WATCH: Ethan Lyric, “I Love You More”

Artist: Ethan Lyric
Hometown: Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Song: “I Love You More”
Album: Saskatoon Berries EP
Release Date: October 13, 2023 (single); December 1, 2023 (EP)

In Their Words: “The music video was shot in Vancouver, British Columbia, throughout the beautiful area of North Van alongside my cinematographer and long-time collaborator, Carter Heintz. Showing the journey and navigation of love through the simple and fun lens my music always tries to provide.

“The inspiration for this project as a whole came from a lot of artists and things in my life at the time. This single and my upcoming EP, Saskatoon Berries, take a lot of inspiration from the musicians I grew up hearing on YouTube – like Conan Gray, Cavetown, and Chloe Moriondo. All these people create music that just makes you feel at ease and want to smile, and that’s how I would love my music to be received as well. I feel this project was also deeply influenced by the process of finding myself and my identity. I always like to say that being an Indigenous artist, whether you write explicitly about Indigenous culture or not, your culture is one of the biggest inspirations to your art so I feel obviously that was a large inspiration as well.” – Ethan Lyric

Track Credits: Songwriter – Ethan Lyric

Musicians: Ethan Lyric – vocals, guitar
Jeremy Haywood Smith (JayWood) – bass
Brett Tizcon – keys
Anil Ramgotra – drums

Producer – Jeremy Haywood Smith (JayWood)
Recording engineer – Jeremy Haywood Smith (JayWood)
Mixing – Art Antony
Mastering – J. LaPointe (Archive Mastering)


Photo Credit: Julio Assis (BNB Studios)
Video Credits: Cinematographer – Carter Heintz

Edited by Ethan Lyric, Carter Heintz
Featuring – Matilda Shanks, Victoria McNeil

BGS 5+5: Ariel Posen

Artist: Ariel Posen
Hometown: Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Latest Album: Reasons Why
Personal Nicknames (or rejected band names): AP or Guitariel

Which artist has influenced you the most – and how?

I think I’d have to say the Beatles. It was what I was brought up on and, even though I don’t like to compare things in music, they have always acted as a musical measuring stick for songs. I know they were and still are a huge influence on a lot of people, and it’s for good reason. They’re just kind of the greatest.

What was the first moment you knew you wanted to be a musician?

I think from a very early age. My parents were both musicians and I was also immersed in their shows, their travel and the lifestyle. Once I started playing guitar, started actually getting somewhere with it, and had my first gig, it was clear to me that this was my path and that I might actually be able to make a living doing it, too.

What’s the toughest time you ever had writing a song?

I’ve had a couple songs that I thought I had figured out right from the get-go, and as time went on, I started demoing them, and ultimately recording them, I realized they weren’t where they needed to be, yet. I basically started from scratch and built the blocks once again, around what I felt was holding up, and it took a couple of tries to get it right. I think chasing those type of things always end up being worth it!

What has been the best advice you’ve received in your career so far?

That no one is going to give you anything or “make anything happen” for you. It’s all gotta come from you. You will start to get what you put into it. No one’s out there that’s going to give you opportunities, because they are too worried about themselves and who they think is looking out for them! Get out there and make opportunities happen for yourself, put the work in and just be nice.

How often do you hide behind a character in a song or use “you” when it’s actually “me”?

Probably 70/30. Writing about myself and my own experiences is the most authentic form of songwriting and feels the most genuine. However, sometimes I love to write about other peoples’ experiences, often people I know, as I’ve seen these experiences occur from outside the looking glass, so to speak. Both perspectives have a lot to offer. Nothing is more honest than you being you, though!


Photo Credit: Calli Cohen

LISTEN: William Prince, “When You Miss Someone”

Artist: William Prince
Hometown: Peguis First Nation – Manitoba
Song: “When You Miss Someone”
Album: Stand in the Joy (produced by Dave Cobb)
Release Date: April 21, 2023
Label: Six Shooter Records

In Their Words: “Time has been on the forefront of my mind. This record is making up for the time I lost to grief and pain… This record dares to remain positive amidst the seemingly endless reasons to feel negative or sad, while still holding space for just how crucial those things are to feeling joyful and happy. This record acknowledges pain but does not give it power. What I hope comes through are feelings of love, peace, and strength. The strength to stand in the goodness of what you have, rather than sit in what you have lost. This record showcases what provides me my greatest joy. The love in my life.” — William Prince


