Birchmount Records

Birchmount Records

Birchmount Records — Canada’s Budget Label with Hidden Gems
For decades, Canadian record collectors have stumbled across albums on Birchmount Records in thrift bins, yard sales, or dollar-store racks—often not realizing they were holding pieces of a fascinating chapter in Canadian music history. What looked like a budget label churned out by a major distributor was, in fact, an ambitious experiment that mixed reissues, compilations, and a surprising amount of original Canadian content. Behind the cheap price tags lay a catalogue that captured everything from garage rock and psych-pop to jazz, funk, and country, including contributions from artists who would later leave a permanent mark on Canadian music.

Origins at Quality Records
Birchmount was created in 1969 by Quality Records, Canada’s largest distributor at the time. Quality already handled a vast network of international labels and had its own successful imprints (Barry, Broadland, Celebration, REO, Ringside, among others). Executives George Keane and George Struth saw an opportunity to build a budget line that would recycle older Quality titles, strike deals with other Canadian independents, and release new material under a uniform brand. They named it Birchmount Records, after the street running near Quality’s Toronto headquarters.

The Big Launch
The launch was unusually bold. In September 1969, Quality announced a 22-album first wave, nearly 90% of it Canadian content—something unheard of at the time. Releases included reissues of acts like The Guess Who and The Beau-Marks, licensed material from Lyman Potts’ Canadian Talent Library (featuring Guido Basso, Eugene Amaro, Al Baculis, and others), and a compilation deal with Don Grashey’s Gaiety Records, which brought obscure groups such as The Plague and The Checkerlads into the fold.

To bolster the catalogue, Quality also created a series of “shadow albums”: records by faceless studio bands with no touring existence, padded with 50% cover versions and 50% new songs. Producer Greg Hambleton—then cutting his teeth at Sound Canada Studios—was hired to oversee these projects. He brought in his brother Fergus Hambleton, songwriter Jay Telfer, and Yorkville psych-rockers The Magic Cycle to record bed tracks. Out of these sessions came albums by “Suzanne,” “Sultan Street Nine,” “Tuesday’s Children,” and “Candy Rock Fountain.” While marketed as genuine artists, they were really vehicles for Hambleton originals and clever studio work.

Early Canadian Highlights
Birchmount’s early catalogue offered an eclectic spread of talent:

Mary Saxton, an Edmonton soul singer barely out of her teens, released her debut album.

Beau Hannon and the Mint Juleps captured the Niagara R&B scene.

Cal Cavendish and Bette Graham offered folk and lounge stylings.

Pete Schofield and the Canadians documented Toronto’s high-school jazz scene.

Wayne Versage, original vocalist of The Shays before David Clayton-Thomas, cut his only solo LP.

Folk duo Merrick and Kathy Jarrett recorded Folk Songs for Children.

This unusual diversity made Birchmount stand apart from ARC or Paragon, other Canadian “budget” lines of the day.

Second and Third Waves
A second wave of 22 albums appeared in November 1969, again heavy on Canadian content (about 75%). By early 1970, the third wave ballooned to 32 albums, though the Canadian share slipped to under half. Still, this batch produced some of the label’s most coveted titles:

*Wayne McGhie’s In the Sunshine—a soul-reggae-funk LP whose drum breaks later became legendary with hip-hop producers.

Alan Thicke’s debut LP, featuring quirky originals and one track sampled decades later.

Friday Afternoon’s Johnny Cash Hits, a strange hybrid of country covers and psych-tinged originals.

Betty Vidal’s mostly original country-rock album.

The Everlovin’ Singers, a slice of Canadian sunshine pop.

Sadly, a fire at Quality’s warehouse in 1970 destroyed much of the stock from these releases, instantly making them some of the rarest LPs in the Birchmount catalogue. Today, originals often sell for hundreds of dollars.

Decline of Canadian Content
By 1972, the focus shifted toward repackaging American stars like Johnny Cash, Hank Williams, Gladys Knight & the Pips, and the Isley Brothers. Canadian content, which had been 90% at the launch, dwindled to less than 25% by the late 1970s. There were exceptions: country artists such as Diane Leigh and Hank Smith appeared, and in 1978 Birchmount struck a deal with the Canadian Talent Library to issue a dozen LPs by Peter Appleyard, Rob McConnell’s Boss Brass, Jackie Mittoo, Eugene Amaro, the Laurie Bower Singers, and others.

