The Sound of Queen鈥檚

Stormy sky and rough waves.

Is there, in the expanse of music made by Queen鈥檚 alumni, a "Queen鈥檚 sound?" The answer seems to be an unsatisfying No. And yet, every musician we asked about a Queen鈥檚 sound cited a common foundation to the music they鈥檝e made as Queen鈥檚 students, past and present.
 
"To me, if there is a Queen鈥檚 sound, it is based on the notion that you can go anywhere on a Thursday, Friday, Saturday night 鈥 you still can in Kingston 鈥 to see a band play,鈥 says Gord Sinclair, Artsci鈥86, who played bass with the Tragically Hip. 鈥淜ingston has always produced really good musicians and really good artists, and I think that鈥檚 partly due to the culture of the town,鈥 Mr. Sinclair says in an interview from his home in Kingston. 鈥淧eople have grown up and seen live music played in front of them. I think it鈥檚 great that young bands are still trying to do it.鈥

In the mid-1980s, when half of the Hip members were studying at Queen鈥檚, 鈥渢here was ample opportunity to get your act up on stage.鈥

The Hip played venues such as Alfie鈥檚, the Terrapin Tavern, Lakeview Manor, and sometimes the Grad Club.

鈥淜ing颅ston has always produced really good musicians and really good artists, and I think that鈥檚 partly due to the culture of the town.鈥

Gord Sinclair, Artsci鈥86 The Tragically Hip

鈥淭he more you get the opportunity to play, the more you develop your talent as a musician and as a performer. We were particularly blessed with a very charismatic frontman and singer, Gord Downie, who relished that opportunity to get up in front of people.鈥

The live experience is formative, he says: 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what allowed us to develop our sound.鈥

Live music was also foundational for Blue Rodeo鈥檚 Jim Cuddy (Artsci鈥83). Mr. Cuddy told the Queen鈥檚 Gazette in 2015 that his years at the university were 鈥渁 very productive time for me鈥 It was the coming together of a lot of things.鈥

While at Queen鈥檚, he met Walter Macnee, who mentored him on guitar, says Mr. Cuddy. He also reminisced to visitkingston.ca about nights in campus and city clubs watching artists such as Bruce Cockburn, Stan Rogers, Willie P. Bennett, and others.

鈥淚 was just mesmerized when I saw those acts, very inspiring.鈥 He grew confident enough to get up on stage himself, at Grant Hall in 1978. A few years later, Blue Rodeo would form and go on to sell millions of albums and win a dozen Junos.

The answer, then, is that the Queen鈥檚 sound is evident in the talent and style that was heard and honed in the essential live venues on campus and in the city.


Funeral Lakes

The next album from Funeral Lakes will be inspired by both Queen鈥檚 University and Kingston, with city inspiration on the surface, and campus inspiration down a little deeper.

Funeral Lakes is couple Sam Mishos and Chris Hemer, who are working on a master鈥檚 in geography (Sam) and a master鈥檚 in cultural studies with a focus on Canadian national mythology (Chris).

The duo鈥檚 upcoming second full-length album, with the working title North American Martyrs, is about 鈥渘ational mythology and deconstructing some of the myths and taking a more critical look at the people and events we celebrate,鈥 Mr. Hemer says from their home in Kingston.

He says the city is a huge influence.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a somewhat historical album, so I鈥檝e been spending a lot of time just walking around and observing and photographing what鈥檚 around us and using that as inspiration.鈥

The music is part of a project for his master鈥檚, and Sam鈥檚 studies of geography also inform the music they make.

鈥淭he line between our band and our academic lives is pretty blurred. There鈥檚 a lot of crossover and it鈥檚 hard to separate the two,鈥 Mr. Hemer says.

  • A man, playing a guitar, and a woman, leaning against him, look out at the lake as they sit on large rocks by the shoreline.

    Photograph by Johnny C. Y. Lam

  • A man and woman stand barefoot in the lake with a sunset behind them.

    Photography by Johnny C. Y. Lam

鈥淚n undergrad, I had a lot of space and opportunity to grow as a musician being at Queen鈥檚, and then I think a lot of our music was academically informed, and we grew as individuals and as musicians and academics, and it all kind of coalesced into this project.鈥

Their music 鈥 CBC described hearing 鈥渆co-activism, Catholicism, and escapism in their indie folk music鈥 鈥 was born when the pair met at Queen鈥檚 and took full advantage of the ample opportunities to play live.

