For three decades
the Skydiggers have been integral members of Canada's vibrant folk-rock scene, garnering considerable critical acclaim and community support despite repeated industry setbacks and limited commercial success. Inspired to write songs after attending a concert by the Hi-Fi's (later
Blue Rodeo) at the Cabana Club in Toronto, founding member
Josh Finlayson formed an acoustic duo with
Andy Maize in 1988, quickly attracting attention with their strong melodic vocal harmonies. With the additions of songwriter
Peter Cash, drummer
Wayne Stokes, and bassist Ron Macey,
the Skydiggers rapidly became darlings of the Toronto club scene.
Less than a year after forming,
the Skydiggers became the first signing of the new Canadian branch of Enigma Records, releasing their self-titled debut LP in 1990. Sales were modest but the record garnered two charting singles on Canadian radio, "Monday Morning" and "I Will Give You Everything," giving the group the foundation for the first of many Canadian cross-country tours. Despite their growing popularity, their new record company was unable to promote the album properly; soon the slim economics of the Canadian music marketplace and the collapse of the U.S. parent company forced Enigma Canada into bankruptcy. Undeterred, several former members of Enigma formed FRE Records, bankrolling and releasing the second
Skydiggers album,
Restless, in 1992. Critically acclaimed,
Restless spawned their biggest hit single ("A Penny More") and is considered by many fans and critics as the high-water mark of the band's recording career.
FRE and Enigma Records were then picked up for distribution by Capitol/
EMI, which reissued the first album and released the album
Just Over This Mountain in 1993, which ironically -- after three records and a dozen tours of the country -- helped earn the 1993 Juno Award for Most Promising Group of the Year. In 1995, the band signed to Warner Records, releasing
Road Radio; simultaneously, FRE Records went bankrupt, discontinuing all of the band's back catalog. The lineup of the group also changed: most notably,
Peter Cash left to form
the Cash Brothers with his brother
Andrew. Only
Finlayson and
Maize have remained steadily part of
the Skydiggers, often touring Canada as a duo, as well as with established Canadian artists such as
Blue Rodeo and
Cowboy Junkies. Most notably,
Maize has used his many bad experiences with record labels to create a thriving independent Canadian record label and distributor, MapleMusic, responsible for successfully releasing and promoting such Canadian artists as
Paul Brandt,
Tegan and Sara,
Matthew Good,
Loreena McKennit,
Daniel Lanois, and
Sarah Harmer.
The band's next album, 1997's
Desmond's Hip City, was released on the independent DROG Records label, and found
the Skydiggers experimenting with a harder sound, and even incorporating some slight trip-hop influences. In 1999, frustrated that their best-selling album,
Restless, was still unavailable due to the legal limbo surrounding FRE's bankruptcy, the band independently released Still Restless: The Lost Tapes, assembling a newer version of the album around the original rehearsal tapes. There and Back, a live recording from Toronto's Horseshoe Tavern, appeared in 2000, followed by 2003's rootsy
Bittersweet Harmony, a 2006 acoustic collaboration with
the Cash Brothers, and the 2008 studio album
City of Sirens. A year later, they took stock of their career with the 2009 anthology The Truth About Us: A Twenty Year Retrospective.
In 2012,
the Skydiggers returned with their eighth studio album,
Northern Shore, released on
Cowboy Junkies guitarist
Michael Timmins' Latent Recordings. Recorded at both
Blue Rodeo's Woodshed Studio and
the Tragically Hip's Bathhouse, the album included a guest appearance by returning member
Peter Cash. The holiday-themed
Angels followed two years later, after which they explored the work of
Byrds singer/songwriter
Gene Clark on 2016's Here Without You. In 2017, they delivered the
Timmins-produced
Warmth of the Sun, featuring the singles "Apology," "When You're on a Roll," and "Needle and Thread." ~ Laurie Mercer