Former Barenaked Ladies frontman Steven Page has teamed up with Sloan’s Chris Murphy, Odds co-founder Craig Northey and Moe Berg of the Pursuit of Happiness as the Trans-Canada Highwaymen, performing at the Capitol Centre April 23.
--taken from: North Bay Nugget
by Luke Hendry
Former Barenaked Ladies frontman Steven Page, Sloan’s Chris Murphy, Odds co-founder Craig Northey and Moe Berg of the Pursuit of Happiness are coming together under the band name the Trans-Canada Highwaymen for eight Ontario shows, including the Capitol Centre April 23.
The “super group” of Canadian rock musicians will play a 16-song set of each other’s hits, interspersed with “road stories, jokes, secrets and surprises” that recall their 25 years of friendship.
Among the songs on the set list are Sloan’s Underwhelmed, the Barenaked Ladies’ The Old Apartment, Pursuit of Happiness’ I’m An Adult Now and It Falls Apart by Odds.
--taken from: North Bay Nugget
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Thursday, March 16, 2017
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
The History of Canadian Indie Rock in One Group
Berg, Murphy, Northey & Page come to Patridge Hall
--taken from: Niagara This Week
Together, the biographies of the members of the TransCanada Highwaymen tell the story of a defining era in Canadian indie music. The band, also known by the more straightforward tag of Berg, Murphy, Northey & Page, is undoubtedly one of the greatest collections of indie rock musicians ever assembled in this country. And though they shy away from the term “supergroup,” it’s hard not to refer to them as such. Just think about this; in the 10-year span from 1993 and 2002, there is not a year where a member of this band wasn’t nominated for a JUNO Award. For Canadian music fans aged 30 to 45, the songs of Sloan (Chris Murphy), Odds (Craig Northey), Pursuit of Happiness (Moe Berg), and the Barenaked Ladies (Steven Page) were ubiquitous.
While the four members of the band crossed paths over the years in the tight-knit Canadian indie music scene, it was actually a mutual friend, theatre director Jim Millan, who planted the idea for them to play together live, sharing their songs and stories from the stage. As such, this isn’t the kind of supergroup that ignores the members’ respective discographies. In fact, for the upcoming TransCanada Highwaymen shows including an April 19 stop at the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre in downtown St. Catharines, there are no new songs. These concerts are all about pleasing the crowds and having fun, with each guy bringing his four or five most popular tunes.
“Those guys are all entertainers in terms of the, ‘are you an artist or are you an entertainer?’ But I also think everybody in the Highwaymen group has their artist side,” says Murphy. “I think that when the four of us get together, everybody is willing to engage the audience and engage each other.”
While seeing this collection musicians together at once, sharing songs everyone knows the words to, like Sloan’s “The Rest of My Life” or Barenaked Ladies’ “One Week,” has a high novelty factor for the audience, it’s a pretty novel experience for the musicians themselves.
“I’m just hanging out with my friends and getting to play [Pursuit of Happiness’] ‘I’m an Adult Now’ with the guy who wrote it and having Moe Berg sing the harmony on [Sloan’s] ‘Underwhelmed,’ it’s all high novelty for me,” says Murphy. “And I think as a sort of package thing, I think it’s a pretty high quality show and it’s a super fun hang for me.”
With both Sloan and his other group, Tuns, still active, Murphy is happy to see the TransCanada Highwaymen keep it easy and just have fun playing the hits. That said, “I think there could be a next step to it where it’s like, ‘you know what? Let’s put our heads together and write some songs’ or ‘let’s get together and record some other covers,’” he says. “But for now, I’m also trying to keep Sloan on the tracks, too. Page has got his own thing, Craig is doing the Odds still, they continue to make music, and Moe Berg is the most dormant. I think he would probably be up for whatever. I don’t know exactly how that’s going to go, but in the process it’s super fun.”
--taken from: Niagara This Week
--taken from: Niagara This Week
Together, the biographies of the members of the TransCanada Highwaymen tell the story of a defining era in Canadian indie music. The band, also known by the more straightforward tag of Berg, Murphy, Northey & Page, is undoubtedly one of the greatest collections of indie rock musicians ever assembled in this country. And though they shy away from the term “supergroup,” it’s hard not to refer to them as such. Just think about this; in the 10-year span from 1993 and 2002, there is not a year where a member of this band wasn’t nominated for a JUNO Award. For Canadian music fans aged 30 to 45, the songs of Sloan (Chris Murphy), Odds (Craig Northey), Pursuit of Happiness (Moe Berg), and the Barenaked Ladies (Steven Page) were ubiquitous.
