BANDCALLEDMAX ANNOUNCE NEW ALBUM, LIVE AT THE CAMERON HOUSE, SHARE FIRST SINGLE

TORONTO’S WORST KEPT SECRET, BANDCALLEDMAX, ANNOUNCES THEIR NEW RECORD, LIVE AT THE CAMERON HOUSE, OUT APRIL 16, 2026 VIA VICTORY POOL RECORDS

LISTEN / SHARE “ROCKER” HERE
BUY / STREAM “ROCKER” HERE

PRE-SAVE LIVE AT THE CAMERON HOUSE HERE

PERFORMS LIVE AT THE CAMERON HOUSE ON APRIL 16 FOR THE VICTORY POOL RECORDS SIX YEAR ANNIVERSARY

Photo Credit : Calm Elliott-Armstrong // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

bandcalledmax—Toronto’s worst-kept secret—is officially entering their bar band era. The anything-goes rock’n’roll trio of David Monks (Tokyo Police Club), Mike Small (Meligrove Band), and Nick McKinlay (Fast Romantics) embody a reckless energy that can only be fully appreciated live: hence their new record, Live at the Cameron House, due out April 16, 2026 via Victory Pool Records. 

Today, bandcalledmax are sharing “Rocker”, the first single off their new record which encapsulates their live energy. “Here at bandcalledmax we make a simple promise at our live show: we rock and you get to dance,” says Monks. “It’s important to us that our customers, sorry, ‘audience’ knows what they’re in for when they attend a performance. That’s why we say it right on the tin with the first lyric in the first song of the set. And it’s true - myself and my colleagues Mike and Nick are actual rockers - satisfaction guaranteed!”

LISTEN / SHARE “ROCKER” HERE
BUY / STREAM “ROCKER” HERE

MORE ABOUT BANDCALLEDMAX

Always on the verge of collapse but never missing a beat, bandcalledmax is a group of veterans with enough miles under their belt to let the music fall off the rails in front of a crowd and still rein it back in for a photo finish.

Struck up over a friendship and a shared enthusiasm for reckless playing, bandcalledmax have been performing their “Sock-Hop Rave-Up” (Exclaim!) wherever fate takes them: “The goofier a show sounds, the better.” Known for their legendary Dakota Tavern residencies—packed crowd, special Toronto-famous guests, and antics galore—the band’s approach may be summed up in that one night they did shots of red bull before going on stage at 2:30am. As a classic guitar-bass-drums trio, bandcalledmax is purposefully elastic, designed to entertain virtually any gig, whether in the corner of a bar or a livestreamed, backyard show – which the band did on a whim at McKinlay’s place. The band’s gigs and its sound are similarly fancy-free: “we always wind up somewhere we could never have anticipated.”

At every chance, bandcalledmax turn down the dial of pretension, breaking the ice so that the crowd can enjoy themselves. Between their coordinated blue jumpsuits (“that was some real lead singer energy: coming into practice and saying, ‘are we cool if I order these band outfits’?”), customized guitar straps (bold orange letters reading “MAX”), and commitment to encouraging  people to dance like John Travolta and Uma Therman in Pulp Fiction, ridiculousness is key; you can relax when, as Small puts it, “there’s someone in here who looks stupider than you.”  

This is refreshing for a group of veteran Canadian musicians, whose careers reach across genres and geographies. Whether it’s Monks’ work with CanCon supergroup AnywayGang or nü metal band Klokwise; Small’s bass work with RUMBLEFRENZ, Elliott BROOD and Loviet; or Nick McKinlay’s drumming experience with Motorists, Ivan Rivers, and CJ Wiley, these three have an undercurrent of sonic understanding that makes it effortless for them to come together and let loose. “We spend so much time in other bands chasing a culminating album or sold out tour,” Monks explains, “and I see this band more as an experience or moments that you revel in but can’t hold on to.” Trusting in each other that these moments will arise, bandcalledmax isn’t about picking apart one another’s chord choices or squabbling over song structure: “We believe whatever we’re playing is the best idea we’ve had.” bandcalledmax fulfills what its members—and audiences—crave: a group that will take a big guitar solo, hit the brown notes, and open up a space in which every decision is right, if you do it with style.

