Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - Lowest of the Low Return: Toronto Mike'd #398
Episode Date: November 13, 2018Lowest of the Low return to discuss Shakespeare My Box and the Canadian music industry before playing live and kicking out the Cancon jams....
Transcript
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... See you later.
Wait, is that the intro to the episode now?
We just did it.
I'll tell you why.
I'll tell you why. What up, Mike? Toronto!
VK on the beat, uh, check, uh I'm in Toronto where you wanna get the city love
I'm from Toronto where you wanna get the city love
I'm a Toronto Mike, you wanna get the city love
My city love me back, for my city love
Welcome to episode 398 of Toronto Mike,
a weekly podcast about anything and everything.
Proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery, Propertyinthe6.com, ATM Canada, Census Design and Build,
and our newest sponsors, Palma Pasta and Fast Time Watch and Jewelry Repair.
pasta and fast time watch jewelry repair i'm mike from toronto mike.com and joining me is ron hawkins and lawrence nichols from lowest of the low welcome back guys hey how are you doing
how you doing mike thanks for having us back yeah pleasure is all mine and i mean that for once
you know we all say that but this is the truth. This is amazing that you took some time
to visit me here.
How are things going?
How are things doing?
Currently I am loving what you've done with the place.
It's all been nicely renovated down here
and nicely painted.
The home listeners can't see it
but they can sense it.
They can sense it.
I've got to thank listener Chris Brown,
who, Chris Brown, not the Chris Brown,
and not the other Chris.
There's two.
So there's the guy you know,
and then there's the guy who beat up Rihanna or whatever.
And then there's the Chris Brown painter,
chrisbrownpainter.com.
And he was like a big fan of the show.
And he's like, he heard me at some point,
I mentioned to Jeff Woods of all people,
because Jeff Woods paints houses in like Thornbury, Ontario. ontario anyway i said i need to get some painting done here chris is like i'll
paint your studio for free and he did such a good job i hired him i think maybe that was his plan
all along i hired him to do the main floor so chris did a good job lost leader yeah i think i
got played now he's like uh yeah i got played and he's been here for six months. Well, he was there a while.
Moe Bird came over when he was here.
What did he do?
I got Moe to help fix the floor.
Oh, wow.
You actually did do something.
No, I didn't.
But Moe's from Edmonton.
My wife's from Edmonton,
so I have nothing but great things to say about Edmontonians.
So I just want to put that out there.
Sure.
But thanks, guys, for coming.
I want to say hi to Andrew Stokely, who's listening, because Andrew Stokely was all set to come join us.
He wanted to, like, sit on the stairs there and watch the show, but we changed the date on him.
We did.
That's right.
But, you know, that's okay.
So Andrew has to work.
I think he's doing some curling, Matt.
She's doing audio for him.
But he says hello.
Hey, Andrew.
Hey, Andrew.
And it worked.
See, I think he's been played too.
I think everyone's getting grifted or whatever.
Oh, it'll happen.
It'll happen with Andrew.
Life is a grift, man.
Life is a grift.
If you want to hear the first deep dive with ron hawkins go to episode 175
uh here's the description mike chats with lowest of the low lead singer and songwriter
ron hawkins about shakespeare my butt success for which you're unprepared i wrote that awkwardly
but you know what i mean gore downey the The Perfect Marriage of Peace and Quiet and Tim Thompson's Maple Leafs Montage
and much, much more.
So that was the first Ron Hawkins episode.
Right.
So strike those from the card today.
Yeah, I don't want to hear anything
about Peace and Quiet and Tim Thompson.
Now episode,
this is when you both came over,
episode 264.
Mike and Lois of the Low
play and discuss their 10 favorite
songs of all time.
And then you guys also performed
live, and we got
to hear an unreleased, re-recorded
version of Rosie and Gray,
which was very cool.
We had an exclusive there. And then I
think I shit all over it by saying I can't.
The intro wasn't long enough.
It wasn't at all suitable for you, I guess.
But it was beautiful.
There was some blowback.
You guys tried to do a nice thing.
And then we never released it.
I noticed that.
I have great influence in these sessions.
We'll call these the basement sessions.
And we're all the way at,
that was 264 and you're at 398 now.
You keep busy.
I kicked it up a notch.
I'm glad someone noticed.
Yeah.
I used to,
I still say in the intro,
I call it a weekly podcast.
And in the extra,
I'm like,
I always say,
see you next week.
But I mean,
Tom Wilson's coming over on Thursday.
I recorded yesterday.
So like I'm
doing like three episodes a week and still calling it a weekly podcast.
Born on third, calling it a triple.
That's right. That's right. Thought he hit a triple.
Yeah, I said, I heard, that's a common phrase, but I liked it in Bush Leaguer by Pearl Jam.
I think Ed Vedder drops that about George W. Bush.
You call him Ed Vedder?
Ed?
Didn't he want to change it to Ed?
I haven't touched his face in a while.
He was Eddie when I left him.
I just assumed you singer-songwriter types
had like a secret channel or something.
Like every 15 years you have to...
Will he be Edward Vedder?
That's right.
Edward J. Vedder?
The third.
It's like when Joey Bell became Albert Bell.
Does anyone remember that?
No.
The baseball player
Joey Bell one day,
I don't know,
he decided he was,
he wanted to be Albert Bell
and we all had to start calling,
you know,
you got to call someone
what they want to be called,
right?
Like,
if Ron decides his name
is from now on
he's Richard Hawkins
or whatever,
we got to comply.
It's like...
Not necessarily.
We had a bass player
in the Rusty Neals
whose government name is Michael Kaler and he decided ever we gotta comply it's like not necessarily we had a bass player in the rusty nails uh whose
government name is michael kaler and uh he decided you know at 15 or whatever to change his name to
blitz because he was a little punk rock kid and he was blitz for most of his adult life and in most
of the bands we were in and then at some point in mid tour he decided that he wanted to be called
michael again and uh we said no you're blitz it's far too late for that. Too late, buddy.
You're Blitz.
Any old-time Blue Jay fans?
Remember Manny Lee?
Manny Lee?
And then he decided he was Manuel Lee?
But that's not...
That's close.
Less of a stretch.
It's not like Blitz.
From Joey to Albert.
Joey to Albert.
Dickie, I'm Richard.
That's right.
Ed to Eddie is the same kind of deal.
So, okay.
So that was episode 264
and yeah I have the episode 400
coming up on the weekend I'm going to put it together
and I think less than a year ago
I feel I put together episode 300
so it's been pretty
prolific here
but I have some kind of neat thing to share here
so I got a note from Stephanie Wilkinson
who wanted to tell me about her friend Greg. And Greg is married to a woman named Christina. So if you're following along at
home, Greg and Christina just celebrated their 20th wedding anniversary. And I was chatting
via email with Greg yesterday because Greg wanted to share some audio. I'm going to play the audio, and then we're just going to share the story here.
Subversives. There's something subversive
About you and me
There's a market value on love
We're getting something for free
I don't know why
But when we're apart
Something makes me want to start
Setting fires and kicking down doors
I hope we never have to resort
To dividing what is mine and what is yours
So this is Greg and Christina's wedding song.
And they had an anniversary, and I guess they got a letter to you, Ron,
and they asked you to put together a video,
and they just wanted me to thank you again.
Apparently you made their, I would say you made their day,
but I think you made their lives with this, with this gesture.
They're very happy with what you did.
They're welcome. There was no video component on my end. There was an happy with what you did. They're welcome.
There was no video component on my end. There was an audio component
on my end. Oh, see, I got an MP4
file and I converted it without even
listening. I converted it to MP3 and I just assumed
there was video, but it was all just audio, I suppose.
Because it was a massive file.
And I said, okay, well, I'm not sticking that in the soundboard
until I compress that thing.
But so, thank you from...
It was a big hit with Christina.
Oh, here, Christina.
This is Ron Hawkins.
Your very, very romantic husband, Greg,
wanted to send you a message for your anniversary,
so he decided to send a singing telegram.
And I am the delivery boy
of that singing telegram.
So this is a song for you guys
on your 27th anniversary.
Maybe it was the 27th anniversary, but so there.
I wanted to open with that because that was a sweet thing you did there.
I'm a sweet guy.
Apparently.
On occasion.
It was very nice.
There was some very cathedral-like reverb there.
Where were you?
In a cathedral.
Yeah.
And this jam I heard for the first time
a couple of days ago.
piano plays Lazy days, lie to die.
Take my pain, but don't waste my time.
Cause folks are born, and then they die.
We're prisoners of their own design
The pageants and plans
A new shackled man
Is cast away
Immune to the bliss
The sweet tender kiss Tell us what we're listening to.
We went into the studio to record a couple new songs for the bonus vinyl.
There's a piece of bonus vinyl in our Shakespeare in my box set.
So we wanted to make sure that we didn't just catalog what we'd already done,
but that we threw in some new stuff, as we are wont to do.
So there's a bonus vinyl, and this is one of two of the brand new songs.
Shakespeare in my box.
Now I need to Know More.
Okay, so.
I haven't heard this song
in headphones yet before.
It sounds really good.
I only listen in headphones.
You only listen in headphones.
Okay.
I've got to get some headphones.
I've got to get some headphones.
The piano and organ
is performed by Mike Bogusky
from Blue Rodeo.
It just sounds amazing.
No, amazing.
The lowest of the low
Twitter account,
I guess, shared it, I don't know, was that yesterday or a couple days ago? It was recent. No, amazing. The lowest of the low Twitter account, I guess, shared it, I don't know,
was that yesterday or a couple of days ago?
It was recent.
Recently, yeah.
A few days ago, yeah.
And I liked it right away.
I thought it was great, shared it.
The cool thing about the vibe here, too,
now that I'm hearing it in headphones as well right now,
is we recorded it pretty much off the floor.
There was some vocal and guitar overdubs,
but like that piano, grand piano that you're hearing,
the mic is sitting right beside the drums.
So drums are bleeding into the piano mics,
pianos are bleeding into the drum mics.
Now...
Yeah, I know, it sounds great.
And I often kick out the jams of people.
So we're actually, I should tell people,
we have kicked out the jams,
but today we're going to kick out, how do I say this? We're going to kick out the CanCon jams. Can. So we're actually, I should tell people, we have kicked out the jams, but today we're going to kick out,
how do I say this?
We're going to kick out
the CanCon jams.
Can I call it that?
Sure.
Sure.
So we're going to kick out the jams,
but it's not your 10 favorite songs
of all time necessarily,
which you've already done.
It's 10 favorite CanCon jams,
and we'll talk about that,
which I'm totally psyched about.
You're also going to play something
shortly,
but I have more questions, die which I'm totally psyched about you're also you're also going to play something yes uh shortly
but uh I have more questions so I need to know more about this uh Shakespeare my box I need to
know details well earlier this year we signed a deal with uh Warner Music Canada which is the
first time we've ever signed with a record, big record
label, I guess.
And it was a two album commitment, I guess.
So we arranged to make the first album, basically all the existing albums.
They're all being put together in a box.
Some of them have never come out on vinyl before.
So for the first time, Hallucigenia will be out on vinyl.
It's a lovely double gatefold thing. Sorted Fiction is on vinyl for the first time and you of course also get Shakespeare in My Butt and Do The Right Now
from last year and then there is a new bonus disc with like 12, 14 songs
on it. Some live songs, a few remixed songs, and then collected
a few. And this one, right?
Lazy Days. Yep, Lazy Days is on there.
Another new one, which is an
outtake from the Shakespeare My Butt era,
which we recorded, called Hole in the
Ground, that we recorded at
Union Sound the same day we did
Lazy Days there.
And for any USS fans, there's a remix.
Human Kebab from USS did a remix of one of our tunes. So there's some little treats in there. And for any USS fans, there's a remix. Human Kebab from USS
did a remix of one of our tunes.
So there's some little treats in there.
There's some live stuff.
There's some remixes of our own.
That guy's nuts,
that Human Kebab.
He's a bit crazy.
In all the good ways, yes.
And the other guy in that band
who's actually done the show,
Ashley Boo Schultz,
also not nuts,
but like an interesting thinker.
Just even a conversation with him is very
like the synapses are kind of firing at
all times and it makes for like a
very interesting discussion.
Does he write all the lyrics in the band?
I think so.
And they just had like a 10th anniversary
party. I went to it actually
and that was pretty cool.
Well, we played a show with them in Ottawa.
Was it last summer?
Like last summer of 2017?
Yeah.
Summer of 2017, we met those guys for the first time,
and they were amazing.
Like, they really tear it up out there.
And I guess one of them just said,
my sister made out with one of you back in the day.
I can't remember.
I can't remember. Oh, boy. I can't remember. Oh, really?
Oh, boy.
I can't remember which one.
That doesn't narrow it down much, probably.
You said your sister made out with all of us back in the day.
You know, now I think, I mean, you guys could use a little DJ in the mix, lowest of the
low.
