Andrew Morrison of The Jerry Cans is setting up to play what would be — for most bands with their popularity — a standard-sized gig at Toronto's Horseshoe Tavern. Instead, the concert has become something much bigger: a showcase of northern Canadian musicians that he and his bandmates hope makes the money they spent on the trip worthwhile by maximizing the participating bands' exposure.

It took more than $10,000 to get the five-piece band from Iqaluit, where they're based, to Toronto — and that's only counting the plane tickets. It's a significant amount of money for the band, which performs largely in the Inuktitut language.

"Touring is super-challenging," Morrison said a few hours before the group's show, part of the Curator Series during Toronto's North by Northeast (NXNE) music and arts festival.

"Even for this show, we're paying for it," he said, since they've already used up all the grant money they're eligible for and have received.

Northern Canadian musicians are ballooning in popularity, thanks in large part to streaming, which has given these artists the ability to reach audiences as never before. But it's also forcing them to rely more heavily on live shows and touring to generate an income. In the past, they would have benefited from album sales.

Artists from Canada's remote communities face a particularly difficult, expensive and emotionally draining reality of struggling to simply get to the same venues that musicians from the South can easily access, said Morrison and Jerry Cans bandmate Nancy Mike.

Morrison says it cost more than $10,000 to get his band to Ottawa for a single tour. 'We've struggled a lot to get out of Nunavut sometimes to play music.' (Jackson Weaver/CBC)

"[Flying] from Iqaluit to Ottawa is, like, $2,200 return for one person," said Mike.

And because they took every opportunity to play as many dates as possible while touring in the south, "we'd be exhausted by the end of it," she said.

Northern spotlight

In the past 10 years, northern and Indigenous music has been winning over bigger and bigger audiences, and some artists have leveraged that into international recognition, said Morrison and Mike.

Nancy Mike, accordionist and throat singer with The Jerry Cans, grew up and still lives in Nunavut. She says they have had to 'constantly work' to afford trips down south, sometimes at the expense of her mental health. (Jackson Weaver/CBC)

Renowned Nunavut throat singer Tanya Tagaq, a Juno Award- and Polaris Music Prize-winner, was recently profiled on 60 Minutes, while Northern Quebec singer Elisapie Isaac (who performs as Elisapie) was featured on NPR's All Things Considered in March.

Josh Qaumariaq, a Nunavut "Arctic soul" singer and one of The Jerry Cans' featured NXNE guests, was recently signed by Toronto entertainment agent Julien Paquin and is headed to Nashville's Americanafest in September.

Meanwhile, The Guardian sent reporters to Iqaluit to cover the "booming" Inuit music scene and Nunavut Music Week — an event founded by members of The Jerry Cans in 2017. The writers interviewed local artists like electro-pop singer Riit and Juno-winner Aasiva.

Tanya Tagaq, a Polaris Prize-winning Inuk throat singer, has been featured internationally in The Rolling Stone, 60 Minutes, and Pitchfork. Members of The Jerry Cans believe it's evidence of an increased interest in northern music. (Katrin Braga)

"Iqaluit has always had lots of talented people; it's just now, and in more recent times, it's been building outside of Iqaluit, outside the territory and even outside Canada," said Morrison.

"People are finally sort of paying attention to what I think are already amazing things that have been happening there for many, many years."

Mike, the sole Inuk member of The Jerry Cans, believes the fascination is largely fuelled by an interest in Indigenous artists.

"Indigenous people now are proud to present what their talents are to the world, and feeling a little bit more comfortable" doing so, she said.

From left, The Jerry Cans' Nancy Mike, Andrew Morrison, Gina Burgess, Brendan Doherty, and Steve Rigby in Iqaluit, where they founded Nunavut Music Week nearly two years ago. (The Jerry Cans)

Though some critics argue there still aren't enough Indigenous musicians on services like Spotify, the music industry's switch to a streaming model has undeniably had a profound effect. According to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, streaming now constitutes nearly half of all revenue in the global recorded-music market.

"Music has never been so global as it is right now," said Liam Killeen, an artist manager at Coalition Music who also teaches a talent management course at Ryerson University in Toronto.

In this environment, Killeen said, artists from Nunavut, the Northwest Territories and Yukon can just as easily be discovered as those who are closer to musical hotspots and urban centres.

