Times Colonist

Shad extends history-making Polaris record

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TORONTO — New projects from some of Quebec’s most cuttingedg­e musicians have landed spots on the Polaris Music Prize short list.

Pop provocateu­r Hubert Lenoir, Congolese-Canadian Pierre Kwenders and electronic orchestral composer Ouri are among the 10 contenders for this year’s $50,000 award for best Canadian album.

They join London, Ont., rapper Shad, whose Tao became his fifth album to be shortliste­d for the Polaris, the most of any artist since the prize’s creation in 2006.

Among the Quebec nominees, Lenoir takes a spot with Pictura de Ipse: Musique directe, also known as Picture of Myself, a concept album that set recorded conversati­ons of his daily life to musical compositio­ns.

Kwenders, who was born José Louis Modabi in Kinshasa, Congo, before moving to Montreal, is recognized for José Louis And The Paradox Of Love.

The album captures the dancefloor energy of Afro-Latin beats and features a collaborat­ion with Arcade Fire’s Win Butler and Régine Chassagne.

Ouri is the stage name of Ourielle Auvé, whose album Frame of a Fauna was inspired by her classical training in France and the electronic music she discovered upon moving to Montreal.

First Nations hip hop act Snotty Nose Rez Kids picked up their third nod for Life After while Indigenous duo Ombiigizi landed on the list for their debut Sewn Back Together, produced by Broken Social Scene’s Kevin Drew.

Other Polaris-nominated albums include Toronto singersong­writer Charlotte Day Wilson’s Alpha, Rosairevil­le, N.B.-raised Lisa Leblanc’s Chiac Disco, St. John’s-based musician Kelly McMichael’s Waves and Vancouver rock band Destroyer’s Labyrinthi­tis.

The Polaris Music Prize names the best Canadian album of the previous year — irrespecti­ve of genre or sales — as chosen by a group of journalist­s, broadcaste­rs and bloggers. The winner will be announced Sept. 19 during a gala presentati­on at Toronto’s Carlu.

Tickets for the evening are available through Ticketmast­er while the ceremony will be webcast live on CBC Music.

Last year, the Polaris went to hip hop artist Cadence Weapon for Parallel World, his poetic reflection on race, policing and technology that was largely inspired by the George Floyd protests in 2020.

Each runner-up receives $3,000.

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