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Photo Credit: Josh Justice

Songs of the Week: August 18 - 24, 2025

August 25, 2025 by Christine McAvoy in Song Of The Day, Songs Of The Week

“You Know That I Tried” by Billy the Kid

Some artists are just unstoppable, and Billy the Kid is definitely one of them.
From ambitious pandemic projects, to life upheavals, Billy Pettinger finds a way to create unique and beautiful music of all genres.

Her latest project, Prelude to a New Dream, was born out of heartbreak and starting life over. She says of the first track released: “You Know That I Tried” isn’t just a song
it’s every page I read, every sentence I wrote, every session I paid for, every word I survived.
”

The lyrics cracked my heart open - they’re vulnerable and sorrowful, and yet are hidden under lovely piano chords and graceful vocals.

The album is out on September 19th, and I can’t wait to share more as she releases it.

  • Christine


“English Harbour” feat. Jim James & Arc Iris

by The Barr Brothers

You had me at Jim James.

“English Harbour” is the latest single from The Barr Brothers, which features the My Morning Jacket frontman, as well as Arc Iris.

The song is a gorgeous hymn with incredible harmonies from James, with Andrew Barr explaining, “We’d been imagining Jim’s soaring voice on the song’s opening melody for a while. One afternoon around 4 p.m., we sent it to him before heading out to pick up our kids. By the time we got home that night, he’d sent back not only the opening melody but a fully harmonized performance from start to finish. It was one of those hair-standing-on-the-back-of-your-neck moments in the life of this record. I loved the song from the moment Brad first played it for me, but Jim’s voice brings a whole new energy to it.”

Brad Barr adds on, “One funny thing about this song—we imagined both Jim James and Jocie Adams singing on this one. I think I was actually doing my impression of Jim when I wrote the opening vocal melody. (Backstory: we befriended Jim when our band The Slip opened for My Morning Jacket in 2007, and opened for them again with The Barr Brothers around 2015. And we’ve loved Jocie’s singing and arranging since we toured with her old band The Low Anthem). One night we wrote to them both, separately, to ask if they’d be interested and available to sing on this song and they randomly happened to be eating dinner together at Jocie’s house in LA. Crazy serendipity! The two of them make this song so magical.”

You can find the song off their upcoming album (their first in eight years!) called Let It Hiss, which is out on October 17th, and also features collaborations with Elizabeth Powell (or Land Of Talk), Patrick Watson, and more!

  • Kirk


“Outcast” by Art d’Ecco (Eddie & Ernie Cover)

I’m still extremely obsessed with Art d’Ecco’s latest album Serene Demon - I got the vinyl at the album release show and I listen to it front to back all the time.
Needless to say, I sat straight up in my chair when the name popped up in my inbox this week.

While Art has been busy being Long Listed for the Polaris Prize and Songwriting Award, and prepping for the bands European dates, he found the time to cover the 1965 soul classic “Outcast” from Eddie & Ernie (click here to hear the original).

I was curious as to what made Art pick this track to cover and luckily it was right in the press release: “I read somewhere that it was a favourite of Lou Reed.  My version is closer to the Animals 1966 cover of the song found on ‘Animalism'.  I had just acquired a new resonator guitar and was looking for a way to incorporate it into a song. I’ve always loved how twangy and odd resonators sound when played like a traditional acoustic guitar. We recorded the song to tape with as much period appropriate gear as possible to keep things as raw and alive.”

I love a good cover that makes it sound like it’s an original, it’s that well done - and Art knocked this one out of the park!

  • Christine


“Circle Remains Unbroken” by The Deep Dark Woods

The Deep Dark Woods recently announced their new album, The Circle Remains, and last week they shared a new track, “Circle Remains Unbroken”

In true DDW fashion, it’s a haunting tune that frontman Ryan Boldt explains is “a spiritual song rooted in ‘Will the Circle Be Unbroken?’ It’s a refusal to be influenced by the ridiculous fads that are being blasted into our fragile brains and the feeling that our nihilistic way of living is destroying us.”

You can listen to The Circle Remains when it drops on October 3rd, which will be followed shortly by a Canadian tour, with the band hitting the Fox Cabaret here in Vancouver on October 24th.

