Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - Richard Crouse Kicks Out the Jams: Toronto Mike'd #916
Episode Date: September 21, 2021Mike catches up with Richard Crouse before he plays and discusses his 10 favourite songs of all-time....
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Welcome to episode 916 of Toronto Mic'd, a podcast about anything and everything,
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I'm Mike from torontomike.com,
and returning this week to kick out the jams is Richard Krause.
Hello, Richard.
Hey, Mike. How are you?
Listen, if I had known that this was episode 916,
I would have insisted on waiting 84 more episodes so I could be number 1,000.
I like an even number.
You know, I could arrange for your third appearance
to be episode 1,000.
All right.
That'll happen probably in a couple of months.
I was saying the way you got, the way you ripped through these things, it's like next
week.
Welcome back, Richard.
Seriously, it's been far too long.
Do you know that when you visited here the first time, it was April 2018?
Wow.
It doesn't seem that long, but I'll tell you the pandemic to me,
I look at it two ways. It either feels like it's been 10 years long, the last 18 months, or it feels like it's been about a week. I can't tell anymore. People say,
when's the last time I saw you? And I say, well, it can't be that long ago. And this is just before
the pandemic, which now is coming up on two years that I've seen some people and it does not feel
that long. I'm with you, man. Sometimes it feels like forever. And then sometimes you're right. It feels like
that was six weeks ago or something that this pandemic started. But I'm going to read the
description from your first appearance, and then we're going to do a brief catch up before we
kick out the jams here. But I want to let people know if this is their first time hearing Richard Krauss on Toronto Mic, that they really should pause,
like right now, and find
episode 323,
which is also not a round number.
I'm sorry about that. I know. Listen, I feel
burned by all this.
Well, you have friends in high places.
We could always make this happen.
But in the description I wrote
at the time, by the way, that was a two-hour episode
in person.
Fantastic deep dive.
Mike chats with movie critic Richard Krauss about his years as a bartender, co-hosting Real to Real, hosting the Richard Krauss Show on 1010, his cancer scare, his love of Elvis Costello, which may or may not come up again in this episode, Pop Life on CTV, and so much more.
That's almost too much for one show.
Two hours, and I could have gone longer. I think I did you a favor by wrapping it up with a two-hour mark. How are you doing, man? I mentioned
the cancer scare there. How's your health? You look fantastic, but how are you feeling?
I feel fine. I feel fine. Uh, you know, I feel fine. The, the, the cancer thing was more than a scare. I mean,
it was, it was cancer. I had surgery and chemo for over a year. Uh, but you know, you have that
marker where you hit the five year mark. I'm well past that now. And, uh, and things are fine. You
know, it's, uh, it's, it's always something that kind of lurks in the back of your head
a little bit, but I was fairly open about it. I talked about it a lot in the press. I wrote a
great deal about it on ctbnews.ca. I put up like a 30,000 word essay over the course of a few weeks about what to expect if you've been diagnosed with cancer.
And I still have people stopping me on the street and saying, I went and got tested for,
I went and got a colonoscopy because I read that, or I heard your story. And that is gratifying.
If you have to go through something absolutely terrible like that at least you can
try and find some good in it and for me that's the good that came out of it yeah i gotta say
you know thankfully knock on wood i haven't had to uh deal with what you had to deal with but
whenever i have something i need to deal with whenever i can read like a sort of like a deep
dive that of someone else's experience going
through it it's sort of like I would say uh comforting and reassuring to kind of kind of
live through like to kind of if I could like uh borrow your shoes for a little bit and kind of
learn about your path that I'm about to take there's something there's something uh positive
there and so I'm always grateful
when people like yourself are open about these experiences, because we're all human beings,
we're all dealing with these things. This is something as an illness that you had to
deal with. And if someone else has to go through that, it's, it might be comforting for them to
be able to read about your, what you experienced. Yeah. And at the time when it all happened,
you know, I was on Canada AM,
which was still on the air then I was, you know, kind of like I was my, I had a loud voice and,
and I thought that it would be incumbent on me just to say, you know, listen, this is a confusing
time. If you have just been diagnosed with cancer, it's a confusing time. There's so much information
that just comes winging your way
so quickly. And there's terms that you don't really understand. And for me, anyway, there were
entire meetings that I had with doctors that I barely remember because there's just so much
talk. There's so much information. And you're slightly shell-shocked by the whole situation.