鈥淚t was a pretty formative experience,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was easy to grow as a musician because there were a lot of places to play on campus. We were part of a music club that had a jam space that was pretty well free to use. We got to kind of cut our teeth there.

鈥淚n terms of Queen鈥檚 as an institution, there was a lot of opportunity at that point of time in my musical trajectory to do things if you wanted to do things. I think that was really important and helped me grow.鈥

The music of Sam and Chris 鈥 she鈥檚 from Toronto and he鈥檚 from Vancouver 鈥 is also inspired by Lake Ontario.

鈥淲e feel pretty lucky that we鈥檙e in such close proximity to nature. It鈥檚 a great place to turn off your brain for a bit and not think about the world so much and appreciate what鈥檚 around us.鈥


Danielle Hope Edwards

Danielle Hope Edwards (ConEd鈥23) says that songs she鈥檚 written while a student at Queen鈥檚 have been 鈥渋mpacted by the experience of finding myself, of growing up or going to university for the first time.鈥

As the 21-year-old wrote in her song Coming Home, to be released by early next year, 鈥淪ometimes we feel that we do come here just to understand there鈥檚 a whole lot we can鈥檛 comprehend.鈥

The song, she says from her home in rural Prince Edward County, is about 鈥渃oming to the point where you know it鈥檚 OK to embrace the new experiences, that we鈥檙e coming home, we鈥檙e coming into ourselves, we鈥檙e coming into new experiences.鈥

When she left home for the first time, she found Queen鈥檚 and Kingston to be 鈥渧ery homey鈥 and supportive. She knows that everyone has their own experience, and 鈥渋t might not be the same for everyone, as I believe everyone expresses their experiences differently. So, that way, there might be a Queen鈥檚 sound.鈥

That collegial atmosphere 鈥 and the opportunities to play live her soul-gospel-R&B-inspired music and to write in cosy coffee shops 鈥 had a clarifying effect on her songs.

  • A woman plays a ukulele while sitting on the leaf-covered grounds of a forest.

    Photograph by Mackenzie Wryghte

  • A woman leaning against a tree in the woods playing a ukulele.

    Photograph by Mackenzie Wryghte

鈥淚 feel that the older I get and the more I start to write, it continues to get better, and also clearer. Some of the songs I鈥檇 write before, I thought, 鈥楾his is very good but nobody鈥檚 going to understand what you鈥檙e trying to say.鈥 So, I鈥檓 coming to the point where I鈥檓 breaking things down, making it still authentic but more plain.鈥

That positive Queen鈥檚 experience strengthened the hope that is both her middle name and her musical raison d鈥櫭猼re.

鈥淚 have a lot of hope, and I want to put that in music and share it. I have struggled with mental health [issues]and I want to write about that and share it. Maybe someone else can relate. Ultimately, that is my goal with music, to just shine bright with it and if it blows up, it blows up, and if it doesn鈥檛, there are still people whose lives are being touched through those songs I write and the lyrics I write, and I鈥檓 just grateful.鈥


Wild Rivers

The influence of Queen鈥檚 University weaves like a looping thread through the music of Wild Rivers.

The band, which includes Devan Glover (Artsci鈥15), Khalid Yassein (Artsci鈥15), and Andrew Oliver, returned to the Kingston area to finish their latest record, Sidelines, at the Tragically Hip鈥檚 Bathouse Studio in nearby Bath.

鈥淲e wanted to remove ourselves from this city because where you live and where all your friends and family are there are so many distractions,鈥 Ms. Glover says from her home in Toronto. 鈥淲e really wanted to go somewhere where we could just wake up, make the record, go to sleep, hang out all the time, and just be fully in it.

鈥淚t was kind of a nice thing to be back in Kingston for it, so it just felt like the right decision.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 a fantastic live music scene, it punches above its population. The scene shouldn鈥檛 be as good as it is but, for whatever reason, there鈥檚 an appetite for it.鈥

Khalid Yassein, Artsci鈥15
  • Two men and one woman sit in a convertible car, looking above at the camera.

