New Music by Jianda Monique: Whole Heart “Keeps It Round.”
22 Aug 2010 Comments Off
in :), Beautiful & Yummy, General Ji, JiMedia, JiMusic Tags: album, Free Music, indie music, jianda, jianda monique, myspace.com/jiandamonique, new music, om lounge 10, streaming audio, whole heart, wish
Press Release -
FOR IMMEDIATE ENJOYMENT AND DISTRIBUTION – CIRCULATE AND RETWEET WIDELY:
New Music by Jianda Monique: Whole Heart “Keeps It Round.”
Jianda Monique’s New Single “Whole Heart,” Continues An Extended Meditation Jam.
(August 2010, Boulder, CO – Contact: SugarMamaPR at: sugarmamapr @ yahoo.com)
Jianda Monique, whose single “Stay In Love,” among others, was recently featured in the full-length drama/comedy “Family” (Dir. Faith Trimel) is back in fine form…or yogic form, perhaps?
Often critiqued for the “songs in the round” structure of some of her previous tunes, including “Wish” (From Om Records’ noted Tenth Anniversary release, “Om Lounge 10″) and “Stay In Love,” Jianda Monique simply follows the muse, which continues to whisper sweet somethings to her like: Keep it simple. Keep it tribal. Keep it round.
“Song structure, western scales, pop song construction, while I love them and they sell records, they don’t take the place of the human heartbeat,” Jianda begins. “There was song as salve, song as celebration, song as ritual before song as structure, I’m sure of it.”
Jianda continues, “I like the tribal, loving, organic feeling I get when I’m chilling, tapping into Source, meditating. We can even have walking meditations, dancing meditations, and of course, dreaming, making love, making light, making life. Everything comes back to the heartbeat–the repetitive, consistent, insistent, persistent beat of the heart. I’ve decided to explore this more organic idea. Everyday, it feels like that’s just beginning, hence the name and the tone of the track–Whole Heart.”
Having attempted fundraising to record an album in the last few months, Jianda decided to take the new album idea one song at a time when the efforts stalled midway. “I’m grateful for those who offered up support, but Spirit has a different journey in mind apparently,” she continues. “Whole Heart” spoke to me, telling me it was time to begin again. Music heals, gets right to the heart of things for me. I needed to keep moving forward.”
Experimental to be sure, Jianda’s been in bands and written indie/alternative tracks, downtempo and dance music, neo-soul jams, and now, apparently meditative-yogic selections. Says Jianda: “I guess keeping it round means being well-rounded, too. I love art and artists from every walk of life, so why wouldn’t my art reflect that? My music’s moving in more of a meditative direction right now, and I’m happy to let that blossom and unfold for the Highest Good.”
An eclectic artist in her own right (often compared to everyone from Sade, to Tracy Chapman, to the Cocteau Twins), Jianda’s also a radio host at BlogTalkRadio, and a writer.
“Whole Heart” is available for free, streaming exclusively at Myspace.com/JiandaMonique. You can click the links below to hear it, or you can purchase her current album “Jianda Monique” at Jianda.net (just click the “Buy Now” button on that homepage: www.jianda.net).
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For Booking or Additional Information, email: sugarmamapr @ yahoo.com.
Click here to hear Jianda Monique’s latest track, “Whole Heart” at Myspace.com/JiandaMonique
Click here to buy Jianda Monique’s album, “Jianda Monique” – http://jiandanet.wordpress.com/buy-jianda-cd-music
Namaste.
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Click Here for Jianda Music Playlist – http://www.myspace.com/jiandamonique |
SMPR Archives: Brian Jonestown Massacre Interview
02 Jun 2010 Comments Off
in Articles by Ji, General Ji, Jianda Artist Interviews Tags: album, Anton Newcombe, Article, Brian Jones, brian jonestown massacre, Genesis P. Orridge, interview, jianda, Matt Hollywood, Methodrone, music, My Bloody Valentine, Psychic TV, Sonic boom, spacemen 3, Velvet Underground
Brian Jonestown Massacre Interview
by Jianda
No phone or fixed address to speak of, all-night jam sessions, allusions to hallucinogens, spontaneous performance art spasms…this is Brian Jonestown Massacre.
Its figurehead, Anton Newcombe, has been well aware of the hippie/beatnik deal since bolting off to San Francisco at 14 to lodge with the squatters. Coupled with alleged rumblings that Anton is Brian Jones’ illegitimate son, this pins his aesthetics somewhere between Jack Kerouac and, well, Brian Jones.
Anton trails off, critiques and mocks himself, and runs head-on into non-sequiturs, spiralling with the same haphazard grace as the band’s current album,
Methodrone. It’s Newcombe, along with his childhood friend and bandmate Matt Hollywood, who round out their My Bloody Valentine meets Velvet Underground reverberations into sheer blizzardry.
“I used to be into effects,” he continues, “Like, we used to play shows where we’d all have at least two amps, sometimes five, split with a digital delay. That’s cool, but there’s something about nuts and bolts. I’ve always been into minimalism and repetition. Matt and I have played songs for just, six hours straight on just E and A chords. Total Spacemen 3.
Lulling and elegant, Brian Jonestown Massacre also trips into pure, pared-down mod rock, at once embracing and shunning how must modern music’s so overproduced.
“See,” says Anton, “They used to record a lot simpler a long time ago, and then after the ’70s when The Police came out, they started getting really complex like putting a mic on every instrument and the drums, instead of letting it all blend together in a way. Like, the older way. That’s the magic stuff.”
Having both been a backup band for Sonic Boom (Spacemen 3) and finished a west coast tour, they’ve gained the admiration of Psychic TV god Genesis P. Orridge, who’s going to collaborate on their next studio album.
Methodrone is actually made up of the band’s earlier works, mostly demos, and Newcombe says they’ve already evolved to a new, more pop-driven sound, with only smatterings of noise.
“Not to be some tweaker paisley shirt guy, but 1967 was it. There was a sense that anything could happen–the youth culture and everything, and technologically, a lot of people did all the greatest, most amazing stuff. I love psychedelic music, and the blues. Like, Zulu warriors, they chanted blues. They could go into battle and die, so they were like ‘this is all we can do.’ Which is interesting when you add ambient, industrial, repetitious guitarwork. Strange. A lot of psychedelic bands are limited by R&B instead of using everything.
“Some people,” he goes on kinda emphatically, “don’t ever sit alone in a room with nothing else that’s gonna bring ‘em through the night but an album they like. They just go home and don’t think about things, and that’s a shame. We should make an epic record. Call it, Pharmacopaea, like, a cornucopia of drugs!” He laughs, maybe kidding.
“With us,” Anton says, convinced, “there’s an energy when you can barely hold on to something. Watching it slip through your fingers. Some people are into that, you know?”
Visit BJM at: www.myspace.com/brianjonestownmassacre or www.brianjonestownmassacre.com. And just get totally far out with it.
Originally published at Underscope Magazine













