5 Saskatchewan bands who've made a splash over the last 10 years - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:38 PM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
SaskatchewanIn Depth

5 Saskatchewan bands who've made a splash over the last 10 years

Saskatchewan's music scene has exploded in the past decade, with artists from our province gracing the cover of Rolling Stone, touring far and wide and raking in awards.

Well-known acts have raked in awards, magazine covers and international acclaim

The last decade has offered five Saskatchewan acts many chances to tour and share their music with international audiences. (melis / Shutterstock)

With a decade in the rear-view mirror, it's time to take a look at what the past 10 years have meant for Saskatchewan artists.

On CBC Radio's Saskatchewan Weekend,Peter Mills spoke with five artists about how their careers have changed andevolved, and what they've leaned from a decade of making music and touring the world.

For The Dead South, JessMoskaluke, The Sheepdogs and TheDeep Dark Woods, the last decade has given them a chance to tick a few thingsoff their bucket list.

And for one Saskatchewan band, Rah Rah, the end of the decade will also mark the end of their run.

The Dead South

On Dec. 31 the band plays the first show of the Served Cold tour, which will take them across Canada, the United States and Europe. (The Dead South/Twitter)

The Dead South's In Hell I'll Be In Good Company might be the best known song from the Saskatchewan-based quartet. Theirlight-hearted, choreographed videowhich flashes through scenes of the band inhotel rooms, back alleys, the streetsof Toronto andprairie grid roads flanked by canola fields tothe tune of bluegrass sang with raspy vocals has over 162 million views on YouTube.

"After that everything just kind of started steamrolling forward," said Scott Pringle.

Pringle who plays the mandolin and guitar in addition to singing says the band started with Nathaniel Hilts, Colton Crawfordand a few friends who met through wrestling and school.

"They ended up jamming a whole bunch and writing a few of the first Dead South songs," said Pringle. Shortly after those early sessions, the other friendsleft and Pringlecame in.

"Me, Danny, and Nate have known each other since we were five years old, and we picked up where they left off and just continued on from there," said Pringle.

Pringle said they ran the gambit of punk, grunge, metal and rock, and turned to bluegrassafter Crawford bought a banjo in university.

"That's when we were first just starting to explore bluegrass music and we took all of those older influences thatwe had developed earlier in high school and started applying that to these bluegrass instruments, and now that's what ended as Dead South," he said.

The breadth of travel undertaken by the Dead South has been remarkable to Pringle. "We've been all over the world so many times in the lastjust over seven years," said Pringle.

"Sometimes I can't even remember where I was the day before, let alone know where I'm going the next day. So Ithink back to all the places I've travelled (and) it's pretty incredible and pretty special to have the privilege to do that, to be able to do it with our band family, and crew and my brothers. It's pretty awesome."

Playing the Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre in Morrison, Coloradothis year was a career highlight for Pringle.

"That has always been a bucket list venue to play. So being able to play between those two massive rocks and play to 10,000 people was pretty incredible," he said.

Travelling the world has meant the band now has fans all over the globe. In 2014 the band was picked up by a German record label and have been touring overseas three times a year ever since. Going into the new year, the band already has 60 tour dates spanning the globe, includinga tentative show in Russia.

From the attentive, polite crowds in Germany torambunctious Quebecois fans, The Dead South are set to be in good company this coming decade, no matter where they go.

Jess Moskaluke

Jess Moskaluke performs at the Canadian Country Music Awards in Hamilton, Ont. on Sept. 9, 2018. (Peter Power/Canadian Press)

This decade saw Jess Moskaluke's star steadily rise, and she's now one of the biggest country music stars in Canada.

Moskaluke was nominated for country album of the year at the Junos four times (and won the category in 2017),won female artist of the year at the Canadian Country Music Awards three years in a rowand became the first Canadian female country artist since Shania Twain to have a platinum single with her songCheap Wine and Cigarettes.

"Man, I really never thought I'd get any of these things," said Moskaluke. "I still barely believe you, hearing these things."

Ten years ago the country star in waiting had just graduated high school, and was studying at Brandon University with hopes of becoming a parole officer.

Two years into her time at BU, after taking part in talent competitions and singing anywhere she could,Moskaluke signed a development deal and a publishing deal in Nashville, Tennessee.

"The requirements from both ends both the university side and the publishing development side were just too much. I was in Nashville once a month. I was in L.A. once a month and that left like a week every month to go to school, which is not enough," she said.

She decided to take a break from school.

Jess Moskaluke, Madeline Merlo, Shania Twain, and Kira Isabella open the Canadian Country Music Awards in Hamilton, Ont. on Sunday, Sept. 9, 2018. Moskaluke says sharing a stage with her idol, Twain, was a highlight of her career. (Peter Power/Canadian Press)

"I was not conflicted at all. I knew that the music industry is sometimes a fleeting one, and you know you might have your 10 minutes in the limelight and then it might go away," Moskaluke said.

But the fleeting nature of the industry, and through the fear of making a huge change Moskaluke said her family's support was crucial to her career.

"That's a pretty scary jump, you know especially when you're on a path that seems really safeGo to school, get a job, live a really nice life."

Moskaluke splits her time betweenNashville, her home in Rocanville, Sask.,and on the road, and shehas big plans for the new year, including her first show with a symphony this coming May.

The Sheepdogs

The Sheepdogs perform during the 2013 Juno Awards in Regina. (Derek Mortensen/Canadian Press)

The hard-rocking, southern-inspired, bluesy sound of The Sheepdogs would be right at home with the southern-fried rock of decades past, but their music was heard far loud and clearthis past decade.

From being played inarenas in the Czech Republic during the 2015 International Ice Hockey FederationWorld Championship, to spots on late night and early morning talk shows in America, the Saskatoon band's music has reached far and wide.

