Monday, January 7, 2008
City's 'wildman' down on the farm
Vancouver rock legend Art Bergmann found fighting arthritis in Alberta
The Vancouver Sun
Saturday, June 2, 2007
By John Mackie
Art Bergmann answers the phone, hears my voice, and mutters the perfect Art Bergmann greeting.
"The last time you talked to me someone died. So who died this time?"
No one, in fact. It's just that the arts editor of the Vancouver Sun wants to know whatever became of Art Bergmann, Vancouver's legendary new wave singer-songwriter and wildman, after a decade or so out of the limelight.
The answer is a bit of a shock. The 54-year-old Bergmann has arthritis in his hands, and doesn't really make music any more, because it's too painful to play guitar.
"It's gotten really bad in the last six months," he says.
"It started in my hands, my hands are all gnarled up. Now it's in my spine, I can't walk too good. Apparently it's just going to get worse."
The other shock is where he's living. After a decade in downtown Toronto, Bergmann and his wife Sherry Decembrini have spent the last year-and-a-half living a rural life on a small farm in Airdrie, Alta., a half hour north of Calgary. Sherry's sister lives up the road, and they're looking after the place for someone who moved away.
"I'm surrounded by 100 acres of wheat," says Bergmann.
"We have 10 acres of decaying old farmyard, with tons of skeletons on it."
Given his past, it's amazing that Art's not a skeleton himself. His songs were filled with references to drugs and guns and all sorts of bad stuff, and a lot of it came from first-hand experience.
Bergmann claims to have been clean and sober for a decade. But he admits his boozing and drugging got pretty bad in the late '80s and early '90s.
"Climbing up an apartment building wall to rip off my neighbour, that was probably my dumbest move," he says.
Really?
"Yep. On Main Street there."
That's when you knew you had to get out of town?
"No," he snorts. "But that was near the end. No, I just went on tour and decided to stay in Toronto for awhile. Of course, I never got enough money to move back."
Twelve years later, he still doesn't have enough money to move back. He probably never will. Which is ironic, because Art Bergmann symbolizes Vancouver's musical underground as much as anyone.
His first brush with fame (or infamy) was with the K-Tels, a new-wave power trio that was renamed the Young Canadians after K-Tel threatened to sue. As a solo artist, he put out a quartet of critically lauded albums on major labels, and even had a semi-hit with the poppy Faithlessly Yours.
But he never made a commercial breakthrough, and after 1995's What Fresh Hell Is This?, he was dropped by Sony. Since then he's been in the musical hinterlands, surviving by doing odd jobs and working at a Toronto restaurant called Rancho Relaxo.
Last year, DOA's Joe Keithley reissued a Young Canadians compilation CD, No Escape. It seems to have found a bit of an audience in Japan, where for some strange reason Vancouver new wave bands from the late '70s have achieved cult status.
A filmmaker named Susanne Tabata is also apparently working on a documentary of Vancouver's punk/new wave era. She recently showed up in Airdrie to interview Bergmann, with DOA's Randy Rampage in tow. (Bergmann laughs that Rampage cut quite an image in small-town Alberta, with his hair dyed a colour not found in nature.)
Now comes news that Bergmann's former bass player Ray Fulber is working on a CD of some demo tapes Bergmann made in the mid-'80s with producers Bob Rock, now one of the biggest producers in the world, and Paul Hyde.
Rock's demo recording of Bergmann's searing rocker My Empty House helped Art nail his first big record deal, with Duke Street Records in Toronto. But when it came time to record an album, Bergmann went with former Velvet Underground member John Cale as producer instead of Rock.
In retrospect, it was a rather dumb move, passing over a young local guy who was about to become red hot internationally for an aging 1960s legend whose glory days were well behind him.
"[Cale] just came and collected his 35 grand [fee] and drank tea and played squash, and that was about it," says Bergmann.
"Got a bit freaked out at Ray, I think. Or all of us, actually. We were in the midst of some psycho-sexual drama. Here's a quote from John Cale: 'I was fighting the demos all the way.'"
Fulber feels the Rock demos are infinitely better than Cale's production.
"When I play it for people they go 'Wow man, if this would have come out, Art would have been a household name,'" says Fulber, whose son Rhys is in the Vancouver acts Front Line Assembly and Delirium.
"He does a version of Junkie Don't Care and the solo is just unbelievable, beyond anything that ever made it to [record]."
Fulber now lives a relatively tranquil existence running a studio on the Sunshine Coast, where he lives with his longtime girlfriend, Bergmann's former keyboard player Suzanne Richter. In tandem with drummer Taylor Little, they were the band on the best Bergmann solo albums, Crawl With Me and Sexual Roulette. Lyrically it was Bergmann's darkest period, with twisted songs like My Empty House (about a murder-suicide), The Hospital Song (inspired by a girlfriend's overdose) and Dirge No. 1 (about a cocaine addict threatening to go on a murderous rampage).
But it got so crazy, the band imploded.
"I remember the last gig we played together," recalls Fulber.
"I think we got like six grand or $5,500 for one set. The next morning Suzanne had a meeting and said 'I'm not going to stay around and watch one of you guys die.'"
She quit, Fulber quit, and Bergmann soldiered on as a solo artist, with records produced by Toronto's Chris Wardman. The Duke Street label went bankrupt, so he moved to Polygram for his third album, Art Bergmann, and then Sony for his fourth.
Bergmann had a powerhouse manager in Sam Feldman and tons of champions in the music biz. But the lack of an American or European record deal probably killed his career. He was probably a bit over the edge for mainstream success, ala Bryan Adams but probably could have done okay selling a few records here, a few there.
In any event, he didn't have either a major label deal or a manager when he made his last recording, an acoustic "unplugged" record (he calls it "defanged"), Design Flaw. It was released in 1998 on the small Toronto label Other People's Music. In 2000, another small label, Audio Monster, released Vultura Freeway, a CD issue of another excellent 1984 demo tape.
Alas, there isn't likely to be much more original Art Bergmann stuff, and not only because of the arthritis.
"I quit doing drugs and alcohol in '95-'96, and haven't written much since then," he says. "I killed my muse, I guess."
But he still has his fans, like Bob Rock.
"He actually called me out of the blue, Bob Rock," says Bergmann. "About a month ago."
What did he have to say?
"Just that he loved my writing as much as James Hetfield's [of Metallica]."
Reached at his home in Hawaii, Rock says he's "always willing to chat about Art Bergmann.
"Continually wrote great songs, and never really ... the potential that was there, they never really achieved it. I think Art personally had some difficulties, as we all did when we were young. Some people move beyond that, and some people get stuck in that. Maybe unfortunately that's what happened to him.
"But the songs don't go away, and his brilliance doesn't go away. And you know what? He was a really great guitar player. I play his stuff all the time, I've got the re-released stuff, and he's a great guitar player. Had a great sound and a distinct style, which is so hard to have these days."
Rock has reunited with his old bandmates in the Payola$ for an album and a summer tour.
Another Vancouver new wave act, the Pointed Sticks, recently reunited to do a small Japanese tour, and Buck Cherry of the Modernettes also did some Japanese dates.
Asked if he would reform the Young Canadians for a Japanese tour, Bergmann doesn't sound all that enthusiastic. For one thing, Young Canadians bass player Jim Bescott was killed in 2005 in a truck accident. Then there's Bergmann's arthritis problem.
"But make me an offer," he deadpans.
"I've been trying to sell out for years, but nobody's buying."
10 Classic Art Songs
The Vancouver Sun
Saturday, June 2, 2007
By John Mackie
1. HAWAII
The Young Canadians' biggest hit, with an incredibly infectious guitar line and chorus that simultaneously mocks and celebrates taking a mid-winter holiday in the sun. Makes prominent use of the 'f' word.
The chorus was a favourite saying of Ross Carpenter, a Bergmann friend and musician from White Rock, B.C., who claims he wrote much of the song. Bergmann says he can't remember Carpenter playing him Hawaii, but acknowledged Carpenter by belatedly giving him a co-writing credit on the Young Canadians' No Escape CD when it was released.
2. DATA REDUX
Anti-war rocker with one of Bergmann's best guitar solos and fabulous production by Bob Rock.
On No Escape.
3. DON'T BOTHER ME
A brilliant pop song about being dumped.
On No Escape.
4. MY EMPTY HOUSE
Savage rocker about a man who gets laid off, goes nuts and shoots his wife. Inspired by a rash of murder-suicides that hit B.C.'s Lower Mainland in the early 1980s in the wake of the Social Credit government's restraint program.
It was recorded several times, but the best version is on the Poisoned cassette produced by Paul Hyde and mixed by Bob Rock.
It may be reissued on a CD Ray Fulber is working on, with the working title The Lost Art of Bergmann.
5. INSIDE YOUR LOVE
Scorcher from the John Cale-produced Crawl With Me album on Duke Street, with an incredible guitar solo.
Available as a download on iTunes. There is also apparently a Bob Rock version that's even better, which may or may not be on The Lost Art of Bergmann.
6. THE HOSPITAL SONG
Lovely pop song about an OD, with the immortal line "maybe later we'll get together and have a relapse."
On the Sexual Roulette album on Duke Street, also on iTunes.
7. DIRGE
Psychotic Led Zeppelin-esque number about a cocaine fiend threatening to go on a murder rampage.
On Sexual Roulette, iTunes.
8. GAMBOL
One of Art's wildest rockers, with a great lyric about living on the edge.
On Sexual Roulette, iTunes.
9. FAITHLESSLY YOURS
Art's radio hit, with a wonderful descending melody line.
On the Polygram album Art Bergmann, which is currently out of print.
10. REMEMBER HER NAME
Powerful, slow-burning number about a sordid affair by a woman who looks like Marianne Faithfull.
On Art Bergmann, currently out of print.
Saturday, June 2, 2007
By John Mackie
1. HAWAII
The Young Canadians' biggest hit, with an incredibly infectious guitar line and chorus that simultaneously mocks and celebrates taking a mid-winter holiday in the sun. Makes prominent use of the 'f' word.
The chorus was a favourite saying of Ross Carpenter, a Bergmann friend and musician from White Rock, B.C., who claims he wrote much of the song. Bergmann says he can't remember Carpenter playing him Hawaii, but acknowledged Carpenter by belatedly giving him a co-writing credit on the Young Canadians' No Escape CD when it was released.
2. DATA REDUX
Anti-war rocker with one of Bergmann's best guitar solos and fabulous production by Bob Rock.
On No Escape.
3. DON'T BOTHER ME
A brilliant pop song about being dumped.
On No Escape.
4. MY EMPTY HOUSE
Savage rocker about a man who gets laid off, goes nuts and shoots his wife. Inspired by a rash of murder-suicides that hit B.C.'s Lower Mainland in the early 1980s in the wake of the Social Credit government's restraint program.
It was recorded several times, but the best version is on the Poisoned cassette produced by Paul Hyde and mixed by Bob Rock.
It may be reissued on a CD Ray Fulber is working on, with the working title The Lost Art of Bergmann.
5. INSIDE YOUR LOVE
Scorcher from the John Cale-produced Crawl With Me album on Duke Street, with an incredible guitar solo.
Available as a download on iTunes. There is also apparently a Bob Rock version that's even better, which may or may not be on The Lost Art of Bergmann.
6. THE HOSPITAL SONG
Lovely pop song about an OD, with the immortal line "maybe later we'll get together and have a relapse."
On the Sexual Roulette album on Duke Street, also on iTunes.
7. DIRGE
Psychotic Led Zeppelin-esque number about a cocaine fiend threatening to go on a murder rampage.
On Sexual Roulette, iTunes.
8. GAMBOL
One of Art's wildest rockers, with a great lyric about living on the edge.
On Sexual Roulette, iTunes.
9. FAITHLESSLY YOURS
Art's radio hit, with a wonderful descending melody line.
On the Polygram album Art Bergmann, which is currently out of print.
10. REMEMBER HER NAME
Powerful, slow-burning number about a sordid affair by a woman who looks like Marianne Faithfull.
On Art Bergmann, currently out of print.
Back in action: John Armstrong and the Modernettes
This summary is not available. Please
click here to view the post.
Muretich lived, loved music scene
Outspoken Herald rock critic, 54, loses battle with cancer
Calgary Herald
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
By Heath McCoy
You never knew quite what you'd stumble upon when paying a visit to James Muretich.
When word spread last April that the mercurial Calgary rock critic was terminally ill, stricken with a brain tumour, people around the city were stung by the news.
Always a boisterous, extroverted soul, Muretich had kept an unusually low profile in recent years -- certainly since his fast and furious days as the Calgary Herald's rock reporter throughout the 1980s and '90s -- and many of his friends had not seen him for a long while. But so many wanted to reach out to the man.
Would he shake hands or bite 'em? Nobody could be sure. It depended how Muretich was feeling that day, really. It wasn't much different when he was healthy. And so some paid him a visit and others stayed away.
