today, the rainbow amplifiers’ meetings have dwindled to quarterly sessions, but sivyer says the club is doing well partly because they’re no longer trying to book shows every night of the week.
“the business is viable now,” he said. “we’re making a small profit every year, mainly because we don’t do 12 shows a week anymore. after covid, we were smarter and said we can’t do that again. now we’re booking a lot less, about two to five shows a week, so that cuts down all of our costs.”
he’s also proud of his daughter stacy’s work in programming. the rainbow had long been known as ottawa’s home of the blues, but danny wanted to reach a younger clientele and asked stacy to take over the bookings a decade ago. she also manages (and often tends) the bar.
“stacy is doing a really good job with the young local music scene,” he said. “the young bands all support each other. if she books three of them, then three of the others come out and support. they follow each other around the city. it’s always a pretty good crowd and quite often a sold-out crowd.”
for proof they’re on the right track, sivyer pointed to the two ottawa music industry coalition awards at the bar. the rainbow was named best music venue in 2023, while stacy earned the live-music curator-of-the-year award this year.