London Underground

London Underground documents one of the most complete and continuous regional music records in Canada, tracing how a mid-sized Ontario city developed its own recording culture over more than a century, from the early twentieth century to the present day. Spanning orchestral dance music, early rockabilly and pop, garage and R&B, private-press rock, experimental and electronic music, funk, soul, hard rock, proto-punk, punk, post-punk, alternative, and independent rock, the archive shows how London functioned as a self-contained musical ecosystem with its own musicians, studios, venues, radio infrastructure, educational programs, manufacturing, publishing, and civic memory, as well as record labels from 1900 through 2025.

That continuum begins well before rock ’n’ roll. London was the birthplace of Guy Lombardo (born 1902), one of the most successful bandleaders in North American popular music and a pioneer of large-scale recorded and broadcast dance music. Long before independent labels, radio compilations, or underground scenes, Lombardo’s early musical formation in London led to an international recording career that helped define the sound, structure, and commercial reach of twentieth-century popular music. His success represents one of the earliest examples of a London-born artist shaping recorded music far beyond the city’s borders — and establishes London’s connection to recording history at the very start of the modern music industry.

By the 1930s, London was also home to Sparton Records of Canada, one of the most important early industrial pillars of Canadian recorded music. Founded in London in 1930, Sparton became a major manufacturer and distributor, pressing records for labels such as Columbia while also issuing its own catalogue. Although Sparton functioned primarily as a national production and manufacturing centre, its London operation was closely tied to Ontario’s broadcast and community-based music culture, releasing recordings by local artists including Priscilla Wright, Don Wright, and Lloyd Wright and the Radio Rangers, Southwestern Ontario performers such as Guelph’s Velvetones, Cliff McKay, and Ward Allen, and Toronto-area folk, country, and popular acts including Bob Scott and the Canadian Pioneers, the Travellers, the Happy Wanderers, the Rhythm Pals, and the Starlighters. Sparton was also the first company in Canada to manufacture stereo records, and its presence placed London at the centre of Canadian record production decades before the rise of independent rock labels or underground scenes.

London’s modern recorded history began in earnest in the mid-1950s. Artists such as Priscilla Wright and Lloyd Wright and the Radio Rangers were already recording professionally, supported by CFPL radio and television and a local broadcast culture that actively generated recorded output. By the early 1960s, the city was producing full-length albums and singles by acts like Larry Lee & the Leesures, The Tempests, Ronnie Fray and the Versatile Capers, and Johnny and the Canadians — groups that toured widely, appeared on national bills, and left behind recordings that now stand among the strongest documents of early Canadian rock ’n’ roll, rockabilly, R&B, and garage music.

The late 1960s and 1970s saw London broaden stylistically rather than narrow, as funk, soul, jazz-rock, hard rock, and progressive approaches emerged alongside earlier forms within an increasingly album-oriented local scene. This period of expansion coincided with the presence of GRT of Canada, the Canadian arm of General Recorded Tape, which operated out of London in the early 1970s and briefly placed the city inside the national recording industry. During this window, London-origin recordings by Thundermug, Truck, Canadian Conspiracy, and singer-songwriter James Leroy moved from local production into national distribution, while the same London-based GRT operation also handled major Toronto and regional acts including Klaatu, Lighthouse, Dr. Music, and Hamilton’s Grant Smith & The Power, situating London at the intersection of local creativity and Canada’s commercial recording infrastructure.

At the same time, London became home to some of the most radical experimental music in the country. The Nihilist Spasm Band — active from the mid-1960s onward — established an internationally recognized free-improvisation practice rooted entirely in London, releasing records, building custom instruments, and proving that the city could sustain long-term avant-garde activity independent of commercial pressures. Groups such as the London Experimental Jazz Quartet further document this parallel experimental lineage, operating alongside — not outside — the city’s broader recording culture.

This same locally rooted ecosystem also extended beyond records and clubs into national broadcast. Running parallel to underground and album-oriented growth, London-born Tommy Hunter became one of the most influential figures in Canadian broadcast music, hosting The Tommy Hunter Show from 1965 through 1992 and using national television to elevate country, folk, and popular music performance standards while launching and supporting generations of Canadian artists.

This experimental and technical current extended into academic and studio contexts. Fanshawe College emerged as a key site for electronic and studio-based experimentation, guided in part by producer Jack Richardson, who helped connect training to industry-level practice. Richardson — best known for producing landmark recordings by The Guess Who, Alice Cooper, Bob Seger, Kim Mitchell, Diana Krall, and later receiving Producer of the Year recognition for work associated with Alanis Morissette and A Tribe Called Red — played a crucial role in connecting London’s training environments to the highest levels of international recording practice.

