Northern Lights Favorite musical acts — some of them Jewish — are in the forefront of a Canadian musical renaissance. It seems that everything's gone wrong, since Canada came along / Blame Canada! Blame Canada! / They're not even a real country anyway ... — From "Blame Canada" (a song from the 1999 film "South Park: Bio-ger, Longer & Uncut') GEORGE VARGA Copley News Service S atirical lyrics to the contrary Canada has been a fertile source of pop music since Joni Mitchell, Neil Young and the Band rose to prominence in the 1960s. Now, the country that also produced Rush, Hank Snow, the recently reunited Guess Who and ja77 piano legend Oscar Peterson is enjoying a musical renais- sance. Our neighbor to the north has become home to such U.S. favorites as Barenaked Ladies, Nelly Furtado, - punk-pop upstarts Sum 41, and has spawned such suc- cessful expatriates as Shania Twain, Alanis Morissette and k.d. lang, producer David Foster and Late Show With David Letterman bandleader Paul Shaffer. Shaffer banters with Dave every year about taking off for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, and k.d. lang, recently discovered she is Jewish on her mother's side (through her Jewish maternal great-grandmother) — despite being raised as a Christian. She played the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville one recent Yom Kippur, but "quietly fasted" on her own. Barenaked Ladies features Jewish member and lead singer Stephen Page, a member of Temple Sinai in Toronto, where he lives with wife Carolyn and sons Isaac and Benjamin. He regularly goes home for Rosh Hashanah. "I try to make the effort to do those kinds of things and stay connected with the home front," he has said. BNL performs Saturday, Dec. 29, at the Palace of Auburn Hills. Ignored By The Media The wave of new talent has emerged despite only spot- ty media coverage and a lack of U.S. record deals. Nevertheless, such promising young acts as the Cash Brothers, Diane Dufresne and the Weakerthans could soon join the ranks of such gifted Canadians as Ron Sexsmith, Lilith Fair founder Sarah McLachlan, Celtic- music violin star Natalie MacMaster and feminist singer-songwriter Ferron — as well as Rufus Wainwright. "It's amazing how little Americans know about Canada," said Wainwright, who was born in New York and has lived in Montreal since he was 3. 12/28 2001 54 "But I like to keep it that way. It's quieter. There's something good about maintaining the 'Canadian mystique."' That mystique contributes to the allure of such notable Canadian musicians as Loreena McKennitt, Bruce Cockburn, Leonard Cohen and Giles Vigneault. Cohen, a favorite of R.E.M. and Nick Cave, once accepted a Juno Award (his country's equivalent of a Grammy) by remarking that only in Canada could someone with his flat, droning baritone voice be hon- ored as the top male singer of the year. Cohen, born to a Jewish family in Montreal, is a practicing Buddhist and an ordained monk. He recent- ly left a California Zen Buddhist temple, where he'd been meditating for the past five years, to release his newest album, Ten New Songs; it reached No. 3 on the Israeli charts. "There are a lot of great Canadian musicians," said jazz star Diana Krall, a Vancouver-area native and a two-time Grammy Award-winner. Fellow Canadian Sarah Harmer agreed. "There is, musically speaking, a broad spectrum of sounds being created by people born in Canada, who exist in the Canadian music scene but not beyond," said Harmer, a rising singer-songwriter with several appealing albums to her credit. "I think that's a beautiful thing, and the fact that people in America or Armenia won't have access to [all of] it is what makes the world so wonderful," she con- tinued. "The fact you have indigenous sounds from Cape Breton and Newfoundland is a good thing." A Diverse Group Canada's current crop of talent is diverse, indeed, and may be the strongest since Mitchell, Cohen, the Band and other icons made an international impact in the '60s. The same decade also saw the rise of such notable homegrown artists as Gordon Lightfoot, Buffy Sainte- Marie and jazz guitar phenom Lenny Breau, while the 1950s gave birth to such briefly popular doo-wop vocal groups as the Diamonds, the Four Lads and the Crew Cuts. The latest batch of promising Canadian bands includes Flashing Lights, Royal City, the Philosopher Kings, Nickelback, Kittie, Treble Charger, Econoline Crush, Our Lady Peace, Veal, and the Celtic-tinged Barrage. The funk-pop Toronto-based Philosopher Kings, fea- turing brothers Jon (on keyboards) and Jason (on bass) Levine, owe much to the Motown sound, without mimicking it. Equally notable are such arresting singer-songwriters as Lara Fabian, Maren Ord, Hawksley Workman, Melanie Doan, Martina Sorbara and Kurt Swinghammer. "There's a real tradition of live music here," said Gordon Downie of the Tragically Hip, a very popular band that has never duplicated its Canadian success in this country "That's the tradition that Canadian bands come out of, playing live," Downie continued, speaking from Toronto. "It's not that novel, but you log a lot of miles before you make that first record." Non-rock idioms are also thriving in Canada, be it the teen-pop of the Moffatts and SoulDecision, or the hip-hop stylings of Choclair, K-OS and Kardinal Offishall. Then there are such techno artists as Mistress Barbara and DJ Maus, along with country-pop singers Terri Clark and Carolyn Dawn Johnson. Little Exposure Some of these artists are familiar to American listeners. Many are not, in part because Canada seems to be a world away, at least when it comes to radio and TV exposure in this country for musicians who don't have U.S. record deals. Moreover, too many gifted Canadians whose albums are available here in the U.S. often toil in obscurity, just as Mitchell and Young did before moving to Los Angeles in the '60s. A common reason is that the genre-leaping music they perform is at odds with most U.S. radio stations, which favor niche formatting and employ myopic pro- gram directors to ensure stifling rigidity. And, heaven forbid, if an artist is from Quebec and sings - in French, since music performed in any foreign language (including Spanish, despite the Latin music surge) is shunned by most U.S. radio programmers. As a result, many Americans have never heard such Canadian musical treasures as La Bottine Souriante, Mary Jane Lamond, the McGarrigle Sisters, Ashley MacIsaac, Jane Siberry or the Rheostatics, a band that this year celebrated its 21st anniversary yet is virtually unknown outside its native country. To hear a bemused Wainwright tell it, there are other problems besides the fuzzy knowledge of Canadian music in this country. "I have people come up to me [in the United States]," he said, "who say: 'Oh, I have a friend in Vancouver. Do you know him?'" Harmer experienced a similar encounter with a lis- tener at one of her concerts in this country. "I remember talking to someone a couple of years ago about where Canada was," she recalled, speaking from New York. "You know, people often ask: 'Where are you from in Canada?' But it depends where in the U.S. you're