A Song That Speaks Before You Even Press Play
Some songs carry a message bigger than music. Campfire Bob’s Every Child Matters is one of them. Rooted in Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation movement and inspired by real encounters with First Nations community members, this song is a heartfelt tribute to a painful chapter in Canadian history – and a hopeful step toward healing.
Who Is Campfire Bob?
Campfire Bob is a singer-songwriter originally from Quebec, Canada, now based in Vancouver. His musical journey began at age nine – not with a proper guitar, but a plastic toy one from a toy store, because he didn’t yet know music stores existed. The first chord he ever discovered was F major seven. By his own words, “it sounded so magical – it changed my life.”
That sense of wonder never left him. Over the decades, Campfire Bob has played in indie punk, original rock, Celtic prog, new folk, and country & western bands, performing across the east and west coasts of Canada, the northeastern United States, and even solo acoustic gigs in France. His music reflects his values – he actively raises funds for causes he believes in, including literacy programs and community health initiatives.
Today, his collaborations span continents. He works with:
● Mice Elf – a musician/producer in Sweden, together forming the duo WILDWINDS
● Johnny Money TkN – a Montreal rapper, collaborating on the theatrical bilingual song Fydor’s Blues
● Emrick Fe – a poet and freedom fighter in Kenya, creating music under conditions of political imprisonment and violence
● Derek Simpson and Kaj Falch-Nielsen – Vancouver-based musician/producers who are central to his current work
His music is eclectic pop rock – personal, values-driven, and always an offering to the world.
The Story Behind “Every Child Matters”
A Parade That Changed Everything
The song’s origin begins with a parade. Campfire Bob was visiting a town near a First Nations community on the first-ever National Day for Truth and Reconciliation in Canada. Everyone in the parade – young and old — wore orange shirts printed with the words “Every Child Matters.”
“Smiles and joy, their dedication and fearlessness – the paraders brought tears to my eyes. I felt as if a lie had been lifted from the shoulders of all Canadians on that day.”
It was a powerful public declaration of truth, community, and resilience.
What Is Truth and Reconciliation Day?
National Day for Truth and Reconciliation (September 30) is a Canadian statutory holiday acknowledging the forced separation of Indigenous children from their families through the residential school system – a government and church-run program designed to eliminate First Nations cultures and assimilate children into the dominant settler society.
Residential Schools Survivors, the Assembly of First Nations, and Inuit representatives launched a landmark legal case against the federal government and church organizations responsible. They won – on behalf of all Canadians. In a historic moment, the Roman Catholic Pope traveled to Canada and apologized directly to First Nations Leaders, describing the residential school programs as a form of genocide.
A Quiet Conversation at a Pool Hall
Later that year, Campfire Bob was playing pool at a hall near an urban First Nations hub in Vancouver. Two elderly First Nations women came in and sat nearby. They wore the orange shirts. They watched him, with friendly eyes, for a long while.
Eventually, they struck up a conversation. They gently suggested he reflect on the words printed on their shirts: Every Child Matters.
That conversation became this song.
The Music: How “Every Child Matters” Was Made
The production of Every Child Matters is as collaborative and community-rooted as its message.
Derek Simpson, a Vancouver First Nations music producer, shaped the sonic landscape and produced the track, bringing in musicians who wove themselves into the fabric of the song.
The Team Behind the Track:
Drums, Bass, Vocals, Producer – Derek Simpson
Orchestration – Andrew Persoon
Guitar – Kaj Falch-Nielsen
Vocals – Campfire Bob
Kaj Falch-Nielsen recorded Campfire Bob’s vocals and his own guitar parts at Blue Light Studios in Vancouver. From there, Derek Simpson and Andy took the project to Derek’s studio and creative workshop to complete the production.
The result is a song that blends Campfire Bob’s folk-influenced singer-songwriter voice with layered instrumentation and a production style shaped by a First Nations artist who understands the weight of the message deeply.
Why This Song Matters
Every Child Matters isn’t a protest song, and it isn’t a lecture. It’s a reflection – a quiet but powerful consideration of history, humanity, and the responsibility we all carry as members of society.
What makes this song resonate is that it came from a genuine moment of human connection: two women in orange shirts, a pool hall in Vancouver, a long and friendly silence, and a gentle nudge toward something worth thinking about. Campfire Bob didn’t write this so
ng from the outside looking in – he wrote it from a place of being invited in, of listening, of caring.
In a music landscape often driven by noise and speed, Every Child Matters is an act of slowing down.
Listen and Connect
● Watch the video: Vimeo
● Website: campfirebob.ca
● Discography: Archive.org
● Bandcamp: campfirebob.bandcamp.com
● Vimeo: vimeo.com/campfirebob
● YouTube: youtube.com/@CFB4U
Campfire Bob’s music is a reminder that songs can be more than entertainment – they can be a form of witnessing, of honoring, and of healing. “Every Child Matters” is exactly that.






