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5 Surprising Facts About Steely Dan’s ‘Pretzel Logic’

It’s 1974. Steely Dan—at this point still technically a band in the traditional sense—is at a crossroads. They’d done the road. They’d seen the inside of enough dingy clubs and felt the friction of the traveling circus. Walter Becker and Donald Fagen, the cynical, jazz-obsessed architects behind the curtain, were starting to realize that the five-piece rock group they’d assembled was… well, a limitation.

‘Pretzel Logic’ is the pivot point. It’s the record where the band starts to dissolve into a revolving door of the world’s most elite session players. It’s the album where the songs got tighter, the hooks got sharper, and the jazz influences moved from the background to the driver’s seat. It was a massive commercial success, but it was also the beginning of the end for Steely Dan as a live entity for nearly two decades. This wasn’t just pop; it was high-concept musical engineering disguised as radio-friendly gold.

1. The Ghost of Horace Silver

You know that iconic, syncopated piano line that kicks off “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number”? It didn’t just fall out of the sky. It is an almost direct appropriation of the intro to jazz legend Horace Silver’s 1965 track, “Song for My Father.” It’s the ultimate example of Fagen and Becker’s “bop phrasing” leaking into the pop charts.

2. The Mystery of the “Squonk”

On “Any Major Dude Will Tell You,” Fagen sings about a squonk’s tears. During the recording sessions, the studio musicians were actually too intimidated to ask what a squonk was, fearing they’d look out of the loop. It turns out it’s a mythical creature from Pennsylvania folklore that is so ugly it spends its life crying and can dissolve into a puddle of tears when cornered.

3. The Last Stand of the Quintet

While the album used a small army of L.A. session legends (like Jim Gordon and Jeff Porcaro), ‘Pretzel Logic’ holds a bittersweet distinction: it was the last album to feature the original full quintet lineup of Becker, Fagen, Denny Dias, Jim Hodder, and Jeff “Skunk” Baxter. Shortly after, the touring stopped, and Baxter headed off to join The Doobie Brothers.

4. The Secret Trombone on a Pedal Steel

For the instrumental cover of Duke Ellington’s “East St. Louis Toodle-Oo,” Jeff “Skunk” Baxter didn’t just play guitar. He used his pedal steel to painstakingly recreate the classic “Tricky Sam” Nanton trombone solo from the original 1920s arrangement. To keep the vintage vibe, Walter Becker used a talk box to mimic James “Bubber” Miley’s muted trumpet.

5. The Lost Flapamba Intro

If you bought the original single of “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number” back in ’74, you were missing something. The album version starts with a weird, woody percussion solo played by Victor Feldman on an instrument called a flapamba. ABC Records (and later Geffen) ordered it cut from the radio single to get to the hook faster.

5 Surprising Facts About Stevie Wonder’s ‘Fulfillingness’ First Finale’

In 1974, Stevie Wonder delivered “Fulfillingness’ First Finale,” a record that deepened his artistic voice at the height of his creative peak. Following “Innervisions,” he moved into a more reflective, personal space, bringing emotion, spirituality, and sharp commentary into tighter, more intimate arrangements. Released on July 22, 1974, the album became his second to top the Billboard charts and won three Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year, confirming its place as one of the defining releases of his classic period.

1. It’s a Grammy-Winning Landmark

“Fulfillingness’ First Finale” earned Stevie Wonder his second consecutive Album of the Year Grammy, along with Best Male Pop Vocal Performance and Best Male Rhythm and Blues Vocal Performance for “Boogie On Reggae Woman,” showing just how strongly the album connected across both pop and R&B audiences.

2. It Balances Introspection with Political Fire

The album moves confidently between introspection and political commentary, highlighted by “You Haven’t Done Nothin’,” a direct and timely protest aimed at President Richard Nixon that became a number-one hit and captured the urgency of the moment.

3. The Sound Is Stripped Back and Intentional

The sound of the album is more restrained and intentional, with songs like “Creepin’” and “They Won’t Go When I Go” leaning into space and mood, creating a somber and focused atmosphere that gives the record its emotional depth.

4. One Track Breaks His Solo Writing Streak

Stevie Wonder wrote nearly every song on the album himself, with “They Won’t Go When I Go” standing as the only co-written track, created with Yvonne Wright, making it a rare collaborative moment on an otherwise deeply personal project.