You know, maybe this will introduce you to...
Well, you'll hear the results if you get the box set.
All right, so people who want to get the box set,
I mean, a lot of people listening to us right now
are fans of Shakespeare, my butt,
if they want the box set.
And the funny thing is,
we all listen,
let's say you're in college or high school
and you're in love with Shakespeare, my butt.
Now we're at a point
when we can afford something like a box set
because now we're all old enough
with money flying around too.
And the most potent drug,
and Ron might not even,
I don't know if you'd like to hear this or not,
but it's a fact,
the most potent drug is nostalgia.
And if you could listen to a song
and be back in university,
it's kind of priceless.
Unfortunately, nostalgia is cut with fentanyl these days,
so it can kill you if you're not careful.
That's a good point.
I agree with you.
We say that every time we make any record,
is that we kind of carry this golden albatross around
called Shakespeare in my butt,
because it's sort of, you know,
of course we're blessed,
and it's amazing to ever have a record
that looms large in your catalog like that,
but at the same time,
you then have to live up to it constantly.
It's a fantastic problem to have.
Well, it's because your last album,
Do The Right Now,
was a great album.
Fantastic.
And there's cuts on that.
I mean, Power Lines,
did I get the right name there?
But there are cuts on there
that would fit right in on mainstream rock radio station
or whatever your current station.
Theoretically. Theoretically.
Later we're going to talk a little bit
about the business before we kick out.
Before you play and then we kick out the jams.
But
yeah, man, when I talked to my buddies
and I was talking about, I said
it's a lower dropping buy. And first of all, that
excites them. But then I get to say this is the move
I'm doing now. Like, oh, they're dropping by.
Oh, yeah, for the third time.
I go for the third time.
And then I say,
I'm going to play a song
from Shakespeare,
my butt in my basement.
And then I even just tweeted this.
You'll see it on Twitter.
I know Ron's not on Twitter.
You're still holding out.
But Lawrence, you'll see it later.
But I tweeted like
a letter to 1991 Mike.
I just wanted to let him know
that 2018 Mike wrote a letter to 1991 Mike
to let him know Los Alor are going to drop by
and then let him know his oldest has a hockey game at 6 o'clock
and the Leafs still haven't won the Stanley Cup.
Did he write back?
I'm waiting.
I haven't checked in my Twitter.
He doesn't return your...
Where am I going with that?
Except to say that as recently as like three episodes ago,
Rachel Brady, who writes for the Globe and Mail,
I asked her what her favorite song of all time was
because we were going to just play the one song,
not 10 songs, but one.
And she said, Bleed a Little Wild Tonight.
And we played it.
That was like three episodes ago.
And that's a recurring theme.
Sarah Boesveld, there's been a number of people come in.
What is your favorite song of all time?
It's from Shakespeare, My Butt.
Next time you got to get Sarah to come in
and sing her favorite song too. Well, I had her sing. She's quite the singer. Yeah, from Shakespeare, My Butt. Next time you've got to get Sarah to come in and sing her favorite song, too.
I had her sing. She's quite the singer.
She just had a baby.
She can still sing.
She can do a duet or whatever.
Not that that would stop her
from coming in or whatever. But yeah, she's a great
singer. You're right. And she sang on to some
Bob Seger on that episode.
Oh, my God.
I hope the baby was okay.
Actually, I don't know. I hope the baby was okay. Actually,
I don't know.
I did the math.
It might have been,
she might have conceived that night.
Like that might have,
I might have played a role somehow
because if you reverse the math,
it's like nine months
before this baby pops.
You're saying so many things
I don't like right now.
I will move on from that.
Except to say,
one thing I want to say is thank you.
I actually want to say thank you
and I don't know if I've said this
the last couple of times
you've been over, but is thank you. I actually want to say thank you. And I don't know if I've said this the last couple of times you've been over,
but like,
thank you for creating art that brings me back to being a teenager.
Like it's something magical about that.
Like it's almost like you've invented a time machine.
I have invented a time machine,
but that's not what we're here for to talk about.
That's 425 episode 425.
Well,
no,
I mean,
that's,
that's the thing.
I was just talking about this the other day,
about how one amazing thing about being a 54-year-old man in a band
is that I have access to 16-year-old me.
I don't have to even send letters.
I can just yell across the hall from my dorm room to his dorm room.
I can get in touch with that.
And I was talking about just this go-, this go around with lowest to the low,
like just spray painting my clothes
like I did when I was 16,
making lowest to the low shirts, you know?
Like, as I said, you know,
either that's incredibly embarrassing and sad
or it's amazing.
No, it's punk.
Yeah, well, it's punk.
But I mean, the idea that I can be 54 years old
and this can be my vocation
and then I can still get excited about that
means to me,
like, you know,
I keep quoting this quote
that I think is Bob Dylan
or it might be from the Bible,
but he was not busy being born,
he was busy dying, right?
And I totally adhere to that,
that you're either moving forward
and you're excited about life
and what it has to offer
or you're basically on your way out,
you're decaying, right?
I think that's actually Morgan Freeman
from the Shawshank Redemption.
I think that was co-opted by Red, yeah, Morgan Freeman in the Shawshank Redemption. I think that was co-opted by Red, yeah,
Morgan Freeman
in the Shawshank Redemption.
It's like,
get busy living
or get busy dying.
And then as he followed up
with like,
God damn right
or something like that,
some Morgan Freeman thing.
It's been a while,
but it sounds like
St. Matthew really.
Get busy living
or get busy dying.
Yeah, that's a great,
great quote.
But let me do
a little business here
so that we can talk about the business of music in this country
and then you guys can play something
and then we can kick out the gems.
So in front of you, there is a beer.
You each get a six-pack of beer from Great Lakes Brewery.
Clap up.
Hold your hands.
Hold your palms.
Thank you.
Fresh craft beer.
And Ron, you don't actually drink, right?
I might apply that six-pack directly to my six-pack.
You have a six-pack?
I'm jealous.
Is that what he's saying?
He's got a six-pack?
I think that's what he's saying.
I implied it.
I've never had a six-pack.
Wait, the lights are lighting up on the phone.
Testimonials.
That's right. That's right.
That's right.
My 60,
I have a almost 17-year-old.
He wanted,
he said,
I want weights
and he wants to get bigger.
And one of the things he wants
and he's changed his diet
and everything
but he wants six-pack.
This is,
what's a six-pack?
And it,
I mean,
I told him,
I think it's my wife
who always says
six-packs are made in the kitchen.
That means your diet has, if you really do want the six-pack,
your diet, it gets so boring and unfun, you know what I mean?
But it's a real commitment.
But that's something.
I don't have the discipline to suddenly...
I don't have the discipline to care about that statement.
I just have nothing to contribute.
Okay.
I will smile and nod at this.
Sure.
So the six pack of beer, Great Lakes Brewery.
Thank you, Great Lakes Brewery.
That's lovely.
Thank you.
And they're a fiercely independent craft brewery located here in Etobicoke.
And as you know, 99.9% of all Great Lakes beer
remains here in Ontario.
GLB, brewed for you, Ontario.
And I have a little Italian music.
I got to remember to play it
because it just adds for the moment.
I just want to make it
a little more authentic here.
But there is some
Palma's kitchen
from Palma Pasta.
There's lasagna.
This is frozen lasagna.
What is going on here?
It's amazing.
This is going to be great for my six-pack.
I was going to say, the beer and the lasagna might not assist.
Yeah, really.
Oh, that's wonderful.
You mean this entire thing is filled with lasagna?
You'll see what I mean.
You know what I mean
like
that's a hefty lasagna
it's a massive
so it's frozen now
oh man
wow
you gotta let it
thaw in the fridge
refrigerator
you don't thaw in a freezer
but you thaw in the refrigerator
for like 24 hours
and then you pop it
in the oven
I think it's like
350
and then you do it
for 45 to 60 minutes
I just had one
the other day
and everyone
my family,
everybody just loves the Palmas lasagna.
Oh, that's wonderful. Thank you.
When you're finished doing it for 45 to 60 minutes,
you can eat your lasagna.
Palmas Pasta has four locations in Mississauga and Oakville,
but I'm most excited about Palmas Kitchen.
That's the new location,
not too far from Mavis and Burnhamthorpe.
If you go to palmapasta.com,
you can find out exactly where it's at.
But they got fresh food, hot fresh food,
a retail store.
They got, you know, seating.
They got coffee.
Everything's there.
So discover Mississauga's best fresh pasta
and Italian food.
I'm not even finished my Shakespeare in my box questions,
but Brian's got a question for you
that will tie in nicely with this.
So let's hear from Brian.
Propertyinthe6.com
Hi, Ron and Lawrence.
Brian Gerstein here.
Sales representative with PSR Brokerage
and proud sponsor of Toronto Mic'd. You can call or text me at 416-873-0292 if you are planning to buy
and or sell in the next six months. Guys, there's no better ending to Mike's podcast than Rosie and
Greg coming on to wrap things up as Mike signs off and thanks his guests and sponsors, which as a sponsor myself,
I want to personally thank both of you for that.
With the new Shakespeare,
my box retrospective box set,
you're all blindfolded.
Is that one of the incriminating photos you are referencing on it?
And regardless,
what is the backstory on it as inquiring minds want to know?
Why are you blindfolded on the cover of Shakespeare, My Butt, Ron?
I don't, through the foggy mists of time,
I can't really remember whose idea that was
or why we thought it was funny.
I think it's a Firing Squad reference, I'm going to guess.
There was another one done with red noses as well.
I don't know what that's a reference to.
Firing Squad?
Firing Squad.
Circus Firing Squad?
Yeah.
Yeah, I don't know.
I think it was a Firing Squad reference.
And I don't know why that's appropriate,
but probably we felt...
I mean, it's funny because I thought if we had done it after,
if it had come out after we became Indie Freedom Fighters,
as they like to often call us,
that would make sense to me.
But I think we made that decision
whilst we were shopping and around to every major label you could,
you know, before we got turned down by them all.
That's a...
Because I couldn't see your eyes.
Right.
That's right.
That's a great question, Brian.
And now he alluded to the fact
that every episode closes with Rosie and Gray.
What's interesting, fun fact, is that my contact at Great Lakes Brewery,
who are great people, they're fiercely independent.
Did I mention that?
Freedom fighters.
Of course, there's a line early in Rosie and Gray about drinking Guinness.
And I've been asked, is there any way, like jokingly I've been asked,
not in seriousness,
to insert Great Lakes beer
instead of Guinness into that line.
Apparently that's,
so that was a fun request
I thought I'd share
since he brought up the roasting.
So you need to,
I guess what I'm saying is
you'll need to re-record that song.
Drink some Great Lakes from it.
Wow.
Nostalgia is a powerful, powerful drug.
Yeah, that's right.
They like to remix nostalgia and sell it off to the highest bidder.
So thank you so much, Brian, for that question.
And Paytm, I just want to let people know that there's still $10 available to you right now.
$10 if you download the app from paytm.ca. This is an app
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So you can use that towards another bill payment or a reward purchase. do that now. And census design and build, if you're looking for architectural design,
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you need to schedule your zoning and cost project feasibility study at
censusdesignbuild.ca.
So do that today.
Ron and Lawrence, on this day, on this day in 1940, remember the time.
I forgot I got to name this segment, remember the time.
I got to brand that thing.
On this day in 1940,
the Walt Disney animated film Fantasia is released.
That's a classic.
Did you guys watch Fantasia as kids?
That scared the crap out of me.
I seem to remember that for a lot of years that movie was unavailable.
It got returned to the vault.
That's a Disney move, yeah.
And then I think it came back out
and I think I saw it
at the University Theater
on Bloor Street,
which is now a pottery barn
or something like that.
Yeah, I think it had
a 70 millimeter re-release
maybe sometime in the 90s
or something like that,
but it's, that's, it was.
I can say that in the 80s
they would edit it
and kind of package it up
into those, the wide world of Disney,
whatever the show was that I used to see on CBC
at like 6 p.m.
That was Wonderful World of Disney.
Wonderful World of Disney, yeah, that's it.
And I used to see like,
so I don't think it was the full movie,
but it was like excerpts from Fantasia.
And the fun fact about Fantasia is,
there's a bunch of fun facts, but the main one is that
it's the first film to use stereophonic
sound. So there you
go. 1940 on this date.
So Remember the Time is brought to you by
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Shakespeare in my box. If somebody listening right now is like, I got to get my, my mitts on that. Do that. Shakespeare in my box, if somebody listening right now is like,
I got to get my mitts on that.
What is the recommended process?
Go to lowestofthelow.com.
What's the action?
Lowestofthelow.com.
They go to our website,
and there's a link on there
that will take you to the Warner Music Store
where you can buy,
or pre-order at this point,
the vinyl box,
and you have the option of buying tickets
for a special show at the Dakota Tavern next week
where we'll be performing for box owners.