  • Kirk


“At The Same Time” by Absolute Losers

You’re going to want to crank this one loud. Charlottetown, P.E.I. trio Absolute Losers have released a late contender for the 2025 Summer Jam with their new single, “At The Same Time”

The high energy song is brimming with 90s-power-pop, and “draws from bassist/vocalist Sam Langille’s 'memories of summers spent at his grandparents’ cottage in Flat River, Prince Edward Island, where he and his brother, bandmate and guitarist Josh Langille, would dig for worms, fish for trout, and listen to their grandfather’s stories of growing up in a post-war boat-building town.” Sam elaborates: “A lot of people can relate to feeling some kind of magic when they’re with their grandparents. This place was definitely magical as a kid.”

Check out the song below, and pick up their new album, In The Crowd, on September 26!

  • Kirk

August 25, 2025 /Christine McAvoy
Billy the Kid, art d'ecco, the barr brothers, the deep dark woods, absolute losers
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Credit: Taija Grey

Songs of the Week: May 26 - June 01, 2025

June 02, 2025 by Christine McAvoy in Song Of The Day, Songs Of The Week

“Ice Tea” by Skye Wallace

What’s your favourite summer drink and new favourite summer jam? For Skye Wallace, it’s “Ice Tea”.

Even though the Toronto singer’s previous album The Act of Living came out late last year, they’re already dropping a new single, influenced by “Old Peel” from New Zealand’s Aldous Harding (who gets a songwriting credit on the track). Skye explains: “I was desperately trying to reconnect with myself and the music I make. Listening to 'Old Peel,' I felt a spark of inspiration, a flood of lyrics and a storyline that felt important to pursue. It was like old folk singers repurposing melodies with their own newly-written words. 'Ice Tea' is my homage to the song that reawakened my creative self.”

You can watch the video (which Skye used to announce another new release coming soon), which is directed, edited, & coloured by Skye, with cinematography by Teagan Johnson, and dedicated to the memory of artist, poet, and activist jes sachse.

  • Kirk


“Good Times” by Total Fucking Darkness

Total Fucking Darkness just wants you to have “Good Times”.

The collaboration of Torquil Campbell (Stars), Stephen Ramsay (Yougn Galaxy), and renowned producer Tom McFall have been giving us a slow drip of dopamine with their dance hits all year long, with the latest being a partially spoken word synth banger.

As the song promises “oblivion” and I feel like this blurb from their press release sums it up better than I could:

What surrounds the stars in the sky? Total fucking darkness. Where can you have the most fun? In total fucking darkness. Who’s yer new favourite dance act? Total fucking darkness.

Have a listen below, and get ready to dance.

  • Kirk


“Tree of Life” by Art d’Ecco

Recently been super obsessed with the new album (Serene Demon) by Vancouver’s Art d’Ecco and was excited to see there was a video released for the track “Tree of Life” (one of my favs from the record).

Of the song Art says “the words speak for themselves - partnership starts with planting a seed - sometimes we grow together, sometimes we grow apart”.
When I first heard it I was already into the funky bass groove in the song, and then that saxophone solo hit and I almost fell out of my chair.

I cannot wait for the hometown show on Thursday the 12th at the Fox Cabaret - I’m bringing my dancing shoes for sure.

  • Christine


“Mahaha: Tickling Demon” by PIQSIQ

Last week, acclaimed Inuit throat singing duo PIQSIQ released their latest album, Legends, and along with it, new single “Mahaha: Tickling Demon”.

On the new album, sisters Tiffany Ayalik and Inuksuk Mackay present eight songs based around beloved figures from Inuit culture, with Tiffany saying, “We wanted to honour our traditional stories—narratives that are not just entertainment, but fundamental to Inuit identity. These legends have long been how we pass on critical teachings: How to stay safe on the land, how to live in the right relationship with each other, with the animals, and with the spirit world. These are stories of survival, respect, and deep connection to place.”

And Inuksuk adding, “We created visual slideshows for each legend and sourced historic and contemporary Inuit artworks that depicted these beings. While recording, we projected these images in the studio, and then sang to what we saw and felt. It was deeply immersive and visual; we let the visuals guide our vocal responses.”