5. It Moves Seamlessly Across Styles

Across the album, Wonder moves seamlessly through soul, funk, and progressive influences, from the rhythmic drive and synthesizer bass of “Boogie On Reggae Woman” to more spiritual and reflective material, creating a cohesive sound that connected strongly with both pop and soul audiences.

Harajuku-Core Quartet HANABIE. Drop New EP ‘HOT TOPIC’ And Launch First-Ever North American Headline Tour

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HANABIE. have been building toward this moment since making history as the first Japanese women to perform on the main stage at Lollapalooza in Chicago in 2024, and now the Tokyo-based Harajuku-core quartet are bringing their heavy, high-energy show to North America on their own terms. New EP ‘HOT TOPIC’ is out now via Sony Music Japan, and the first-ever North American headline run is underway with Nekrogoblikon and Enterprise Earth in support.

‘HOT TOPIC’ delivers five tracks that showcase the full range of what HANABIE. can do. “ICONIC” opens with a punchy, electronic-leaning approach and arrives with a full music video. “Tokimeki about you” marks the band’s first-ever straightforward love song, built around a groovy instrumental section that drummer Chika describes as her personal favorite on the record. “Spicy Queen” and “GIRL’S TALK” round out the familiar side of the catalog, while closer “Theme of hanabienchan.” delivers the wild-card energy that has become an EP tradition for the group.

Formed in 2015 as a high school club activity by Yukina, Matsuri, and Hettsu, with Chika joining on drums in 2023, HANABIE. have grown into one of the most genuinely exciting acts in heavy music. Their hit single “Pardon Me, I Have To Go Now” has surpassed 10 million YouTube views and 5.3 million TikTok views, building an international following that makes this North American headline run a natural next step.

The tour is currently underway, running through April 11 in Los Angeles.

‘HOT TOPIC’ Track Listing:

  1. “ICONIC”
  2. “Spicy Queen”
  3. “Tokimeki about you”
  4. “GIRL’S TALK”
  5. “Theme of hanabienchan.”

HANABIE. 2026 North American Tour Dates:

March 21, Theatre of Living Arts, Philadelphia, PA

March 23, The Ritz, Raleigh, NC

March 24, Buckhead Theatre, Atlanta, GA

March 25, House of Blues, Orlando, FL

March 27, House of Blues, Cleveland, OH

March 29, Saint Andrew’s Hall, Detroit, MI

March 30, House of Blues, Chicago, IL

April 1, The Fillmore Minneapolis, Minneapolis, MN

April 3, House of Blues, Dallas, TX

April 4, House of Blues, Houston, TX

April 6, Emo’s Austin, Austin, TX

April 7, The Van Buren, Phoenix, AZ

April 9, House of Blues, San Diego, CA

April 10, August Hall, San Francisco, CA

April 11, The Belasco, Los Angeles, CA

Edmonton Alt-Metal Newcomers Famous Strangers Unleash The Cinematic Video For Debut Single “Deepstar”

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Famous Strangers have been sitting on this video for two years, and the wait made the release hit harder. The Edmonton alt-metal outfit have unveiled the long-anticipated music video for “Deepstar,” their debut 2024 single and the first song the band ever released, a cinematic visual that brings the track’s cosmic narrative fully to life and closes the loop on the earliest chapter of their story.

The song itself was mixed by Juno-winner Phil Anderson and mastered by world-renowned engineer Maor Appelbaum, whose credits include Faith No More, Dream Theater, and Dokken. Guitarist Jeff Kittlitz describes how naturally it came together: “While exploring presets on my new Fractal FM9, I landed on a tone that instantly brought to mind classic Deep Purple and Black Sabbath, and the main riff came together almost immediately.” Vocalist Amanda Kiernan’s lyrics draw from something equally personal, a tribute to a friend whose presence felt genuinely cosmic, with the friend herself appearing in the video.

Since forming in 2023, Famous Strangers have released four singles and performed at Armstrong MetalFest and Loud As Hell Open Air Festival, sharing stages with Revocation, Danko Jones, Three Inches of Blood, and Riot City. Their atmospheric, emotionally driven approach to heavy music has positioned them as one of Canada’s most intriguing emerging acts in the genre.