Yes, and there's going to be some surprises
and some treats that night.
That's cool.
What night is that again?
Next.
November 21st, next Wednesday.
There's an early show at 7 p.m.
There's an late show at 11 p.m. There's an late show at 11 p.m.
You can make that choice on the pre-sale site.
The pre-sale, I think the boxes will be delivered
sometime in maybe a week after the show,
late November.
You know what Gene Simmons will do?
I never know what Gene Simmons will do.
Do I want to know what Gene Simmons will do?
For some exorbitant amount of money,
he will personally deliver your Gene Simmons box set
of unreleased material.
That saddens me.
I mean, he's unabashedly, you know,
everything's for sale.
But yeah, I got the press release.
I don't know what he was charging.
It was something ridiculous.
So like if you're living in Patagonia, you know?
I didn't see any like continental US know, I didn't see any like
continental US only or I didn't see
any caveats. Yeah, is there the fee
plus travel fees? Like, I mean, if he's
got to fly across an
ocean or something. Do you have to let him in your house?
Yeah.
This unreleased material
for Gene Simmons is, this is like
apparently stuff that, it's not
Kiss stuff. Like it's just stuff that he did. It's crap. I can't imagine anybody wanting to pay anything for that, this is like apparently stuff that, it's not Kiss stuff, it's just stuff that he did.
It's crap. I can't imagine anybody wanting
to pay anything for that, let alone the
exorbitant amount of money he's asking.
Or maybe if one sucker buys
then he's good to go. I don't know.
Enough about Gene Simmons.
So Shakespeare in my box. So what is the date?
It says it's pre-order right now, but what's the date
it's out? November 30th, I believe,
is the actual release date. And I think it's pre-order right now, but what's the date it's out? November 30th, I believe is the actual release date.
And I think it's also available on Amazon.ca.
People can go to Amazon
and look it up there. Shakespeare My
Box. No, very, very cool.
That's very cool. Now...
You know that, so that title of Shakespeare
My Box, it happened
exactly the same way that the title of Shakespeare
My Butt happened, if you want to talk about
unfortunate nostalgia. exactly the same way that the title of Shakespeare in my butt happened. If you want to talk about unfortunate
nostalgia.
When we were sitting around
making Shakespeare in my butt,
I think, it might not
have been me, but it was somebody in the band
made that suggestion
based on a misreading of a
Shakespearean poster on a wall
that said Shakespeare's Britain or something
like that, but it was far enough away that somebody said, does that say Shakespeare's butt? And then somebody
said Shakespeare my butt. We laughed. And then that became the album title. And that's how an
awful lot of things get decided in Lowest of Low. So when this came together to compile it,
I said, ha, ha, ha, it should be called Shakespeare my box. And everybody went,
that's pretty funny. And I was like, oh my God. And I was having this incredible deja vu.
And then I was quite concerned. And we sort of talked to a few people oh my God. And I was having this incredible deja vu. And then I was quite concerned
and we sort of talked to a few people outside of ourselves
and everybody to a person said,
that's a great name for the collection.
And I was like, is it?
Is it really?
Yeah, we did our due diligence
and we came up with boring, unfunny titles for it as well.
It's just that we just circled back to...
That seems that, you know, they say first thought, best thought.
And it was like, I don't agree with that.
First thought, stupidest thought, maybe. Sometimes.
And then we always do that. Even Lois the Lo is the same way.
Come up with that name, and then come up with
35 other names, because you're like, we can't call ourselves Lois the Lo.
And then go, that was the best one.
You know what? I don't know if either of you ever watched
The Simpsons. So there's the famous episode
where they introduce Poochie.
And the guy
in charge says something like, we need a dog
character. We can call him something like Poochie. You know, Poochie, right? Yes. And the guy in charge says something like, we need a dog character. We can call him something like Poochie,
you know, Poochie, but better, he says.
You guys figure that out.
Then he leaves the room,
and you have all these writers at the table,
and they kind of all look at each other,
and they go, so Poochie it is?
And they go, yeah.
So that's the same kind of deal.
Like Poochie, except better.
Exactly.
So somebody said, Shakespeare my box, better yeah so shakespeare my but not that
and now poochie's back on his home planet that yeah that's right never to be seen again poochie
that's right um that's right um that's the one where the the woman she's passed now but she was
100 or something but the voiceover actress she was like she was a bunch of famous cartoon characters i can't remember her foray something foray
but anyway she was the voice of uh roadrunner and she said everybody saw and she said they
only paid me to say beep or something and then she corrects the guy and says well no actually
they only had me say it once and then they loop looped it. So beep, and they looped it.
Anyway, enough Simpson.
That's another podcast we'll do.
Brief bit of real talk before I hear you guys play something,
which I can't wait.
I'm going to remind me to record it.
That was smart.
I did that last time.
I'm going to record it with my phone,
the video of you guys playing.
So that's your job, Lawrence,
to remind me.
If you don't,
I'm going to be mad at you.
Okay.
Real talk.
Now,
how tough is it for a Toronto-based musician
to make a living
at his
slash her craft?
That's a very open,
vague question.
In 2018?
Like,
how is it?
Yeah,
let's talk about it
on a scale of very difficult
to impossible
oh yeah
I'm leaving it
intentionally broad
to a little bit of context
there's a couple of
conversations I had recently
one with Chris Murphy
from Sloan
and then another one
with Molly Johnson
and
I'm not in the industry
I don't know anything
but both conversations
I was left with the impression
that
unless you have
some kind of a big hit that cracks the US.S. market, this is the impression I got.
Unless you have that, which puts you in apparently a different category potentially, it's almost impossible to live in this city and just be a musician.
Even if your songs, and I'm dating myself of this one because I don't know if they play videos anymore, but even if your songs are all over much music and let's say Indie 88 or 102.1, The Edge.
I don't make a living playing music.
I know lots of people who make a living
that's all music-based,
but it involves a bit of teaching,
which is a musical pursuit.
a bit of teaching and um which is which is a musical pursuit um uh i honestly don't know how anyone's starting out today like what what financial plan they're hoping to follow um
just look just anybody any any millennial who's who's living and working in toronto can't afford
to buy a house anymore i mean that's that's a tough thing. A lot of people are having to stay at home
or gang up and get a lot of roommates and stuff like that.
So in Toronto, it's just tough to make a lot of money
and stay above water.
It's not just musicians, though, too,
because a friend of ours is a man named Ken Babstock,
arguably the Poet Laureate of Canada right now.
It's, you know, probably I'm going to guess he's in his 40s, early 40s.
And he's fantastic.
He's at the absolute top of that game.
And he has to teach to stay alive.
I mean, he's a poet.
So, you know, that's been a joke for a long time.
You know, trying to make a living as a poet is probably worse than trying to make a living as a musician. And I'm a weird, like I'm kind of swimming upstream
because I read all the time about how it's getting harder
and things are getting worse
and it's getting better for me exponentially every year.
But as Lawrence says, I'm not a millennial
and it's like I got an opportunity to get my foot
in the door when there was a chance
to get your foot in the door.
And then I was in a, you know,
of course certainly not a household name. I mean, I don't think Lowest to Low, I think a lot of people in the door. And then I was in a, you know, certainly not a household name.
I mean, I don't think Lowest to Low,
I think a lot of people in the mythology
of Lowest to Low has grown,
but we certainly weren't really a household name
in Canada even then.
You know, we were very successful.
And in the, you know, amongst the tribe
that we were popular with,
we were very, very popular.
But not enough to sort of surf that
the rest of our lives, you know,
or anything like that.
So yeah, it's really hard.
And I know some writers, a couple of writer friends of mine
had said varying versions of like, you know,
when we were starting out, you know, he as a writer, me as a musician,
it's like, you know, they would tell you, you know,
you might starve to death, you know, like think about it
because you might starve to death.
He says now it'd be like, you're going to starve to death.
Like there's not a, there's not even a, like you might starve to death.
You're now either going to have to have an alternative or you're going to starve to death. Like there's not a, there's not even a, like you might starve to death. You're now either going to have to have an alternative or you're going to starve to death.
So, so you said it was getting better for you. Uh, can you elaborate? Like,
like how so?
I'm not at liberty to elaborate.
If nostalgia is a drug, Ron is one of the biggest dealers.
He's got quite a lot.
Cause I cut it with love, man.
There you go.
No, it's just, you know, like I now,
because Lois the Lois was almost a household name,
was a garage hold name.
That's really awkward.
I will point out, in certain subsets,
and I realize sometimes we think that the subset we're in is the universe.
I've been at fault for this.
During the final Tragically Hip concert,
I just thought every Canadian that was breathing
was watching with me.
And then my wife, her Facebook feed,
nobody was talking about the hip.
And I had this whole like,
oh, it's kind of like just like English white Canada
that's really into this of a certain age.
And then I had this whole like epiphany.
So my subset, and of course, I am of the age where I was the the age where music means the most to you when Shakespeare my butt comes out so
in my subset uh you know lowest of the low I might as well be talking about the Beatles or whatever
like in this subset and I realize of course at the uh if you look at the country as a whole that
not everybody lives in my little subset.
That's true.
But also at the time you're talking about,
music was something that people bought.
That happens less and less now.
Very few people actually pay for music.
They pay for subscription services.
We have our friends, James Party,
who we're playing with in Buffalo next week, actually.
They had a million listens to one of their songs on Spotify,
and I don't think it really moved the dial for them financially at all.
That's a question I've always been curious.
I don't know the figures.
Before I forget, because this kind of ties into Spotify,
not quite Spotify, but there is a question.
I think you answered it on Twitter, but we've got to answer it here.
If I could dig it up.
Do you know where I'm going with this?
Oh, yeah, that our music is currently not available on Spotify.
Yeah, Sean Hammond. That's the guy. I just want to give him credit.
He says he can't find your music on Apple Music.
Yeah, sorry, Sean.
Yes, it did vanish temporarily
because it's all being transferred over to Warner Music
and it's all coming back up concurrently with the box set release.
So temporary, Sean. And there all be back. So temporary Sean.
And there will be a remastered Hallucigenia,
a remastered Sorted Fiction,
and Hallucigenia's even got some bonus tracks.
You know, I mean, there'll be more.
It'll be better.
How does Spotify work?
Do you opt in to be available on Spotify,
or is it like a default setting?
Yes, but it's pretty much a default thing.
Like, I mean, every label indie or now with Warner,
everybody's just like, well, of course,
because that's where people go to listen to music now.
So if you want people to listen to your music,
that's where you have to be.
Yes.
Now, you mentioned you get...
I mean, I'm just curious about the economics of Spotify.
Of course, back in the day,
we bought CDs for like 15 to 20 bucks a pop or whatever.
And in that old days, what percentage of that would go to the band, for example,
versus today with Spotify, how many billions of streams do you need
before they cut a check of anything worthwhile?
The thing too is this isn't new.
Nothing's new under the sun.
I feel like people are making it sound like Spotify.
nothing's new under the sun.
I feel like people are making it sound like Spotify.
You're getting 75 cents for your million listens on Spotify is a brand new thing.
But if you go back to pre-'60s
and you talk about Little Richard and Jerry Lewis
and all those guys, they were all getting screwed.
Fats Domino, millions and millions of records sold,
physical objects sold, and they were broke because the record company was screwing them around and even in
our day i'd say that you know where that was one thing you always argued about uh with your label
was how much you know how much is the device that delivers the art important and how much is the art
important and that's always been out of balance i think in my mind you know but it's it's it's the same way we're talking about how it's impossible to be a
poet it's impossible to be a musician is that because there's a certain cultural uh downplaying
of how important these things are to us you know it's like it's like everybody realizes you need it
to be healthy to have a healthy culture and to to remain alive you kind of need this stuff like
oxygen but nobody wants to pay for it or nobody wants to understand how somebody can stay alive long enough
to make it, you know? And maybe, maybe it's the kind of thing that there'll be a big reckoning
10 years from now when the quality of the music either goes out the window or people just stop
making it because they can't survive. And they'll realize, Oh wait, we really needed that. And we
didn't, you know, we didn't honor it
in the way we should, so now it's gone.
Like the climate.
It's like if all the bees die, we're next.
But nobody's stupid enough to not pay attention
to those major warnings, are they?
Of course not.
So Lawrence, you mentioned, of course,
you have a day job.
I do, yeah.
I have a full-time job where I...
In an apiary?
No. I like to
bees, but I don't make a living doing
that. No, I drive around Toronto
and I deliver supplies for a
paper supply company. Makes for
some long days. Get
up early in the morning and get out there in traffic.
That's what I did today. Today
I got up at five and I was at work at
six and then came straight from work and met Ron.
And now I'm here and then I'll be going back to work when we're done here.
And then...
Is there an analogy in the paper delivery business for the nostalgia?
Like is there a certain ply of toilet paper?
No, because people still pay for it.
People still pay for it.
I missed the one with the fuzzy kittens on the cover.
