The Indie Rock Swindle

The Polaris Prize rewards Canada’s not-so-independent indie musicians
Illustration by Jennifer Spinner
In 1995, Steve Jordan, darling of the Kingston independent music scene, got his big break: an A&R (artists and repertoire) position at Warner Music Canada, one of a few major labels that dominated the Canadian airwaves. His job was partly to serve as a pipeline to subculture. Hoping to capitalize on the grunge wave, the majors were recruiting young musicians with dive bar pedigrees, and while the prevailing wisdom among the chosen was that art and commerce made lousy bedfellows, not many could turn down a chance at an audience. Neither could Jordan (real name Freedman), who, with his wire-rimmed glasses, receding hairline, and pierced ear, looked like the kind of nerd who during the darkest days of high school found solace in his interests, and self-esteem in their pursuit. He wasn’t like other A&R guys, who sweet-talked bands into signing bum deals with their bosses. His tastes were riskier, and he was as keen as his clients about the music. With Warner behind him, he could give a leg up to the bands he loved.

Eager to impress his new employers, he went on weekly pilgrimages to the record store strip on Toronto’s Yonge Street, scanning the consignment walls at HMV and Sam the Record Man for the kind of unplucked gems he’d have seen at the Toucan in Kingston. It was there that he discovered the self-released Thriller by Son, led by Jason Beck, a recent McGill grad who was, in Jordan’s words, “basically trying to Frankenstein Prince and Elvis Costello together, and totally succeeding.” Jordan bought the record out of curiosity, and by the end of the day his colleagues were convinced that both talent and scout were ingenious.

“Of course, nobody bought it,” he recalls, “so my stock just plummeted.” He’s now forty-four, hair depleted but youthful wardrobe intact, and his nervous tics are mostly tamed by a scrappy confidence (he bears a resemblance to Law and Order’s Christopher Meloni, but without stage makeup). His manner, a glissando between industry suit and gushing fan boy, belies a career marked by disappointments. After Son followed Thriller with another bomb, 1997’s Wolfstein, they were dropped from the label. Jordan’s next signing was Big Wreck, an act whose primed-for-radio bravado presented an ugly contrast to his first discovery. “I kind of liked the idea of my job more than I liked my job,” he says, “more than I liked beating my head against the wall trying to get interesting things signed and having to settle on Ricky J,” referring to the poor man’s Vanilla Ice from Montreal.

The big Canadian labels had always produced a lot of pap. As Stuart Berman writes in This Book Is Broken, his oral history of Broken Social Scene, they were all branches of international companies, mandated to produce blockbusters for export to their (mostly) Yankee masters. This left little room for the bands Jordan had grown up on, whose music wasn’t made to appeal to middle-of-the-road audiences. By the mid- to late ’90s, most of them — King Cobb Steelie, Change of Heart, the Inbreds, names familiar to anyone who listened to college radio then — had retreated back into obscurity, their hopes of ever making it big crushed, their stories retold as cautionary tales to the next generation of independent artists. Otherwise, they fled the country: Beck, for his part, decamped to Europe with his friends Merrill Nisker (later Peaches) and, eventually, Leslie Feist (later Feist), reinventing himself as Gonzales. As it turned out, obscurity was a better fit than the limelight. As Jordan toiled in the mainstream, Canadian alternative musicians went it alone, in total freedom. “You weren’t going to sell a million records in the States, so you didn’t even worry about it,” says James Keast, editor-in-chief of the independent music monthly Exclaim! “It was like worrying about being gored by a unicorn on the way home. And since suddenly your reasons for doing it were your own, it meant the music was good.”

Good music was disseminated independently, or through small labels that ran on shoestring budgets, generating just enough profit to finance a few more releases. Labels like Noise Factory, which issued albums by soon-to-be members of Broken Social Scene, operated out of their owners’ apartments. To be a musician who tended bar or peddled records to make ends meet was no longer a sign of failure; since sales were a pipe dream anyway, being part of a creative clique was infinitely more gratifying than being signed to a major. So it seemed like poetic justice when peer-to-peer file sharing, starting with Napster in 1999, began to flood the mainstream music market with free goods. The indie labels, with their lean budgets, online cunning, manageable rosters, and devoted fan bases made up of friends and friends of friends, flourished, while the majors staggered under the weight of their overheads.

