
Greetings Brothers and Sisters Hope all is well where all you dwell. Please Scroll Down for ALL UPCOMING EVENTS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18th 2009
7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Restorative Justice Network of Ottawa Presents:
A night of Information, Awareness and Art/Music about Restorative Justice Network.
featuring:
Ernie Tannis: Solicitor, Mediator and Social Justice Advocate
Robin MacDonald: Restorative Justice Storyteller
Randall James: Past Participant of the Collaborative Justice Program
Eric Vieweg: Musician from the Withering Pines
Artwork by Shannon Moroney
Umi's Presents the Ottawa New Music Series
feat: FPdeux & Marabou
$5 Cover
Licensed Event (I.D. required)
featuring:
FPdeux - http://www.myspace.com/fpdeux
&
Marabou - http://www.myspace.com/lesppinsdemarabou
Greetings music lovers! Join us for another night of groundbreaking new
music from our capital city and the rest of Canada. We invite Dan Parker and Louis Dugal, who together form FPdeux hailing from Montreal, Quebec, joining Ottawa's own favorite band, Marabou! here's somemore info on the bands:
This is a licensed event.
FPdeux - Cajon. Splash. 6-string baritone guitar. Keys. Melodic. Vocal harmonies. Over-the-top pop. Words to be heard. Rock n'soul. Touches of jazz. Funky fun. Passionate. Energetic. Raps. Freestyles. Bossa nova. Teachings. Toronto. Quebec City. Montreal.
http://www.myspace.com/fpdeux
Marabou - Origins - Once upon a time there was a busy market place nestled in a hidden corner of the world, and in this market place was a brilliantly colourful fruit stand. Its vender sold the roundest oranges, the tastiest melons, the most savoury grapefruits and above all, the most magnificent apples. One hot afternoon, a lonely vagabond with an aching belly stole the brightest of the apples. But the apple’s beauty was so intense that he could not bring himself to eat it, and so, he kept it in the hood of his cloak, convinced that it would someday bring him good fortune. As the vagabond continued his wanderings, the quiet apple heard the songs and voices of the most hidden places, its seeds inheriting the music of the world. After countless days of timeless adventure, one afternoon the young boy found himself in a dimly lit café. The place carried an odor of beer and nostalgia, sounds of laughter and intriguingly beautiful melodies. That night, the apple slipped out of the vagabond’s hood and fell to the soft earth, where four seeds were sowed. The seeds magically grew into four children, who spent their days recreating the melodies which had once craddled their young souls. They played many songs, and were happy until the last day of the month, when they had to pay the rent…
http://www.myspace.com/lesppinsdemarabou
Friday, November 13th 2009
Friday Night Open Mic & Freestyle Jam Sessions
7:30 Start Time
Hosted by: Nathaniel Larochette
$5 suggested
Artists of all disciplines are welcome to participate in an inviting open mic every friday night at Umi Cafe. This is your chance to be heard, regardless the medium and share with other extremely talented artists. It is the building blocks of a community with a local culture.
Join us after for a open freestyle jam session where musicians, singers and lyricists flex their improv skills and create live tapestries of music never before heard.
Saturday November 14th 2009
Shannon Moroney - Vernissage - November Artist
Meet Shannon at the Umi Cafe on Saturday, November 14th,
3 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Open to the public. Free.
Shannon Moroney (B.A., B.Ed., M.A.) was born and raised in Ontario, Canada, and worked full-time as a teacher, counsellor and social justice advocate for several years. At age thirty, Shannon's life was traumatically altered: without warning and while she was out of town, her husband committed several violent sexual assaults on two strangers. Following a two-and-a-half year court process he was declared a Dangerous Offender—sentenced to an indeterminate period of incarceration.
Ottawa New Music Series: Ann Walton and the Crooker Brothers
The Deathbed Pillowtalk Tour
8:00 PM Start Time
$5 Cover
www.myspace.com/annwalton
www.myspace.com/crookedbrothers
Umi continues its concert series showcasing some of the most innovative and newest coming the the capital city and all across Canada. This week we are happy to hows Ann Walton and the Crooker Brothers on their DeathBed PillowTalk Tour!
Crooked Brothers:
A trio of reputable players, including Matt Foster and Darwin Baker of SubCity and Jesse Matas, a solo artist, the Crooked Brothers engage the gloried tradition of bluegrass set to bloom alongside a forlorn rasp of blues and a nod to the prairie folk tradition. Devin Latimer, artistic director for the Trout Forest Music Festival, deemed the band "great musicians -- unique, creative and a great addition to this year's festival."
Recorded in a cabin on a frozen lake and in the cozy living rooms of the band's closest friends, Deathbed Pillowtalk melds lyrical fancy with simple, yet finely wrought melodic lines. "This record was borne of good food and the members wanting to try something new," says Matas. "Not to mention some beautiful drunken times in a mahogany dining room during the darkest time of the year."
Ann Walton: Ann Walton is a Canadian singer/songwriter who has been honing her craft for years. Growing up she wrote poetry and listened to old jazz greats like Sarah Vaughan, and her good ear meant picking out melodies on her parent's old upright piano. Since she first took the stage in her home town of Winnipeg, fans have been captivated by her seemingly effortless piano playing and her original poetry set to song. Since releasing her debut album in August '07, Ann has graced stages from Vancouver to Toronto and has performed at a variety of conferences, showcases and festivals, including the Winnipeg Folk Festival and Back Forty Folk Festival in 2008. She has also recently shared stages with Mark Berube, Danny Michel and Steve Forbert among others.
Friday night Open Mic w/ Special Guest
Salimah Valiani - New Book Reading: Letter Out: Letter In
LETTER OUT: LETTER IN
poems by Salimah Valiani
7:30 PM Start Time
$5 Suggested
Using post-Apartheid South Africa as a point from which to reflect on Canada and beyond, Letter Out : Letter In is a poetry collection of social commentary, political-economic analysis, and philosophical meditation. Historic and persisting structures of racism, sexism and economic inequality are explored, but also the nature of gender and ethnic divisions within and among oppressed groups. Moving from critique, Letter Out : Letter In further proposes love as an alternative to the binary of competition/solidarity so prevalent in Western thought. The Sufi notion of love is defined and redefined at recurring moments in the collection, making use of poetic subtlety to offer a new vision in a fractured world.
Praise for Valiani’s first book, breathing for breadth: ...The poems in Salimah Valiani’s first collection are mostly accessible, offering a mix of politics, observations and styles. ...The book is rife with cultural insights without being sanctimonious. ... There is a restlessness of spirit and mind in this book that shines through without succumbing to the usual romantic clichés.
—Ottawa Express
Salimah Valiani is a poet, an activist and a researcher. She has lived and worked on four continents, reflecting a history of migration in the recent and far past of her Shia Muslim community. Valiani has published widely in a range of milieux. Her analytical work in social and economic policy has appeared in institutional publications of the various organizations with which she has worked, particularly in Canada, India, and South Africa. Her poems have been published in feminist publications, literary journals, and political magazines. In 2005 her first collection of poetry, breathing for breadth, was published. Her poetry has also appeared in Sarah Husain’s politically-timely anthology, Voices of Resistance – Muslim Women Speak-out on War, Faith and Sexuality.
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