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Prism Prize Video: Flying Hórses - Unsettled

The 2019 Prism Prize for Best Canadian Music Video was awarded recently to Kevan Funk, for his clip for Belle Game’s Low. We will continue to profile the nominated videos, including this one from an adventurous Montreal instrumental artist. Slaight Music is Patron Sponsor for the Prism Prize.

Prism Prize Video: Flying Hórses - Unsettled

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The 2019 Prism Prize for Best Canadian Music Video was awarded recently to Kevan Funk, for his clip for Belle Game’s Low. We will continue to profile the nominated videos, including this one from an adventurous Montreal instrumental artist. Slaight Music is Patron Sponsor for the Prism Prize.


Flying Hórses - Unsettled

There are many words to describe the visual for Flying Hórses’ Unsettled - but the word “breathtaking” seems to be the most apt description. Shot in the beautiful, but desolate landscape of Iceland, we find the artist confined within a glass box, surrounded by the vastness of nature around her. The box begins to fill with smoke, overwhelming and suffocating. As the box starts to fill, she tries to escape for a moment, before resigning and quietly wallowing in the haze around her.

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The artist has previously addressed the meaning of her entrapment: “The smoke-filled box is a metaphor for the overwhelming feeling of being unsettled. Although you can see there are beauty and light nearby, your mind cannot reach it until you face the darkness, instead of trying to escape it.” Director Timothee Lambrecq builds a strong connection between the viewer and the artist’s quiet struggle with herself, painting a rather beautiful portrait of the dark and often debilitating state that many can often experience.

Flying Hórses is the project of Montreal instrumental artist Jade Bergeron.

Video directed & produced by Timothee Lambrecq

Set designed by Kristinn Arnar Sigurðsson

Filmed in the Snæfellsnes Peninsula, Iceland

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Daniel Caesar
Courtesy Photo

Daniel Caesar

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Daniel Caesar Returns to NPR for First Tiny Desk Performance in 8 Years

The Canadian-born singer-songwriter brought a 12-piece choir for his five-song set, focused on songs from his 2025 album, Son of Spergy.

Daniel Caesar has returned to NPR’s Tiny Desk.

Back in 2018, the Canadian singer-songwriter performed a string of songs for the popular performance series, hot on the heels of his acclaimed debut album, Freudian. Despite his three-song set, Caesar left the room — and the audience at home — in awe of his natural talent and charm. His debut remains one of the 15 most-viewed sets on YouTube.

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