They were more risk averse than ever by the time Three Gut Records, a label run by two friends out of Guelph, released the debut album by the Constantines, a band hailed as punk rock’s answer to Bruce Springsteen. The Canadian press loved it. The music website Pitchfork Media, oracle of all things independent, loved it. The Constantines’ success, purely critical at the time, tipped off the public that something important was happening in Canadian music. “I felt like I was in a position to potentially become involved and help exploit — well, ‘exploit’ is kind of a nasty word, but to help spread the love,” says Jordan. He tried but failed to secure a Warner deal for his new favourites, but that was a clash of worlds, and it was increasingly unclear which one Jordan belonged to. Later that year, he was fired.

Warner, he realized, was not in the business of spreading the love, so he dreamt up another way to do it. He’d create a “community of music listeners” and give them a forum from which to make taste; they would be entrusted with selecting the best Canadian albums of the year, based on merit alone. Unlike the Junos, whose winners are largely determined by industry professionals with a stake in their sales figures, the recipients of this new award would be nominated by broadcasters, programmers, bloggers, and critics. And the winning album, whose makers would receive $20,000 in prize money, would be hand picked by an elite grand jury of music experts. It would be the one Canadian award to strike indie musicians, once skeptical of conventional accolades, as legit.

Five cycles into the Polaris Music Prize (named after the North Star), “indie” has become shorthand for “interesting” in musical parlance, and many bands who have made the Polaris short list have received the acclaim they deserved. The Constantines’ tenth anniversary was commemorated in the Toronto Star. Broken Social Scene’s fourth record debuted at number one on the Canadian charts. Feist’s albums now challenge Carole King’s for most gifted on Mother’s Day. The winners, meanwhile, are beloved acts that haven’t quite broken big yet: Owen Pallett, then known as Final Fantasy; Patrick Watson; Caribou; and Fucked Up, a band who, as the name suggests, came up in the Toronto hardcore punk scene but had warmed to melody by the time their second full-length album, The Chemistry of Common Life, won the prize in 2009.

As a tent for Canadian music scenes nationwide, Polaris served notice that Canada, on the strength of its independent rock bands, is finally, inconceivably cool — disproving the cliché that, as Peaches once told an interviewer for Canoe.ca, “You can’t become anything in Canada unless you leave Canada.” Its cachet is the triumph of taste over consumption, independence over conglomeration. This, at least, is what you’ll read in the press kits.

Creative communities can make art, but they don’t often know what to do with it. “We were so phenomenally unprepared,” says Owen Pallett, spruce in his Paul Smith scarf despite the mild weather. He’s talking about Blocks, the label that released his first two records, Has a Good Home and the Polaris-winning He Poos Clouds. Blocks was co-founded in 2003 by musicians Mark McLean and Steve Kado, Pallett’s former bandmate in Toronto’s “gay church music” legend, the Hidden Cameras. Their slogan is “Don’t try, do!” and, true to this ethos, most of their releases are manufactured on someone’s carpet out of cardboard and glue. When Has a Good Home started to sell forty copies a night during Pallett’s inaugural tour, Kado nearly worked himself into an early grave trying to keep up with demand. At the time, Blocks barely had the wherewithal to supply local record shops, never mind get the album to fans outside their environs. Has a Good Home and He Poos Clouds earned the label enough money to buy bushels of craft supplies, but Pallett enlisted European labels Tomlab and the much larger Domino to release his records beyond Canada.

And he wasn’t alone. When the Constantines’ success began to exhaust Three Gut’s resources, the band signed an international deal with Seattle’s Sub Pop. Three Gut remained their home base until the label folded a year later when sole surviving staff member Lisa Moran collapsed under the workload. In 2007, Caribou, by then residing in London, England, signed with the American indie label Merge, home of the multimillion-selling Arcade Fire, themselves graduates of Montreal’s indie rock scene. Fucked Up worked their way up to Matador, one of North America’s most storied indie rock labels, based in New York. In short, they did what Canadian musicians have been doing since Hank Snow fled for the bright lights of Nashville. Many maintained close ties to their scenes of origin (Pallett donated much of his Polaris winnings to Blocks affiliates, and the rest went toward his boyfriend’s student loans). The smart ones ensured their copyrights were Canadian owned, entitling themselves to domestic arts grants. But they didn’t count on their friends to get their wares to market, something Jordan — who conceived of Polaris in part as a way of repatriating some of these lost acts — knows as well as anyone.

