Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - Beasts of the East: Toronto Mike'd #897
Episode Date: August 6, 2021This 73rd Pandemic Friday, Mike kicks out Canadian songs from east of Ontario with Cam Gordon and Ben Rayner. Surprise guest Jay Ferguson from Sloan gets things started by kicking out the first jam....
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I'm just going to breathe heavily.
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I'm Mike from torontomike.com and joining me this week for our 73rd
pandemic Friday is Cam Gordon and special guest.
Drake.
Ben Rainer.
Ben Drake Rainer.
All right, Ben.
Now remember you got to get right on these mics here.
So you can move it.
I'll get myself to you.
I was a little late arriving.
Okay, so Ben.
Cam, I see every week, so I'll get back to you, Cam.
Sure.
Ben, how the hell are you doing?
I'm good.
It's been a while.
It's been a while.
It's nice to see you.
Are you going to kick out some steam?
I'm honored to be co-hosting Pandemic Fridaysidays and on a thursday yeah we do that cam what how does it
feel being next to the uh famous and talented ben rain i when you told me ben was gonna pinch
it for stew i i thought oh my god like perfect i got very excited as a long-time reader um ben i don't know
if you remember i sent this to mike we met like 15 years ago when i interviewed you for rock critics
dot com that's i thought i'm that guy no i knew that i'm you remember that i remember that you
had more had longer hair yeah i i sort of had like a shag cut,
which is good to sort of talk,
you know, maybe that'll tie into some of the bands.
Yeah, but you know when you talk to Cam,
you have to direct your voice.
No, I was looking at his beautiful face,
which I thought looked awfully familiar.
He's a handsome guy.
He's handsome, but you're Eddie Vedder.
You know what?
I shaved the beard and cut my hair because I was getting it too much.
I told you a car stopped in Hamilton.
But that's not a bad thing.
A car stopped in Hamilton.
The guy went, holy shit, you look just like Eddie Vedder.
And I was like, this is getting to be enough.
Like he yelled at you from a car window?
They stopped in the middle of an intersection and was like, holy shit, bro.
I would go with that.
I know, that's what I said.
Get like a cameo account.
Pick up some chicks.
So you're like the Eddie Vedder to his Evan Dando.
Am I right?
Is there a Dando?
I don't think so, no.
We'll work on that one.
Good try, though.
But Ben, how old is your daughter now?
Closer to five than four.
She'll be starting school in the fall.
Well, maybe.
I just came from a five-year-old girl soccer match.
Does your daughter do any soccer?
See, we were going to enroll her in soccer when all this nonsense happened.
And that was the only sport I was ever actually any good at growing up.
So I had visions of coaching her five-year-old, four-and-a-half-year-old soccer team.
And for a while, it was her cousin Sadie who seemed more soccer inclined.
But I've won her over.
And a friend of mine gave me,
my friend Yvonne gave me an alien head soccer ball
because, as you know, I'm into UFOs and aliens.
And that was the kicker, as you will.
And now I feel like I have a future
as a child soccer coach.
Just warning you, though,
that the caliber of soccer you watch
with these five-year-old girls
is very poor.
I think you said it sucks.
So I watch my seven-year-old son play
once a week,
and that might as well be like the Euro Cup
compared to what I see.
Honestly, it's like I'm watching
Messi and Ronaldo,
and then I go watch these five-year-old girls, and it's
brutal. But Ben, in a nutshell, because we have a special guest
who's going to zoom in to kick out the first jam.
So we have to set up what the theme is for this Pandemic Friday.
But in a nutshell, what have you been up to since we last talked to you?
Like, I don't know, 10 months ago, whatever it was.
You know what?
I'm going to crack one of these.
Yeah, that's a good idea.
Crack one.
And by the way, I have more in the fridge.
So if you guys drain those four.
I might do two because I'm not driving.
Having just whizzed across here.
Yeah, do it on the mic.
Not like Canada.
You know what?
I drink more Great Lakes.
What do you got?
You got a burst?
I love the burst.
I like the burst.
I drink more Great Lakes than you.
You got the lager.
I got the lager.
Either of you realize probably.
I'm like a walking advertisement for it.
Literally walking around with them
and I'm going to crack open
so I've been doing
I've been doing some behind the scenes
like just writing bios for bands
and right now
this is the reason why I've barely slept
for the last few days because I lost half of
a really large project I was doing for a friend's label
how'd you lose it?
I turned on my computer
but don't you use Google Docs
or something,
like in the cloud?
I just had it saved on my card.
You're an amateur.
I've learned my lesson.
All my notes are in Google Docs.
Like a day before the deadline,
I'm still getting my heart rate down
from the ride over there.
It's okay.
I love it, man.
I was pretty close,
but I came across the floor.
How many clicks was it?
Do you know?
You know what?
If I hadn't stopped off at the house
to give my kid a kiss,
I would have been here perfectly on time. But why don't you
drop south and just take the water
for a trip? I was just whizzing across Bloor, because that
was the way I was coming. Okay, you got streetlights there.
Anyway, yeah, so I've been up
till dawn,
rewriting half of this thing. I managed to recover
my notes. But the file, it was
the weirdest thing. It just, like, I turned on,
my partner, Gail, was like, oh, you can recover that. It just like, I turned on the computer. My partner,
Gail,
was like,
oh,
you can recover that.
I'm like,
it's not there.
Like a Word document?
Yeah.
It just vanished from the folder.
Should have called me.
I would have found that.
There were a number
of people that could have
called me.
Stricken by panic,
I didn't get that far.
And then,
move to the cloud.
Just do it in Google Docs.
And it's an audit trail.
I don't think computers
are ever going to catch up.
But I've been working for
Coffs Records too.
I've been helping them write a website
and just working in the shop sometimes
and pricing records and stuff. It's super fun.
It pays the rent and I don't have to
write so much. That's the way I look at it.
And you're feeling good? You look good?
Yeah, I feel good.
You feel good?
Yeah.
I had a dark winter, as I always do.
But yeah, I was still, you know, I still had some,
I took a, for my former employer,
I had a pretty good package going out,
so I was still collecting paychecks.
I feel like I've seen you at the beach again.
Not, I've seen your tweets.
Oh, I'm always at the beach, which is good.
Yeah, so I, you know, and then when the time came,
it was like I got to start figuring out something kind of stable
because writing isn't, you know, I would have to be picky
because it really does drive me.
I mean, it actually drove me crazy, Mike.
You know that.
Hey, Ben, have you been watching Resident Alien?
I haven't.
Is it good?
I don't know.
Ian Service wants to know.
So, Ian, let us know if he should be watching it. He does love
That's a TV show?
I should tell you, Ben, you probably don't even know this, but
if you have any family members who
want to watch this moment live,
direct them to live.torontomic.com
and they can hear you
and watch the show live.
I think Gail and Polly
are probably listening. Polly's going to have a bath.
Okay. Live.torontomic.com.
But because today's topic is Beasts of the East,
so we're going to kick out our favorite Canadian jams
from East of Ontario.
Remind us why you're qualified for this,
beyond being the best music critic reviewer in the world.
Tell me about your Maritimes roots.
Just the world?
Remind us. Just the world. He's about your Maritime's roots. Just the world? Remind us.
Just the world.
He's into aliens.
Go on.
Go bigger.
I have the best on several worlds.
Imagine hearing music from aliens.
What would that sound like?
I often wonder that.
If I was to talk to an alien.
What instruments have they figured out?
Do you know what I mean?
I think it's like minimal,
like crap work.
Brian Eno.
No, it's Brian Eno music for airplanes.
Or they make music with their minds. Brian Eno. No, it's Brian Eno, music for airplanes. Or they make music
with their minds.
That's right.
Ben, remind us
of your maritime bona fides.
When I was a wee baby,
I moved,
well, I didn't move.
My parents moved
to Glovertown, Newfoundland
from England.
So I was born in Colchester.
Newfoundland, not maritime.
Yeah, an Atlantic province, actually, if I may. If I may correct. So go east of Ontario.chester. Newfoundland, not Maritime. Yeah, an Atlantic province, actually,
if I may, if I may correct.
So east of Ontario.
I had you in like Halifax or something.
No, no.
And then, well,
because you people in Ontario
tend to confuse all the Atlantic province.
Also, if you read the rockcritics.com article,
this was all covered.
And I've only had him on Toronto Mike
like eight times or something.
And then we,
again, a few years later,
we moved sight unseen again to St. George, New Brunswick.
So I...
Okay, New Brunswick.
And I spent...
That counts.
So I was there for 11 years.
I mean, my folks are still both...
But how old were you when you left
east of Ontario provinces, as I call them?
Christ, I was 18.
I moved to Ottawa.
And I've been to Toronto like 25 years.
Cam, I think he's qualified for this episode.
Totally.
I still...
My folks are still called.
Do they want to watch you at live.tronemake.com?
And my partner's from Newfoundland, so I'm there all the time.
So I'm both.
He runs like in Newfoundland all the time.
Well, I was.
Those days are over.
He's a bullseye for this topic.
By the way, Ian Service says that you would love Resident Alien.
It's so great.
And I think you've got a show you've got to catch up
on there. I've got a lot of things I've got to catch
up on. There you go. Hey, before the special
guest zooms in to kick out the first jam and get
us started. And again, Ben,
you're new to the Pandemic Friday, so the way this works
is you'll hear the special guest
and I'm hoping the special guest will
not reveal their identity and you'll
have an opportunity to guess who it is.
It's like yeah
yeah it's been pretty good only only one time did the guest not do not not pull it's oddly scary
like it's just i don't know i always find a bit uncomfortable well last week was tough i have some
guests like i i i feel like i can guess them about 50 of the time are you so you're you're not you're
not in the know then no no no I'm the only one who knows.
You can sometimes guess.
It's always somebody who's been a guest on the show before,
an FOTM.
And I try to make it match the theme.
You've got a lot to catch up on here.
So I could hear the bell any moment here.
So I just want to remind everyone listening,
and you, Ben, Cam has to be there,
so I don't have to worry about him.
But we have some details confirmed for TMLX 8.
This is the eighth Toronto Mic Listener Experience.
It is going to be, for sure, it's going to be August 27,
which is a Friday, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
It's going to happen on the patio of Great Lakes Brewery,
which is near Runnymede and Queensway,
but like down the street from the Costco.
And Palma Pasta has stepped up to feed us on the house.
They're going to feed us for free.
So the complimentary meal from Palma Pasta.
And Great Lakes is stepping up to buy us our first beer.
So your first pour is on the hizzle.
Ben, will you be there?
I said this last year, but I guess it didn't happen.
Like everything
else, it didn't happen. I will totally
be there, yes. Do you have a musical
guest? No, because it actually
is going to be the recording
of the pandemic finale, but
I'm going to have a fourth mic open. Are you predicting the end
of the pandemic, guys?
No, we predicted the end of Pandemic Friday.
Yeah, Mike's exhausted as he declared on one of his podcasts.
These need to end.
So we need to start learning how to live with this thing.
We need to go on with our...
Like, I know your daughter's not vaccinated.
I have the same stress because I got two anti-vaxxers in the house.
There you go.
And that makes me nervous.
But I do think we're going to have to learn to live with this thing.
Pandemic Friday is going to start.
So pandemic Fridays are coming to an end.
I'm just going to check my Zoom here.
Stand by.
Okay.
Yeah, that pandemic's not coming to an end.
Well, yes, you're right.
The pandemic Friday won't be over on August 27,
but we will end pandemic Fridays
and kind of go to the next phase,
which is just learning to live with this thing.
In the Delta Plus.
Are you vaxxed?
I had one.
Okay.
And then they were like.
Where's your second?
You know what?
The Delta still gets you with that one.
They're like, no, none of them seemed to work.
And then they were like.
Cam's moving further away from you.
I'm not like anti, but I slept through my last.
No, did I even make the second one?
I made a second one and I slept through it. Yeah, but why isn even make the second one? I made the second one, and I slept through it.
Yeah, but why isn't this a priority for you?
I'm curious, because for me,
it was like I was kicking old people out of my way.
I was just...
George Costanza.
When they were like,
oh, you can mix and match,
and they basically was like,
oh, well, the two mRNA ones
are theoretically interchangeable.
I'm like, but why would one of the other one
and one of these...
Oh, I mixed and matched from AZ,
and then I went to Pfizer. See, I was just like, then you're telling me... other one and one of these? Oh, I mixed and matched from AZ and then I went to Pfizer.
See, I was just like,
then you're telling me. What did you do, Cam?
AZ, Pfizer?
Or did you do two Pfizer?
No, I was AZ
and then at the mega clinic
at Scotiabank
we're serving Moderna.
Okay.
We mixed and matched
and we're still feeling great.
No, it wasn't that,
but then you're telling me
basically that one shot
was enough of either one.
And anyway, the only one I...
I like to read peer-reviewed studies and stuff,
and I was like, I'll wait and see about getting a second Pfizer.
And then they would give it to those stupid teenagers
and keep it away from the adults.
Which is weird, because I think our kids are going to end up with Moderna, I think.
Like, it's kind of like...
I think so.
Is that what Vegas is, The Vegas line on this?
I read that somewhere.
Although there's been another wave of articles this week about,
especially EU countries and cruise ships denying people who have mix and match vaccines.
Yeah, I saw that too.
Ben, we have a good relationship, right?
How many times you've been over now?
Several times.
Like, I love you, man.
You're going to be at TMLXA.
But look, we need you to get your second shot.
Okay?
Tell me if I can help you.
Okay?
We got to get that second shot.
You're vulnerable.
I was going to say,
it's only three weeks away.
I feel like I...
Oh, yeah.
It takes 14 days to kick in.
We need to do it next week.
Although it's an outdoor event.
That's true.
I feel like I was out
in this thing
even when nobody else was
for like six,
like the first of this thing
with my daughter all the time,
in and out of places all the time.
I feel like I've had a pretty good system.
Also, I told you the story, didn't I?
We think we all had it
well before it was a thing
because my daughter even had the rash.
You still need the second shot.
So we're going to put a pin
on the vaccination discussion,
which people are probably bored to tears of.
We're all going to be kicking out
and you're in good hands here, Ben.
I'm going to guide you, but I all going to be kicking out and you're in good hands here, Ben. I'm going to guide you.
But I'm going to let in our special guest right now
who's going to kick out the first jam.
Let me just click the magic button.
So only I can see the special guest.
So no peeking.
So I'm going to wait for it again.
I'm not going to tell you the name of this special guest.
I want to see you try to guess.
I like the doorbell sound.
As I address the special guest, who I can see
but no one else can see. Senior Ding Dong.
How are you doing, special guest?
I am well.
Okay. Now,
this is going to be tough for you, but I need you to
tell us a little bit about yourself without
giving us any detail that will
reveal your identity.
Do you guys know, do you know Front Page
Challenge? Do you know that show?
Yeah, sure.
Of course.
I feel like.
Okay, do you want to ask a question of our guest, Ben Rayner?
Are you that old dead author?
What was his name?
Oh, Pierre Burden?
Yes.
Oh, it's old dead author, Pierre Burden.
The corpse of Pierre Burden.
Okay, Cam, do you have a question for our special guest?
Yeah, I do.
Hello, special guest.
Are your roots in Quebec, PEI, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, or Newfoundland?
Newfoundland.
Newfoundland. Also knows Newfoundland.
Or New Brunswick, yes.
Exactly.
Yes.
Yes. Okay.
Okay, so your turn, Ben.
Have we met?
Have you met Ben Rayner before?
Sure.
Wow. That's a good clue. Okay. Cam, your turn.
Are you a musician?
Yes.
Okay.
Ben's turn. I like this new style.
I was going to say, I was thinking Gino Vanelli originally.
