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Five Questions With… Skydiggers' Josh Finlayson

In November 2017, Skydiggers co-founders, Josh Finlayson and Andy Maize, found themselves turning to the healing power of music to deal with the recent loss of several friends and family members.

Five Questions With… Skydiggers' Josh Finlayson

By Jason Schneider

In November 2017, Skydiggers co-founders, Josh Finlayson and Andy Maize, found themselves turning to the healing power of music to deal with the recent loss of several friends and family members. A weeklong writing retreat at the Banff Centre led to a recording session in early 2018 at The Tragically Hip’s studio The Bathouse with engineer/producer Nyles Spencer, drummer Peter von Althen and multi-instrumentalist Aaron Comeau. The results are Skydiggers’ latest full-length, Let’s Get Friendship Right.


Initially intending to write and record a suite of songs chronicling the Five Stages of Grief, the idea for the album gradually morphed into a nine-song celebration of the enduring relationships that have influenced, inspired and carried Finlayson and Maize through three decades of working together, and finding a way to overcome loss through music’s “good medicine.”

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To coincide with the release of Let’s Get Friendship Right, the band is running a unique contest to remix the album’s current single, Ineligible, with full details available at skydiggers.com/ineligible. Deadline for entries is Oct. 21, with the winner to receive a $250 gift certificate from Long &McQuade.

Skydiggers are playing select dates across Canada this fall, wrapping things up in Toronto on Dec. 21 at the Danforth Music Hall. We spoke with Josh Finlayson just as they were about to head out on the road.

 

What makes Let’s Get Friendship Right stand apart from your past work?

I’d say the most significant difference is the production work by Nyles Spencer, who is the house engineer/producer at the Bathouse studio. I’ve had the chance to work with him on several occasions, and he’s very talented and intuitive. We’ve worked with many great engineers over the years, and Andy and I like the process of having people lead us to new places musically. Nyles embraced that, and we loved the results. We often record as a full band, but for this one, we recorded each song to a click track or loop and built it from the ground up.

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What songs on the record are you most proud of and why?

I like If I’m Spared. I think it’s a great example of Andy and I collaborating as songwriters. And Nyles, along with Peter Von Althen and Aaron Comeau, really elevated the recording. I also like Questions Of Love. It feels like our attempt at writing a James Bond theme. And the first single, Ineligible, is very cool. 

The band has been through a ton of changes over the past 30 years, but the Maize-Finlayson partnership remains strong. What has kept you together all this time?

Humour would be a big component. You need that as a tonic for any long-term partnership. But above all, the band has been a terrific place for us to express ourselves over the years—personally and collaboratively. Music makes for good medicine for those who listen to it and make it. We feel fortunate to have the band in our lives and still have an audience that’s supportive and interested.

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What's been the biggest change in your life over the past year?

No big changes of note.

What's your best touring story?

There’s so many; it all blurs into one tour at some point! We’ve had incredible experiences going to places in Canada I may have never gone otherwise. We played at the Dawson Music Festival a couple of times. On one tour, we travelled up the Yukon River from Whitehorse to Dawson performing at First Nations communities along the way. That sticks out.

Web: skydiggers.com

Facebook: @ skydiggers

Twitter: @ skydiggers

YouTube: @ theskydiggers

Press: Beth Cavanagh / What's The Story

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Lily Allen
Charlie Denis

Lily Allen

Pop

Lily Allen Coming to 3 Canadian Cities on 2026 North American Headlining Tour

The outing in support of the singer's provocative "West End Girl" album will be the singer's biggest U.S./Canada headlining outing to date.

Lily Allen is gearing up for her biggest North American headlining tour to date. The “Tennis” singer announced the dates for the nine-stop outing in support of her West End Girl album on Friday morning (Dec. 5), revealing that it is slated to kick off on April 3 in Chicago at The Auditorium, and feature stops in Toronto, Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., Atlanta and Los Angeles before winding down on April 28 at The Masonic in San Francisco.

Allen will perform the album in full on the tour, in the order the tracks appear on the LP, with tickets for Lily Allen Performs West End Girl slated to kick-off with an artist pre-sale sign-up open now through Monday (Dec. 8) at 11 p.m. ET. The artist pre-sale will then open at 10 a.m. local time on Dec. 10 and runt through 10 p.m. local time on Dec. 11. A general on-sale will then open at 10 a.m. local time on Dec. 12; click here for more ticketing information.

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