Dylan Ireland: Folk-Rock’s Reluctant Rockstar

Dylan Ireland: Folk-Rock’s Reluctant Rockstar

It’s rare to come across a local musician who writes “Peterborough” into their music and makes you feel it, but Dylan Ireland does just that—and it lands. His story starts in Express & Company, a band that cut deep grooves on the Canadian folk scene. Their 2013 album Ontario wasn’t just a local hit; CBC Radio 2 and 3 played its tracks heavy, landing Dylan on national stages like Mariposa Folk and SXSW, and earning him Emerging Artist nods at both Mariposa and Peterborough Folk Festival.

When he broke out solo, Ireland’s debut Every Other Night hit with the force of Kings of Leon and Springsteen, but unfiltered and live-off-the-floor. Driving tracks like “Hard Enough” married rumbling guitars with heartland secrets, while “Silver Screen” built its atmosphere on haunting pedal steel and cinematic ache. The album, co-produced with James McKenty and featuring players like Jim Bryson, Loel Campbell, and Anna Ruddick, sounds less like a studio project and more like an open wound stitched with melody—and it all felt earned.

What gives Ireland’s music its weight is truth. He doesn’t dip into clichés—he writes wide-eyed and specific, whether he’s wrestling with lost love or drafting love letters to home. His track “Peterborough,” written just months after he landed here, telescopes in on belonging and the weird comfort of missing and making a place at once.

Then there’s the ugly beauty: the battles with anxiety, addiction, and the noise of the road. Ireland hasn’t fixed all the cracks, but he lays them bare, song by song, studio by studio, all while building a reputation as one of Canada’s most soulful storytellers. If music were a map, Dylan Ireland would be the town you pause in—not just for the right direction, but because you’re drawn to the hum of life there.

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