Hey!
Gino Vanelli's brother.
Special guest, are you able to sing Black Cars for us?
Just emotional.
How does that even go?
Yeah, sorry.
This is scintillating, isn't it?
Yeah, sorry.
Continue.
Okay, Ben, ask a question of our special guest.
It's a museum from east of Ontario. A museum a musician i believe musician uh uh all right do you sing
sure i mean it debatable but yes okay i'm gonna go to the live chat we have a live chat at live.
toronto mic.com just see if there's any guests guesses i don't see it okay go ahead cam ask a question of our musician from uh east of ontario hmm were you were you in a band
uh were and am okay i was gonna say is this jay ferguson
pretty good i was gonna hold out i was okay very very good very good i was gonna hold out because
i was watching the twitter feed and i noticed that uh that uh i think ben was sort of aiming
it was maybe gonna be drake and fingers crossed it was kanye i thought i i was i was actually
getting the j vibe too it was the voice i was trying to figure out the voice. Yeah. Hi, nice
to hear from you. So hold it.
You didn't think my voice sounded like
Kanye? I was working on it. Well,
is Kanye doing some kind of live event right now? That's why
no one's going to pay attention to us.
So ladies and gentlemen, Jay
Ferguson. He's actually met Pauly.
Of Sloan. Okay, Jay, you've met
Ben's daughter, Pauly. When she was a
baby. Yes, of course.
She's met three quarters of Sloan. Okay, Jay, you've met Ben's daughter, Polly. When she was a baby. Yes, of course. She's met three quarters of Sloan.
Okay, who's the holdout?
Patrick.
That's fine.
Hey, you know what, Mike? I think Patrick's the holdout on your show, too.
Actually, I got a couple of holds out. I've only had you and Chris on the show.
Have you asked Patrick to be on?
Yeah, in fact, it was going to happen, and then it sort of disappeared into the abyss.
And then I guess at some point I got to pick that up.
But as you know, Jay.
Let us know if you hear from him.
I will.
I will.
As you know, I absolutely adore your little band there.
Love Sloan.
Just love Sloan.
We all do.
Like such a formative band, I think, for myself and Mike
and Stu Stone, who's not here.
Just like one of the gateway bands.
Yes, Stu's a big fan, too.
Ben, what do you think of Sloan as a band?
Well, because Sloan, we're from near where I grew up in New Brunswick, from Halifax.
And that moment, like I was 17, 18, maybe, 16, 17, 18,
when they were happening first.
Smeared.
Smeared came out.
What's the first EP?
What's the first EP?
I'm forgetting.
Peppermint.
And then Eric Strip had the Peter EP.
That's right.
And Hardship Post was a thing.
It was just like a cool moment to be from Atlanta.
The monoxides were a thing.
It was a moment. And Iardship Post was a thing. It was just like a cool moment to be from Atlanta. The monoxides were a thing. It was a moment.
And I associate you guys with like leaving home,
but kind of having this cool moment.
And you, my frosh week at Carlton,
my first, I went to the University of Ottawa cafeteria
to see you guys play with a very young Thrush Herman.
And that was like my first,
like my second or third night in Ottawa.
So I felt very east coast proud but do you see what now why i said it was bigger than drake bigger than cornea in my especially for this bigger in my heart absolutely jay you're
a good man for doing this uh i i'm gonna just assume you haven't been listening to our 72
previous pandemic friday episodes of Toronto Mike.
But basically, we've each brought four songs to the table, our four favorite Canadian songs
from east of Ontario.
It's very possible we'll hear some Sloan on this episode.
Like, it's entirely possible.
I have a suspicion there might be.
What was that, Jay?
My joke was there better be, but no, it's fine if there's not.
There probably will be. But you also brought a jam. What was that, Jay? My joke was there better be, but no, it's fine if there's not. I'll be very good.
There probably will be.
But you also brought a jam.
In fact, you're going to kick out the first jam.
So I'm going to play your song.
Okay.
Then I'll fade it down, and then we'll hear from you as to why you selected that song here.
Very good.
So, everybody, this is Jay Ferguson's first song on our Beasts of the East episode. When I go into battle, it keeps me nice and safe because it's heavy made out of metal.
And I stand here and I watch the door, but I might not be back anymore.
And if you keep your eyes straight, you might see why all this matters.
It's so easy, easy said for you.
Take it easy, easy step for you
Nice and easy, easy step for you
But you don't see my eyes
You don't see my eyes
Woo!
Great start. Jay, what are we listening to?
Okay, so the song that I chose is by a band called Hardship Post.
They're originally from Newfoundland, and the song is called Silver Suit.
Now, Hardship Post were a band from St. John's, Newfoundland.
They kind of migrated to Halifax and were managed by one of our original managers.
His name was Peter Rowan.
And our record label, Murder Records,
we originally put out an EP by them called Hat,
which would have been the third release on Murder Records.
And I think Ben was sort of mentioning that that came out
like right around the time,
like not long after Peter by Eric Strip.
That song, Silver Suit, was a seven-inch single
that we released by them in 1984 i believe and
it came in a sandpaper sleeve wait 84 or 984 oh sorry 94 how old are you first
it's a collector's item 74 before ready yeah um uh anyhow yes 1994 sorry and um
it came in a sandpaper sleeve which was impossible to uh
our hands were all destroyed by assembling them by you know in the murder records offices and uh
i just i really like that song i liked hardship post when they came out with their first ep
it was very of the moment it was very nirvana flavored but when they released
uh when they did a new set of recordings which that song Silver Suit was taken from I feel like they really sort of left a lot of the Nirvana isms
behind and they're really uh sort of evoking that song to me is really almost like Elvis
Costello and the Attractions or like Joe Jackson or a little more new wave uh or late 70s England
than uh than the Hack EP which I felt was very Nirvana at the moment.
And I found that's when...
I liked Hardship Post.
They were fantastic live.
But when they played that song to us,
it blew my mind.
They almost became a different band at that point.
Jay, they were one of the bands...
They signed to Sub Pop.
I feel like that full length had a song called
Watching You and whatever that album was. I remember it has had that full length, had a song called Watching You
and whatever that album was.
I remember I had that too.
Watching You and there was another really
a ripper on there.
Yeah, that was a pretty good album too.
I listened to that record,
half of that record last night.
I was procrastinating
and trying to come up with this list for Mike.
Oh, really?
Yeah, it's funny.
I just found that album,
which I never had the vinyl of.
I found it a week ago here in Toronto
for the first time,
the vinyl of the Sub Pop album by Hardship Post.
So yeah, so they were like the one of three bands
that was signed by Sub Pop in like 93, 94
out of Halifax basically.
But the first Sub Pop record is great.
And then when they toured it,
they kind of, they went down to a two-piece
because matt clark the drummer left the band and they kind of i feel like the record was great and
they kind of frittered away what they could have been but i think they just you know i don't know
why they kind of changed and decided to uh i mean not decide i i don't know why they sort of just
didn't really uh grab hold of the moment
and really try and run with it.
They kind of, they just kind of petered out basically.
Did they get back together ever?
Do other things?
Like that's one band I sort of have no sort of recollection about what they did after
or even the members of that band doing anything else after.
Not much.
I forget what, like we see Sebastian, who's the main singer-songwriter in the band. He lives in Vancouver. And I forget what like we see sebastian who's the main singer songwriter in
the band he lives in vancouver and i forget what he i mean he's i don't think he's a lawyer but
he's he's doing fine he has a very upstanding profession at this point and uh and uh the other
two guys i don't know i haven't seen them since the early 90s really so uh i don't know if they
did anything else yeah i i was funny because I was trying to think, I remembered they were signed.
It was jail.
The third.
Cause Eric's trip runs up,
up was jail.
The third one,
but it was pretty cool.
That was like,
it was a real,
real neat moment for like the Maritimes.
I mean,
I don't know how to describe it.
Yeah,
no,
no fair,
fair enough.
I don't know how to even describe how it felt being from there.
Like it,
it was hard for Nova Scotia bands or bands
from our community to get even noticed in Toronto and then all of a sudden our band was signed by
DGC at the time which had Nirvana, Sonic Youth, Teenage Fan Club, Hole and everything and then
all of a sudden Sub Pop came in and signed three bands so it was it was my it was a bit of a
Cinderella story I think a lot of the bands probably weren't ready to be signed probably like us like we had played basically 15
shows and then we were signed to geffen which was ridiculous but it was such a it was a i'm not
gonna say it was a magical time but it was a very exciting time to be a band or be a musician
and jay i feel like sloan did like there was like like a double sided like seven inch with like you guys and Eric's trip for Sub Pop, right?
Was it Nevermind the Mollusks? in and out of Nova Scotia before she was. So basically she came up and the first thing she did was want to do that
double seven inch,
which was us and Jail, I think.
I have that somewhere.
Eric's trip.
Yeah.
And another band called Idée du Nord
who are from New Brunswick.
What was the Sloan?
Was that like,
it was like one of those like B-side,
like Pillow Fight or something?
Was that?
Yeah.
It was a song of mine called Pillow Fight, which I would rather was forgotten.
Thank you for reminding me.
Anyhow.
Can I change my picks?
Yeah.
Anyhow.
Mike, check YouTube.
Yeah.
No, no.
But it was whatever.
It was just exciting to have a record on Sub Pop.
We were fans of all of these labels and these bands. And, uh, it was,
it was pretty, uh, outrageous at the time for sure.
Now, uh, exciting news for you, Cam and Ben,
is that I actually changed the camera on zoom.
So Jay can see you guys right now. So if you want to wave to Jay Ferguson.
Where am I waving? Like there?
Wave into the light.
to Jay Ferguson.
Where am I waving?
Like there?
Wave into the light.
Yeah.
Jay,
what's,
like,
give us a little update on what's going on
with Sloan right now.
Bury us in some,
some facts
about the current status
of the band.
Like,
are you,
do you have any shows planned?
What's going on?
We have been
kind of inactive
as a band
since,
I guess, for about a year and a half, But we've been in the middle of making a record, which will be our 13th record.
So that is we're in the middle of recording that right now.
And we do have some shows planned for November.
And fingers crossed if they if they happen or not.
I don't know. Things are it seemed for a while like it was a sure thing.
And I mean, I know just with with the state of COVID and the nation.
The state of the states and Alberta.
Yeah, exactly.
Ladies and gentlemen.
We may be driving straight through a couple of provinces before the end.
We'll see.
Anyhow, we have shows in November.
In the meantime, we released a couple of vinyl-only B-sides records
that are limited edition.
And we have another sort of limited edition record coming out in November, December as well.
But then the real record, the real new Sloan record will come out probably in the new year.
Nice.
And Jay, how's Chris doing?
I know he had a little setback there.
He did.
He had a, I guess the proper term is bell's palsy and it was something
that he kind of woke up with one day and uh and uh he had uh he has a good doctor and um he had a
lot of encouraging this happened back in january february and uh there was a lot of encouraging
stories but that in that it's a condition that heals itself on its own.
And that has been the case with Chris.
He's good.
If you talk to him now,
you would not notice that,
that he had that.
It was just on one side of his face.
I know people,
some people have it a lot worse and it lasted for a lot longer,
but it seemed like within a couple of months,
he was,
you could see it trending better and progressing.
I've known a couple people who had it
and the scary part is you actually just
don't know when it's going to start to
fix itself
maybe this is permanent
and then when you start to see
the improvements it must be uplifting
just the idea of waking up in the morning
and it's like there's my face
brutal
very surprising for him, for sure.
But no, he's had lots of well wishes at the time.
And he's doing great.
And you would, like, if you saw him today, you would not know.
So he's very happy about that.
It's really weird.
I know someone who has that right now.
And I wonder if it's maybe linked to this virus.
I don't know.
Dr. Ben here.
It is peculiar.
Well, I will say City News did have a segment
about a lady who says she got it from one of the vaccines.
Well, if City News has it.
It wasn't incorporated.
So, Jay Ferguson, you're a hell of an FOTM.
You're fantastic.
At some point, I'd love to get you back to kick out the jams with me.
And I know you've been to the backyard here,
but I'd love to get you back here.
Yeah, right on.
Anytime.
I'd love to get you back.
Oh, man, anytime?
Okay, what's your schedule like tomorrow?
I've fed Mike enough tunes to do about eight or nine of these East Coast jams.
So we can replace them.
So Jay, that's it.
So no pressure.
You could, of course course you could log off
Zoom right now
and I won't think
any lesser of you
and many many many
surprise Zoom guests
have done that
but the odd
you know Rod Black
for example
and Mike Richards
who's now hosting Jeopardy
now hosting Jeopardy
I saw
congratulations
there's some
some FOTMs
who do the surprise Zoom thing
they stick around
all we're going to do now is kick out jams and talk about it.
And every jam will be a Canadian band from east of Ontario.
So it's 100% up to you.
I won't take any offense to it if you need to go.
Okay, well, I don't want to barge in on your party,
but because it is East Coast-centric,
I'm happy to hang out for a little bit and just hear.
And maybe I'll be obnoxious and interject every once in a while.
We're all dorks.
This is an extra dork.
Since he's sticking around a bit, can I go first?
Because it'll be relevant to the guest.
So normally Cam starts us off, and this time I'm butting in front
because I'm glad you're on the line for this jam.
This is my first jam in our Beasts of the East Pandemic Friday episode.
This is our 73rd Pandemic Friday.
Let her rip!
She was underwhelmed
if that's a word
I know it's not
cause I looked it up
That's one of the skills that I learned in my school
I was overwhelmed and I'm sure of that one
Cause I learned it back in grade school
When I was young She said you was funny
I said you are funny
She said thank you
And I said never mind
And she rolled her eyes
Her beautiful eyes
Boy, it's not the grammar
It's the feeling
That is certainly in my heart
But not in her
But not in her
But not in her
But not in her
But not in her The night it hurts The night it hurts
Who was that?
My bloody valentine.
Jay just took a...
I thought Jay would get Shazam going here
to figure out what the hell I'm playing.
So, of course, I'm starting any Beasts of the East episode.
I'm going to start with Sloan.
The band Sloan.
The band Sloan.
I'm assuming Sloan was on all our lists.
Well, which Sloan is the question, right?
Because there's so many jams you could pick.
But I decided to go with the first Sloan song I ever heard
because I wasn't cool enough to hear the EP that Ben here was listening to.
So I'm listening to my 102.1.
I can't remember if they were The Edge or Edge 102
or what was going on with CFNY.
But early 90s, you know, digging my lowest of the low.
And this song I heard, I came on the radio, and I
swear to you, Jay, it was love
at first listen. I'm like, what the hell is that?
I didn't even know this was a Canadian band. I didn't know what
was going on. I just knew this sound
appealed to me, and
I fell in love. And then, of course,
you learn more about who the hell's singing,
you pick up the album, and then the rest is history.
But I can tell the people
out there, before we go to jay
ferguson for some uh inside baseball uh this is the very uh the debut single as far as i know from
sloan and uh again first song i ever heard and it's um i believe it's the you'll tell me jay but
this is your best charting single outside of this country. Is that true? I would not know about that.
I can't imagine there was any charting single outside of this country.
Okay, so I have some info on this.
It's all real too.
Apparently, on the US Modern Rock Charts,
it's called Modern Rock Tracks Chart,
in 1993, this song, Underwhelmed,
which by the way is in the dictionary,
and I look like a fool for so long
because i would tell people it's not a word but uh this peaked at number 25 right okay i feel like
we defined the term bubbling under basically like 25 years of that yeah heat seeker like oh it's
getting played in detroit and nowhere else um so i don't know i mean i i believe
your stats and i appreciate your uh research uh i think maybe the good and everyone actually did
all right on some of those modern rock charts uh when that came out in the states uh and that was
on a label called the enclave but uh but i believe you but i but you know that song did very well for us, obviously, at like at CFNY.