They do, but we don't make those anymore because the environment,
you know.
But yeah,
so no,
and then tonight we'll be rehearsing
from nine till twelve
and then I'll get up
at five again tomorrow
and go back to work.
I have no complaints
about any of this.
Because you're happy
because you still get
to do what you love.
I get to do this
and I have complaints
on Lawrence's behalf
but he doesn't have.
Yeah.
But Ron,
if I read between the lines,
you're able to
support yourself strictly based on your singing,
songwriting.
On the back of Lawrence Nichols, yes.
On the back of Lawrence Nichols.
Yeah, well, that's what I was going to say is that, you know,
so it's having been in Lowest to the Low, that's one foot up.
And then I plugged away at a solo career as well.
That's another foot up.
And then, you know, I produce records for people
and I'm a visual artist.
And so sort of like between all of those trickles,
it adds up to a good situation.
And as I say, it seems to be growing.
And for a long time, like for decades,
I would have people with straight jobs who would go,
like, I couldn't live like that.
Like I could not know where my money's coming
from three months from now.
Like I would just be stressed all the time.
Yeah, the volatility, yeah.
Yeah, and so for me, though,
it's like I just sit with the comfort
that, well, it's always taking care of itself,
and I have no real evidence to believe
it will stop taking care of itself,
and then that just has been building.
So not only has it not been taking care of itself,
it's been getting better,
but I recognize that I'm in a vast minority
of people trying to do that.
And how much is it like ownership?
Like let's say a song like Bleed a Little Wild Tonight.
This is a song you wrote.
Yeah.
Ron.
And so do you own like,
I know there's publishing rights
and there's always,
it's a bit confusing for an outsider like me,
but do you own that?
Mm-hmm.
I do.
That's the thing,
the way we run our career,
I've always owned all the songs I've written,
and we've always pretty much at some point
owned all the masters that we've recorded,
which is a good position to be in.
I mean, it's not like 0% of 100% of publishing,
or I get 100% of zero if nobody uses the publishing
in terms of selling it to movies or covering it or whatever.
Right.
And I've been told in the past that the way I write songs is not
the easiest thing to sell to things like commercials
or film and stuff like that because they're very specific
lyrically.
And who knows if that's true or not.
But yeah, there's not been tons of that kind of thing
happening for me.
Have you ever been tempted to try and get a little more vague
in your songwriting so that
maybe some more money would come in?
But would that be like a song under the Carlaw Bridge?
You might not name the bridge.
Is that what you mean?
Yeah, just under some generic bridge.
I mean, that's catchy, right?
Under some generic bridge.
But part of why people like me love the songs
is they speak to the city.
Well, I was going to say too,
that's another fold of this onion
that we're unpeeling here is that
it also depends on what you're in it for what
you'll be satisfied with when you become a musician or an artist of any nature like a lot of people
won't be happy unless they're you know jay-z or they're you know right now let's say in toronto
the arkells if they're not the arkells then they failed and they don't want to do it or you know
some bone isn't being you know funny bone isn't being tickled or whatever. And, uh, for me,
it's like, I've always been in it. You know, all my role models were people who, if you look at
their careers sort of got in their own way because of their own value system. And, uh, so I'm the
same. So I recognize that I probably could have made decisions that might've made me more money.
Well, I mean, for instance, you know, in early lowest to the low, there's a, there's a story
that goes, you know, uh, Molson Canadian asked us to use salesman cheats and liars on the tv
commercial and we basically like you know eight fingers went up eight middle fingers because that
song is so specific very specific very specific song and then they kept coming back with greater
and greater amount of money and it was you know so this is in the early 90s it went to over a
hundred thousand dollars and we were able to sort of hold on, you know, we were shaking or we were physically shaking when we said no the last
time, but we, you know, stuck or strapped ourselves to the mast and said no. But would you say no
today? Yeah. To Molson Canadian, I would. Yeah. I mean, there's still this integrity for me in
terms of like, I don't want to lie about, you know, I don't want to strap my name to something
that I wouldn't use. You know, I don't want to do anything that's morally repugnant to me,
you know, politically or environmentally or, but, you know, again,
that, you know, in this kind of industry and in the kind of society we live,
live in that strikes a lot of boxes off, you know,
you've lost a lot of opportunity right there.
If you're not willing to do something morally repugnant.
Andy Kim was in last week
and he was telling me he did very well
when Jeep, I guess Chrysler owns Jeep,
but whoever owns Jeep bought Rock Me Gently
for a big campaign
and cut a fat check or something.
Well, see, you know what's changed with me
with getting older
is that I still have exactly the same values for myself.
I hold myself up to the same.
But whereas in the past,
I would probably have judged somebody harshly for that. I hold myself up to the same. But whereas in the past, I would probably have judged
somebody harshly for that.
Now I get it.
Now I kind of,
I'm older and softer in that way
for other people where I go like,
I get that you have to eat
and you have a family
and stuff like that.
And you know,
I'm not going to judge you for that.
I don't want to do it,
but hell,
I'm happy for him.
That's great.
That's really cool.
I mean,
when I saw that,
I saw Barenaked Ladies
at like at Massey Hall
like last December or something.
And they played this song.
The new song is called Canada Dry.
That's the name of the new song, which is not new anymore because it's a year old.
But it was their new song.
And Canada Dry was used prominently in the ad campaign for Canada Dry.
And I was sitting there thinking, like, what came first?
Like, I'm pretty sure the drink drink came first. The drink came through,
but did somebody say,
hey, write a song
about our beverage
because we would like
to license it,
or did they have a song
called Canada Giant
and they came to them
and said...
Okay, an addendum
to what I just said before,
I'm totally judging
the brand of the beverage.
That's pretty lame.
But they could have picked
a beverage with an easier
rhyme scheme.
Tahiti treat.
Tahiti treat.
Tahiti treat. I remember Tahiti treat. Tahiti treat. Tahiti treat.
I remember Tahiti treat.
Or Fresca.
Even Fresca.
Well, no, actually, that's a tough one.
What rhymes with Fresca?
Is Fresca the one that's big in Germany?
Is that the...
I don't know what that is.
It could be.
Or Fanta.
I'm thinking of Fanta.
Fanta.
Fanta's big in that.
Doesn't Fanta cover a whole bunch of different places?
Okay, anyway, we're getting...
The craziest outlier of all this
would be that I was just talking,
I was in New York with my partner
and we were going to a bunch of cultural stuff there,
the New Yorker Festival,
and I got all excited about the idea of busking
and I said, you know, when I get home,
I'm going to busk.
And she said, really?
And I said, yeah, just spend a day busking.
And she said, yeah.
And then a couple hours later,
we came back to it and I said,
yeah, spend like an hour busking. And then it was like, spend like half an hour busking. And she said, and she said, yeah. And then about a couple hours later, we came back to it and I said, yeah, like, you know, spend like an hour busking. And then it was like, spend like
half an hour busking. And she said, every time you tell me the story, it gets to be smaller.
But you know, the idea that if I thought I could go out and busk, you know, two or three days a
week and make enough money to pad the other stuff, I would totally do it because I would feel right
about it. I would feel like it's just a very personal,
small version of what we do with our fan base,
which is that try to be as stripped down
and truly us as we can be.
And that's how I started doing it as well.
Like Steve and Stanley and I used to go out and busk
and my friend Petter and I used to go,
he used to have a standup base.
We'd go out and busk with this acoustic guitar
and standup base.
So, you know, like, so I'm pretty So I'm pretty pre-disastered.
If that makes me happy,
then it cuts me a lot of slack to not be pissed off
in a lot of scenarios that might piss somebody else off
because I'm happy with very little.
I'm a simple soul.
How much money would you need to make in a day
to make it worthwhile going busking?
I don't know.
$2,000, $3,000.
Exactly. If you're dropping money for a busker, what's the
biggest denomination?
I know. It's been a long time.
The thing about busking is it's so incredibly
unpredictable that you would get...
I got the odd $50 bill.
And of course, in 1989...
There were no toonies.
There were no loonies either.
There were tons of loonies.
There were loonies.
People throwing condoms into my case. Cans of beer. There were no toonies. There were no loonies either, right? There were tons of loonies. There were loonies.
People throwing condoms into my case.
Oh, loonies.
Cans of beer.
Cans of beer.
You know, I'm willing to bet there was loonies in 88.
Well, imagine that.
I'm like, I got a can of beer. 88 or maybe 88?
That's a good question.
In a way, it seems like they've been there forever.
I remember.
I remember when they showed up.
It was exciting.
I feel like it was 88, but I could be misremembering.
That's a while ago.
Now, Bon Jovi was on 60 Minutes,
and I'm watching 60 Minutes.
This is a few years ago,
and Bon Jovi was explaining how Bon Jovi is structured
from a business standpoint.
It was Bon Jovi owns,
Bon Jovi, the man,
owns the band Bon Jovi,
and everyone else,
including Richie Sambora,
who we think is a founding member or whatever,
they're all employees of Bon Jovi Inc.
or whatever the heck is.
So I was curious about Lowest of the Low.
Is this Ron Hawkins?
Do you own Lowest of the Low
and then you hire musicians to be in the band?
I own these guys.
No, we actually started out a very socialist gang.
And it was like everything was split four ways
from publishing to, uh, the band and everything that got tweaked later in the, later on after
some reunions and everything, and strictly on the financial basis that everybody else had a
other living. And I was, this is all I do. Right. So I figured, well, I spend those hundreds of
hours writing songs. So we renegotiated that kind of thing. But the idea from day one is like, we've all built this together.
So we're all part of the,
part of the undertaking.
So,
you know,
we kind of,
I guess we kind of,
you know,
like it gets kind of confusing because when Steve left the band,
you know,
as a forming member,
you know,
we have a partnership.
So now Dave and I are the original members that are in the partnership.
So that's the closest it is,
but it doesn't really mean anything other than
we're the guys who will get stuck
with the debts if the band goes under.
Is that what that means?
I think so.
Whatever's in our bank-based
debts. Okay, now two more
questions on this.
One is, can you explain to me,
is it possible for you to explain to me
SoCan? Because I know Chris you to explain to me SoCan?
Because I know Chris Murphy was trying to explain SoCan and what he gets from SoCan every year.
Tell me what it is.
It's like ACTRA.
It's like a performing rights organization.
It's a royalty collection agency.
Is that from radio stations?
Yes.
When they play?
And TV.
Yeah, so venues that have live music
radio stations
television
television programs
I guess as well
all have to pay
I guess a set fee
to SoCan
and based on
whose songs
are performed
on television
whose songs
are performed
in venues
it all gets divvied up
and there's people
that work away
so is that like if
who will I pick
let's go back
to Eddie Vedder
so Pearl Jam
comes to town
oh you mean Ed yes Ed yes and ed's gonna ed plays uh henry needs a new pair of shoes i could
i could hear it playing that does that venue now need to whatever it is uh is that how it works
yeah theoretically no but the reason it doesn't work quite like that is it's not even even the
collection of songs is not on a like they i don't think they
have the algorithms to collect exactly all the plays you have so when you get paid for plays
it's not it's not like you you got played 2 000 times so you get paid x number of pennies for the
two for each time it's like they do these audits every now and then and you know um if you're in
that audit inside that audit they make a guesstimation.
So I think what it is is that oftentimes,
if you're not Bruce Springsteen or something like that,
you may get unduly paid because you showed up more often
than you actually were when they do the algorithm,
or you fall through the cracks.
So overall, I think it evened out to be pretty fair,
and they catch it.
And there are places like Maple Leaf Gardens, I was going evened out to be pretty fair and they catch it.
And there are places like Maple Leaf Gardens,
I was going to call it Maple Leaf Gardens,
the ACC.
It's not even called that anymore.
It's not even that.
It's something else now.
Scotiabank Arena.
I watch a lot of Leafs games.
Wherever that is that the Leafs play,
they're currently playing that Peace and Quiet tribute to the Leafs video that Tim Thompson
made.
We said we weren't going to talk about it.
Didn't we say we were not going to talk about it?
But it's interesting in this way.
I love talking about Tim.
Because ACC doesn't pay for that.
They don't pay SOCAN for that.
There's some loophole for that actual presentation.
They pay for in-house music that's being played.
And I would love to know whether they have to pay
for the organ player when he plays Pump It Up on the organ. I don't know if they have to
pay Costello.
There are certain little things where there are loopholes
for certain kinds of broadcasts.
That was probably more information than you wanted.
I like this inside baseball.
I just wonder, is it a
substantial amount?
For lowest to low at this point, I'm just thinking
I guess you get the odd play on
a Q107?
At this point,
you get a payment every quarter.
And right now,
I get more payments
for solo material
than I do for lowest
to the low material.
But that will change
if we play a lot of shows.
Because another element of it too
is you can put,
you can submit your set lists.
So if we play live,
I can submit all the set lists
and all the song names.
