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Minor Holiday Release Day!
Minor Holiday - Single Artwork - 11-18-20.jpg

“Minor Holiday”

Hello!!

My new single "Minor Holiday" — my first release under the name Sparkbird — is now available everywhere!
 

Bandcamp
Spotify
Apple Music
Amazon
Pandora
YouTube
Soundcloud
Patreon


The track features:

These various parts were recorded remotely in Portland (me), Los Angeles (Mathias), New York (Yoed, Jeni, and Lisa), and Sydney, Australia (Greta). It was mixed and mastered in Eugene, Oregon, by Thaddeus Moore at Liquid Mastering.

The single’s incredible artwork is a linocut by Rebecca DeMoss and features a non-binary cardinal. Prints will be available at some point! The graphic design is by Chad Lowe.

In spite of all the impressive musicians involved in recording this song, I don't expect any press for it, so I hope you'll help me share it with the world. Here's a handy link for sharing it: https://song.link/KpjG6ZSX8kq2V

Sheet music for "Minor Holiday" (with piano, vocals, and chords) is now available on Bandcamp as a physical item and a PDF. It's also included as a download on my Patreon.

Next month I'll be releasing Kyla Smith's animated lyric video for the song!! Here's a sneak-peek screenshot:

MinorHoliday_Thumbnail_Fire_Sky_Person.jpg

Stay tuned, and stay well.

Love,
Stephan
a.k.a. Sparkbird
www.sparkbirdmusic.com

January Newsletter: My New Name
Minor Holiday - Single Artwork - 11-18-20.jpg

“Minor Holiday”

(keep reading for more info on the song)

Happy New Year! It’s 2021!!!

After 13 years of creating music and performing under my own name, I’ve decided it’s time to mix things up. And so, upon the birth of this new year, I’m excited (and scared) to announce the birth of my new musical identity: Sparkbird.

On January 22nd, I’ll be releasing the single “Minor Holiday” under this new moniker. I’ve included my real name as well for this release, so it will appear among my releases if you follow me on Spotify or Apple Music.
 

Join me on Patreon to hear/download "Minor Holiday" now
&
PRE-SAVE the single on Spotify

 

There are many reasons behind the name-change decision. The biggest is that my name just isn’t that catchy. It’s a fine name, but I don’t think it’s done my music career any favors. Annie Clark chose to use the name St. Vincent because she didn’t want people to see her name and think coffee shop. I hope the name Sparkbird will serve a similar function for me. It feels ambitious, aspirational — a name I can grow into.

Last April I sent you a demo of “Minor Holiday,” and I’m so excited for you to hear the studio version. It features backing vocals by Greta Gertler, percussion by Mathias Kunzli, strings by Yoed Nir, upright bass by Jeni Magana, and clarinet by Lisa Parrott. These various parts were recorded remotely in Portland (me), Los Angeles (Mathias), New York (Yoed, Jeni, and Lisa), and Sydney, Australia (Greta). It was mixed and mastered in Eugene, Oregon, by Thaddeus Moore at Liquid Mastering.

The single’s incredible artwork is a linocut by Rebecca DeMoss and features a non-binary cardinal. Prints will be available at some point! The graphic design is by Chad Lowe.

In addition, artist Kyla Smith is working on an animated lyric video for the song!!

When I started writing “Minor Holiday” in early 2020, I had just finished reading Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and its sequel, The Testaments.

Following these disturbing depictions of a totalitarian regime, I jumped right into Atwood’s Oryx & Crake, which deals with an assortment of catastrophes, from climate change to a pandemic. In real life, the bushfires in Australia were finally nearing containment, but the threat of COVID-19 was suddenly looming.
 

Season’s grievings to us, one and all
Once we get the hang of it
We’ll forget to get upset
 
Bearing each unsettling new pall
So adaptable
We’re so adaptable

 

While reading The Handmaid’s Tale, I had been struck by this prescient warning from Atwood:
“Ordinary, said Aunt Lydia, is what you are used to. This may not seem ordinary to you now, but after a time it will. It will become ordinary.”

I came upon the concept of creeping normality, which Wikipedia describes as “a process by which a major change can be accepted as normal and acceptable if it happens slowly through small, often unnoticeable, increments of change.”

I want to take this opportunity to remind you and myself to maintain an ethic of non-indifference. 2020 may be over, but it’s still our duty to take action, use our voices, care for one another, and strive to create a better world for future generations.

I’ll be in touch in a few weeks when the song and lyric video are released. Thank you so much for your support. I wish everyone a safe, bright 2021.

Take care,
Stephan
a.k.a. Sparkbird

Additional news:

  • In November I appeared on the Creating Portland podcast!
    Listen: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | YouTube - with video

  • On February 11 at 7 PM, I'll be performing/presenting "Sparkbird: An Evening of Piano Pop with Russian Influences" for the University of Oregon department of Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies! More details to come.

  • The Look at the Harlequins! SONGBOOK is here and it’s beautiful! A PDF version is also available.

  • “Minor Holiday” sheet music will be available shortly!

February Newsletter: An early glimpse of "Sparkbird"

Hello! Happy February!

I was so caught up in the release of Look at the Harlequins! (Bandcamp | iTunes | Spotify | Amazon | Google Play) that I forgot to send out a new song last month! To make up for it, I'm sending a big one — the demo for the title song on my next full-length album, Sparkbird. I've been busy orchestrating ten songs for it, and I'm hoping it will be ready later this year.

Stephan Nance Sparkbird.png

While this song doesn't mention any birds by name, it's very much a tribute to birding and the joy that the pursuit of birds has brought to my life.

A "sparkbird" is the bird that gets you obsessed with birds. For me, that's the Western Tanager. Actually, I have a picture of the Western Tanager who sparked my passion and ultimately inspired this song! There he is.

This is the "incredible, bright yellow bird with an orange head and black wings" I mentioned to Kelsey Greco when she interviewed me for this Vortex Magazine article.

As exciting as the discovery of this Western Tanager was, way back in 2011, I didn’t really start birding right then. But more and more, birds became tied up in my self-care and mindfulness practices. There were individual birds I looked for on my daily bike rides — a hummingbird who was always perched at the top of a certain tree, a pheasant who was always on top of a certain pile of bark chips.

I was appreciating birds but kind of tiptoeing around them. For some reason, I had this idea that if I dared to go out with a pair of binoculars, some Real Birders would call me out and tell me to get off their turf. Eventually I met a Real Birder — my friend Rebecca Waterman, who contributed backing vocals to "Grey & Green" — and I asked her very sheepishly if she thought it’d be okay if I looked at birds even though I didn’t know anything about birding. She told me to just do it, and that she didn’t know a ton either but you just learn as you go.

It makes me wonder — how often do we wait for permission to do something that could make us happier?

If watching birds happens to be something you're interested in but feel unqualified to do, let me be the one to say: you have permission! Or maybe you want to learn to play an instrument, or to speak another language, or do calligraphy, or write a poem, or make something out of clay. You have permission to do those things, too! You'll probably be terrible at it at first, but being terrible at something is the first step towards being good at something.

On the subject of birds — this week I'm going to the Winter Wings Festival in Klamath Falls, Oregon, to do research for the young adult novel I'm writing (which, if you haven't guessed, is bird-related). If you follow me on Twitter and Instagram, you'll be seeing some glimpses of that trip, which promises to be very cold and snowy.  ❄️⛄️

Oh — also, this demo is of course a work in progress! In the end, it'll have real instruments, and definitely some percussion. 😊

PS If you're interested in having me play a house show sometime this year — anywhere in the world — let me know! Here's my helpful guide to hosting a living room concert.