But that success didn't happen overnight. The band formed in 2004, and 10 years ago frontman Ewan Currie was already putting in work.

"Ten years ago, I would have either been waking up and jumping in the band van, or sleeping in late and working at a bar in Saskatoon," said Currie.

Currie described his bandmates Sam Corbett and Ryan Gullen as "a bunch of half-baked university students that weren't really too thrilled about going to class and trying to get a regular job," when they first started playing. From their very first monthsthe band has stuck to the rock-n-roll sound and fury that first moved them.

In 2011, with three albums and no label, the band wound up withsome of music's most prestigious real-estate the cover ofRolling Stone.

The sudden attention granted by this cover feature opened a lot of doors for The Sheepdogs. (Rolling Stone)

"It was a kind of a spellbinding year," said Currie. "I didn't really have a lot of time to actually consider how I felt I mostly felt exhausted, but you, know buoyed by a lot of adrenaline and excitement that kept me going."

The sudden attention was overwhelming at times, and to manage the sudden spotlight the band threw themselves into their music. Already seven years in at this point, Currie said they wanted to show all the new eyes on them that they were the real deal.

The sudden attentionopened doors for the band, like playing the Jimmy Fallon Show twice and meeting Larry David, of Seinfeld and Curb Your Enthusiasm fame, at a party in New York.

Even with the sudden rush of attention nine years ago, Currie said it isn't what motivates him. The ability to create is fulfilling and encouraging, and his pride is in what he does.

"The thing I'm most proud of is just that it's 2019, I'm in my 30s and I'm making a living playing rock and roll music that I write with my best friends and my brother," he said. "That's kind of my dream job."

From memorable shows at Massey Hall, the Grey Cup in Regina or at the top of the Broadway Bridge, Currie said the new decade will chockfull of concerts and a new record that he's been writing with the same passion he had 15 years ago when the band started.

The Deep Dark Woods

Saskatoon's The Deep Dark Woods found career highlights playing Bonnaroo, Newport Folf Festival and many others. (Submitted Photo)

Ryan Boldt of The Deep Dark Woods said it's hard to believe he's been making music for as long as he has. 15 years writing tunes and strumming chords have taken Boldt around North America a few times.

In this decade, a few highlights include playing the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville andplaying the Newport Folk Festival.

"Austin City Limits Festival, there's Bonnaroo, I meanthe list is long of things that I'm very proud of," said Boldt.

Boldt now lives in Ontario but comes back to the province quite often. His 2017 album Yarrow was recorded in Saskatoon as was some of his current album.

One song that stands out from Boldt's discography is Charlie's (is Coming Down), a song about Good Time Charlie's,the bar and venue at the Plains Hotel. The hotel was torn down to make way for Capital Pointe a real estate venture which had a far less illustrious decade than the artists mentioned here and Boldt's song stands as a memorial.

Boldt wrote the song for CBC'sGreat Canadian Song Quest whilehe was on tour in Halifax. He wrote the whole song in a day.

"It came together pretty good," he said.

This song about an old staple of the scene closing downa place where Boldt remembers drinking beer, playing open mic nights, going to shows with his mom and seeing young musicians get their start struck a chord with many in the province.

"It's a real shame," he said. "Kids could go and learn how to play music in front of a crowd. You don't find those sorts of places very often. It's really a shame that this place was torn down. I don't know what they're thinking."

Heading into the new year Boldt said the industry is tenuous and it's hard to ekeout a living, but he hopes he'll be at it fora while longer.

"I hope to be doing this in10 years. Well, we will see, I mean the way things are going it is harder to make a living off of it now ...we'll see what happens."

Rah Rah

Regina indie rockers Rah Rah are playing a few final shows after going on indefinite hiatus. (Rah Rah)

All good things must come to an end, and as one decade ends and another begins,Regina's staple indie rock band Rah Rah are saying farewell.

With albumslike Vesselsand The Poet's Dead, which was nominated for a Juno award in 2014, Rah Rahset the stage for the indie genre to take root in Regina and across the province.

"There's been a lot of stories people (have) been sharing on social media and stuff like that. They kind of jog the memory because of course it kind of feels like a blur you know?"Marshall Burns said.

Burns sang and played guitar in the band, which he'dbeen a part of sincehigh school. Even whentheir music wasfeatured during the FIFA World Cup, or when the band was going to the Junos,there was never a moment where Burns realized the musicians dream of making it big.

"I felt like we were building towards something withinthe reach of the band," which was a slow and steady process, said Burns. "We never broke through in like a major way overnight or anything like that, or at all."

The band has over 600 shows under their belt. While some were big, some small, some rowdy and packed, others were sparse and indifferent, which formed a two steps forward and one step back feeling for Burns. But looking back on the band's history, he's proud of the tours, travel and music.

"The amount of travel that we got to do to cool places, you know, the band really truly did take us to do things and see things that we never thought possible," he said. "No regrets. It's been a great experience."

The band went on hiatus in 2016 after playing the BreakOut West festival. Burns said withband members in different cities, in new jobs and with time sneaking up on them, they felt that the hiatus was indefinite.

Members of the group have branched off into new projectssaid Burns, who recently released an album called Dogs and Booze.

The band decided to make the ambiguous end to the group more definitive, and are putting on three shows in Saskatoon and Regina.

"We never really had a proper final show. Those last shows we played certainly weren't billed as such," said Burns. "I think people will appreciate the chance to hear the songs once again and we'll certainly appreciate the chance to play them."

Rah Rah will play their two final shows on Dec. 29 and Dec.30 in Regina at The Exchange.

With files from Saskatchewan Weekend