One Herald reporter made the journey to the 11th floor of Foothills Hospital on a Friday afternoon in April. Rather than finding Muretich confined to his bed, or taking medication, the visitor witnessed his former colleague storming out of the ward, bags packed, grumbling bitterly about the doctors.
"They're treating me like I'm already dead," Muretich growled. "I've got things to do."
"Can I catch a ride home?" he asked.
Anybody who knew Muretich had to laugh at the story. It was so like him. Razor sharp. Tough. Obstinate. Full of life. That's how he'll be remembered.
Muretich, who was coaxed back to the hospital that same night, died at home this past weekend. He was 54.
Muretich was raised in Montreal, where he earned a BA in theology and philosophy at Concordia University before attending the University of Western Ontario where he earned a masters degree in journalism. After a short stint as a court reporter in Peterborough, Ont., Muretich moved to Calgary in 1979 where he worked as a rock critic for the Calgary Sun (then called the Albertan). He came to the Herald in 1983, where he stayed for the next 19 years.
For two decades, Muretich was the voice -- with a capital V -- of Calgary's music scene, both in the Herald and on TV where, in the mid-80s he hosted his own community access music video show -- FM Moving Pictures -- on Channel 10. Muretich also had his own show on Calgary's campus radio station, CJSW.
In a conservative city, writing for a family newspaper, the hard-living writer managed to be Calgary's version of Lester Bangs, the gonzo rock critic for Creem magazine in the 1970s. Muretich might not appreciate the comparison, having once snarled at this writer: "I could write circles around Lester Bangs." Humility was not James's thing.
Nevertheless, Muretich, who described his freewheeling style of rock journalism as "surfing on chaos," lived and breathed the Calgary music scene.
He was so ingrained in it that when he married his second wife, Sally, in 1995, the nuptials were performed at the legendary and now defunct rock club, The Night Gallery, with rocker Art Bergmann as the wedding performer.
Muretich made a sizable impact, promoting the Calgary music scene to the rest of Canada and providing gutsy, insightful, sharp-witted commentary on the rock world at large for Herald readers.
There's no better way to pay tribute to Muretich than to hear stories about the man from the people he touched.
Rest in peace, James.
Jann Arden (Calgary based singer-songwriter; Juno award winner)
"James was so bold and forthright and . . . well . . . odd. (At first) he kind of scared me, to tell the truth. His bald head and numerous twitches and quirks made him a force to be reckoned with. He made me nervous. (But) over the years I was so proven wrong. You cannot judge a book by its cover, not his book, not that man. He was warm and sensitive, and very open about his life and his pain.
"James has done a number of kind-hearted stories about me over the years; one in particular has always made me laugh. . . . James came to my parents' home in the mid '90s to interview them for a piece he was doing about my Living Under June album. He plowed through a few probing questions concerning my youth and my wild years in the bar scene . . . My mother, at some point, asked James if he'd like a drink. Whoops. He did indeed. . . He went on to polish off an entire bottle of really horrible cheap whiskey. My mother said it was one of the most entertaining nights of her life! She told me that he made them laugh and laugh at all his crazy stories. Mom said he cried a couple of times, told them that he loved them and that he loved me. Well, I loved you too, James my dear. You wrote like you lived."
Maurice Ginzer (concert promoter, former owner of Kaos Jazz and Blues)
"I remember when he came into my club on 17th Avenue when we were primarily doing jazz and shifting into blues (mid '90s). It was one of those nights where there was a really staid, super-conservative audience and James walked into the place and we had a drink. He listened to the band, it was Jack Semple, and he called it immediately. 'This is a performer. This is phenomenal!' Then he leaned over to me and said 'But what's wrong with this crowd?' As he had a few more drinks, he became quite vocal about it! 'C'mon! We gotta get 'em going. Don't they know what they're listening to?!'
"A couple more tunes went on and he had a couple more scotches and finally he said: 'I'm gonna throw some life into this party.' So he walked up and started talking to this attractive woman. It looked like she came straight from the office. She was in a two-piece business suit, a little uptight maybe. . . .
"There's James in one of those T-shirts where it was cut off at the arms. He was gritty and rough looking . . . and he got her up dancing. . . . I think it was one of the first times anybody danced in my club!
"From that point on, the club became a pretty happening spot."
Tom Bagley (Calgary artist and rocker)
"When he came to town, this was a different place. There wasn't all the bands there are now, but he always supported this little underground scene. . . . When I started Forbidden Dimension he came over to my house with a photographer, I lived way down in the suburbs with my parents. . . . He came over and did the interview and left, and as a joke he left a condom on the kitchen floor. We're this very suburban family, right? But my mom one-upped him. She said: 'Oh, James left his hat.' They thought he was this wild guy, but they appreciated him because he was always promoting their boy."
Kerry Clarke (Associate producer: Calgary Folk Music Festival)
"I remember James taking part in a CJSW funding drive. He announced that he would take off his clothes, the more money people gave . . . until he was naked. And he really was naked there in the booth. There were a few squeamish people around who were quite shocked. . . . But it really helped pump up the funding drive." (Incidentally, naked James stories abound in Calgary. Accounts still make the rounds of him running around a number of rock festivals, the folk festival, and even the Ship and Anchor wearing only a Speedo).
Tom Cochrane (Canadian rocker, Juno award winner)
"There's a song on my upcoming album (No Stranger) partly inspired by (James) called White Horse. We as musicians run into you (rock critics) in the course of business and promo tours and stuff, and the first line of the song says 'I didn't get to know you all that well.' But I knew him enough to know he was a pretty generous guy and he believed in music. If it didn't solve all the world's problems, it could definitely ease the pain. He really believed that. . . .
"He and I had a lot of disagreements over the years, but I really respected his opinion. . . . Because you knew he sat down and listened to the music hard. That's why I would take him very seriously. . . . He respected honesty in art.
. . .
"One thing about James, he lived life to the fullest. He probably pushed the envelope more than a lot of musicians I know. . . . I always tipped my hat to the guy and I think I'm going to go drink a glass of wine for him in a little while. Scotch? Yeah, I might have a scotch, too."
Calgary Herald
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
By Heath McCoy
You never knew quite what you'd stumble upon when paying a visit to James Muretich.
When word spread last April that the mercurial Calgary rock critic was terminally ill, stricken with a brain tumour, people around the city were stung by the news.
Always a boisterous, extroverted soul, Muretich had kept an unusually low profile in recent years -- certainly since his fast and furious days as the Calgary Herald's rock reporter throughout the 1980s and '90s -- and many of his friends had not seen him for a long while. But so many wanted to reach out to the man.
Would he shake hands or bite 'em? Nobody could be sure. It depended how Muretich was feeling that day, really. It wasn't much different when he was healthy. And so some paid him a visit and others stayed away.
One Herald reporter made the journey to the 11th floor of Foothills Hospital on a Friday afternoon in April. Rather than finding Muretich confined to his bed, or taking medication, the visitor witnessed his former colleague storming out of the ward, bags packed, grumbling bitterly about the doctors.
"They're treating me like I'm already dead," Muretich growled. "I've got things to do."
"Can I catch a ride home?" he asked.
Anybody who knew Muretich had to laugh at the story. It was so like him. Razor sharp. Tough. Obstinate. Full of life. That's how he'll be remembered.
Muretich, who was coaxed back to the hospital that same night, died at home this past weekend. He was 54.
Muretich was raised in Montreal, where he earned a BA in theology and philosophy at Concordia University before attending the University of Western Ontario where he earned a masters degree in journalism. After a short stint as a court reporter in Peterborough, Ont., Muretich moved to Calgary in 1979 where he worked as a rock critic for the Calgary Sun (then called the Albertan). He came to the Herald in 1983, where he stayed for the next 19 years.
For two decades, Muretich was the voice -- with a capital V -- of Calgary's music scene, both in the Herald and on TV where, in the mid-80s he hosted his own community access music video show -- FM Moving Pictures -- on Channel 10. Muretich also had his own show on Calgary's campus radio station, CJSW.
In a conservative city, writing for a family newspaper, the hard-living writer managed to be Calgary's version of Lester Bangs, the gonzo rock critic for Creem magazine in the 1970s. Muretich might not appreciate the comparison, having once snarled at this writer: "I could write circles around Lester Bangs." Humility was not James's thing.
Nevertheless, Muretich, who described his freewheeling style of rock journalism as "surfing on chaos," lived and breathed the Calgary music scene.
He was so ingrained in it that when he married his second wife, Sally, in 1995, the nuptials were performed at the legendary and now defunct rock club, The Night Gallery, with rocker Art Bergmann as the wedding performer.
Muretich made a sizable impact, promoting the Calgary music scene to the rest of Canada and providing gutsy, insightful, sharp-witted commentary on the rock world at large for Herald readers.
There's no better way to pay tribute to Muretich than to hear stories about the man from the people he touched.
Rest in peace, James.
Jann Arden (Calgary based singer-songwriter; Juno award winner)
"James was so bold and forthright and . . . well . . . odd. (At first) he kind of scared me, to tell the truth. His bald head and numerous twitches and quirks made him a force to be reckoned with. He made me nervous. (But) over the years I was so proven wrong. You cannot judge a book by its cover, not his book, not that man. He was warm and sensitive, and very open about his life and his pain.
"James has done a number of kind-hearted stories about me over the years; one in particular has always made me laugh. . . . James came to my parents' home in the mid '90s to interview them for a piece he was doing about my Living Under June album. He plowed through a few probing questions concerning my youth and my wild years in the bar scene . . . My mother, at some point, asked James if he'd like a drink. Whoops. He did indeed. . . He went on to polish off an entire bottle of really horrible cheap whiskey. My mother said it was one of the most entertaining nights of her life! She told me that he made them laugh and laugh at all his crazy stories. Mom said he cried a couple of times, told them that he loved them and that he loved me. Well, I loved you too, James my dear. You wrote like you lived."
Maurice Ginzer (concert promoter, former owner of Kaos Jazz and Blues)
"I remember when he came into my club on 17th Avenue when we were primarily doing jazz and shifting into blues (mid '90s). It was one of those nights where there was a really staid, super-conservative audience and James walked into the place and we had a drink. He listened to the band, it was Jack Semple, and he called it immediately. 'This is a performer. This is phenomenal!' Then he leaned over to me and said 'But what's wrong with this crowd?' As he had a few more drinks, he became quite vocal about it! 'C'mon! We gotta get 'em going. Don't they know what they're listening to?!'
"A couple more tunes went on and he had a couple more scotches and finally he said: 'I'm gonna throw some life into this party.' So he walked up and started talking to this attractive woman. It looked like she came straight from the office. She was in a two-piece business suit, a little uptight maybe. . . .
"There's James in one of those T-shirts where it was cut off at the arms. He was gritty and rough looking . . . and he got her up dancing. . . . I think it was one of the first times anybody danced in my club!
"From that point on, the club became a pretty happening spot."
Tom Bagley (Calgary artist and rocker)
"When he came to town, this was a different place. There wasn't all the bands there are now, but he always supported this little underground scene. . . . When I started Forbidden Dimension he came over to my house with a photographer, I lived way down in the suburbs with my parents. . . . He came over and did the interview and left, and as a joke he left a condom on the kitchen floor. We're this very suburban family, right? But my mom one-upped him. She said: 'Oh, James left his hat.' They thought he was this wild guy, but they appreciated him because he was always promoting their boy."
Kerry Clarke (Associate producer: Calgary Folk Music Festival)
"I remember James taking part in a CJSW funding drive. He announced that he would take off his clothes, the more money people gave . . . until he was naked. And he really was naked there in the booth. There were a few squeamish people around who were quite shocked. . . . But it really helped pump up the funding drive." (Incidentally, naked James stories abound in Calgary. Accounts still make the rounds of him running around a number of rock festivals, the folk festival, and even the Ship and Anchor wearing only a Speedo).
Tom Cochrane (Canadian rocker, Juno award winner)
"There's a song on my upcoming album (No Stranger) partly inspired by (James) called White Horse. We as musicians run into you (rock critics) in the course of business and promo tours and stuff, and the first line of the song says 'I didn't get to know you all that well.' But I knew him enough to know he was a pretty generous guy and he believed in music. If it didn't solve all the world's problems, it could definitely ease the pain. He really believed that. . . .
"He and I had a lot of disagreements over the years, but I really respected his opinion. . . . Because you knew he sat down and listened to the music hard. That's why I would take him very seriously. . . . He respected honesty in art.
. . .
"One thing about James, he lived life to the fullest. He probably pushed the envelope more than a lot of musicians I know. . . . I always tipped my hat to the guy and I think I'm going to go drink a glass of wine for him in a little while. Scotch? Yeah, I might have a scotch, too."
Young Canadians reissued, expletives and all
Vancouver Courier
Friday, January 6, 2006
By Greg Potter
In 1980, use of the "f-word" in song was not only discouraged, it was outright forbidden by major label record companies and thought by many of the Perry Como generation to be grounds for lengthy prison terms.