    Photograph by Samuel Kojo

  • A female and two males, sitting on chairs, lined up in a row.

    Photograph by Samuel Kojo

Ms. Glover and Mr. Yassein met at Queen鈥檚 and 鈥渟tarted to play shows, write songs, get a bit of a following in what we think is one of the best music cities in Canada,鈥 Mr. Yassein says from his home in Toronto. 鈥淲e still feel like our education and time at Queen鈥檚 contributed to our music career in a lot of ways.鈥

He says the city鈥檚 location between Montreal, Ottawa, and Toronto brings in a lot of live bands to see, and that helps support many venues to play in.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a fantastic live music scene,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t punches above its population. The scene shouldn鈥檛 be as good as it is but, for whatever reason, there鈥檚 an appetite for it. There鈥檚 enough venues, there鈥檚 enough people that believe in the music.鈥

Ms. Glover adds, 鈥淎 lot of our early stuff is acoustic, folky, and I think a lot of that was because we started playing in Queen鈥檚 coffee houses and open mics, the more chill environments. That definitely influenced how we approach our shows and our early music, just because there鈥檚 so many great spots in Kingston and at Queen鈥檚 for that sound.鈥

鈥淭hat made me think that maybe the Queen鈥檚 or Kingston sound is like a live sound,鈥 Mr. Yassein says.

Whatever the sound is, Ms. Glover says, 鈥淨ueen鈥檚 is the reason we are a band still.鈥


A sound that brings me back

by Arisa Valyear

It鈥檚 been six years since I called Queen鈥檚 home, but this sound always brings me right back.

I was sitting in a red velvet, upholstered seat at Massey Hall watching Queen鈥檚-born band Wild Rivers perform just a few weeks ago when I heard it. That quiet and unhurried, modestly composed yet beautifully delivered sound that could be from only one place. A place tucked behind the jagged banks of the St. Lawrence River where the tricolour flies and limestone lies: Queen鈥檚.

As I listened to the band unveil a stripped-back rendition of their song Safe Flight, I was gently jolted back home by each note. Back to Lake Ontario鈥檚 cresting waves, which Devan Glover鈥檚 soaring vocals so perfectly mimicked. Back to the hum of humid air that floats up from the water and blankets University Avenue in the summertime, which Khalid Yassein revived so effortlessly with his enveloping vocals and low and steady guitar.

The sound of Queen鈥檚 is different from the sound of Kingston, which is heavy at times, with throaty bass and clashing percussion (look to the Tragically Hip鈥檚 Grace, Too or the Glorious Sons鈥 Heavy), and then soft and delicate at others, with sultry lyrics and swinging melodies (think Long Time Running or Kasador鈥檚 Skeleton Park). Where Kingston鈥檚 sound is more complex and steeped in contradiction, the Queen鈥檚 sound is less so. It鈥檚 calmer, clearer. It stays light even when it gets loud. The Kingston sound commits fully to its embodiment of sonic extremes; the Queen鈥檚 sound stays rooted somewhere in the middle.

I was lucky to be able to contribute to the university鈥檚 unique musical identity in a small way while I was at Queen鈥檚, both as a performer and concertgoer, but I wasn鈥檛 aware of it at the time. I didn鈥檛 know that the humble, four-person band I was part of, carried by three vocalists, an acoustic guitar, and a folksy fiddle, would help cement a certain musicality within the school鈥檚 vine-covered walls. I didn鈥檛 know that gig by gig, our routine covers of indie-folk songs like the Lumineers鈥 Ho Hey and acoustic pop-song mashups were slowly reinforcing a signature sound, one that so perfectly occupies the space between restraint and recklessness.

I didn鈥檛 know it then, but I know it now. The farther I drifted from the university, the clearer the realization became.

And that night at Massey Hall, even though I was miles away, the sound of Queen鈥檚 found its way back to me. And I hope it always will.

Arisa Valyear, Artsci鈥15, MA鈥16, is a musician, music historian, writer and editor now based in Newmarket, Ont.

Prefer the offline issue?

The Queen's Alumni Review is the quarterly magazine for 成人大片 alumni. Compelling stories and photos make it a must-read for all who love Queen's.

Download Fall 2022