Artist / Band
Biography
The Laurie Bower Singers – Canada’s Studio Soundtrack
The story of the Laurie Bower Singers is less about chart hits than it is about presence. For more than two decades, their voices seemed to be everywhere in Canadian life—on radio jingles, television themes, variety shows, commercials, and an unbroken run of albums that defined the sound of smooth, professional harmony. Behind it all was trombonist, arranger, and choral leader Laurie Bower, whose knack for marrying jazz sophistication with pop clarity made his singers indispensable to broadcasters and record producers alike.
Born in Kirkland Lake in 1933, Lawrence “Laurie” Bower studied trombone and choral technique at the University of Toronto and cut his teeth in the dance bands of Benny Louis, Ozzie Williams, and Mart Kenney. He was soon a regular in CBC studios, part of a generation of musicians who moved fluidly between jazz clubs at night and commercial sessions during the day. Bower’s reputation grew not only as a player but also as an arranger with a gift for clarity—he could take any group of singers and give them a polished, unified sound.
The Laurie Bower Singers came together in 1969, first as a compact vocal quintet and then gradually expanding into a rotating ensemble of Toronto’s finest session singers. At a time when the CBC and the Canadian Talent Library were commissioning music to fill airwaves with homegrown content, Bower’s group was perfectly placed. They were versatile, reliable, and fast. The group could cut a full album of covers in a matter of days, record a pair of jingles in the morning, and back a jazz orchestra on television the same evening.
Their albums, issued steadily through the 1970s—often on the Canadian Talent Library imprint—captured their lush, easy-listening style: re-voiced pop and folk hits arranged with orchestral sweep. But their real influence went far beyond LPs. By their own estimate, the singers recorded hundreds, even thousands, of commercials. Cal Dodd, one of the later members, once joked that they were doing “two jingles a day, every day, for 25 years.” If you turned on Canadian radio or television during those decades, chances are you heard the Laurie Bower Singers without knowing it.
What set them apart was Bower’s insistence on precision without losing warmth. His charts gave the singers the silky quality of American groups like the Ray Conniff Singers, but with a flexibility that allowed them to slip into jazz, folk, country, or advertising work without missing a beat. They became the “house sound” of countless CBC productions and a model of professionalism for younger singers breaking into the Toronto studio scene.
By the end of the 1970s the group had even reached the U.S. market, with three albums released stateside, but the tides of popular taste were shifting. While disco and rock dominated commercial radio, the Laurie Bower Singers remained most valuable in the worlds of broadcasting, jingles, and live television. Bower himself branched out in the early 1980s, co-founding the Spitfire Band and continuing to play trombone with big bands led by Guido Basso, Peter Appleyard, and Jim Galloway.
The group wound down its activities in the late 1980s, formally retiring around 1990. Yet their legacy is less about one big hit and more about saturation. They were part of the fabric of Canadian sound during a formative period, when broadcasters and advertisers relied heavily on live studio talent. The Laurie Bower Singers brought polish and consistency, ensuring that Canadian music—whether on a prime-time CBC variety show or in a thirty-second toothpaste jingle—always sounded world-class.
Today their records are prized as artifacts of the Canadian Talent Library era, and Laurie Bower himself is remembered as a linchpin of Toronto’s studio culture: a musician who quietly shaped the way Canada sounded during a quarter century of rapid change.
-Robert Williston
136 tracks
Showing 10 of 12 tracks
Feelin'
Didn't We?
You're Driving Me Crazy
Don't Go Breaking My Heart
Here's That Rainy Day
I've Found a New Baby
Wedding Cake
Penny Lane
The Importance of the Rose
Sing Me a Rainbow
Look What They've Done To My Song, Ma
Thorn In My Shoe
El Condor Pasa
Mississippi
Think
Silver Bird
Sweet Ginger Bread Man
Up On Cripple Creek
Pretty Lady
Put Your Hand In The Hand
10 tracks
Take Me Home Country Roads
Lay it On Me
I Think It's Gonna Rain on Me Today
Together
Everybody's Reachin' Out For Someone
Love and Maple Syrup
Country Comfort
It Takes Time
Look and See
Rita, Put Your Black Shoes On
What is Christmas
Love and Maple Syrup (Gordon Lightfoot)
Everybody's Reachin' Out for Someone
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Song Sung Blue
Cotton Jenny
Morning Has Broken
Me and Julio Down By The Schoolyard
How The Singers Sing
Brand New Key
Magnificent Sanctuary Band
Is Someone Listening?
The Young New Mexican Pupeteer
Pussywillow Cat-tails
Showing 10 of 12 tracks
Guitar Man
Papa Joe
Wish I Was A Plane
Happy Dreamer
You Are What I Am
Rain Brings People Together
Shadow Song
Battle Of New Orleans
Daniel
Crooked Mile
Showing 10 of 12 tracks
Angie Baby
Just a Little Song
Sunshine On My Shoulders
I Got a Name
When You Find a Sad Song
Circle Round The Sky
Back Home Again
Think I'll Write a Song
Sundown
Stop And Smell The Roses
Christmas is for Children
Showing 10 of 11 tracks
The Way I Want
Woman
Hey Look
Rainy Day People
If You Feel
Una Paloma
50 Ways
Come To Mother
Do You Know
Got A Feelin'
10 tracks
Looks Like We Made It
Everything Old is New Again
Evergreen
Love to the People
Sir Duke
Southern Nights
Country Fair
Don't Give Up On Us Baby
Daybreak
When I Need You
10 tracks
Ready To Take A Chance
Tell No Lies
You Needed Me
Just To Be Alone With You
You're The One That I Want
You Never Done It Like That
She's Always A Woman
You
You Don't Bring Me Flowers
My Life's A Song
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Rock With You
You Decorated My Life
Lotta Love
When You Say Goodbye
Take The Long Way Home
Minute To Minute
One More Love Story
Too Much Is On The Line
September Morn
Do You Think I'd Call It Love
10 tracks
Fool That I Am
Nine to Five
It Goes Like It Goes
I Go To Rio
Don't Cry Out Loud
Kiss Me in the Rain
Don't Ask Me Why
Could I Have This Dance
Rhumba Girl
Out Here On My Own
10 tracks
Love Will Turn You Around
A Love Song
Bye Bye Love
Theme from Ice Castles - Through the Eyes of Love
Key Largo
Theme from Chariots of Fire - Race to the End
The Rose
I Wish That I Was Making Love (To You Tonight)
Don't Blame Me
American Music
2 tracks
Didn't We
If You Feel The Way I Do
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