Projects such as Dr. Philter Banx’s 1975 Moog-based LP, created by Fanshawe students working within one of Canada’s earliest post-secondary electronic music programs, were not anomalies. They were direct products of a functioning, locally rooted recording environment that encouraged experimentation alongside professional discipline.

London’s experimental lineage continued into electronic music through figures such as John Acquaviva, whose early work as a DJ, tastemaker, and studio collaborator was grounded in London. Before co-founding the internationally influential Plus 8 label, Acquaviva operated out of London, linking the city’s existing culture of experimentation to Detroit techno and extending London’s underground tradition into new technological forms rather than breaking from it.

London’s continuity is also reflected in artists whose careers bridged local beginnings and national success. Doug Varty emerged from the London scene through early groups such as Homestead and Southcote before charting nationally with Sea Dog and later Lowdown. Other artists with formative London roots include Garth Hudson of The Band, whose early musical development began in the city. Justin Bieber, also born in London, represents a later global extension of this pattern, demonstrating how London-origin artists have continued to shape popular music across eras.

By the late 1970s and into the 1980s, London became one of the most thoroughly documented punk and post-punk centres in the country. Nationally visible releases by Demics and ’63 Monroe sit alongside independent recordings by Crash 80’s, Sheep Look Up, Mettle, Second Thoughts, The Regulators, Conning Tower, The Hippies, Generics, Friendly Fire, and others. These artists operated within an active local circuit supported by venues, print culture, independent labels, and — critically — CHRW Radio Western, whose broadcasts and compilations preserved an extraordinary amount of material that might otherwise have disappeared.

CHRW’s role cannot be overstated. From early cassette and vinyl compilations through later CD projects, the station provided both exposure and documentation, capturing punk, alternative, experimental, and independent music as it happened. Releases such as The 1990 London Compilation, London Underground, and later CHRW projects show a city still recording, still organizing itself, and still leaving a clear historical trail. Animals Fight Back, issued by Yeah Right! Records, stands as a key example — linking local bands, radio, and independent production within the same ongoing network.

Throughout this period, London sustained its own independent labels and producers, including Auto Records (Peter Brennan), Jaymar Music (publishing), Raven Records in the 1990s, and Yeah Right! Records, creating release pathways that did not depend on outside industry centres. Yeah Right! remains active today, continuing to produce and support London-area artists and reinforcing the city’s long-standing independent label tradition.

This recorded legacy is now also reflected in formal music-specific preservation. The London Music Hall of Fame has documented and celebrated the city’s musical history through curated displays and permanent artifacts honoring artists with deep London ties, including Guy Lombardo, Tommy Hunter, Don and Priscilla Wright, Garth Hudson, Thundermug, ’63 Monroe, Sheep Look Up, and later generations such as Kittie. By presenting physical evidence of recorded and performed music across eras, the Hall of Fame reinforces London’s long-standing role as a place where musical activity was not only created and recorded, but remembered, contextualized, and publicly acknowledged.

Thanks are due to John Berkmortel (Gilded Cage) for his inspiration, materials, and long-standing documentation of the London scene, and to Peter Brennan, whose work as a musician and label operator helped shape the city’s independent recording history.

Taken as a whole, London Underground is a regional archive that shows how music was written, recorded, manufactured, circulated, broadcast, preserved, and institutionalized locally for more than a century. Few Canadian cities outside the largest centres can be reconstructed with this level of specificity. The records exist. The documentation exists. And thanks to sustained local and civic effort, so does the history — now gathered in one place at citizenfreak.com.
-Robert Williston

Notable omissions

This overview emphasizes London’s recording ecosystem rather than assembling a comprehensive list of London-born musicians. As a result, several important figures are omitted intentionally rather than by oversight.

Paul Pesco was born in London, Ontario, and went on to become one of the most successful Canadian-born session guitarists internationally, performing on major recordings by Madonna, Whitney Houston, Sting, Steve Winwood, and others. Pesco’s professional career unfolded almost entirely outside London, and his omission reflects the essay’s focus on locally rooted recording activity rather than later global careers. If included, he would logically belong alongside artists such as Justin Bieber as an example of London-origin talent whose impact was realized elsewhere.

