Formation and early years Emily Haines was born in
New Delhi, India, to American-born parents, and was raised in Fenelon Falls,
Ontario. She grew up as a dual citizen of both Canada and the United States. Her father, poet
Paul Haines (best known for his lyrical collaboration with
Carla Bley in the 1971 jazz opera
Escalator over the Hill), often made cassettes of rare and eclectic music for his daughter to listen to, and her early influences included Carla Bley and
Robert Wyatt. In mid-1996, Haines and Shaw met at Toronto's Horseshoe Tavern. Bonding over a mutual distaste of the music scene, they began dating and writing songs together. That same year, the band signed a development deal with
Warner Bros. Records. A producer in London listened to the demos they recorded in this period and offered to bring Metric to the United Kingdom for a possible record deal. Eager to escape from the crowded conditions of the loft, Haines and Shaw set off to London in early 2000 and signed a publishing deal with
Chrysalis Records. With the help of the producer
Stephen Hague, Metric recorded a set of
new wave/
synthpop drum machine paced songs. The pair tired of recording demos, and in November 2000 returned to their Brooklyn loft to put a band together; they recruited Joules Scott-Key (a native of
Flint, Michigan) as their drummer and Jarrett Mason as their bassist.
Grow Up and Blow Away (2001–2002) Metric continued to work on their debut album in the first few months of 2001. Now dubbed
Grow Up and Blow Away, they developed a more musically layered and mature sound than the earlier
Mainstream EP. Haines and Shaw completed the album in April and by this time had found a new label for their release, the Los Angeles
indie label Restless Records. However, the album, produced by Shaw, was delayed for years by the label. It was finally released in 2007 on
Last Gang Records.
Grow Up and Blow Away included the
uptempo songs "Grow Up and Blow Away", "Raw Sugar", and "Soft Rock Star", as well as
downtempo songs "White Gold", "The Twist", and "Rock Me Now" (which included falsetto singing by Shaw and spoken-word vocals by Haines in a manner reminiscent of "The Mandate", and had an overall jazzy vibe). "Parkdale", featuring trumpeting by Shaw and a fanfare intro, concerned the
Parkdale, Toronto neighborhood. When the track titled "Rock Me Now" was reworked, it had been stripped of its intro "bubble" sounds, as well as an additional vocal part was added to the bridge. The title track was also reworked during the chorus, in which, Haines vocalizes "If this is the life, why does it feel so good to die today?" and the synths get a more "heavier" feel. In the same year, the band released
Static Anonymity, a five-song EP which they sold only at Metric performances and on their official site. Three tracks from the EP were also included on
Grow Up and Blow Away. Metric up to this time had been for the most part a studio band; live shows could not reproduce the
synthesizer-centered and
drum machine-driven sound of the recordings. After recruiting a drummer to allow a stronger, more engaging live presence, Metric performed in New York in 2001. They handed out handmade copies of their unreleased music to fans at shows and by mail, and later gave away the music on the internet. In August 2001, the
television commercial "Be Afraid", advertising
Polaroid's I-Zone Pocket Fortune film, used music from the song "Grow Up and Blow Away", with the line "Why does it feel so good to die today?" changed to "Why does it feel so good to fly today?". In March 2002, Metric performed at
Canadian Music Week. The band's performance was criticized in an article in
University of Waterloo's newspaper
Imprint, where the reviewer referred to the band's music as "derivative, pretentious, boring pap at its most mediocre". By the end of 2002, Metric had gained another bandmate: the
bassist Joshua Winstead (a native of Texas), who was in town performing with long-time friend Scott-Key in the local music scene.
Old World Underground, Where Are You Now? (2003–2004) In 2003, Metric released their first official studio album
Old World Underground, Where Are You Now? on
Everloving Records and shortly thereafter it appeared on the !earshot National Top 50 radio chart. The album was produced by
Michael Andrews and recorded at Elgonix Labs, Los Angeles. The band then moved to Los Angeles, where they performed locally, often playing at
Silverlake Lounge and Spaceland.