You can find the album on bandcamp & everywhere else, and listen below to “Mahaha: Tickling Demon” (who “haunts the land and tickles people to death — if you are found frozen with a smile on your face, it was likely the work of Mahaha”).

  • Kirk

June 02, 2025 /Christine McAvoy
skye wallace, total fucking darkness, piqsiq, art d'ecco
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Songs of the Week: October 21 - 27, 2024

October 28, 2024 by Christine McAvoy in Song Of The Day, Songs Of The Week

“The Local” by Jody Glenham

It’s always frustrating when an unreleased song gets stuck in your head, and that’s exactly what happened when I saw Jody Glenham tease an upcoming EP during her set for Car Free Day a few weeks back. But luckily, now I can spin “The Local” on repeat.

The new song is the first single off that EP, Still Here, and is a moody yet optimistic tune about strength and persistence. Have a listen, and keep an ear out for Rich Hope on backup vocals!

  • Kirk


“Serene Demon” by Art d’Ecco

Last week, Art d’Ecco not only released a sprawling epic, but also announced his upcoming album!

Clocking in at over seven minutes, “Serene Demon” is a four-part song with twists and turns, and while Art jokes the premise is straightforward (saying “it’s literally an existentialist and a true believer walk into a bar and debate”) it is musically anything but simple, as he admits “That song is the most challenging thing I’ve ever written.”

You can watch the equally intense video below, and mark February 14 of next year for the release of Serene Demon.

  • Kirk


“Ghostbusters” by Elliott BROOD

It’s only a few more days until Halloween, and I knew it was finally time to share this super fun cover of “Ghostbusters” by Ontario’s Elliott BROOD!

The band just did a string of shows promoting the release of their two latest albums Town, and Country - which hopefully means we’ll see them out west again soon!

  • Christine

October 28, 2024 /Christine McAvoy
jody glenham, art d'ecco, elliott brood
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Photo Credit: Ted Belton

Songs of the Week: July 08 - 14, 2024

July 15, 2024 by Christine McAvoy in Song Of The Day, Songs Of The Week

“How It Feels” by Cold Specks

Whenever an artist that I haven’t heard new music from in a long time pops up in my inbox I get so stoked - and that’s exactly the case when I saw that Cold Specks had released a new track!

It’s been SEVEN years since Cold Specks (aka Al Spx) has graced our ears with something new, but “How It Feels” has changed that.

Co-written with Chantal Kreviazuk, Spx says of the song:
“[It] was written in 2019 at a time when I was struggling with money. I was struggling with my mind as well, and I was reflecting on my experiences. It was written one magical night in the dead of winter in a studio around midnight. It came together quite easily and Chantal is a gem.”

It’s a beautiful intimate song that showcases she singing chops that I’ve sorely missed these last few years.

  • Christine


“Reappearing Rat” by Sunset Rubdown

Speaking of acts we haven’t heard from in a long time… it’s been fifteen(!) years since the last time we had a new song from Sunset Rubdown, but after last year’s reunion tour, they’re back with “Reappearing Rat”!

The song is the first tease of an upcoming album, and the group hasn’t missed a step with an upbeat, frenetic song that’s an ‘ode to the tiny monster that lives in our heads—the one that makes itself known anytime blessings such as serenity, clarity, or acceptance are on our emotional horizons’. Spencer Krug explains, “A kind of irresponsible and lazy surrender to the notion that we’re all just stuck with ourselves, this song is for those times you think “Why won’t that person just leave?”, only to realize you’re referring to yourself. For better or worse, we live in our brains. Apparently so does the rat.”

The new album is called Always Happy to Explode and comes out on September 20th via Spencer Krug’s own label Pronounced Kroog. They’ll also be touring in October, kicking off right here in Vancouver at the Rickshaw Theatre on the 10th. You can check out the video, directed by Derek Janzen and starring Aaron Read, below!

  • Kirk


“High Summer” by Joel Plaskett

I’m not gonna lie, every time I see a new single with the same name as another song, I am slightly disappointed when it’s not a cover. But even if the new Joel Plaskett single isn’t his take on the Jason Collett classic, it’s still an excellent summer jam.