They were very good to us in the early days.
And, you know, we're so grateful that we were already we were already signed and everything like that.
But even before we were signed and we had the Peppermint EP out and even before that, when we just had a song on a cassette compilation called Here and Now, it was a different version of Underwhelmed.
CFNY was playing that so you know we uh that's that song obviously started everything for us
but jay do you remember your champions at uh cfny because we've become quite friendly with a lot of
the uh 90s uh talent on 102.1 but do you remember like who would be one of your your champions there
i feel like Kim, uh,
and I'm liking Kim Hughes.
Yes.
Kim Hughes.
Of course.
She was very,
uh,
very good to us in the early days.
And of course,
uh,
and of course like Dave Bookman,
Dave Bookman was there back then as well.
And,
uh,
he was,
he was very,
uh,
a big supporter.
And I'm sure there's other names that I,
that I would know,
but I remember,
I feel like Kim is who we would see every time who would be
interviewing us,
uh,
there.
And it was brother Bill there.
I'm trying to think.
Brother Bill.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Brother Bill.
Yeah.
He was on the album too.
Only because Jay,
brother Bill,
uh,
prior to me saying,
Hey Ben,
do you want to fill in for Stu Stone on this pandemic Friday?
I would tap brother Bill on the shoulder and he would fill that role.
He's been,
uh,
a co-host of many a Pandemic Friday.
We're outside.
I like bats.
It is a bat.
Ben was
almost attacked by a bat.
It was you.
It was in your
purview.
A raccoon just walked down
my trellis a couple minutes yeah see we had a
squirrel in my kitchen apparently just before i got home in the kitchen in the kitchen that i've
had raccoons in the kitchen but brother bill uh brother bill i could see him being a big he was
a big advocate too for lowest of the low i know that too but i could see him advocating for uh
slowing at the station there actually brother bill looms Bill looms high in Sloan folklore
because at the beginning
of the song
The Good and Everyone
on our One Chord
to Another record,
when it's like,
please welcome to the stage
Sloan,
that's him announcing
us at HFest 95.
Yeah,
you didn't know that?
I can't remember
if I knew that,
but I have the same reaction
every time I'm told that fact,
I think,
which is a mind blow.
That's a good one.
I really didn't know that.
See,
100% he's listening right now.
So let's just send some love to White Rock, British Columbia.
Oh, wow, right on.
And say hello to the artist
formerly known as Brother Bill,
now known as Neil Morrison.
But very good FOTM.
Jay, could I ask you,
this is like a really nerdy question
about Smeared and CFNY
just bear with me
so Underwhelmed had a video
500 Up
had a video right
CFNY I remember
specifically they played Underwhelmed a lot
but they didn't really play 500 Up
but they would play Take It In a lot
do you know why that was?
I always wondered because Take It In I don't think ever had a video did it no there was no video and it's funny that they
chose to play that take it in might have been a radio single in canada okay it was definitely it
was a radio single in the united states oh maybe someone in the u.s started trying to promote it to
some canadian stations as well because i remember for years like it would be in rotation, like into the third, fourth,
fifth album. You'd still hear it.
Yeah, it's strange. That's a song that we never play anymore, but when we do play it,
it does get... We probably should re-entry into the pantheon, I suppose. But 500 Up,
we still play fairly regularly. Underwhelmed
is a regular, for sure.
I like Lemon Zinger.
I'm a fan of Lemon Zinger.
That was like a thrash song, was it?
Alright, now Cam, do you have anything
you want to say
before I kick out your first
job?
Sorry, I'm just using some of your Ridley
embalming fluid from Ridley Funeral Home. Yes, thank'm just using some of your Ridley embalming fluid
from Ridley Funeral Home.
Yes, thank you Ridley Funeral Home for
sending over the hand sanitizer.
It's usually corpse sanitizer.
Especially since Ben's only got the one vaccination
so you might need... Ben's going to have another beer
and rid your system inhospitable
to virus. Are you fully vaxxed
Jay Ferguson? I am, yes.
Okay, you're invited to TMLX8
on August 27th.
We've got vaccine passports
accepted.
Yeah, no, my
intro, and Mike, I mentioned this to you
off camera, with our little
pal Stu Stone, I thought this would be
a good opportunity to
broaden the level of songs and
knowing that Mr. Rainer was joining us and knowing
a lot of his taste that maybe we could
go a bit deeper and a bit more
obscure. I was going to choose Godspeed, You
Black Emperor, like Dead Flag Blues
to kick us off, but I thought that might be
a bit on the nose and I also thought Ben might
choose it later.
But this is a song, perhaps a less
obvious one. I quiz MF
to say, hey, do you know this song?
And she said no.
I was a little surprised because I thought this was like a CanCon AM staple.
But she didn't know what it was.
But I think everyone else listening will know. I love this.
It's so fucking good. Take anyone you want to As long as I can hear from you
Just be mine in your way
Just be mine in your way
Just be mine in your way
Loving you ain't so easy
I would never try to please me.
But I've got time anyway.
I've got time anyway.
Okay, so what we're listening to is Loving You Ain't Easy by...
I'm going to probably butcher this
pronunciation. Pagliaro?
Pagliaro.
Pagliaro.
Question for Ben
before we start. Any relation to
Jennifer from
the Star with the same last name?
I don't think so. No, because when I was googling
Michelle, I was like, she
popped up. Oh, I can ask her.
Yeah.
Can you text her right now?
Do you ever text him?
No.
We could email her.
Email Jay.
She's out on Twitter.
Here at JPEG.
She can join Jay on the Zoom.
Yeah.
I rode a train with him.
I went with Andy Kim's Christmas show
a few years ago
because they did one here.
Andy does the
Christmas thing
where Bud's
so I kind of went along
as like
tour photographer
even though I'm not
a photographer
and we rode a train
to Montreal
from the Toronto show
at the Phoenix.
I can't remember
whether that's somewhere
in...
It doesn't matter.
But Pac Nero
was part of the gang.
It was a broken
social scene
and Ron Saxon. It was a broken social scene. And Ron Saxman.
It was a fun group.
And we had like a private car.
A boozy private car.
Oh, Ron's booked, by the way, for Toronto Mike.
There you go.
And I loved Pac Ligero because he was like,
jean jacket, jean shirt, jeans, and sunglasses.
Looking identical to how he looked when he was young,
just with like white hair.
It was just just fucking awesome.
Both nights, he was the best thing that hit the stage.
Everyone was just in awe of how good he was.
He is a legit legend.
He's from Montreal.
He played a show.
Maybe this was the one he played in Toronto about five years ago.
They said it was his first Toronto show in 30 years, the prior time he was opening for peter frampton at the cne that's
how long he came alive yeah yeah do you know this song mike like this yeah yeah yeah i do know this
song uh jay what do you think of cam's first pick amazing yeah it's like one of the best canadian
songs of all time for sure and he had a bunch like he had a bunch of those yeah he could have been
way bigger that's another one.
Some Sing Some Dance was another one from that
same record, which is great.
He had a lot of French language hits.
You think he's better than Gino Vannelli?
Yeah.
I'm not going to knock Gino
because he had some
monsters too.
The thing I always liked about
this song was you could hear on song was that this you could hear on
like classic rock radio or you could hear it you know alongside a band like slona it wouldn't sound
out of place like it was a weird because and i didn't realize how old this song is this is from
like 1971 i believe it came out i i always thought this was more like a late 70s thing
um but like really really holds up for a song that's what, 50 years old now.
Yeah.
Almost.
Like it's insane.
Very good songwriter.
Yeah.
He was just like Mr. Hook.
Totally.
Not Dr. Hook.
Or Peter Hook.
Okay.
Cam,
way to go.
Now Ben.
I gave you a bunch
so you can just surprise me.
That's right.
Okay, so I should tell people you gave me a bunch. Like you can just surprise me. That's right. Okay, so I should tell people, you gave me a bunch.
I just wanted four of your jams.
I actually cherry-picked.
I didn't want any repeats, so I kind of skipped those.
That's why I gave you a bunch.
I said I did that last time.
I think I sent you like 25.
So let me play the song I chose.
Basically, I chose this one to play for Ben Rayner.
Here you go, buddy. Life is too short to ration out in portions
I spend my time as soon as I get it
It's gone, but I'm in no rush
I'm in no rush, why, why, why?
Do the change, I'm in no rush Why, why, why do I change?
I'm coming alive again
I'm in command of my fate
I can depend on destiny
If it's safe, come alive, come alive Oh, dead life away
Flies from your brain
My obsession with that band, Dog Day,
and that song is called Oh, Dead Life.
It's from their first album, Night Group.
Dates back to like...
I remember I had the record
and I hadn't really spent time...
And it's exactly
what I like. So I was kind of like, oh, it's just exactly
what I like. And very Halifax, right?
Very Halifax. Halifax does like that kind
of bright, shoegazy thing. But I remember
driving to
the Hillside Festival in Guelph
and having that moment with it
and just going,
fuck, I love this record.
And then ever since then,
I became kind of a lone champion of the band.
It was just so frustrating
that nobody knew them.
And eventually,
my buddy Evan signed them to,
he always said this privately to my girlfriend. I think that was
15 years ago, 10 years ago.
I think I can say it loud and clear. He was like,
I only signed them because Ben loved them so much.
The album, Concentration,
did nothing. What's it called?
Dog Day.
I'm pleading ignorance.
But it sounds great.
At the beginning,
I thought it was The Strokes last night,
but it's not.
It's frustrating
that nobody knows
the concentration
in their new record.
They have the Rodimonic Goth.
The first one's sort of like,
not unlike Sloan Smeared,
it's very,
very,
you know,
it wears its influences
on its sleeve
a little more,
but it's still fucking awesome. And I, I just like, on its sleeve a little more, but it's still
fucking awesome.
And I,
I just,
like,
I got to be friends
with Seth and Nancy,
Seth Smith and Nancy,
Nancy Urich
over the years
because I just always
went to the shows
and interviewed them
and stuff.
And I think
when they first met me,
they were a little freaked out
by, like,
how much of it,
it was like the first time
I met the guys
in Chalk Circle,
like Brad and Chris.
I think they were like,
is this guy a stalker?
I just think they're one of the great unsung Canadian bands.
And Seth is an amazing songwriter.
And Nancy is an amazing songwriter.
And I think they deserve better.
What's the label they're on?
They were on Tom Lab out of Germany for one
and Outside for one.
And now they release them on their own called Fun Dog.
Let me ask Jay Ferguson.
Jay, are you familiar with this band?
Yeah.
No, they're kind of part of the era of Halifax that I missed.
You know what I mean?
I had already moved to Toronto by this point,
so I really didn't catch their early shows or anything like that.
But I do remember seeing them.
I only saw them play a couple of times,
but they played at the Horseshoe Tavern uh which is a basement or used to be a basement club
on Argyle Street in Halifax and this would have been in the Seahorse yeah like 2006 or so and
I remember seeing Dog Day and I thought they were great and I know obviously it's not one of their
songs I remember them performing uh the Stoes, I Want to Be Your Dog.
And it was the most affecting versions I've ever heard of that song.
Like it actually blew my mind.
It was really, not to sound corny, but emotional.
It was the way they sang it.
Sorry, the male and the female.
Sorry, I don't know their names.
Yeah, exactly.
Like I don't know them well. Yeah, exactly. Like I don't know them well,
but,
uh,
it,
it sounded so great.
And,
uh,
it was like one of my favorite shows that year.
I really loved it,
but I don't know a lot about them,
but I,
I,
every time I hear something,
I enjoy it.
And I,
and I enjoyed that song,
which I did not know at all.
Now I'm just going to address a few points made at live.torontomic.com
where we're live streaming the pirate streams
so that the record companies can't boot us.
Sure.
I want to say hi to YZ Gord,
and I want to say hello to Cambrio,
who wants me to ask Jay Ferguson if he likes Foghat,
and he wants to know why more people don't appreciate Foghat.
Here's why people don't appreciate Foghat.
I'm just kidding. I know very little fog hat i know i don't know anything about them okay that's okay moose grumpy though
this one's for you uh ben rainer uh she says all the mass clinics are walk-ins now and most
pharmacies can give uh you your second shot now too and And she says, if you, Ben, would like her to book you
an appointment, she's happy to do so.
She just needs your postal code.
I'm not going down this road right now.
I'd prefer not to have this.
You don't want someone named Moose Grumpy to
put your health into her hooves?
I'm not entrusting my health and welfare to a moose.
Moose Grumpy,
we're going to address this after
the program here.
Okay, so that's fine.
Now I'm looking at the jams, and it would be Cam's turn.
Here, Cam, let's go back to the regular rotation,
then you go first here, because I want to hear their reaction to this.
Okay, yeah, this will be a good bridge.
Yeah, any intro before?
I think this is the first band we're hearing.
So we've heard, what, a Quebec band or Quebec artist. I did a Nova the first band we're hearing. So we've heard a Quebec band or Quebec artist.
I did a Nova Scotia band.
Yeah, and two Nova Scotias.
Now we're going to hop over to New Brunswick here.
Excellent. Excellent job, Cam.
Thank you. But you smile Yeah
You are good
Yeah Thank you. Okay, this is perfect
because we've got Eric's trip.
Listen, this is from the Peter EP
that came out on Sloan's own
Murder Records. got Eric's trip. Listen, this is from the Peter EP that came out on Sloan's own Murder
Records in
what year?
This would be like 95, I'm guessing
this probably came out.
It's a little earlier.
A little earlier, I think
92.
It's like late 92, early 93.
I think it might say one, but it came out.
I bought it a lot.
Yeah, because I get that they had all those four early 93. It came out around, I think it might say one, but it came out. I bought it. Yeah.
Yeah.
Cause I,
I get that.
They had all those like cassette,
like they had those four cassettes and then there was this,
and then there was love terror.
And it seemed like it all kind of came out within a four or five year span.
Uh,
led by Rick white.
I know when I moved back to Toronto from Hamilton,
he was probably like the,
him and Moe Berg were the two quote unquote rock stars I would see around a lot.
And guess how starstruck.
Am I remembering it wrong?
Is he really tall?
Like I'm 6'5".
So like I feel like I would see him on Queen Street and stuff.
And sort of again be a bit starstruck.
I think just because he had Zelda very long hair.
And I saw him and Tara White together
once. I was like, oh my god, there's the
power couple right
there. This was during the Elevator to
Hell phase.
I got to be pretty good friends with Tara,
and it always freaked her out how much I loved
Elevator and Eric's Trip. This is returning to
a theme. In fact,
I ran into her and Rick after
they'd split up at the the lcbl by my house
wearing an eric's trip shirt one day but here's um when i first moved here i was working for the
star i i showed up in an elevator to hell t-shirt to interview dallas and travis good from the sadies
and they were living upstairs at la above la hacienda at the time on queen queen west the
late great la Hacienda.
And they were both like, it's the first time I met them. We were having some drinks and Dallas was like, are you a fan of
Elevator to Hell? And I was like, I'm from fucking New
Brunswick. I love Eric Striff.
Gosh, he's like, I'll be right back.
And came down with Mark and Rick and
Tara because they were staying up there.
Was it by like the scruff of the neck?
That's amazing.
I'd only been here a couple of months and And I met, like Tara worked at Rotate.
And I was always like, that's Tara.
Okay, yeah, that's right.
That's amazing.
Oh my God.
It was just like, over the years, she and I became friends.
And I would see her occasionally with Rick.
And same thing as you.
I get totally starstruck with Rick.
Totally.
Well, let's tell the people, this was on your list, right, Ben?