Or here's an idea
I've had for a while now.
Again, I think of myself as the target audience here.
But how about you take the alt rock that we loved in the 90s,
let's say 102.1, right?
Except we're all in our whatever 40s now, 40s and 50s,
and you have the adult alternative station,
which has sort of got a bit of,
you can go back to even the Marsden Spirit of Radio stuff
and then you can bring it into the 90s.
I mean, there would be a ton of lowest of the low,
I would think, on this station.
Theoretically.
Either that or we all just smarten up
and listen to good music wherever it is.
I love how people try to find these pockets
and demographics and stuff.
And it's like, you know,
there's people who are under 20
that have come to our shows.
Either their parents have dragged them there,
their grandparents have dragged them there.
But, you know, they'll come back and say,
that was awesome.
You know, a good band is a good band, you know?
And I'm not saying that necessarily millennials en masse
like guitar rock music like our generation did,
but those who like it, like it.
And it's out there.
And if it's a quality version of that,
they'll like it.
So, you know, it's like,
I find it funny because when we're in the generation
that we're talking about,
where the people are playing it,
we don't apply this to the swingier jazz.
We don't apply this to early blues.
Like that's just music now.
And so everybody listens to it, you know,
and it doesn't matter whether you're 18 or 80.
But when we're right in it,
when you're still living through it,
I think people suddenly get all weird about whether, you know,
who's listening to this and who's not listening to this.
It's like, it's music.
If they like it, they like it.
Well, for some people, it's their job to do that as well.
And it's an imprecise and impossible science,
but some people have to try to make sense of it.
But I feel like it's people getting paid to do something
that isn't really a job.
Well.
You know what I mean?
It's like marketing, you know, like the whole thing where they talk about,
you know, how marketing became a thing between when the teenagers were invented, right?
So marketing, so the, always the dream marketing is between what, 16 and 30 or 16 and 24.
And everybody's like, they don't have money.
Like, what are you marketing to them for?
They can't buy anything, you know?
Because that's when you, that's when you Because that's when you imprint upon people stuff.
That's when they form these things that become nostalgia later,
and nostalgia has, you know...
Right, but you're not selling nostalgia.
That's what I'm saying.
Like, if you're talking about stuff that you're, you know,
and they're sending, like, 22-year-old tastemakers into bars to set,
you know, it's like, that's great, but you're talking,
you're in a bubble here.
Like, you're in an echo chamber of people that don't really have
exposable income. How do we get tastemakers
to come to our shows? I'd love to meet one.
They might be among us. Maybe you don't even know.
Yeah, they don't announce their presence, the tastemakers.
It's funny,
though. It really is an imprecise science.
I remember that baffling... Well, it's not a science.
That's how imprecise it is.
It's faux science. I remember that baffling
experience where we were trading edits of Girona Train all night, trying to figure out how imprecise it is. It's faux science. It was just, I remember that baffling experience where we were trading edits of Gerona Train all night
trying to figure out what the CBC would consider
to put on the radio because our label was like,
well, we can't.
The song has got a 20-second bit of music
where there's no lyrics in it,
so we've got to get rid of that.
And we were trying to figure out different ways
to shorten the song.
It was all completely pointless because it was, you know,
but I mean, it just seemed like, you know,
that's maybe what used
to happen all the time. I don't know. Well, the thing is,
though, that's a very good example because it's
the same band we're talking about and in the 90s
our managers at the time were
just apoplectic about the idea
that we wanted to apply with
Rosie and Gray. They were like, it's a minute before
anybody sings anything. There's a double intro. What do you need
a double intro for? You got to cut one of those intros.
And of course, as I say, we were just eight middle fingers
sticking up all the time at that point.
So it was like, we were like, you know, screw you.
Like, that's the song.
You know, either they take it or they don't.
And of course, they took it and ran with the ball.
And then that imprinted this thing in our heads
that we were right and that you should always
just stick your middle fingers up,
which is probably not the case.
But I still think there's an element of smoke and mirrors
and it's about you're chasing, you's about you're chasing your tail about...
The most ludicrous one was a guy I respect wildly,
Kim Cook, he's a friend of ours
and he's the label owner of Fairmum,
was talking about the trail at the delay,
bop, bop, bop, bop, bop, at the end of the song
and that we had to cut that because...
Oh, power lines, yeah.
And I was like, you know what?
They'll cut that.
We don't have to cut that.
If it's too much, they'll chop it off.
They'll interrupt it.
They'll start another song over.
They'll do whatever they want, yeah.
We're concerned about things that aren't real concerns.
Yeah.
All right.
Sorry.
Or it won't even go that far.
It won't even get that far up the ladder.
So fake science is bad, everyone.
That's what we're here to say.
CanCon rules.
Now, you guys are playing Buffalo
and I understand you're rather big in Buffalo.
They like us.
They like you in Buffalo.
We like them.
And I'm going to guess,
I'm going to extrapolate.
I'm going to try to problem solve you.
Because they could hear you
from Toronto radio stations,
probably mostly 102.1. Exactly. And so, I mean, of course, people hear you from Toronto radio stations, probably mostly 102.1.
Exactly.
And so, I mean, of course, people hear you.
They like you because it's good.
Good music is good music.
So I guess I'm curious to know your thoughts
on the fact we have CanCon and how it helped your career.
Does Shakespeare My Butt get that kind of rotation
if there's no Can con rules uh in place
i think so i think it would have because i think the phenomenon that that got all the exposure for
shakespeare my butt was it was a very deliberate initiative by by cfmy at the time to play local
independent canadian music that's what that was their thing. I don't know that there were...
It wasn't enforced CanCon, I don't think.
It was not.
I think it was personal diligence.
Yeah, what was the radio play like
all over the country, though?
I mean, was it adopted in the same way?
It wasn't adopted anywhere similarly as The Edge,
but there was no Edge.
Like, you know, everybody we talked about,
everybody I ever complained about radio
had the nerve to complain about radio
once I left Toronto would go,
are you kidding me?
You know, because we had the edge.
We had, you know, even like CKLN and CIUT and stuff.
We had a lot of options for independent music, so.
Yeah, I've always been,
I've been a fan of CanCon, I think,
because I think it does help
we live in the shadow
of the behemoth
there's so much
culture coming over the border
and I don't even know if it applies as much today
the internet has sort of made the world
a much smaller place
in a lot of ways but I can't help but think that there
were artists that did get exposure
on Canadian radio that wouldn't have received
it otherwise if the
programmers could have simply put out the
most popular American stuff on
24-7.
For that I think it's a good thing.
I sort of have a recollection of Brian
Adams being very upset
in the 90s.
Because he suddenly
didn't qualify as CanCon
because he recorded the album with a British producer
and he recorded it, I assume, in Switzerland
or something like that.
Something like that.
And maybe co-wrote the songs with Mutt Lang.
I don't know.
But he wasn't Canadian enough to qualify for CanCon.
Now, at the end of the day,
I'm not sure that that prevented Brian Adams
from being on Canadian radio.
Think of how big he would have been.
I don't think so.
Yes, think of how big Bryan Adams would have been.
You mean they could have played that jam more?
Everything I do, I do it for you?
Wasn't that on high rotation everywhere forever?
Yeah, sure.
Still probably is.
And, you know, so I don't, you know,
he was not very fond of it
because he felt it was holding him back in some ways.
I don't know, maybe it was, but I don't know. We were he was not very fond of it because he felt it was holding him back in some ways. I don't know, maybe it was,
but I don't know.
We were always sort of
outside looking in on that
so it's kind of hard to see,
you know,
if it was a real problem.
So I think it probably did good.
I think it probably still does good,
but the digital
and landscape
that we're living in right now
I think has very different rules
and it's hard to figure out
how that all works.
I know I said the CanCon question
was the last question,
but now I'm just curious
because I struggle with this.
The radio and much music,
those two channels, if you will,
used to be what would curate,
sort of present to me the music of the day
and it was kind of curated.
I would listen to, be it Bookie or whoever alan cross or whoever would kind of like give it a
little context sometimes and then uh you discover music that way and i'd be like oh i really like
that uh song about henry he's got this new pair of shoes and i go pick up the the disc and so uh
today i don't know how like how does it work today like who's curating and presenting it i know i
have teenagers,
and I know they listen to a lot of music,
but they're listening to big American hip-hop acts
is primarily what they're listening to.
But how do you cut through the noise?
I suspect the answer for us is we probably don't.
Like Lazy Days.
Let me just be specific.
Like Lazy Days.
I heard it.
I loved it.
I tweeted it.
We just played it.
It's going to be on the Shakespeare My Box, which is going to be bought
by fans of Lowest of the Low, right?
So how do you
get people to hear
a song like that in 2018?
Well, I don't know
the absolute answer to that.
For us, we're going to go and play it in front
of people. And that's not a
glib answer. That's really how we're...
That's not just us.
I think that's the...
What's the phrase I'm looking for?
It's every dimension
or every exponentially bigger band than us
still does this,
but in an exponentially bigger level.
It's still down to playing in front of people.
I think no matter how big you are,
you're not just sitting
back waiting for the radio to do it.
I guess I feel when you're playing
in front of lowest of the low fans.
That's the converted, and you're in church,
and these people all believe.
How do we get to new people?
Because the radio was the old way, the way I grew up with.
The flip now, though, is
I get angry and get...
I get judgy and pointy when I talk to people my age
who do such, you know, the minute the sentence starts,
there's no good, you know, I want to just head them off
at the pass because there's so much good music made.
You know, I'm always saying there's more good music now made
than you could ever listen to.
So, you know, and I don't just mean good by some weird abstract,
I mean, music that you like, music that you would and i don't just mean good by some weird abstract i mean music that you
like music that you would like if you heard it um and i just every now and then i'll just do a dive
in youtube or wherever it is right you just look around and uh like recently this i just played
four sold-out shows at the only cafe and brought um a performer named sky wallace uh with me who
some of your of uh your fans will know uh and, and she's a, you know, like a folk
artist, but also has a band and she's probably in her mid twenties and she's very, very achieved
and has it all down and has a couple of records. She just made a record with Jim Bryson, but I just
discovered her completely by accident from a video that was on YouTube and, uh, and then tracked her
down and then asked her to come to the the shows. And that's the thing.
So then she came and played for whatever that might have been
over the four nights, 200 people.
And I would be shocked if she didn't gain 100 new fans.
So I think it still can work that way, which is the old way,
which is really no different.
Replace YouTube with Sam the Record Man,
and that's what I used to just go around and look in the bins, right?
So I think it's kind of a contemporary version of that, right?
For those who are curious and want to look around for stuff
and actually care about music or care, you know.
I mean, obviously our lives get in the way
and there's a lot of stuff to do, but.
My apologies that we're already an hour in.
Is that okay? Okay, good.
I'm just making sure you're not late for the hockey game.
No, no, that's not. I have to get out here by five we're fine
we're fine tap your head if you ever need a bathroom break how's that for a signals we'll
have signals okay are you okay to all right you're gonna perform yeah sure some music and
thanks lawrence for reminding me to record this. And when she smiled all you thought about was running up suicide hill
Nothing short of a bullet could have broken your will
And all for the hand of Magdalena
Your boots planted in the soil of Spain
Like her tears in the Spanish rain
All for the hand of Magdalena
Clyde gave her with a bayonet
You never thought anyone could look so cool
She could handle that Soviet pistol
Like she learned to do it in school
You found it live in an area
Bombshell section, injection
You were wet with fear
She was wet with passion
All for the hand of Magdalena.
Your boots planted in the soil of Spain.
Like her tears in the Spanish rain.
All for the hand of Magdalena.
Your mother could never understand why her son took the car to arms.
And her father could never understand that she could fall for your
Republican charms
Magdalena, Magdalena
Magdalena
The choice was never ours In a week and a half
You'll be walking down 42nd Street again
And you could read it in the New York Times
The plagiarizing in this damning way
And you could read it in the New York Times, the plagiarizing in his tamming way And you could touch that spot where the fascist bullet nearly severed your arm
But that's nothing like the way that your soul is scarred
And all for the hand of Magdalena, your heart broken in the soil of Spain
Like her tears in the Spanish rain All for the hand of Magdalena
Your blood's red like the soil of Spain
Like her tears in the Spanish rain
All for the hand of Magdalena
The hand of Magdalena
The hand of Magdalena.
Amazing. Amazing.
I have to assure everyone listening that there was no edits.
I didn't re-do it.
That was just live on the floor.
That was sensational.
Oh, tampering. Thank you.
Ron's had a guitar on the whole time we've been talking.
I've been dying to do that.
Oh, my goodness.
Thanks so much here.
Well, thank you for having us and helping us spread our image. This is another component of convincing people to come and listen to you play music live.
And I think a whole bunch of people just heard Lazy Days for the first time when you played it earlier.
Yes.
And maybe some people just heard For the Hand of Magdalena for the first time.
That's right.
You never know.
