Biography
Like a glacier scraping over Alberta’s musical scenery rearranging punk,
pop and pre-alt country, Jr. Gone Wild churned a wide, wild path. They picked
up and lost members with stunning regularity during their uncountable blurry
tours, eventually tallying up nearly 30 alumni, each of whom left their mark on
the band’s country-punk sound.
Formed in Edmonton in 1983, the band’s one constant has been singer/songwriter
Mike McDonald. Their then-novel practice of touring in a van on the young
Trans-Canada Highway worked to build Jr. Gone Wild’s legend — McDonald speaks
of days of drinking, fighting, being robbed, being sick and cold, all while
playing in dives. That touring helped to create songs that range from period
pieces that nail coming of age in the ‘80s to subtle heartbreakers capturing
fragments of the eternal human condition. The band’s penchant for pedal steel
and country-smoked moments set them apart from other bar bands of the day and
elevated the songs from simple pop choruses and tongue-in-cheek perspectives
into something meaningful and enduring.
By the time they broke up in 1995, Jr. Gone Wild just missed the alt-country
craze. In 2013 the band reunited, proving that instead of being ahead of their
time, Jr. Gone Wild are timeless.
Biography by Mary-Lynn Wardle