Yes.
Oh, this exact song?
This exact song.
We both think so.
And the name of the song is?
Did we name the song?
Listen, I always,
that EP,
they're all like one word titles,
so I feel like I always
get them mixed up.
But yeah, that song's called Listen.
I'm going to throw out my fun facts
just because we have like
Jay and Ben here,
but I do want to give a shout out
when you mentioned
The Good Brothers,
an album I had not thought of
in years.
You probably had this. The elevator one with Dallas on dallas on it was amazing well no i was thinking that there was the uninvited
the uninvited unintended that was like a super group that was rick white from eric strippen
elevated to hell um i think dallas good was in it and then greg keeler from blue rodeo and they put
out and it sounds like an elevator to hell
yeah it's fucking awesome that was like it was great because i think it just got re-released
in the last couple years brian from rotate it's on blue fog yeah he lives right yeah rick out in
the country and he and i'd said something nice about rick on twitter and he sent me that one
and not the new new rick one and like he's like what's your address and that showed the reissue
of the unintended and uh and the one he did with Ein Sof,
a couple of years ago,
which is also amazing.
Yeah.
They just showed up in my mailbox.
A real body of work for Rick White.
I also forgot The Unintended did a split seven inch
with the Constantines,
where Constantines covered like four Neil Young songs
and Unintended covered four Gordon Lightfoot songs.
Like a real collector's item, but
it's just great stuff.
I feel like a lot of it's not on
Spotify or it's just sort of faded
into the ether or the weird pockets
of YouTube and stuff.
I'm learning so much. I just want to say,
Cam, you know your shit. Ben fucking
Rainer is here. How many years were you
at the Star? Almost
22. And Jay Ferguson and Sloan is here. How many years were you at the Star? Almost 22. 22. And Jay Ferguson
and Sloan is here. Half my life.
Honestly,
does Strombo
assemble a group like this?
I'm nobody. I'm like you, Mike.
I'm just a fan. I have no
force in this game beyond. But you know your shit.
Great choice. Did you finish your
fun facts? Yeah.
That story's amazing.
Just wild.
No, it was really,
and I would always write about them
whenever I could.
And I'd met,
when I was in university, actually,
here's a good story,
because they would always wind up opening,
there would be like the opening band,
or it'd be like the Inbreds
and Eric Strip at 4.30 in the afternoon at an ollie just show it on tap in ottawa in the barbara market and you'd always go like i go
it's still like the couple times the eric strip have reunited i've i've moved heaven and earth
to be there uh and i was so sad i missed it when they did a one at uh sappy fest and you runs like
is that plane gonna crash into your house um oh i hope not but when i was a student at Savvy Fest, and she runs a... Is that plane going to crash into your house?
Oh, I hope not.
But when I was a student at Carleton my second year,
they played the Fen Lounge, and I got in the pit,
and then someone elbowed me right in the mouth,
and I nearly lost a tooth during sunshine.
I think it was one of the ones on Love Terror.
But afterwards, I very, very...
This is a true story. It was my first instance of music journalism. I had an But afterwards, I very, very, and this is a true story,
it was my first instance of music journalism.
I had an assignment due and I was like,
I'm going to interview Eric's trip
about the East Coast explosion.
And Rick is very shy.
He was just off hugging Julie in the corner.
But I sat down with, I met Mark
and Chris Thompson was the one who granted
the 18, 19-year-old kid, nervous kid, an interview.
So that was, they were the first band
I ever interviewed
as a budding music journalist.
That's huge.
That's wild.
And they were from New Brunswick.
Yeah.
That's kind of cool.
Love it so much.
I love it so much.
I also want to give a shout
to their drummer,
Mark Godet,
who I think was older,
but is one of the most,
I'm not a musician at all.
I don't care,
but I just remember
every time I saw Eric Sharp
just being transfixed by his drumming.
And he was like 15 years older than them.
And he was like a minimal kit too.
Yeah, but it seemed like he was like Mo Tucker or something.
Let's make it look like Elevator to Hell slash Elevator Through
slash Elevator was a devastating live band in the end.
It was just like taking my friend Rob,
and we'd always say it was like taking acid,
just watching them.
It was like, oh, I just had a 40-minute acid trip.
Jay Ferguson of Sloan,
what say you about Eric's trip?
Listen.
Oh, it's one of the best.
I mean, I'm whatever,
grateful that we were able to release that EP
before they kind of went on to make make more records for sub pop and stuff
like that but um it's it's almost hard to describe what it was like to see eric's trip play in
halifax in like 91 92 when i feel like our bit like i kind of thought like i thought our band
was was great and like we were doing something different than a lot of the other bands in
halifax i thought we were you know sort of a lot of the other bands in Halifax. I thought we were, you know,
sort of taking influences from Sonic Youth and My Bloody Valentine,
blah, blah, blah.
And then Eric's trip showed up and I had heard a bit of their warm girl
cassette and I thought it was great.
And they showed up and they just had single light bulbs on the stage that
they turned on and off with their feet and they had super long hair and
they were so loud and exciting
like it totally stepped the game up in halifax by them showing up it was the most
memorable and and outrageously loud show that i can remember they were like a feral band like
they really were like and and not just like not you know yeah they're from like New Brunswick and what but they didn't seem like they're from
anywhere like really
Moncton is
not representative
it's like driving along eight mile
in Detroit with a shit brown river
like Moncton it's a bit of a
skeety town and they were and they were
totally like they were like you know the
kids hung out smoking weed
like the darker hallways of the high school.
Although, I must say, like, Julie Dorian, like, she seems like a delight, too.
She's a sweetheart.
Like, her solo career is, like, awesome, too.
Like, just the volume of music that spawned from that band is just, like, it's incredible and, like, really underappreciated, in my opinion.
They're super prolific, and Rick has always been really prolific.
And it's nice that, I know that Brian with Blue
Fog has also been reissuing a lot of
Rick's older stuff. They even reissued the Peter
EP with a bunch of extra
songs from the era.
If you think that Rick is
prolific, it's like Prince
basically. There's tons of records and then
there's a vault full of unreleased stuff
that's just as good. For a while
because Brian also
was one of the guys behind Rotate This,
there would just be CDRs
burned of various requite
and elevator things for sale
on the counter at Rotate.
You can't keep up with it. I've got a bunch of them.
They were never
officially released, but you could pick them up
for $10 or $12.
What was Moon Socket?
That was Chris. that was that was
chris that was chris's like post okay that was good too man yeah and then mark gadet had a thing
called purple knight it was just like him and one other guy wow and that was kind of sort of like
two-piece like art hardcore kind of stuff i remember a lot of these songs were on uh i think
it was a sonic onion compilation more of our stupid noise like i feel like all lot of these songs were on, I think it was a Sonic Onion compilation, more of our Stupid Noise.
I feel like all five of these bands were on this
and they were all great.
They were, again, a good gateway
into all these other sounds.
They're legendary to me.
They're one of my absolute favorite bands of all time.
I love them probably more than I love My Bloody Valentine.
They're up there with Joy Division
and My Bloody Valentine and all,
and the Mary Jane and PJ Harvey,
for whom my own daughter is named.
Yeah, totally.
They're all, I mean,
sort of Rick and Julie and all of them.
And Rick, whose output,
I guess I've kept up with the most,
is a unique sort of visionary guy.
It's like, he's the real deal.
It's, you know,
the way that they created Eric's trip and everything just in a basement in Moncton is wonderful
and such a unique story as well.
Ben, before you leave here tonight,
I can pump air in your tires if you want.
I can go get my pump.
I know, I stopped to pump them up.
Oh, you're full?
I paid some service station
at $1.50 to...
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Nice ride, though.
Do you have a light on that ride?
I do.
Good.
Good.
I want you to be...
This is like code.
It's like a drug deal.
Okay.
So I'm going to kick out my...
The cocaine is under the chair.
I'm going to kick out my second jam
just to reset.
This is an important announcement
for everyone who can hear our voices right now.
The Pandemic Friday finale, it is happening August 27.
It's a Friday night from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
We're on the patio.
Outdoors, it's an outdoor event.
We're on the patio of Great Lakes Brewery,
the location near Royal York and Queensway. It's down outdoor event. We're on the patio of Great Lakes Brewery, the location near Royal York and Queensway.
It's down the street from the Costco.
We're going to be there. Palma Pasta
is going to feed us.
That's authentic Italian food.
It's going to be delicious. That's on the house.
That's courtesy of Palma Pasta. Thank you.
And Great Lakes Brewery is not just
hosting. They're going to give
everybody,
at least the FOTMs who come for TMLX8,
your first pour is on the house.
That's your first beer.
They're buying it for you.
Okay.
This is unbelievable.
There's no paywall here.
There's no tickets.
Sorry, Stu's done.
You said this is the first time they've opened their patio. Yeah, they haven't been open since...
Like in two years, pretty much.
Yeah, almost two years. That's incredible. And this will be the first time the patio is open to non they've opened their patio. Yeah, they haven't been open since... Like in two years, pretty much. Yeah, almost two years.
That's incredible.
And this will be the first time the patio is open to non-employees, essentially.
Is August 27th thus the day you started this thing?
No, no, no.
It's just we had to have...
At some point, I realized we need an end date because it's killing me.
Mike was, shall we say, fed up.
I love it, but it's a lot of work. It's every
week. We've done 74 weeks in a row
and there's a lot of prep and then
I want to organize, you know, I want to get a Jay Ferguson
to come in and I want to get a Ben
Rayner and it's just, it's a lot.
At some point this has to happen.
I would say Thursday's a good date night
going out with our partners
and stuff. I have my daughter's soccer.
I get here as fast as I can.
I set up outside.
This will be, you know,
I hope Jay sticks around a little longer,
but you know, this can go,
sometimes with Stuart,
it goes like almost three hours.
So like, we won't go three hours today.
This is all good stuff though.
Good stuff.
On that note, okay.
So I kicked out Sloan's Underwhelmed
as my first jam.
Here is my second jam. I'm not alone
I'm not alone
I feel like I'm fading
And obscure beneath this
I'm not a flesh and bone
I'm not alone
I'm not alone
I'm like a one in a million face.
And I'm to your front door.
And then you come.
And then you come.
Make me feel so bright.
Make me feel brilliant.
And so white.
It's like I shine white It's like a shine
It's like a shine
It's like a shine
It's like a shine
It's like a shine
It's like a shine
I felt it wouldn't be Pandemic Friday
if we didn't play some Doughboys.
Of course.
I feel like they're up there in the total plays category.
Often referenced.
That's for sure.
They come up quite a bit, actually.
I thought we were going to watch a back episode of The Wedge.
That's right.
Fun fact, absolutely.
So this is Shine.
And I'll share a few facts, and then I'll be interested in your takes,
and then Jay's as well.
But, of course, this is a Montreal band.
So we're east of Ontario, Montreal, Quebec.
That's what threw me.
You just made it like Atlantic bands.
In hindsight.
We could have done it before, but then you gave me Montreal.
But we're out of time.
Like, we're done.
We have no more time.
Because the last Pandemic Friday is only a few weeks away.
You're right.
We could have done, of course.
We could have done just...
We could have gone province by province.
We could have just done Nova Scotia.
I will say, I feel like Rainer is a big Voivod fan.
So I'm hoping we're going to hear some...
Who knows?
So, okay, John Kastner,
he left the Asexuals
and started up...
Awesome, awesome.
Yeah, they started the Doughboys.
I just want to shout out Scott McAuliffe
because he left the Doughboys
before this album.
This album is Crush.
It's like their big breakthrough,
if you will, commercially.
But Scott went on to form a little band called Rusty.
Rusty, who, of course, is probably the most referenced.
We just reunited and actually put out a pretty good record.
They were reunited in my fucking basement.
Rusty, everyone.
Oh, that's right.
In the basement.
Come on, Ken made the trip from Sudbury.
He was laying bricks.
Like, literally laying bricks.
Put down the last brick and hopped in the car.
Yeah, honestly, of course.
You know what we think of Rusty.
Did Rusty take a lasagna?
Oh my God.
I don't know if that palma pasta thing existed yet, actually,
now that I think about it.
Jay, did you get a lasagna?
I did, thank you very much.
They're quite delicious. Was it good? Excellent. Jay, did you get a lasagna? I did, thank you very much. They're quite delicious. Was it good?
Excellent.
Excellent, thank you. Okay, good, good.
Just want to make sure you got one.
I finally told Kastner how much I love
the Doughboys. We were having a drink
in South by Southwest a couple years ago
and I was like,
the first album I ever mail ordered was
Happy Accidents and I ordered a
t-shirt with it and you meant so much to me. He's friendsidents, and I ordered a T-shirt with it,
and you meant so much to me.
Like, you know, he's friends of friends,
and I knew him a little bit,
and I've always been polite.
Okay, here's a fun fact.
I'm going to bury it a few fun facts,
but you probably know all this,
but do you know what band John Kastner is in right now?
What was the band after the Doughboys?
All Systems Go. No, that's a good guess.
I saw them at the Pearl Jam 98 show that I loved at Molson Park.
That was an awesome show.
I know.
I love it so much.
I talk about it often.
But I saw them on the live.
I don't know if we're allowed to talk about Matthew Goode anymore.
I don't know if he's been canceled, but he was there.
The actor.
He should have been.
Cracker.
Cracker, yes.
Cracker was there.
You know who else was there?
Hayden was there.
Hayden was there. He's another guy we talked about. Went to my high school know who else was there? Hayden was there. Hayden was there.
And he's another guy we talked about.
Went to my high school.
Right.
Shout out to Hayden Desser.
But where am I going here?
Men Without Fucking Hats.
And then take the fucking out of there.
It's just Men Without Hats.
Sorry, he's in Men Without Hats now.
John Kastner is the manager.
And he might not be the...
He's the manager of Men Without Hats.
Yeah.
But I think he used to be a guitarist.
Like he was a a guitarist.
He was a rhythm guitarist in the band.
The Montreal scene is weirdly incestuous like that with stuff that doesn't seem to go together.
And the other John in the band was in Bionic
with Ian Blurton.
That's right.
Fucking awesome, too.
Blurton was booked on this show,
and it never happened, and I can't remember why,
but I need to get that back on the agenda.
I want to just tell you another fun fact
because you mentioned The Wedge of course.
This is the theme for much music.
The Wedge throughout the 90s.
But at the 1994 Juno Awards
this album
Crush was nominated
for the Juno for Best Hard Rock
album.
They did not win this Juno.
I know.
Best Hard Rock Album.
Jethro Tull.
Guess what?
Yes, that's a good guess.
What band do you think beat out?
Ooh.
What year?
1994.
And Jay, you get a vote too here.
You get a guess, I mean.
1994?
Right.
The Doughboys lost for Best Hard Rock Album to what band?
Who did they give it to?
The Guess Who.
That's our
just hotel.
I'm trying to think what wouldn't be considered alternative
at that time.
Hard rock.
Slick Toxic or something.
In 94 though?
I feel like Slick Toxic got wiped away by grunge.
Yeah, I think you're right.
I think there's a Slick Toxic video that's amazing
where they have flannel and everything on it.
Who turned into Rubber?
Was that them?
There was a band called Rubber or Svengali.
Oh, yeah.
Svengali turned into Rubber.
It's not Gato either, so keep guessing.
It's not Gato. Oh, Greg Gato. Hard Rock. David Wilcox. That's not Gato either. Keep guessing. It's not Gato.
Hard Rock. David Wilcox.
That's a good guess.
Okay.
I'll help you out because I think you'll be
surprised that this band is also in the Hard
Rock album category, but it's
I Mother Earth.
I don't mind that first time.
It's pretty good.
I like a lot of that.