Perfect for a lazy, warm evening or sitting around a campfire, “High Summer” is a chill look back at memories of summer’s past, while simultaneously looking to the future, with Joel ending the song asking to meet him in the fall.

Which is exactly what you can do when his latest album, One Real Reveal drops on September 13th, and he hits the road on the One Real Reveal on Wheels tour, including a pair of Vancouver shows in September!

  • Kirk


“I Feel Alive” by Art d’Ecco

Last week, Art d’Ecco released his first new single in a couple years, with the effortlessly catchy “I Feel Alive”.

The tune will instantly be stuck in your head for the next week, with Art d'Ecco explaining the song is about “breaking free. I wanted to tie my love for music to that feeling of being alive - when a song lights you on fire from the inside - it’s a powerful, undeniable emotion.”

No solid word yet on a new album, just a tease of more to come, but until then you can check out the video below!

  • Kirk

July 15, 2024 /Christine McAvoy
cold specks, sunset rubdown, joel plaskett, art d'ecco
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credit to Luca Venter

Songs of the Week: March 07 - 13, 2022

March 14, 2022 by Kirk Hamilton in Song Of The Day, Songs Of The Week

“Worm ft. Dill The Giant” by Royal Canoe

Surprise! Out of nowhere, Royal Canoe dropped a brand new album this past Friday.

Vault (2011-2021) is exactly what you may expect from the title; as the band puts it, it is a “collection of 10 songs that were pulled from a long list of unreleased demos, b-sides and oddities that have been accumulating on our various hard-drives over the past decade. These songs are the underdogs, the overachievers and the almost-fits that we just couldn’t quit. During this past winter we dusted off old backups, scoured mp3-vaults and even went back to the studio to finish up a few tracks that were uncompleted but long-time favourites of the band. For us, each song on Vault feels like a brief journal entry that captures a simple, but meaningful moment from the past decade of us making sounds together.”

Along with the new album, the band dropped a video for “Worm ft. Dill The Giant” with trippy stop motion animation courtesy of MIMI and lyric animation from the band's own, Matt Schellenberg.

Take a peek below!

  • Kirk


“Palm Slave” by Art d‘Ecco

Piano AND Saxophone?! You sold me right there Art d’Ecco!

“Palm Slave” give me major 80’s-vibes, but with a mix of experimental and chaos. Of the song itself Art says it’s "a cautionary tale about obsession, and how a misguided search for meaning and purpose, may lead some to very dark places”.

The full album will be coming out later this year, and the band are making their way down to SXSW, as well as a few other winter festivals. Last time I saw them live was at the Constellation Festival in 2019!, so hopefully there is a Vancouver date soon too.

  • Christine


“Devastatingly Mediocre” by Deanna Petcoff

Okay, this one came out last month, but the first time the latest single from Deanna Petcoff hit my ears was the other day. And from the raw catchiness to the biting lyrics and even the hilarious title, “Devastatingly Mediocre” hooked me immediately.

Not only that, but the backstory is equally great. Petcoff says she “wrote this song when my friend was dating the most boring guy alive. He really was so normal, met the bare minimum of being a decent person, and yet she was so infatuated with him. At first I wrote this as a joke because I always called him devastatingly mediocre just to tease her, but when I showed it to my band they loved it and we decided to make it something real. I think it actually holds a lot of meaning for a lot of people– it’s so easy to fall in love with someone just because you want to be in love, regardless of whether or not it really works.”

The single is off her debut album To Hell With You, I Love You, which is out April 8th on Royal Mountain Records.

  • Kirk


“Fuckboi” by Common Deer

Speaking of catchy songs with biting lyrics and titles that tickly my fancy… Common Deer just released their latest single “Fuckboi”.

The band’s latest single is a blast of synth energy, and singer Sheila Hart says: “I was going through another near-relationship falling apart, and feeling justified in my anger and resentment. After reconsidering the situation, I reluctantly realized that I may have been the problem after all.”

“Fuckboi” is off the album MAXIMALIST, which comes out April 1st, and also features songs with names like “Negative Thot” and “LonelyFans”, so it should be one to watch out for!