When I get home, step on my home grounds, that's when I feel all colours come out, like I can be me again. - Nancy Mike

But unlike when artists could rely on album sales for revenue, they must now rely on streaming, which earns them much less, forcing them to focus on alternative sources of income. This can put a disproportionate strain on northern acts.

"If we look at touring [for a young artist from the North] — which is so, so vital nowadays … to building a real fan base — the biggest issue you're going to find is logistics," Killeen said from Coalition Music's Toronto-area headquarters.

In the red 'before your first show'

The inaccessibility of some northern communities can push the price of goods above five times the national average, because flights from Nunavut and Canada's other territories are uniquely expensive . Couple that with the already high expense of music production, and you start to understand why artists from the North are at a significant disadvantage.

The only Inuk member of The Jerry Cans, Nancy Mike, left, says touring can be particularly difficult, both practically and emotionally. (Jackson Weaver/CBC)

To travel to Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver or Toronto, artists will already have spent several thousand dollars before they've even touched down, Killeen said.

"It's a little bit daunting to see how in the red you are before you've played your first show."

As a result, northern artists will often try to maximize their trips by staying for long periods and playing more venues. Renting a vehicle and trailer, including insurance, adds to the bill.

Coalition Music's Liam Killeen says northern artists struggle more than southern ones, who have better access to more venues in more towns. 'I think sometimes in southern Ontario, we don't realize how spoiled we are.' (Dave Macintosh/CBC)

It's true that musicians from all over Canada string together shows for months-long tours, but it doesn't compare, Killeen said.

For instance, southern Ontario bands are "spoiled" because they can play "50 shows between Windsor and Montreal" while spending most of their time at home, "not in a hotel, not taking those expenses," he said.

Funding 'not proportional'

There is help available. All Canadian musicians can apply for provincial and federal funding, such as from Canada Council for the Arts, as well as compete for grants from the Foundation Assisting Canadian Talent on Recordings (FACTOR), a private-public arts funding agency. Musicians from remote communities are eligible to apply for additional funds, up to $1,000 per band member, depending on which province or territory the musician is from.

In 2017-18, for example, The Jerry Cans received nearly $70,000 from the government of Nunavut, which also sponsors Nunavut Music Week.

But even that amount doesn't go far enough, Killeen said: Hotels, transportation and gas for multiple tours a year can leave a band $30,000 in the red.

In addition, it costs money to fly south to record with the experienced producers and technicians that southern bands have much easier access to, Morrison said.

While it's important to acknowledge the financial support of groups like FACTOR and the Canada Council, "it's still very little," he said. "It's not proportional compensation for what needs to happen up North."

The temptation to move south

Singer Qaumariaq, who performs as Josh Q and lives in Iqaluit, is also grateful for grants he's received from groups like the Canada Council, but said it's still not enough. He constantly weighs whether shows south of Nunavut are even worth performing.

Even though he's at the beginning of his career, when an opportunity to play across Canada is especially valuable, he turns down gigs he would love to accept. At times, instead of travelling and performing with his full band, The Trade-Offs, he hires local studio musicians to help offset costs.

"Each time we get offers and the places cannot offer [to pay for] travel … we are like, 'Is it worth it?' Because it's so expensive," he said.

Josh Qaumariaq, who performs as Josh Q, often debates whether it's worth it to perform shows in Canada's South, despite the fact he's just starting out, 'because it is so expensive.' (Jackson Weaver/CBC)

The temptation to leave his home and move south is always there, Qaumariaq added, because it would be easier and cheaper.

Other artists have taken a similar path. Tagaq, one of northern Canada's most successful artists, spends much of the year in Toronto, returning to her hometown of Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, in the summer.

But for The Jerry Cans, moving south isn't an option.

"Not a chance," said Morrison.

Moving south to advance her musical career is impossible, Mike said, because her creativity is tied to her home — the source of her inspiration. It's what makes the situation so difficult: She makes the music she does because of where she's from, but feels the resources to succeed aren't there. In addition, the struggle of staying on the road for months at a time puts a strain on her mental health and forces her to spend time away from her three children.

"When I go outside [in Toronto], I see cement," said Mike.

"When I get home, step on my home grounds, that's when I feel all colours come out, like I can be me again."