Skip to content

Whitehawk Arts Council schedules second concert of the season

The Whitehawk Arts Council will be presenting its second concert in the Stars for Saskatchewan concert series. The Lion The Bear The Fox is scheduled to take to the stage in Sturgis on November 16.
lion
From left, Christopher Arruda, Ryan McMahon, and Cory Woodward will be performing as Lion Bear For for the second concert in the Whitehawk Arts Council's Stars for Saskatchewan series.

            The Whitehawk Arts Council will be presenting its second concert in the Stars for Saskatchewan concert series. The Lion The Bear The Fox is scheduled to take to the stage in Sturgis on November 16.

            "Vancouver’s Lion Bear Fox is three huge voices joined as one, telling the truth through compelling story, honest narrative and unbridled passion, said The Lion The Bear The Fox website.

            "Three men go to war onstage every night to share a message of hope, vulnerability and redemption,” it said.

            The Lion The Bear The Fox is “a musical force of nature,” and an “emotional awakening” that’s sure to “be around for a lifetime,” according to the Nanaimo Daily News.

            "Originally known for their respective solo careers, Christopher Arruda, Ryan McMahon and Cory Woodward joined forces as The Lion The Bear The Fox in 2012 and was immediately selected as one of the top 20 unsigned bands British Columbia, it said.  The fall of 2013 saw the band release its self-produced breakthrough EP We’d Be Good Men and take Western Canada by storm, touring 15 times over the next two years including stops at Canadian Music Week in Toronto, Contact East in PEI, OSAC in Regina, the Mission Folk Festival and The Commodore Ballroom in Vancouver.

            They have had the pleasure of sharing the stage with artists like Tom Wilson, Good For Grapes, Elliot Brood and Kim Mitchell.

            This year The Lion The Bear The Fox further cemented itself as the new Canadian band to watch, the website said. “With the help of friend and producer Nygel Asselin, the trio spent 10 days in the Vancouver Island wilderness crafting “the record of their lives,” a collection of songs steeped in character and full of warmth.

            “One part folk, one part rock - a pinch of gospel and a dash of growl, the self-titled LP is a testament to the trio’s strength as songwriters,” it said. “Lush acoustic guitars are bookended by buzzing electrics and screaming organs, all tied together by rich percussion and three voices in mighty harmony.

            “It’s a sound that harkens back to an era when the song was paramount.”