August 30, 1999
Jam
Music
      Artists A-Z
      Album Reviews
      Concert Reviews
      Concert Listings
      SoundScan Charts
      Lowdown Column
      Pop Encyclopedia

Movies
Television
Video
Theatre
Books
Country




ENT Blog
RSS Feed

MACCA



Moxy Fruvous honours suburb
By KAREN BLISS


TORONTO - Mike Myer's Wayne's World was based on the beer-drinking, metal-loving, black-t-shirt-wearing Scarborough teens. Pop group Moxy Fruvous's latest album is based on and titled after Thornhill.

The connotation associated with Scarborough and suburbs like the affluent Forest Hill is the same the world over, but what of Thornhill? A combination of the two, perhaps?

"It was unquestionably middle and upper middle class, but it was also a bit of a stoner culture," says co-vocalist Jian Ghomeshi of the days he and his bandmates grew up north of Steeles. "So it was discovering your friend's new stereo and going there to listen to the Stones and the Beatles and the Who."

Ghomeshi, who has long left Thornhill for downtown Toronto, returned to his breeding ground with Moxy-mates Michael Ford, David Matheson and Murray Foster to shoot the photos for the back of Thornhill's jewel case and CD sleeve.

"It would only be the real thing if we actually went up there and did a photo session right in front of my parents house," he says. In one of the photos, you can almost see where fellow musician Hayden grew up.

"There's a lot of bands and actors and artists who have gone on to considerable fame that have come out of Thornlea and Thornhill," says Ghomeshi, citing members of By Divine Right, Universal Honey, Philosopher Kings and hHead as examples. Ghomeshi even used to plant himself outside Rush's rehearsal space on Doncaster for hours to listen to the prog-rock band practice.

So while a new song called "Hate Letter" is littered with references to Thornhill, the hate is towards a person rather than the suburb. "It's a tip of the hat to Thornhill," explains Ghomeshi.

"When we say Thornhill, we mean, first of all, our school, Thornlea, which was very much, at the time, a school for the arts. We all met in the theatre department and it had an open concept, very liberal. We'd call our teachers by their first names. Some were hippies. A lot of the grading was pass-fail. It was very forward-thinking. I think that led to a real fertile ground for creative thinking and critical thinking."


HOT MUSIC HEADLINES
Kathleen Edwards in T.O.
2012 Grammy Awards preview
Winehouse coroner suspended
'TLC' singer's bankruptcy case tossed
McCartney rehearses for Grammys
Whitney Houston dead at 48
Grammy stars honour McCartney
Live Review: City and Colour in T.O
Springsteen set to kick off Grammys
V-Day theme tops CD reviews
More Headlines
Meet Blue Ivy Carter
Madonna calls out M.I.A. gesture
Adele sings for Anderson Cooper
Canuck Grammy class of 2012
Gotye speaks on Walk Off signing
Elton seeks advice on raising son
Pickler considering adoption
Adele brushes off 'fat' comment
McCartney gets Walk of Fame star
Brown loses bid to end probation


Who's coming and when
Want to know when your favourite band is coming to town? Check out Clive, JAM Music's extensive Canadian concert listings.
TV Listings
Wondering what's on tonight? Check out our TV listings for the complete schedule in your area.
Movie Listings
Find out what's playing at a theatre near you.

1. Leonard Cohen: Old Ideas

2. Adele: 21

3. Lana Del Rey: Born To Die

4. Various: 2012 Grammy Noms

5. Gotye: Making Mirrors

Courtesy Nielsen SoundScan Cda








What did you think of Madonna’s halftime show?
She’s still got it
I wasn’t impressed


Results