A late-80s Toronto group whose music moved between rock, pop, and folk elements across several albums.
For a good frame, try 'Ode To The Season' or 'A Sky With No Stars.' They give you a sense of where the band could land.
They formed around singer-songwriter John Crossingham and guitarist Dave Scott in Toronto in the late 1980s, and their 1989 debut included '15th of August,' a song that connected with listeners at the time. Their catalog shows real range, from the melodic 'A Sky With No Stars' to more introspective writing like 'Find Out Our 60's.' Later work like 'Love Story On The Moon' leaned into more experimental territory while earlier material had a clearer folk-rock foundation.
They released their debut in 1989, followed by albums like 'A Hundred Years from Today' in 1992 and 'The Birds That Fly Away' in 1995. They kept recording through the 1990s, with their sound shifting somewhat over those years.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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