Old World Underground, Where Are You Now? received generally positive reviews. In December 2005, the album was certified
gold in Canada. The songs "Combat Baby" and "Dead Disco" were released as singles. "Combat Baby" was featured as a free single on iTunes in 2004. Six music videos were created to promote the album and accompany "Calculation Theme", "IOU", "Combat Baby", "Succexy", and "Dead Disco" respectively. Metric was featured as themselves in the 2004 independent French film,
Clean, directed by
Olivier Assayas and starring
Maggie Cheung. The band performed the song "Dead Disco" in the film and also acted in a short sequence. The film, which also featured songs by
Brian Eno,
Daniel Lanois, and
Tricky, was nominated for the
Palme D'Or award at the
Cannes Film Festival.
Live It Out and Grow Up and Blow Away (2005–2007) in Washington, DC (2006) On October 4, 2005, Metric released their second studio album,
Live It Out, on
Last Gang Records. The album, produced by Shaw, was well received by critics and fans, and eventually went twice
platinum in Canada, selling over 200,000 units. Three singles supported the album's sales: "
Monster Hospital" (number 55 on
UK singles charts), "
Poster of a Girl", and "
Empty". "
Monster Hospital" was selected as
NME Track of the Week and was number 12 on NME Tracks of 2006. and at the 2008
Ottawa Bluesfest; this was in addition to playing at the inaugural
Pemberton Music Festival in
Pemberton, British Columbia in July and
All Points West Music & Arts Festival in New Jersey in August. During December 13–23, 2008, Metric toured across Canada with
Tokyo Police Club,
The Dears, and
Sebastien Grainger and The Mountains, to raise money for various charities under the name "Jingle Bell Rock" tour. "
Help, I'm Alive" was released as the lead single from the upcoming album on iTunes on December 23, 2008 in Canada and January 1, 2009 elsewhere. Their fourth record,
Fantasies, was self-released on April 7, 2009 through
Last Gang Records in Canada, and their own label, Metric Music International. The album was produced by
Gavin Brown and by Shaw; it was recorded at the band's Giant Studios in Toronto, and
Electric Lady Studios, New York.
Fantasies was issued in a standard edition (featuring 10 tracks), a deluxe edition (including 4 more tracks), a deluxe edition UK edition (including 10 more tracks), and later, an Expanded Edition (a second disc with 10 tracks). A fusion of new wave and loud rock,
Fantasies was generally well received by critics and fans. By 2012, it had sold 500,000 copies, the band's best selling album so far. Haines and Shaw had performed all ten tracks acoustically the previous September at Union Pool in Brooklyn. The music video for "Gimme Sympathy" was released on
Myspace on March 16, 2009. Haines and Shaw completed a mini tour of acoustic shows across Canada, with stops in Winnipeg, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver, and Victoria in late April with cooperation from local radio stations. The band finished a Europe tour in May 2009 and toured the US (with Sebastien Grainger and The Mountains and Smile Smile), UK, and Canada at music festivals during the summer. They then headed to Australia for their first Australian tour in early October, and performed a show in Tokyo. In August of that year,
Mike Shinoda of
Linkin Park fame began streaming a remix of the track "Gold Guns Girls" through his website. The track was the theme for his art exhibition Glorious Excess (Dies), and later became part of a compilation album set up by Linkin Park's
Music for Relief for victims of the 2010 Haiti earthquake. In October 2009, Metric released a five-track EP called
Plug in Plug Out containing acoustic versions of songs from
Fantasies, which was available on
Amazon for 30 days. In of December that year, the band produced a charity T-shirt for the
Yellow Bird Project to raise funding to promote musical education across Canada. The T-shirt bears the slogan 'Keep the dream tight' — a lyric from their song, "Hustle Rose". Haines and Shaw performed an acoustic version of "Help I'm Alive" on January 22, 2010 for the Canada for Haiti telethon. During the
2010 Winter Olympics, Metric, along with several other Canadian music acts, came together in Vancouver to re-record
K'Naan's song "
Wavin' Flag" to benefit Haiti in a movement called
Young Artists for Haiti. Haines and Shaw also performed at a Neil Young tribute event alongside their friends in
Broken Social Scene. It was at this event that Haines met
Lou Reed, leading to later collaborations between the two of them. The track "Black Sheep" was released on August 10, 2010, and became available on the band's
Myspace page. The song is on the soundtrack for the film
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World. In the movie, the song is sung by
Brie Larson, who portrayed
Envy Adams in the film.
