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STYLED FOR LIFETIME BY CRISTA LEONARD
October 15th, 2011 by Reid Stewart / , , , ,

Check out the new section of our site entitled “Styled”. Thanks to Crista Leonard for her interview and beautiful photographs of some of our pieces from our Fall/Winter 2011 collection.

We look at clothing the way we look at art – each of us with a different set of eyes. Our sense of which items pair well, which colours match and which pieces should be layered or left alone is unique. Like genres in art, different elements of clothing also appeal to different people. Some of us are drawn to a good cut, while others prefer the more abstract qualities of pattern and color.

Styled is a way for us to share these different interpretations of clothing. It’s a way for us, at Lifetime, to work with friends that don’t necessarily work with us that often. It gives them a chance to take our in-season collection and style and photograph the clothes in a way that makes it their own. It’s always more interesting to see other people’s vision for the clothes and to see how they capture their vision in photographs. We hope you enjoy!

Check it out Styled by Crista Leonard

Interview | Jennifer Castle
September 6th, 2011 by Sara Tollestrup / , , , , 1 Comment

Jennifer Castle by David Clarke

This past spring singer-songwriter Jennifer Castle released her third album (her first under Flemish Eye), Castlemusic. Though only 31 minutes long, the album is a window into her imaginary world. With her beautifully breathy voice, Castle will lull you into a daydream of your own only to pull you back into reality with the Neil Young-like “Way of the Crow.” We spoke to the Toronto-based artist in anticipation of her Vancouver show September 29th, 2011 with Ruffled Feathers at the Electric Owl.

What are your earliest memories of making music?
My earliest memories are probably writing songs for me and my sisters to sing or to go along with our dance routines. Also, when I was younger and would hear mechanical sounds, I would try to match my voice to those sounds, so if someone was near me they wouldn’t know I was making those sounds.

I’ve often wondered what leads an artist to create music in a particular genre. What has led you to make the kind of music you make?
My music has always been singing-based because you don’t have to do anything but sing. Music centered around lyrics and voice has always come very naturally to me. I’ve written music and sung always. Sometimes I hear songs, and I want my own. It’s like adding a response to what I’ve heard. It’s communication. When I’m playing music I’m just playing around with my guitar.

How has living and creating in Toronto influenced your work?
There is a rich improvisational community in Toronto, and it really influenced me at an experimental time with my own recordings. I tapped into that community when I was solidifying a lot of the work that is a continuation of my work now. There are no doubt improvisational groups all over the country, but Toronto has a unique group and is a unique city, it’s inevitable that it influenced me. Toronto is also a place I like to leave. I like to distance myself from it because there are a lot of people making similar music here. I like to leave to find out what I’d want to do if it were only me –to find something singular to me, and my own.

How do daydreaming and imagination inform your work?
When I’m daydreaming I sing. I take for granted that life is sitting around thinking about music. It’s a lot like childhood –imagining, daydreaming and singing. It’s what I like to do when I’m alone. I need to daydream, it resets me. It sounds flakey, but sometimes I just need to flake out. I think everyone does it.

Tell me about the creative process behind your album Castlemusic.
I had been playing a lot of music at the time and years before. I picked up on a feeling and thought this feeling has legs, so I made the choice to make a record. I had been playing all of these songs (not side by side) but was affected by a sensation and thought, “Okay now would be a good time.” There are always songs floating but there’s not always the desire to pin them down, to record them and put them through studio filters. I just let them be.

What have you learned in the process?
I learned a lot more about the logistics of making a record and started feeling more comfortable with the techniques. I’m more comfortable sitting around playing music, as there are more smoke and mirrors [with recording]. I think what I’ve learned will reveal itself in the next record. I don’t think I know just yet what I’ve learned.

Some of your songs are more upbeat; I’m thinking now of your song “Poor as Him,” while some are more breathy and dream-like such as, “You Don’t Have to Be.” Where do these two different sounds come from?
When I was recording and talking to the people playing with me I was like, “This song has to be loud enough to be heard in heaven.” Not really, but I would give a lot of physical direction for the sounds of the music. I’d say, “This song needs to turn the corner and blow a kiss.” It didn’t matter who it blew the kiss to, it could be Aretha Franklin for all I cared, it was just the idea that this song needs to make this gesture. Some of the songs I just release to go somewhere else. I’d just try to shake them out. Some of the songs ended up sounding just like me like, “Remembering” and [they] couldn’t be let go. I just had to be comfortable with the vulnerability of those ones, but the others were free to transform.

In this era everything is consumed so quickly, but the music on this album can’t be. How do you hope your listeners will perceive it?
We consume new music very quickly in this culture. Even I consume music quickly. There are signifiers in music that I hear, and I try to make up what it means, and I try to make up my mind quickly about whether I like it or not. And of course there are also cultural tastemakers who tell people “You should like this,” but there’s not a lot of those people telling people to like my music. There’s also music that I didn’t and haven’t consumed quickly. It grew on me. I don’t know what to hope for with my music. Sometimes people hear it, and say the like it, and then they say, “You must hear that all of the time,” and I say, “Are you crazy?” I am thankful when they like it.

