Monday 9 January 2012

Life on the Road - Our First Tour


The winner of the 100th blog entry contest chose “Life On The Road” as a subject for me to write on. As this is such a huge topic for me, and represents a such significant part of my life, I am hoping our contest winner will not mind if I break the topic down in to sub-categories. So today, for our contest winner we will discuss “Life On The Road - My First Tour".

Our first real road trip was in 1989 . We had started to get a little bit of a buzz going in Winnipeg from our super duper shows at the 1989 Winnipeg Folk Festival


and The Buskers Festivals that are so popular with hippies and vegetarians.




I am folk emoting. DO you like my rayon prairie skirt?


I’d just bought a used, student sized accordion with which to play our folk rock tunes. 

Dress from Bi-Way. I think it was $9.



I had no idea how to play it. Never learned. Just played it like a sideways piano. I have not an ounce of polka in me, I suppose.
It came time to go on the road. We’d been getting some attention from record labels, and we were advised that we should head out east so that people could have a look at us and start fighting over our folk rock asses. We drove from Winnipeg to Southern Ontario and we played for the month of October at various venues.  
We had rented a 15-passenger van and my family donated an old, odd sized mattress that the guys put on a wooden platform that they rigged up. Our drummer wouldn’t sleep on it because there was a stain on it. I recall sleeping very well on that mattress. I am unsure of how safe this was. Our gear when underneath and our luggage in a rack on top of the van.  The drive from Winnipeg to Kingston would have taken us a day and a half or so. This was in the days before the internet.


 Yes. I know.

Dan, Brad and our sound man - George Addis, would have done the bulk of the driving. I listened to my walkman. The kind with cassette tapes.
I had a photo of George Addis hanging a moon in which you see way too much detailed topography. Just saying. He showed us his bum a lot.  Not sure why. Gives you an idea. He had an extreme mullet, which was au courant.  I had to throw the photo away. It was that upsetting. And his anus was an awful sight, too.
Anyway, I have a postcard that I wrote to my family that said we arrived to Kingston early so had to spend another day in a hotel which meant we would lose money again. I mentioned twice, in the space of a small postcard, that I had “the trots”. I remember that we had to get me some Imodium and that it was caused by a bad hamburger somewhere around Barrie, ON. To this day I get stomach cramps anywhere near Barrie. 
Our show in Peterborough was at The Red Dog Tavern. Seven people were there and I got a t-shirt of the bar for my brother. That is all I remember. 

www.therreddogtavern.com

Our big showcase was in Toronto at Albert’s Hall on Bloor St. It was a blues club on the second floor above a college crowd drink to get drunk bar. We played there for a whole week. No one does that anymore.

I'm sorry the photos are such crap. I had a disc camera. Remember them? And now my scanner has crapped out so I can't do these at a higher res. Do you need to know all of this? Yes. Yes you do.


I was warned to stay away from the bar downstairs. Did I really look that innocent? We met some interesting characters there like Henry the bouncer who pretended to be mean, but tolerated us because we were Prairie folk and kind of dull which is better than being assholes. 

Brad, Henry the Bouncer and Elpoo


A few famous people came to our shows.

Danny Greenspoon, me and Kit Johnson

Michael and Peter Timmins (Cowboy Junkies) with me. I look like an idiot. I thought Peter was dreamy.

me with Murray Mclaughlan and Kit Johnson. Who picked my clothes for Christ's sake!


I think I slept with a bartender from Albert's Hall (Sorry mom. This is the "no boundaries" part of the blog). We watched a video of Pete Townshend. I don't remember the sex with him, but I remember leaving his apartment verrrrrry early the next morning and he gave me $20 for a cab, but he lived about 4,000 miles away from where the band was staying, so I ended up having to use all my food money for the next few days to get back to our hotel. He knew it was going to cost more than $20. Arse.

 CBC taped us one night although there was some kind of technical foul up and the tape never saw the light of day. Probably a good thing. 
Frankly, I think we were probably pretty horrible. But we were a different kind of horrible, so people were interested. We were an unknown to promoters so we didn't get a rider that I can recall, and we often had to fight to get what we were contractually entitled to.

Our next stop was Guelph, Ontario where we played the Albion Hotel, a club frequented by hipster university kids and where war vets lived in squalor. 

Dan and Elpoo outside the Albion hotel in Guelph, 1989


The rooms we stayed in at the hotel became (and still are) the standard by which we measure levels of horrific accommodations. We actually found it to be hilarious it was so awful.  The mattress on my bed was about 3 inches thick and made up mostly of dust and old man skin flakes.

Dan making the best of staying at The Albion

Ben is cold and afraid in an Albion Hotel bathtub.



Our floor mates, old men with mental illness and hygiene issues, would shave, wash their dishes and underwear in the same sink. It was evident. We didn't bathe or shower there. The carpeting in the hallway was sticky, like almost dried tar. It smelled like sweat and Klik.

The campus was nice, though. We played a lunch hour show there. Here's Brad with a nice Guelphian tree.


When we came back to Winnipeg after almost a month away, we were welcomed home like heroes. It was pretty great. Folks were rooting for us then - wanted us to make it big, I guess. 
playing at The Spectrum, Dec 26, 1989


Being on the road for the first time was pretty exciting, but it was certainly an eye opener for me. I learned that sometimes a ditch CAN be a bathroom. I learned that sometimes you have to play for 7 people. I learned that if you get along with the people that you have to sit with in a van for 20 hours, you are pretty lucky. 

I also learned that I liked waking up in my own bed best. That having diarrhea in Barrie is not fun. And that I will NEVER EVER sleep with a bartender again, unless I get adequate cab fare up front.


7 comments:

  1. Lisa Wells said:

    Great topic!! Sub-categories? Cool. Well done! I love that photo of Ben in the bathtub.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I saw you at Albert's Hall! I was there with Jeff Rogers. Man, that was a long time ago.
    xo
    joni

    ReplyDelete
  3. Inga Binga Borga!!!!

    D. Nore

    ReplyDelete
  4. Joni, why didn't you tell me I dressed like a loser? It would have saved much heartache for me for years afterward.

    D. Nore - I don't know what you are trying to say, but I like it. Swedish chef?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Such wonderful memories come with this iteration... Thanks. "Hard" (well, not really) to remember a world without the internet, or digital music, or portable video enjoyment devices.
    Keith

    ReplyDelete
  6. Amazing, we need more !! I think a book would be even better ! Love the tour itinerary with the "$600 per night" - was that your cut or the entire band ? Anytime you want your sideways piano back....I can lend it to ya :)

    Bill B

    ReplyDelete
  7. We wanna book! We wanna book! We wanna book!

    ReplyDelete