAWG FM, said of the decision “We are pleased with the Decision from the Commission today and look forward to continuing our work to get the station on the air as soon as possible. Ottawa is the perfect flagship market for DAWG FM’s All-Blues music format. Along with Ottawa ‘s world class Blues festivals, DAWG FM will help make Ottawa “Chicago North” – a focal point for Canadian blues artists to get their music played on FM airwaves”.

The Torres group was instrumental in engineering a new frequency that will reach the Francophone Community of Ottawa and Gatineau . Torres says “We proposed and engineered the use of 94.5 FM at a significant expense and tested it to prove that 94.5 could provide a quality signal. We are pleased that the Commission accepted our proposed use of 94.5 MHz as a solution that allows the original licences to DAWG FM and Astral to be upheld, while allowing a third FM frequency to be used for the Francophone community”.

Torres is hopeful that this Decision paves the way for his Halifax Blues station to be approved shortly, “We have a unique application in front of the Commission for an All-Blues radio station in Halifax . The sharing of Canadian blues talent between the Maritimes and the nation’s capital is an exciting facet of our business plan, and will provide a cultural blues exchange across Canada ”.

Ed Torres and Frank Torres are the principals of DAWG FM and Skywords Radio and Media companies, a national radio broadcasting organization with offices in Halifax , Ottawa , Markham and Edmonton .

For more information, contact:

Frank Torres

(905) 470 7655 ext 100

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Blues in Canada supports DAWG FM”

Bluesincanada.com supports DAWG FM’s efforts to bring Blues formats to commercial radio across Canada. DAWG FM has applied to the CRTC for FM Radio stations in Ottawa/Gatineau, Kawartha Lakes/Peterborough, Abbotsford Chilliwack , Vancouver, Edmonton and Guelph. You can help bring the blues off the satellites and into commercial conventional “free” radio by writing an email of support. Just click on one or more of the markets below and make sure to fill in your name and address.
Please join our facebook page DAWG FM
Welcome to Blues in Canada, Our site is under construction but when its completed, Bluesincanada.com will be a meeting place for those who love the blues. Whether you are a musician, a promoter or a fan, you can visit this site to share information about what is happening in the blues scene.
Please check back frequently to see the site evolve and add us to your favourites
Welcome to Blues in Canada, a meeting place for those who love the blues. Whether you are a musician, a promoter or a fan, you can visit this site to share information about what is happening in the blues scene.
· Let everyone know about a great performance you saw or a CD that must be heard.
· Post your schedule so we know where to catch your show.
· Check out the employment opportunities or advertise your own talents for hire.
·  News stories and press releases can be posted on the News page.
·  Link your site to Blues in Canada on the links page.

Blues in Canada supports DAWG FM”CLICK HERE to listen to the radio ad
Bluesincanada.com supports DAWG FM’s efforts to bring Blues formats to commercial radio across Canada. DAWG FM has applied to the CRTC for FM Radio stations in Ottawa/Gatineau, Kawartha Lakes/Peterborough, Abbotsford Chilliwack , Vancouver, Edmonton and Guelph. You can help bring the blues off the satellites and into commercial conventional “free” radio by writing an email of support. Just click on one or more of the markets below and make sure to fill in your name and address.
Please join our facebook page DAWG FM
Welcome to Blues in Canada, Our site is under construction but when its completed, Bluesincanada.com will be a meeting place for those who love the blues. Whether you are a musician, a promoter or a fan, you can visit this site to share information about what is happening in the blues scene.
Please check back frequently to see the site evolve and add us to your favourites
Welcome to Blues in Canada, a meeting place for those who love the blues. Whether you are a musician, a promoter or a fan, you can visit this site to share information about what is happening in the blues scene.
· Let everyone know about a great performance you saw or a CD that must be heard.
· Post your schedule so we know where to catch your show.
· Check out the employment opportunities or advertise your own talents for hire.
·  News stories and press releases can be posted on the News page.·  Link your site to Blues in Canada on the links page.