PRE-SAVE LIVE AT THE CAMERON HOUSE HERE

The band’s new record, Live at the Cameron House, finally offers a solid document of the band’s energy. It distills bandcalledmax’s ethos into a whirlwind of chaos, and catharsis. Recorded live-to-tape in the Cameron house back room (with a “spaceship of recording gear behind us,” the control room essentially squished into the bathroom), this album captures a “battle happening on stage,” as Monks and McKinlay fight for control of the wheel while Small keeps the car from veering off the road. The band takes you to “Partytown USA” (where Monks hams it up, crooning, ‘It ain’t what you wear, it’s what you keep on’), screams you through the perils of being a “TV Maggot,” and gets your heart racing with “Gun for Hire”, spitting Talking Heads references while ripping chords like The Hives. Known for bringing friends on stage for off-the-cuff experiments, this record features a raging saxophone solo (courtesy of Gordon Hyland) on “Tangerine” and Nichol Robertson on the aforementioned “Partytown USA”, stretching the unpracticed tension of the show even further as collaborators ride the band’s wave.

As the band explains, “There’s this magic of playing a show when you know it’s being recorded,” and you can hear this magic on album highlight “Wild Horses”. Monks—who’s been getting comfy with lead guitar in bandcalledmax after a career as a bassist—caps a two-minute, full-bodied solo by yelping “yeah!” into the mic – a moment of pure joy.

At a time when there’s a lot of pressure to treat music as a product, bandcalledmax makes music for the community, for the pals. They’re the bar band you wish played around the corner every night. bandcalledmax are rock n’ roll in the least ambitious sense: instant feelings, immediate doings, the instantaneous ecstasy of making noise together. As Live at the Cameron House attests, this also means enticing an audience to get down and follow the ruckus wherever it goes. “What’s the weirdest venue we can play next?” Monks asks: “Where’s the party going?”

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LIVE AT THE CAMERON HOUSE TRACKLIST
1 Theme
2 Rocker 
3 Infidelity 
4 Punch Buggy 
5 Partytown, USA 
6 Gun For Hire 
7 Fire
8 Fool
9 Tangerine
10 TV Maggot 
11 I'm Gonna See My Baby Tonight 
12 Turn It Up 
13 Wild Horses 
14 Theme (Reprise) 

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SPENCER BURTON SHARES NEW SINGLE, “PRAIRIE MOON”

SPENCER BURTON SHARES HIS NEW SINGLE “PRAIRIE MOON”, OUT TODAY VIA DINE ALONE RECORDS

BUY / STREAM “PRAIRIE MOON” HERE
WATCH “PRAIRIE MOON” (ACOUSTIC PERFORMANCE) HERE
LISTEN / SHARE “PRAIRIE MOON” HERE

Photo Credit : Lane Dorsey // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

For his 2024 album, North Wind, Spencer Burton retreated to a small off-grid cabin in Northern Ontario, reconnected with nature and found peace and comfort in isolation. Taking a step back from the realities of life let him step back into making music after some time away.

Today, Spencer is sharing his first new music since the release of North Wind which follows in the same vein. “Prairie Moon” is a song “about home, or rather the feeling of home. Life can take you places you might not want to be, at a time where the only thing giving you hope is the idea of home. I found home and hope could be found in simple things. Sharing the same sky, sharing the same sounds, sharing the same moon. Prairie Moon was written in two different places. While those places were incredibly distinct in their own ways, they both held one truth: The want for someplace better.”

BUY / STREAM “PRAIRIE MOON” HERE
WATCH “PRAIRIE MOON” (ACOUSTIC PERFORMANCE) HERE
LISTEN / SHARE “PRAIRIE MOON” HERE

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MORE ABOUT SPENCER BURTON
On making North Wind, Spencer says, “I always felt this need for importance, this need to be poetic. It came, but it felt mandatory at times. I struggled with that,” says Spencer. “But then I found beauty in the simple things. A bird's song. A rustling gale. A ripple in the water. With the beauty of those simple things came importance and poetry in an unforced, natural way.”

The majority of North Wind was written in the north woods, in solitude and reflection. And while the songs have a spiritual importance, they also speak to ordinary life away from it all–fishing, an encounter with a coyote, sitting with your own thoughts.

“It’s really interesting what pleases the ear, musically, when isolated for a few weeks at a time. The only inspiration being yourself and the beauty of true untampered nature. It’s a different atmosphere than what we’re accustomed to. It really helped bring these songs to life.”

