“One of Canada's best new songwriters” - Canadian Beats
Contradiction and confluence. Singularity and totality. Break-up and renewal. On After the Sting of It, Kelly McMichael performs a wild yet precise balancing act in a constant process of redefinition, offering shifting perspectives emotionally and skipping genres musically for an album that’s always asking you to hold two ideas at once. With art-rock production flair that belies its humble processes, McMichael weaves unexpected sounds around her poignant, incisive words for a self-contained journey through the psyche.
The follow-up to 2021’s hit Waves—for which McMichael received an East Coast Music Award, three Music NL Awards, and a spot on the Polaris Prize shortlist—builds on its classic-rock core and expands wildly into psychedelic synth, drum machines, and found sounds. Though Waves was her solo debut, McMichael is no novice, previously performing as Renders and in the bands of Sarah Harmer, The Burning Hell, and the Hidden Cameras.
The cover for After the Sting of It—a collage of polaroids, fabric, and pieces of a painting by McMichael’s Oma Yolande Renders—offers an overture of what awaits on the vinyl inside: myriad moods and influences pulled together into coherence by a confident architect. The hot cinnamon red border holding it all in reflects its mood, angry and passionate. Like Waves it was recorded in McMichael’s adopted home of St. John’s, Newfoundland, also with the singer-songwriter Jake Nicoll, who also engineered and co-produced Waves. McMichael made much of Sting at home by herself; her debut’s success, she says, “gave me the confidence to be more playful.”
After the Sting of It is impressive in its emotional duality and unconcerned about fitting into any particular genre, music that sits in the comfort of its core ideas while being utterly unafraid to try new things. It plays exactly how its maker intended. “I write and record in a way that you’re just giving the song what it needs,” says McMichael. “Why limit the creativity? I don’t want limitations.”
Shortlisted for The Polaris Prize, 2022 Winner of ECMA 'Best Rock Recording'
"If post-Toronto was a genre, Kelly McMichael would be its poster child, champion, and priestess. Her debut solo album, Waves, is half confessional, half musing, as this musical chameleon ushers us about, through the eddies of her life in the wake of fronting past musical projects like RENDERS, Rouge and Thelma & Louise. This is the evolved form of a musician who has been shaped by experience and learned when to break the rules and when to make them her own. As one of the most exciting albums we’ve heard this year, it’s all the more intriguing to know that there’s still some gold left in those hills. When an album like Kelly McMichael’s Waves is this good you can’t help be go looking for easter eggs." Alex Cook, The East Magazine
Kelly McMichael is a fearless songwriter and multi-instrumentalist redefining alternative pop/rock with flashes of jazz sophistication and psychedelic shimmer. Her songs feel both instantly familiar and thrillingly unpredictable—nostalgic hooks wrapped in defiant art-rock ambition, channeling resistance with both grit and grace. Kelly’s magnetic stage presence is commanding, cathartic, and unapologetically powerful.
McMichael first cut her teeth co-founding the DIY feminist synth band Rouge, while studying Art at the University of Guelph. She was recruited into Toronto’s vibrant indie scene, performing with artists including Gentleman Reg, Allie X, Tim Baker, The Burning Hell, and Sarah Harmer. Years of touring across North America and Europe, combined with deep dives into bedroom production under the moniker Renders, sharpened her expansive sonic palette and singular artistic voice—fuelling the rise of her acclaimed solo project.
Her independently released debut Waves (2021) was shortlisted for the Polaris Music Prize and won the ECMA for Best Rock Recording. The follow-up, After The Sting Of It (2024), pushes further—lush, cinematic, and sonically daring—layering indie rock with ethereal sonic landscapes. The album earned national alternative radio play (CBC, The Verge), MusicNL’s 2025 Album of the Year, and another Polaris longlist nod. Whether fronting a full band in a euphoric swell of sound or delivering a spellbinding solo piano performance, McMichael leaves audiences stirred, shaken, and completely captivated.
Originally from Peterborough, Ontario and now based in Newfoundland, Kelly McMichael is an artist in full bloom—bold, evolving, and impossible to ignore.
"Out of the many great East Coast releases (After The Sting...) is a sure contender for album of the year"
- Tony Ploughman, Fred's Records
“(Kelly)... continues to drop explosive tunes”
- Exclaim! on ‘Bomb’ as #14, Best songs of 2024
“A show-stopping performance”
-Spill Magazine