The Midway State Profile Page
| Cover | Artist / Album | Category | Rating | User Rating | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Midway State Holes (Remedy 2008) | Rock | 3/5 | 0/10 | |
| The Midway State The Midway State (EP) (Remedy 2006) | Rock | 4/5 | 0/10 |
| Cover | Artist / Album | Category | Rating | User Rating | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Midway State Holes (Remedy 2008) | Rock | 3/5 | 0/10 | |
| The Midway State The Midway State (EP) (Remedy 2006) | Rock | 4/5 | 0/10 |

Sometimes to get noticed you have to leave a place that's comfortable for unfamiliar territory. Nathan Ferraro, lead singer, songwriter and pianist for The Midway State learned that lesson when he was just 16: "I have my dad to thank for it really, he bought us the van," says Ferraro.
Keys to a $2,000 Chevy Beauville in hand, The Midway State ditched the prospect of summer jobs and left their little ski town two hours north of Toronto to trek all the way across the continent playing shows for anyone who would have them. "We played everywhere booking our own gigs," says Nathan. They performed in biker bars, living rooms, coffee shops, and even the odd club when they got lucky. The guys slept in their van, ate dried noodles and granola bars and relied on new friends for showers and the occasional couch.
As soon as Nathan was out of high school, he picked up and moved to Toronto with his best friend Daenen. "We stayed in an apartment for $75 a month each with two old band mates. There were four of us in bunk beds in one room," he says, "but we knew it was where we had to be to move forward." His instincts were right. In time their demo fell into the hands of multi-platinum, award winning producer Gavin Brown. Things clicked and The Midway State was soon recording their first EP, the well-received Met a Man on Top of the Hill.
A few months after the EP was done, the band's indie video found its way to a few US A&R people and ignited a spark. "That's when everything changed. It wasn't too long before we found ourselves talking with Jimmy Iovine about his work with artists like John Lennon and U2," recalls Nathan. "You have to understand... where I grew up we had no cable TV, no internet. My house was so remote we didn't even have a proper address. Before those trips Daenen and I had never even been on a plane or seen a palm tree. It was nuts. I feel blessed. We were very lucky".
On their upcoming piano-driven pop/rock debut album, Holes (Remedy/Interscope), Brown is once again in the producer's seat. Recorded in the outskirts of Toronto at the legendary Metalworks Studios (David Bowie and Tina Turner laid down tracks there), Holes glistens with refined melodies, raw emotion and massive sing-a-long hooks.
As with Ferraro's poetic lyrics, The Midway State's musical influences are hard to pinpoint. The Midway State has understandably been compared to Ben Folds - their sound is truly a unique concoction of assured songwriting built on Ferraro's admiration of classic, gimmick-free artists. There is tenderness that runs through Holes that can arguably be attributed to Nathan's earliest influences. "Carole King is my all-time favorite. I just fell in love with the way she crafts her songs," he says. "Growing up, I listened to everything from Cat Stevens and Dire Straits to Neil Young and Peter Gabriel. I also love Coldplay, Snow Patrol. I just love music really. Whatever gets to me, it has nothing to do with genres and everything to do with the songs."
Ferraro's touring history reflects that appreciation for all types of music. Over the last year, The Midway State has played with a diverse range of artists from dramatic stylist Mika to the rootsy Rocco DeLuca &The Burden. "Sometimes we'd even tour with hardcore bands. People would see me bring a keyboard on the stage and be like, ‘Whoa, what is going on?'" But the band has won over even the most resistant crowds. "In the end, I think people just relate to honesty and we try to give them that," says Ferraro.
The Midway State is already attracting many eyes and ears in Canada. In its second week, The Midway State's debut album Holes broke the top 100 on the Canadian sales chart. The Midway State entered the Billboard Top Canadian Emerging Artist Chart with both "Never Again" (#8) and "Change For You" (#20) simultaneously. The Midway State has also been added to roughly 60% of all Canadian college radio stations in addition to several commercial stations, including Toronto's Mix99 and Ottawa's KissFM.
