![]() ![]() Wordplay that would entice and excite Rush’s Neil Peart. “Sacred and Mundane” as a title features some of the same kind of A deceptive acoustic opening leads into a second blast of hard rock power. As a statement of purpose informing the listener that Tiles is back, Paul Rarick’s vocals are pleasant, layered and multitracked to add richness to the mix. Tiles opens their 5th studio album with a crunch and a bang “Hide in my Shadow” is a tasty rocker with loads of distorted guitar and a punchy, insistent drum line that pushes Paper, Tiles showcases material that is well and truly theirs. As the band has grown and, yes, progressed, these influences have fallen further to the side, and on Fly Uncomfortable, worried that it was more imitation than influence. Often shares similar sonic touchpoints to Rush’s material, while earlier albums have perhaps exhibited a bit of influence in songwriting that may have made some listeners The fact that Terry Brown has produced or mixed the majority of their efforts has led to a sound that Past efforts have been compared to Rush, for reasons both fair and unfair. Presents of Mind, released in 1999) is joined by founder members Chris Herin (guitars, keyboards), Jeff Whittle (bass) and Paul Rarick (vocals) on 8 tracks ofĭiverse and heavy progressive rock, with nods and winks to 1970’s hard rock that sound genuine, not forced. Original drummer Mark Evans (last heard on a Tiles album on parts of The album reunites the band’s ‘classic’ line-upįor a full-length collaboration for the first time since 1997’s Fence the Clear. CBC will also begin simulcasting its morning radio show on TV in Winnipeg next fall.Detroit’s Tiles is back with a vengeance on Fly Paper, their fifth album (and first studio effort in four years). While he said he couldn’t report on recent ratings because Winnipeg is a Numeris diary market, Schwartz allowed that Breakfast Television was not achieving the ratings the network hoped it would.Ĭompetitors in the market include Global Television’s Morning News Winnipeg and CTV’s CTV Morning Live, both launched in the past two years. Schwartz says the new show aims to focus the company’s efforts on its most popular program in the market. The new show hits TV sets next Monday, Jan. CT on City and Wheeler in the Morning with Rena and Philly will be live 6 a.m. Wheeler in the Morning will run from 6 a.m. The TV version of the show, Wheeler in the Morning, will feature interviews and other in-house segments from City television personalities Drew Kozub and Jenna Khan during periods when radio listeners are hearing music. Wheeler in the Morning with Rena and Philly will be broadcasting its radio show as usual, only with cameras tracking the shows hosts in action. Jordan Schwartz, VP, in-house productions, Rogers Media, says 11 other Breakfast Television staffers will be moving over to the new show. The switch means the loss of 14 positions, including the jobs of Breakfast Television Winnipeg hosts Courtney Ketchen and Jeremy John. City has introduced a new morning strategy for Winnipeg, taking Breakfast Television off the air in the market, and replacing it with a broadcast version of popular radio show Wheeler in the Morning, which also runs on the Rogers Media-owned 92 CITI-FM as Wheeler in the Morning with Rena and Philly. ![]()
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