  • Kirk


“Sweet Dreams of Otherness” by Alexisonfire

Oh, I’m INTO THIS!

I was super excited to hear that Alexisonfire was putting out new music and hitting the road, and even more excited to find out that Matt Kelly (who has been playing with City and Colour as of late) performed on the record as well. Petal Steel on an AOF album?! I need to hear this.

“Sweet Dreams of Otherness” (which will be on the full album titled Otherness) is a BANGER, and I can 100% see the band starting their sets with this song.
Oh, and I almost forgot that Jay Baruchel directed the video for the track. Check it out below.

  • Christine


“Lonely Bong” by Cancer Bats

Okay, we might as well stay on the loud-band-from-the-Niagara-Region (my home turf) train.
Especially since the video for “Lonely Bong” by Cancer Bats includes a cameo from Alexisonfire’s Wade MacNeil!

In the video the Bats are trying to find new ways to connect with the kids (guys, if you’re old, I’m old), and fill in the lead guitar space left by founding member Scott Middleton (spoiler alert, it’s Stevis Harrison of Fever 333).

Cinnamon Challenge anyone?

  • Christine

March 14, 2022 /Kirk Hamilton
royal canoe, art d'ecco, deanna petcoff, common deer, alexisonfire, cancer bats
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Art d'Ecco photo credit to, Mike Pepperdine

Art d'Ecco photo credit to, Mike Pepperdine

Songs of the Week: Jan 17 - 23, 2021

January 25, 2021 by Kirk Hamilton in Song Of The Day

"Andre" by Small Sins

(okay, this came out before last week, but this is a new feature & I wanted to spotlight it, and I call the shots around here!)

It's been just over a decade since the last Small Sins album, and since then Thomas D'Arcy has been more than a little busy producing and collaborating with the likes of Hawksley Workman and members of July Talk. But now the catchy synth and intimate vocals that I loved are back, as heard on the new single "Andre", the first tease of the brand new album, Volume II, due out on Feb 12th. - Kirk


"We Are The Underworld" by Strippers Union

Another band we haven't heard of in quite some time, with members who have been busy nonetheless. Strippers Union was a collaboration between The Tragically Hip's Rob Baker and Craig Northey of Odds, and they're back with not one but TWO albums of new material. The Undertaking is a double album with the first half being released February 5th, with the second arriving a month later on March 12.
"We Are The Underworld" is the first taste of the album, and sounds a lot like what you would expect the collaboration of the two Canadian powerhouse bands. - Kirk


"Wanna Feel Good" by Miesha and The Spanks

Hot off their 2018 album Girls Girls Girls, Miesha and The Spanks are already back with a brand new EP called Singles on April 16th. The grungy, fuzzy rocker "Wanna Feel Good" is the first of what was meant to be a loose collection of radio singles, but found their way onto an EP produced by the award winning Leeroy Stagger. - Kirk


"TV God" by Art D'Ecco

Vancouver's "androgynous neo-glam art-rocker" Art d'Ecco released the lead single off brand new album In Standard Definition, due out April 23. The press release promises the album will be "like channels on an old television set" and that every song "presents an episodic look into the world of entertainment, our obsession with celebrity and the power it holds over us."
I love a good concept album, and if the first single is any indication, it's gonna be a doozy. - Kirk


"Bus" by Begonia

A b-side off her last album Fear, "Bus" comes out along with the announcement of Begonia's upcoming live album, appropriately titled the Fear Tour Live Album.
The live album is out at the end of this week, January 29. You can get a tease of it by watching "The Other Side" here. If you’ve never seen Begonia live, this record and these videos will have to do for now, coming as close as possible to capturing her powerful performance. - Kirk


"High School" by Nice Horse

It's not often you'll see a country song here, but I've long said Nice Horse sneaks in with the few other country acts I like. And their new single "High School" reaffirms that sentiment, with a nostalgic look back at the "glory days" (that hits even if you don't have a particular fondness for those days or wish to re-live them). - Kirk

January 25, 2021 /Kirk Hamilton
small sins, thomas d'arcy, strippers union, the tragically hip, odds, miesha and the spanks, art d'ecco, begonia, nice horse
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