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  1. Beast was a Canadian electronic music duo based out of Montreal. Its members were vocalist and lyricist Béatrice Bonifassi and composer/producer Jean-Philippe Goncalves. Bonifassi was the main songwriter for the band and the music was composed and produced by Goncalves.

    • Rush. Rush - Tom Sawyer. No list of the best Canadian bands can be complete without Rush. This prog trio from Toronto never allowed themselves to be defined by just one sound.
    • The Tragically Hip. The Tragically Hip - Ahead By A Century (Official Music Video) These guys enthralled people across Canada for decades until their frontman, Gord Downie, died in 2017.
    • Nickelback. Nickelback - How You Remind Me [OFFICIAL VIDEO] We don’t understand why there has been a fashion to revile Nickelback. As a band with over 50 million album sales and a long list of sold-out concerts, this post-grunge band is one of the most commercially successful Canadian bands of all time.
    • Arcade Fire. Arcade Fire - Everything Now (Official Video) Winner of the Grammy for Best Album back in 2011, Arcade Fire has this fantastic ability to appeal to people across the spectrum of music from rock to dance.
  2. Beast was a Canadian electronic music duo based out of Montreal. Its members were vocalist and lyricist Béatrice Bonifassi and composer/producer Jean-Philippe Goncalves. Bonifassi was the main songwriter for the band and the music was composed and produced by Goncalves.

  3. Beast is the debut album by the Canadian band Beast. The album was made available internationally on iTunes on November 4, 2008. While it has been physically released in Canada, international releases have not been announced.

    • Snow. If Snow had never done anything other than be a reggae-influenced Canadian rapper named Snow, it would be enough to wholly solidify his historical legacy.
    • Martha and the Muffins. Martha and the Muffins blew out of Toronto’s New Wave scene with their classic 1980 club hit “Echo Beach.” Martha Johnson sings in the relatable voice of an office clerk, bored at her 9-to-5 job, fantasizing of a romantic beach escape all by herself, over herky-jerky guitar/synth churn.
    • Terri Clark. The much-revered era of Nineties country just wouldn’t have been the same without the contributions of Terri Clark. The Alberta-born singer got her start playing for tips (and a $15 flat rate) at Nashville’s famous honky-tonk Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge in 1987, and raced into the Top Three just a few years later with her 1995 debut single, “Better Things to Do.”
    • April Wine. Pioneering arena rockers April Wine moved from Halifax to Montreal at the start of the Seventies, and then spent the rest of the decade churning out tuneful, middle-of-the-road rock hits, alternating between sentimental, keyboard-sweetened love songs, and upbeat, guitar-heavy love songs.
  4. Jul 22, 2016 · Enter the best-known Canadian deathcore band that’s not Cryptopsy in 2008: Despised Icon. Generally, this a band where people beyond their teens who don’t much care for deathcore anymore, myself included, can enjoy to some degree.

  5. Aug 3, 2024 · Over 29K music fans have voted on the 130+ Best Canadian Rock Bands. Current Top 3: Rush, The Guess Who, The Tragically Hip