Sure, Jim Morrison used to toss it around onstage after a few drinks, and more than a few parents snapped vinyl when Country Joe McDonald substituted the offending letters in the "F-I-S-H" cheer on the Woodstock soundtrack; but short of John Lennon's "Working Class Hero," the odd mating-ape call by the Who's Roger Daltrey and the deliberate shock value of the Sex Pistols' "Bodies," the word wasn't commonly employed by tunesmiths in search of something to rhyme with "truck," "luck" or "duck."
When Vancouver punk-pop trio the Young Canadians sputtered said word in the opening line of their underground hit "Hawaii"--and then repeated it in every chorus--it was apparent that some cog in the Greater Scheme of Things had been shaken irreparably loose.
The YCs, as they were known to fans--guitarist/vocalist Art Bergmann, bassist/vocalist Jim Bescott and drummer Barry Taylor--exploded onto the local scene with all the subtlety of a car bomb, a fact attested to by the recent re-release of the excellent No Escape compilation on Joe "Shithead" Keithley's Sudden Death Records. (Though almost identical to the long out-of-print 1995 Zulu Records' release of the same title, with liner notes by head-Modernette Buck Cherry, the new version has been remastered and resequenced with an extra track.)
Originally known as the K-Tels (a name dispensed with when the manufacturer of "original hits by original stars" albums and assorted slicing/dicing implements took umbrage), the Young Canadians, unlike most of their contemporaries, arrived fully formed as a tight and technically proficient unit.
Sound, image, chops, stage antics and songs, songs, songs were all in place before the threesome debuted at O'Hara's on Valentine's Day, 1979. To look at, they were not especially punk, or even punk's corporate cousin, new wave: Bergmann, forever in the throes of morphing from Nick Lowe melody meister into Keith Richards waste case, looked like a computer geek gone bad; Bescott, a former folkie, came off like an adrenaline-fueled bank teller; the hyperkinetic Taylor, meanwhile, dared to sprout facial hair at a time when beards were carcinogenically linked to Lindsay Buckingham/Don Henley-type behaviour.
The Young Canadians' music, however, swiftly enabled them to rise above the flotsam of fashion casualties. Played lightning fast, their songs--like those of Creedence Clearwater Revival a decade earlier--came off like one great single after another. Despite the novelty, frat-house nature of "Hawaii" (built around a jagged guitar riff nicked from the Hawaii Five-O theme song), the tune was instantly hummable, as were "Automan," "I Hate Music," "Where Are You," "Well, Well, Well," "Hullabaloo Girls," "Data Redux," "Just a Loser," "Don't Bother Me"--the list seemed endless.
Quintessence Records, one of the first Canadian record stores to found an independent label, quickly scooped up the lively trio and released 1980's 12-inch Hawaii EP (the first 500 copies included a bonus seven-inch EP, tossed into the sleeve because it bore the "K-Tels" moniker and therefore couldn't be sold as a standalone without the inventors of the Patty Stacker throwing a hissy fit).
Co-produced by the band, Quintessence-owner Ted Thomas and Payola$'s guitarist (soon-to-be mega-metal producer) Bob Rock, the EP sold well, garnered the band a spot on CKVU-TV's The Vancouver Show and led to the consternation of many an in-town DJ, who were deluged with request-line calls from fans and other drunken yobbos to play the title track so that everybody could snort, chortle and singalong with the expletive-peppered chorus. Needless to say, the track didn't get a lot of commercial-radio exposure.
It did, however, lead to the release a few months later of a second EP, This Is Your Life. A more mature, sonically riveting effort, it led to a U.S. tour backing (in fact, blowing the socks off) the grossly overrated Boomtown Rats. The YC's seemed poised to take on the world.
Instead, the end came sooner than anyone expected, in December 1980, with a four-night finale at the Lotus Gardens on Abbott Street. The band cited "record-industry indifference" for the split; in other words, the Young Canadians didn't want to sound like the Knack, the Motels or the Vapors, so the major labels didn't want to know about them.
In retrospect, it is difficult to believe that all of the wonderfully written, structured, performed and produced pop songs included on No Escape issued forth over the course of little more than two short years. Bergmann, of course, went on to become one of Canada's best and most underappreciated songwriters, producing a string of critically beloved major-label albums. Taylor went on to join Shanghai Dog and continues to play on occasion with Roots Roundup. Bescott joined the Actionauts, among other local outfits; he was killed in a freak accident earlier this year on Aug. 31, after being struck by a semi-tractor trailer in Kitsilano. He was 52.
Perhaps the most memorable Young Canadians' show was the one at the VECC in the summer of 1979. Sharing a bill with San Francisco's Dead Kennedys, the YC's raged as go-go girls danced and artist Jim Cummins action-painted an enormous canvas draped behind the drum kit. Or maybe it was the multi-act bill on a flatbed in Vanier Park, band members having Jackson Pollocked their white shirts and denims with fluorescent spray bombs. Or maybe it was the night the band inaugurated the Smilin' Buddha as the city's hell, the country's-- premiere punk palace.
If you didn't catch 'em then, you won't now. Except, of course, on No Escape, a respite unto itself.
Friday, January 6, 2006
By Greg Potter
In 1980, use of the "f-word" in song was not only discouraged, it was outright forbidden by major label record companies and thought by many of the Perry Como generation to be grounds for lengthy prison terms.
Sure, Jim Morrison used to toss it around onstage after a few drinks, and more than a few parents snapped vinyl when Country Joe McDonald substituted the offending letters in the "F-I-S-H" cheer on the Woodstock soundtrack; but short of John Lennon's "Working Class Hero," the odd mating-ape call by the Who's Roger Daltrey and the deliberate shock value of the Sex Pistols' "Bodies," the word wasn't commonly employed by tunesmiths in search of something to rhyme with "truck," "luck" or "duck."
When Vancouver punk-pop trio the Young Canadians sputtered said word in the opening line of their underground hit "Hawaii"--and then repeated it in every chorus--it was apparent that some cog in the Greater Scheme of Things had been shaken irreparably loose.
The YCs, as they were known to fans--guitarist/vocalist Art Bergmann, bassist/vocalist Jim Bescott and drummer Barry Taylor--exploded onto the local scene with all the subtlety of a car bomb, a fact attested to by the recent re-release of the excellent No Escape compilation on Joe "Shithead" Keithley's Sudden Death Records. (Though almost identical to the long out-of-print 1995 Zulu Records' release of the same title, with liner notes by head-Modernette Buck Cherry, the new version has been remastered and resequenced with an extra track.)
Originally known as the K-Tels (a name dispensed with when the manufacturer of "original hits by original stars" albums and assorted slicing/dicing implements took umbrage), the Young Canadians, unlike most of their contemporaries, arrived fully formed as a tight and technically proficient unit.
Sound, image, chops, stage antics and songs, songs, songs were all in place before the threesome debuted at O'Hara's on Valentine's Day, 1979. To look at, they were not especially punk, or even punk's corporate cousin, new wave: Bergmann, forever in the throes of morphing from Nick Lowe melody meister into Keith Richards waste case, looked like a computer geek gone bad; Bescott, a former folkie, came off like an adrenaline-fueled bank teller; the hyperkinetic Taylor, meanwhile, dared to sprout facial hair at a time when beards were carcinogenically linked to Lindsay Buckingham/Don Henley-type behaviour.
The Young Canadians' music, however, swiftly enabled them to rise above the flotsam of fashion casualties. Played lightning fast, their songs--like those of Creedence Clearwater Revival a decade earlier--came off like one great single after another. Despite the novelty, frat-house nature of "Hawaii" (built around a jagged guitar riff nicked from the Hawaii Five-O theme song), the tune was instantly hummable, as were "Automan," "I Hate Music," "Where Are You," "Well, Well, Well," "Hullabaloo Girls," "Data Redux," "Just a Loser," "Don't Bother Me"--the list seemed endless.
Quintessence Records, one of the first Canadian record stores to found an independent label, quickly scooped up the lively trio and released 1980's 12-inch Hawaii EP (the first 500 copies included a bonus seven-inch EP, tossed into the sleeve because it bore the "K-Tels" moniker and therefore couldn't be sold as a standalone without the inventors of the Patty Stacker throwing a hissy fit).
Co-produced by the band, Quintessence-owner Ted Thomas and Payola$'s guitarist (soon-to-be mega-metal producer) Bob Rock, the EP sold well, garnered the band a spot on CKVU-TV's The Vancouver Show and led to the consternation of many an in-town DJ, who were deluged with request-line calls from fans and other drunken yobbos to play the title track so that everybody could snort, chortle and singalong with the expletive-peppered chorus. Needless to say, the track didn't get a lot of commercial-radio exposure.
It did, however, lead to the release a few months later of a second EP, This Is Your Life. A more mature, sonically riveting effort, it led to a U.S. tour backing (in fact, blowing the socks off) the grossly overrated Boomtown Rats. The YC's seemed poised to take on the world.
Instead, the end came sooner than anyone expected, in December 1980, with a four-night finale at the Lotus Gardens on Abbott Street. The band cited "record-industry indifference" for the split; in other words, the Young Canadians didn't want to sound like the Knack, the Motels or the Vapors, so the major labels didn't want to know about them.
In retrospect, it is difficult to believe that all of the wonderfully written, structured, performed and produced pop songs included on No Escape issued forth over the course of little more than two short years. Bergmann, of course, went on to become one of Canada's best and most underappreciated songwriters, producing a string of critically beloved major-label albums. Taylor went on to join Shanghai Dog and continues to play on occasion with Roots Roundup. Bescott joined the Actionauts, among other local outfits; he was killed in a freak accident earlier this year on Aug. 31, after being struck by a semi-tractor trailer in Kitsilano. He was 52.
Perhaps the most memorable Young Canadians' show was the one at the VECC in the summer of 1979. Sharing a bill with San Francisco's Dead Kennedys, the YC's raged as go-go girls danced and artist Jim Cummins action-painted an enormous canvas draped behind the drum kit. Or maybe it was the multi-act bill on a flatbed in Vanier Park, band members having Jackson Pollocked their white shirts and denims with fluorescent spray bombs. Or maybe it was the night the band inaugurated the Smilin' Buddha as the city's hell, the country's-- premiere punk palace.
If you didn't catch 'em then, you won't now. Except, of course, on No Escape, a respite unto itself.
Jim Bescott, Singer-songwriter, 1953-2005
Art student and filmmaker turned bass player was a founding member of Vancouver's new-wave K-Tels
The Globe And Mail
Friday, October 7, 2005
By Tom Hawthorn
VICTORIA -- The bassist Jim Bescott was a founding member of the K- Tels, a seminal new wave trio from Vancouver. In late 1978, Mr. Bescott approached guitarist Art Bergmann of suburban Surrey about forming a punk group. Mr. Bergmann had been in a band called the Shmorgs, which included future MLA David Mitchell, now a vice-president at the University of Ottawa.
With Barry Taylor on drums, the K-Tels debuted at a gig in Vancouver billed as the Valentine's Day Massacre in 1979. Shows at a Gastown art gallery called Gambado's and at the Smilin' Buddha Cabaret on skid row became legendary for the K-Tel's energetic performances.
"Bescott had the same onstage intensity Art did, veins bulging in his neck and temples, and sweat flying," John (Buck Cherry) Armstrong wrote in his 2002 punk memoir Guilty of Everything. Those venues opened the doors for rival bands, many of which had been banished from others halls because of police harassment or petty vandalism.
Mr. Bescott is credited with having first considered the Smilin' Buddha, which had once been home to visiting African-American jazz and blues greats. The small room on East Hastings Street became a punk mecca famous for its beautiful neon sign and infamous for a giant Slavic bouncer named Igor.
The K-Tels joined DOA, the Subhumans and the Pointed Sticks as fan favourites as punk and new wave found a Vancouver audience as manic as the music. As proof of popularity and superior musicianship, especially considering punk's do-it-yourself ethos, the K-Tels won the city's annual Battle of the Bands showcase in 1979.
The K-Tels' Hawaii became an instant underground classic. A rousing surf- punk tune with a guitar riff ripped from the Hawaii Five-O theme, the notorious lyrics include a dozen uses of a common expletive. An extended-play record featuring the song quickly sold 2,000 copies. The rush was created by word of mouth, as no commercial station dared play the song.
It was during an outdoor show at Simon Fraser University that the K-Tels were served legal papers from K-tel International. The Winnipeg-based record label demanded $50,000 in damages for violating the goodwill of their name. At the time, K-tel was known for frantic television commercials pitching household gadgets as well as album collections of "dynamic," "explosive," and "electrifying" hits.
Barely able to feed themselves let alone finance a legal battle, the trio briefly called themselves the X-Tels before settling on Young Canadians. The band released a single and two EPs -- Hawaii (1979) and This Is Your Life (1980) -- before breaking up.
The end was hastened no doubt by the stresses of living in close quarters on the road with no money. The take after a two-night stand at the Hong Kong Cafe in Los Angeles was a paltry $6 U.S. -- to be divided among the three members.
