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C A N N O P Y

Art is True North

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Hubs & Huddles column of Cannopy Magazine, which focuses on multi-purpose performance centres
Ensemble column, which highlights classical artists and ensen, which highlights classical artists and ensembles
Ellington column, which features jazz vocalists and instrumentalists
Studio Sessions column, which focuses on in-depth artist profiles — particularly visual artists in their creative spaces
Materials column, which focuses on artists working across various creative media; Profiling Various Creative Media
Spaces column, which highlights galleries anSpaces column, which highlights galleries and exhibit venuesd exhibit venues
Fourth Wall column, which focuses on the global theatre industry
 In Motion column, which focuses on the global dance industry
In Focus column, which highlights the global film industry
Alt.itude column, which focuses on global alternative music
Homegrown column, which highlights Canadian alternative music
Arts & Letters column, which focuses on essays, opinions, and ideas related to the arts

Off The Record: Peter Gregson on Peter Gregson

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Peter Gregson

The Scottish composer, producer, and cellist rediscovers simplicity with his latest self-titled album

Words by Eva Stone-Barney

ISSUE 15 | ENSEMBLE




It might come as a surprise that Peter Gregson – whose previous work has endeavoured to push boundaries, rubbing shoulders with the world of digital technology – has erred on the side of simplicity in his forthcoming album, Peter Gregson (out April 11th). That the work is self-titled is significant: “this music is the closest to what I hear in my head that I’ve ever reached.”  


What’s in Gregson’s head reveals itself to be an assortment of elegant melodies. The cellist and composer draws inspiration from Felix Mendelssohn’s songs without words – his cello becomes a singing voice, an extension of himself. 





Gregson made the album in “The Big Room” at Peter Gabriel’s Real World Studios, which sits in the middle of a pond, just outside of London, as he describes it. He recorded his cello to tape, and the synthesizer digitally, to create a sound world that looks as far back as the 19th century, and as far forward as avant-garde electronic composition.


There is something vulnerable about creating a record that is so paired-down, particularly for an artist as prolific as Gregson. His aim was to release something pure, music whose essence is not modified or obfuscated by the format in which it is presented. Each piece leads into the next: an imaginative, free-flowing portrait of the artist, which leaves ample room for interpretation.


CANNOPY x Peter Gregson


New album out April 11th, 2025.


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