Betty Moon, Toronto-born singer/songwriter and guitarist grew up in a musical family. At age 13 her dream of becoming a ballerina turned into the pursuit of joining a rock band. She continued her dance studies and after one year at Humber College's music program she formed a band called Bambi. Within months Bambi played the Toronto club scene to packed houses at The Phoenix, The Twilight Zone, Voodoo and various clubs around town. Bambi’s sole release entitled “Rock On” became a cult favourite, charted top ten on CFNY and both videos from the album received high rotation on MuchMusic. This earned her a record deal with a major label (A&M Records) and in 1991 released her self-titled debut album. After a number of differences with the label and the Polygram takeover, she decided to pursue the direction she felt passionate about which was more "hard rock" and less “pop pulp”. In 1993, her band included Glenn Milchem, Darryl Fleming, Rob Langhans and Mike Burke. Her songs were described as “heavy alternative” and comparisons to Danzig, Alice in Chains, Soundgarden or a female-fronted Stone Temple Pilots were not uncommon. In 1998 she launched her own label Violet Records, secured distribution in stores across Canada and released “Stir”. Stir received great reviews from the media and comparisons to Tool, Marilyn Manson, a female Danzig and being a “Queen Street girl” and “goth-girl” began circulating in 1996.
“The Last Gasp” directed by Scott McGinness and starring Robert Patrick features Betty Moon’s single “Anything” as a running thread in the film score. Her TV appearances include The New Music, Muchmusic, Musique Plus, Best of Much, The Vancouver Morning Show, and Global TV's First Up. Apart from Canadian tour dates, BETTY MOON has showcased in Los Angeles and London, England and opened for Pink Floyd in Toronto.