Words & Music is pleased to extend its helpful “how-to” series for our members, “The Breakdown,” into the realm of short, question-and-answer videos.

 In this first episode, SOCAN A&R Representative Racquel Villagante talks with Kaya Pino, Music Supervisor at The Wilders, an award-winning group of music supervisors, composers, producers, and songwriters, who create and foster music that bring ideas to life, so that audiences experience them as their creators intended.

Our question this time is, “What are the specific things you’re looking for when selecting music for film or TV projects?”



The next edition of the Francophone Gala SOCAN, which will be virtual, will once again celebrate the outstanding contributions of music publishers by presenting the SOCAN Music Publisher of the Year Award. Publishers are invited to submit their nominations now.

The SOCAN Publisher of the Year Award recognizes a SOCAN publisher member who has made significant and positive contributions to the music industry and the creative community over the one-year period preceding the year of the award’s presentation.

The eligibility period for the 2020 SOCAN Awards extends from Jan. 1, 2019, to Dec. 31, 2019, and only achievements having taken place during that period will be considered. All nominations will be assessed by a jury of music industry professionals.

To be eligible, music publishers must operating in Canada, and their repertoire must be predominantly Francophone, or have had a significant Francophone impact creatively and commercially. Publishers with a representative sitting on the selection committee are not eligible for this award.

Nominations for the Montreal Gala SOCAN must be sent to Andréanne Robertson (andreanne.robertson@socan.com) by Oct. 16, 2020, at 5:00 p.m. ET.

The Francophone SOCAN Publisher of the Year Award will be presented virtually during the 31st edition of Gala SOCAN, at a date to be confirmed shortly.

Download the nomination form



Multi-platinum singer-songwriter Bonnie Raitt honoured her colleague songsmith Shirley Eikhard with a virtual induction ceremony for the song “(Let’s Give Them) Something to Talk About” – which Eikhard wrote, and Raitt took to the Billboard Top 10 – into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame (CSHF) on Global’s The Morning Show on Oct. 6, 2020. The multi-Grammy-winning Raitt released the recording on her 1991 album Luck of the Draw,  propelling both herself and Eikhard to new heights of success.

“Shirley Eikhard is a Canadian treasure and multi-faceted artist, who’s gifted us with her voice, her music, and her talents as a songwriter,” said Vanessa Thomas, CSHF Executive Director. “A mainstay on radio nearly 30 years later, Bonnie Raitt’s recording of ‘Something to Talk About’ is unparalleled and timeless, and takes its well-deserved place in the Hall of Fame.”

Shirley Eikhard, originally from Sackville, New Brunswick, earned JUNO Awards in 1973 and 1974 for Best Country Female Artist, and has had numerous country and pop hits, including “You’re My Weakness” and “Smilin’ Wine.” Her songs have been recorded by Cher, Anne Murray, Chet Atkins, Ginette Reno, Alannah Myles, and Rita Coolidge.

Eikhard wrote “Something to Talk About” in Nashville in the 1980s, and had offered the song to Anne Murray, among other artists, all of whom expressed interest – but ultimately didn’t record it. She had put the song on the back burner, and one day received a surprise phone message from Bonnie Raitt, re-playing a recording of “Something to Talk About” that Raitt had just finished, after discovering the song on a demo tape that Eikhard had sent her years earlier.

“I got home and there was this thing on my machine. There was Bonnie… I was numb,” recalled Eikhard. It may have taken seven years for Eikhard to find the right artist to sing her song, but when Bonnie Raitt left that fateful voicemail, the rest was music history.

Raitt’s recording of Eikhard’s song proved a spectacular success. The single peaked on Billboard’s Hot 100 and Adult Contemporary charts at No. 5 in October 1991, and at No. 8 on Cashbox. It placed even higher in Canada, at No. 3 on the RPM Top 100 chart and No. 4 on Adult Contemporary, and made the Top 20 on RPM’s 1991 year-end chart.

 “Something to Talk About” earned Raitt a Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, and drove the Luck of the Draw to win Album of the Year, boosted by multi-platinum sales in North America.  At home in Canada, the song also earned Eikhard a JUNO nomination for Songwriter of the Year, and later SOCAN Classics and BMI Awards for its status as a radio favourite.

The song has been performed by Britney Spears, Kelly Clarkson, David Clayton-Thomas, and Jennifer Love Hewitt; and Raitt’s edition was the opening theme to the Hollywood film of the same title, starring Julia Roberts and Dennis Quaid.  Eikhard also sang her own version, that was used as the theme song for CBS’s Women of the House.

Following the televised virtual presentation of Eikhard’s song induction, the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame will be adding the song to its permanent and interactive exhibition at the National Music Centre in Calgary, that features a celebrated catalogue of inducted songs that fans can listen to, as well as displays, exclusive artifacts, and one-of-a-kind memorabilia celebrating Canada’s greatest songs and songwriters.