Mr. Bescott, who also sang, wrote several of the band's songs, including Automan, No Escape and Just a Loser .
James Patrick Bescott moved to Vancouver from San Francisco with his family in 1967. He graduated from Kitsilano High School in 1972, by which time the neighbourhood for which the school took its name was already famous as a haven for hippies and draft dodgers.
While attending the Vancouver (now Emily Carr) School of Art, Mr. Bescott won a national film prize. A Night in the Movies won the best animation award at the ninth Canadian Student Film Festival at Montreal in 1977. His movies were shown at festivals in Canada and the United States.
As a singer-songwriter in the early 1970s, Mr. Bescott joined Riff Raff, a band he named, which took as its gimmick frequent changes in costume as well as musical style. The group performed a four-set show: greasers, Beatles, psychedelia, and glam rock.
He later played with a hippie collective that billed itself as the Band of Love Angels, in which 13 members on a variety of instruments created a crescendo of folk and reggae notes in one of the last statements of Kitsilano flower-power.
The Young Canadians opened for such bands as XTC and the Boomtown Rats, whose Irish singer Bob Geldof had worked briefly at Vancouver's underground newspaper, the Georgia Straight. Mr. Bescott also played with Bang Bang, which opened for the Clash.
He remained a presence in the Vancouver music scene, performing in recent months at such mellow Kitsilano venues as the Naam vegetarian restaurant.
On Aug. 4, a night-time fire gutted his mother's heritage house on Macdonald Avenue. She fled barefoot and both lost nearly all their possessions. Mr. Bescott was photographed retrieving a guitar from the ashes at daylight.
He was killed a few weeks later in a bizarre accident at a nearby supermarket. Police believe Mr. Bescott tripped and fell beneath the wheels of a slow-moving tractor-trailer truck delivering groceries. He died at the scene.
A CD of Young Canadians' material titled No Escape was released by Zulu Records in 1995. Joe Keithley, of DOA and Sudden Death Records, will be reissuing the CD later this year.
Jim Bescott was born on July 7, 1953, at San Francisco, Calif.
He died on Aug. 31 in Vancouver. He was 52. He leaves a brother, Robert, and his mother, Catherine, known as Kay.
The Globe And Mail
Friday, October 7, 2005
By Tom Hawthorn
VICTORIA -- The bassist Jim Bescott was a founding member of the K- Tels, a seminal new wave trio from Vancouver. In late 1978, Mr. Bescott approached guitarist Art Bergmann of suburban Surrey about forming a punk group. Mr. Bergmann had been in a band called the Shmorgs, which included future MLA David Mitchell, now a vice-president at the University of Ottawa.
With Barry Taylor on drums, the K-Tels debuted at a gig in Vancouver billed as the Valentine's Day Massacre in 1979. Shows at a Gastown art gallery called Gambado's and at the Smilin' Buddha Cabaret on skid row became legendary for the K-Tel's energetic performances.
"Bescott had the same onstage intensity Art did, veins bulging in his neck and temples, and sweat flying," John (Buck Cherry) Armstrong wrote in his 2002 punk memoir Guilty of Everything. Those venues opened the doors for rival bands, many of which had been banished from others halls because of police harassment or petty vandalism.
Mr. Bescott is credited with having first considered the Smilin' Buddha, which had once been home to visiting African-American jazz and blues greats. The small room on East Hastings Street became a punk mecca famous for its beautiful neon sign and infamous for a giant Slavic bouncer named Igor.
The K-Tels joined DOA, the Subhumans and the Pointed Sticks as fan favourites as punk and new wave found a Vancouver audience as manic as the music. As proof of popularity and superior musicianship, especially considering punk's do-it-yourself ethos, the K-Tels won the city's annual Battle of the Bands showcase in 1979.
The K-Tels' Hawaii became an instant underground classic. A rousing surf- punk tune with a guitar riff ripped from the Hawaii Five-O theme, the notorious lyrics include a dozen uses of a common expletive. An extended-play record featuring the song quickly sold 2,000 copies. The rush was created by word of mouth, as no commercial station dared play the song.
It was during an outdoor show at Simon Fraser University that the K-Tels were served legal papers from K-tel International. The Winnipeg-based record label demanded $50,000 in damages for violating the goodwill of their name. At the time, K-tel was known for frantic television commercials pitching household gadgets as well as album collections of "dynamic," "explosive," and "electrifying" hits.
Barely able to feed themselves let alone finance a legal battle, the trio briefly called themselves the X-Tels before settling on Young Canadians. The band released a single and two EPs -- Hawaii (1979) and This Is Your Life (1980) -- before breaking up.
The end was hastened no doubt by the stresses of living in close quarters on the road with no money. The take after a two-night stand at the Hong Kong Cafe in Los Angeles was a paltry $6 U.S. -- to be divided among the three members.
Mr. Bescott, who also sang, wrote several of the band's songs, including Automan, No Escape and Just a Loser .
James Patrick Bescott moved to Vancouver from San Francisco with his family in 1967. He graduated from Kitsilano High School in 1972, by which time the neighbourhood for which the school took its name was already famous as a haven for hippies and draft dodgers.
While attending the Vancouver (now Emily Carr) School of Art, Mr. Bescott won a national film prize. A Night in the Movies won the best animation award at the ninth Canadian Student Film Festival at Montreal in 1977. His movies were shown at festivals in Canada and the United States.
As a singer-songwriter in the early 1970s, Mr. Bescott joined Riff Raff, a band he named, which took as its gimmick frequent changes in costume as well as musical style. The group performed a four-set show: greasers, Beatles, psychedelia, and glam rock.
He later played with a hippie collective that billed itself as the Band of Love Angels, in which 13 members on a variety of instruments created a crescendo of folk and reggae notes in one of the last statements of Kitsilano flower-power.
The Young Canadians opened for such bands as XTC and the Boomtown Rats, whose Irish singer Bob Geldof had worked briefly at Vancouver's underground newspaper, the Georgia Straight. Mr. Bescott also played with Bang Bang, which opened for the Clash.
He remained a presence in the Vancouver music scene, performing in recent months at such mellow Kitsilano venues as the Naam vegetarian restaurant.
On Aug. 4, a night-time fire gutted his mother's heritage house on Macdonald Avenue. She fled barefoot and both lost nearly all their possessions. Mr. Bescott was photographed retrieving a guitar from the ashes at daylight.
He was killed a few weeks later in a bizarre accident at a nearby supermarket. Police believe Mr. Bescott tripped and fell beneath the wheels of a slow-moving tractor-trailer truck delivering groceries. He died at the scene.
A CD of Young Canadians' material titled No Escape was released by Zulu Records in 1995. Joe Keithley, of DOA and Sudden Death Records, will be reissuing the CD later this year.
Jim Bescott was born on July 7, 1953, at San Francisco, Calif.
He died on Aug. 31 in Vancouver. He was 52. He leaves a brother, Robert, and his mother, Catherine, known as Kay.
OLD SCHOOL
The Edmonton Sun
Sunday, June 27, 2004
BY FISH GRIWKOWSKY
WHAT FRESH HELL IS THIS? (1995)
Art Bergmann
Epic
5 out of 5 stars
"There are no absolutes to human misery, things can get worse."
Don't I know it, brother. Don't we all. But I suppose they can improve, too. For example, there's a reason that Art Bergmann showed up four times on the big list of Canadian bests. That and a cup of coffee, I suppose.
He was and perhaps still is a terribly underrated performer, and this is my favourite album by him. It's a devastating portrait of fear, addiction and hopeless love, full of electric angst and dark, rolling piano.
He opens up telling us, "I just wanted to be good like the Beatles in Hollywood," then gets into a really heartfelt acoustic ballad called Buried Alive, where some cigarette-smoky girl tells him, "my whole life's a crime." Then, for levity, a couple drugs songs, Guns and Heroin and Some Fresh Hell, an Iggy Pop nightmare rocker propelled by vicious bass and a crazed circus organ.
Heavy stuff, but this guy spent enough time in the belly of the beast to earn his position as a loco, bored rock star in Hard Core Logo, a role he as much lived as played. Wherever you are, Art, I hope you're doing fine. If not, don't forget, there are no absolutes to human joy, either.
Sunday, June 27, 2004
BY FISH GRIWKOWSKY
WHAT FRESH HELL IS THIS? (1995)
Art Bergmann
Epic
5 out of 5 stars
"There are no absolutes to human misery, things can get worse."
Don't I know it, brother. Don't we all. But I suppose they can improve, too. For example, there's a reason that Art Bergmann showed up four times on the big list of Canadian bests. That and a cup of coffee, I suppose.
He was and perhaps still is a terribly underrated performer, and this is my favourite album by him. It's a devastating portrait of fear, addiction and hopeless love, full of electric angst and dark, rolling piano.
He opens up telling us, "I just wanted to be good like the Beatles in Hollywood," then gets into a really heartfelt acoustic ballad called Buried Alive, where some cigarette-smoky girl tells him, "my whole life's a crime." Then, for levity, a couple drugs songs, Guns and Heroin and Some Fresh Hell, an Iggy Pop nightmare rocker propelled by vicious bass and a crazed circus organ.
Heavy stuff, but this guy spent enough time in the belly of the beast to earn his position as a loco, bored rock star in Hard Core Logo, a role he as much lived as played. Wherever you are, Art, I hope you're doing fine. If not, don't forget, there are no absolutes to human joy, either.
Damned but never forgotten
The Hamilton Spectator
Thursday, April 5, 2001
By Glen Nott
Art imitates life. Life imitates art. If this was a competition, Art would win.
Art Bergmann, that is.
Assembled in one storied room in downtown Hamilton Saturday night will be, to borrow a Johnny Cash line, the mud, blood and beer of Canadian rock 'n' roll.
This is a group that can count scars on scars -- drugs, disease, Daniels (Jack), debauchery -- but none can count higher than the 46-year-old Bergmann.
Not that he'd want to. Bergmann's not really a numbers person. But here are some interesting ones:
1954: Born in British Columbia to Mennonite parents. Grew up in Surrey.
1977-'84: With bands The Schmorgs, the K-Tels, The Young Canadians, Los Popularos and Poisoned, helps create the West Coast punk scene.
1984: Bergmann's first solo album, Crawl With Me, produced by John Cale of The Velvet Underground, is released and goes gold in sales in Canada.
1989: Juno award (yep, they caught up) for most promising male vocalist for his work on the legendary album Sexual Roulette. The single is Faithlessly Yours.
1990: Plays role of burned out, gun toting rock god in Bruce McDonald's stellar road film Highway 61.
1993: Kicks heroin addiction, an experience that translates into another album, 1995's What Fresh Hell Is This?, a phrase borrowed from Dorothy Parker.
1997: Moves to Toronto.
April 4, 2001: Gets a day off from his job at Rancho Relaxo, a happening restaurant and nightclub in Toronto.
Bergmann and his band don't play out often, which makes this show that much more special.
"I played a show with Teenage Head in Estevan, Saskatchewan in the '80s," he said. "And I really love Tom (Wilson's) stuff."
Like all the best gutter-dwelling music giants -- the Paul Westerbergs, Iggy Pops, Tom Waits -- Bergmann keeps making music that is fresh and original, and far from the grasp of mainstream.
"I've never been stuck in the spiky hair days," he says. "I say play four chords, even five. People always fault me for my complex arrangements, but I get bored."
He listens to radio, but doesn't often like what he hears.
"I listen to 102 (The Edge), but most of the music sounds the same. There's no humour, and there's got to be humour.
"Dark humour, though."
There will be plenty of laughs Saturday, not to mention some remarkable history on display. Gord Lewis, Steve Mahon and Jack Pedler will serve as a sort of house band.
Wilson and Tim Gibbons will sit in with them for some Florida Razors and Shakers material. Later on, the Head will play with singer Frankie Venom front and centre.
Lewis has had the lads together for some practices, and things have gone swimmingly.
"I'm getting calls from Detroit and Buffalo about this one. It's basically sold out," said Corktown booking agent Dan Quinlan. "Somehow the word got out. It's the who's who and it's pretty neat."
And somewhere weaved into this mix will be the night's emcee, Toronto rock pioneer Nash The Slash. Awesome.
The Corktown Tavern -- where only the furniture is plastic.
He has a gig in Hamilton, then Toronto, and then another one hundreds of miles north of Calgary.
Yes, Texas born bluesman Sonny Rhodes, safe and plump from a winter away from the road, is back and criss-crossing the world in the name of, well, travellin' and playin' and singin'.
Rhodes, a legend of the pedal steel guitar sound and its unlikely marriage with the blues, plays the Hudson (233 King Street E.,) tomorrow night. Cover for the show is $15.
Tonight at the Hudson, it's One Step Beyond. Jazz guitarist Jake Langley is in on Saturday night. Cover for those shows is $5.
Sonic Unyon recording artists Sianspheric play Raven (69 Augusta Street at John Street) tomorrow night, and will soon be releasing a new album, titled The Sound of the Colour of the Sun. Expect it in June.
