Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.03.2019, Blaðsíða 14

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.03.2019, Blaðsíða 14
VISIT OUR WEBSITE LH-INC.CA 14 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • March 15 2019 SALE! T-SHIRT BLOW OUT!! MY ANCESTOR ADULT SHIRTS SALE $20 (JADE OR SAPPHIRE) OÐIN ADULT SHIRTS SALE $20 (BLACKBERRY) OÐIN CREST ADULT SHIRTS SALE $20 (WHITE) VIKING CRUISE ADULT SHIRTS SALE $20 (BLACKBERRY) LÖGBERG-HEIMSKRINGLA REG $30 SALE $20Full colour Graphic T-shirts ICELANDIC VIKING ADULT SHIRTS REG $25 SALE $15 Lamba Mín Tote REG $10 SALE $5 LIMITED SIZES REMAINING, PHONE ORDERS ONLY CALL 204 284 5686 Back in stock! “Leif Landed First” License plate cover $5 Pins $10 LITTLE THOR, LITTLE FREYA, I LOVE AMMA, I LOVE AFI TODDLER SHIRTS $15 (2T - 6T) show your Icelandic pride Lisa Sigurgeirson Maxx is a third generation Western Icelander, daughter of the late Bill (Vilhjalmur Jakob) Sigurgeirson, who was born in Gimli and raised on Hecla Island before moving west with the family to Steveston, British Columbia, in 1943. She is, more to the point, an incredibly gifted singer-songwriter who will be performing in Winnipeg on the evening of May 16, 2019, at the Icelandic National League of North America’s 100th annual convention. Lisa also participated (as a vendor and photographer) in the 99th annual INLNA convention in Edmonton, as well as performing on stage at the 97th INLNA convention in Richmond, BC. During August and September, 2016, she and her then band, The Still Creek Crows, toured Iceland, performing for the Icelandic National League of Iceland in Reykjavík, as well as at Melodica, also in Reykjavík, and Bláberjadagur (the Blueberry Days festival) in Súðavík in the Westfjords. Her second CD, featuring several new songs in celebration of her Icelandic roots, will soon be released. This review is of her original CD, Still Hold True, something of an undiscovered gem here in Canada. Full disclosure: Yes, Lisa Sigurgeirson Maxx is a cousin of mine – my mother Elin, by common consent the sanest of her siblings (though this says less than it may seem), is elder sister to Lisa’s late father, Bill – and yet, No, I fear, there’s no hope of my ever being paid for writing this review. Lisa Sigurgeirson Maxx, you see, is an artist, something you’ll discover when you listen to these songs and, as with so many artists here and now (and then and there, as well), she has had to eke out her living, caught between the duty to her gift (and boy, can this girl sing!) and the equally powerful pull of living in this world, two tasks that take a lifetime each to properly fulfill. When asked, then, to review Still Hold True, my first thought was, “No, no, no, for this will never pay. Besides, she’s family, it just won’t do.” But then I put the album on and, listening to the songs, knew I had no choice, for the album, as Lisa writes in the liner notes, “is a tribute to family / for those who have come and gone / for those still here / and for those yet to come.” And so, who better than one of the clan to help spread the news? This is a powerful, beautiful work, worthy to be heard by all. Like life itself, Still Hold True arcs from birth to death, opening with two love songs to her newborn baby girl, the first song (“I Ya”) pulsing with a young mother’s ecstasy and joy, her utter awe- filled wonder at this sweet new being she has borne. (“I Ya” was the way her baby girl first said “I love you”). The second song, “Shadow Dance,” is a profoundly moving meditation on growth itself and the simple gift that this life is, the all of this life, both its shadows and its light. The album comes to an end with two transcendent songs of farewell: the first to her Scottish nana (the title track, “Still Hold True”), and the final song, “Farðu Draumaveginn” (Go the Dream Way), an enchanting incantation that bids good night, farewell to her Icelandic amma. Anyone among us here who boasts Icelandic blood will be entranced by the pure and haunting power of this song. In between these book-ends are songs that chart the living of a life – songs of people known and loved and lost; places, too, and things; events that mark the journey here that we all take, this life we live between the being born and our final sailing from this shore. “Song for Mikley,” like so many of these songs, is a song of celebration, a song of pride and deep connection to both blood and, yes, to place. The boat Mikley was the last wooden- hulled commercial fish boat to be built here on Canada’s West Coast, a 44-foot trawler built in Steveston back in 1989- 90 by Lisa’s father, Bill, and his (some say long-suffering) partner, Doreen. The two then fished that boat up and down this coast until finally they put away their gear and retired from the sea. (The story of the building of the Mikley, originally published in West Coast Fisherman, will be reprinted in the Icelandic Connection later in 2019). “Song for Mikley” celebrates not just the building of this boat, it celebrates the reasons why the boat was built: because Bill’s father, Geiri, was a builder of boats – both back on Lake Winnipeg and later on in Steveston – and because Geiri’s father (Jakob Sigurgeirsson) built boats as well. Both men worked the lake, of course, so boatbuilding is something like a gift – much the same as the love of music is a gift, the love of song, for all are gifts passed down by blood. And so “Song for Mikley” is a celebration of that gift and of that place back there upon the lake. It is also a celebration of the old folk who, by the simple (though never easy) living of their lives, became the inspiration to the ones who followed them in time. It is, in this, an ode to connection and to blood and to the way the years and seas – the inland sea that is Lake Winnipeg and the Pacific Ocean as well as the grave and deep Atlantic from whose grey depths our Iceland rises solid as a psalm – flow together into one. “Old House” will resonate with anyone who remembers their amma lovingly. If you are very, very lucky in this life, you will have had an amma who made you buttered toast with cinnamon Lisa Sigurgeirson Maxx – Still Hold True Reviewed by Ian Ross Vancouver, BC Lisa Sigurgeirson Maxx in her ancestral homeland. The cover of Still Hold True.

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