A full-length album is in the works for 2026, promising to push their sound darker and deeper than anything they have released so far. Fans of Halestorm, Nothing More, and Bad Omens should be paying close attention.

Nashville’s Guitar Hero Grace Bowers Honored Chaka Khan At The 2026 Resonator Awards

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Grace Bowers performed at the 2026 Resonator Awards presented by We Are Moving The Needle in Los Angeles, honoring Chaka Khan in a moment that put one of Nashville’s most exciting young guitarists on the same stage as one of soul music’s most enduring legends. At 19 years old, Bowers is already operating at a level that most artists spend entire careers working toward.

Her debut album ‘Wine On Venus’, produced by John Osborne of Brothers Osborne and released independently, earned widespread critical acclaim, with Forbes calling it “an infectious, joyous party” and Rolling Stone declaring Bowers “Nashville’s new guitar hero.” That kind of recognition does not arrive by accident. Bowers built her foundation in dive bars, drawing from the blues of B.B. King and the soulful funk of Sly and the Family Stone, before pandemic-era social media videos launched her into a much wider spotlight.

The milestones have stacked up quickly. A performance at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards alongside Chris Martin, an appearance at Love Rocks NYC with Peter Frampton and Trey Anastasio, a late-night debut on Jimmy Kimmel Live, tours with The Red Clay Strays, Gary Clark Jr., Slash, and The Roots, sold-out headline shows in Japan, New York, and Los Angeles, and Instrumentalist of the Year at the 2024 Americana Music Association Honors & Awards. She made her Grand Ole Opry debut on her eighteenth birthday and was named a US Global Music Ambassador by the US Department of State.

With more music and more stages ahead, Grace Bowers is not slowing down.

Grammy-Nominated Blues Rock Powerhouse Beth Hart Brings The “You Still Got Me” Tour To Five UK Cities This May

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Beth Hart has one of the most visceral connections with her audience in music, and the “You Still Got Me” UK Tour brings that relationship back to five cities this May. Wille & The Bandits performing as an acoustic duo join as special guests across all dates, which include Bristol Beacon on May 15, Edinburgh Usher Hall on May 16, Nottingham Royal Concert Hall on May 18, the Glasshouse International Centre for Music in Gateshead on May 20, and Oxford New Theatre on May 22. Low ticket warning already in effect for Bristol.

The tour supports Hart’s eleventh studio album ‘You Still Got Me’, released via Provogue/Mascot Label Group and produced by Kevin Shirley at Ocean Way Studios in Nashville. The record is among her most personal, opening with the Slash-featuring rocker “Savior With A Razor” and moving through groove-laden funk with Eric Gales on “Suga N My Bowl,” the tender piano ballad “Wonderful World,” and the raw socio-political statement “Don’t Call The Police.” Shirley calls Hart “a diamond, a living contradiction,” and the album earns every word of that description.

Six Billboard Blues chart toppers, double platinum certifications, a string of European Top 10 albums, and over 600 million streams form the backdrop to an artist who has spent nearly three decades doing things entirely on her own terms. Her most recent albums ‘A Tribute To Led Zeppelin’ and ‘War In My Mind’ became her highest charting UK and US releases to date.

Hart’s live shows are the full measure of everything she puts into her recordings, and these five UK nights will be no different.

Beth Hart “You Still Got Me” UK Tour Dates:

May 15, Bristol Beacon, Bristol

May 16, Edinburgh Usher Hall, Edinburgh

May 18, Nottingham Royal Concert Hall, Nottingham

May 20, Glasshouse International Centre for Music, Gateshead

May 22, Oxford New Theatre, Oxford

Norwegian Black Metal Provocateurs Witch Club Satan Make Their North American Live Debut This Spring

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Witch Club Satan are coming to North America for the first time, and they are treating it exactly like what it is: a ritual. The Norwegian black metal provocateurs announce the “Founding of the North American Coven” tour, a 16-date headline run across the U.S. and Canada from May 27 through June 16, with support from Penelope Trappes and Patriarchy on select dates.

The band has spent the past year earning this moment. In 2025 alone, Witch Club Satan performed at Roadburn, Hellfest, Sonic Rites, Mystic Festival, and Rockstadt Extreme Fest, completing a largely sold-out fall headline club tour across Europe. Metal Hammer declared them “the best thing to happen in black metal in years” after their first UK show. In early 2026, they joined Swedish heavyweights Avatar as direct support on the “In The Airwaves” tour across Europe and the UK, expanding their profile further before crossing the Atlantic.