On Saturday night at Raven, Hamilton's FLUX A.D. and Dale Morningstar of The Dinner is Ruined combine for the best double bill of the weekend in these parts.
Morningstar, incidentally, had a big hand in Gord Downie's recent trip down poetry lane, the album and book Coke Machine Glow.
Downie, of course, is the dancing guy with the funny thing in his ear for The Tragically Hip.
Richard Baxter is a drummer. Boy, is he ever.
The Quebec musician has made an album, Baxter's Drum World, which features his world-record 115-piece drum kit.
The album is all drums. There are African tribal beats and a bongo duel, and the final two cuts are the the cat's whiskers for drum solo enthusiasts -- The Jazz Ghost of Buddy is a five-minute, 20 second solo on a four piece kit, while Percussion "Krock" Soup is almost 18 minutes of solo work on the full kit.
Need to know
What: Damned But Never Forgotten, a massive rock 'n' roll review
Who: Teenage Head (Gord Lewis, Frank Venom, Steve Mahon, Jack Pedler), Art Bergmann and Band, Tom Wilson, Tim Gibbons, Nash The Slash (emcee), Dave Byngham, Buckshot Bebee & The Sapphire Fly Band, and Spoiled Rotten
When: Saturday, April 7. Doors open at 9 p.m.
Where: Corktown Tavern, 175 Young Street, downtown Hamilton
Tickets: $10 in advance at Dr. Disc, Rave Records and the club, or $13 at the door
Thursday, April 5, 2001
By Glen Nott
Art imitates life. Life imitates art. If this was a competition, Art would win.
Art Bergmann, that is.
Assembled in one storied room in downtown Hamilton Saturday night will be, to borrow a Johnny Cash line, the mud, blood and beer of Canadian rock 'n' roll.
This is a group that can count scars on scars -- drugs, disease, Daniels (Jack), debauchery -- but none can count higher than the 46-year-old Bergmann.
Not that he'd want to. Bergmann's not really a numbers person. But here are some interesting ones:
1954: Born in British Columbia to Mennonite parents. Grew up in Surrey.
1977-'84: With bands The Schmorgs, the K-Tels, The Young Canadians, Los Popularos and Poisoned, helps create the West Coast punk scene.
1984: Bergmann's first solo album, Crawl With Me, produced by John Cale of The Velvet Underground, is released and goes gold in sales in Canada.
1989: Juno award (yep, they caught up) for most promising male vocalist for his work on the legendary album Sexual Roulette. The single is Faithlessly Yours.
1990: Plays role of burned out, gun toting rock god in Bruce McDonald's stellar road film Highway 61.
1993: Kicks heroin addiction, an experience that translates into another album, 1995's What Fresh Hell Is This?, a phrase borrowed from Dorothy Parker.
1997: Moves to Toronto.
April 4, 2001: Gets a day off from his job at Rancho Relaxo, a happening restaurant and nightclub in Toronto.
Bergmann and his band don't play out often, which makes this show that much more special.
"I played a show with Teenage Head in Estevan, Saskatchewan in the '80s," he said. "And I really love Tom (Wilson's) stuff."
Like all the best gutter-dwelling music giants -- the Paul Westerbergs, Iggy Pops, Tom Waits -- Bergmann keeps making music that is fresh and original, and far from the grasp of mainstream.
"I've never been stuck in the spiky hair days," he says. "I say play four chords, even five. People always fault me for my complex arrangements, but I get bored."
He listens to radio, but doesn't often like what he hears.
"I listen to 102 (The Edge), but most of the music sounds the same. There's no humour, and there's got to be humour.
"Dark humour, though."
There will be plenty of laughs Saturday, not to mention some remarkable history on display. Gord Lewis, Steve Mahon and Jack Pedler will serve as a sort of house band.
Wilson and Tim Gibbons will sit in with them for some Florida Razors and Shakers material. Later on, the Head will play with singer Frankie Venom front and centre.
Lewis has had the lads together for some practices, and things have gone swimmingly.
"I'm getting calls from Detroit and Buffalo about this one. It's basically sold out," said Corktown booking agent Dan Quinlan. "Somehow the word got out. It's the who's who and it's pretty neat."
And somewhere weaved into this mix will be the night's emcee, Toronto rock pioneer Nash The Slash. Awesome.
The Corktown Tavern -- where only the furniture is plastic.
He has a gig in Hamilton, then Toronto, and then another one hundreds of miles north of Calgary.
Yes, Texas born bluesman Sonny Rhodes, safe and plump from a winter away from the road, is back and criss-crossing the world in the name of, well, travellin' and playin' and singin'.
Rhodes, a legend of the pedal steel guitar sound and its unlikely marriage with the blues, plays the Hudson (233 King Street E.,) tomorrow night. Cover for the show is $15.
Tonight at the Hudson, it's One Step Beyond. Jazz guitarist Jake Langley is in on Saturday night. Cover for those shows is $5.
Sonic Unyon recording artists Sianspheric play Raven (69 Augusta Street at John Street) tomorrow night, and will soon be releasing a new album, titled The Sound of the Colour of the Sun. Expect it in June.
On Saturday night at Raven, Hamilton's FLUX A.D. and Dale Morningstar of The Dinner is Ruined combine for the best double bill of the weekend in these parts.
Morningstar, incidentally, had a big hand in Gord Downie's recent trip down poetry lane, the album and book Coke Machine Glow.
Downie, of course, is the dancing guy with the funny thing in his ear for The Tragically Hip.
Richard Baxter is a drummer. Boy, is he ever.
The Quebec musician has made an album, Baxter's Drum World, which features his world-record 115-piece drum kit.
The album is all drums. There are African tribal beats and a bongo duel, and the final two cuts are the the cat's whiskers for drum solo enthusiasts -- The Jazz Ghost of Buddy is a five-minute, 20 second solo on a four piece kit, while Percussion "Krock" Soup is almost 18 minutes of solo work on the full kit.
Need to know
What: Damned But Never Forgotten, a massive rock 'n' roll review
Who: Teenage Head (Gord Lewis, Frank Venom, Steve Mahon, Jack Pedler), Art Bergmann and Band, Tom Wilson, Tim Gibbons, Nash The Slash (emcee), Dave Byngham, Buckshot Bebee & The Sapphire Fly Band, and Spoiled Rotten
When: Saturday, April 7. Doors open at 9 p.m.
Where: Corktown Tavern, 175 Young Street, downtown Hamilton
Tickets: $10 in advance at Dr. Disc, Rave Records and the club, or $13 at the door
Too cute for cutting-edge Bergmann
Calgary Herald
Thursday, September 7, 2000
by James Muretich
Art Bergmann
Vultura Freeway
Rating 2 out of four stars
These mid-'80s, rescued-from-dust-in-someone's-vault recordings from the beginnings of Art Bergmann's solo career show just how far the icon of the Canuck rock underground has come in the intervening 16 years. Bergmann buffs will no doubt treasure rarities like the title track and the usual articulate venom the king snake can summon with ease.
However, the bouncy rhythms in vogue at the time, one of the sins of new wave-electropop, sap a lot of the righteous anger that seethes within these songs. It's too cute for the kind of cutting-edge Bergmann gives naked to the world.
For Art fanatics (all three dozen of us). For others, check out What Fresh Hell is This or play Sexual Roulette.
Thursday, September 7, 2000
by James Muretich
Art Bergmann
Vultura Freeway
Rating 2 out of four stars
These mid-'80s, rescued-from-dust-in-someone's-vault recordings from the beginnings of Art Bergmann's solo career show just how far the icon of the Canuck rock underground has come in the intervening 16 years. Bergmann buffs will no doubt treasure rarities like the title track and the usual articulate venom the king snake can summon with ease.
However, the bouncy rhythms in vogue at the time, one of the sins of new wave-electropop, sap a lot of the righteous anger that seethes within these songs. It's too cute for the kind of cutting-edge Bergmann gives naked to the world.
For Art fanatics (all three dozen of us). For others, check out What Fresh Hell is This or play Sexual Roulette.
1984: Rear window
Vancouver Sun
Thursday, June 8, 2000
By Alex Waterhouse-Hayward
In May 1989, my clematis montana 'Rubens' was in bloom. Art Bergmann arrived on his 10-speed, all suntanned and sweaty in a muscle shirt. He had never looked so good. I served him some iced tea and then asked him to pose under the clematis. It occurred to me that he looked like Julio Iglesias, but with hair.
The reek of rotting onions was overpowering as my daughter Ale, 14, and I climbed the stairs of a warehouse on Railway Street and Gore one late evening of another May, in 1984. A makeshift recording studio had been installed on the fourth floor. Bergmann and friends, the cream of the best alternative scene rock bands of the day (among them my friends Gord Nicholl, Randy Carpenter and Nick Jones) were recording 10 songs. Carpenter had called me with the tip that my favourite Bergmann song Yellow Pages -- "Sticking knives in our backs and giving it a twist'' -- was on for that evening.
Not having grown up with rock 'n' roll, I belatedly shared with my daughter the teen thrill of hearing a great song, over and over. It was fun watching Bergmann play guitar and Carpenter and Jones on back-up vocals. The recording engineer, Cec English, seemed to be impervious to all the excitement as he methodically and unemotionally flicked switches. Only later did I find out that he was in great pain. The night before, he and Bergmann (fuelled by an over-consumption of Jim Beam) had kicked a police car outside the Oasis Club. English had a broken foot.
Later in 1984, I photographed Bergmann at the "Snake Pit,'' a house on East Broadway and Renfrew that he shared with Tony Baloney and other musicians. One of the resulting photographs is from what I would call Art's "wasted Keith Richards period.''
But I prefer to remember him as he looks on the cover of the CD Vultura Freeway, available now at audiomonster.com and soon in music stores. Those 10 songs that I had heard back in 1984, until now available only on the original cassette, have been lovingly brought back by local rocker Chris Houston and Audio Monster's Greg Corcoran. When Houston asked me some months back if I had "happy photos of Art,'' I thought of Bergmann under the clematis on a hot afternoon.
Borrowing from the title song, Vultura Freeway (up there with The Clash's London Calling for a song meant for driving fast on a hot summer day), "it's not summer but it's hot today,'' you can bet that it will be hot tonight and Friday when Bergmann performs at the Marine Club.
Thursday, June 8, 2000
By Alex Waterhouse-Hayward
In May 1989, my clematis montana 'Rubens' was in bloom. Art Bergmann arrived on his 10-speed, all suntanned and sweaty in a muscle shirt. He had never looked so good. I served him some iced tea and then asked him to pose under the clematis. It occurred to me that he looked like Julio Iglesias, but with hair.
The reek of rotting onions was overpowering as my daughter Ale, 14, and I climbed the stairs of a warehouse on Railway Street and Gore one late evening of another May, in 1984. A makeshift recording studio had been installed on the fourth floor. Bergmann and friends, the cream of the best alternative scene rock bands of the day (among them my friends Gord Nicholl, Randy Carpenter and Nick Jones) were recording 10 songs. Carpenter had called me with the tip that my favourite Bergmann song Yellow Pages -- "Sticking knives in our backs and giving it a twist'' -- was on for that evening.
Not having grown up with rock 'n' roll, I belatedly shared with my daughter the teen thrill of hearing a great song, over and over. It was fun watching Bergmann play guitar and Carpenter and Jones on back-up vocals. The recording engineer, Cec English, seemed to be impervious to all the excitement as he methodically and unemotionally flicked switches. Only later did I find out that he was in great pain. The night before, he and Bergmann (fuelled by an over-consumption of Jim Beam) had kicked a police car outside the Oasis Club. English had a broken foot.
Later in 1984, I photographed Bergmann at the "Snake Pit,'' a house on East Broadway and Renfrew that he shared with Tony Baloney and other musicians. One of the resulting photographs is from what I would call Art's "wasted Keith Richards period.''
But I prefer to remember him as he looks on the cover of the CD Vultura Freeway, available now at audiomonster.com and soon in music stores. Those 10 songs that I had heard back in 1984, until now available only on the original cassette, have been lovingly brought back by local rocker Chris Houston and Audio Monster's Greg Corcoran. When Houston asked me some months back if I had "happy photos of Art,'' I thought of Bergmann under the clematis on a hot afternoon.
Borrowing from the title song, Vultura Freeway (up there with The Clash's London Calling for a song meant for driving fast on a hot summer day), "it's not summer but it's hot today,'' you can bet that it will be hot tonight and Friday when Bergmann performs at the Marine Club.
Songs presented in all their naked brilliance
Calgary Herald
Thursday, March 16, 2000
by James Muretich
Art Bergmann
Design Flaw (Other Peoples Music-EMI)
Rating: 3.5 out of four stars
Canadian singer-songwriter Art Bergmann's 1998 acoustic gem, Design Flaw, may be a little easier to find in stores the second time around since it's being distributed through EMI Music. No one dives into the quagmire of sin, drugs, death and desire with such poetic passion as this Vancouver-bred rocker and on this disc, armed only with an acoustic guitar and occasional help from legendary guitarist Chris Spedding, Art's songs are presented in all their naked brilliance. This puts faces and feelings to the individuals who swim upstream against society's mainstream values. Still a cult figure "in the garage'' after more than two decades, Bergmann is the Canadian Ray Davies of the dispossessed.
