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Hearts on Fire

Six Years that Changed Canadian Music 2000–2005

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An authoritative, unprecedented account of how in the early 2000s Canadian music finally became cool

Hearts on Fire is about the creative explosion in Canadian music of the early 2000s, which captured the world's attention in entirely new ways. The Canadian wave didn't just sweep over one genre or one city, it stretched from coast to coast, affecting large bands and solo performers, rock bands and DJs, and it connected to international scenes by capitalizing on new technology and old-school DIY methods.

Arcade Fire, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Feist, Tegan and Sara, Alexisonfire: those were just the tip of the iceberg. This is also the story of hippie chicks, turntablists, poetic punks, absurdist pranksters, queer orchestras, obtuse wordsmiths, electronic psychedelic jazz, power-pop supergroups, sexually bold electro queens, cowboys who used to play speed metal, garage rock evangelists, classically trained solo violinists, and the hip-hop scene that preceded Drake. This is Canada like it had never sounded before. This is the Canada that soundtracked the dawn of a new century.

Featuring more than 100 exclusive interviews and two decades of research, Hearts on Fire is the music book every Canadian music fan will want on their shelf.

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    • Library Journal

      February 4, 2022

      To make it in Canada, so conventional wisdom went, you had to make it somewhere else first--especially if you were Canadian. Barclay (The Never-Ending Present: The Story of Gord Downie and the Tragically Hip) chronicles how, in the early 2000s, a wave of bands from Montreal, Toronto, and other cities across Canada put paid to that notion, though their fans in the United States, Europe, and elsewhere might not have initially realized that they were Canadian. His recounting of this remarkable explosion of creativity makes for a weighty tome indeed, his profiles of 40-plus artists taking up more than 600 pages. Bands such as Tegan and Sara, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Broken Social Scene, and Arcade Fire benefited from both the pre-monetized infancy of digital music sharing and what turned out to be the last gasp of commercial physical music distribution; the book concludes on a somewhat uncertain note, as escalating costs (rent not least among them) and declining album sales made pursuing a music career an increasingly uncertain enterprise even before COVID took out the live concert industry at the knees. What emerges from Barclay's narrative is five years of capturing lightning in a bottle that yielded some of the most remarkable music of the early 21st century. VERDICT A thorough and intriguing history made no less appealing by its length. For pop music historians and fans, particularly of Canadian bands from 2000 to 2005, whether they know it or not.--Genevieve Williams

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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Languages

  • English

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