But not for the last time, though.
I sing your praises at every opportunity.
That is the sincere truth.
I think you guys are fantastic here.
And now we can kick out some jams here.
So it's just like last time.
I'm going to play the song and then I'll break it down.
And then I want to hear why you love the track. I'm feeling shitty
Cause you're so pretty
And I know that when I fall
You will not be home
I want you to be
Don't be so cruel to me
Don't keep me wondering
If I'm right or I'm dumb
Cause I know that's just you.
And I know you're gonna do whatever you want to. Yeah, I'm so lonely. I want you only in
every other cliche that I can think of. In every other cliche that I can't think of, think of, think of, think of.
The cliche song, Junior Gone Wild.
I don't know, maybe this tale has grown in the telling a bit.
I don't think so.
In August of 1990, that was the first time I ever toured Canada.
I was part of a little folk trio called the Pale Criminal at the time, a fellow named James Paul from Toronto,
and a fellow named Steve Mitchell who was from Vancouver.
And we went out in a 1974 Datsun to drive across Canada and play shows.
And we got as far as Winnipeg, and then Steve discovered he was diabetic,
so immediately flew home to Vancouver,
and we became a little folk duo, me and James.
And we met some really cool other musicians along the way.
So this was August 1990.
When we got to Regina, there were two people,
two fellows working at the bar that we played at.
A fellow named Keith was the bartender,
and a fellow named Jason was working the soundboard.
And those guys were two-thirds of the band The Waltons.
And they gave me a little cassette of their demos.
And then, which I listened to constantly on the drive
and afterwards when I got home.
I thought they were fantastic.
And then a few days later,
we opened up for Junior Gone Wild
at the Westwood Club in Calgary,
who I had never met before.
And it was the same thing.
They were simply fantastic.
They were sort of doing this sort of country punk...
It was this incredible hybrid,
and Mike McDonald, who wrote a lot of the songs,
had a real sort of acerbic wit to him
that really comes through in those songs.
And I bought their little cassette.
It was called Folk You, The Guido Sessions,
and it was a collection of live tracks,
and they were gearing up to release their,
I guess it was maybe their first major label album
or something, it was on Stony Plain,
and that was a song we just heard
was called The Cliché Song.
But when I got back to Toronto,
I was playing these tapes for a lot of people
that I knew, and I remember playing
Junior Gone Wild stuff for Ron,
and I seem to remember when our bands teamed up
to play Night at the Cabana, we all piled on stage and covered a Junior Gone Wild stuff for Ron. And I seem to remember when our bands teamed up to play Night at the Cabana,
we all piled on stage and covered
a Junior Gone Wild song back there.
So I consider them to be sort of touchstone
of my first great trip across Canada.
So I have a great fondness for them.
And I think, I don't know,
I mean, you really dug their sound too, right?
Yeah, and the cliche song became a staple
with the low we used to play these shows
as a three-piece at a place called the Blue Moon Saloon,
which was just mayhem. It was like a tiny bar
that wasn't really built for it. We were jammed in the corner
and people would be standing on tables
and on the bar and dancing and stuff like that.
But we, hearing
those guys before that, hearing those guys was one
of the, you know, there were probably three
or four different pieces of a blueprint that
helped me put the idea of what I was writing for Lowest to the Low together out
of the ashes of a band called Popular Front that I used to have, which was sort of a big
more, much more sort of world beat stuff and some ska stuff and, you know, two-tone and
all that kind of stuff.
And then I just sort of got this cow punk thing, you know, and the sarcastic, we used
to call it sarcastic folk punk. And that,
you know, those guys, Junior Gomwald was certainly one of the early progenitors of it. And I sort of
saw that too. And, you know, it all came, came into focus like that. Oh yeah, you can do that, right?
We, last, last year we, we went out and played some shows with them in Alberta and it was really,
really, really great to go out and do that again.
Because also we had never played together.
We were fans of each other but had never
crossed the country and stuff but never played
on the same stage.
All 10 stories are going to be as good as this.
I'm in for a treat.
You've got some Waltons mentioned in there.
I got head licked by a tractor.
I still put Naked Rain on my mixes and stuff.
I still see Jason every time we go through Regina.
He runs a studio there,
and he's playing with a bunch of people out there,
and it's good to see him.
He's a great songwriter and terrific singer.
And yeah, I was a great big fan of those guys.
Terrible speller, though.
Lick My Tractor.
That's right.
Let's kick out another one.
He don't know how to lie Or undermine you
He don't know how to steal
How to deal or deceive
So leave him alone
Set him free
Cause he's speaking with the angel.
Speaking with the angel.
That only he can save.
Ron Sexsmith, speaking with the angel.
Yeah, so I came across Ron.
We both grew up in East End, so I would run into him every now and then when I was a teenager
and before I moved out west and then didn't know anything about him until I was, you know,
probably early lowest of the low, I would start seeing him play shows.
I remember a show at the El Macombo
and a couple of shows at the Cabana Room as well
that I went with my then-girlfriend Kathleen,
who we were both big fans and would go see him a lot.
And we were often the only ones dancing on the dance floor
when they were piling the chairs up at the end,
and Ron would still be playing.
He was sort of trying to usher people out.
So there was a certain vibe, a certain sort of honky-tonky
kind of sad-sacky vibe you'll be shocked to know
about those Ron Sexman shows.
And the thing I love about this is I got the tape
Grand Opry Lane.
It was a cassette, and I think it was,
I'm pretty sure it was produced by Bob Wiseman,
and it was very sort of roughly and uniquely produced by Bob.
Bob's got quite a touch, but it's not a very mainstream touch.
And I thought it would perfectly cut against Ron's,
the sweetness of Ron's songs and his voice and everything.
And then I was always sort of underwhelmed and disappointed
by some of the production that happened later with Ron's songs
because it was like, you know, big string sections and stuff.
And I thought, you know, do you really need to pour some icing sugar, pour some sugar on rock?
Not to use another Bon Jovi reference.
That's Def Leppard, man.
Oh, Def Leppard.
Def Leppard Incorporated.
Probably.
Again, another person who
I think
agonizes over the lyrics in the songs,
which I have been known to do as well.
So he really struck a chord with me.
You also, like in those Blue Moon shows,
one of the staples with that was Tell You?
Was the name of the song?
Yeah.
And that was from Grand Opry Lane as well.
Yeah.
Boy, this is really taking me back.
Nostalgia is very powerful.
It's a potent drug.
I only want to listen to this cassette tape.
And nothing he's done since.
He's doing the Andy Kim Christmas show.
Have you guys ever done the Andy Kim Christmas show?
He's done 14 years apparently he's been doing this thing.
And the next band we play is on the bill too.
Andy, call us.
I had a 20-minute conversation with Andy on a couch.
Just met him.
I was going to do a radio thing.
And Andy was going to do a radio thing and Andy was going to do a radio thing
but we got
bumped, not bumped, but we got sort of
delayed by Ziggy Marley
who showed up with his entourage.
And I don't know if you've ever seen Ziggy Marley in person.
No. I imagine it's, you know,
I'm only talking about
megawatt smile here. I'm not talking about
artistic output, but
that must have been what it was like to be in Bob
Marley's presence. Ziggy Marley
smiles and I would have
went right to the bank and given him all
my money. He just has this unbelievably
charming, right
into the deepness of your heart smile on his face.
Anyway, so he came in, so they ushered him right
past me and Andy and we were left on the couch
talking about, you know, I got to chat with Andy
about his childhood and about lowest low and all this kind of stuff and we were left on the couch talking about, you know, and I got to chat with Andy about his childhood
and about, you know,
lowest to low and all this kind of stuff,
and we'd never met.
We left there and we were like kind of fast friends,
and he's a good friend of Kevin Drew's as well.
Kevin was like,
oh yeah,
I thought you guys would hit it off if you ever met.
He's the sugar sugar man.
He's the sugar man.
He's the sugar man.
Not sugar man.
No, that's another,
I'm searching for that guy.
That's right.
Man, amazing.
This next band, so Andy from this next band has been here.
Yes, he has.
That was pretty fantastic, actually.
But let's play it, and then we'll talk about it. Accusations all around you
You know this is nothing new
Accusations up and down you
Now you don't know what to do.
So this is Skydigger's
Accusation.
It's just occurring to me
that I don't think this song is available anymore.
I think they had some difficulty with their label.
When you were talking about keeping ownership of the master tapes,
Andy told me that story.
They had to re-record it because they lost the rights to it.
Yeah, they had to re-release the album, but just as all of the demos.
So this is the original version.
It was a terrific record, and it's terrible that that happened to them.
This was one of my absolute favorite bands
when I was, I guess,
around 20 years old
when this came out
and I used to go and see them
all the time.
I used to go see them
and the Grievous Angels
and the 13 Engines.
Right.
I was a big fan of them as well.
More and all that stuff.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
What's funny about that
is Dave Alexander
was a huge Skydiggers fan
and was at all the Skydiggers shows as well
so Lawrence and David were probably at the same shows together
not knowing each other
I was probably standing in front of him
he was like that guy's taller than me
he should be behind me
speaking of Christmas shows
you got Skydiggers near Christmas time at the Horseshoe
that's an annual staple
just recently I got to
I felt very lucky.
I got an invite to go to Revolution Recording
where Andy and his band recorded a live album
on the floor of the studio
that maybe will come out next year.
And it was a wonderful thing to sit and watch.
They're just terrific.
I think he's a fantastic singer
and I've always been a big fan.
And it's great to sing along to the Skydiggers.
I think he told me that I Will Give You Everything was the first song he ever wrote.
Like that was the first song he ever wrote.
It's a pretty decent way to start off with an upper.
Although maybe he's modified the story.
Who knows?
But that's what he says.
Anyways, in public there.
He's like, hey, I got an idea.
I got an idea.
How about this one?
I confused Andy Mays
with the guy
who fixed my furnace
because I had,
the guy who fixed my furnace,
long story,
but my phone,
I had the names
in the wrong,
the numbers
under the wrong names
and I left a message
for Andy
that he had to come back
because it was like minus 20
and the kids were freezing
and Andy nicely
let me know
I had the wrong guy.
So it's fine.
You're going to say
the guy came out and said, this is the first furnace I've ever fixed. Next time I had the wrong guy. You're going to say the guy came out and said,
this is the first furnace I've ever fixed.
Next time I tell this story,
I'm going to have Andy over here fixing my furnace.
Let's kick out another one. All right
Hey
Please don't tell me something
Something I don't wanna hear The sea something I don't want to hear.
The sea's falling down without making a sound, and a rumfresh won't even go near.
All right, all right, it's all right.
All right, all right, it's all right.
All right, all right, it's all right.
All right, all right, it's all right.
Cadillac Tramps, alright This would be honorary CanCon
Yeah, those guys are from Orange County
And we actually played with them
Most of the time we played with them at the Town Pump in Vancouver
One time
And they opened for us
And I was the only guy
The other guys were all in the dressing room
I was the only guy on the floor watching them
And story goes, I sort of walked in And I was the only guy the other guys were all in the dressing room I was the only guy on the floor watching them and
story goes I sort of walked in
and I was white as a ghost and they said
I was like we gotta fucking
crank it up tonight man
those guys are incredible so
they were doing what you're hearing now
and then we had to go on after them so
it taught us a very valuable lesson because
we became fast friends with them and
anytime we had to go on after them, we hit the stage running.
You know, like you hit the stage at the place where you might have been
when you go off to do your own course because you're so pumped.
Right, right, right.
So we became friends.
And as I say, they're from Orange County, California.
But they spent so much time in Toronto and in Canada touring around.
And we went down the west coast of the States with them as well.
But Gabby, their singer, would tell me that, you that you know I said do you ever have trouble getting into Canada he said no no he said we have no trouble getting into Canada he
said we have trouble getting back into the United States because they'd go they were all like you
know fairly big tattooed dudes that actually met in prison and formed their band in rehab because
they were all on very dangerous courses and they had this rule
that you know the band would keep them all alive if they were in the band to the point where we
were on tour one night uh with them and we didn't know this i didn't know about the origin story so
i asked their bass player warren if he wants to come out drinking with us and he was kind of like
hemming and hawing and he's he's like yeah maybe and i was like okay and came back knocked later
and he's like no i'm I'm not going to come.
And then I found out the next day that they had a band rule that if anybody fell off the wagon, they beat the shit out of them.
You know, because that was the way they could deal with it, right?
Yeah, fantastic people.
And Gabby actually just died last year.
Oh, I'm sorry to hear that.
Yeah, very prematurely.
Because, you know, they all had very tough lives.
And I think it caught up to Gabby, but he died of cancer.
That's too bad.
Yeah.
But they reign supreme in the mythology of our band,
for sure.
Absolutely.
It's called hate.
It goes like this.
Yeah.
Although I'm going to need a ruling, Lawrence,
because Orange County, I'm not sure I can allow that one.
