What People are Listening to in…Canada

04/20/09  Print This Post Print This Post    5 Comments   Popular   Written by Jane Tattersall
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Feature photo by Daaane. Photo above by nonanet.

The Great White North continues to pump out some of the best music in North America, as Matador contributor Jane Tattersall reports from Toronto.
Plants and Animals

This Montreal group went from nowhere to everywhere following the release of a short EP a year and a half ago. The subsequent full length album, Parc Avenue, is a glorious hodgepodge of “franglais pop” that’s part rock opera and part art-rock. www.plantsandanimals.ca

Recommended: “Bye Bye Bye” and “A L’Oree Des Bois”

Born Ruffians

The latest and greatest from the Toronto scene. Frenetic, engaging threepiece pop from three kids who sing about what kids care about.

Short songs, upbeat tempos, chants and singalong choruses made last year’s Red, Yellow & Blue a critical favourite and their live shows a must-see. www.bornruffians.com

Recommended: “Kurt Vonnegut”; “Barnacle Goose”; “I Need a Life”

Metric

A four-piece that’s nomadic by nature, having called Montreal, New York, and Los Angeles home before decamping to Toronto. Smart lyrics, plus Emily Haines’s purring vocals and guitarwork make them the dance band for thinkers. www.ilovemetric.com

Recommended: “Gimme Sympathy”; “Combat Baby”; “Poster of a Girl”

Constantines

A perennial Toronto favourite. Vocalist Bry Webb alternately growls and croons his way through anthems that recall a young Springsteen. Their recent album, Kensington Heights, earns its name from a downtown artistic community and was voted 2008’s Album of the Year by the Associated Press. www.constantines.ca

Recommended: “Young Lions”; “Do What You Can Do”

Stills

Montreal’s Stills sit alongside other notables like Broken Social Scene, Weakerthans and Feist as elder statesmen of the new Alt-Can-Rock. Last year, the band released “Oceans Will Rise” (their best album to date), a more mature take on the post-punk sound that originally saw them compared to mope-rock afficionados like Interpol. www.thestills.net

Recommended: “Snow in California”; “Everything I Build”; “Still In Love”

Crystal Castles

An electroclash-influenced noise factory of beats that sound equally great on the dancefloor or on your Ipod.

Made up of duo Alice Glass and Ethan Kath,their self-titled debut album released last year is awash in indecipherable lyrics, screams, bleeps and doodles that are simultaneously old-school and futuristic and somehow melodic. www.lastgangrecords.com

Recommended: “Courtship Dating”; “Vanishing”

Black Mountain

From Vancouver, the rotating lineup of Black Mountain (and various splinter groups, including Pink Mountaintop, Pink Mountain, etc.) draws from a collective of artists and friends who’ve been playing together in various incarnations for years.

They’ve earned kudos from the unlikeliest of places, including an opening slot on the Coldplay 2005 Canadian tour.

2007’s “In The Future” is their most cohesive and ambitious album to date, a sprawling, haunting and equally uplifting/devastating whole piece of work that could be the soundtrack for our generation’s midlife crisis. www.blackmountainarmy.com

Recommended: “Angels”; “Stay Free”; “Don’t Run Our Hearts Around”

Brendan Canning

Feature photo by Daaane

“Something For All Of Us”: The debut solo record from one of the founders of Broken Social Scene and a stalwart member of the Toronto scene (hHead, By Divine Right) is a thing of beauty.

From the opening notes of the title track, discordant and eerie, to the sad pretty lilt of “Snowballs and Icicles” and the driving guitars of my favourite track, “Churches Under the Stairs,” this record is a seamless glimmering gem that’s vaulting on to everyone’s “Best of 2009″ lists.

The production is top-notch, giving each track its own chance to shine, although there’s still some quality BSS fuzziness. www.brokensocialscene.ca

Recommended: “Churches Under the Stairs”; “Antique Bull”; “Love is New”

Lights

Lights is one sugar-coated candy of a girl making pop that’s fast becoming everyone’s guilty pleasure. Old Navy plucked her out of obscurity by featuring her music in its TV campaign, and the web effect was instantaneous: thousands of fans and website hits and offers of record deals.

Even though she’s only got an EP out at this point (full length due before end of the year), her pop songs are also making inroads at radio and she’s shot low budget videos for three tracks already that are online and getting play on Canadian TV. www.iamlights.com

Recommended: “White”; “Drive My Soul”


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About the Author

Jane Tattersall

Jane Tattersall is a Toronto-based music industry vet who often talks on her cell phone while playing soccer. Her encyclopedic knowledge of music is both enchanting and terrifying.

5 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Carlo replied on April 21, 2009

    Cool post! Since leaving Canada I’ve been out of the loop musically. Canada has pumped out so much good music in recent years – I’ll be checking these out. Thanks!

    (Report comment)

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  • Carlo replied on April 21, 2009

    Shameless plug for a friend from Vancouver: Mary Ancheta – funky grooves, smooth smoky voice – she’s toured on the Vans warped tour and has opened for several great bands:

    http://www.myspace.com/maryancheta
    http://maryancheta.com/

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  • Nancy replied on April 21, 2009

    My favourite lately is the Montreal (french) band Malajube.

    http://www.myspace.com/malajube

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  • Caitlin replied on May 4, 2009

    This is gonna sound totally snobby but isn’t Metric a bit old? Don’t get me wrong, I still listen to them and love them (especially the album Old World Underground, Where are you Now?) but they’ve been around for awhile. Anyways… I don’t listen to a ton of indie anymore but other good Canadian artists include Wolf Parade, Apostle of Hustle and Gentleman Reg.

    Oh yeah, and listen to Elliott Brood!!! The banjo has never made me feel that way before.

    For a good afrobeat band from Ottawa, check out the Souljazz Orchestra

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  • Sandy replied on September 4, 2009

    I totally disagree with your stills selection- no being here or I’m with you.
    those are the 2 best ones. I love them dearly, but the first time I saw them I was not impressed. I saw them at the Junos though and they did a fabulous job.
    Also, as for metric, their new album is out, and stadium love is a fantastic song.
    Great Band from Vancouver: The Heck. Amazing lyrics, guitarist=wow.

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