So I thought that by talking about it and coming out the other
end as I did healthy would be valuable, hopefully, for someone who was just entering in and just
feeling that weight of what happens when you're diagnosed. And here I am a few years later,
cringing at my own words. Like, why am I calling this a cancer scare? A cancer scare is when you
think you might have cancer and you find out you don don't that's a cancer scare you had cancer well and
then and i'll tell you it was scary so yeah it's a cancer scare so i guess and more and i do not
judge any human being with regards to how they react when they're faced with this disease but
i do i do find it interesting that you can go your route which i i just expressed
why i'm glad you went your your route and we're open about everything but you can also go the
other way as norm mcdonald did norm uh other than his you know close friends and family uh we had
no idea he was grappling with this terrible disease and uh passed away recently after i guess
i think nine years he was yeah yeah and Yeah. And you know, there's two ways
really of looking at this. I, I didn't get really public about it until after my final chemo
treatment. In fact, it was the day after my last chemo treatment that I went public and, and went
on Canada AM and told the story. And then I started writing about it and that previous to that.
And it was a long time. It was, uh, you know, over a year, a year and two months or three months or
four months. I can't remember now. Um, while I was having chemo and things, I didn't really tell
anybody, uh, and except very close friends. Uh, my family knew, although I i my dad who lived in nova scotia at the time um i don't i didn't
really tell him uh for a long time because there was nothing he could do about it i didn't want
him to worry and with other people i i kind of didn't want people looking at me and going oh
he's he's not well so let's not hire him for this gig or he's not well, let's not. And, and I didn't want that pity.
That was sort of the thing that, that kept me going.
And I, I would suggest, and I don't know this about Norm MacDonald,
but that was part of it too.
And as a comedian, I think, you know,
you want to not have that hanging over every joke that you tell.
No, that, that makes complete sense again.
And I will just say a big fan of Norm MacDonald.
Missed the guy already.
And just what a terrible disease.
Like we just had the virtual run for Terry Fox two days ago.
So it's the second year in a row it was a virtual run.
But every year as I have for decades, I raise funds for my virtual run this year, unfortunately.
But what a horrific disease.
We all know somebody, we all love somebody who's been touched by it.
And I'm just grateful that you're looking so fantastic, man.
It's all worked out for you here.
Yep.
Yeah, no, it did.
And I'll tell you, the treatment I got was exemplary.
And, you know, if anyone out there who's listening is struggling or
has been recently diagnosed, just know that the treatment works, you know, and be careful,
get tested, look after yourself. And, you know, it's a, you know, you knock wood,
every case is different. But, you know, there's a great deal of success out there right now with cancer treatments.
And keep that in mind.
A positive attitude, I found, for me, that a positive attitude, and I don't want to sound all Patch Adams-y about this, but it's really true.
A positive attitude meant so much to me.
meant so much to me.
It really made me,
it felt like I could get over that hump a little bit better
if I used humor
and just tried to feel better about things.
You know, when I saw you on the schedule today, Richard,
I was like just crossing my fingers
that like, I don't know,
a major movie star would not pass away this morning.
I hope, I know Clint's got a new movie out,
but the man's got, you know, he's an older guy. Please, Clint, don't die this morning like i had like i hope i know clint's got a new movie out but the man's got you
know he's he's an older guy please clint don't don't die this morning because i figured you'd be
uh you'd be unavailable because every time you know you make the rounds and and they uh there
are it's true when someone famous dies i generally tend to pop up uh eulogizing them and uh to the
extent where uh they call me the undertaker and uh there's
a number of newsrooms around town because and and i can and i can see it i'll be home working here
and i'll get a twitter alert that so-and-so has died and then it's like two three you know one
and and and the three two one yeah i look and the phone starts to blow up and people want me to talk
about them and then your next thing you know what you're on CP24, you're on CTV Toronto, you're on CTV, the news net there.
Radio.
You're on 1010 CFRB.
Yeah.
So shout out to Ridley Funeral Home.
They're pillars of this community.
Ridleyfuneralhome.com.
The Undertaker, Richard kraus can endorse their fine
services a few quick hits here before we kick out these jams uh so last night i'm watching the uh
the federal election results rolling early but i realize that i in my opinion i'm curious to
your thoughts on this as a proud maritimer but i feel like canada never pays more attention to
the maritimes and Atlantic Canada
than we do that night of a federal election.
You know what I mean?
I will tell you, they don't pay any attention
other than on election night
because our results
start to come in first and
in some ways set the tone for what's
to come for the rest of the country, so people
are interested in that.
