biographical info
Five
years in Japan infused Tara Dawn Solheim’s music with the pop and lively
animation of Japanese culture. Tara Dawn, cleverly coined “Taradon – a dinosaur”
by CBC’s Grant Lawrence, has been busy working on a new album since returning to
Canada in summer 2011. The new album will be a bridge between the blues/pop
sound she played with her band in Japan, Tarantula, and the new material she
has been writing in her home province, Saskatchewan. The songs move between the
bright lights and crowded trains of Tokyo and the silent calm of a prairie
field.
No
newcomer to writing, Tara began her career as a spoken word artist and poet. She
has been commissioned to create original poetic performances for CBC, various
dance shows and local festivals including the Cathedral Arts Festival, the Her-i-cane
Women’s Art Festival, and the Regina
and Brandon Folk Festivals. From 2004 to 2005, she worked with the Mackenzie Art Gallery in Regina to
develop and host a poetry and jazz performance series called the Seldom Sessions.
During
her five years in Tokyo, Tara Dawn performed with and wrote for a number of
bands including Tarantula
(blues/early rock), =7 (Japanese
jazz/rock), Mac's Blues (blues), The DNT (hip hop) and Ooze Out out of D.R.C (hip hop). She did
instructional singing videos for JOYSOUND,
a major karaoke company throughout Japan. Her music was featured in Japanzine, 2009 The Gaijin Sounds Competition,
highlighting the best foreign musicians in Japan.
After
years in Japan, she decided it was time to return to her home and native land.
Born in Saskatoon, she is currently based in Regina, Saskatchewan. Her original music draws on blues and jazz from the
1920's and 30's and early rock and roll. Her songwriting has been influenced by
a range of artists from Bessie Smith, Nina Simone, Chuck Berry, Joni Mitchell
to Buddy Holly. Her lyrics are haunted by
wind and sky.
influences
Buddy Holly
Chuck Berry
Nina Simone