*All events are 21+ valid ID required for entry*
8 PM – Doors
9 PM – Show
BORN RUFFIANS
Born Ruffians – Luke Lalonde, Mitch Derosier, and Steve Hamelin – rose to prominence in the aughts indie blog era, the same Toronto scene that produced Canadian indie icons like Broken Social Scene, Tokyo Police Club, and Metric. Since that time, they’ve become one of Canada’s biggest indie rock exports, releas ing 8 albums and 3 EPs on some of the world’s most acclaimed record labels – Warp Records, XL Recordings, Yep Roc Records, Paper Bag Records, and their newly – minted Wavy Ha ze Records.
The group has toured internationally, supporting renowned artists like Caribou, Franz Ferdinand, Hot Chip, and The New Pornographers, while also headlining tours throughout North America, UK, Europe, and Australia. ‘Uncle, Duke & The Chief’ ( 2018), one of the final projects produced by the late, exceptionally – great producer Richard Swift (The Shins, Nathaniel Rateliff , Foxygen ) , brought the band into a new era: the album was lauded by NPR Music, Rolling Stone, and American Songwriter as a matu re, confident evolution of the band’s hooky left – of – center pop sensibilities. Their follow – up COVID – era trilogy ‘JUICE’ (2020), ‘SQUEEZE’ (2020), and ‘PULP’ (2021) , produced by Graham Walsh (Alvvays, Holy Fuck, METZ), charted on Billboard and US Alternative Radio Charts and garnered widespread acclaim from press outlets in North America and Europe.
In 2025 they return with “Beauty’s Pride”, with new band member Maddy Wilde in tow. Here, the band set out to create a r ecord that sounds like it was made in 2025: it’s a maximalist indie rock album that embraces hi – fi production techniques . It presents Born Ruffians as the rare veteran act that can still make you feel like you’re discovering your new favourite band.
QUEEN OF JEANS
If it weren’t for the fact that both Miri and Mattie were each the tokenized female (and queer) members of their respective bands, Queen of Jeans may have never existed. Their mutual frustration became the glue that bonded them together, and gave them a chance to finally create the kind of music they wanted to make, inspired by both their experiences plus a wide range of artists like St. Vincent, Camera Obscura, and Fiona Apple.
Releasing on Memory Music, Queen of Jeans’ All Again is an enveloping, rich indie-rock record, changing dance partners between cheek-to-cheek ’60s pop sweetness, ’90s alt-rock dirt, spacious and pained emo, and the songcraft and melodicism of the sharpest acoustic singer-songwriter acts. Miriam Devora (vocals, guitar, keys) and Matheson Glass (lead guitar, piano) along with the addition of Andrew Nitz (bass, keys) took extra care this time to create a Queen of Jeans full-length that reflected in sound and structure the emotional depths they were exploring.
The band recorded All Again at producer and engineer Will Yip’s Studio 4. The album’s 11 tracks, which play out a never-ending cycle of love and heartbreak, are loaded with presence and playfulness, giving weight to the memory and emotions that unfurl. As the record closes, it bleeds back into its introduction. Even when something is over, it’s not really over, is it?