Thursday, March 16, 2000
by James Muretich
Art Bergmann
Design Flaw (Other Peoples Music-EMI)
Rating: 3.5 out of four stars
Canadian singer-songwriter Art Bergmann's 1998 acoustic gem, Design Flaw, may be a little easier to find in stores the second time around since it's being distributed through EMI Music. No one dives into the quagmire of sin, drugs, death and desire with such poetic passion as this Vancouver-bred rocker and on this disc, armed only with an acoustic guitar and occasional help from legendary guitarist Chris Spedding, Art's songs are presented in all their naked brilliance. This puts faces and feelings to the individuals who swim upstream against society's mainstream values. Still a cult figure "in the garage'' after more than two decades, Bergmann is the Canadian Ray Davies of the dispossessed.
STATE OF THE ART BERGMANN
The Edmonton Sun
Friday, November 13, 1998
BY FISH GRIWKOWSKY
You can see the evidence of a million drinks on his face, hear as many cigarettes in his voice. Dropped by his label more times than most of us have fingers, Art Bergmann phones collect from some bar or other in Toronto and still, an inspiration to any of us who dare complain about anything, carries on.
"I've never been brave enough to off myself," he says with a smile you can hear. "I learned how to live it up all too well."
One of our country's foremost underground heroes, he even got a Juno in "better" days. ("It should have been a highlight, but it wasn't," he admits.)
Bergmann has, however, found light in his latest label divorce, a true Canadian optimist in the face of the snowstorm. "I'm an independent," he says, slowing down the last two syllables, making himself sound like a trophy. "I was really bummed for a while. Then I realized: no middleman.
"I could do whatever I wanted. Here's to that."
Like a lot of indies, Bergmann has the whole world in front of him again. All he needed to do was put the pen in his hand again and invite the muse. Trouble is, the muse was on holidays, maybe left in some bar somewhere, or a trashed hotel room.
"I've had a writer's block for a couple years," he laughs halfheartedly. "So my buddy Peter Moore suggested doing a live album. Recording it, it didn't come across."
Another low point? Turns out no. "Peter said, 'Let's do it in my kitchen,' he's got a complete recording studio in there, and so we did."
The result is Design Flaw, another in a long line of emotional projects following up the days Bergmann used to sing about his empty house, Marianne Faithfull or about tears about a mansion shooting chickens in Bruce MacDonald's Highway 61. Mostly just the singer and his acoustic, Bergmann tours through his old songs like Faithlessly Yours with a sad, sombre voice. He's joined by a ghostly electric now and then. The man even covers an old Gram Parsons tune, aware of the connection between himself and the doomed Byrd.
This, well, slowing down, taking it easy ... is this the end of Art Bergmann as party animal? Is he going straight and clean? "What the fuck for?" he laughs. "There's lots still left in me. I don't know what happiness is, necessarily, but I think the reason we're alive is to come to terms with that. I'm getting to the point of almost a reliable income again. I'm making a living. I don't want anything else any more."
Art Bergmann plays Rebar tomorrow night, tickets at the door. Show up early to avoid the downstairs lineup, but show up!
Friday, November 13, 1998
BY FISH GRIWKOWSKY
You can see the evidence of a million drinks on his face, hear as many cigarettes in his voice. Dropped by his label more times than most of us have fingers, Art Bergmann phones collect from some bar or other in Toronto and still, an inspiration to any of us who dare complain about anything, carries on.
"I've never been brave enough to off myself," he says with a smile you can hear. "I learned how to live it up all too well."
One of our country's foremost underground heroes, he even got a Juno in "better" days. ("It should have been a highlight, but it wasn't," he admits.)
Bergmann has, however, found light in his latest label divorce, a true Canadian optimist in the face of the snowstorm. "I'm an independent," he says, slowing down the last two syllables, making himself sound like a trophy. "I was really bummed for a while. Then I realized: no middleman.
"I could do whatever I wanted. Here's to that."
Like a lot of indies, Bergmann has the whole world in front of him again. All he needed to do was put the pen in his hand again and invite the muse. Trouble is, the muse was on holidays, maybe left in some bar somewhere, or a trashed hotel room.
"I've had a writer's block for a couple years," he laughs halfheartedly. "So my buddy Peter Moore suggested doing a live album. Recording it, it didn't come across."
Another low point? Turns out no. "Peter said, 'Let's do it in my kitchen,' he's got a complete recording studio in there, and so we did."
The result is Design Flaw, another in a long line of emotional projects following up the days Bergmann used to sing about his empty house, Marianne Faithfull or about tears about a mansion shooting chickens in Bruce MacDonald's Highway 61. Mostly just the singer and his acoustic, Bergmann tours through his old songs like Faithlessly Yours with a sad, sombre voice. He's joined by a ghostly electric now and then. The man even covers an old Gram Parsons tune, aware of the connection between himself and the doomed Byrd.
This, well, slowing down, taking it easy ... is this the end of Art Bergmann as party animal? Is he going straight and clean? "What the fuck for?" he laughs. "There's lots still left in me. I don't know what happiness is, necessarily, but I think the reason we're alive is to come to terms with that. I'm getting to the point of almost a reliable income again. I'm making a living. I don't want anything else any more."
Art Bergmann plays Rebar tomorrow night, tickets at the door. Show up early to avoid the downstairs lineup, but show up!
End-of-the-road movie for a generation
The Toronto Star
Friday, October 18, 1996
By Peter Goddard
Hard Core Logo
Starring Hugh Dillon, Callum Keith Rennie, Bernie Coulson, and John Pyper-Ferguson, screenplay by Noel S. Baker, based on the novel by Michael Turner, cinematography by Danny Nowak, directed by Bruce McDonald. At Canada Square and Eaton Centre.
Forget the Vatican's banks, the far side of the moon or the left side of Bob Dole's brain. No place on earth contains more mysteries than the interior of a band's tour van - a space Bruce McDonald in Hard Core Logo, makes into a rolling metaphor for Life As It Is and other Really Big Ideas.
Logo is a classic rock flick, equidistant in spirit from Don't Look Back, Spinal Tap and Weekend by Jean-Luc Godard. With a hot soundtrack and cameos from the likes of Art Bergmann, it's also a somewhat nostalgic finale to Vancouver's great punk scene as well as to McDonald's trilogy which began with Roadkill and continued with Highway 61.
Hot nostalgia? Exactly. No other kind's possible for the late '70s and '80s. Hard Core Logo gets revved up when the band's on stage, but elsewhere McDonald and screenwriter Noel S. Baker remind you of how all the energy is beginning to slip away. This is also an end-of-the-road movie for a entire generation.
Inevitably, the more historically inclined critics will like to align it with another tradition - that of Anglo-Canadian "road" films - or "river" films, like Bill Mason's Paddle To The Sea - best defined by Don Shebib's Goin' Down The Road.
(Quebecois filmmakers have always seemed less inclined to hit the road, unless that road headed south - like in La Floride, say. But - wait on there. How could I have forgotten the seminal Molson's commercials we're now seeing, with those swash-buckling, funny-speaking coureur de bois looking for the big brewski in the sky?)
In truth, only the truly innocent and/or R.E.M fans might think one of these rented, rolling hell-holes is about getting a bunch of greasy rockers from gig to gig - in real life or in this flick's gritty approximation of it.
Anyone who's ever spent any time in one - and three minutes is about all you need - will instantly remember the unique rock van smell; a combination of petrified pizza bits, clothes unwashed for six months, cheap booze, cheaper sex all coated with the furry residue from inexpensive drugs.
But like all road flicks, the distance covered in Logo is the one between the guys who are forced to live together in their beat-up Gruman delivery truck - "the goat van," they call it - as the band heads east from Vancouver for a few farewell gigs across the prairies.
Joe Dick (Hugh Dillon) is band leader as well as lead singer and lead jerk. In short, he's hard not to like even if he's scamming everyone at least part of the time. (Dillon, who also appeared in McDonald's Dance Me Outside and looks uncannily like the punk Bruce Willis thinks he is, also happens to be singer/songwriter for the Headstones.)
Billy Tallent (Callum Keith Rennie) is the Keith Richards to Dick's Mick, the suave guitarist who may be the only one in the band who might have a future in music - well, an extra month or two. He and Joe go way back together and they can't forget it, despite their best efforts.
Then there are band members Pipefitter (Bernie Coulson) and John Oxenberger (John Pyper-Ferguson) who, like Elvis. have long ago left the auditorium. For them, the van ride along endless two-lane blacktops to gigs where no one shows, particularly the man with the money, is tantamount to having the mob call in that favor it's owed.
There is, of course, more than money involved. There's the cadaverous, punk legend Bucky Haight (the cadaverous and superbly eerie Julian Richings) who Dick just must visit. The few ghostly moments the script gives Haight amount to a small part but Riching is so dead-on right in it - and, yes, the key word here is dead - it almost takes over the entire film, which is something considering how strong the rest of the cast - particularly Dillon - is.
Finally, there's the strangest character of all, Bruce McDonald (played by the hirsute but otherwise well-cast Bruce McDonald), who's busy recording all of this for a movie despite his characters' insistance he go take a long walk off a short dock - or something like that.
But even here, you feel the tug of McDonald's own past and his on-going penchant for shooting movie-within-movies (consider his early short, Let Me See.)
Screenwriter Noel S. Baker has provided some of the funniest and deftest writing Canadian moviemaking has heard in years. But it can't hide the bitter-sweetness just below the surface.
Friday, October 18, 1996
By Peter Goddard
Hard Core Logo
Starring Hugh Dillon, Callum Keith Rennie, Bernie Coulson, and John Pyper-Ferguson, screenplay by Noel S. Baker, based on the novel by Michael Turner, cinematography by Danny Nowak, directed by Bruce McDonald. At Canada Square and Eaton Centre.
Forget the Vatican's banks, the far side of the moon or the left side of Bob Dole's brain. No place on earth contains more mysteries than the interior of a band's tour van - a space Bruce McDonald in Hard Core Logo, makes into a rolling metaphor for Life As It Is and other Really Big Ideas.
Logo is a classic rock flick, equidistant in spirit from Don't Look Back, Spinal Tap and Weekend by Jean-Luc Godard. With a hot soundtrack and cameos from the likes of Art Bergmann, it's also a somewhat nostalgic finale to Vancouver's great punk scene as well as to McDonald's trilogy which began with Roadkill and continued with Highway 61.
Hot nostalgia? Exactly. No other kind's possible for the late '70s and '80s. Hard Core Logo gets revved up when the band's on stage, but elsewhere McDonald and screenwriter Noel S. Baker remind you of how all the energy is beginning to slip away. This is also an end-of-the-road movie for a entire generation.
Inevitably, the more historically inclined critics will like to align it with another tradition - that of Anglo-Canadian "road" films - or "river" films, like Bill Mason's Paddle To The Sea - best defined by Don Shebib's Goin' Down The Road.
(Quebecois filmmakers have always seemed less inclined to hit the road, unless that road headed south - like in La Floride, say. But - wait on there. How could I have forgotten the seminal Molson's commercials we're now seeing, with those swash-buckling, funny-speaking coureur de bois looking for the big brewski in the sky?)
In truth, only the truly innocent and/or R.E.M fans might think one of these rented, rolling hell-holes is about getting a bunch of greasy rockers from gig to gig - in real life or in this flick's gritty approximation of it.
Anyone who's ever spent any time in one - and three minutes is about all you need - will instantly remember the unique rock van smell; a combination of petrified pizza bits, clothes unwashed for six months, cheap booze, cheaper sex all coated with the furry residue from inexpensive drugs.
But like all road flicks, the distance covered in Logo is the one between the guys who are forced to live together in their beat-up Gruman delivery truck - "the goat van," they call it - as the band heads east from Vancouver for a few farewell gigs across the prairies.
Joe Dick (Hugh Dillon) is band leader as well as lead singer and lead jerk. In short, he's hard not to like even if he's scamming everyone at least part of the time. (Dillon, who also appeared in McDonald's Dance Me Outside and looks uncannily like the punk Bruce Willis thinks he is, also happens to be singer/songwriter for the Headstones.)
Billy Tallent (Callum Keith Rennie) is the Keith Richards to Dick's Mick, the suave guitarist who may be the only one in the band who might have a future in music - well, an extra month or two. He and Joe go way back together and they can't forget it, despite their best efforts.
Then there are band members Pipefitter (Bernie Coulson) and John Oxenberger (John Pyper-Ferguson) who, like Elvis. have long ago left the auditorium. For them, the van ride along endless two-lane blacktops to gigs where no one shows, particularly the man with the money, is tantamount to having the mob call in that favor it's owed.