Photo Credit: Jsenftphotography

BGS 5+5: Whitehorse

Artist: Whitehorse (Luke Doucet and Melissa McClelland)
Hometown: Toronto, although the band was conceived while we were living in Hamilton, Ontario — and we’re temporarily living in Winnipeg, Manitoba, for a year. I know… simple question; complicated answer.
Latest Album: I’m Not Crying, You’re Crying (out January 13, 2023)
Rejected Band Names: Yellowknife (also a city in the north of Canada)

Which artist has influenced you the most … and how?

Our band and this record in particular (I’m Not Crying, You’re Crying) was really informed and inspired by our long love affair with Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris, which began in earnest when we were living in Nashville over a decade ago. We’ve made lots of detours into different corners of the Americana landscape since then, and now maybe for the first time, we’re tying ourselves back to that time and place. There’s a sort of Beauty and the Beast element to Gram and Emmylou that we have always related to — or sought solace in. His vulnerable warble and her impossible majesty bring the songs to life in a way that is hard to define but there’s something beautiful in that juxtaposition. We’ve gleaned a lot from them over the years.

What rituals do you have, either in the studio or before a show?

We have a fairly simple pre-show ritual and that is: one drink; no more, no less. There’s a sweet spot where you’re just loose enough to get lost in the songs and make brave choices but not so loose your playing stinks. And yeah, maybe bring one on stage with you…

Which elements of nature do you spend the most time with and how do those impact your work?

We are spending a year living in Winnipeg, Manitoba, or “Winter-Peg, Man-it’s-cold-out” where as I write, the temperature is a frosty -20°C. We are a walking family — we don’t own a car — so we all have excellent winter parkas and boots to trundle across the frozen prairie city. Manitoba is also a sun bathed province so a blanket of snow and a vast bright blue prairie sky can make for a rare kind of beauty and mystery. We find ourselves leaning on that big sky ambience in the production choices we employ in the studio. Reverb-drenched guitars, midtempos and big spaces are all tributes to the Canadian winter. You hear them in records by Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Blue Rodeo, k.d. lang, Colter Wall and The Sadies, too. Coincidence? Dunno.

What has been the best advice you’ve received in your career so far?

The best career advice actually came from a running coach on the eve of my (Luke’s) 2013 Boston Marathon race: “The hay is in the barn” is what my coach Tanya Jones offered me when I called her in a panic over my impending pre-race insomnia. She reminded me that the work had been done, the miles had been logged, and that the difference between success and failure would come down to training and hard work — which I had done. Add a dollop of adrenaline and a sleepless night won’t matter, since “the hay is in the barn,” i.e., the harvest had been collected. She was right (2:55:11, meaning I finished my race a full hour before the horrifying detonation of the two bombs that marred the event that year) and that advice has helped me (and us) ever since.

If you had to write a mission statement for your career, what would it be?

Follow the muse wherever she wanders, know that this game is a long one, spend more time on the finer points than you think you need to, assume your fans to be smarter than you and never forget that if you’re lucky, the very act of playing the show is tantamount to stopping to smell the roses.


Photo Credit: Lyle Bell

WATCH: Sweet Alibi, “Next Somewhere”

Artist: Sweet Alibi
Hometown: Winnipeg, MB Canada
Song: “Next Somewhere”
Album: Make a Scene
Release Date: January 28, 2022
Label: Comino Music

In Their Words: “This live video for ‘Next Somewhere’ was shot prior to us going into the studio to record the album. It’s more of a stripped-down version. This song is about living a touring life, and being away from home often, but finding a sense of home on the road. So many fans that start out as strangers become friends, and give us a sense of comfort every time we visit their city and their homes. Touring is what has kept us going strong as a band these past few years and we are so truly grateful to be heading back out on the road this spring with tours across Canada and Europe in the summer! We had such an amazing time making this album, Make a Scene, and we are thrilled to show it off to our audiences. It will be good for the soul to see some familiar faces and know that we are spreading some joy during this time!” — Amber Nielsen, Sweet Alibi

Photo Credit: B&B Studios

WATCH: Del Barber, “Nothing Left to Find”