While the four members of the band crossed paths over the years in the tight-knit Canadian indie music scene, it was actually a mutual friend, theatre director Jim Millan, who planted the idea for them to play together live, sharing their songs and stories from the stage. As such, this isn’t the kind of supergroup that ignores the members’ respective discographies. In fact, for the upcoming TransCanada Highwaymen shows including an April 19 stop at the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre in downtown St. Catharines, there are no new songs. These concerts are all about pleasing the crowds and having fun, with each guy bringing his four or five most popular tunes.
“Those guys are all entertainers in terms of the, ‘are you an artist or are you an entertainer?’ But I also think everybody in the Highwaymen group has their artist side,” says Murphy. “I think that when the four of us get together, everybody is willing to engage the audience and engage each other.”
While seeing this collection musicians together at once, sharing songs everyone knows the words to, like Sloan’s “The Rest of My Life” or Barenaked Ladies’ “One Week,” has a high novelty factor for the audience, it’s a pretty novel experience for the musicians themselves.
“I’m just hanging out with my friends and getting to play [Pursuit of Happiness’] ‘I’m an Adult Now’ with the guy who wrote it and having Moe Berg sing the harmony on [Sloan’s] ‘Underwhelmed,’ it’s all high novelty for me,” says Murphy. “And I think as a sort of package thing, I think it’s a pretty high quality show and it’s a super fun hang for me.”
With both Sloan and his other group, Tuns, still active, Murphy is happy to see the TransCanada Highwaymen keep it easy and just have fun playing the hits. That said, “I think there could be a next step to it where it’s like, ‘you know what? Let’s put our heads together and write some songs’ or ‘let’s get together and record some other covers,’” he says. “But for now, I’m also trying to keep Sloan on the tracks, too. Page has got his own thing, Craig is doing the Odds still, they continue to make music, and Moe Berg is the most dormant. I think he would probably be up for whatever. I don’t know exactly how that’s going to go, but in the process it’s super fun.”
--taken from: Niagara This Week
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
Liner Notes: Bullet News for March 14th
--taken from: FYI Music News
A new group of old timers calling themselves The Trans-Canada Highwaymen is making headlines because of its line-up featuring Sloan's Chris Murphy, BNL Steven Page, Pursuit of Happiness frontman Moe Berg and Odds' Craig Northey. The collective has an eight-city tour of soft-seaters beginning in St. Catharines' First Ontario Performing Arts Centre on April 19 and calling it a wrap at Brampton’s Rose Theatre on the 28th. Murphy spills the beans in Exclaim! about what one can expect from these golden boys live, which is a bit of this and that from each's own respective careers. An expanded show is in the planning stage that is to incorporate monologues around the catalogue of songs. At this time there are no plans to write new material together, and there's no word of a record deal...so far.
--taken from: FYI Music News
A new group of old timers calling themselves The Trans-Canada Highwaymen is making headlines because of its line-up featuring Sloan's Chris Murphy, BNL Steven Page, Pursuit of Happiness frontman Moe Berg and Odds' Craig Northey. The collective has an eight-city tour of soft-seaters beginning in St. Catharines' First Ontario Performing Arts Centre on April 19 and calling it a wrap at Brampton’s Rose Theatre on the 28th. Murphy spills the beans in Exclaim! about what one can expect from these golden boys live, which is a bit of this and that from each's own respective careers. An expanded show is in the planning stage that is to incorporate monologues around the catalogue of songs. At this time there are no plans to write new material together, and there's no word of a record deal...so far.
--taken from: FYI Music News
Monday, February 27, 2017
Wolfe Island Winter Ball with Jason Collett, Shad, Hannah Georgas, Sarah Harmer, TUNS
--taken from: Exclaim!
by Sarah Greene
In carrying on with eclecticism, Collett invited out emotive electronic singer Lou Canon, who had many pedals and knobs and synths and cords to deal with (the audience was patient and cool about it). But perhaps the biggest surprise of the evening — and one that had this reviewer smiling ear to ear — was two puppets from Feltworth (Chris Murphy and Jay Ferguson of Sloan) singing a song about being turned on from the balcony. That's it, I thought; Feltworth just stole the show.
