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Dig Your Roots (compilation albums)

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Dig Your Roots
Compilation album
Released2003–2007
GenreHip hop, spoken word, electronic dance, roots, Canadian aboriginal, experimental jazz
LabelNational Campus and Community Radio Association

Dig Your Roots/Découvre tes racines is a Canadian series of compilation albums, released by the National Campus and Community Radio Association (NCRA/ANREC) in the 2000s to promote new and emerging artists.[1] The project was launched in 2002, utilizing development funding that Corus Entertainment provided to the NCRA/ANREC as part of a benefits package relating to a major radio acquisition transaction.[1]

Each year's Dig Your Roots compilation focused on a particular genre of music. Submissions were judged by a panel that first chose up to 100 artists to be featured through streaming audio on the project's website.[2] It then chose the 15 best entries for the CD compilation. The albums were also promoted by a series of live concert broadcasts which aired on participating campus and community radio stations across Canada.[2]

Project 1: Hip Hop (2003)

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The first album, released in 2003, featured unsigned hip hop artists.[3] The five associated concert shows were held on March 17 in Surrey, British Columbia; March 20 in Winnipeg, Manitoba; March 23 in Toronto, Ontario; March 26 in Montreal, Quebec; and March 29 in Halifax, Nova Scotia.[4]

In Exclaim!'s review of the album, critic Thomas Quinlan called it "the greatest Canadian hip-hop compilation since Cold Front", claiming that it had corrected "the mistakes of Rap Essentials."[5]

  1. Vandal (Toronto) – Urban Camper (3:51)
  2. First Words featuring Cess (Rothesay) – Down With Putting Raps Down (3:51)
  3. Wyzah (Montreal) – Three Angels (3:42)
  4. The Goods (Halifax) – Monkey Motion Shuffle (2:52)
  5. War Party (Hobbema) – Feeling Reserved (3:26)
  6. Illa Brown/Kutcorners (Vancouver) – Rock On Ya Block (3:37)
  7. Classified (Halifax) – Unexpected (3:49)
  8. Dangerous Goods Collective (Edmonton) – No More Nice Guy (4:10)
  9. Kamau (Toronto) – Brain Storming (2:04)
  10. Frek Sho (Winnipeg) – Fort Rouge (2:42)
  11. Les Architekts (Montreal) – le diable joue un jeu (4:45) 1
  12. Half Life (Montreal) – Secrets of Society (4:45)
  13. Ink Operated (Surrey) – Chant It Ooh Ah Oh (3:06)
  14. Josh Martinez (Vancouver) – Another Day (4:10)
  15. Eye + Eye (Toronto) – Snapshots (5:52)

Notes

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1 Due to manufacturer error, another song, Anodajay's "Le détenu", was mistakenly substituted on the CD for this one. Dig Your Roots subsequently released a special three-song sampler of Les Architekts' songs to compensate for the error.

Project 2: Spoken Word (2004)

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The second album, one of two released in 2004, focused on spoken word poetry and storytelling.[6]

  1. Steph Berntson (Sackville) – Barreling Madly (2:07)
  2. Kevin Matthews (Winnipeg) – Arsenic and Boldface (3:05)
  3. Derek Bradford (Halifax) – I Spy (1:53)
  4. Ève Langevin (Montreal) – Bulletin de nouvelles en bref, version 1 (1:09)
  5. Gein Wong (Toronto) – A Paper Son (2:35)
  6. Khyro (Montreal) – Fragment de Réflection du Mirroir 2: Forêt Vierge (1:55)
  7. Jeremy Gorman (Fredericton) – Pussycat Pussycat (1:29)
  8. Barbara Adler (Coquitlam) – In the Time Before (3:50)
  9. Nico Rogers (Winnipeg) – Hard to choke your artichoke heart (1:22)
  10. Julie Parrell (Winnipeg) – Untitled (2:23)
  11. Odessa Thornhill (Montreal) – I Sold My Wealth (1:02)
  12. T.L. Cowan (Edmonton) – homebody/homegirl (4:40)
  13. Heather Majaury (Waterloo) – Mother’s Song (4:25)
  14. Janet Marie Rogers (Victoria) – Make Me / Sombrio Spirit (4:18)
  15. Unblind (North York) – Mythology (1:43)

Project 3: Electronic Dance (2004)

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The third album, also released in 2004 simultaneously with the spoken word album, focused on electronic music.[7]

  1. Alexandre (La Butte) – Qu'elle a dit (3:58)
  2. D_MON (Dartmouth) – Don't Listen (3:51)
  3. Chinese Jetpilot (London) – Return of the Phat Dragon (DYR Edit) (3:28)
  4. Blackjwell (Montreal) – Falls (4:38)
  5. East Coast Disaster Complex (Victoria) – Robbiemart (3:38)
  6. Balboa (Winnipeg) – Ballad of the Lonely Mogwai (3:56)
  7. Alucard (Winnipeg) – Triple Wave (edit) (4:27)
  8. DĀV (Montreal) – Parisian Dream (4:31)
  9. d*rogers (Ottawa) – Did 2 Much (Grooveboy Remix) (4:46)
  10. Big Phat McNasty (Kamloops) – Rogue State (4:15)
  11. Gary Flanagan (Rothesay) – Driver (3:16)
  12. DJ Oxide (Winnipeg) – Sundae (4:05)
  13. Zenobia Salik & the United ElectroSoul Underground (Vancouver) – Headphones (Vegas Lounge Mix) (5:04)
  14. Guru-shishya (Hamilton) – Cagian 3 (3:56)
  15. vitaminsforyou (Montreal) – quand peanut fait dodo (3:24)

