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Presale codes were last updated (3 hours, 54 minutes ago) at 03-25 11:57 Eastern. Some presale codes are reserved exclusively for our members, learn why we do this here.
Presale codes were last updated (3 hours, 54 minutes ago) at 03-25 11:57 Eastern. Some presale codes are reserved exclusively for our members, learn why we do this here.
Circuit-Breaking Nostalgia with Our Lady Peace
For 30 years, Our Lady Peace has carried a tuneful, slightly off-kilter take on alt-rock born in Toronto clubs and sharpened on MuchMusic.
Thirty years, still curious
This anniversary run frames their shift from the raw push of Naveed days to the sleeker, tech-curious streak behind Spiritual Machines, after key lineup turns like drummer Jeremy Taggart's 2014 exit. Expect a set that centers 90s anchors like Clumsy, Superman's Dead, Somewhere Out There, and Starseed, with a couple of deep cuts slotted between radio moments. The room usually skews mixed-age, from fans who bought CDs in '97 to younger listeners who found the band through playlists, with a calm floor and sharp focus during quieter bridges.A crowd that listens hard
You'll spot weathered tour tees, a few Spiritual Machines robot sketches on signs, and people mouthing guitar hooks as much as choruses. Trivia heads know futurist Ray Kurzweil's voice appears on the original Spiritual Machines, and that 4am is often linked to Raine Maida's father's initials as well as a late-night writing hour. For clarity, everything here about songs and production flourishes is an informed read of recent shows rather than a locked blueprint.Our Lady Peace: The Scene Around The Songs
The scene reads like a respectful reunion, with faded Clumsy and Naveed shirts next to fresh prints of the Spiritual Machines robot art.
Nostalgia with new edges
You hear soft group humming on intros, then loud, tuneful shout-backs on lines like "Doesn't anybody know?" during Superman's Dead. Fashion leans flannel, denim, and comfortable sneakers, plus the odd leather jacket that has seen more clubs than closets.A sing-it-if-you-mean-it crowd
Merch tables move lyric tees and clean poster designs over novelty items, and people compare which city got the rare deep cut. Between songs, fans tend to swap low-key stories about MuchMusic premieres or first shows rather than filming every moment. The overall feel is community first, where heads nod during verses and pockets of fans raise hands for the big "whoa-oh" swells in Innocent. It is a crowd that shows up to listen, sing when asked, and let the band steer the night.Our Lady Peace: How The Songs Breathe Onstage
Raine Maida's voice sits high and slightly nasal, and he flips into a clear falsetto to lift pre-choruses without pushing the band to shout.
Hooks built on contrast
Steve Mazur favors bright, delayed patterns that leave space, then stacks fuzz for choruses, while Duncan Coutts glues parts with round, melodic bass lines. Live, many classics ride drop-D guitars and a half-step-down tuning, which gives the riffs weight while keeping chords easy to sing over. The group often reshapes intros, like teasing a quiet arpeggio before the crash in Clumsy, or stretching the breakdown in Naveed into a short, tension-and-release jam.Small tricks, big payoff
Drums tilt crisp and splashy rather than boomy, which keeps verses ghostly and lets choruses feel bigger without turning muddy. A subtle production touch is the use of short vocal slapback on refrains and occasional Kurzweil-style voice bits between songs, nodding to their concept roots without stealing focus. Lighting tracks the music in broad strokes, with cool washes for verses and warm blasts on choruses, more color accents than heavy effects.If You Like This, You'll Like Our Lady Peace's Circle
Fans of Bush often click with Our Lady Peace because both lean on tight, chiming guitars that bloom into big choruses.