But I'm going to let it.
Since now that he's passed, I'm going to let that in.
Yeah.
There you go.
There you go. Sorry to learn that in. There you go.
Sorry to learn that news.
But yeah, they were a big part of the story.
Yeah, for sure.
And I think, you know,
sorry, I was just going to say,
they also kind of were a big inspiration with the band Lawrence and I had after the Los Alos
called the Rusty Nails.
There was a lot of that kind of bluesy, punky.
We covered one of their songs as well.
We covered the song their songs as well.
We covered the song Venice.
Cool.
All right.
Ready for the next jam. I think I know what's next. guitar solo
There's a tune, I bring it in my ear
That always starts me singing
There's a doubt that is hiding with my fear
Something starts it stinging, yeah
And my head starts to spin and to sink
And my arms are too tired to feel
Here we are in this slow boat
Wishing for a sail
Wishing for a Sail.
Also, I think,
a big part of the story.
And, you know,
I guess a theme.
There's two people
on this recording
that are not with us anymore.
James Julian,
the bass player,
and Larry Grimes,
the singer,
are both gone.
Yeah, they were
a real spark plug.
You know, and again,
speaking about
Junior Gone Wild
and it being an artistically inspirational thing,
I think Dig Circus, I wouldn't say so much was an artistic inspiration to us
as much as we love the band and their music.
They make different kind of music than us,
but I remember Steve and David and I used to,
before we even had a bass player for Los Lowe,
we used to go to the Free Times Cafe and do these open stages,
bring new songs out, try them.
And, you know, there's a bit of a quagmire
in that folk scene,
which is that something that we used to refer to
as canoe songs.
You know, like there would be seven people
playing what we would, you know,
call canoe songs in a very derogatory manner.
Just, you know, straight up folk music, right?
And then these guys came running in one day out of nowhere seven of them or six of them however many there
were and jamie was wearing a top hat with the top cut out with his hair sticking out of the top of
the top hat and it was literally like what the like we're we've been sort of home invaded you
know it was like and then they just literally ran up on stage and played their songs which kind of
blew us away and just the energy the manic energy it, the circus of it, they became fast friends with us. And, you know, we played shows together.
I name dropped them on Pellucid Genia. And Larry and I actually, the singer, were kind of partners
in crime in some very deep, dark ways all through the early 90s and uh that i think i guess that caught up with larry in the aughts but uh yeah big inspiration for us oh and some of the you know guys in the dig circus
went on to become fembots as well uh another group that incredibly great group that are friends of
ours i noticed the jams are short like relatively speaking i think none of them hit four minutes i
don't think well Well, not yet.
Probably one.
There's probably one,
but yeah, I noticed that too.
It's because we're not hippies, Mike.
Yeah.
I remember the last time we were here,
I edited down the 11-minute song
to a respectable five and a half.
Last time I kicked out the jam,
somebody picked The Doors, The End.
No kidding.
Yeah.
Wow.
You know what?
It was acid test.
Did you ever,
do you know?
Speaking of musicians,
Steve Fall,
who they only recently
got back together actually,
but he's a guitar teacher
to make cash.
Not too far from here actually,
but yeah,
he kicked out
because he loved Apocalypse Now
and The End is prominent there,
but it's like,
I don't know how many minutes it is,
but it's maybe 14 or something.
I think Jim Morrison and Francis Coppola
went to school together.
Is that right?
At a certain point, yeah.
It was like,
it might have been at,
Reform School?
It might have even been at film school
or something like that.
I did not know that.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure I read that.
Don't hesitate to bury me in fun facts like that.
Yeah.
Crazy about them.
It might be a quasi fact.
I don't know.
You can look that up. I'll Google it later. You can Google it later. An alternative fact. An alternative fact. Crazy about them. It might be a quasi-fact. I don't know. You can look that up.
I'll Google it later.
You can Google it later.
An alternative fact.
An alternative fact.
Oh my goodness.
Now let's hear the next jam.
The next jam. Someone always leaves that light on
I have dreams that little boys burn a house
They set afire the ivy
in the window pane
up from the ground
Fire drills
and skilful uniform
Wallpaper's warm
Wallpaper's warm
He's gone up
He's gone up
He's gone up to lie down
I stand, I wait He's gone up, he's gone up, he's gone up to lie down.
I stand, I wait, and I go quietly.
What's a minute hand?
How could it be stolen from you?
Cold tap.
Dental freeze Weeping tile
Cold snap
What a jam this is.
Holy smokes.
Love it.
I think it's under
three minutes too.
It's just all
killer no filler
as they say.
That'll be
Is that Colin playing guitar?
Colin Cripps?
Oh, no, he was in Crash Vegas.
Luther.
Luther.
He's the right color.
He's the right, okay.
There you go.
Yeah, another comrades of ours.
I really like Sarah Harbour.
What a boss, huh?
Like, just great
Yeah, there's a real thing about
You know, when I listen to this
Some of the vocal choices
Some of the note choices
Are really incredible
Because it's a
You know, it's a pop song
Sort of
But it's got all this
Sort of art rock
You know
Like jazz notes in it
You know
That one
You know, they're not where you would expect them to go
set your teeth on edge in a good way
that's instinct
that's what that is
powerful
can't teach that stuff
you could parse it later on
run a little clinic about it
but it's not an exact science
you could teach to make a living while you were writing it and run a little clinic about it, but it's not an exact science.
You could teach to make a living while you were writing it.
Fantastic.
We played a few gigs with Weeping Tile.
Yeah, and I used to go see Sarah when she was in the Saddle Tramps,
which was before that,
and back at the old Diamond Club.
The old Diamond Club. The old Diamond Club.
Ay, ay, ay.
Ready to kick out another one?
Sure, bring it.
There's more music from the 90s?
What?
What? You decide the place you want to set
But it's never fast and you know how fast it hasn't done it yet
Take your time and it ends up taking mine
Baby, you and me, the company we hide
And I spent hours on the way To change the view and rain to lay Sour Landslide
Human Rain Delay.
These were some of the people that,
under the name The Coles,
opened up the Shakespeare My Butt
cassette and CD release party
at the Ultrasound Show Bar in 1991.
Wow.
I guess The Coles broke up and D and Vince...
Was Vernon The Coles?
I don't think so
I don't think he was
I think
Sour Landslide
was what remained
and
and they were another
band that we toured
we toured with them
across Canada
in the Rusty Nails
after Lowest to the Low
but did lots of gigs
with them
yeah I lost the low
I toured with them
in 90
oh that's right
you brought the hockey sticks
with us
yeah yeah yeah.
The Nets.
The weirdest moment there being we played First Avenue in Minneapolis
where they shot perpouring.
And we were opening for Shonen Knife, another blast from the 90s.
And we showed up.
We got there super early for some reason.
So we brought the Nets into the club with the sticks
and set up on the dance floor and started playing ball hockey.
And all the guys, all these Minneapolis dudes that were in the rigging and everything all came out of
the ceiling and everything oh my god yeah and they grabbed the hockey sticks and started playing us
and then shonen knife the japanese women from shonen knife walked out on the stage like
completely like what the hell is going on and i think later on that tour vince the writer he's a huge Replacements fan and I'm a huge Clash fan.
And we got into what can only happen in your 20s in a band house on the road, which is we got in a late night kitchen argument over which band was better.
And we at some point and we both love each other and, you know, and loved each other through this whole thing.
It was, you know, a sort of loving antagonism.
But we were really, really ramping each other up and at a certain point it seemed sensible for us to take all the
empty bottles that we had drank while we were fighting about this and throw them through the
glass kitchen window so we basically took out all the windows in the kitchen of the band house
while while the rest of our bands slept in the other room and you know incongruously got up the
next day and we're like what that's rock rock and roll, man. We played with Sour Landslide.
Strangely, we never solved the argument either.
We played with them the night Princess Diana died.
We were in Edmonton that night.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't remember what year that was, but I remember.
97.
97.
So that's, oh boy.
In the 90s, I think Sour Landslide,
I always thought they were the best band.
Everybody we knew.
I thought they were just better than everybody.
He's only telling me this now.
I just thought,
I was just like,
oh man,
I wish I could be that good.
And yeah,
and you know,
I don't know.
Are we playing a lot of songs
that people don't know?
So I can tell you,
I'm ashamed to admit this,
but I'm going to tell you,
real talk,
I don't know Sour Landslide.
I don't know this band.
I don't think you're alone there.
They were a band that could go and they could
play a great show and they did it all across
Canada and really win people over, but it just
never seemed to happen for them.
I never understood though.
Frustratingly, they also were critically
acclaimed.
So they were critically acclaimed and they
always were fan favorites with our fans
anytime we played.
And it got so hard for them that it was like,
after two or three records that didn't sell enough,
didn't sell as many records as they wanted to
and just it didn't seem to be building,
Vince went a bit crazy and was threatening
to bury all his instruments in the backyard.
Dee, the drummer, is also his partner.
She had to hijack all the instruments out of there
and hide them at her mom's house.
Wow. Because he was literally going to bury them.
I always wondered for a band like Sour Landslide,
was it just a question of like they needed,
I don't know, because Moe Berg was just
here and he was talking about how they just filmed that video
for I'm an Adult Now and a lurk.
They tried to drop it off at like 299 Queen Street
and then suddenly it's on high rotation
on Much Music and he said the rest is history.
Like that was it.. Is it just they needed
a hit to get
played? Well, that's the thing with them. They had
nothing but hits. All their songs are that
catchy. That sounds
catchy, poppy, power poppy.
Every song was just a gem.
They were so deliberately catchy. So they mismanaged?
Is it a record? I get a lot of great bands in here that talk
about the record company.
Maybe that's it. I don't think they were managed.
Yeah.
Anyway, you know, yeah.
We were mismanaged.
They were not managed at all.
Those are the choices in the 90s,
mismanaged or not managed at all.
But anyway, kudos.
I mean, they're still one of my favorites,
you know, things when I think about the 90s.
I could hum any number of Sour Landslide songs
and instantly be happier.
I got some catching up to do.
Yeah.
Here's another jam.
piano plays softly
My city's still breathing but barely it's true
Through buildings gone missing like teeth
The sidewalks are watching me think about you
Sparkled with broken glass
I'm back with scars to show
back with
the streets
I know
will never take me
anywhere but here The stain in the carpet, this drink in my hand
The strangers whose faces I know
We meet here for our dress rehearsal to say
I wanted it this way
Wait for the year to drown
Spring forward, Fall back down
I'm trying not to wonder where you are
The weaker than's left and leaving.
Weaker than's are amazing.
I'm just going to start with that, Lawrence.
Now it's your turn.
Yeah, they're amazing amazing this has got us
all the way up to
year 2000 now
I think
hasn't it
oh
Ron and I
along with Jules Penner
opened for the Weaker Thans
at the
album release
for this
in Winnipeg
we did two nights
at the
West End Cultural Center
I think
this is a great album Left and Leaving by the Weaker Thans it's We did two nights at the West End Cultural Center, I think.
This is a great album, Left and Leaving, by the Week of Ends.
It really is wonderful.
I want to say that Stephen Brunt kicked this out on his jam list.
Oh, did he?
Yeah. Oh, nice.
Have you ever done his Newfoundland Songwriter Festival?
I don't know if you know if it exists, but yeah, you'd be perfect. Anyway. Does it happen in Newfoundland songwriter festival. I don't know if you know if it exists. But yeah, you'd be perfect.
Anyway.
Does it happen in Newfoundland? It happens in Newfoundland, yeah.
And is it songwriters?
It's Canadian songwriters.
And Stephen Brunt is on the committee
that organizes it.
Does he do stand-up comedy
as well? No stand-up,
but he's a Newfoundlander. Of course he does.
He lives all summer in Newfoundland. He's got He's a Newfoundlander. Of course he does.
He lives all summer in Newfoundland.
He's got a place
in Newfoundland.
We should all be so lucky.
So,
Weaker Thans,
though,
I was telling somebody
this the other day
that they were on
G7,
the first record,
I think,
was on G7,
and that's
Propagandhi's label,
Chris Hanna
from Propagandhi.
So,
I was friends
with Chris Hanna.
It's on your guitar.
Yeah, I was friends with Chris Hanna and I emailed him your guitar. Yeah, I was friends with Chris Hanna,
and I emailed him one day, or probably didn't email him,
probably telephoned him and said,
look, none of your records are in the stores in Toronto.
And I said, if you send me the records,
I will take them around on my bike and distribute them.
I'll be your distributor on my bike.
So I was doing that to Soundscapes and Rotate
and all this kind of stuff, driving them around.
And so my payback was that he sent me all the records off on the label, check them out. And, you
know, there's an awful lot of German metal and, you know, stuff like that. So I would
be checking stuff out, stuff would be going into a pile that I was probably not going
to listen to again. And then I put Fowl in, which is the record before this one, and was
just blown away. And, you know, and it was one of those aha moments where you sort of, I often reference the raft of the Medusa,
you know, that Jericho painting where it's like a raft.