It holds up. The first two records are pretty good. I got a lot of that. I don't mind. It holds up.
The first two records are pretty good.
I got no problem with them on the run.
So Gently We Go.
What was the one of So Gently We Go on it?
Was the song called Low?
Dig.
Was the song called Low?
Dig, right.
I liked Dig quite a bit.
I liked Dig and I liked that other one.
Edwin was a beautiful man.
I'm sure he still is.
He looked like an Eric Lindros,
like a young Eric Lindros.
Well, I remember that Toronto Star
had an article about,
this was like 2000,
how musicians, they used to drink,
now they're into fitness,
and they talked to Edwin for it
because it was like he was wearing
the Coss's muscle shirt.
Then he bought a bar, I think.
That's right.
Shout out to what?
Tattoo Rock.
Right.
Oh my God, that's right.
See, this is all good stuff.
A few more fun facts though.
The album Crush was released on A&M Records
and was produced by Daniel Ray
and mixed by Dave the Rave.
Ogilvy.
It got critical accolades
in 1994. I mentioned the
Juno Award nomination.
CFNY listeners voted it the 24th best album of 1993.
Shine was named by Chart Magazine
as number 38 on their 2,000 year list
of top 50 Canadian songs of all time.
2,000 songs.
It's on their top 2,000.
So shout out to John Kastner,
who of course,
and we talk about this quite a bit as well,
but is dating the actress.
In fact, had a child with Jessica Paré.
Is that how you say it?
Paré.
Paré.
Paré.
Okay.
And of course,
she was Don Draper's second wife on Mad Men.
See, and I've mentioned this like five times already,
but I saw them together
at a Teenage Head tribute show
at the Great Hall
where Jessica Paré was just
hanging out in the crowd
and someone like Stiv Bader's
from the Dead Boys was also there.
Or no,
I feel like Stiv Bader's is dead.
I think it was Cheetah Chrome, the other guy from the
Dead Boys was also there. So it's got to be the only
event that Jessica Perret
and Cheetah Chrome were ever in the same room.
I actually met Jessica Perret at a vice party
in some weird
biker compound in Austin.
This is years ago. They got shut down by the police.
With Johnny Knoxville.
And I think it was the guys,
it was like one of the guys from Death Row Above
might have introduced her.
It's all a bit of a blur,
because it was late, early in the morning, as it were.
But yes, Jessica Paré, Johnny Knoxville,
and Death From Above
is a pretty weird combo too.
That's not bad.
Block Party played that thing too.
Actually, Jay,
can I ask you a question
about Doughboys?
So like this album,
Crush,
I feel like was what,
like their third or fourth album.
Like when Sloan was coming up
like 92, 93,
did the Doughboys seem like
a veteran band
from what you recall back then?
Or did you ever like cross paths with them on the road?
Because they always seem like a band.
They formed in 87.
Yeah, they seem like they sort of, I wouldn't say they straddled the 80s and the 90s, but they did have like material in the 80s.
Sure, like we would have seen them play when John Kastner was in the asexuals when they played in
halifax so few bands came to halifax that if a band came everybody would go to the show so it
was even fewer came to saint john new brunswick oh yeah 45 minutes away from the shit hole i grew up
i was excited by the first doughboys record when that came out and i remember seeing them play and
i remember taping the show like on a cassette and I listened
to that to death and that was kind of the area era of the Doughboys that I knew and then they
made a couple more records and I didn't really by the time the Shine song was out like I would
I guess I would hear it on or see the video but I didn't really know their music but we knew those
guys Jonathan Cummins and John Kastner early on and they would have been like at the first Sloan
show in Montreal and it was exciting because we had seen their bands and we're like oh my god
John Kastner's at our show you know it just seemed like you know Canadian rock royalty was at our
show right so we've we've known those guys over the years and uh they've been John's been a big
uh supporter of ours and uh well that's all yeah I was say, it must be very distracting, too, because he's got the dreadlocks
in the crowd.
It's like, how can you not?
I was going to ask, has he lost the dreads yet?
That was my question.
He still looks the same.
By the way,
Cam, this is the second
time we've played a Doughboy song
on Pandemic Friday. You kicked out
Shitty Song when we did the F'n Jam.
Yeah, also from that album.
I didn't know you guys were Doughboyz fans.
This is all very exciting.
Oh, yeah.
Are you new, Ben?
Come on, tune in, brother.
Come on.
There's 73 in the can for you to catch up on.
That's true.
I've got, yes.
I'll just strip the three hours of sleep out of my existence that I've been getting every night.
Well, I would night I will tell you
I just remembered this
you tell us that and then you can introduce your second jam
well you don't know what it is so I'll just play it when you're done
the reason
I ordered
that sounds good I might have to steal another one
let me know I can go to the fridge and get one
I'll take one
the reason I ordered Happy Axe,
because I lived in St. George, New Brunswick,
and you had to drive to St. John.
They had a cool record shop called Backstreet Records,
which is still there.
I think it's been about 40, 45 years.
But I wanted a Doughboyz t-shirt too.
But the reason I mail-ordered the first time,
because I would mail-order indie records,
because you couldn't get them anywhere.
Backstreet had a pretty good selection, but you couldn't get them anywhere. Backstreet had like a pretty good selection
but you couldn't get everything.
I don't remember mail order guys.
No, it's so quaint.
But I,
the reason I got
Happy Accidents sent to me
was I was kind of
half asleep listening
to Brave New Waves
on CBC
and I got it mixed up
with Sliver by Nirvana
which was the tune
that I really,
really liked
and I still like
Happy Accidents
but I woke up in the morning
and I'd written down
Doughboy's Happy Accidents.
I mail-ordered it and was like,
where's that fucking grandma take me home?
Grandma take me home.
And I was like, oh.
My dad went to the show.
So I was an early adopter of Nirvana
without knowing it.
And the Doughboys benefited.
That's wild.
Okay, now I'm going to play your second jam
and then as I start it, I'm going to run to my fridge
and get you another cold Great Lakes beer.
Here you go, buddy. Take two months away
Leave, leave with the ones you love Ooh, I like the ones you love
Ooh, I like the ones you love
You have to wait for the bass to come in. See? I want to go.
I want to be.
I want to go.
When life is stressed, I will be on my way.
I won't be stuck inside, I won't be taking flight.
And when the wheels come off, I'll be an astronaut But I won't be lost in space I'll be skipping rocks
When you lay down and roll
So many changes.
There's nowhere to fade down.
It's all good.
What a great song.
This is the third time.
I usually cry
at this song
it's one of those
you've made me cry
with songs
I'm like the
Barbara Walters
of Toronto Podcast
that's like
I know
this is always
from their first record
first cassette actually
that became a record
that song is called
The Ones Who Love You
and I
I mean
it's that one I have goosebumps all over my body Who Love You and I mean it's
that one
I have goosebumps
all over my body
every time I hear that
and it's one of those
it's up there
with all the songs
that ruin me
we've played a few on this
I feel like
Julian Baker
you were like
openly weeping
Julian Baker
I can't get through
that first album
without sobbing
it's brutal
but I think
Always is
you know,
there's sort of Cape Breton
and PEI born
living in Toronto now.
Living not far from me, actually.
Molly Rankin is, of course,
East Coast rock royalty
being a descendant
of the Rankin family.
And I think it was Jimmy,
her dad,
was the one who died
in a car accident.
No, fairly young.
I think she is one of the smartest
and most
dark-witted
songwriters to come along
in a lot of things. Almost like Morrissey-level
kind of literate
wit.
Black wit, too, though.
Black wit. And I think her voice
is pure gold.
And those two, the two Always records are among my favorite records of, you know, the 21st century.
They actually deservedly got fairly big internationally, too.
Well, that Marry Me Archie is a big hit.
Yeah, like all over there.
They have radio hits and YouTube hits and all the things.
Indie 88 loves.
With a cassette.
Like something that was basically like Graham Walsh from Holy Fuck, who's produced Mets and Doom Squad and all the things. Indie 88 loves. With a cassette, like something that was like basically like Graham Walsh from Holy Fuck,
who's produced Mets and Doom Squad and other bands,
basically like record.
Like Chad Van Galen produced that record,
and I think Graham kind of like made it presentable
in non-cassette form for the first time.
It's really cool.
I feel like it gets better with every listen.
Like it's already aging really well.
That's probably, what, five, six years old now, I think.
I love that song.
Archie, Marry Me.
Timeless.
Marry Me, Archie or whatever.
Marry Me, Archie is a beautiful song.
And they're all, but there's so many of them.
I know, I know, I know.
What say you, Jay Ferguson?
Sorry, yeah.
No, I think they're great once again
it's like a band that uh are kind of past our time in in the maritimes like after we were gone but
sure yeah they have great songs that one i that one is great as well i i think the guy who i know
the best would be a guy named uh alec he was in uh he was in the band two hours traffic also awesome yeah yeah
that's true uh and i remember meeting him back then when he was in that band and then all of a
sudden when he was in always and they took off it was like wow awesome like so great for him and and
uh well deserved they have some great songs and he has she's great as well yeah he has some good
stories about because when they were a couple like that's kind of how Wall-Ways formed.
They were a couple.
And he was like,
I knew the Rankin family was a big deal.
He's like,
until the first time I went home
to Cape Breton with her.
Because he's from Charlottetown, I think.
Yeah.
And he was just like,
holy shit.
It's like the queen of the princess
has arrived in town.
And I like that she didn't trade on her name.
She did like an EP that was basically like
paving the way for Always Under Her Own Name,
but never, knowing Molly a little bit,
probably doesn't want to call attention to it.
I don't think I knew it until like,
I was very familiar with that Archie song
when it first came on the radio.
I'm like, what's this? I remember, I've only seen them once. until I was very familiar with that Archie song when it first came on the radio.
I'm like, what's this?
I remember I've only seen them once.
I saw them in a very unusual venue at the Yorkville Library when Toronto Library did the Rockin' the Stacks series
where they actually played with that band Pup.
Pup were good too.
And this was, again, probably right when this came out.
And there's no stage and
she's quite petite too it's like nobody you just see this like this voice or emanating of this
crowd of like hipsters at like young and bluer um but yeah like what anyway great great band i i
sort of forgot them like right up until the end of my picks i sort of regret it now she's a star
man i've i like i i mean alec and mo Alec and Molly are buds, but whenever I watch her,
and actually, when they started making the rounds,
they were a bit shrinking violety on stage.
But I think over the course of that album,
I think the release part was maybe The Shoe,
and then there was a bigger show,
and then they did like four nights at the Opera House.
You know, it was a slow go.
It was like a year or a
year and a half maybe even two years but that record they kept getting offered tours with
crazy like uk band and they'd be like a like glastonbury like they were just like and all
the stages like they were just everywhere yeah and deservedly so totally yeah well done well
done so the third jam of cam is coming right up. I want to thank StickerU. You go to StickerU.com. I've got Toronto Mike stickers I'm going to bring to TMLX8. Jay, did you get a Toronto Mike sticker?
Oh my God, did I ever. Right here.
Is this another euphemism?
Everything's a euphemism if you think on it long enough.
Yes, I did. Thank you, Mike. everything's a euphemism if you think on it long enough yes i did thank you mike okay okay so thank
you sticker you quality stickers uh they've been fantastic partners for years now uh ridley funeral
home we mentioned they brought us the hand sanitizer that cam is literally drinking over
there so thank you yeah i'm just uh ridley beer in a shot mckay CEO Forums. Okay, they're the newest sponsor of Toronto Mike.
They have a podcast called the CEO Edge Podcast.
It's fireside chats with inspiring CEOs and thought leaders.
And I've been actually sharing episodes on torontomike.com.
But I urge FOTMs to subscribe and listen.
Give it a spin.
The CEO Edge Podcast from McKay CEO Forums.
And last but not least, Mike Majeski.
He's ripping up the Mimico real estate scene,
but he does more than just Mimico.
If you go to realestatelove.ca and reach out to Mike
and have a conversation with him,
just make sure you tell him that Toronto Mike sent you.
Helps the program, helps fuel
the real talk. Thank you
Mike Majeski
who just renewed for another three months.
So shout out to Mike Majeski.
Hopefully he's at TMLX8.
I like that you had to wear
with all the approach a funeral home as a sponsor.
Or did they approach you?
I did not approach the funeral home.
The funeral home invested me and said,
these people don't look so healthy
when they come and visit you.
I think this is an opportunity.
Well, the fact like Wiseblood does
is like monthly death countdown.
Yeah, again, Dusty Hill.
Yeah, R.E.P.
Jay Ferguson, you're friendly with Mark Wiseblood, right?
I mean, I don't know Mark super well.
But who does?
Maybe met him at some point.
I'm better friends with his brother.
I've known his brother for a million years,
but I don't know Mark as well.
But I'm aware.
I think Mark might have connected me to you.
Wasn't Evan in Guided by Voices?
Yeah.
What was that, Ben? Evan was in Guided by Voan was in like evan wasn't he or some band i have to play evan had a band called
uh the american flag a long time ago didn't he have something to do with i feel like the drummer
for the american flag drummed with guy to buy but he was in like iteration like 25 of guy so so i wow so holy shit i can't explain this to me explain this
to me so mark's brother's in a band what are we here yeah he's a musician okay see i don't know
this yeah i remember this because one of the times i saw guy but voices like the american flag open
for them and then like a week later the drummer was all i know is mark's a guy i invite over once
a month to sit right there for three hours
and tell me everything I should know about the previous month that happened in the zeitgeist.
Okay?
Sure.
And no one does it as well as he does.
He's a wealth of information.
Yeah.
He keeps getting, like we literally did three hours on Monday.
On Monday.
We did three hours.
And I mean, yeah, forever until he says, no, I'm inviting him over.
He did like 12 minutes
on Jackie Mason.
You know honestly
God and it's I think
Jay I think it's an
acquired taste like I
would say it like this
those who like the
Mark Weisblatt
appearances on
Toronto Mike like it
a lot.
Okay.
It's not for
everybody.
But if you dig that
if that's your jam
then you just hook it to my veins.
Like, give me more.
And if I say it's only two and a half hours,
I get hate mail.
Like, what the hell is it?
Why is it so short?
When did it come out?
On like two days ago?
Monday.
I've already listened to the whole thing.
I went to Center Island.
I took the little ones to Centerville on the island.
And it was an amazing day.
And I was exhausted.
I was so spent.
And I get home and I go, oh, I got to set up now for my three hour...
Although Mark will do most of the
talking for you. But there's lots
of sound bites in these episodes and I got to
like rein them in and it's actually like
I'm exhausted, but I love it so much.
Okay, let's get back to the jam. By the way, someone you might
discuss, just not to preempt
next week's Ridley funeral home,
but I thought somebody, Pat, just know,
this is serious, someone who I think was a contemporary
of FOTM, Jay Douglas.
Oh my God.
Which was a great episode.
Yeah, Jojo, I forget what his last name was,
but he was in one of those other Jamaica to Toronto bands.
Oh my God, okay.
Yeah, he just passed away.
I saw Tim Perlick tweeted about this today.
Okay, I've got to find out
what maybe Michael Barclay came in and educated me on that one.
Let's just bring down the minute.
All right, so let's kick out Cam Gordon's third of four jams.
Back to Montreal for this one.
The penultimate jam, if you will, from Cam Gordon.
Absolutely. Wait till you find out who mastered this song.
Oh, I don't even have that in my phone.
An FOTM. Mark Weisbach. Nope. I don't even have that in my phone. An FOTM.
Okay.
Mark Weisblatt.
Nope.
Think about your high school.
Oh, shit.
Okay.
That checks it.
I can walk the rest of the way. And I promise not to cry anymore
All the reasons beat the crap out of me
Every day when I wake up, they are waiting
I like you sound like a video livestream.