Scott Pilgrim author
Bryan Lee O'Malley said he was inspired by concert photos of Haines while originally drawing Envy's singing poses. The band toured in Western USA, before playing shows in the Canadian Maritimes and Eastern Ontario for most of March 2010. Metric also toured with
Sarah McLachlan for part of her 2010
Lilith Fair. Metric won two awards ("Group of the Year" and "Alternative Album of the Year" for
Fantasies) at the
2010 Juno Awards. On June 8, 2010, the third installment in the Twilight film series featured Metric in its soundtrack.
Twilight Saga: Eclipse soundtrack was released featuring Metric's song "Eclipse (All Yours)". The song was written with the film's composer,
Howard Shore. An acoustic version of the song can be found on the Expanded Edition of
Fantasies. On July 21, 2010, the band performed the song on
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. During October and November 2010, Metric opened for
Muse for seven shows of
The Resistance Tour. Later that year, the band was part of the lineup for
Voodoo Experience 2010, which took place over Halloween weekend in
New Orleans, Louisiana, US. On January 4, 2011, Metric released an
iTunes Session EP exclusively on
iTunes, consisting of eight live tracks, including "Hustle Rose", "Empty", and a cover of the
Buffalo Springfield song "
Expecting to Fly", and a 30-minute interview. In October 2011, Metric released a collection of remixes from
Fantasies entitled
Fantasies Flashbacks through a collaboration with website Indaba Music. The band released all the individual tracks as well as their stems so that the general public could remix the songs. The songs were then submitted online to Indaba and the band chose the winning remixes for the album. An unofficial album
Electrified Fantasies featuring 14 remixes of songs of the album "Fantasies" appeared in January 2012. The tracks were selected from 1767 remixes that arose from the official remix contest and are licensed under a
Creative Commons license.
Synthetica and Cosmopolis (2012–2014) The band's fifth studio album,
Synthetica, was released on June 12, 2012 on the band's own label, Metric Music International; the album received generally positive reviews.
Synthetica was produced by
Gavin Brown, John O'Mahony,
Liam O'Neil, James Shaw, and it was recorded at Giant Studios (Metric's own studio) and
Electric Lady Studios. The album also included a collaboration with
Lou Reed, who sang with Haines on "The Wanderlust". For iTunes pre-orders, they included five instrumental bonus tracks, that were the basis of five songs from the album. A deluxe version, with five additional acoustic tracks, was released on November 20, 2012. The album's first single "
Youth Without Youth" was released to the internet on April 30, 2012. The single was the first song in history to debut at number one on the Canadian Alternative Rock Charts. This was followed by a sneak preview of "Speed the Collapse", which was released to the internet on May 23, 2012. On May 29, 2012, the band started a
hide and seek hunt for fans to access an early stream of
Synthetica. The secretive stream became available on the band's
SoundCloud page. A few days later the stream became publicly available. In late 2011, it was announced that the band would be contributing to the soundtrack of
David Cronenberg's 2012 drama film entitled
Cosmopolis. Songs were co-written by the band with film composer
Howard Shore as well as an appearance by
K'naan on one track. This was the second time that the band collaborated with Shore after their previous work on the
Twilight Saga: Eclipse soundtrack. The soundtrack was released on June 5, 2012 in Canada and on July 10, 2012 in the United States. In June 2012, Metric performed as part of the NXNE festival in Toronto. On August 21, 2012, the first episode of a
documentary about the making of
Synthetica, covering events at the band's home studio in Toronto and recording sessions at New York's
Electric Lady Studios, was released on the band's
YouTube channel. The band wrapped up a 25-tour dates US Tour on October 14, 2012. They embarked on their first arena tour across Canada, which started in Victoria, British Columbia, on November 9, 2012 and ended November 24, 2012 at
Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario. On November 20, 2012, Metric released a deluxe version of
Synthetica, which featured acoustic versions of songs on the album, as well as a cover of "Strange Weather" by
Tom Waits. In April 2013, they performed at
Coachella Festival. The band won three awards at
2013 Juno Awards: "Alternative Album of the Year" for
Synthetica and "Producer of the Year" for James Shaw. The art director/designer/photographer Justin Broadbent also won an award for "Recording Package of the Year" for
Synthetica. In June 2013,
Synthetica was longlisted for the
2013 Polaris Music Prize. On July 1, 2013, Metric performed at Parliament Hill on Canada Day for then-Prime Minister Stephen Harper. The band spent 2014 writing for their upcoming sixth studio album. They also played at several festivals around North America including a return to Pemberton Music Festival (the band played the original 2008 festival), Riot Fest, and Made In America LA.