It took international labels to bring domestic independent acts to foreign audiences, and foreign approval to get average Canadians jazzed about their projects — not exactly a new trajectory for Canadian art. But former major label execs like Jordan recognized a demand for infrastructure early on, and by 2003 they began looking to the independent music scene for opportunities. “You see independent radio promotion companies more than ever before in this country, marketing companies, lots of independent labels, and they’re all staffed with ex–major label people,” says Jeffrey Remedios, a former publicist for Virgin/EMI and the co-founder of Arts & Crafts Productions, home to Broken Social Scene and company (Feist, Stars) and, nowadays, the Constantines. Arts & Crafts operates out of a downtown Toronto loft furnished with sleek vintage upholstery and mounted gig posters. In the open concept workspace, employees in street clothes do business to an impractically loud soundtrack; Remedios and his well-manicured assistant work out of sight, presumably in peace and quiet.
Home · Page 1 of 2 · Next

15 comment(s)

nathaniel g mooreSeptember 13, 2010 13:51 EST

Well the article didn't really get into what I wanted to read about, I was hoping to comment "Finally someone in this country addresses the outdated term "indie" as its applied to the music industry." I guess we'll leave that up to the experts to handle. Still a great piece, basically discussing how small a market the canadian music industry is, and the clash between media, the public, the prize, and the musicians. still unclear as to why the word indie is in the title like three times but the idea is never truly properly explained or developed in this piece.

How many times do we have to read about canadian bands doing better in other countries? That's like writing, well the US won more medals than we did again at the Olympics. We're a smaller country, so obviously we're going to sell less.

N

nathaniel g mooreSeptember 13, 2010 13:52 EST

though i have to say the beginning does disect the concept of indie music quite well, i guess i just got lost in the description of the polaris award show with sarah from much music, etc. it sounded like a terrible money meets art sleeper hold moment in time.

i change my mind, i actually like this piece. i just wish someone would destroy the word indie forever from the media landscape.

but you do a good job of describing how indie is not a suitable term anymore for a lot of these so called independent labels.

this is what happens when i don't drink coffeee in the morning.

peace

ngm


AnonymousSeptember 13, 2010 14:11 EST

For every one valid and worthwhile statement that she presents, there are two errors in either judgement or fact. I have to say I think her pretensions got the best of her in this article. It’s sad because half the article belongs in The Walrus, and the other belongs in a zine. She nitpicks aesthetics, which undercut her article; makes you question her bias. Biting journalism should be tempered, which is why I don't understand the passive aggresive references to clothes and hair.

For every good point she makes (and there are many) I think the article comes off as a well-researched statement to align herself with a kind of credibility that floats beyond any minimal prestige or degradation that she endows in this article.

AndrewSeptember 13, 2010 14:11 EST

Wait, what's the indie rock swindle..?

AnonymousSeptember 13, 2010 15:26 EST

the prize claims to be about all genres. but it can't ever be. how did you miss this point?
its a collusion of industry and grants and the boring cbc.
dozens of canadians rule the electronic and avant garde international scenes, but you'd never know it at the polaris.

AnonymousSeptember 14, 2010 00:36 EST

You wouldn't happen to be white, middle-class, and from Toronto, would you?

AdamSeptember 14, 2010 13:21 EST

I know Polaris jurors who I wouldn't trust to give me an off-hand recommendation. As music editor of a mid-sized alt weekly, I was offered a jury spot a few years ago, and turned it down because I didn't feel I'd heard a wide enough cross section of Canadian music that year. I think the problem with the prize is that the jury pool is too narrow —or maybe, too broad. You can be a well-known music writer in Canada simply by starting a blog and/or being reliable with deadlines and working hard. Doesn't mean you're qualified to judge the best albums of the year.

There are some seasoned critics on the list who've been around the block a few times, but there are also a lot of 20-25 year-old bloggers and freelancers whose musical memory doesn't extend before 2006 or so, and who basically pick a lot of inoffensive, artful but not tremendously exciting indie-folkie singer/songwriter material. Which is fine, but the list is top-heavy with that stuff. It's all rock/pop, and more than that it's mostly the same strain of rock/pop.

Interesting that a grand jury picked Fucked Up. A lot of people I know were dismayed when that band won (I was thrilled!). There were some great records competing with Chemistry of Common Life, but they were mostly good, solid entries in the catalogs of good, solid artists. Fucked Up recorded a triumph, on the other hand, and deserved the recognition.

AnonymousSeptember 15, 2010 11:51 EST

Fearless. Witty. Thoughtful. Canadian. Sounds like Edwin.

Ray MitchellSeptember 15, 2010 14:52 EST

I find it ironic that, of all of the art forms, perhaps only music penalizes you financially as you become more successful. You have considerable production costs, you have to in essence maintain two homes, (one often being a van that flits you across the country), and unless you become that 1% you will never be as financially secure as if you had just stayed home and worked fulltime at McDonalds. Frankly, the love must be strong.