“In times of division and chaos, we hope to offer a shelter and community within our coven,” the band says. “We are preparing for a powerful ritual.” That is not promotional language. Witch Club Satan’s live shows are known for their confrontational fusion of raw black metal, performance art, and ritualistic intensity, and North American audiences are about to find out exactly what that means firsthand.

The tour opens May 27 at Underground Arts in Philadelphia and closes June 16 at Substation in Seattle, hitting Toronto, Montreal, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Berkeley along the way. Tickets are on sale now.

“Founding Of The North American Coven” Tour Dates:

May 27, Underground Arts, Philadelphia, PA

May 29, Prepare The Ground Festival, Toronto, ON

May 30, Fairmount Theatre, Montreal, QC

May 31, Sonia, Cambridge, MA

June 2, Baltimore Soundstage, Baltimore, MD

June 3, Bowery Ballroom, New York, NY

June 5, Preserving Underground, Pittsburgh, PA

June 6, El Club, Detroit, MI

June 7, Reggie’s, Chicago, IL

June 8, Amsterdam Bar & Music Hall, St. Paul, MN

June 10, Bluebird Theater, Denver, CO

June 12, Lodge Room, Los Angeles, CA

June 13, Cornerstone, Berkeley, CA

June 15, Hawthorne Theatre, Portland, OR

June 16, Substation, Seattle, WA

Guitar Visionary Kyle Pacey Releases Daring New EP “After the Fall”

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There are artists who make music to entertain, and artists who make music to understand the world. Kyle Pacey, the Grammy-nominated Hamilton guitarist, singer, and songwriter, has always belonged firmly in the second category. On After the Fall, his luminous new five-song EP out now, Pacey brings the full force of that lifelong curiosity to bear — spinning R&B heat, jazz-inflected melody, funky locked-in groove, and blues-rooted soul into a cohesive and deeply felt statement about endurance, empathy, and what it means to be alive and paying attention in this moment.

At the center of the collection is the EP’s title track, a piece of breathtaking compositional ambition that deploys improvised jazz-scat phrasing against a driving rhythmic bed to pose the questions that animate the entire project. “What will remain / after the fall,” Pacey sings, his voice both urgent and luminous, before opening the lyric outward to encompass the sweep of human experience: “Farewell my friends now / there’s nowhere to hide — / oh sweet woman / please comfort me.” The song does not offer easy resolution; instead it offers something rarer and more nourishing — the comfort of being asked the right questions in exquisite company.

“What will remain after the fall… oh sweet woman, please comfort me.”

The EP moves through five distinct sonic worlds with the ease of a player who has inhabited all of them for decades. Back Against the Wall leans into rousing blues-rock, its propulsive funk bottom and insistent groove physically lifting the body even as the lyric grapples with the sensation of being hemmed in. Brave New World arrives on a reggae-styled pulse and draws openly from the philosophy of Aldous Huxley — a meditation on personal autonomy and the power each of us holds to chart a new course. I’m Here for You trades in a warm country-blues tenderness, its message of inner strength and self-reliance arriving with the quiet authority of earned wisdom. And Beware, the EP’s most strikingly cinematic moment, conjures a swampy, Lynchian unease — a soulful blues warning about division and the urgent need for common ground, delivered in a growl that would make Tom Waits take notice.

Pacey’s musical authority is built on a foundation that stretches back to lessons under Tony Braden — the celebrated guitarist and teacher who also shaped Kim Mitchell and Ed Bickert — and a run of local and international guitar championships before he turned eighteen. He went on to serve as opening act for the Duke Ellington Orchestra at Hamilton Place, became the first local musician ever to play that storied venue, and built a reputation whose arc runs from an invitation to audition for Chicago to a 2007 Grammy nomination as a member of the John Gora Band. His octave work draws comparison to Wes Montgomery; his full chordal approach recalls Freddie Green and Charlie Christian. After the Fall was recorded at Pine Street Studios in Hamilton, Ontario, with a stellar ensemble of collaborators — Kevin Christoff and Gordon Hall on bass, Michael Sloski, Johnny Winiarz, and Bruno Farrugia on drums, Michael Birthelmer on acoustic guitar, and Ed Roth on keyboards — each song matched to the precise combination of players that best serves its emotional weather.