Artist: Del Barber
Hometown: Inglis, Manitoba
Song: “Nothing Left to Find”
Album: Stray Dogs: Collected B-Sides Volume One
Release Date: August 20, 2021
Label: acronym Records

In Their Words:Stray Dogs is a result of over 10 years of writing and recording music. When the pandemic began I was lost, scared about the future and in the depths of an unprecedented creative slump. I built a studio out of an old shed on my farm in an attempt to force myself to try and write songs. Every day I’d go out there in the mornings and struggle to get one line that I liked or one chord progression that was inspired. I wasn’t getting anywhere and it was my first taste of the fabled ‘writer’s block.’ Instead of writing new material like I had intended, I began to delight in the process of looking back. ‘Nothing Left To Find’ was one song I kept coming back to. I had so many versions of it in my files, it begged to be finished. After cutting a dozen of the verses I had written, it’s now a short and sweet song that really ties the tonal landscape of Stray Dogs together.” — Del Barber


Photo credit: Haylan Jackson

WATCH: Ariel Posen, “Now I See”

Artist: Ariel Posen
Hometown: Winnipeg, Manitoba
Song: “Now I See”
Album: Headway
Release Date: March 5, 2021

In Their Words: “This song was inspired by my own personal growth over time but more specifically by a friend that had once told me that ‘now they could see’ that everything was left behind them. They were struggling with some relationships and some severe personal issues and it took time, but they finally found acceptance in themselves and were able to move past it. Just because they weren’t the type of person that they thought they would be, and just because someone isn’t perfect, doesn’t mean that they don’t belong. Sometimes the smallest realizations and changes lead to gigantic breakthroughs and in the theme of the album, make significant ‘Headway.'” — Ariel Posen


Photo credit: Lynette Giesbrecht

WATCH: Raine Hamilton, “Brave Land”

Artist: Raine Hamilton
Hometown: The flatland prairies of Winnipeg, Manitoba
Song: “Brave Land”
Album: Brave Land

In Their Words: “I am a prairie person, but this album is about the mountains. As a flat lander, I was in a good position to appreciate the contrast of the open, vulnerable spaces of my upbringing, with the courageous, up-reaching lands of the mountains. We don’t have ‘up’ where I come from, so I really had a lot to learn from the mountains, this brave land that connects both the earth and the sky. This song, ‘Brave Land,’ is the title track of the record, and speaks to the courage of these landforms that reach out beyond their earthly world, and the spiritual connection that represents. ‘Brave Land’ is a joyful song that celebrates being alive on the Earth! What an amazing time that can be!” — Raine Hamilton


Photo credit: Megan Steen

LISTEN: William Prince, “Gospel First Nation”

Artist: William Prince
Hometown: Peguis First Nation – Manitoba
Song: “Gospel First Nation”
Album: Gospel First Nation
Release Date: October 23, 2020
Label: Glassnote

In Their Words: “Gospel is by definition ‘the good news.’ These songs were capable of lifting spirits in the darkest of times. I witnessed it on many occasions. They provided hope and relief. A subject I addressed earlier this year. Maybe that message needs continuing throughout this time. I am as much the grandson of Chief Peguis, the founder of Peguis First Nation, as I am Edward Prince Sr., one of the founding Christian pastors of that same community. Gospel First Nation is an amalgamation of two very important realms in my life.” — William Prince


Photo credit: Jsenftphotography

LISTEN: The Bros. Landreth, “Master Plan”

Artist: The Bros. Landreth
Hometown: Winnipeg, Manitoba
Song: “Master Plan”
Album: ’87
Release Date: September 25, 2019
Label: Birthday Cake/The Orchard

In Their Words: “‘Master Plan’ is all about putting your faith in your partner, when you’re really on your knees. We wrote this about halfway through what would end up being a pretty substantial hiatus between records and it was a tremendously difficult time. It talks about asking for grace from the ones you love and stating your intentions: ‘I know that I’m not strong right now, but I’m working on it’ — while simultaneously saying ‘Thank you for having my back and believing in me, even if I don’t right now.'” — David Landreth

“Dave came to the table with this incredibly honest and beautiful tune already finished. He wasn’t convinced that it was and thought it needed more. All I did was write a hook. Which is just his melody anyways. This might be my favourite song on the record!” — Joey Landreth


Photo credit: Josh Dookie