The End of the Line
Birchmount carried on into 1980, ultimately releasing more than 400 albums. Of these, roughly 90 were Canadian recordings. Most were sold cheaply in department stores and bargain bins, which kept the label profitable but limited its prestige. Still, for collectors, Birchmount is now recognized as a treasure trove: a mix of hidden gems, psychedelic curios, and early works by artists who later made names for themselves.

Legacy
What began as a budget imprint became an unintentional archive of Canadian talent at a crucial moment in the country’s recording history. Birchmount gave debuts to singers like Mary Saxton, preserved rare psych-pop experiments, and inadvertently documented Canada’s cultural mosaic in the late sixties and seventies. Today, its records—once dismissed as cut-rate—are sought after worldwide, proving that even a bargain-bin label can leave behind a priceless legacy.
-Robert Williston

Tracks

Artist Track Title
Pete Schofield and the Canadians Mrs. Robinson The Now Sound
Sultan Street Nine These Eyes ST
Ian & Sylvia Tyson I Don't Believe You Lovin' Sound
Jackie Mittoo Frangipani (Jackie Mittoo) Let's Put It all Together
Beau-Marks Fullfillment The High Flying
Tuesday's Children Traces ST
Bette Graham Alberta Today Colour Me "Canadian"
Candy Rock Fountain Kaleidoscope Love Can Make You Happy
Eddy Dietrich & The Rancheros Rose of San Antone Old Time Country Favourites Vol 2
Ian & Sylvia Tyson Lovin' Sound Lovin' Sound
Hank Smith (Heinz Schmidt) Sharing the Good Life (With You) The New Country Sounds Of Hank Smith
The Laurie Bower Singers Boney Fingers Back Home Again
Diane Leigh The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down Diane...Country Queen
Rob McConnell and the Boss Brass Send a Little Love My Way The Best Damn Band in the Land!!
Vic Franklyn (Lyn Evans) Brazil Leave Tenderly
Keath Barrie Like A First Time Thing Sings of Love and Places
Guido Basso Goofus It's Happening (re-issue)
Bonnie Scots Coulter's Candy Laugh and Cry
Bette Graham The Prairies of Saskatchewan Colour Me "Canadian"
Beau-Marks Baby Face The High Flying
Stew Clayton The Nineteen Year Old My Canadian Home
Rising Sun Groovy Day (All on a Sunny Day) Born to Be Wild
Betty Vidal Kickie Gentle On My Mind
Bette Graham The Fool On The Hill Shades of Blue
Tom Milestone And The Jarvis Street Revue Watermelon Man Strands of Time
Candy Rock Fountain Love (Can Make You Happy) Love Can Make You Happy
Jack Hennig Lonesome City Lisa Brown
Keath Barrie Love Has Made a Woman Out of You Only Talkin' to the Wind
Diane Leigh Show Me The Way To Go Home Diane...Country Queen
Lynn Jones (aka Marilyn Jones) Your Gonna Love Yourself in the Morning They Don’t Play Our Love Songs Anymore
Wayne McGhie & the Sounds of Joy By The Time I Get to Phoenix ST
Dick McClish A Man and a Woman The Dick McClish Quintet
Pat Riccio The Song Is You Pirates, Buccaneers & All That Jazz
Vic Franklyn (Lyn Evans) I'm Not Anyone Friends
Lynn Jones (aka Marilyn Jones) Come in From the Rain They Don’t Play Our Love Songs Anymore
Pat Riccio When the Saints Go Marching In Pirates, Buccaneers & All That Jazz
Earl Mitton & the Valley Rhythm Boys French Reel Play Downeast Fiddle Favourites
Hank Smith (Heinz Schmidt) Lady Sunshine Country with Strings 'n' Things
Alan Thicke Good-Bye ST
Stew Clayton Renfrew Valley My Canadian Home
Cal Cavendish Sarah Mountain Road
Guess Who Stop Teasing Me ST
Jerry Palmer Oh, Lucky Me Country Sound of Jerry Palmer
Dick McClish 'Til You Came The Dick McClish Quintet
Paul Anka We Made It Happen ST
Dick McClish Yesterday (guitar solo) The Dick McClish Quintet
Keath Barrie The Old Lamplighter Sings of Love and Places
Innovation We'll Sing in the Sunshine ST
Keath Barrie Swallows Only Talkin' to the Wind
Jack Kingston Isle of Newfoundland Springhill Mine Explosion
