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VEEPS All Access launches in Canada: First impressions of the concert streaming service

VEEPS All Access launches in Canada: First impressions of the concert streaming service

National Post22-05-2025

Love concerts, but can't make it to the venue? Stream live shows and events from your couch with VEEPS, a music-first streaming service now operating in Canada. Click here for an introductory offer of 30% off. Explore upcoming concerts and the extensive archive of past performances.
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Live music fans and streaming aficionados, take note: there's a new streaming service in town and we have an exclusive deal for new members.
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VEEPS All Access has just landed in Canada as a first-of-its-kind subscription service that provides exclusive access to live entertainment through the VEEPS app. With a new Canada-exclusive offer, Postmedia readers can save 30 per cent on a VEEPS All Access subscription for a limited time.
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I've been enjoying the variety and the quality of the platform's musical library. Having missed out on Coldplay's first run of the Music of the Spheres tour in Vancouver, the band's live performance from Buenos Aires' River Plate stadium was first on my list to check out. It was easy to find by searching for the band in the app's search bar or by browsing through the list of popular artists.

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Valérie Bah wins Amazon Canada First Novel Award for ‘Subterrane'
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Valérie Bah wins Amazon Canada First Novel Award for ‘Subterrane'

TORONTO – Valérie Bah's speculative comedy 'Subterrane' has won the $60,000 Amazon Canada First Novel Award. The Quebec author and filmmaker accepted the prize at a ceremony in Toronto on Thursday night. The novel follows a filmmaker documenting the lives of queer and Black characters who are pushed underground by urban prosperity in the fictional city of New Stockholm. The documentarian focuses on the death of an activist protesting a construction project. In addition to writing and filmmaking, Bah is a massage therapist. Other finalists include Benjamin Hertwig for 'Juiceboxers,' about four young soldiers serving in Afghanistan, and Vancouver-based Myriam Lacroix for the genre-bending 'How It Works Out,' in which a lesbian couple's relationship is reimagined through multiple scenarios. Also in the running were Andrew Boden of Burnaby, B.C., for 'When We Were Ashes,' about disabled children in Nazi Germany; Halifax writer David Huebert for 'Oil People,' about two families locked in a bitter rivalry that lasts generations; and Calgary's Natalie Sue for the tender comedy 'I Hope This Finds You Well,' about loneliness and love beyond our computer screens. Each shortlisted novelist receives $6,000. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 6, 2025.

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