Disclaimer | p. ix |
Foreword | p. xi |
Overture: Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere | p. 1 |
In 1985, tears are not enough to rescue Canadian music | |
punks and folkies go DIY | |
Stompin' Tom brings it all back home | |
recording technology breeds indie boom | |
the children of CanCon come home to roost | |
Did You Get My Message on the People's Radio?: CBC, Campus Radio, Muchmusic | p. 25 |
The CBC's Brave New Waves and Night Lines build new alternative communities | |
the dawn of campus radio | |
MuchMusic's videos spawn the radio stars | |
Glittering Prizes and Endless Compromises | p. 53 |
Og Records connect the country with It Came From Canada | |
Barenaked Ladies' indie cassette changes the rules | |
Lowest of the Low battle the industry | |
major labels give former indie stars vanity labels | |
Sonic Unyon builds an empire | |
the Inbreds reap the rewards of the CanRock Renaissance | |
Under The Volcano: The Fallout of Vancouver Punk | p. 76 |
The careening career of Art Bergmann | |
Bob Rock goes from the Payolas to ushering heavy metal into the mainstream | |
NoMeansNo makes hardcore an artform | |
Slow spawns grunge then takes on David Geffen as Copyright | |
Folk of the Eighties: Montreal | p. 114 |
Men Without Hats and Rational Youth capture Cold War nightlife with the punk underground | |
Gerard Van Herk and Tony Dewald go primitive with Deja Voodoo | |
the Asexuals, the Nils and the Doughboys break out beyond city walls | |
Voivod escape a Northern Quebec factory town and become Montreal metal gods | |
Yeah, It Matters: Change of Heart and Post-Punk Toronto | p. 170 |
Young art school punks form Change of Heart | |
A Neon Rome dabble in the dark side of rock mythology and nearly become casualties | |
Elvis Mondays create a community | |
Bruce McDonald sets out to document A Neon Rome and ends up with Roadkill | |
Northern Wishes & Visionary Flounders | p. 202 |
The Rheostatics take a self-conscious Canadiana approach to art rock | |
Jane Siberry's technological folk transforms into spiritual soul | |
Look People's Jaymz Bee embodies Toronto's comedic id | |
the Bourbon Tabernacle Choir find soul salvation | |
Mary Margaret O'Hara labours over a singular masterpiece and retreats under pressure | |
Dale Morningstar tosses out the rulebook in Dinner Is Ruined | |
What Are We Fighting For?: The Outsiders | p. 258 |
Andrew Cash gives Canadian punk a social conscience | |
Skydiggers turn back the clock to help cope with hard times | |
Bruce Cockburn embraces activism and finds a wider audience than he has ever known | |
Spirit of the West leads the charge for Celtic music and topical songwriting | |
the Pursuit of Happiness battle political correctness | |
Acadian Driftwood: The Creation of the Daniel Lanois Sound | p. 295 |
The Lanois brothers open Grant Ave. Studios | |
Daniel meets Brian Eno and shifts from recording folk artists to new wave bands | |
Luba, Parachute Club and Martha and the Muffins are early clients | |
Lanois indelibly alters modern music production via his international client base | |
Crash Vegas, Junkhouse and SIANspheric follow the Lanois example | |
In the Spirit of Crazy Horse | p. 333 |
Neil Young reclaims his rightful place as the father of Canadian rock | |
13 Engines borrow the Crazy Horse template to forge their own powerful sound | |
54 40 seek success in America but instead discover they can't escape their roots | |
the songs of Hayden, Weeping Tile and Treble Charger echo Young's painful honesty, but for a new generation | |
Folk You: Roots Revisited | p. 366 |
Handsome Ned tries to bring traditional country to Queen St | |
Cowboy Junkies' mutant Queen St. blues somehow ends up selling millions | |
k.d. lang tries to subvert the mainstream with cowpunk and gives up | |
Jr. Gone Wild's fusion of punk and country struggles to fit into either camp | |
The Importance of Being Sloan | p. 419 |
Jay Ferguson and Chris Murphy meet in Kearney Lake Rd | |
Sloan create a bidding war and ignite the Halifax Pop Explosion | |
battling their major label over Twice Removed becomes worthy of a Hollywood underdog story | |
Sloan decide that breaking up is hard to do | |
the band takes ownership of their career and develop Murderecords | |
Never Mind the Molluscs: The Halifax Underground | p. 456 |
Jellyfishbabies show the locals how it's done | |
the October Game becomes a launch pad for Sarah McLachlan's talents | |
John Chisholm's Black Pool develops a sense of professionalism in the independent circuit | |
the search for ôthe next Nirvanaö brings Sub Pop to Halifax and record deals for Eric's Trip, Jale and Hardship Post | |
the Super Friendz, Rebecca West and Thrush Hermit sustain the explosion | |
The Path of Thorns: Nettwerk Records | p. 500 |
Terry McBride's label grows beyond his one-bedroom apartment to become a multi-million-dollar international operation | |
Moev and Skinny Puppy give the label an early electronic credibility | |
the Grapes of Wrath and Lava Hay present the folk rock side of the label | |
Sarah McLachlan moves from Halifax to begin her rise as an international superstar and the label's epicentre | |
Nettwerk's growing pains cause much of its original roster to splinter as various lawsuits arise | |
Trust Yourself: Blue Rodeo | p. 546 |
Greg Keelor and Jim Cuddy flirt with new wave and New York City | |
they come home to find a band and a better music scene | |
ôTryö becomes a video hit and prom staple | |
Bob Wiseman's talent can no longer be contained in Blue Rodeo | |
happy accidents spawn Five Days in July | |
not-so-happy accidents and turmoil spawn Nowhere to Here | |
solo albums bring the band back together | |
Two Solitudes: The Tragically Hip | p. 581 |
An unlikely garage band from Kingston, Ontario, avoids the cover-band trap | |
early recordings capture the imagination of young Canadians seeking a band to call their own | |
Gord Downie develops his poetic talents and becomes the figurehead of the CanRock Renaissance | |
the Tragically Hip parlay their popularity into a touring festival, curating a definitive collection of the country's top talent | |
Epilogue: Where The Change Is | p. 622 |
By the late '90s, the scene's hopes exceed its expectations | |
delusions of grandeur and a major bankruptcy help sink the scene | |
creatively adventurous material hits a glass ceiling | |
even a mainstream songwriter like Ron Sexsmith struggles to have his voice heard | |
Canada's live scene evaporates | |
Godspeed You! Black Emperor, the New Pornographers and the Weakerthans find international success on their own terms | |
the next generation applies lessons learned to an even more productive decade | |
Selected Cast of Characters | p. 649 |
Selected Critical Discography | p. 656 |
Sources | p. 695 |
Thank Yous | p. 711 |
Index | p. 715 |
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