There is, of course, more than money involved. There's the cadaverous, punk legend Bucky Haight (the cadaverous and superbly eerie Julian Richings) who Dick just must visit. The few ghostly moments the script gives Haight amount to a small part but Riching is so dead-on right in it - and, yes, the key word here is dead - it almost takes over the entire film, which is something considering how strong the rest of the cast - particularly Dillon - is.
Finally, there's the strangest character of all, Bruce McDonald (played by the hirsute but otherwise well-cast Bruce McDonald), who's busy recording all of this for a movie despite his characters' insistance he go take a long walk off a short dock - or something like that.
But even here, you feel the tug of McDonald's own past and his on-going penchant for shooting movie-within-movies (consider his early short, Let Me See.)
Screenwriter Noel S. Baker has provided some of the funniest and deftest writing Canadian moviemaking has heard in years. But it can't hide the bitter-sweetness just below the surface.
Bergmann living down his reputation
Canadian rock legend tries a mellower sound
The Toronto Star
Thursday, October 15, 1998
By Ben Rayner
Knock around any business long enough and you'll be rewarded with a Reputation.
Such is the honour of Art Bergmann, who - after something like 35 years in the rock 'n' roll maelstrom - is definitely in the running for CanRock iconhood, albeit on a modest scale.
And that Reputation precedes him: One of those punk-before-there-was-punk guys. Surly. Unpredictable. Record-label nightmare. Drugs. Bit of a nutter, really. Etcetera.
This blinding autumn afternoon, though, Bergmann - perched, smoking and slightly flu-ridden, on a stamp-sized College St. patio - is not the miasma of rock legends I'd been led to expect. Just a perfectly likable, if slightly rumpled and curmudgeonly, middle-aged ("I'm 400," he says) musician.
"It's amazing. People make up stories and badmouth me," says Bergmann, mumbling into his coffee. "I've never missed a show, I don't think.
"I'm a consummate professional."
A smirk. But seriously, he adds, he'd prefer to cede his walking-disaster title to someone who can pull it off with a little more enthusiasm than he's willing to muster these days.
"I like to sit back and watch the younger guys now," he says, "See if they can pull it off."
Bergmann - who's been grinding out snarling, hard-edged rock songs since he began his career during the early '70s with Vancouver bands like the K-Tels and The Young Canadians - should buck a few more expectations with the release this week of his new album, Design Flaw.
A collection of songs he's penned over the past decade (plus a cover of Gram Parsons' "Sin City"), it was recorded acoustically in Toronto producer Peter Moore's kitchen last year, with guitarist Chris Spedding dropping a few electric textures into the mix.
The record gets a proper unveiling tonight when Bergmann performs with Spedding at Rancho Relaxo (300 College St.).
"It's a little dreary," Bergmann says of the album. "It's 4 a.m. music."
Design Flaw's unplugged approach grew out of the sporadic acoustic sets Bergmann performed over the past couple years, during an extended sabbatical from the music business.
Although he's never really enjoyed a long and fruitful relationship with any record label, Bergmann hit the wall when Sony Canada dumped him after 1995's acclaimed What Fresh Hell Is This? - especially since the disc snared a Juno for best alternative album.
"I just decided to quit everything for a while, quit the business for a while," recalls Bergmann, who was eventually lured to Ontario from Vancouver to play some low-overhead acoustic dates.
He never left.
"I came out here for a couple of shows and had no reason to go back," he says. "So I said to my wife: 'You feel like being Gypsies for a while?' "
At one point, someone suggested Bergmann record one of his solo shows, and the seed was planted for Design Flaw. The album - which is being released on punk-reissue label Other People's Music - contains older material, in part because he wanted to do a career overview. But Bergmann's distaste for the music industry had effectively sapped him of the desire to compose any new songs.
"I'm starting to write now, thank God," he says. "I thought it was gone - I killed a couple of Muses for a while.
"The whole destructive lifestyle was best for me. My best stuff came from a hangover."
The acoustic-troubadour thing is temporary, says Bergmann, who pledges to return to full, caustic, noisy form once he scrapes up enough cash to bring his band back to Toronto.
"I'm going out west right away," he says. "I'm going to meet up with a couple of members of my band and play a few shows - get really loud for a couple of weeks. Then hopefully I can afford to get the guys out here.
"We'll see if I can prance around like a fucking gigolo, like Steven Tyler. God, I hate that shit. Go away."
The Toronto Star
Thursday, October 15, 1998
By Ben Rayner
Knock around any business long enough and you'll be rewarded with a Reputation.
Such is the honour of Art Bergmann, who - after something like 35 years in the rock 'n' roll maelstrom - is definitely in the running for CanRock iconhood, albeit on a modest scale.
And that Reputation precedes him: One of those punk-before-there-was-punk guys. Surly. Unpredictable. Record-label nightmare. Drugs. Bit of a nutter, really. Etcetera.
This blinding autumn afternoon, though, Bergmann - perched, smoking and slightly flu-ridden, on a stamp-sized College St. patio - is not the miasma of rock legends I'd been led to expect. Just a perfectly likable, if slightly rumpled and curmudgeonly, middle-aged ("I'm 400," he says) musician.
"It's amazing. People make up stories and badmouth me," says Bergmann, mumbling into his coffee. "I've never missed a show, I don't think.
"I'm a consummate professional."
A smirk. But seriously, he adds, he'd prefer to cede his walking-disaster title to someone who can pull it off with a little more enthusiasm than he's willing to muster these days.
"I like to sit back and watch the younger guys now," he says, "See if they can pull it off."
Bergmann - who's been grinding out snarling, hard-edged rock songs since he began his career during the early '70s with Vancouver bands like the K-Tels and The Young Canadians - should buck a few more expectations with the release this week of his new album, Design Flaw.
A collection of songs he's penned over the past decade (plus a cover of Gram Parsons' "Sin City"), it was recorded acoustically in Toronto producer Peter Moore's kitchen last year, with guitarist Chris Spedding dropping a few electric textures into the mix.
The record gets a proper unveiling tonight when Bergmann performs with Spedding at Rancho Relaxo (300 College St.).
"It's a little dreary," Bergmann says of the album. "It's 4 a.m. music."
Design Flaw's unplugged approach grew out of the sporadic acoustic sets Bergmann performed over the past couple years, during an extended sabbatical from the music business.
Although he's never really enjoyed a long and fruitful relationship with any record label, Bergmann hit the wall when Sony Canada dumped him after 1995's acclaimed What Fresh Hell Is This? - especially since the disc snared a Juno for best alternative album.
"I just decided to quit everything for a while, quit the business for a while," recalls Bergmann, who was eventually lured to Ontario from Vancouver to play some low-overhead acoustic dates.
He never left.
"I came out here for a couple of shows and had no reason to go back," he says. "So I said to my wife: 'You feel like being Gypsies for a while?' "
At one point, someone suggested Bergmann record one of his solo shows, and the seed was planted for Design Flaw. The album - which is being released on punk-reissue label Other People's Music - contains older material, in part because he wanted to do a career overview. But Bergmann's distaste for the music industry had effectively sapped him of the desire to compose any new songs.
"I'm starting to write now, thank God," he says. "I thought it was gone - I killed a couple of Muses for a while.
"The whole destructive lifestyle was best for me. My best stuff came from a hangover."
The acoustic-troubadour thing is temporary, says Bergmann, who pledges to return to full, caustic, noisy form once he scrapes up enough cash to bring his band back to Toronto.
"I'm going out west right away," he says. "I'm going to meet up with a couple of members of my band and play a few shows - get really loud for a couple of weeks. Then hopefully I can afford to get the guys out here.
"We'll see if I can prance around like a fucking gigolo, like Steven Tyler. God, I hate that shit. Go away."
End of era with Pump's passing
Club reigned as city's most important venue for live rock
The Province
Sunday, July 13, 1997
By Tom Harrison
People who don't smoke don't drink and they're cheap, too.''
For years, this quote from Joe McLean, blown up and framed in glass, hung on a brick wall of the Town Pump. It referred to the end of the Pump's experiment with a smoking ban and was put up as a reminder of a hard lesson learned.
The smoking ban lasted for only a few months in 1991 but it made the Town Pump the first club in Canada to try such a policy and made national headlines. As McLean, then one of its owners, so eloquently noted, it didn't make the club any money, however, and after weeks of terrible business the ban went down and the quote went up.
It's a brief era in the Town Pump's almost 15-year history that Bob Burrows would prefer to forget, even if it does illustrate one of the strangest of its many phases.
Burrows, who is one of the current owners, shut down the Pump in May, bringing to an end its reign as Vancouver's most important rock club.
It's reopening as Sonar, a dance club, is no less symbolic for what it says about entertainment trends and the state of live music. In the week since the dramatically renovated room has been open, Sonar has been pulling in the crowds and making money the way the Pump never did in its dying days. Yet Burrows got into the business by booking live rock 'n' roll and has a close attachment to the Town Pump.
"I was the one who started booking bands there,'' he says. In 1983, the Town Pump was a Gastown restaurant that usually featured a house band doing current hits. For a while, owner Alan Achilles brought in Top 40 cover bands but when this didn't work, Burrows booked original rock into the 420-capacity room.
"At the time, I was working with Simon Gunn and Frank Weipert and we were booking bands like that rockabilly band from Scotland -- the Shakin' Pyramids -- and The B-Sides and David Raven and they all were making a lot of money, but no one was coming for the Top 40 bands,'' he said.
WEALTH OF ACTS
The Town Pump provided a venue for an emerging post-punk/new wave community and a wealth of diverse touring acts. It became a stepping-stone for local acts that had graduated from the smaller Railway or Savoy and were on their way to the Commodore Ballroom. Headlining the Pump on a weekend also was a mark of status. It meant the act had built its own following, often by playing to a near- empty house on a Tuesday, or sharing a bill with three other acts on a Wednesday.
"The Town Pump probably paid out more money to local bands than any club in town, including the Commodore,'' Burrows says. "If you could draw, you could make five grand a night. I remember giving Art Bergmann $4,000. I think that was more money than he'd seen in his life.''
The Town Pump became the place for such battles of the bands as Spotlight '85 and later the annual Demo Listen Derby and an important room to showcase for record labels and the business.
But Achilles' other ventures were not doing well and threatened to drag the Pump under. After a time in receivership, the 68 Water St. address was bought by Ray McLean, who turned the management over to sons Dan and Joe in 1988.
That began a new era, post-Expo 86, of good local acts and an astounding array of U.S. and international recording acts.
"My big focus was the local bands,'' Burrows says. "At one time, there were 10-15 local bands who could sell the place out any time.''
He can think of only one these days -- the Matthew Good Band -- and notes that there aren't many touring bands that are worth booking either.
Yet there was a time when the important bands coming out of Seattle had played the Pump well before Seattle began its grunge era. Nirvana played there; Pearl Jam's first Vancouver date also was at the Pump. The list can be extended to No Doubt, Counting Crows, The Wallflowers and many others for whom the venue was a springboard.
"One day, John Teti (a Sonar partner) and I were reading a Rolling Stone that had an issue listing a poll of the 100 best live acts and just about every one one of them had played the Pump,'' says Burrows.
A highlight reel might include a drunken shambles of a night by The Replacements, a stunning display of guitar mastery by the doomed Danny Gatton, the revelatory musicianship of the Dave Thomas Band or the regular excellence of David Lindley.
For my part, I've got plenty of good recollections of playing there with my band Bruno Gerussi's Medallion (later Little Games) and a not-so-good recollection of singing Sweet Jane, drunk and off key, with local musicians at the 1995 Medicine Ball charity for the Children's Hospital.
MEMORIES SAVORED
For his part, Burrows enjoys memories of the early appearances of Fishbone and Red Hot Chili Peppers but "the highlights always were the Beat Farmers shows.
"Meeting people who were on their way down was much more interesting than meeting the ones on the way up. Donovan, Hank Ballard, Albert Collins -- Albert was a really cool guy. Etta James -- she scared the hell out of me.
"The best years were probably '93-'94-'95,'' he says. "
But, as music tastes and economic forces began to take away from the live music business, the Town Pump became vulnerable to a love/hate relationship that had developed. The club attitude could be arrogant, even bullying at times, not only to patrons but to the talent. It also was in bad need of renovation.
"I knew I had to make a change,'' Burrows says. "I didn't know what it was going to be but I knew a change was coming or the club wasn't going to be around any longer.''
The club is still there but the Pump is gone . . . along with Joe McLean's opinion of non-smokers.
TIMELINE
1983: The Town Pump is a Gastown restaurant that starts booking live acts in the evenings. Owner Alan Achilles tries to make a go of it with Top 40 cover bands; his plan flops, so booking agent Bob Burrows gets the nod to bring in original rock.
1985: By the mid-'80s, the Pump's a hit and becomes the site for such battle-of-the-band performances as Spotlight '85 and the annual Demo Listen Derby.
1986: Expo 86 is the turning point for the Pump, followed by a string of successful shows that emphasize local acts.
1988: After a brief period in receivership, the Pump is sold to Ray McLean, who turns management over to his sons Dan and Joe.