I was always sort of saying, you know,
like we're just floating around in this society
that I don't feel super comfortable in all the time.
And when you meet somebody cold, you know,
like not somebody you've known for a while or whatever,
but you meet somebody cold who seems to think
the same way you do or, you know,
is part of your tribe or whatever.
It's like, hey, you're on the raft.
And I remember feeling like the weaker thanns were on the raft.
My lovely lady Alex is in Winnipeg right now
rehearsing music with Christine Fellows,
whose husband is John K. Sampson.
And they're going to be playing some shows in the next couple of weeks.
They'll be at the Burdock in Toronto
next Sunday, I want to say, in a week
and a half. Also an early and a late show.
Early and a late show. Christine Fellows
is wonderful, wonderful. I was going to say this.
I was going to say small world, but it is a small
Canadian music world, right?
It's a big country, but a small world for sure.
By the way, Lawrence,
I don't know why, but
there's 11 jams on your list.
Right now, I was looking at the list
and I had one missing because I had 10
and I'm like, why am I missing a jam?
That's what I was doing over there.
Top 11.
We went up to 11.
Spinal tap.
Are we allowed to play 11?
I make the rules around here.
I'm going to allow it.
Also, one of these was an American act,
so technically now we're back to 10 Canadian acts
with a bonus jam.
So we'll see how it all works out here.
10 Canadians and then...
All right.
Here we go.
Wow. Proxy by proxy
And the sound remains
To be delivered
In such a way
We wish it in here
And a wish is here
Yeah
Proxy.
This song should have been a monster hit.
I don't understand why it wasn't.
This just calls out for windows rolled down
and driving around in the summertime.
I was going to say, how come Weezer can have monster hits?
You know what I mean?
This is better than anything Weezer ever did. Right, right. And it's Canadian. I don't know. I don't know what the summertime i was gonna say how come weezer can have monster hits and then you know what i mean like what's better than anything we ever did right right and it's canadian i don't
know i don't know the answer this was independently released vaguely sloan asked about it as well
so this is from 2001 um this is the second blertonio record ian blerton was in a band
called change of heart He was a change of
heart for years and years and years and years. And then he sort of struck out on his own. And
this is the second Blurtonia record. And right around the time he was doing this, he had already
produced one of the Rusty Nails records and he produced that Weaker Thans album that we just
heard from. So he was part of the story for sure. And in a couple of years down the road he would produce Sorted Fiction
for Lois to the Lo as well, so
he was growing an enormous beard and working with us
all at the same time.
Simultaneously.
And this song is so fantastic.
I could see it growing as we were recording.
Yeah, so, again.
Yeah, I'd say Ian maybe
falls into the category of a lot of bands
that are sort of undersung for sure, right?
I think so.
Ian as a writer, I think, undersung.
Ian has, I think, a certain legendary status, but I don't know that enough people actually know his music.
I think more people should.
He's got an incredible body of work.
They don't hand you $5 a day for being a living legend.
Nope.
body of work. They don't hand you $5 a day for being a living legend. Nope.
On that first tour that I talked
about earlier in 1990, we were
one day behind Change of Heart.
Everywhere we went, there were empties.
We were still sitting around the band rooms and stuff.
I feel Change of Heart, again,
I'm going back to Much Music, that tells you how much
of an impression it made on me, but Change of Heart,
I remember, you know,
they got video play on Much Music.
That's the thing, this idea of the visuals of great success, right?
Because we suffer from it too.
In Buffalo, we go to Buffalo, people think we're massive rock stars, right?
There's all kinds of assumptions about cars we drive and blah, blah, blah.
There's the optics of success.
And I think Ian as well, like you said,
even if you get to Pursuit of Happiness and Moe Berg and stuff like that,
there's a certain sense of it always seems much bigger than it really is.
And that's not to undercut it,
because I think it's big in a more important way,
like more personally and more directly,
is more important to me
anyway, but there's this sense out there that
the visuals of it are
that we're all giant rock stars.
Do either of you know Molly Johnson personally
by any chance?
I met her. I used to know her
in the 80s and early 90s.
Way back in 83
when she was in 84, when she was in Alto Moda.
Sure.
I only bring it up because I had an interesting
episode with like literal
episode like of Trotter Mike with Molly Johnson
which is unlike any others and Lawrence if you
want to check it out it's a bit of a roller coaster
ride sure
did it go sideways is that what you're saying
yeah it's the only 400 episodes almost
and I have one that went sideways and it was molly johnson and it was it was sideways before i even pressed record it had
gone sideways and uh anyway yet i don't even do it justice talking about it except uh it's like i
train wreck i can't look away it's there but uh but i uh did talk to her about how like because
molly johnson was on our televisions back when tv was the there
was an internet right and that was a big deal you're on our televisions in our living room or
family room whatever in a basement whatever you're there there is a perception that uh yeah you're
driving around in a cadillac or something because you must be rich and famous because you're on tv
like there is that perception and you get the what i what I find is Molly really set me straight very quickly to let me know
like she takes the TTC everywhere
because she's a
Canadian famous musician
and she says, you're thinking of an American
famous musician and the equivalent,
potentially the equivalent in America
might have a driver
of his Cadillac potentially.
It's a whole... It's a difference in the market
size. And I mean, that could also be a fallout
of the CanCon rules as well,
because your video would show up on MuchMusic
or on Toronto Rocks or on VideoHeads
right next to Bon Jovi, for example.
And so you're being...
Let's also not forget the Bubles and the Dions
and the Morissettes.
I mean, there have been giant Cadillacs.
Sure, but just the perception thing
that you're talking about,
the people, they see you right next to the same level as those people.
And they're like,
well,
yeah.
So we put,
we do it like a equivalency thing.
We figure it's not an unreasonable thing for people to imagine,
though.
You know,
I mean,
just,
but she's right.
The reality is,
is that,
you know,
there's perhaps not,
not as much automatic glamor associated with,
with having a video on.
So your homework is to listen to the Molly Johnson episode
and get back to me.
Oh, okay.
Your thoughts.
That's your homework.
Are you okay?
It's August.
I'm still recovering, but we're going to be okay.
Let's kick out.
And by the way, again, other than the Weaker Thans track,
everything's under four minutes, which is kind of cool.
I think this next one's super short.
It's in the title title so let's go yeah
it's better than last time but something about the tone is wrong it's only a half an average song
but it's better than nothing
it's wailing from somewhere it wants it to wail from somewhere else
it sounds like a million silver bells and it sounds like a single
but something about the tone is wrong it It's in the delivery, the action is gone.
It's only a half an average song, but it's telling you something.
The Two Minute Miracles.
So it's, yeah, the answer was in the band name, not the song name, but half an average song.
Yeah, I just love this one.
This is Andy McGoffin singing and playing instruments for you there.
Andy ran a studio in London, Ontario, called the House of Miracles,
and produced a lot of music that people would have heard.
The first Constantine's record was done there.
He made, I think, a great remote recording
of the Great Lakes Swimmers on one of their albums.
I think it was called Bodies and Minds.
I think it was that one.
Jim Guthrie's Now More Than Ever record.
He did that.
He's currently, well, if they're still going,
he plays bass for Raised by Swans
and makes their recordings.
And I think the House of Miracles is now in Cambridge,
where he runs a recording studio.
And I just always loved the way that he made music sound.
I think he captured it really, really wonderfully.
And the Two Minute Miracles was his project,
where he would record himself.
And he wrote these really, really quirky...
And they all have to be two minutes long.
It was a loose rule.
But some of them,
the first song on their second album
was 20 seconds long.
So, I mean, they varied in length,
but they were, for the most part, fairly brief.
And Half an Average Song is just...
This is a lovely, lovely little song
about, I guess, subjectivity and, you know, confidence.
Had you closed with this being the 10th jam today,
then you would have opened with the cliché song, then you would have opened with the cliche song
and you would have closed with half an average song.
It would have made you seem really smart,
I would think that was.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Another lost opportunity.
But instead, I mean, I think,
and bravo, Andy McGoffin.
I think Two Minute Miracles is still available
on iTunes and everything.
They haven't put out an album in a while, but it's all good.
Go and check it out.
But I think we're just finishing with the biggest baller song
we could think of from last year.
We're skipping all the way ahead to 2017.
Here it is.
There you go. I look up at the sky
I thought that I could see I don't want wanna be paid back
Your relief is an end
Walk away, walk away, girl
If you know what's good to do
Walk away, walk away walk away girl
if you know what's good
to you
walk away
walk away girl
if you know what's
good to do
if you know what
if you know what
weaves walk away
Yeah, just a great song.
One of the best songs I've heard in the last few years.
I just think this one rocks.
Great tune.
This, to me, too, speaks to what we were talking about before
about generations of music
because this, to me, is such a Pixies song.
Like, it's the Pixies, basically,
with a female singer and, you know, just such a Pixies song. Like, it's the Pixies, basically, with a female singer.
And, you know, just the idea of where the guitars go,
it's completely like that, what's happening right now.
Just all, you know, very schooled in the Pixies, which is awesome.
All those lines, you know.
And it just makes me think that, you know,
obviously there's aspects of other things in there, but like...
There's a little wisp of Pat Benatar in there too, I insist.
But it's all usable, you know, it's like all where we come from, and it's...
Yeah, these guys are great.
And Jasmine Burke's a great singer too.
Just a killer voice on here.
This too sort of goes with Pixies, right?
Now I just hear Pixies now that Ron mentioned it.
Which you can't go wrong with that, though.
Yeah, no. Well, there's worse bands too.
That's another band that, you know,
like the visuals would lead you to believe
they were probably more economically successful
than they were, right?
Yeah.
Although I do now hear them in a lot of ads for things.
Like particularly, what's the song?
She has Gigantic.
Yeah, I think that's like a massive Apple campaign
or something like that. Well, you know, I think that's like a massive Apple campaign or something like that.
Something like that.
Well, you know, I think this happens a lot, right?
Which is, I think, and people usually let it slide,
is the sort of karmic payoff that some bands like that get,
which is that, you know, they basically helped create an entire genre of music
that, you know, people like Nirvana and, you know,
everybody sort of carried on with and made lots and lots and lots of money
doing. And then, you know, they never really made tons of money.
I don't think the Pixies and then they broke up.
And so I think a lot of times a reunion that will happen like that.
And then you'll see some placements and stuff like that.
Their fan base who might've been, you know,
maybe ticked off at that before sort of goes, you know, hurrah.
They sort of clap a little bit and say like
it's their time to kind of...
Like these guys.
These guys are pretty good.
You'd think they'd be more economic than successful.
Like this. I can totally hear lowest to low in this.
I will say, though, the way
I measure success is
the smile on your face. You both
seem like you're happy, content people.
And that to me is amazing.
I got a lasagna, six beers.
I got a lasagna, six beers.
We just listened to some great Canadian tunes.
Thanks so much for doing that.
We had a great conversation.
We got to kick out the jams.
You played live.
I mean, this was unbelievable for me.
And I think people will love hearing this.
Thank you for having us back.
That's very nice of you.
Remember, I think it's 45 to 60 minutes
at 350.
Well, we can go back
and listen to this tape.
Although there might
actually be a label
on the tin probably,
but it's additional service.
I tell you how
to cook your lasagna.
Wow.
And again,
Shakespeare,
my box,
you can pre-order it now
and everyone listening,
you should go do that.
Just go to
lowestofthelow.com
and you can click on the link there. And get her done. Yeah, and you can go to that. Go to lowestofthelow.com and you can click on the link
there. And get her done.
Yeah, and you can go to our YouTube page. Just Google our YouTube
page and listen to Lazy Days and hear a
new song. Well, then Ron's going to say, and drink some
Great Lakes beer from the...
Okay. No, Ron only drinks
Canada Dry now.
Is my lasagna just clean?
And that
brings us to the end of our
398th show.
You can follow me on Twitter. I'm at
Toronto Mike. Lowest of the Low is at
Lowest of the Low.
Our friends at Great Lakes Brewery are at Great Lakes
Beer. Propertyinthe6.com
is at Raptors Devotee.
Tough night last night for the Raps.
Palma Pasta is at
Palma Pasta.
Fast Time Watch and Jewelry Repair is at Fast Time WJR.
And Paytm is at Paytm Canada.
See you all next week.
It's been eight years of laughter and eight years of tears.
And I don't know what the future can hold or do for me and you But I'm a much better man for having known you
Oh, you know that's true because
Everything is coming up rosy and green
Yeah, the wind is cold but the smell of snow won't stay today
And your smile is fine and it's just like mine The wind is cold, but the smell of snow won't speed the day.
And your smile is fine, and it's just like mine, and it won't go away.
Because everything is rosy and gray.
Well, I'll try that.
Well, I've been told that there's a sucker born every day.
He's stalling.