What sets Pacey apart from the wide field of singer-songwriters working in blues, R&B, and jazz fusion is the particular lens through which he views his subject matter. His lyrics have always been informed by a restless intellectual life — a sustained interest in world events, the visionary culture of the 1960s and ‘70s, metaphysics, philosophy, and the New Thought movement — and After the Fall is his most fully realized expression of those preoccupations to date. From Huxley’s writings on individual agency in Brave New World to the Lynchian surrealism of Beware, Pacey positions contemporary feeling inside a much larger frame, inviting listeners to locate their own experience within the sweep of ideas that have shaped our culture. As broadcaster Kevin Barber has written of Pacey’s work: “He has lived through those times, and the passion and conviction he carries ensures that those who get to hear him are treated to something real and good.”

“I am captivated by music that is always changing,” Pacey says of his approach, “and like to incorporate a fusion of popular music genres. I am a very expressive player and like to push boundaries with my unorthodox style.” That restlessness is everywhere in evidence on After the Fall — in the sudden pivot from a jazz scat to a reggae groove, in the blues-country warmth of a song that could sit comfortably on a late-night radio playlist as easily as a Hamilton club stage, in the audacious Huxley reference tucked inside a propulsive beat. The EP is the work of an artist in the full command of his powers, making exactly the music he wants to make, and certain that the world is ready to receive it.

After the Fall is available now on all major streaming platforms and for purchase on Bandcamp. Stream or download the EP and follow Kyle Pacey across his channels for upcoming live dates and new projects.

Indigenous Performing Arts Alliance to Honour Susan Aglukark at Luncheon on Six Nations; Celebrating New Memoir KIHIANI and 30th Anniversary of ‘THIS CHILD’

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The Indigenous Performing Arts Alliance (IPAA) will host a special luncheon on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, from 12:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. at Yogi’s Barn in Ohsweken, Ontario, to honour acclaimed Inuk singer-songwriter Susan Aglukark. Lunch will be provided for attendees as the community gathers to celebrate Aglukark’s groundbreaking career and the release of her deeply moving new memoir, KIHIANI (HarperCollins), which has already reached the Top 10 on Amazon’s Composer & Musician Biographies charts. The event features an esteemed panel of speakers, including Chief Sheri-Lyn Hill of Six Nations of the Grand River; Sara Kae, IPAA Grand Council Member and Youth Ambassador; Andrés Mendoza, Vice President of CARAS/The JUNO Awards; and Jesse Kumagai, President and CEO for the Corporation of Massey Hall & Roy Thomson Hall. Attendees will experience live performances by Amanda Rheaume, Julian Taylor, Manitou Mkwa, and Susan Aglukark herself.

Tracing her path from Fort Churchill, Manitoba, to the global stage, KIHIANI is a courageously honest exploration of navigating trauma and reclaiming identity through the redemptive power of art. Within moments of its debut, the book surged into the #1 on Amazon and Indigo Books in numerous categories, including Composer & Musician Biographies. Aglukark, an Officer of the Order of Canada and the first Inuit artist to ever win a JUNO Award, crafts a narrative that is both a personal lifeline and a cultural milestone.

“Writing poetry at fifteen became a lifeline, and eventually music carried me into a career that would reshape Canadian arts and culture,” Aglukark reflects. Her artist statement is best captured in the lyrics and spirit of her work: “This Child was my artist statement, my call to personal action… write who you are so you never forget where you come from, who you are, and why you left.”

In tandem with the memoir, Aglukark celebrates the 30th anniversary of This Child. Remastered from original source tapes and available on vinyl for the first time, the record features the historic #1 single “O Siem,” which established Aglukark as the first Inuk performer to achieve a Top 40 hit. The album remains a cornerstone of Canadian music, certified triple platinum with over 300,000 copies sold.

The Indigenous Performing Arts Alliance (IPAA) will further honour this legacy with a special luncheon on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, at Yogi’s Barn in Ohsweken, Ontario. The gathering will bring together cultural leaders, including Chief Sheri-Lyn Hill and representatives from the JUNO Awards and Massey Hall, to celebrate Aglukark’s enduring influence on Indigenous music and storytelling. The event will feature live performances by Aglukark alongside Amanda Rheaume and Julian Taylor.