How do you feel about performing your music live and touring?
I’m starting to understand it as I do it more and more. Performing is very different from recording. Plus, I feel like there’s a folk singer on every block of the world. Before I play I always think to myself, “I hope people want to see this thing” because it’s not necessarily the thing I did when I recorded it. I like to sing and play guitar, really like it, but sometimes I wonder what on earth people are doing traveling around and signing songs.

How do you feel about Vancouver? Are you looking forward to performing there?
Yeah. Vancouver is a home away from home. I’ve lived there twice, and I always go back to it. Many of my very dear friends are there. I’m always wondering, “Am I going to live there again?” My absolute favourite place is Strathcona. It’s really amazing.

Upcoming Tour Dates:
September 23 :: Montreal, QC
September 29 :: Vancouver, BC
September 30 :: Edmonton, AB
October 1 :: Calgary, AB
October 22 :: Halifax, NS
October 23 :: Fredericton, NB
October 25 :: Montreal, QC
October 26 :: Kingston, ON

Collective Interview | Stephen Wilde
July 28th, 2011 by Sara Tollestrup / , , ,

Collective photographer Stephen Wilde agreed to do this interview despite a hectic shooting schedule and a busy family life with his wife and young son Ed, so thanks Stephen!

About this photo gallery: “These pictures are from my latest adventure, the BC Bike Race. I was documenting seven days of mountain bike racers sleeping in tents and racing day in and day out. It was pretty fun. Thankfully I didn’t have to race. These are not fashionable, but I love taking Lifetime pictures. Oh man, so ridiculous!”

What is your earliest memory of taking photos? A super high-tech Kodak disc camera my parents bought me one Christmas when I was around 14. I took some shots of some model logging trucks and bulldozers I had made. I set it up to look like a logging operation. I thought at the time they were brilliant! A few years later I had saved enough to buy a Minolta 35mm body and a couple of lenses.

On a Saturday night you’d most likely be…Umm, not going to Gabbie’s country bar across the street from my house! I’m a house hermit these days. Having a little guy (son Edward, pictured above after winning his first bike race) leaves me a zombie quite often.

What is your favourite project that you’ve worked on? One summer while assisting in New York, I took a job with photographer Dean Karr. Dean was the epitome of a Los Angeles rock star photographer flying into NYC, renting loads of super cool cameras, and there was me–his dorky assistant–helping Dean shoot Busta Rhymes in a 12 monkey’s suit on the streets of the city with random fans mobbing him. I was supposed to go to L.A. to help Dean photograph Marilyn Manson but didn’t. That may have topped Busta. Darn.

What makes a good portrait? This is the hardest question in the world. There are one million variables. I mean one million times 6.93 billion different characters! Personally, some bit of a unique location. A touch of awkwardness with the subject, which could be as simple as a stare. Interesting light. And if I were super fortunate, the portrait would reveal a glimpse into the subject’s soul. Kidding about the last part.

What has been your favourite travel destination to shoot? India. The light there! I think it’s the pollution there that filters the light making it soft and sumptuous. And their colour pallet…a fantastic combo of color and light. Oh, and the characters too…

How do you take your coffee? THICK AND STRONG! It’s the only way I can keep up to my son.

What about the adventure lifestyle (particularly biking) draws you to photographing it? Growing up on a farm in the north and dirt biking endlessly as a kid set me up for a pretty active lifestyle. I spent my young years working at ski resorts in the winters and traveling for summers. A form of adventure has always surrounded me, so my interest in photography and action made the combo of venture and pictures a natural option.

What makes a better photograph, one that is carefully composed or one that is spontaneous? Spontaneous. Of course composed is necessary but being able to catch little life moments is pretty special. There’s something super exciting about saying a shot wasn’t set up, and that it just happened, and I just happened to be there with a camera.

If you could personally thank one person for their contribution to your field, who would you pick and why? Nadav Kander. His brain is insane! His work is brilliant.

What is your favourite piece of Lifetime clothing? Funny…I’m wearing it today! An old red t-shit from maybe 5 or 6 seasons ago. I don’t know who designed the graphic. It has four birdies on it. Three badminton birdies and one animal bird all in a row. It’s super faded and thin now from age and sweat. I love it.


Sled Island | Day One
June 23rd, 2011 by Reid Stewart / , , ,

If every day in Calgary was as warm and sunny as this one, the population would triple in a year. Beautiful. Got my wristband and an itch to rock out in Cowtown like you wouldn’t believe. Didn’t think that last year’s roster could be bested, but I’ve been proven wrong. I’m already having anxiety attacks over bands with conflicting schedules and it’s only Wednesday. I caught up with first-time festival director Lindsay Shedden this afternoon and found out that it’s Sled Island’s egalitarian attitude towards all of its performers that sets it apart from other festivals.

Always good for a sound bite, Chad Saunders, Station Manager for CJSW, talked about his favourite Sled Island memories and what these four days actually mean to Calgary’s local music scene. Braids played to a packed house at Central United Church and what a sound they made! I’ll sleep when I’m dead-let’s Sled.

Bobby Ferris

Lifetime Video Zine #2 | Day One
June 23rd, 2011 by Reid Stewart / , , , ,

Day one coverage from Sled Island Festival. Featuring our friend and host Bobby Ferris.

http://www.vimeo.com/25520533

Day one coverage from Sled Island Festival. Featuring our friend and host Bobby Ferris.

 
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