Project 4: Roots (2005)

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The 2005 album centred on roots music artists.[8]

  1. The Cracker Cats (Saskatoon) –Darkness (2:45)
  2. D. Rangers (Winnipeg) – Coughin Up Blood (2:55)
  3. Paul Paulin (St. Joseph du Lac) – J'ai pas n'cent su moé (3:47)
  4. Anne Louise Genest (Whitehorse) – Paradise Road (3:38)
  5. John Wort Hannam (Fort Macleod) – Church of the Long Grass (4:06)
  6. Penny Lang (Montreal) – Prairie Sky (3:08)
  7. Jory Nash (Willowdale) – Citizen's Waltz (3:49)
  8. Glen Reid (Burk's Falls) – Lifeline to the Heartland (4:04)
  9. The Flummies (Happy Valley - Goose Bay) – Comb Your Hair Flat Down (3:06)
  10. Les Chauffeurs à pieds (Québec) – Marie la chamelle & reel du poteau blanc (5:31)
  11. Barley Wik (Victoria) – View of the Station (2:23)
  12. Jane Eamon (Kelowna) – Ruckus in the Henhouse (4:26)
  13. Tim Harrison (Toronto) – Elizabeth's Lament (3:38)
  14. Petunia (Fredericton) – The Lonesome Pine Hollows (3:56)
  15. Rob Currie (Halifax) – Rape of Grand Pré (3:23)

Project 5: Aboriginal (2006)

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The 2006 album focused on aboriginal music by First Nations, Métis and Inuit artists.[1][9]

  1. Sandy Scofield (Vancouver BC) – Faith (feat. Kinnie Starr) (4:49)
  2. Shirley Montague (Norris Point NL) – Ijiatsuk (3:54)
  3. The Pappy Johns Band with Murray Porter (Ohsweken ON) – Going Back (5:02)
  4. Elaine Jakesta (Watson Lake YT) – Healed Heroes (2:20)
  5. Ed Peekeekoot (Crofton BC) – Wild Lilies to Wheat Fields (3:12)
  6. Jef Tremblay et les Éléments (Québec QC) – Tanite Etuteiak (3:48)
  7. X-STATUS (Winnipeg MB) – Still Around (2:55)
  8. Sinuupa (Kuujjuag QC) – Simple Man (Explicit Language) (4:46)
  9. Eekwol (Saskatoon SK) – Too Sick (4:15)
  10. Tagaq (Cambridge Bay NU) – Breather (5:27)
  11. Rez Villain (Bedford NS) – Charismatic Manner (Explicit Language) (3:45)
  12. Leela Gilday (Yellowknife NT) – Rage (4:12)
  13. Richard M. Gloade (Fredericton NB) – The Mean Song (3:11)
  14. Graeme Jonez (Toronto ON) – Black Magic Goldmine (3:18)
  15. Digging Roots (Barrie ON) – Going Back (4:48)

Project 6: Experimental Jazz (2007)

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The 2007 album featured experimental jazz artists.[10]

  1. Georges Koufogiannakis, "Yo, Mo D." (5:05)
  2. TFC, "Acting on the Assumption" (4:48)
  3. Colin Fisher, "Zig Zag" (6:05)
  4. Bitchin, "2005-05-27 08:13:55" (6:43)
  5. Duane Andrews, "Improvisations on the First Movement of Mozart's String Quintet in G Minor K516" (2:49)
  6. Avi Granite: 6, "Ghetto Panda" (7:13)
  7. Inhabitants, "Main Drag" (5:11)
  8. UniSecs, "À Travers" (5:16)
  9. Gordon Grdina's Box Cutter, "Tidal Wave" (5:37)
  10. The Barriomatic Trust, "The Ruined Map" (3:29)
  11. The Beni D Band, "Walk'n' the Ave" (5:11)
  12. Sons of Colborne, "Up v. Down" (4:25)
  13. Jesse Zubot, "Nootropics" (4:23)
  14. BoboK (2), "Erroné" (4:03)
  15. Tyler Hornby, "Shadows of a Brighter Day" (5:18)

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Digging for talent; Dig Your Roots searches below the surface to uncover Canada's great music potential". Telegraph-Journal, November 21, 2005.
  2. ^ a b "Dig Your Roots Talent Search". Sudbury Star, November 10, 2005.
  3. ^ "Dig Your Roots Expose Independent Hip-Hop"[usurped]. Chart Attack, January 29, 2003.
  4. ^ "Dig Your Roots Hip-Hop Tour A Go"[usurped]. Chart Attack, March 5, 2003.
  5. ^ "Dig Your Roots". Exclaim!, January 1, 2006.
  6. ^ "Dig Your Roots: Spoken Word". Exclaim!, May 31, 2004.
  7. ^ "Dig Your Roots: Electronic Dance". Exclaim!, March 31, 2004.
  8. ^ "Roots artists unearthed, including Islander". The Guardian, January 7, 2005.
  9. ^ "Dig Your Roots wants to hear from Aboriginal artists". Ontario Birchbark, January 31, 2006.
  10. ^ "What’s The Frequency, Campus?: Dig Your Roots". Torontoist, March 23, 2007.
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