Episode 03 – The Tea Party
In this episode, Jeff Burrows looks back on the 90s as a wild, defining decade — a blur of massive festivals, MuchMusic-fueled momentum, and moments that didn’t feel surreal until years later. From the chaos and camaraderie of Edgefest to touring with Foo Fighters and Green Day (“walking through art museums with them in the afternoon, then watching them destroy their trailer at night”), he remembers the era as both overwhelming and deeply formative. Festivals felt like summer camp for Canadian rock bands, and the sheer scale of it — playing for tens of thousands a night — didn’t fully hit him until much later.
He speaks fondly of Lollapalooza ’96, signing with Rush’s management team, and the eclectic mix of Canadian bands who were all doing their own thing without chasing trends. MuchMusic, he says, was the great amplifier — the reason bands could show up in any town and draw a crowd — even if the video budgets left them half a million dollars in debt. Looking back, Burrows feels the loss of that era and the platform that helped shape it. The 90s Canadian rock scene was a rare, messy, electric moment in time, and for The Tea Party, it was a ride that took them far beyond anything they ever expected.
Connect with The Tea Party:
WEBSITE || THE TEA PARTY INSTAGRAM || JEFF BURROWS INSTAGRAM || MUSIC
Tracklist:
1.) The Tea Party – Temptation || Transmission
2.) The Tea Party – The Messenger || TRIPtych
3.) The Tea Party – The River || Splendor Soils (on broadcast version only)
4.) The Tea Party – Writing’s On The Wall || Seven Circles (on broadcast version only)
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