Episode Details
Back to EpisodesOne Hundred Dollars Reborn After Leukemia
Description
The history of the Canadian band $100 deconstructs the transition from a vulnerable acoustic duo to a high-stakes Alternative Country ensemble through the architecture of a near-fatal medical hiatus. Driven by the unvarnished songwriting of Simone Schmidt and Ian Russell, the group's evolution from the 2007 Hold It Together EP to a two-time Polaris Music Prize nominee and the eventual formation of The Highest Order serves as a profound study in creative survival and artistic metamorphosis. We begin our investigation by stripping away the "standard garage band" narrative to reveal a 2006 Toronto scene where Schmidt and Russell functioned as a raw, stripped-down duo with nowhere to hide on stage. This deep dive focuses on the "Coiled Spring" effect of 2007, analyzing how Russell’s sudden leukemia diagnosis and the resulting chemotherapy effectively wiped out the band’s public momentum while winding their internal creative clock tighter through medical isolation. We examine the transition to the 2008 Forest of Tears era, deconstructing the decision to expand into a massive seven-piece ensemble by drafting the rhythm section of John Ray and the River—including Dave Clark on drums and Kyle Porter on bass.
The narrative explores the "Sonic Architecture of Healing," analyzing how the addition of Stu Crooks’ weeping pedal steel and Jonathan Adjemian’s swelling organ provided the vital heartbeat required to carry the emotional weight of songs born in a room of sickness. Our investigation moves into the "12-Day Sprint" at The Woodshed studio, deconstructing the 2011 Songs of Man recording sessions where the seven-piece band played live off the floor to capture a staggering level of collective intuition. We reveal the "Polaris Blindness" paradox, exploring why the jury’s decision to judge art purely on merit validated the band’s brilliance without relying on a sympathy narrative. The episode explores the 2012 "Metamorphosis," analyzing the escape valve of Schmidt’s solo project "Fiver" and the stylistic pivot from grounded storytelling to the experimental stratosphere of psychedelic country. Ultimately, the legacy of $100 proves that a creative project can function as a protective chrysalis, designed to foster growth and ensure survival before breaking open to let new iterations fly. Join us as we look into the "Stockpile of Intensity" in E5234 to find why the most successful missions in art often end in evolution rather than longevity.
Key Topics Covered:
- The Coiled Spring Hiatus: Analyzing how the constraint of a leukemia diagnosis forced the songwriting of Schmidt and Russell to shift away from external validation toward a psychological lifeline.
- The Seven-Piece Expansion: Exploring the mechanical necessity of drafting the John Ray and the River rhythm section to match the sonic architecture to the band's emotional weight.
- The 12-Day Live-Off-the-Floor Session: Deconstructing the musical sprint at The Woodshed studio and the collective intuition required to record a complex ensemble without digital fixes.
- Polaris Music Prize Validation: Analyzing the significance of the 2009 and 2011 long-list nominations as symbols of artistic merit independent of the band's back-story.
- The Chrysalis Metaphor: Why the 2012 transition into "The Highest Order" and "Fiver" represents a completed mission rather than a commercial failure.
Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles accessed 3/21/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.