AnonymousSeptember 15, 2010 17:46 EST

Isn't the headline disingenuous? What does it really have to do with the article itself? And more so, did Jordan / Polaris actually state that its objective is to herald "indie" music? That isn't clearly stated in the article. I thought Polaris simply wanted to honour the "best" releases in Canada, and if that results in a list of 10 titles from the majors, so be it, and if it results in a list of 10 titles from independent labels, so be it. And the result, which is to be expected, is a mix of the two — so you get a list that features Warner's Tegan and Sara and Merge Records' Caribou. And for most of the artists, well it's arguable where you'd want to pigeonhole them — Shad gets Universal's support, BSS gets EMI's support, etc. — which indicates that perhaps the best thing is to simply not try to pigeonhole them by claiming they all claim to be "indie". And it's a shame to think that someone was bored stiff last year by 10 of Canada's most interesting musical acts.
Best that Alexandra not bother attending this year; there are many other people who'd be thrilled to have the opportunity to take her seat.

Serpico WigandSeptember 17, 2010 00:19 EST

The only thing that the Polaris achieves is to provide employment for Jordan and his office, with a large chunk of it paid for by Factor, and other publically and privately funded grant entities.

It is nepotism of the highest order, and reeks of the same self-serving old-boys-club style of backslapping that makes the Junos a national embarrassment.

The music media are complicit in this massive fraud. These people should be ashamed of themselves.

We have amazingly great music in this country, all over the place, in styles and genres that you can't imagine, but these organizations make sure you will never hear any of it. Their focus is pathetically narrow, exclusive and self-serving.

This article would have served better to address and discuss the massive amount of abuse and fraud that occurs within these funding entities, and further, how the very organizations discussed in this article manipulate those entities to secure and enhance their bottom lines.

AnonymousSeptember 17, 2010 12:17 EST

Hahaha,

"music ... in styles and genres that you can't imagine." What a statement. Awards for music are a popular medium by their very nature! Awards ceremonies are antithetical to ideals of experimental music, no matter what principles the Polaris does or does not stand for. "Indie" is a marketing term now, which is why the writer couldn't pull together a tangible statement in the first place. If you want to celebrate avant-garde music, there are these new things called blogs. They even have year-end lists, which fill that blank space that you're blindly whining over.

I'm not even standing up for the Polaris, it just seems that people like you love to play the martyr. It's subversive to rave about the evils of Canadian music! Who cares about context! That's become just as tacky as *Canadiana.
As for you, Serpico Wigand, go record in your bedroom or something.


*BSS, Dan Mangan, The Sadies.

AnonymousSeptember 17, 2010 12:17 EST

Hahaha,

"music ... in styles and genres that you can't imagine." What a statement. Awards for music are a popular medium by their very nature! Awards ceremonies are antithetical to ideals of experimental music, no matter what principles the Polaris does or does not stand for. "Indie" is a marketing term now, which is why the writer couldn't pull together a tangible statement in the first place. If you want to celebrate avant-garde music, there are these new things called blogs. They even have year-end lists, which fill that blank space that you're blindly whining over.

I'm not even standing up for the Polaris, it just seems that people like you love to play the martyr. It's subversive to rave about the evils of Canadian music! Who cares about context! That's become just as tacky as *Canadiana.
As for you, Serpico Wigand, go record in your bedroom or something.


*BSS, Dan Mangan, The Sadies.

kayceeOctober 03, 2010 19:20 EST

The term indie is just used to sell records these days, there is no true meaning. Obviously the majority of the finalists are not "independent" and use major label support.

Its sort of like starting a magazine, calling it a "non profit organization" with "charity status" but injecting it with an initial $2,000,000 start up fund, but still asking folks to donate to it, making charity videos with margaret atwood.....

we all think its a "non profit/indie" magazine, but its all using daddy's big wallet support.

AnonymousOctober 05, 2010 16:33 EST

I declare cultural jihad on awards industries and the laughable corruptions they foster

Add a comment

  
I agree to walrusmagazine.com’s comments policy.

Canada & its place in the world. Published by
the non-profit charitable Walrus Foundation
TwitterFacebookRSS
On newsstands now
New Issue on Sale
June 2012
Subscribe online for as little as $2.49 an issue. Visit The Walrus Store
to buy prints of our covers
The Walrus Foundation National Event Guide

The Walrus HOOPP Pension Debate
Be It Resolved That Canadians Are Incapable
of Saving for Their Retirement Needs Alone

12 pm, Wednesday, May 30 at
Hart House Debate Room, Toronto

The Walrus Glenbow Debate
Calgary’s Cowboy Culture:
Living Legacy or Just History?

6:30 pm, Thursday, June 7 at
Epcor Centre: Max Bell Theatre, Calgary

The Walrus Laughs
The Walrus SoapBox