It's election night and whatever lobster season is,
that's when they pay attention to us down there.
Because I was thinking last night,
because you're right, we don't have anything
except we start to get some stuff rolling in
from the East Coast here.
Let me turn off my ringer here.
And then suddenly we're all like, oh my goodness.
And these results come in so early.
You'll see, like, for example, the liberal candidate in this St.
John's East or whatever has six votes.
Like, well, they have to start somewhere.
I like the modesty of it all.
You know, the these small communities that start to vote and literally everyone comes out and votes from, and votes and from these small fishing communities and things.
And I,
you know,
I think it's kind of sweet.
I like that.
My people are representing,
I haven't been down there for ages because we're not really allowed to go
down during the pandemic.
They kind of didn't want us down there.
And so we canceled a planned trip to go,
but next year we'll go down next year.
Dude.
Sounds amazing.
And do you have any thoughts here?
While I have such a cool kind of alternative media man on the program here,
any thoughts on NOW Magazine turning 40?
You know, I loved NOW Magazine in its early days.
I remember when it came out.
And I think like so many things that are celebrating decades and decades and decades of existence now,
we kind of take them for granted. But, you know, at the time when Now Magazine came out and I could
pick it up, leap through and see who was playing at the Cabana Room or at the Beverly Tavern
and see really cool ads for bands like Les Trangés or The Government or somebody like that,
it was a godsend for people like me other than that
it was word of mouth no twitter no nothing there you know you had to find out where people were
playing uh you know through your friends and often uh in those days anyway i would just go down to
queen street west and and go to four or five places a night just to see who was playing see
what was going on there were posters
and things that were up and around uh but you know often for the the cost of a two or three or maybe
if you're feeling extravagant a five dollar cover uh you can go in and see uh you know two or three
bands at one of those places and now magazine uh really for most of its life really was an alternative magazine to everything that was
happening in the rest of the city. They covered things differently. They had a point of view
and they covered the arts in a way that was exhaustive. And that was something that,
you know, nobody does anymore. If you pick up the newspapers and have a look around on, you know,
what we think of now is old media.
The arts kind of gets a short shrift,
even though I would suggest that during the pandemic,
it's the arts that's stopped everyone from going completely mad.
It is television and music and movies.
However it is that you're watching them that have kept us entertained and kept us on a level.
So I think the arts is super important
and wish there was more coverage of it.
And Now Magazine thrived at that for a very long time.
I agree 100% with everything you said,
including the desire for more coverage of it.
But I'm going to suggest something
just to get your thoughts on this.
And I guess I preface this by saying,
yes, I'm biased because Mark Weisblatt appears on this show for a few hours every single month so i'm just throwing
that out there yes he's become a friend but in my humble opinion and i'm more curious about yours
uh maybe 1236 mark weisblatt is now carrying that torch i read 1236 absolutely it arrives uh most days not usually at 1236 which is i thought was
sort of the point of the name but uh it but it arrives every day at some point and and uh i do
think that he's got a really interesting way of curating the news out there it's not all arts
coverage but there is there is a lot of uh interesting stuff stuff that in terms of the arts,
that there'll be some story that I've never heard of
or something that's new to me.
And for me, you know, that's invaluable.
I love the arcane.
And quite often that's what comes up on that newsletter.
If you have a few hours every month to spare,
I highly recommend Mark Wiseblood on Toronto Mic
for his monthly recap.
We dive deep, my friend.
You would dig it.
Yeah, yeah.
Now, you're not here.
You're on Zoom here.
So we're about to kick out the jams.
But if you were here, obviously, you'd be going home with some fresh craft beer from Great Lakes Brewery.
You know the drill.
I'd have a lasagna for you, a frozen lasagna from Palma Pasta.
If you drop that into FedEx right now,
it'll get here before it defrosts.
Oh, I could bike it over.
Toronto Mike stickers from stickeru.com.
But what I can give you, this is exciting.
This is only started in September 2021.
I can email you and I will email you
a $75 digital gift card
that you can use at chefdrop.ca.
So basically, yeah, you're going to find a great meal.
You and your wife can enjoy, you and your partner.
I don't know if you're married.
Wife, yeah.
You guys can enjoy a great meal from Chef Drop, curated meals from chefs and restaurants.
Fantastic selection.
Go to chefdrop.ca.
I'll send you the email where you can spend 75 bucks just because you kicked out the jams on Toronto Mic'd.
