country
Canada
From Yorkville folk and prairie rock to the 6 sound and powwow-step
Top 10
Les titres emblématiques de cette région
Blinding Lights
The WeekndThe Weeknd grew up in Scarborough, Toronto and shaped a decade of R&B with the dark-tinted, hazy mixtape House of Balloons in 2011 before crossing into pop superstardom with Can't Feel My Face and Starboy. Blinding Lights, released in late 2019, became the most-streamed song in Spotify history. After Hours and Dawn FM cemented his synth-pop turn.
Canada has been an outsized exporter of pop music since the late 1960s, when the Yorkville folk scene in Toronto sent Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen, Neil Young, and The Band into the wider North American imagination. The 1990s belonged to Céline Dion and Shania Twain in the global pop charts, and the 2010s belonged to Drake, The Weeknd, and a Toronto R&B sound the city itself trademarked as the 6. Quebec runs a parallel francophone track through Félix Leclerc, Robert Charlebois, and Beau Dommage, and the country's First Nations musicians, from Buffy Sainte-Marie to The Halluci Nation, have made Canada a quiet pioneer of Indigenous-led popular music.
Questions fréquentes
Who is the most internationally successful Canadian musician?+
By total sales and streams, Céline Dion is the most internationally successful Canadian artist, with global sales above 200 million records. By 2010s and 2020s streaming, Drake and The Weeknd took over the global charts, with The Weeknd's Blinding Lights becoming the most-streamed song in Spotify history. Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen remain Canada's most artistically celebrated songwriters.
What is Toronto's 6 sound?+
The 6 is Drake's shorthand for Toronto, drawn from the city's two area codes (416 and 647). The 6 sound refers to the moody, atmospheric production aesthetic developed in the early 2010s by Drake's OVO Sound and The Weeknd's XO label: slowed BPMs, washed-out synths, late-night R&B vocals, and trap percussion. PARTYNEXTDOOR, Tory Lanez, and Daniel Caesar all came up in its orbit.
What makes chanson québécoise different from French chanson?+
Chanson québécoise is the francophone song tradition of Quebec, distinct from Paris chanson and tied to Québécois identity, the 1960s Quiet Revolution, and the rise of the Parti Québécois. It is sung in joual, the working-class Quebec French dialect, often deals explicitly with Quebec politics, and runs from Félix Leclerc's acoustic ballads through Robert Charlebois' rock breakthrough to Beau Dommage's 1970s neighbourhood pop.
Why is Canadian content (CanCon) regulation important to Canadian music?+
The 1971 Canadian content regulations (CanCon) require Canadian radio stations to play a minimum percentage of music that meets at least two of four Canadian-origin criteria (the MAPL system: Music, Artist, Production, Lyrics). The rules carved out a domestic market that allowed acts like Rush, The Tragically Hip, and Bryan Adams to build careers Canadian audiences could hear, and they remain a structural reason Canada punches above its weight in pop music exports.
Which Canadian Indigenous artists shaped the country's music?+
Buffy Sainte-Marie, Cree-raised in Saskatchewan, broke through in the 1960s Greenwich Village folk scene with Universal Soldier and remains foundational. In the 2010s, the Ottawa First Nations group A Tribe Called Red, now renamed The Halluci Nation, invented powwow-step by layering electronic dance music under traditional powwow drums and singing, winning a Polaris Music Prize and reshaping how Indigenous music could sound on a global stage.
Dernière révision : 2026-05
Sources & Références
- 1Encyclopedia of Music in Canada — Helmut Kallmann, Gilles Potvin, Kenneth Winters (eds.), 1992Livre
- 2The Tragically Hip and the Cultural Lifeblood of Canadian Music — The Guardian, 2017
- 3How Drake and The Weeknd Made Toronto a Music Capital — The New York Times, 2018
- 4Polaris Music Prize Annual Reports — Polaris Music Prize, 2024
- 5Music of Canada — Wikipedia contributors, 2024
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À propos de cet article
This page is based on documented music history, artist biographies, chart and award records, and cross-referenced sources from music journalism and academic research on Canadian and Quebec music.
Curated by the timeline.music editorial team.