“I’m not really trying to write music these days,” says Spencer. “I’m trying to write good feelings.”

PERFORMANCE DATES
Mar 27 - Lincoln, On - Honsberger Estate

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GEORDIE GORDON REVEALS “ALL THE FIRES” FROM UPCOMING ALBUM, RIVER ROUND

GEORDIE GORDON’S NEW ALBUM, RIVER ROUND, OUT MAY 1, 2026 VIA VICTORY POOL RECORDS

WATCH / SHARE “ALL THE FIRES” HERE
BUY / STREAM “ALL THE FIRES” HERE

 PRE-ORDER RIVER ROUND VINYL HERE

PERFORMANCE DATES BEGIN MAY 22

Photo Credit : Colin Medley // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

On May 1 Geordie Gordon will release his third solo album River Round, a collection of love songs as intimate anthems of resilience. Friendship and romance stand off with life’s losses as Gordon weaves into his home-recorded folk music the irrepressible joys of pop—memorable verses and soulful, hard-hitting hooks—honed in his career as sideman and collaborator in acts including Islands, US Girls, Andy Shauf, and The Weather Station

Today, he shares the video for the new single, “All The Fires”. The song comes from “my attempt to put myself in the shoes of someone who has just lost everything,” says Gordon. “I wrote the song in an emotional flurry after watching a Patti Smith performance. I was so inspired by the way she can plainly deliver a simple chord progression yet instill the most powerful meaning into every word. I aspired to craft a song devoid of flash or excess, purely a vessel for the grief and anxiety that I had been storing in the pit of my stomach. 

 “As I was recording the song, I was reading Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower, a work of fiction following a young woman as she loses her whole community in Southern California due to intense climate and social upheaval. That same month three musical colleagues of mine had their homes burnt to the ground in the LA Wildfires, showing just how quickly science fiction can become a reality in our lives.”

WATCH / SHARE “ALL THE FIRES” HERE
BUY / STREAM “ALL THE FIRES” HERE

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MORE ABOUT GEORDIE GORDON + RIVER ROUND
On River Round Gordon plays a small orchestra of instruments, including acoustic and electric six-string and tenor guitars, bass, mandolin, electric mandola, octave mandolin, fiddle, organ, Wurlitzer, Moog, and glockenspiel.

The title River Round cites the “round” as a form of singing in unison, a blending of voices, hinting at how this solo project is in fact a revival, a revelry of coming together. Even in the apocalyptic “All the Fires,” a song that looks frankly at the world, Gordon’s lyrics insist there’s a way through, and that way is by coming together: “I just need to see you safe by morning. Because there’s no morning without you.”

WATCH / SHARE “ENDLESS LINE” HERE
BUY / STREAM “ENDLESS LINE” HERE

On the album’s second track, “River House” Gordon brings back to life the old, crumbling rooms of a home he moved into at 18, where so many musicians would be roommates and gather to imagine and build the artist’s hometown punk and folk scene in Guelph, Ontario. That community mourns through “Richard’s Song,” an ode to the late musician and indomitable “front man” Richard Laviolette (1982–2023), whose Sunday band practices Gordon recalls with radical tenderness. He sings to Richard, ‘We can’t rehearse for what life brings / You know you can tell me anything,’ and the lines resound as a call to nurture, through song, friendship and queer life at every beginning, end, and transition. This nurturing might be what Gordon calls “the good hurt in the music.” 

Geordie Gordon is a singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist based in Toronto and raised in Guelph, Ontario, where at the age of 13 he began playing in touring bands. For twenty years, he has toured with acts including Islands, US Girls, Andy Shauf, and The Weather Station. His solo project combines folk, soul, and pop in classic songs with lyrical verses and melodic, explosive hooks. His songs tell stories of coming of age, music community, and queer love. River Round is his third solo album on Victory Pool Records.

PERFORMANCE DATES
May 22nd - Guelph @ Silence w/ Bird City
May 27th - Toronto @ Burdock Music Hall w/ José Contreras

 PRE-ORDER RIVER ROUND VINYL HERE

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RIVER ROUND TRACKLIST
01 Held Me Up
02 River House
03 Richard’s Song
04 Endless Line
05 The Deal
06 On My Way
07 Ocean Of Time
08 All The Fires
09 Never Goes Away
10 Feel Our Way Through

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