And I want to let all the listeners know they can save 20% right now at chefdrop.ca
if they use the promo code FOTM20. So FOTM20, that's 20% off your first order of $50 or more at
chefdrop.ca. But Richard, you're getting
the $75 just for appearing on
Toronto Mic'd. I love it.
Thank you very much. I'll look forward to that.
And Richard, without further
ado, my question for you, sir, is
are you ready
to kick out
the jams? You know I
am. I'm ready to kick out the jams and You know I am. I'm ready to kick out the jams
and get my $75 gift card.
I'm ready to pay for being perfectly
admired and you can
have anyone that you have
ever desired.
All you gotta tell me now
is wow, wow, wow, wow.
Welcome to the workin' week.
Oh, I know it don't
thrill you. I hope it don't kill you. Welcome to the working week, oh I know it don't thrill you, I hope it don't kill you
Welcome to the working week, you gotta do it till you do it, so you better get to it
All of your family had to kill to survive, and just waiting for their big day to arrive
But if it's what I feel, it better be a lie
Welcome to the working week, oh I know it don't thrill you, I hope it don't want to fade this down, Richard, but I want to hear you talk to me.
Shock to the system, Richard Krause has kicked out some Elvis Costello.
Yeah, it's not unsurprising that the first song would be an Elvis Costello song,
but it's also the first Elvis Costello song that I ever heard.
So I grew up in Nova Scotia and I was obsessed by music,
but I lived in this very small town, Liverpool, Nova Scotia on the South Shore,
and we couldn't get records. You could drive 200 miles to Halifax down at the time, what were
treacherous coastal roads. And you only made the trip if you had like a doctor's appointment or
whatever, if you were going to make that trip, it meant that you had things to do in the city.
And the, the, the day was always planned from appointments and and whatever
going to see the orthodontist and all that stuff and i would always try and swing by kelly's records
uh in halifax and try and and gather up as much stuff as i could get that i've been reading about
so i used to as a music obsessed kid growing up there i would buy hip parader magazine and cream
and all those music scene magazines uh at a place M&O's Pharmacy, blow my entire allowance on them. And so I knew all about Elvis
Costello before I had ever heard a note of the music. My brother was living in Toronto. I used
to send him lists of records that I wanted. He would bring them back to me and just happened to
be in one of those lists with him.
He came in.
He gave me the record.
I went into the bedroom where my stereo was, put it on the turntable,
and I dropped the needle, heard that song.
It blew my mind.
I didn't know what rhythmically admired meant for a very long time.
And if you want to know, look it up in my book, It's Dirty. And then
listened to side one, flipped it over, listened to side two, side one again, side two again,
fell in love with it. I'm still in love with it. And I remember thinking at the time,
I never have to listen to REO Speedwagon or Fleetwood Mac ever again. Not that there's
anything wrong really particularly with those, but they did not speak to me. Elvis Costello was the first artist who really spoke to me in the same way that Frank
Sinatra and Bing Crosby had spoken to my father, that Jimi Hendrix had spoken to my brother of
their generation. And now I had my own music. I love it, man. I could do, I just realized I
could do two hours with you just talking about Elvis Costello. Like that can be the 1000th episode of Toronto.
That's right. Yeah, yeah, yeah. RC on EC. Oh, think about it.
I'm going to start working on the artwork right after this convo here. But first, here's your second jam. I saw you out the other night
I saw somebody hold you tight
A rock set
I wondered who it could be
It was so dark I couldn't see it
But I know what was in me
When I tell you it ain't right
I know you got to agree
I followed you into a show
The band was playing rock and roll
I said
I didn't need to seek you out
The music played so loud
But I could hear you through the crowd
You was telling everyone about a new guy you found Well, that doesn't sound like the rock set.
I know what's going on.
No, this is the amazing Dr. Feelgood.
And they were a pub rock band in England, sort of just precursors to punk rock and new wave.
in England, sort of just precursors to punk rock and new wave.
And they've stayed together for years and were more popular in England than they were here.
But I think they're amazing.
Their guitar player, Wilco Johnson, had this really kind of a rhythmic sort of crazy way of playing.
You've got the singer, Lee Brillo, who was just a dynamo on stage and um I love while doing the research I think for the Elvis Costello book I read a bunch of old reviews about Dr. Feelgood because they would
often share bills and they were in and around and nobody wanted to follow Dr. Feelgood because uh
when they were playing live because as one journalist journalist said, seeing them live in a pub was like Hiroshima in a pint glass.
