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SATURDAY JULY 25 | Great Lake Swimmers | 8:00PM

  • Jan 17
  • 2 min read

Critically acclaimed Southern Ontario indie-folk band Great Lake Swimmers, led by Tony Dekker, craft lush, homespun Americana from rural soundscapes—and return with their most instinctive, immediate album yet, Caught Light, hailed as part of a career that’s earned Polaris Music Prize shortlisting and multiple Juno Awards nominations.


Purchase advance tickets on SHOWPASS HERE ($50 plus tax and fees) OR at the door while quantities last ($55 plus tax)


Dinner is available with our kitchen open until 9pm. Reservations are strongly suggested—make yours HERE. We are an intimate 85-seat venue, so every seat is a great seat! While we do our best to accommodate all seating requests, they cannot be guaranteed. For the best experience, we recommend making reservations in even numbers (for example, a party of three may be seated with an additional guest). Doors open half an hour before showtime for those who will not be dining with us.



Featuring a blend of acoustic instruments, rural soundscapes, and wistful vocals, Great Lake Swimmers are a critically acclaimed indie-folk group led by Tony Dekker. Based in Southern Ontario, the group emerged in the early 2000s with a succession of heavily atmospheric albums recorded in old silos and rural country churches. The music developed in that pastoral warmth, performed and recorded in acoustically resonant and historical locales with a revolving cast of personnel. They are renowned for homespun folk and lush, intimate Americana in their live shows. 


Their newest album, Caught Light, released in October 2025, is their most immediate and instinctive album to date. Recorded in just five days in Ontario’s Ganaraska Forest with producer Darcy Yates (Bahamas) and engineer Jimmy Bowskill (Blue Rodeo), it draws warmth from early ’70s folk-pop while embracing a new spontaneity and directness in Dekker’s songwriting. 


Great Lake Swimmers have been shortlisted for the prestigious Polaris Music Prize and nominated twice for Canada’s Juno Awards, with the CBC calling them “a national treasure.”

 
 
 

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