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Taima
Website: www.taimaproject.com
Photography courtesy of
Bernard Fougères
For high-resolution images for media use, please contact Heather Kelly Communications at heather@heatherk.ca or 416-364-5701
About
Elisapie Isaac
Elisapie was adopted at birth by an Inuit family and
was raised according to Inuit tradition. She also kept
close ties with her biological parents - an Inuk mother
and a father from Newfoundland. The "mix of cultures" she experienced as a child soon gave her the desire
to travel, to take risks and to express the duality
she carried within her. In a land of vastness, of intense
cold and of cultural constrasts, Elisapie learned to
pace her life to nature's own rhythm: hunting seasons,
bird migration, endless sunlight or months-long nights
all became a part of her, just as she embraced Inuit
tradition as well as some aspects of contemporary culture.
In this fragile equilibrium between light and darkness,
between old and new, she found her own destiny: communication.
Music was always a part of her. As a child, she repetitively
sang the religious hymns learned in church, for her
mother wanted her to know them by heart. At 14, her
uncle invited her to join the Salluit Band (a folk-rock-gospel
group that recently celebrated its 40th birthday) as
a chorist. She accepted the invitation... but since
singing wasn't part of her career aspirations at the
time, she left the band to concentrate on her real passion:
communications.
At 15, she was the host and producer of a radio show
for teenagers broadcasted by TNI in Salluit. She was
never idle, filling her summer schools breaks with communications-related
jobs - either as a tv-show host and journalist, or as
a liaison and counselor for teens in Salluit and Kuujjuaq.
She
left her homeland in 1999 to pursue her communications
studies at Montreal's John Abbott College. In 2000,
she acted as host and journalist for Peoples of the
Circumpolar, a documentary produced by TPI, an Inuit
production company. Her work on the film allowed her
to visit many regions of the Circumpolar - such as Norway,
Siberia, Greenland, Alaska and Canada's Great North.
This travel experience turned out to be a defining moment
of her career, as she developed the need to share her
deep attachment to her culture through art.
Folk music, for the unparalleled emotions and beautiful
sense of intimacy it carries, strongly attracted Elisapie.
Her interest in this genre revived her singing ambitions,
pushed her to write songs and to seek a musician who
would add dimension to her words. She met Alain Auger
in July 2000 - and you know the rest...
In 2001, Elisapie won the Fourth "First Nations
Filmmaker" Award presented by the National Film
Board (NFB) of Canada - which allowed her to direct
Sila piqujipat (If The Weather Permits), a short film
that will premier worldwide in March 2003.Simplicity
and authenticity are at the core of Elisapie's creative
process. In her writing as in her singing, she shares
the emotions of a woman who profoundly bonds with the
world around her. Life perpetually pulsates; love feeds
everything; the heart speaks the language of her people's
Wisemen; and The Mother, mythic figure, is primeval.
About
Alain Auger
Alain was born and raised in Rouyn-Noranda, a town located
in Abitibi, his parents' homeland. The youngest of five
music-loving children, he was introduced to legendary
and visionary bands such as Genesis (the original!),
Pink Floyd, Rush, Supertramp, The Police and Marilion
at a very early age. Alain took his first electric guitar
lessons at the age of 15. In 1987, he enrolled in the
classical guitar program at Vincent d'Indy School, where
he learned to read music. Following the advice of his
music teacher, he then moved to Montreal in 1989 to
study jazz guitar and latin percussions. This new and
stimulating "multicultural" avenue opened
up a world of musical diversity that Alain still explores
to this day with ever-increasing curiosity.
During the last of his three years at cégep Saint-Laurent,
he followed an intensive program on jazz arrangements
for Big Band. During the same period, Luc Boivin invited
him to join El Extasis, a percussions collective.
Alain's first viewing of The Big Blue (Le Grand Bleu),
a film by French director Luc Besson, was the catalyst
of his career as a composer. He was fascinated by the
intimate complicity between image and music displayed
in the movie - and wanted to create musical environments
that would complement other art forms in the same way.
He went on to compose the musical score for Jacques
et la soumission from Ionesco, a play presented by the
cégep Saint-Laurent theater group.
After
his studies, Alain played in various bands that embraced
many styles, from jazz to blues, R&B, funk and latin.
He saw Baraka, a movie by Ron Fricke, while on tour.
The film turned out to be another revelation. The subject-matter
of the movie - a portrayal of Man in various contexts
and a representation of his relations to his environment
- mirrored Alain's vision of the world. To him, the
musical score represented an essential and integral
part of the movie: in Baraka, music acted as a language,
transporting the viewer beyond geographical frontiers,
bringing down all barriers without a word being uttered.
In a flash, Alain gave his career a new direction. He
moved away from the bar scene and spent the next 2 years
putting together his own studio, where he further defined
his musical personality and created a demo track of
his own movie scores. This new direction offered him
endless possibilities as a musician: artistic freedom;
the occasion to explore and use various musical styles;
and the possibility to create musical contrasts, to
share his philosophy of humanity and his vision of a
better society.
Pam Grier provided his first work opportunity within
the film industry. The Afro-American actress who interpreted
Jackie Brown in the eponimous film Quentin Tarantino
(and long-time collaborator of Quincy Jones) was in
Montreal for the shooting of Rod Hewitt's Strip Search.
She loved Alain's demo and passed it on to Hewitt, who
then asked Alain to write a few songs for his movie.
They collaborated again for Back to Even, a film entirely
produced in Los Angeles. Alain has since composed about
a dozen movie scores, as well as numerous theme songs
for advertisement campaigns and television, radio and
theater productions.
A return to live performance always attracted him, but
only if it was to be a personal project. He was therefore
on the lookout for a co-creator, an accomplice who would
understand his goals. Elisapie was that person. Taima
Project really took off in 2001, after Alain's return
from a three-month humanitarian mission in Senegal with
Club 2/3, a Montreal-based NGO.
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