The horses are out of the barn…and it’s time to trot. Introducing Mortar & Pestle: a union between two of Canada’s dance bandits at large. D. Tiffany & Maara come together to bring you pure delicious magic. These tracks are fresh out the skillet and piping hot on your plates. Dip us in maple syrup and throw us to the lezzies!
What do you get when you stir the pot…or grind the pestle? Wet, bubbling, sticky, throbbing bangers that make you lose your mind. Two’s company, but three’s a party. Sweetheart Hannah Karpinski hops in with her provocative Polish vocals, ready to ignite the freak fire and desire in this world and beyond. Unhinged, raw, and chaotic, burning the whole barn down. Enjoy this 4-track offering of hypnotic indulgence. Mortar & Pestle: Pound or be Pounded? Whatever you fancy, you’re in for a treat.
Cerca:pestle
- 1
- 07: Iuta Upopo (Pestle Song)
- 08: Cup Kamuy Ho (Wake Up Sun)
- 09: Battaki (Grasshopper Dance)
- 10: Oroho Raha (Mokor Mokor)
- 01: Drum Song
- 02: Kai Kai As To (Rippling Lake)
- 03: Iso Kaari Irehte (Bear Trap Rhythm)
- 04: Yaykatekar Dub (Love Dub)
- 05: Tonkori In The Moonlight
- 06: Afghan Herbal Garden
- 11: Wei Ne (Oh, My Heart!)
- 1: Drum Song
- 2: Kai Kai As To (Rippling Lake)
- 3: Iso Kaari Irehte (Bear Trap Rhythm) (Feat. Umeko Ando)
- 4: Yaykatekar Dub (Love Dub)
- 5: Tonkori In The Moonlight
- 6: Afghan Herbal Garden
- 7: Iuta Upopo (Pestle Song) (Feat. Umeko Ando)
- 8: Cup Kamuy Ho (Wake Up Sun) (Feat. Umeko Ando)
- 9: Battaki (Grasshopper Dance) (Feat. Umeko Ando)
- 10: Oroho Raha (Mokor Mokor) (Sleep, Sleep) (Feat. Kila)
- 11: Wei Ne
Tender tonkori melodies, meditative dub excursions and hallowed folk vocals combine on Tonkori in the Moonlight, an 11-track collection of mostly traditional songs performed by indigenous Ainu musician OKI. Born on the Japanese island of Hokkaido in 1957, OKI's released his debut album in 1996 and since then he has recorded 11 studio albums both solo and with his Dub Ainu Band and toured internationally - from WOMAD in the UK to the John F.Kennedy Center in Washington DC via festival appearances in Singapore, Australia and across Europe. OKI is one of only a handful of musicians who play the tonkori, a five-stringed Ainu harp, which is both the pulse of this record and the force that unifies the disparate sounds he introduces such as reggae, dub, Irish folk, throat singing, African drumming and music from Central Asia.
- 1