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Blues Scraps And Grandmothers

CKUA’s Ken Regan offers a rebut in the blues radio battles late
Published May 22, 2008  by Fish Griwkowsky in Music Feature

Without getting too sappy here, I’ve been thinking about the effect of our grandparents on our musical sensibilities this week. Over hundreds of interviews with musicians over the years, time and time again I’ve heard about that first guitar being bought by grandpa, old Hank Snow records being played in the parlour or folk songs passed down by grandmothers toiling away with apparent cheer, humming in the yard. Well, my beautiful Russian grandma died this week at 92, but between her vibrant church singing and her cute and absolute addiction to The Sound of Music, the fundamentals of dramatic song first slipped into my heart, and so I thank her. Hopefully, you have some similar touchstone to embrace. If you still have the chance, let them know you’re grateful.

On to more important things, I’ve been talking at length in this column about the scrape between hopeful blues station DAWG FM and CKUA, the latter which forwarded an intervention notice to the CRTC in opposition to the competition’s application to exist in our city. Local blues activist Jeremy Loome described some email conversations in which he and CKUA’s Ken Regan came to an understanding of sorts.

“After a few emails, both sides agreed” said Loome—which I took as a general nod rather than proof of any official decision by CKUA to “sell,” ie., syndicate, its six hours of blues programming a week to the new station—or back down from its oppositional stance. Let me say, I could have been more diligent and apologize. Don’t forget I’m more proudly gonzo than journalist. Here’s Regan’s response: “What was incorrect in the piece in question, were Jeremy’s assertions that CKUA was gong to ‘sell’ Cam Hayden and Holger Petersen’s programs to the new blues station and that we were going to withdraw or significantly modify our intervention because of this arrangement.

“CKUA can’t sell those programs because we don’t own them. Cam and Holger own them. CKUA buys them from Cam and Holger. The only way we could sell them is with Cam and Holger’s permission and so far we haven’t even discussed the idea. Moreover, there’s been no suggestion by the applicants that they’re even interested in buying the shows. What I did tell Jeremy is that I would be more than happy to talk to the people at Skywords Inc. about CKUA’s concerns and their application, to see if there was some way to address everyone’s interests and that ‘if’ we were able to do so, I’d be happy to modify CKUA’s intervention to reflect that.”

Regan’s concern with DAWG, in his own words: “What I do worry about is private radio’s ability to spend millions on promotion of their product over CKUA’s, particularly at a time in the radio industry when audience fragmentation and audience loss is greater than ever in our history. CKUA is simply unable to compete with that kind of marketing and ‘if’ that results in a loss of audience for CKUA, it will translate into a loss of revenue, and that will translate into a potential loss of stability for CKUA, and that could translate into a potential loss of CKUA altogether if the trend were allowed to continue unchallenged.”

It should be noted CKUA has a number of inherent restrictions to fight with, including the amount of advertising they can sell—a quarter, tops, of what private radio can shill—and, unlike CBC, doesn’t get or want government funding, according to Regan. CKUA is, of course, largely privately funded by its incredibly local listeners.

In its response to CKUA’s intervention, Frank Torres breaks some of these numbers down, suggesting that even if DAWG could take away half of CKUA’s blues advertising revenue, that would amount to just over $13,000 annually. But as Regan says, “a loss,” as in, any loss. Both this response and the original intervention can be found at tinyurl.com/4tz2u5. It’s fascinating reading.

Globalization can be a good thing; books are cheaper online, with greater, global selection, for example. But music really does work differently. It often needs nourishment by hand. Like CJSR, CKUA has an inarguable track record of supporting local music. As GM of CKUA, Regan says he has a duty to address any potential threat. Regardless of who DAWG may bite or, indeed, encourage. “To NOT challenge any potential threat to CKUA—no matter how insignificant others may perceive it—would be an abrogation of my responsibility to CKUA, to its listeners and to our community.”

Hopefully, this passion will continue undaunted.

Source: www.seemagazine.com

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