And I promise not to cry anymore I like yourself like a video live stream.
Let's go.
We don't need light.
It's all about the audio.
I cannot believe.
Well, I can.
But this song is 17 years old now.
Lost in the Plot by the Dears.
Thank you.
I still adore this song.
This is a whole record.
By the way, this was among the 28 songs on my top four.
Perfect.
Ben and I DMed. We collaborated.
It means there was value in me delivering more than what Mike asked for, Ben and I like DM'd. Like we, we, we, we collaborate. That's what it means.
There was value in me delivering more than what Mike asked for,
because there's no,
we,
we have extra songs to play with.
Imagine if we'd all just pick the same four songs.
And for those who are listening and not watching on live.troddermike.com,
the,
my backyard light just shut down.
Like,
I don't know if the light bulb.
I think it was the bat.
The bat.
The bat flew into it.
The bats are going to be here all over.
Anywhere is your Batman.
The bats have been massing.
They've been waiting for that light to go out.
Actually, we've heard Batdance by Prince.
By the way, guilty pleasure of mine.
Jay Ferguson, what do you think of Batdance by Prince?
Vicky Vale.
I love it. It's great.
It's kind of a song cycle.
It's like five different songs.
The whole album is fantastic. I don't feel like it. It's great. Yeah. It's kind of a song cycle. Like it's like five different songs. The whole album is fantastic.
It's great.
I don't feel like it's so guilty now.
Party Man?
I love it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Party Man's okay.
What else?
What's the one he did where he had a hot night with, what's it?
Nicky Bale?
Nicky Bale.
Nicky Bale.
It's Nicky.
Nicky Bale. They had like an 11 or 12 minute hot, with Nikki Bale. It's Nikki. Nikki Bale.
And they had like an 11
or 12 minute hot version
of the ballad.
That's right.
That's right.
And then it...
I can't remember
what the name was called.
This town needs an enema.
Oh, the Scandalous Suite?
Scandalous!
All right.
Marvelous!
Yeah, that's the one.
Thank you.
See?
This is the best.
Wow.
This is like ultimate dorkdom.
That I've not heard of.
But for the record though,
of course,
we do miss stew
stone and we can't wait to have him back he's irreplaceable um few fun facts about the deers um
here's a personal memory i that the first time i ever saw them live was actually at the air
canada center opening for a badly undersold concert by jane's addiction oh i was there
yeah that also had a live playing they've talked about before
where they were playing on what looked like
the replicant of the Friends set,
like that coffee shop,
because they were sitting on a couch.
Oh, essential perk.
Yeah, it was like Jane's Addiction
with live unplugged and this baby band
called The Dears in like 2000 or so.
Wow.
So yeah, this is from the album 2004's
No Cities Left.
The follow-up Gang of Losers was nominated for the Polaris Prize.
I just mentioned that because all the other nominees would fit into this category
because that was the year Patrick Watson won for Close to Paradise.
Other shortlist folks that year include the Arcade Fire,
another very underrated band that I was contemplating,
the Besnard Lakes, Julie Dorian,
who we've mentioned in the Joel Plaskett Emergency.
And I kind of forgot, speaking of Joel Plaskett,
in Thresh Hermit, the Rob Benvey had a few spells in the Dears.
I totally forgot that.
Yeah, I remember when he joined the band having,
like, this is the second time I'm going to evoke La Hacienda, actually.
And I didn't know he was in the band.
And he showed up midway through it.
Because it gets to be quite friendly with Murray and Natalia.
Do they live in Toronto now?
They deserve better.
Montreal.
Natalia's parents live by High Park, so they're off to Toronto.
But I feel like that band, especially that album.
I know the panic that Murray went through to get it done. by High Park. So they're off to town. But I feel like that band, especially that album, like that album,
I know the panic
that Murray went through
to get it done
because I think he tore it down
at the last minute
and remixed it all.
But I love it.
And I,
like maybe,
I don't know,
they never seem to get
quite the,
you're a fan,
like they never really got the do they deserve. Yeah, like they certainly, they don't seem to get quite the... You're a fan. They never really got the do they deserve.
Yeah, they certainly don't seem to be in the conversation,
like people say of that era.
It's like, oh, it's a broken social scene.
It's the arcade.
They seem like the next echelon down
with a band like Stu Stone's favorite,
like a band like the Hidden Cameras,
who I think are amongst my favorite of that era,
but I feel like are one or two rungs down.
Had the buzz.
Yeah. But never really... people yeah they would like to have that moment when everyone was like the deers are
they like in the like with the stills yeah exactly that kind of thing where it's just kind of like
oh but i'd say like for the deers or like hidden cameras like for no good reason like that they had
the great videos had a good look the The albums were great, good singles.
International stuff.
Before we forget to mention it, Cam, tell us the FOTM who mastered that song.
Yeah, I assume you're talking about, it's got to be a Noah Mintz production.
Shout out to FOTM, Noah Mintz.
Don't Noah Mintz or Wild Carvalho master every record produced in this city.
It's one or the other.
For Jay and Ben who might not know,
Noah Mintz went to the same high school
as Cam Gordon and Stu Stone.
And Hayden and Gian Gomeschi.
And Bill Wolichka.
Did you know that?
Who's working in Kingston waiting for Stu to show up.
Gordon Corman, all the greats.
This can't be happening at McDonald's.
There you go.
I love those.
That's my first favorite.
Bruno and Boots.
No coins, please.
Or Don't Care High.
I love all the Gordon Corman stuff.
There's so much male bonding going on.
He wrote edgy adult novels.
Young adult adults though.
Oh, he did adult novels? He tried to do like a Shel Silverstein
type swerve.
So many swears.
Oh, before I play
my third jam, did we get Jay Ferguson's
take on the Dears Lost in the Plot?
Maybe not. Jay, what say you about
Cam's third choice?
It's great.
Sorry, I don't have a lot of stories.
We know those guys.
I've known Murray and Natalia since those early days.
Wonderful live bands.
I don't really have any good stories or anecdotes,
but I like that song a lot.
I kind of lost track.
It's a band that was hard to keep track of.
They changed so many members. Just for fun, I was looking up on Wikipedia,
and they had like 17
X members.
You know on Wikipedia
sometimes with bands they'll have like those
flow charts and you sort of have to be
a pretty, you know, it's like drummers from
Spinal Tab or whatever. I was surprised
the Dears had a flow chart. Oh, like Broken Social
Seat might get a flow chart.
I think they would qualify. Well, I will say that.
Murray is a friend of mine and has been since, like,
Dan Burke started bringing them into the old El Macombo back in the day.
But I suspect that Hedai, because he is, I'm knowing him,
and we are friends, probably not the easiest person to work with.
And that may have stifled some of their rise.
Some of the past numbers, yeah.
All right, so I'm going to kick out my third jam.
I was a little surprised, Jay and Ben won't be aware,
that we have a living, breathing spreadsheet
of every jam we've kicked out.
The KOTJ, Kick Out the Jam spreadsheet,
which Tyler Campbell,
VP of Sales,
has been updating it in real time.
He'll be at TMH.
It's up to date with everything in real time.
He's updating it right now.
He's updating it, yeah.
I just went online to look at it.
It's a Google sheet,
and he's updating it in real time.
Ben, I think that bio you're writing
is actually in the spreadsheet.
You can take a look.
You wouldn't have lost it
if Ben had been there.
You know what?
At this point, I'll just paste the fucking thing.
But here's a jam I'm actually surprised in the 73 or 74 weeks of Pandemic Friday
that it hasn't been kicked out
because it's such an epic jam.
Jean Leloup.
Here we go. Oh, gosh. Ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio oio Something filled up my heart
With nothing
Someone told me not to cry Now that I'm older
My heart's colder Colder And I can't
See that it's alive
Epic, okay.
This is, yeah, Faith No More Epic.
Is that Beast of the East?
Yeah, that counts.
I had that record on a couple days ago, actually,
and it's awesome.
We played it like two weeks ago, I think.
I think it was like songs that get us pumped up.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Your jock jams.
Pretty much.
Pretty much.
Essentially, yeah.
That whole record's amazing, though.
Although they're not from the East.
No, Faith No More.
But no, this song is equally epic, I would argue.
This is Arcade Fire's Wake Up.
It qualifies.
Yeah, it's a big jam, and it's already in the spreadsheet.
By the way, this is the second time we've played Arcade Fire on Pandemic Friday
because on the Parenthetical Jams episode with humble Howard Glassman
as the special guest who zoomed in,
I played Rebellion Lies.
That album's like half parentheses.
Funeral, yeah, there's a lot of parentheses in there.
One neighborhoods, brackets, whatever.
Right, exactly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely.
So that album is called Funeral, of course.
This is actually the fifth and final single released from Funeral.
Here's a couple of fun facts for you quick.
We basically, in 2014, Wake Up was listed as the 25th greatest song of all time by, who did it?
Enemy?
Okay, Rolling Stone ranked it as the 42nd best song of the 2000s.
A live version, of course, was performed with David Bowie,
and that's on the Live at Fashion Rocks EP.
It's a Montreal-based band.
Of course, these butlers, I think they're from Texas
or born in California, raised in Texas.
Houston or something.
Yeah, but this is a
Suburban.
Quebec band.
And I'm curious for you guys,
yours take,
because this song
shows up in a lot of places
because literally
it's kind of epic
and sweeping
and grandiose.
But I always
always dug it
and I'm curious
what a music critic like Ben Rayner thinks,
what a musician like Jay Ferguson thinks, and what a handsome guy like Cam Gordon thinks.
He is very handsome.
I know.
I just kind of get lost in his eyes.
It's uncomfortable for me to be around him so often.
Oh, don't sell yourself short.
Thanks, buddy.
Get over here.
If you were double vacs, I'd kiss you right now.
This is a good- looking crowd in the backyard.
The chiseled Eddie Vedder looks.
It's so dark back here, by the way.
I kind of dig this.
The bats are, I tell you, it's the bats.
They're waiting for their moment.
And the change up here in Wake Up, I almost want to turn it up a little bit, but this
whole change up that happens, like, what the heck?
Just a bit more of it and then we'll get you guys to your take on it.
I always thought that this part sounds like obviously like a Motown thing
but also Don't Get Me Wrong by the Pretenders.
Totally.
Sure. Another great song.
Shout out to Chrissy Hynde. Don't eat meat.
I think we kicked her out a few times.
She was one of my favorite interviews ever.
Is she cancelled?
I feel like she had some problematic views
or something.
She did.
But everyone has problematic views if they're honest.
We won't bring it up because it'll piss people off.
It was, you know, she made...
What did she say?
How bad was it?
If you've read her autobiography,
the thing that riled people up was
she basically blamed herself
for putting herself in a situation
where she was raped by a biker.
Oh, she victim blamed and she was the victim.
Yeah, but she was just like, I should have known better.
See, I think if it's yourself, you're allowed to do that.
But everyone was like, you have sold out famine.
You know, anyway, it's a controversial way to go.
I'm not canceling Chrissy Heine.
But she said it when I interviewed her for The Star.
She's hilarious.
The book is actually great.
Her autobiography.
Did you guys ever see Where the Wild Things Are,
the movie?
No.
With James Gandolfini.
Did you see that, Jay?
Sorry, James Gandolfini?
He plays,
he's a voice of like
one of the big monsters.
Yeah.
Is Chrissy Hynde?
And that song,
no, actually no,
it was Karen O.
Yeah, Karen O.
Karen O does a bunch of stuff,
but that song,
Wake Up,
is like a key song
in the trailer
and in the movie there. Yeah, anyway. So what do you guys think of, but that song, Wake Up, is like a key song in the trailer and in the movie there.
Yeah, anyway.
So what do you guys think of the Arcade Fire's Wake Up?
Anybody can go first.
How about you, Cam?
I was just looking at Cam's eyes, even though it's dark.
Yeah, like, I don't know.
Like, I have a weird relationship with Arcade Fire
because, you know, like a lot of folks, I was really into them
and then really didn't like that album
reflector when that came out and then the next one was just like i'm out but you know once in a while
i'll see like some like footage of them playing like at coachella or like wherever you know back
in 2007 or i'm sort of one of those annoying like i actually like Neon Bible best of all their albums but like those first three
like you know throw them in the blender
and like put them all together because like
it's all great but
yeah I don't know like I find
whereas you know where I was saying
you know the Always stuff has aged really
well or Pagliaro
I find their music it still
sounds good but it does sound of
that era
to me now because a lot of these songs
again are what 15
17 years old yeah 2004
probably yeah
maybe and it's just like
there's so much going on in that song too
which is yeah it just
it's a very specific point in time
like hearing these songs which is not a bad thing
but nevertheless
okay what say you Ben Rayner
I
really really
see this is why you're in print
I'm a really big fan of seeing them live
like it's still
the record that came after
the one after
Reflector that people didn't like
which wasn't as bad
as people made it out to be.
But they played
a couple of shows
at the Air Canada Center here,
the Scotiabank Arena,
whatever the hell it's called.
And they played
in a boxing ring
because it was kind of like
reacting against,
the reaction against the record.
And it was the best,
and I've seen them
from the horseshoe
on up, and probably
almost every show they've played in Toronto,
and seen them a bunch of times in other cities,
and it was
wicked.
They had something to prove again, and that
kind of,
it doesn't seem to me like they ever
phone it in.
And I think they try a bit too hard in the studio sometimes.
And kind of have a bit of that U2 thing
where they take themselves too serious
and they want to be important.
But I love The Suburbs.
I thought that was a great record.
And yeah, I don't know.
Like it's hard to be that,
it's hard to get that big
because I think then you get,
you get that kind of self-consciousness
about being big. And I think they you get that kind of self-consciousness about being big.
And I think they wanted to not be seen as a pop act.
They wanted to do something with it.
Yeah, like a lot of statements.
Yeah, no, everything's a statement.
And that's the part that alienates me sometimes.
But they're fantastic.
When you look past that, they're a pretty fantastic band.
What say you, Jay Ferguson?
I really liked Arcade Fire when I first saw them.
And I don't know if Ben or Cam or Mike,
the first show that I saw them play,
the first two shows were at the Rivoli in Toronto.
And that would have been, whatever, 2003.
And just a friend of mine who's from Montreal said,
hey, this band Arcade Fire is playing.
You should go see them.
And I remember seeing them. And they basically were playing the rivoli like they
were playing the roger center basically like they were they were it was uh it was so epic sounding
and and bombastic or whatever but you couldn't help but think like these guys are going to be
huge like it just it was it was outrageous and it was pretty exciting to see that and i i don't think i've seen them play since like 2005 when it was
kind of it was funny it was embarrassing we so i saw them play a couple of times early in toronto
and in 2004 our band sloan we had a festival over on toronto island and we sort of headlined and
sam roberts played and we just got to invite a bunch of bands that we liked.
So like Death From Above played,
and Arcade Fire played, and Broken Social Scene played.
And I remember talking to Arcade Fire saying,
"'Hey, we're doing this festival.
"'Like, would you guys like to come and play?'
And they came and played.
They were second on the bill.
Death From Above were first.
And that was like in 2004.
By the spring of 2005,
we were playing,
we were playing Coachella.
And so it was arcade fire.
Arcade fire was already playing like the second largest stage.
And we're like on in the tent,
you know,
power rankings.
Totally.
Like it totally shifted within six months.
You know what I mean?
And,
but it was exciting to see they're just like rapid rise, in america and everything and it got a great the grammy helped
for sure but this is even before that like david bowie signed on right and like springs they did
stuff with spring i feel like a lot of those shows whether it's a rivoli and they would do
like the the sort of weird after shows with the flashlights have become almost the thing of
mythology like oh the police at the horseshoe or you know all those sort of weird after shows with the flashlights have become almost the thing of mythology. Like,
Oh,
the police at the horseshoe or,
you know,
all those sort of like famous gigs where,
you know,
10,000 people said they were there.