And just,
I thought it was such an evocative way of describing what it must have been
like, the explosive power of this band and the records.
Most of them do the band some justice, but I love that song.
Rock set's a great tune.
So this jam is just for the record.
It's neither a song by the rock set
most people are most familiar with
or a song from Motley Crue's Dr. Feelgood.
That's right.
Dig it.
And what I love about these jam kickings
is sure, I might, like most people,
I might know that Elvis Costello song,
but you get to hear some things
that you don't hear that often,
like this rock set by Dr. Feelgood.
Fantastic.
All right, buddy, here's our third jam. I can see the shape.
Your end finger on your eyebrow
And left hand on your hip
Thinking that you're such a lady killer
Think you're so slick
Well alright Well, all right. And he got on it. Now here's a razor in the wind.
And he's got a pistol in his pocket.
They say the man is crazy on the coast.
Lord, there ain't no doubt about it.
Well, all right.
So damn cool. Talk to me about this jam,ard oh i just love that song i discovered that when
i was 16 years old probably maybe 15 uh and honestly i probably listen to it once a week
it never gets old and it's hard to imagine that that's a band called mink deville whose singer
was willie deville who's the guy that sang the song Storybook Love with Mark Knopfler
on the Princess Bride soundtrack and had a big hit with that.
Mink DeVille were also the house band at CBGB's,
and they were like sort of proto-punk band that set the tone
for a lot of what was to come.
But I love them, And I love that band.
One of the best shows that I've ever seen was Willie DeVille at the Diamond Club.
And this would have been, I don't know, 1980 something.
Three, four, five maybe.
And we go see the show.
It starts hours late.
This is my memory of how the show went.
It starts hours late.
The band comes out, starts to play.
Willie DeVille comes out, starts to sing.
And then he starts pointing at his ear, which is the universal signal for,
I can't hear my vocals.
I can't hear my vocals.
Nothing seems to change.
He gets mad, pushes the mic stand over.
Song number one, done before it gets to the first chorus.
Song number two, he picks up this
shiny guitar that he's playing it's got like a silver body on it and uh he's he starts to play
and then he does like a pete townsend windmill style move with his arm hits the bass of the
guitar and sends it like a rocket into the audience end of song number two probably by the
second chorus by the third song uh he was at this point
i think he was living in new orleans and he started he was moving into doing some more soulful kind of
music and so he sings this song and i don't remember what it was called but i do remember
that the the chorus was something like i can't take it anymore and he just sang it over and over
and over again and by the end of it he's on alls. And then he's laying on the stage and he's pounding the stage
with his hand and he's singing the song. And then we think, wow, this is amazing. We're getting not
only are we getting a full song, but it's an incredible performance. And then he stopped
singing and the band keeps playing. And then we realized that Willie DeVille has passed out on
stage. And that was the end of that song. So we,
it was the end of the show.
It just ended. And people were mad.
They were running to the box office to get their money back.
And someone said to me,
like,
are you,
are you,
are you going to get your money back?
And I said,
are you kidding?
That's the greatest show I've ever seen.
That's that's punk,
man.
Honestly,
amazing.
And the diamond for the kids out there,
that's the Phoenix now,
right?
That's yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
On Sherbourne street. Yeah. Right. Amazingburne street yeah right amazing uh love it man i love it and all these songs uh
cool jams man did you have any because we're about to kick out your fourth jam but were there any jams
that were kind of guilty pleasures that you thought i gotta protect my reputation here and
you left off the list like i don't know there's probably a ton of those i listen i grew up
in the era where music wasn't so format right so i i could be listening to and i worked for radio
stations like ckbw in bridgewater nova scotia where i would be playing uh the new song by
led zeppelin and the next song might be by will by Willie Nelson and the next song after that might be uh whatever that's called right and so um I grew up uh with all that stuff and all of it is
deeply embedded in my consciousness so we're not that you know we're not that far apart in age
because I grew up with my top 40 being exactly the same experience where you'll have like a boy band
I don't know new kids on the block or something right next to like the latest deaf leopard song and that'll be right next to like
young mc or something like it was all just it was all there and then there's a phil collins or a
peter gabriel or something like that or jerry harrison i worked at this place ckbw in bridgewater
nova scotia and my first shift uh on air i trained i was 16 years old and i had to do a top 40 countdown
and so uh they said just make sure that you leave time to get the number one song all the way in and
i was like so all night i'm fretting about it and i'm trying to do the math and count out the
minutes and stuff and uh the number one song was heartache tonight by the eagles i remember that
and so i think that I've nailed it.
