advertisement
FYI

Peter Katz: Like We Used To Be

This well-crafted piece of pop features warm vocals, lush production, and a catchy chorus.

Peter Katz: Like We Used To Be

By Kerry Doole

Peter Katz - Like We Used To Be (Independent): The Juno-nominated singer/songwriter from Toronto recently announced that his next album, City of our Lives, will be released on Sept. 18.


The album’s current single, Like We Used To Be, is already making a splash, and is now the #1 Most Active Indie, #2 Cancon and #5 Top Download overall at radio. It has also been added to some major playlists.

Such success is unsurprising, for this is well-crafted pop of a high order. Katz's warm vocals are framed by lush production, and the catchy chorus doesn't hurt.

advertisement

The tune was co-written by Katz and Grammy-Award winning producer/songwriter Rich Jacques (Lisa Loeb, Colin Hay), with production by Derek Hoffman (The Trews, RALPH, Caveboy) and mixing and additional production by Howie Beck.

"Like We Used To Be is about hitting that definitive end moment in a relationship," explains Katz in a press release. "Somehow that person still holds this ability to make your heart pound and your palms sweat, but you reach a point where you're able to feel the nostalgia of it all, without feeling like you need to go back. You can see a way to finally begin to move on." 

Katz's previous album, 2015's We Are The Reckoning, helped him earn the title of Best Male Vocalist in that year’s NOW Magazine reader’s poll, and the lead single, Brother, a duet with Royal Wood, was a hit on national public radio charts. A francophone version of that song featuring Rémi Chassé was a commercial radio hit in Katz’s birth province of Quebec.
 
His 2016 cover of Beyonce's Halo has become a viral online hit, with over 13.6 million views on YouTube. 

Links

Website

Facebook

Instagram

Twitter

Publicity: Beth Cavanagh, What's The Story?

advertisement
Bill Gilliland

Bill Gilliland

FYI

Obituaries: Toronto Record Label Pioneer Bill Gilliland, Global Music Trailblazer Dan Storper of Putumayo

This week we also acknowledge the passing of Sugar Hill Records owner Barry Poss, and top U.S. booking agent Dave Shapiro and former drummer Daniel Williams, who both died in a tragic plane crash.

Bill (William) Gilliland, a Toronto record label head, producer and music entrepreneur, died on May 17, at age 88.

An official death notice called him "a visionary force in Canadian music. A true architect of the country’s music landscape, Bill’s career spanned more than four decades, shaping the sounds of generations and launching the careers of many iconic artists."

Gilliland first made a mark with Arc Records, a subsidiary of Arc Sound Company Ltd. that was established in Toronto in 1958 by Philip G. Anderson. Gilliland and Anderson co-founded Arc Records in 1959 and purchased the Precision Pressing Co. in 1961. Under the direction of Anderson, its president, and vice president Gilliland, Arc Records entered into a contract with US Hit Records and released a series of pop singles albums under the name Hit Parade (1963–64) that specialized in regional artists and tribute albums.

keep readingShow less
advertisement