I,
the only time I saw them,
I saw them at Danforth music hall with,
with,
I think it was with Wolf parade and final fantasy.
Right.
Right.
Before they ripped out all the seats.
No,
it was still the old moldy theater yeah yeah and
it just also played there in the same month i just heard that being one of those shows like
maybe it's just as the age because it's probably like 25 but like it really felt like this this is
like a moment because like all three of those acts were like awesome obviously in their own ways but
like also very different
we're just like this is this is like fucking great like these are all like canadian bands
plus the dears plus in cameras plus everything that was going on like it was a real moment in
time um and just living downtown and and still being married at the time right uh yeah it was
a good time to start your marriage okay so let. Are you saying you're single? Well, not anymore.
It was a long time.
No, he's a part of a power couple.
That's right.
Media power couple.
Who's she's listening tonight?
Oh, shout out to MF.
Let me quickly catch up on some things here.
Joe Cororo says, missing Stu, obviously, but you guys have amazing chemistry.
Wicked episode, boys. and then vpsal says well
pandemic friday is coming to a rightful conclusion this is a real and vital show and hopefully it
evolves in some form that works for everyone's schedules gets better every week uh well said vp
these pf anyway this guy there's a lot of praise there. Moose Grumpy says, definitely going to miss the weekly check-in and chat.
Dan J says,
for sure,
even on a topic I don't think I'll like,
I enjoy them.
And,
uh,
I'm going to just do something for Dan J because he's making a request here.
So I've got the flashlight.
And of course,
everybody listening to the podcast cannot see this because I'm not recording the video.
But this is what I want to say for,
uh,
Dan J. In the year 2000. cannot see this because i'm not recording the video but this is what i want to say for uh dan jay
in the year 2000 which i remember when i used to watch that it felt like 2000 was far away
and now it is 21 years in the rearview mirror i thought for a second year that was like silver
chair like anthem for a year do you you remember from those early Conants?
I watched all the early ones.
I was a big fan.
Go ahead.
Do you remember
the early Conan
where they had like
all the cat puppets?
Oh,
here's what I remember.
Do you remember
the picture of Bill Clinton
and the guy with just
the lips,
some guy's lips in there?
Or Michael Jackson.
I was day oneer with Conan
because I was a big Simpsons guy.
Me too.
Did he,
he just retired?
Oh, who knows what Scott's like? I watched the last week of shows.
Jack Black was on.
Actually, it was kind of cool because he was supposed to pretend
to hurt himself in the dance number
and during the rehearsal he actually hurt himself
and couldn't do it.
Speaking of hurt himself, this is
the penultimate jam
for Ben Rayner. We'll be right back. Lime and limpid green
The second scene
The fights between the blue you once knew
Floating down
The sound resounds around
The icy water underground
Jupiter and Saturn
Oberon, they're Oberon, Titanium
Neptune, Titan, Stars get frightened
The drumming on that song is fucking amazing.
I knew we would hear this.
I knew it.
Surprise!
I tried to throw a curveball
because one of the most admirable things about Voivod
is that when I...
I knew they were around.
I was a metal kid
because I grew up in Charlotte, Canada, New Brunswick.
But the balls exhibited by these four weirdos
from what's like darkest Quebec.
It's like Jonquière or something.
By covering the first song on Pink Floyd's first album,
Astronomy Domine, and actually doing, I think,
and I say this as one of the world's biggest Pink Floyd fans.
My dad went to school with sid barrett um wow wow and university with storm thorgeson too um kidding whoa yeah but so i was
kind of like dropping grenades no this is where i was this is like i was i i forgot the graduation
photo i can show you um but uh i this is this was my real gateway. I was getting into Floyd, but I didn't really notice Sid Barrett.
But also, then it was like, holy fuck,
Voivod just did a better version of a Pink Floyd tune than Pink Floyd did.
And from there, I just like, you know, it's like Rush.
I think once you cross over and realize what's going on.
And that album, Nothing Face, that this is on is one of
the like most crucial albums of my life i just like it's spectacular like prog metal kind of
thing and and and still the the awesome thing about voivod who are they're not like you'll
hear a bit of them in like mastodon or gojira or something these days but no one's they are their own thing
and they exist in their own weird world you know the songs are all kind of science fiction yeah
it's i don't know they're an amazing they're an amazing band but i that track really uh i remember
hearing it on brave new waves again like in the dead of night it was just like what the fuck who
is doing this and it was voivod and that album kind of like they went from being like a kind of a, you know, a thrash outfit to moved in a more proggy way for a while.
But I still, it gives me goosebumps hearing that.
They seem very French, too.
Like, and I say that in a good way, too.
Like, there's...
Proper Québécois.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's just, I just, who's that guy, like, Piggy?
Yeah, well, he was the guitarist that died.
And he's like...
I've just seen the interviews with them
and they just seem like guys from Quebec.
The guitarist died a few years ago
but he left them a whole...
I think it was an album or two albums worth.
Catoors, I think.
They're amazing.
He left them.
He died of cancer.
Demoed them all this stuff.
But I... They have a new guitarist. He's a young guy. And I have a good story. they're amazing he left like dying of cancer demoed them all this stuff but I
they have a new guitarist
he's a young guy
and I have a good story
they were nominated
for Juno
for the first time
and I think they won
I think they did win
for probably
best hard rock performance
they beat out
I Mother Earth
it was the
the Junos
probably the last one
before the pandemic, in London.
And I was at the opening ceremony, and I hate shaking hands with people.
For the most part, I like you guys.
And I was like, I'm going outside to smoke a joint.
So I'm standing with my friend Emily Smart from Six Suda Records.
They're having cigarettes, and I'm like, I think I was having a cigarette with them.
And I hear, man, you would think someone around here would smoke weed.
And I was like, I got weed if you want.
I turn around, it's a tall guy.
And I'm like, tall Quebecois guy.
And I'm like, hey, yeah, I got weed.
You want to smoke a joint?
No problem.
And I bust out of it.
And I'm like, are you, what do you hear?
Are you a musician?
He's like, yeah.
And he didn't even say Michelle. He's like, well, my name's Michael. I'm in, are you, what do you hear? Are you a musician? He's like, yeah. And he didn't even say Michelle.
He's like, well, my name's Michael.
I'm in a band.
And I was like, what's the band?
Playing it cool.
And he goes, oh, Voivod.
And I actually like,
left for it.
Peeed your pants.
Embraced.
No, I grabbed, he's taller than me,
so I was kind of like grabbing his trunk, basically.
And I was like, Nothing Face, is one of the best albums ever.
And I wound up, my buddy Sean, my buddy Sean Corner, who was working for Sony at the time, was their publicist the weekend.
So I wound up like hanging out with the guys from Voivod occasionally.
And then they played some brew pub in London that didn't even have a proper PA.
So they just brought their amps in.
And it was like hearing fucking Voivod playing
in their rehearsal space.
It was amazing. Honestly,
that was the last June I was ever covered
for the Star.
That was the beginning of the end for me, too.
I was done with it, but
it was a nice way to go out.
They're amazing.
Jay, what do you think of Ben's pick?
I think that's an an awesome story i know
very little of voivode so i have a little comment although i have heard that and yeah i don't know
i still stick up for the pink floyd version i'm a fan but uh yeah i i didn't have any heavy metal
at my high school so i don't know i don't know my heavy metal at all embarrassingly i was the only voivode fan i just heard like much did like play the odd voivode video back i don't remember this
we're aware on uh yeah they did oh yeah power hour no or no city limits maybe yeah like no
like in a bit of like regular rotation because like the laurie brown that one was a major that
was an that was on mca yeah that was was a major label. That was on MCA.
That was their major label.
Maybe I just missed it.
Oh my God, they're so good.
They're still good.
The last record was a really, really good metal record.
They do seem like a band that crossover
where they could open for Soundgarden
or they could open for the Scorpions.
Are they as good as the Killer Dwarves?
I think that's a different category.
Wasn't one of the girls in
the 16-year-old
thrash band, Kitty?
Wasn't one of them? There was some band
where it was the daughter of one of the Killer Dwarves.
Really? Killer Dwarves are so...
Actually, Killer Dwarves, I think, have a gig
coming up in Scarborough.
Because I was looking just to see if there's concerts in Toronto.
I'm not surprised.
Oh, yeah, the big jam.
Rockpile East or whatever.
That's where they belong.
Rockpile, which used to be a Mother's Pizza.
Oh, shout out to Ernie Witt.
I was out that way by the Rockpile on the East End the other day,
and it looked like it was an overflow parking lot for FedEx.
That's what live venues have been releasing.
I see the Rockpile in the West End here a lot because...
It's probably Cloverdale Mall.
I'm always going, Cloverdale Mall.
And the Dead Mall.
The Derelict Mall is behind it.
That's Honeydale Mall.
Honeydale Mall is the Dead Mall.
Also, if you...
Cloverdale's not dead.
It's thriving, okay?
Oh, I have a friend who lives near there.
If you take the TTC Pearson pearson comet it goes right by rock
pile west oh my god i feel shout out to lee aaron who uh i was corresponding with her recently yeah
by the way is rick emmet coming on yeah he's booked when is that happening september i think
okay he's in there he's in there not saying he would play the rock pile but he's uh probably
he would he would he's a he's a yeah he
wrote a book i have the book inside actually he wrote a book uh what was i gonna say i guess i'll
just kick out this jam and then maybe it'll come to me but uh is this my last jam this is your
final can i give a bit of an intro yeah um mike you're the only one who knows this the my original
first choice and i i don't like to say well there's this band Because I'm scared someone else will choose them
I don't think anyone will choose the box
I was going to do crying out loud
For love but I was convinced
That you know
I thought we played this song
Before and you said we hadn't
You know what it was
When you and I did our two man Degrassi
Schools how deep dive we did play The Box Temptation.
Wait, does Jay know about that?
Does Jay Ferguson know that you and I did, how long was that?
Two and a half hours?
Something like that.
We did a two and a half hour deep dive into the Degrassi TV movie schools out.
Yeah.
I will, last night.
So much drunk driving.
Yeah, he was.
Oh, right. Yeah, wheels drunk driving yeah he was oh right
yeah
wheels was
totally
he was drinking the beer
behind the wheel
yeah
doesn't Caitlin get
knocked up too
or something
she has sex
for the first time
and it hurts
more than she thought
it would
and etc
and Joey
was supposedly
you know
losing his virginity
with her
but we all know
he was fucking
Tessa Campanelli
yeah
and you're quoting quoting uh
that that quote yeah that piece of shit the f-bomb uh heard around the actually
was that the episode that it was like the end of the very first round of degrassi and it was
wrapping up it was like the ultimate after-school special like a hundred percent this was the
everything that could have happened, happened.
Lucy went blind.
Oh my god, I forgot about that.
Because she was the passenger when Wheels was going to get chips or something. That's right.
Well, for
the continuity, when the new class came back,
she was still walking with a cane.
Right, for continuity.
Amazing. I like the attention to detail.
Yeah, Mike, this is a true story last night as i
mentioned uh mf is in in dc for a month uh for work but last night we said like a goodbye dinner
nice down to like leslie yeah i said palm and pasta in a parking lot but we were walking home
and we went through greenwood park right where right you know you know, you met us. I met you in St. Patrick's Day. And I'm like, wait a minute, Megan.
See that pool over there?
That's the pool where they filmed
Degrassi School's Dad.
Snake fell in with all their clothes
and the kids were chasing around.
Right.
I swear to God.
Yeah.
She could not have been less interested
in this fun talk.
I have the same fucking experience
of Monica all the time.
You're, welcome to my world.
Okay.
I'll have these mind blows and I'll go into this
great detail about how that's connected to this
and she'll just, her face will be like, oh, that's
nice. And I'll be like, wait, how can
you be so relaxed right now? I'm so taller.
I just dropped this
mind blow. You should be on the
ground in convulsions or
something. Yeah. Like, honestly, it's like, what's
up with that? My friend Justin and
I used to like, my brother too,
to some extent,
who shares my sense
of humor,
we would like,
it was 8.30 on like
Monday nights,
Degrassi would be on.
Sure.
We would like,
lock that time down.
That was like,
as important as
Kids in the Hall.
Oh dude,
appointment viewing.
Yeah,
yeah,
Kids in the Hall
was the other one.
It was like 9.30 on Thursday,
Codco,
Kids in the Hall,
but on Mondays, like we were locked to that team.
All the way with Stephanie K.
All the way.
Anyway, the point is, this is a roundabout way of saying I was going to choose the box.
I didn't.
I almost chose the box, too.
We're friends for life.
And then I was going to choose the band Boulevard.
Who I thought were an East Coast band.
We're actually from Calgary.
They're from Calgary. And it was actually the band
that I did choose
qualifies for this. Another great
like 80s CanCon staple.
Yes. This sounds like Glass Tiger.
Timeless production.
You never guess when this was. Just don't leave it like this. You said you're mad.
I don't know when I feel right.
Don't want to be someone's star.
Bad, bad boy.
Bad, bad boy.
Wow.
Okay, so.
Bad, bad boy.
Yeah.
Does anyone want to guess who the band is?
Do we know the name of this band?
It'll be like you'll say, of course.
By anybody, you mean Ben or Jay?
Oh, yeah.
They were from Charlottetown, too.
I'll let Jay go first.
Can I guess?
Is that Haywire?
It's Haywire.
Very good.
Oh, really?
I had both of their albums.
Absolutely.
I think you know it is what it is,
but these are great songs.
Bad, Bad Boy.
But are they?
Yeah.
I'm only surprised because you have four jams to kick out, okay?
I'm kind of confused by the message on the song.
Wait, hold on.
So your favorite four songs.
They had Dance Desire.
Dance Desire, which is sampled in Maestro, Drop the Needle.
Right.
Wow.
Shout out to last week's, well, we're going to let Ben Rayner go pee in the bushes.
But last week's secret, by the way, Jay, last week's secret surprise Zoom guest was Farley Flex.
Legend.
Wow.
Because we were kicking out Canadian rap.
Yeah.
But the fact that Maestro sampled Haywire
to do Drop the Needle
is one of my many learnings of doing
as we're stuck here in a pandemic
but yeah other Haywire singles we might
recall dances are Black and Blue
Black and Blue
a ballad thinking
about the years
and then another one
Stand in Line
so like a real staple of
80s radio
I picked them mainly because originally I wanted
to have one band from all the different provinces
so this was my
PEI selection but Ben
beat me to the punch with Always
too I guess who would have qualified
Mike was someone
talking to you about Attic Records recently?
Well, Maestro, yeah.
Was it Maestro?
Barley Flex, yeah.
Yeah, just, I mean, Haywire were another band who were in Attic,
who had a really interesting sliver of both Canadian artists
and also would distribute international artists.
Some of the bands on the Attic Records label over the years,
aside from Haywire, included a bunch
of FOTMs. Lee Aaron,
Goddo, shout out to Craig Godovich,
The Nylons,
shout out to Billy Newton Davis,
Maestro, as well everyone from
Aaron Carter, Creed,
Weird Al Yankovic, The Soft
Boys, and like Robin Hitchcock, and also
The Soft Boys? Yeah.
Yeah, they distributed Underwater Moonlight.
You're right.
Yeah.
And then also Elton Mottello, who I think was like Jet Boy, Jet Girl.
Was that that guy?
I think you're right.
Yeah, that's right.
So like what an eclectic mix of artists.
But yeah, like one of the rare sort of Charlottetown breakout acts.
