Interview – Resources provided by Heather Feather

As part of the podcast series, “ArtsAbly in Conversation,” Diane Kolin interviewed Heather White Luckow aka Heather Feather, a children’s performer and educator, and a musicologist based in Montreal in Canada.

A white woman with short brown hair wearing a red dress and holding a black cane. Her left hand is up, as to wave hello.
Photo: Kristin Chalmers

This post presents the resources that Heather Feather, mentioned during the conversation. The podcast episode will be published soon.

Heather Feather

Heather Feather’s toe-tapping music and sunny, energetic personality will have the whole family singing and dancing along. Her songs are not only joyful and fun, but also encourage physical, cognitive, social, and emotional development in children of all ages. Her award-winning 2022 album, Songs for Growing, is filled with “delightful songs and potent melodies all topped off with a lavish production. The vocals are sublime, as are the lyrics which dramatize the music superbly.” (Dez Staunton, Electric Kids Music), while CBC’s Sonali Karnick noted that her song, “appeal to kid’s intelligence.” Songs for Growing was awarded two Artist Development Grants from FACTOR and helped launch her career as a full-time performing artist and a highly sought-after Teaching Artist in preschools, schools, and community groups. With Songs for Growing, Heather was nominated for the 2023 and 2025 East Coast Music Awards Children’s Entertainer of the Year, 2023 Music NL Jazz Album of the Year, and she won two awards in the Funky Kids Radio Awards in Australia.

Visit Heather Feather’s website

Heather Feather’s new album “Together”

Heather Feather’s music blends her Newfoundland roots and her adopted Montreal home, and she performs in English and French. Her second album “Together” (June 2025), in collaboration with Grammy-award Kindie producer Dean Jones, features a blend of upbeat funk, pop, R&B, and jazz tunes about inclusion, acceptance, and belonging. For this album, Heather was delighted to receive full funding from the Canada Council for the Arts. For her new album, Heather Feather will play some release concerts. The next two ones are:

Buy Heather Feather’s music on Bandcamp

Song Fill Your Bucket

The video opening the interview is an excerpt of Fill Your Bucket. Watch the full video:

If the video does not play, watch in on YouTube.

RAMPD

RAMPD (Recording Artists and Music Professionals with Disabilities) is a professional platform equipping the music and live entertainment industry with disability inclusive tools, programming and strategy. RAMPD also connects the industry to a global directory of peer-vetted music/sound creators and industry professionals with disabilities, neurodivergence and other chronic or mental health conditions, to find source and hire—bringing competitive opportunities, visibility and community to our Professional Members while offering disability inclusion to Industry/Venue partners. RAMPD’s Mission is to amplify Disability Culture, promote equitable inclusion, and advocate for inclusive and accessible spaces in the music and live entertainment industries. Founded in May of 2021 (and established January 2022) by award-winning recording artist and cultural activist Lachi, RAMPD came about after a public talk between the Recording Academy and several disabled artists revealed the serious lack of visibility, access, and representation for music professionals with disabilities.

As a disabled artist (multiple sclerosis), Heather presents on behalf of RAMPD, most recently speaking at Folk Alliance International 2025 as part of the panel on Navigating Disability Culture and Access in the Music Industry with Charlie Mosbrook and Jai Yoko. 

Visit RAMPD’s website

Visit Heather Feather’s RAMPD profile

Andrew & Polly

Andrew & Polly are GRAMMY-nominated family music artists and the hosts of the podcast Ear Snacks. The duo’s work is GRAMMY-nominated and has received multiple Parents’ Choice Awards, endorsements from Common Sense Media and the ASCAP Foundation Joe Raposo Children’s Music Award. Together, Andrew & Polly compose and produce music for television and film.

Visit Andrew & Polly’s website

Lachi

Lachi is a singer-songwriter, touring performer, producer, actress, author, disability advocate and cultural activist based in New York City. Lachi’s music is often described as Pop or Dance music. She is legally blind, due to Coloboma. Throughout 2021 and 2022, Lachi established herself as a go-to disability advocate in the music industry, speaking with and performing at places like the White House, the United Nations, the Kennedy Center, Lincoln Center, and the BBC, among other notable appearances. Lachi is the founder of RAMPD. Starting in 2022, RAMPD began partnering with the Recording Academy to help make the Grammy Awards more accessible: working to add a visibly ramped dais, Sign language interpreters, live captioning, and Audio description, American Sign Language and ramps on the red carpet. In February 2024, Lachi was named a 2024 Woman of the Year by USA Today.

Visit Lachi’s website

Eleanor Stubley

Eleanor Stubley was an Associate Professor and Associate Dean of Graduate Students in the Schulich School of Music. Prof. Stubley earned her Ph.D at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and her M. Mus. from Brandon University. In 1989, she joined McGill, where she taught music education, musicology, and performance. Prof. Stubley conducted ensembles around the world, including the Massey Singers, Elektra, Laapula, the Bach Festival Orchestra, and members of the Canadian Opera Company. Her artistic creations include The Pines of Emily Carr, a performance documentary about the relationship between inspiration and place, and Living Gestures, a multimedia concert series that was performed in Canada and Finland. As the founder and artistic director of Chora Carmina, she helped create innovative collaborations between Quebec musicians and visual artists.

Learn more about Eleanor Stubley

Kjellrun Hestekin

During her tenure at Memorial University of Newfoundland, Kjellrun taught all aspects of Theory and directed the MUN Concert Band in the early days of the school. She also sang in the MUN Festival Choir, as well as the MUN Chamber Choir. She served on the MUN Faculty Association on the executive committee and was a long time member of the Academic Freedom and Grievance Committee. She also served as “marshall” for countless convocations as well as occasional instances of “orator. Combining her love of singing with her commitment to community service, Kjellrun became a valued member of Cantus Vocum Chamber Choir. Joining in 2001 she participated in multiple recordings, tv and radio performances, European tours, and conducted mastersclasses from 2001 through 2011. Additionally, her other involvements included service as a board member and or volunteer in numerous musical organizations.

Learn more about Kjellrun Hestekin