Tom Wilson, the influential producer behind landmark recordings by Bob Dylan, the Velvet Underground, and Frank Zappa, was born in Wingham, Ontario, and maintains indirect ties to Southwestern Ontario through projects such as Central Nervous System and the Pepper Tree lineage. While his historical importance is unquestioned, including Wilson risks shifting the focus away from London itself, and his omission reflects a deliberate effort to keep the narrative geographically precise.

Hippies - Nuclear Disaster b/w How You Gonna Live?

Tempests - That's Right - Walk on By

Generics - Societal Hemhorrage (EP)

Mettle, London Ontario

63 Monroe - Stinkin' Out The Joint

63 Monroe - Stinkin' Out The Joint insert side 2

Larry Lee & the Leesures - Just A Little Too Much b/w Yes Tonight Josephine

Regulators - What's in the City b/w That´s Right Nothing's Left (picture sleeve)

Matt Luca - The Old Man b/w I'm Movin' On

jIM Ashby - Speed City (Acid Rock) b/w Speed City

Forest City Jazz Band - A Shanty In (Ottawa) Town b/w Danny Boy (Picture Sleeve)

Conning Tower - Indian Dancing b/w Looking Up From Under (picture sleeve)

Lowdown - No Doubt About It b/w The Girls Already Gone

Nihilist Spasm Band - No Record

Thundermug - Who's Running My World?

Vol 2

Dr Philter Banx vinyl side 1

Speed City (Acid Rock) b/w Speed City

ST

1981-05-25 Pre-Stranglers Party2-Zellots, Nach Dem Tode, and Radio 4

Rack em' Up

63 Monroe

JSS@Dave Clark 5 CROPPED

J & the C's

Tempests

London Experimental Jazz-Invisible Roots LABEL 02

Johnny and the Canadians - Say Yeah! b/w A Million Tears Ago (promo)

Say Yeah! b/w A Million Tears Ago (promo)