Shad, bless him, appearing as his alter-ego Your Boy Tony Braxton, was the only artist of the night to bother checking in with how the crowd was doing, and to try to elicit audience participation via clapping. Then TUNS, the trio of '90s power pop veterans, took hilariously long to set up, during which Chris Murphy made fun of the Elwins' Feurd Moore's moustache. Despite their lackadaisical approach to plugging their guitars in, their three songs ended the Winter Ball on a high note.
--taken from: Exclaim!
by Sarah Greene
In carrying on with eclecticism, Collett invited out emotive electronic singer Lou Canon, who had many pedals and knobs and synths and cords to deal with (the audience was patient and cool about it). But perhaps the biggest surprise of the evening — and one that had this reviewer smiling ear to ear — was two puppets from Feltworth (Chris Murphy and Jay Ferguson of Sloan) singing a song about being turned on from the balcony. That's it, I thought; Feltworth just stole the show.
Shad, bless him, appearing as his alter-ego Your Boy Tony Braxton, was the only artist of the night to bother checking in with how the crowd was doing, and to try to elicit audience participation via clapping. Then TUNS, the trio of '90s power pop veterans, took hilariously long to set up, during which Chris Murphy made fun of the Elwins' Feurd Moore's moustache. Despite their lackadaisical approach to plugging their guitars in, their three songs ended the Winter Ball on a high note.
--taken from: Exclaim!
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
Sloan To Headline Toronto's Festival of Beer 2017
--taken from: Broadway World
You'd have to be a fool, not to think about it! Toronto's Festival of Beer (TFOB 2017), presented by the Beer Store is back on July 28-30, 2017 at Bandshell Park, Exhibition Place. This year, Juno award winning rock band Sloan will headline the festival on Saturday, July 29 presented by 94.9 The Rock.
"We are very excited to have Sloan play TFOB 2017," said Les Murray, President of Toronto's Festival of Beer, "The Saturday of the festival has always been the most talked about day of that weekend because the atmosphere can't be compared to anything else and this year is gearing up to be another big one. It's a day and performance that you won't want to miss!"
This year, TFOB 2017 will be celebrating Canada's 150th birthday by creating a massive 100,000 square-foot pavilion which showcases both beer and culinary delights from various regions across Canada. As part of this celebration TFOB 2017 will also be showcasing various musical acts that hail from different regions in Canada, as well as the U.S. Sloan is the first of three headliners to be announced. Headliners for Friday and Sunday of TFOB 2017 will be announced in the coming weeks.
Over the course of their 25 year career, the four songwriters in Sloan have amassed an outstanding collection of over 200 songs on eleven studio albums. Recently named one of Canada's top five bands of all-time in a CBC critics poll, Sloan continue to write, record and tour well into their third decade together.
Last year, Sloan took to the road performing over 70 shows in celebration of the 20th anniversary of their album "One Chord To Another". 2017 will find the band in studio writing and recording new material. This summer the band will be performing their hits and fan favourites at festival concerts across North America.
--taken from: Broadway World
You'd have to be a fool, not to think about it! Toronto's Festival of Beer (TFOB 2017), presented by the Beer Store is back on July 28-30, 2017 at Bandshell Park, Exhibition Place. This year, Juno award winning rock band Sloan will headline the festival on Saturday, July 29 presented by 94.9 The Rock.
"We are very excited to have Sloan play TFOB 2017," said Les Murray, President of Toronto's Festival of Beer, "The Saturday of the festival has always been the most talked about day of that weekend because the atmosphere can't be compared to anything else and this year is gearing up to be another big one. It's a day and performance that you won't want to miss!"
This year, TFOB 2017 will be celebrating Canada's 150th birthday by creating a massive 100,000 square-foot pavilion which showcases both beer and culinary delights from various regions across Canada. As part of this celebration TFOB 2017 will also be showcasing various musical acts that hail from different regions in Canada, as well as the U.S. Sloan is the first of three headliners to be announced. Headliners for Friday and Sunday of TFOB 2017 will be announced in the coming weeks.
Over the course of their 25 year career, the four songwriters in Sloan have amassed an outstanding collection of over 200 songs on eleven studio albums. Recently named one of Canada's top five bands of all-time in a CBC critics poll, Sloan continue to write, record and tour well into their third decade together.
Last year, Sloan took to the road performing over 70 shows in celebration of the 20th anniversary of their album "One Chord To Another". 2017 will find the band in studio writing and recording new material. This summer the band will be performing their hits and fan favourites at festival concerts across North America.
--taken from: Broadway World
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