Babes for Breasts

Rocker Tara Holloway comes home

After an uncharacteristically long nine-month break from touring, homegrown rocker Tara Holloway is thrilled to be back on the road doing a cross-Canada jaunt.

“I had been going for a few years straight there, so I just needed to regroup,” Holloway says. “But I’ve been songwriting with friends, and I got reinspired. It was like, all right! Back to touring – here we go!”

The Ottawa-born musician turned out her first professional recording effort, Sins to Confess, in 2010. It was released independently, but it’s since been picked up by Light Organ Records and will soon be re-released with a bonus track co-written by Holloway and Australian musician Ben Lee.

Fans probably won’t be complaining about the wait. They’ll be too busy getting their paws on the 2010 release, which many Canadians haven’t yet heard.

“I’ve toured a lot in Ontario and BC, but I [haven’t done] the cross-Canada thing for four years,” says Holloway, who has also spent time working in the US, where she recorded songs for the TV show Sons of Anarchy. “The first time I toured across Canada, in 2007, I just had my home demos. Now, I’ve made this fancy, well-produced record, and I’m signed to a label that I think is really cool.”

The tour will stop in 18 cities and close with a hometown fundraiser show on Oct 27 at St Brigid’s Centre for the Arts, as part of Babes for Breasts.

Babes for Breasts is a national touring benefit show founded in 2003 by Ottawa musician Ana Miura to unite female musicians and raise money for breast cancer, which affects thousands of Canadian women. The group has raised $45,000 to date.

The live show at St Brigid’s will also celebrate the release of its first fundraising CD, which is made up of 17 donated tracks from Canadian female musicians, including Ember Swift, Annabelle Chvostek and Jill Zmud.
Holloway’s homecoming promises to be a powerful night.

Read More About:
Culture, Music, Arts, Ottawa

Keep Reading

The cover of Work to Do by Jules Wernersbach; Jules Wernersbach

‘Work to Do’ shows just how dramatic a grocery store can get

Jules Wernersbach’s energetic novel delves into the intricacies of queer entrepreneurship, climate change—and class revolt
Side-by-side images of author Sara Ahmed holding her dog, wearing pink sparkles with dark hair, and the cover of her book "No! The Art and Activism of Complaining." The book cover is light pink with black text on a white background.

Sara Ahmed says we need more complainers, not less

Whether it’s queer community, academic or government institutions, the feminist scholar says there's value in complaints
Nini Coco with an up arrow behind her; Juicy Love Dion with a down arrow behind her

‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ Season 18, Episode 14 power ranking: The final three

Who can win? Who will win?
Zane Phillips

‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ Season 18, Episode 14 recap: Top of the morning to Ru

We’ve finally reached the end of in-season play, with just a LaLaPaRuZa and finale to go
Advertisement