Rockus-Rack Em Up LABEL 02

Nihilist Spasm Band

Tracks

Artist Track Title
Septer Tribe ST
Pat's People What Have They Done to the Rain Today
Compilation Radio 4 - The Remedy Animals Fight Back! 25 Bands From London Canada 1977-1984
Dyoxen Sooner Than You Think First Among Equals
Compilation Dawna Jackson - Blind Alley Music Industry Arts 1977
Compilation Julie Choquette - Dream in My Head Music Industry Arts 1983
Graham, Mike Remembering Here I Am Again
Mettle Emotional Desert ST
Ham, John My Son The Blues Belong To Me
Compilation Keith Pereira with Mike McCarthy - Do What You Do Music Industry Arts 1977
Mad, The (aka M.A.D. (Mutually Assured Destruction)) God's On Drugs Songs for the Ugly
Septer Time Change ST
True Myth Thunderchild Telegram
McConnell, Rob and the Boss Brass In My Solitude (Ellington) (Norma Locke: vocals) Norma Locke, vocalist
Fray, Ronnie Cold Gray Morning Put This in Your Ear
Hot House Deathbird Burn it Down
Mettle All You Wanted ST
True Myth Light Years Before ST
Forest City Jazz Band Danny Boy A Shanty In (Ottawa) Town b/w Danny Boy (Picture Sleeve)
Thundermug Africa Who's Running My World?
Compilation Trout - One Foot Shallow CHRW London Underground Three
Canadian Conspiracy Are You Man Enough ST
Septer Me & You ST
Chain Reaction You've Got the Cure X-Rated Dream
McConnell, Rob and the Boss Brass Put Your Hand in the Hand On a Cool Day
Mad, The (aka M.A.D. (Mutually Assured Destruction)) Technological Noose Generation Zero
Monkey See Was it the Woman Monkey See
Compilation Mike Roth - Tahiti Music Industry Arts 1980
Compilation Blanket - The Crux CHRW London Underground Three
Durst, Bill Cry Like a River Live
Graham, Mike Gore Bay Momento of Manitoulin
McConnell, Rob and the Boss Brass No Time (Bachman-Cummings) The Sound of the Boss Brass
Mad, The (aka M.A.D. (Mutually Assured Destruction)) Hold Your Breath Taboo of the Western World
UIC New Race Like Ninety (Live)
Currie, Sandi Losing You ST
Brennan, Peter The Dunlop Project - Song for Amelia Auto Records Select Hits Volume 1
Nihilist Spasm Band This is a Test ¬x~x=x
Compilation Don't Touch The Dancers - Make Me Sick 94.9 CHRW Presents LDN
Lombardo, Guy Stars Fell On Alabama Enjoy Yourself!
Compilation Gilbert Smith - Talkin' 1980 Animals Fight Back! 25 Bands From London Canada 1977-1984
Compilation Dale Hancocks - Carribea Music Industry Arts 1983
Compilation Lola Brickida - Simone CHRW London Underground Three
Mad, The (aka M.A.D. (Mutually Assured Destruction)) Songs for the Ugly Songs for the Ugly
Cooper, Bob Understanding Understanding
Compilation Napalm Baby's - Teenage Suicide Animals Fight Back! 25 Bands From London Canada 1977-1984
Durst, Bill What Could Have Been Love Good Good Lovin
McConnell, Rob and the Boss Brass Seems to Me (Bryant) Norma Locke, vocalist
Lee, Larry & the Leesures Barefootin' Club Date
Graham, Mike Shadow of a Man People Music
Compilation Sifter - Abuses Me CHRW London Underground Three
Mad, The (aka M.A.D. (Mutually Assured Destruction)) Lonely Head Songs for the Ugly
Brennan, Peter Gilded Cage - Tara Auto Records Select Hits Volume 1
Pat's People Our Father Today
McConnell, Rob and the Boss Brass Ebb Tide Trombone Rob
Hunter, Tommy Loving Arms ST
63 Monroe Cyanide N.F.G.
Compilation The Bellows - Something (Sleeping) 94.9 CHRW Presents LDN
Durst, Bill The Great Willy Mammoth The Great Willy Mammoth
Lombardo, Guy Harbor Lights Enjoy Yourself!
Compilation Demics - Talk's Cheap Animals Fight Back! 25 Bands From London Canada 1977-1984
Canadian Conspiracy Love is Where You Find It A Change of Life b/w Love is Where You Find It
Duncan, Arlene Knowing You (Instrumental ftg Demo Cates) Knowing You
Septer I Need You ST
Compilation Don Bregg - Sounds So Nice Music Industry Arts 1983
Compilation Say Hello - Hot Hot Hot 94.9 CHRW Presents LDN
Mad, The (aka M.A.D. (Mutually Assured Destruction)) I.t.'s Life... Generation Zero Taboo of the Western World
Compilation Miles XU - Nothing Left 94.9 CHRW Presents LDN
McConnell, Rob and the Boss Brass Manha de Carnaval (Bonfa-Mario) Norma Locke, vocalist
Cooper, Bob Shoreline of My Destiny Understanding
Mad, The (aka M.A.D. (Mutually Assured Destruction)) Curious Songs for the Ugly
Hot House Stay Out in the Rain Burn it Down
63 Monroe Twist My Wrist Stinkin' Out The Joint
Lucas, Matt* The Old Man The Old Man b/w I'm Movin' On
Pat's People Less of Me Today
Aces Wild Frustration Race
Ham, John Whiskey Drinking Lady The Blues Belong To Me
Mad, The (aka M.A.D. (Mutually Assured Destruction)) Another Perfect World Generation Zero
McConnell, Rob and the Boss Brass If You Could Read My Mind On a Cool Day
63 Monroe Hijack Victim Hyjack Victim (compilation)
McConnell, Rob and the Boss Brass Delilah The Boss Brass
London Experimental Jazz Quartet Eric's Madness Invisible Roots
Terrell, Dana Not Talkin' Not Talkin' b/w Innocence
Pat's People Turn, Turn, Turn Today
Smith, Grant & the Power Loveitis Keep on Running
Crash 80's Thrills Waiting for the Heat b/w Thrills (picture sleeve)
Septer Physically Limited ST
McConnell, Rob and the Boss Brass God Bless the Child (Herzog-Holiday) Norma Locke, vocalist
London Experimental Jazz Quartet Spain is for Old Ladies Invisible Roots
Mad, The (aka M.A.D. (Mutually Assured Destruction)) Generation Zero - Embodied Frustrations Generation Zero
B. W. Pawley Road Show Bring Us Another Round (Bankruptcy Blues) Too Many Parties
B. W. Pawley Road Show Too Many Parties Too Many Parties
Lee, Larry & the Leesures Patches of Heaven Club Date
Thundermug Orbit Orbit
Cooper, Bob The Things That You've Given Away Understanding
Compilation Tad Zawadzki - Happy Summer Happy Days Music Industry Arts 1976
Compilation Mike Roth - Cool Cat Music Industry Arts 1980
Tempests Beans That's Right - Walk on By
Smith, Grant & the Power Grab This Thing Keep on Running
Aces Wild Change Deal Us In
Thundermug Beard Who's Running My World?

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