But, you know, they had a good run.
Haywire, like six, seven radio hits.
They'd fit the rock file.
And you want your mind blow now?
Sure.
Here's a mind blow.
So this is something we do sometimes
with our final teams.
Oh, yeah.
Do you remember?
You want to say anything?
This isn't really a mind blow, but...
Oh, yeah, right.
I sort of...
This was a song I'd not heard of
or not heard for like 25 years,
but has that real early
early 1990s
AM radio
or I guess FM radio vibe were
on like something like mix 9.9
.9 everything sounded like
soul to soul keep on moving
but I feel like was also
kind of influenced by like
not massive attack but
anyway or like Peter Gabriel
digging in the dirt and like
Duran Duran come undone
and Haywire got in the
game with this song here
well we can hear like a minute of this
for Ben and Jay did you
recognize this song
no but you're
right it does sound totally like Soul of Soul.
Or Enigma.
I said Enigma.
I hear Enigma.
He sent me Sadness.
Is it pronounced Sadness?
I feel like there's a part one.
Oh, yes.
It was about the Marquis de Sade.
That's why it was arty.
Totally.
Yeah, totally. I forgot about. Totally. Yeah, totally.
I forgot about this one.
Yeah.
Yeah, this song is called Buzz.
You're giving me the buzz by Haywire.
I remember.
I can picture the video now because the guy actually kind of porked out.
But again, like, you know, they had some lasting powers.
They actually lasted a few years into the 90s here with Haywire.
Clearly shamelessly climbing upon any trend they
go. Oh, totally. Totally. The last
song I remember from them was Dance Desire,
which was a big hit. I don't remember anything after that.
Dance Desire.
Drop the needle!
Oh, by the way,
glad you mentioned Maestro, because he now
lives in the Maritime. That's right. Yes, he just moved. glad you mentioned Maestro, because he now lives in the Maritime.
That's right.
Yes, he just moved.
He moved to St. John's.
Because I had to Zoom him,
because he's in St. John, New Brunswick.
CBC wrote an article.
A mutual friend told us.
He's on the radio there.
So shout out to...
And Mishy Mee, because she came up last week,
I was chatting with her this morning.
She's writing her memoir.
I saw this on Twitter today.
It's going to come out in 2020.
There's a lot to write,
but I feel like if you listen to all the Mishimi episodes
of Trotter Mike, you're going to get it all.
Awesome.
Well, we'll read that while we're battling Delta Plus Remixed.
Right.
Are you guys ready for my final jam?
Sure.
Let's stick to that same deck.
Well,
no,
here,
let's go back.
Let's go back.
Oh,
yeah.
Oh,
yeah.
Listen to that in the headphones.
Wow.
I'm going to steal in the headphones. Wow. Am I stealing your beer?
I'm going to steal Cam's beer.
Yeah, go ahead.
Yeah, no, I'm good.
I've had a very stressful day.
I wear my sunglasses at night
So I can, so I can
Watch you weave and breathe your storylines
And I wear my sunglasses at night
So I can, so I can
Keep track of the visions in my eyes.
While she's deceiving me, she cuts my security.
Has she got control of me?
I turn to her and say,
Don't switch the blade on the guy in shades of gold.
Don't mess around with the guy in shades of gold.
I can't believe it,
cause you've got a man With a guy in shades of blue
Holy shit.
Listen to that.
Holy fuck.
It's a big hit.
It's timeless.
That's a monster jam
and it does still sound great.
Holy moly.
This was like a worldwide smash,
this song, right?
I think he became,
because Brian Adams was the first
Canadian artist. I have that info for you. It was
a big hit worldwide and it was a top
10 hit in the US of A.
There you go. But I think Boy in the Box
was the second album like Canadian
album to sell a million copies in Canada.
That was a bigger selling album yeah. Boy in the Box
was a bigger album.
I'm waiting for your fun facts.
Go go Mike. Tell us about Boy in fun facts. Go, go, Mike.
Tell us about Boy in the Box.
All right.
Who was the boy in the box? Corey Hart.
This was actually on First Offense.
Corey Hart.
Corey Hart.
Sunglasses at night.
I'm told by that middleman,
shout out to Mark,
Mark L we'll call him,
that Corey listens to episodes of Toronto Mike
and almost snuck in here
during a recent visit to the city
just before the pandemic.
Whoa. Almost snuck into the basement.
That's a true story. He is one of the nicest
cats I've ever met in the
25 years of music
journalism, I must say.
He's my favorite Corey there. Shout out to the
late, great Corey Haim. Okay. Also went to
my high school. Right.
Holy shit. Okay. Wow.
Star-studded. Wow. So this this is from believe it or not this is 1983
the album's called first defense this was a hit single in the states it reached number seven
that's eddie van halen and guitar sounds like eddie number seven on the billboard hot 100
that of course he hit that in, I guess, September 1984.
Here's an interesting story when I was doing my homework here.
According to co-producer Phil Chapman,
the recording sessions for the album took place in a studio where air conditioning and heating vents were directly above the mixing console.
Air from the vents would blow directly in the faces of the control room personnel,
so they often wore sunglasses to protect their eyes.
Corey Hart, working on a new song,
began to improvise lyrics that included the line,
I wear my sunglasses at night.
Fast forward 25 years, everyone got COVID.
In that same studio with the ventilation.
And now you
know the rest of the story
you think that's true?
it could be true
I can't, there's no other
reason to come up with
in the song's defense
why would Phil Chapman
why would he lie?
but again, how else would you
come up with some rather
inane lyrics? Let's be honest.
Come on. Okay, let's talk
about the video just for a moment because
let's test your memory here. Shot at the
Don Jail.
What FOTM
stars in the video?
Sunglasses at Night.
I think I know this.
All right, Jay.
Is it Laurie Brown?
It is Laurie Brown.
Love it.
Speaking of the power hour,
Laurie Brown, much music.
New music too, right?
I feel like that's the only thing I know about Corey Hart
is that Laurie Brown was in Sunglasses at Night.
I forgot about that.
She's awesome.
She's great.
She is great.
And when she was in The Basement
and I was kind of talking about it, it turns out
that her appearance in this video,
she was just a model who was hired
to do the video, helped
her get the... Moses liked
it. And Moses made
all the...
Moses is a lucky SOB.
Is he?
That's what I understand.
Shout out to Moses. Ziggy's been in the basement.
Ziggy's been in the basement multiple times.
I love Ziggy.
No, Donlon?
No, Denise?
Denise has been in the basement.
I feel like there's a photo on the internet of Ziggy giving you a kiss on the cheek.
Because I had a big crush on Ziggy as a young man, and she gave me a big kiss on the cheek.
Much music.
And she came over with Jay Gold, Joel Goldberg, who directed the Maestro video for
Drop the Needle that included the
sample of Haywire.
There's so many circles being closed.
And Great Lakes
Tomorrow is making available
their Electric Circus beer
named after Electric Circus, which was
co-created by
Joel Goldberg when he was working at
the City Much or Much City. Kablam! Everything's connected. You know what I always thought was... co-created by joel goldberg when he was working at uh this city much or much city
everything's connected you know what i always thought was a simulation camp
you know what i always thought was weird okay so cory hart from montreal gino vanelli from montreal
right correct right around the same time cory hart's wearing his sunglasses at night gino
sharing his thoughts that black cars
look better in the shade
it's sort of a similar like sentiment
wild horses couldn't drag them away
could not drag them away
by the way Ben have you heard the
Gino Vannelli episode of Toronto Mic'd
no I interviewed him recently
he's an opera singer now isn't he
or didn't he make like an opera record
I could see that
I will just say whenever I asked him something Or didn't he make like an opera record? Maybe that happened. I could see that. I feel like he did.
I will just say, whenever I asked him something
he didn't really feel like answering,
he would break into song and he would have his guitar.
Yeah, like it was his move. And I was thinking,
oh, that's his move. It caught on very quickly.
That's what he's going to do when he doesn't feel
like answering my question. Is he one of the FOTMs
who thought he was going to like a TV studio
and then he pulled up to a house?
I think all FOTMs think that. I think that was me, actually. Jay shows up and he went straight to the, he thought he was, yeah, he thought he was going to a TV studio and then he pulled up to a house. I think all FOTMs think that.
I think that was me, actually.
Jay shows up and he went straight to the...
He thought he was going to some big studio.
I was never under any illusions.
I never mislead people,
but these big stars like Gino Vadelli
aren't used to slumming.
Although it was the winter
and I was impressed that Mike greeted me
at the door wearing shorts.
Was it winter?
It was cold.
It wasn't a short.
It was like the autumn or the
autumn or spring when it was. I was like,
oh, this guy's alright. Thank you.
We hit it off and it's been a bromance
ever since.
I don't know if jam is rapidly stealing my heart.
Jay's like, okay, you got 15
minutes. Here he is five hours later.
So let's kick out this final jam so we can set
everybody free. Perfect.
You don't know what it is.
I have to play it.
I sent you like 30.
Every time I ask you if you want to set up your jam,
I realize I'm the only one who knows what I'm going to play,
but it is one of Ben's jams.
Can I say it's also ironic we're doing Quebec and Maritimes jams largely.
We haven't heard any French music nor any Celtic music.
I had that moment last night.
I felt kind of bad.
I was going to kick out Ashley McIsaac. I came this close to
Maggie's Kitchen. What's her name?
Sleeping Maggie.
Because I like Lamond. I forget her first name.
What is her name? Mary Jane Lamond.
Mitsu?
We've heard Mitsu.
That's the other thing. We can't repeat jams.
I kick out Mitsu every other week.
I was going to throw a token Jules Vigneault or something
in there.
Le Rita Mitsuku or whatever.
Oh yeah. Why fake it?
I don't want to fake it. Well here it is for you
Ben Rayner. One of my 28 jams.
I'm going to kick this. You're going to talk
and then we're going to close this out. But I just want to say
thank you for filling in for Stu.
You did an amazing job.
You know what? I love coming and doing this, man.
It's really fun.
We might start a new series
to replace Pandemic Friday
where it's just us three talking about music.
But I'm only doing it if Jay Ferguson joins us.
Jay, it was so nice to hear your voice,
if not see you.
It was a nice surprise.
Although you're not Drake.
You're no Drake.
I apologize for not being Drake,
but likewise.
Yeah, thanks for sticking around.
This is awesome.
Yeah.
So much fun.
I'm lucky enough I can see Jay.
I just want to say he looks fantastic.
I know what he looks like.
You guys are missing out.
I know that face.
Here's Ben Rayner.
Sorry.
Ben Rayner's final jam.
Went to see you play for the first time.
What a time
People looked at me and I think
They wondered why I was not up there
I was not up there with you I watched and listened
for the first time
It was kind of sad
After you played a while
I realized It was kind of sad After you played a while I realized
I was kind of glad
I was not out there
It would not be fair
To you too
And you did real well
You did real well together
We did well together.
But not forever.
That one makes me well up, too.
This always happens when I come to Mike's backyard.
Just let it go, buddy.
Let it go.
I think I just have a lot of repressed sadness.
No, man, you're a human being.
I also am a sucker for Really sad, beautiful music
And I think that
That's actually off
That's when Julie Daron
Split from Eric Strip
Well Eric Strip split because she and Rick White
Split up and he took off
He was marrying Tara White
Who has loved Tara
On the You know, as
the title of the first full-length
Eric Strip album goes.
And it was just like, the thing about
the end of
Eric Strip, like that album Purple Blue is like
their breakup album. They're playing in the same band
and they're breaking up
and then she
came out with this as Broken Girl,
the song that's called Elevator Show.
And it's just like, wow, this is as naked
as like hard-on-sleeve songwriting gets.
And it's like a beautiful, simple melody too.
It really gets under your skin,
but I'm just like, you're laying it all out there.
You know, it's like I'm going to watch.
And it's basically her watching her first show with Rick and Tara and Mark,
who was also in her band, playing together.
It's just like it breaks my heart every time I hear it.
But it's also a very strong song.
You know, it's just like, yeah, we did well together.
I don't know.
And a lot of her stuff was, like a lot of Julie's solo stuff,
is very unguarded.
And it's, like, quite disarming sometimes.
But then she can also do, like, she had a band for a while with, like,
Doug from the Constantine's, the keyboard player from the Constantine's,
I can't remember his name, Will.
And then she just made a record with Eamon McGrath and, like,
two of the Cancer Bats which is totally fucking heavy
She likes to rock out
Which I remember like the big thick bass tone
Yeah and like whip her hair around
Like shout out to
Willow Smith
But no she's awesome
And again not to
Loop back to the
Everyone gushing about Eric's trip but just like
The sheer volume of content that came out of that band and and folks related to that band it's just like
staggering and good quality control yeah well she did that album with the wooden stars too that was
a big deal like monster like all sorts of stuff well people wanted to work with all of them you
know they're very they're like their place in music history, like Canadian music history,
ultimately made...
There is a small global
cult, too.
I feel like she was on, if not
a Tragically Ip record, like one of the
Gord Downie solo albums.
It was her and Dale Morningstar and somebody else.
Fuck.
Yeah, like Battle of the Nudes
and the two after
Coke Machine Glow the two Gordon Solo albums
yeah I saw her play
I feel like she
played with Calvin Johnson
who is somebody I had not thought of for a while
but was in the rockscritic.com
article and
I think she was doing like the Constantine's thing
like Kidman was there
yeah I don't know Jay Ferguson article and I think she was doing like the Constantine's thing like Kidman was there like doing that
yeah I don't know
Jay Ferguson you were amazing
tonight this was awesome
I can't believe you hung in here the whole time
that was unbelievable
thanks for letting me sort of barge in and
occasionally interject
it was an eye opening evening of
musical splendor.
It was like quadruple, like, you know, what's squared, squared,
dork, squared, squared, music, dork, squared, squared.
Like, man, Rushmore, but make it dorky.
Very good.
So a great surprise Zoom guest in Jay Ferguson,
a fantastic in-person, uh,
co-host in bed Rainer,
uh,
long may you run and cam.
I'm going to see you again next week,
buddy.
Uh,
we only have a few more to go.
We see your what?
Three,
three more.
And then you guys are never going to speak again.
That's the idea.
I never have to see,
I never need to see cam Gordon and Stu.
I'm going to be like that viral video clip.
The guy drinking the poison,
like,
like, like, like,
like,
like the,
the semen.
Yeah.
And that,
that got dark.
And that brings us to the end of our 897th show.
You can follow me on Twitter.
I'm at Toronto Mike.
All right,
let's get everybody.
Cam is at Cam underscore Gordon.
Yeah.
Ben, you must have some self-defecating.
So to speak.
Not today.
I hate Ben Rayner.
Is that who you are?
I hate Ben Rayner.
I hate Ben Rayner.
I don't think anyone hates Ben Rayner.
Jay, here's the thing about you, Jay.
I don't think you're on Twitter, are you?
Embarrassingly, no, I'm not on Twitter.
I can be found on Instagram and things like that.
Okay, what's your Instagram handle?
Oh, gosh, I don't know.
Just my name, basically. Okay, find Jay Ferguson from Sloan.
You can find him on there.
You can search him.
You can search him.
Our friends at Great Lakes Brewery.
Oh, by the way, and also Sloan is on Twitter because I follow Sloan Music.
It is. Sloan Music is on Twitter.
Yeah, at Sloan Music.
Great Lakes Brewery is at Great Lakes Beer.
McKay CEO Forums are at McKay CEO Forums.
Palma Pasta is at Palma Pasta.
Sticker U is at Sticker U.
Ridley Funeral Home is at Ridley FH.
And Mike Majeski.
He's also on Instagram with Jay Ferguson.
He's at Majeski group homes.
See you all next week.
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