1990-91: Seattle invades the Pump with Nirvana, Pearl Jam and grunge.
1991: The Pump becomes the first rock club in Canada to adopt a no-smoking rule. This lasts only a few -- highly unprofitable -- months
1993-95: The Pump's busiest years. Bands include Counting Crows, Wallflowers, No Doubt, Stone Temple Pilots and more.
1996: Business starts to fade.
May 1997: The Town Pump draws its last draught.
July 1997: The Pump reopens as Club Sonar, Vancouver's first large-scale, state-of-the-art electronica club.
The Province
Sunday, July 13, 1997
By Tom Harrison
People who don't smoke don't drink and they're cheap, too.''
For years, this quote from Joe McLean, blown up and framed in glass, hung on a brick wall of the Town Pump. It referred to the end of the Pump's experiment with a smoking ban and was put up as a reminder of a hard lesson learned.
The smoking ban lasted for only a few months in 1991 but it made the Town Pump the first club in Canada to try such a policy and made national headlines. As McLean, then one of its owners, so eloquently noted, it didn't make the club any money, however, and after weeks of terrible business the ban went down and the quote went up.
It's a brief era in the Town Pump's almost 15-year history that Bob Burrows would prefer to forget, even if it does illustrate one of the strangest of its many phases.
Burrows, who is one of the current owners, shut down the Pump in May, bringing to an end its reign as Vancouver's most important rock club.
It's reopening as Sonar, a dance club, is no less symbolic for what it says about entertainment trends and the state of live music. In the week since the dramatically renovated room has been open, Sonar has been pulling in the crowds and making money the way the Pump never did in its dying days. Yet Burrows got into the business by booking live rock 'n' roll and has a close attachment to the Town Pump.
"I was the one who started booking bands there,'' he says. In 1983, the Town Pump was a Gastown restaurant that usually featured a house band doing current hits. For a while, owner Alan Achilles brought in Top 40 cover bands but when this didn't work, Burrows booked original rock into the 420-capacity room.
"At the time, I was working with Simon Gunn and Frank Weipert and we were booking bands like that rockabilly band from Scotland -- the Shakin' Pyramids -- and The B-Sides and David Raven and they all were making a lot of money, but no one was coming for the Top 40 bands,'' he said.
WEALTH OF ACTS
The Town Pump provided a venue for an emerging post-punk/new wave community and a wealth of diverse touring acts. It became a stepping-stone for local acts that had graduated from the smaller Railway or Savoy and were on their way to the Commodore Ballroom. Headlining the Pump on a weekend also was a mark of status. It meant the act had built its own following, often by playing to a near- empty house on a Tuesday, or sharing a bill with three other acts on a Wednesday.
"The Town Pump probably paid out more money to local bands than any club in town, including the Commodore,'' Burrows says. "If you could draw, you could make five grand a night. I remember giving Art Bergmann $4,000. I think that was more money than he'd seen in his life.''
The Town Pump became the place for such battles of the bands as Spotlight '85 and later the annual Demo Listen Derby and an important room to showcase for record labels and the business.
But Achilles' other ventures were not doing well and threatened to drag the Pump under. After a time in receivership, the 68 Water St. address was bought by Ray McLean, who turned the management over to sons Dan and Joe in 1988.
That began a new era, post-Expo 86, of good local acts and an astounding array of U.S. and international recording acts.
"My big focus was the local bands,'' Burrows says. "At one time, there were 10-15 local bands who could sell the place out any time.''
He can think of only one these days -- the Matthew Good Band -- and notes that there aren't many touring bands that are worth booking either.
Yet there was a time when the important bands coming out of Seattle had played the Pump well before Seattle began its grunge era. Nirvana played there; Pearl Jam's first Vancouver date also was at the Pump. The list can be extended to No Doubt, Counting Crows, The Wallflowers and many others for whom the venue was a springboard.
"One day, John Teti (a Sonar partner) and I were reading a Rolling Stone that had an issue listing a poll of the 100 best live acts and just about every one one of them had played the Pump,'' says Burrows.
A highlight reel might include a drunken shambles of a night by The Replacements, a stunning display of guitar mastery by the doomed Danny Gatton, the revelatory musicianship of the Dave Thomas Band or the regular excellence of David Lindley.
For my part, I've got plenty of good recollections of playing there with my band Bruno Gerussi's Medallion (later Little Games) and a not-so-good recollection of singing Sweet Jane, drunk and off key, with local musicians at the 1995 Medicine Ball charity for the Children's Hospital.
MEMORIES SAVORED
For his part, Burrows enjoys memories of the early appearances of Fishbone and Red Hot Chili Peppers but "the highlights always were the Beat Farmers shows.
"Meeting people who were on their way down was much more interesting than meeting the ones on the way up. Donovan, Hank Ballard, Albert Collins -- Albert was a really cool guy. Etta James -- she scared the hell out of me.
"The best years were probably '93-'94-'95,'' he says. "
But, as music tastes and economic forces began to take away from the live music business, the Town Pump became vulnerable to a love/hate relationship that had developed. The club attitude could be arrogant, even bullying at times, not only to patrons but to the talent. It also was in bad need of renovation.
"I knew I had to make a change,'' Burrows says. "I didn't know what it was going to be but I knew a change was coming or the club wasn't going to be around any longer.''
The club is still there but the Pump is gone . . . along with Joe McLean's opinion of non-smokers.
TIMELINE
1983: The Town Pump is a Gastown restaurant that starts booking live acts in the evenings. Owner Alan Achilles tries to make a go of it with Top 40 cover bands; his plan flops, so booking agent Bob Burrows gets the nod to bring in original rock.
1985: By the mid-'80s, the Pump's a hit and becomes the site for such battle-of-the-band performances as Spotlight '85 and the annual Demo Listen Derby.
1986: Expo 86 is the turning point for the Pump, followed by a string of successful shows that emphasize local acts.
1988: After a brief period in receivership, the Pump is sold to Ray McLean, who turns management over to his sons Dan and Joe.
1990-91: Seattle invades the Pump with Nirvana, Pearl Jam and grunge.
1991: The Pump becomes the first rock club in Canada to adopt a no-smoking rule. This lasts only a few -- highly unprofitable -- months
1993-95: The Pump's busiest years. Bands include Counting Crows, Wallflowers, No Doubt, Stone Temple Pilots and more.
1996: Business starts to fade.
May 1997: The Town Pump draws its last draught.
July 1997: The Pump reopens as Club Sonar, Vancouver's first large-scale, state-of-the-art electronica club.
Dark sentiments run through singer Art Bergmann's music
The Kitchener-Waterloo Record
Tuesday, April 8, 1997
By Nick Krewen
If Art Bergmann ever becomes prime minister, his first piece of legislation would undoubtedly enjoy unprecedented public support.
"I'd declare a statutory holiday," says the veteran Vancouver singer and songwriter. "It would loosen up everyone and we'd communicate better. Then it would be time to set all the budgets. People would actually get jobs that they're happy with."
Obviously Bergmann's party line is a different remedy from what political leaders such as Mike Harris and Jean Chretien envision for this country, but the former singer and co-founder of the punk rock group Young Canadians feels a little levity could go a long way.
After all, he suggests, Canadians have a dark sense of humor. And it's a type of humor you'll find on all four of his rugged albums, including 1995's brilliant What Fresh Hell Is This?
"I call it realism," says Bergmann, who performs solo at Mrs. Robinson's Wednesday night.
"Canadians have a black sense of humor. You know how Iggy Pop and Lou Reed often have the blackest kind of lyrics? It's the stuff of which novels are made."
Caustic wit
Dark sentiments run deep in Bergmann's music, but his slurry vocals and caustic wit always offer an unexpected detour to the truth. The song Sexual Roulette's message as an anti-AIDS theme is delivered with the surprising proclamation "This is my body/I'm doing time/Are you giving me something/I'll get in five years time."
On Buried Alive, Bergmann equates a breakdown with Humpty Dumpty imagery: "All the King's horses/All the Queen's men/Couldn't put me back together again."
Sometimes poignant, sometimes a satirical menace, Bergmann is a Canadian original: a surreal Stompin' Tom Connors. It's a comparison of which Bergmann approves.
"Stompin' Tom Connors -- he's a great songwriter, storyteller. I find that very flattering," says Bergmann, who tells his interviewer that he's "449" years old.
"I think that's what I'm trying to do with these solo shows. I admire great old country artists like Johnny Cash -- that's what I'm trying to get towards with the acoustic thing. It's not a bunch of rock 'n' roll songs."
Bergmann is hoping to take the intimacy of the live experience with him into the studio shortly to release an independent solo acoustic album. He says a fullblown band album -- hopefully on another major label -- will follow before year's end.
If he finds a label -- and he reassures that there have been some talks -- then Bergmann will have moved to his fourth label in five albums. There are no guarantees. Even winning a Juno for Most Promising Male Vocalist for What Fresh Hell Is This? didn't prevent Sony Music Canada from dropping him.
"I wish I had a long-term commitment," laments Bergmann. "Every time I switched companies, my record would be quietly shelved and that's that. We'd talk for a few months, and then they'd lose interest."
Enfant terrible
An admitted drinking problem also played havoc with his efforts to get ahead, earning him a reputation as an enfant terrible. Although he's been sober for a few years, Bergmann resigns himself to frustration with his prior skeletons.
"I've kind of realized I'm stuck with it," Bergmann sighs. "Although I know much more terrible infants than myself."
He also denies that alcohol enhanced his creativity, although he freely admits "I got a lot of great songs from hangovers."
However, that's all behind him. Art Bergmann says there's only one thing he's concerned about these days: building a healthy career.
"I just want to raise my profile, raise the stakes and go forward."
Art Bergmann
Where: Mrs. Robinson's
When: Wednesday
Tickets: $5
Tuesday, April 8, 1997
By Nick Krewen
If Art Bergmann ever becomes prime minister, his first piece of legislation would undoubtedly enjoy unprecedented public support.
"I'd declare a statutory holiday," says the veteran Vancouver singer and songwriter. "It would loosen up everyone and we'd communicate better. Then it would be time to set all the budgets. People would actually get jobs that they're happy with."
Obviously Bergmann's party line is a different remedy from what political leaders such as Mike Harris and Jean Chretien envision for this country, but the former singer and co-founder of the punk rock group Young Canadians feels a little levity could go a long way.
After all, he suggests, Canadians have a dark sense of humor. And it's a type of humor you'll find on all four of his rugged albums, including 1995's brilliant What Fresh Hell Is This?
"I call it realism," says Bergmann, who performs solo at Mrs. Robinson's Wednesday night.
"Canadians have a black sense of humor. You know how Iggy Pop and Lou Reed often have the blackest kind of lyrics? It's the stuff of which novels are made."
Caustic wit
Dark sentiments run deep in Bergmann's music, but his slurry vocals and caustic wit always offer an unexpected detour to the truth. The song Sexual Roulette's message as an anti-AIDS theme is delivered with the surprising proclamation "This is my body/I'm doing time/Are you giving me something/I'll get in five years time."
On Buried Alive, Bergmann equates a breakdown with Humpty Dumpty imagery: "All the King's horses/All the Queen's men/Couldn't put me back together again."
Sometimes poignant, sometimes a satirical menace, Bergmann is a Canadian original: a surreal Stompin' Tom Connors. It's a comparison of which Bergmann approves.
"Stompin' Tom Connors -- he's a great songwriter, storyteller. I find that very flattering," says Bergmann, who tells his interviewer that he's "449" years old.
"I think that's what I'm trying to do with these solo shows. I admire great old country artists like Johnny Cash -- that's what I'm trying to get towards with the acoustic thing. It's not a bunch of rock 'n' roll songs."
Bergmann is hoping to take the intimacy of the live experience with him into the studio shortly to release an independent solo acoustic album. He says a fullblown band album -- hopefully on another major label -- will follow before year's end.
If he finds a label -- and he reassures that there have been some talks -- then Bergmann will have moved to his fourth label in five albums. There are no guarantees. Even winning a Juno for Most Promising Male Vocalist for What Fresh Hell Is This? didn't prevent Sony Music Canada from dropping him.
"I wish I had a long-term commitment," laments Bergmann. "Every time I switched companies, my record would be quietly shelved and that's that. We'd talk for a few months, and then they'd lose interest."
Enfant terrible
An admitted drinking problem also played havoc with his efforts to get ahead, earning him a reputation as an enfant terrible. Although he's been sober for a few years, Bergmann resigns himself to frustration with his prior skeletons.
"I've kind of realized I'm stuck with it," Bergmann sighs. "Although I know much more terrible infants than myself."
He also denies that alcohol enhanced his creativity, although he freely admits "I got a lot of great songs from hangovers."
However, that's all behind him. Art Bergmann says there's only one thing he's concerned about these days: building a healthy career.
"I just want to raise my profile, raise the stakes and go forward."
Art Bergmann
Where: Mrs. Robinson's
When: Wednesday
Tickets: $5
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)