THIS CHILD 30TH ANNIVERSARY VINYL TRACK LISTING

Side OneSide Two
1. This Child1. Hina Na Ho (Celebration)
2. Shamaya2. Kathy I
3. Suffer In Silence3. Pond Inlet
4. O Siem4. Breakin’ Down
5. Dreams For You5. Casualties of War

No Ferris Wheels, No Flash, Just the River: Four Winds Music Fest Offers a Pure “Anti-Gimmick” Getaway this July

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In an era when music festivals compete on the size of their LED screens and the length of their sponsor lists, Four Winds Music Fest is doing something radical: trusting the land, trusting the music, and trusting you to find your way to one of the most beautiful corners of Ontario.

Returning for its fourth year at the Riverstone Campus (July 10-12, 2026), the festival is positioning itself as the ultimate “unsung” retreat for music lovers who have outgrown the carnival atmosphere of traditional summer circuits. There are no ferris wheels here. Instead, there are 136 acres of historic farmstead, ancient hiking trails, and a lineup of Canada’s finest songwriters—including Blackie + The Rodeo Kings, The Bros. Landreth, and Tim Baker—performing in a setting that feels more like a private sanctuary than a concert venue, a reason to get in the car and leave the city behind.

Five minutes from the festival gates, Durham is the kind of Grey County town that travellers have been quietly discovering for years. Set along the banks of the Saugeen River — an Ojibwa name meaning ‘the mouth of the river’ — Durham is framed by McGowan Falls, winding conservation trails, and the kind of main street that still has an actual diner.

Grey County, situated roughly two hours north of Toronto, has long been known as a four-season escape: hiking and canoeing in summer, brilliant fall colour, charming small towns full of local food, art galleries, cideries, and craft breweries. Durham sits in its southern pocket, close enough to make a long weekend easy, far enough to feel genuinely away.

As audiences from the GTA and Southwestern Ontario seek more meaningful ways to spend their summer weekends, Four Winds has become the go-to destination for the “Slow Festival” experience.

“We aren’t trying to be the loudest weekend on your calendar; we want to be the most restorative,” says Ariana Dalie, Executive Director. “At Riverstone, the music competes with the sound of the river and the wind through the trees. It’s about stripping away the noise of 2026 and getting back to why we love live music in the first place—connection and storytelling.”

Festivalgoers are encouraged to make it a true getaway by exploring the local “Butter Tarts & Buggies” trails, swimming at nearby McGowan Falls, or simply taking advantage of the campus’s professional observatory for world-class stargazing far from urban light pollution.

New for 2026, the Heritage and Cultural Stage serve as the festival’s spiritual center. In partnership with Elephant Thoughts, this space is dedicated to Indigenous storytelling and traditional music forms. It is an intentional space for “unplugged” moments, where the barrier between performer and listener disappears.

The Riverstone Campus is designed for the full weekend experience. Three-day camping passes let you settle in — into the land, into the music, into a pace that has nothing to do with a screen. Accessible facilities accommodate persons with mobility aids, allergies, and respiratory sensitivities. Durham’s conservation area, hiking trails, and the Saugeen River are minutes away for those who want to extend the trip into a proper Grey County getaway.

With the recent closure of beloved community events like Riverfest, Four Winds has emerged as a vital refuge for fans of intimate, roots-based gatherings. By capped attendance and focusing on a high-quality, largely Canadian lineup including Begonia, Tom Wilson, and Reuben & The Bullhorn Singers, the festival maintains a “family-and-friends” vibe that larger events simply cannot replicate.

FESTIVAL DETAILS:

  • What: Four Winds Music Fest 2026
  • When: July 10-12, 2026
  • Where: Riverstone Campus, 233639 Concession 2 WGR, Durham, ON
  • The Vibe: Low-fi, high-fidelity, nature-first.
  • Tickets: Three-day camping passes and single-day tickets are available now at www.fourwindsmusicfest.com.
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About Four Winds Music Fest Inc.: A not-for-profit organization brought to audiences by The Happiness Mafia in partnership with Elephant Thoughts, Four Winds is dedicated to community-building and environmental stewardship through the power of live music.