Pagans in Vegas (2015–2017) in July 2015 In December 2014, it was announced Metric would be appearing in early 2015 on a new series called
Sessions X alongside artists like
The Trews,
Dear Rouge, and
Buck 65. In a preview, Haines and Shaw revealed they'd be playing two new tracks entitled "I Forget Why" and "All In A Day". They also will perform new acoustic versions of "The Police and the Private" and "Dreams So Real". An unfinished track entitled "The Fatal Gift", released at this time, later ended up being reworked as an Emily Haines & The Soft Skeleton track, and was released as the lead single for her 2017 record
Choir of the Mind. On May 11, 2015, Metric released "The Shade", the first single off their upcoming album. The single marked a noted departure for the new record from Metric's more guitar oriented synth rock, and leaned more heavily on synthesizers, with electronic and pop stylings. In June 2015, Metric released a track from their upcoming album,
Pagans in Vegas, entitled "Cascades". They created an app called "The Pagan Portal" to debut their song "Too Bad, So Sad".
Pagans in Vegas was released in September, and appeared on the !earshot National Top 50 Chart in December that year. After recording an untitled companion album to
Pagans in Vegas, some of it in Nashville, the concept was eventually scrapped. They then toured Europe, the southern US, and Mexico throughout the fall of 2015. The band announced on November 17 that they would tour the United States with
Joywave as support. On December 8, 2015, they announced a Canadian tour in the spring of 2016, co-headlining with
Death Cab for Cutie. They also performed in New York that spring. Throughout 2017 the band took a break, with Shaw and Haines both contributing to the Broken Social Scene record
Hug of Thunder, and Haines releasing new solo material for the first time in 10 years with her
Emily Haines & The Soft Skeleton record,
Choir of the Mind.
Dreams So Real and Art of Doubt (2018–2021) In early 2018, it was announced Metric and PledgeMusic were releasing a concert film based on their "Lights on the Horizon" tour, entitled
Dreams So Real. The release of the eOne-distributed Blu-ray/DVD concert film was screened in over 30 movie house screenings across North America and one in Australia. The band appeared at the March 23 screening at Toronto's TIFF Lightbox for a Q&A session.