Jack Hennig Proud Mary Lisa Brown
Hank Smith (Heinz Schmidt) Where Do We Go From Here Country with Strings 'n' Things
Diane Leigh Where He Leads (My Love Will Follow) Diane...Country Queen
Hank Smith (Heinz Schmidt) Every Mothers Child The New Country Sounds Of Hank Smith
Ian & Sylvia Tyson Trilogy Lovin' Sound
Cal Cavendish Did I Call You Again By Her Name Mountain Road
Earl Mitton & the Valley Rhythm Boys Crooked Stove Pipe Fiddlin' for Fun
Hank Smith (Heinz Schmidt) The Long Green Line Country with Strings 'n' Things
Graham Teear How Insensitive Songs With Orchestra
Betty Vidal Apartment #9 Gentle On My Mind
Jack Hennig Going Away Lisa Brown
Bette Graham I Wanna Go Back Shades of Blue
The Laurie Bower Singers When You Find a Sad Song Back Home Again
Six People Messing Up My Mind Gentle in the Wind
Stu Davis (David Stewart) I've Got a Woman's Love Songs from the Heart of Johnny Canuck
Hank Smith (Heinz Schmidt) (We Live in) A World of Our Own The New Country Sounds Of Hank Smith
Wayne Versage Gentle on My Mind Gentle on My Mind
Earl Mitton & the Valley Rhythm Boys Duncan Davidson & Flowers Of Edinburg Fiddlin' for Fun
Guess Who Tossin' and Turnin' ST
Tuesday's Children Pack It In ST
Mary Saxton Big City Guy (Gary Paxton) Sad Eyes
Pete Schofield and the Canadians The Look Of Love The Now Sound
Jack Hennig Lisa Brown Lisa Brown
Pete Schofield and the Canadians Canada (A Centennial Song) It’s a Sign of the Times
Tom Milestone And The Jarvis Street Revue Yakety Sax Strands of Time
Metro-Gnomes We Are the Gentle People ST
Tom Milestone And The Jarvis Street Revue Coming Home Strands of Time
Graham Teear When Sunny Gets Blue Songs With Orchestra
Ian & Sylvia Tyson Big River Lovin' Sound
Guido Basso Tequila It's Happening (re-issue)
Hank Smith (Heinz Schmidt) There'll Never Be Another You The New Country Sounds Of Hank Smith
Tom Milestone And The Jarvis Street Revue Gimme Some Lovin' Strands of Time
Pete Schofield and the Canadians Canadian Sunset It’s a Sign of the Times
Wayne Versage Island Gentle on My Mind
Pete Schofield and the Canadians Taste of Honey It’s a Sign of the Times
Candy Rock Fountain All I See Is You Love Can Make You Happy
Jack Kingston Prince Edward Island Springhill Mine Explosion
Rising Sun Ain't Love Good Born to Be Wild
Cal Cavendish I Was Leaving Today Mountain Road
Mary Saxton Silent Thoughts (McAulley-Theuson) Sad Eyes
Tuesday's Children Call Me ST
Jerry Palmer That'll be the Day On My Way
Diane Leigh Stupid Cupid Diane...Country Queen
Friday Afternoon Folsom Prison Blues A Tribute to Johnny Cash
Pete Schofield and the Canadians Yesterday It’s a Sign of the Times
Hank Smith (Heinz Schmidt) Lonesome City The New Country Sounds Of Hank Smith
Metro-Gnomes Love Needs a Solid Foundation ST
Stew Clayton You Never Miss the Water My Canadian Home
Stu Davis (David Stewart) At Mail Call Today Songs from the Heart of Johnny Canuck
Earl Mitton & the Valley Rhythm Boys New Brunswick Hornpipe Play Downeast Fiddle Favourites

Gentle in the Wind

Love Can Make You Happy

ST

Thicke, Alan

Six People - Gentle In The Wind BACK

Six People

Six People - Gentle In The Wind LABEL 02

Six People - Gentle In The Wind LABEL 01

Graham, Bette - Colour Me "Canadian" Side 1

Graham, Bette - Colour Me "Canadian" Side 2

Graham, Bette - Colour Me "Canadian"

It's Happening (re-issue)

Basso, Guido

Guido Basso-Its Happening (Birchmount BM 527) LABEL 02

Guido Basso-Its Happening (Birchmount BM 527) LABEL 01

Guido Basso-Its Happening (Birchmount BM 527) BACK

ST

Al Baculis Singers (Birchmount) BACK

Innovation - ST LABEL 02

Innovation - ST LABEL 01

Innovation - ST BACK

Live!

Timoon, Adam

Adam Timoon - Live BACK

Franklyn, Vic (Lyn Evans)

Leave Tenderly

Friends

Franklyn, Vic - Leave Tenderly

Vic Franklyn - Friends BACK

ST Side 2

Comments

No Comments