Dreams So Real was produced and directed by Jeff Rogers and T. Edward Martin, partners in Media Goes HERE. Using a Pledge Music campaign, the 4K, Ultra HD, concert documentary captured the group's live performance at Vancouver's
Thunderbird Sports Centre using 24 cameras on the final show of a year-long sold-out world tour. A triple live vinyl recording of the concert, exclusively available on Pledge, had a limited-edition run of 1000 pressings. Metric worked on their seventh full-length record with producer
Justin Meldal-Johnson, who is known for his work with
Beck,
Nine Inch Nails, and
M83. Recording sessions took place at
EastWest Studios and the band's own studio in Toronto. The band headlined Toronto's Field Trip Festival on June 2, 2018, where they played a special set consisting of their 2009 record
Fantasies played front to back, then two new songs followed by a few hits. A single, titled "Dark Saturday", from the band's upcoming album, was released on July 12, 2018. A music video for "Dark Saturday," which was shot entirely on an
iPhone X, was released on July 17, 2018, along with a link to pre-order the upcoming album, although at that time no title or track listing had been confirmed. A second song from the record, "Dressed to Suppress," was released on July 26, 2018. Throughout the summer of 2018 the band supported
The Smashing Pumpkins on their
Shiny And Oh So Bright Tour reunion. They capped off the summer playing the inaugural SKOOKUM Festival in
Stanley Park in Vancouver, British Columbia. After releasing a single, "Now or Never Now" in August, the band released their seventh album,
Art of Doubt, through the MMI/Universal label on September 21, 2018. The album favoured a more guitar driven sound than their previous one. The band played their first ever show in
Moscow, Russia, and then toured throughout Europe over the fall and winter of 2018. They then co-headlined a tour across the United States with Mexican psychedelic band
Zoé, with
July Talk as support. A cross-Canada arena tour followed (without Zoé) with July Talk as direct support. The band toured Mexico throughout June, supporting Zoé, and then appeared at select festivals over the summer of 2019, including
Osheaga, and
Lollapalooza Paris. The band performed at
Austin City Limits on October 5 and 12 2019. In between the dates, they returned to Mexico City for one final show supporting
Art Of Doubt. On November 1, 2019, the band released the track "Common Lives", recorded in collaboration with
Zoé during their tour dates in Mexico. In November 2019, Emily and Jimmy performed 4 acoustic shows at the Funhouse in Toronto, a now defunct "immersive art experience and venue", where fans selected the setlist by submitting requests and the story behind why they chose it. Each show was limited to 200 tickets, and was recorded in full and pressed onto a limited edition vinyl. The band had been announced to headline the CBC Music Festival in Toronto, on May 30, 2020, along with acts such as
Half Moon Run and
Lights. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the festival was cancelled. Over 2020, also due to the pandemic, the band was separated by the US/Canada border closure, with Haines and Shaw being in Canada, and Winstead and Scott-Key being in the United States. The band celebrated the 15 year anniversary of Live It Out with exclusive merch items. Haines and Shaw released a series of "Dirt Road Versions" of the band's tracks throughout the year, all pressed on 7 inch vinyl with limited runs. The band released their first Greatest Hits compilation on November 26, 2021, featuring 10 tracks: "Combat Baby", "Gold Guns Girls", "Help I'm Alive", "Now or Never Now", "Breathing Underwater", "Cascades", "Black Sheep", "Empty", "Synthetica", and an acoustic version of "Gimme Sympathy" recorded at the Funhouse during the band's 2019 residency. The limited-edition release was pressed exclusively on vinyl, and was limited to only 2,500 copies.
Formentera and Formentera II (2022–2024) On March 29, 2022, Metric announced they would be headlining
Budweiser Stage in Toronto, on August 26, 2022, with
Spoon and
Interpol as support. In a letter to fans, Emily mentioned they had been working on new music alongside the announcement. The band also announced a show in Mexico City with
Young the Giant for May 20, 2022. On April 28, 2022, Metric released "All Comes Crashing", the first single from their album
Formentera. The band also announced a North American tour with
Dear Rouge and
Bartees Strange as support in Canada. The band released the 10-minute single "Doomscroller" on May 18, 2022, followed by the single "What Feels Like Eternity" on June 8, 2022, ahead of the record's release. The record released on July 8, 2022, to generally positive reviews. In February 2023, it was announced Metric will be special guests of the
Garbage and
Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds Summer 2023 co-headline tour exclusively on the US dates. On July 7, 2023, the band announced their ninth album,
Formentera II would release October 13, 2023, and released "Just the Once" as the lead single from it.
Scott Pilgrim Takes Off featured a Metric cover of the
Sarah McLachlan song "
I Will Remember You," with Haines as the singing voice of Envy Adams. A version of "Black Sheep" is briefly used in the anime, with the lyrics sung by the crowd.
Romanticize the Dive (2026–present) On January 23, 2026, the band shared a snippet of their upcoming single “Victim of Luck” to their Instagram account, set for release on February 3. Along with the single's release they also announced their 10th studio album
Romanticize the Dive for release on April 24th 2026 via Thirty Tigers records. The band released their second single "Time is a Bomb" on March 4, 2026. Along with the album, a North American tour was also announced with support from
Broken Social Scene and
Stars. ==Side projects==