And at 10, it was a CBC affiliate.
So at 10 o'clock, the CBC was going to kick in whether or not you wanted it to or not.
And I'm like, I'm going through it.
And I get to number two and I'm playing it out.
And I realized, oh, my God, I haven't done this right.
And we faded out. I think i've tried to fade out the
second song number two so that you can still get a sense of what it was but leave enough time but
all i got in of heartache tonight was a bump dump a bump dump of the drums and then boom boom boom
welcome to cbc yeah do you still wake up in the middle of the night like in a cold sweat like uh
i i have never forgotten that moment.
And I've also never forgotten the station manager had a direct line to the station.
And there was a button that lit up when he called.
And like as the CBC cut in, it was a boom and it was instantaneous.
So he was clearly listening.
Oh, man.
Okay, let's try to get to some better memories.
Jam number four.
Here we go. Well, it ain't no use in sin, wonder why
If you don't know by now
And it ain't no use in sin, wonder why
It won't matter anyhow
When the rooster crows at the break of dawn
Look out your window and I'll be gone
You're the reason I'm traveling on
But don't think twice, alright
And make no use of the time or your light
Alright, talk to us about this great jam.
Okay, that's Mike Ness.
And Mike Ness was one of the lead guitarists,
one of the singers of a band called Social Distortion.
I think you can probably tell when I grew up
by the sound set up during the era
of which these first four or five come from anyway.
And, you know, when I was growing up,
I looked at Bob Dylan as a relic from a different
age. I mean, for me, it just, it wasn't music that resonated for me. Now I'll tell you, it does now.
And, and it's funny how it sort of happened. I was in New York and I was roaming around the East
Village years ago, and I walked into some cafe and sat down and had a drink and as I was
having my drink they played all the Blonde on Blonde and I was like oh for some reason it now
totally makes sense to me because of the setting and the place and the time and the whole thing
but back when this record came out I you know I of course knew Bob Dylan I knew who he was but
the music didn't resonate with me and I came to Bob Dylan sort of through the back door, which is by listening to covers like this one.
And Mike Ness, I love Social Distortion.
They have a song that could easily have ended up on this one called Born to Lose.
Born to Lose is an amazing song.
And that one could easily have ended up here.
But I like this one.
It's a solo record.
Not that many people have heard it.
And I think it's a pretty cool tune.
I'm going to shout out friend and client,
Lorne Honickman.
Because Lorne Honickman,
who you might remember from City TV.
I totally remember him.
He's a great
guy, but he has a great podcast.
He came on Toronto Mic'd for
Bob Dylan's 80th birthday.
Just to dive deep into Dylan,
Lauren's the biggest Dylan fan I know.
Praise at
the altar of Bob.
I kind of do now.
For me,
I guess it was just a function of getting some age, you know, like getting some perspective on things and finally understanding what the songs meant.
And, you know, a year or so ago when he released a 17 minute long single, I was like, I wish it was 20 minutes long.
I could have taken a few more minutes of that.
It's funny how some,
cause I know,
you know,
I would hear John Prine through the years and I would really not give it a second thought.
And then I dove in after he passed away and it's,
it hit totally different.
Like,
it's just funny how sometimes the timing isn't quite right for the art.
And then when it does hit,
it's like,
you wonder like,
uh,
why,
why,
why did it take me so long?
It's almost,
it's. Well, I also think when I was a kid,
certainly in music,
if it was super popular,
I was by and large not interested.
And so that has changed a great deal now.
I can see so far.
Yeah, I mean, I'm thinking about hits.
That Elvis song might be your biggest hit so far.
Yeah, maybe.
But here, let's get to your fifth jam. This is not a love song This is not a love song This is not a love song This is not a love song
This is not a love song
Happy to have
Not to have not
Big business is very wise
Crossing over into enterprise.
This is not a love song.
This is not a love song.
This is not a love song.
This is not a love song.
This is not a love song.
This is not a love song.
All right, talk to us about this jam, Richard.
Well, I love this because it not only was a big hit when it came out, and that's one of the reasons that I put it on this list,
because if you think about what sounds come out of your radio today
or whatever it is out of your Spotify today or how whatever it is out of your spotify today
however it is that you hear music uh generally speaking the big hits don't sound like that
they're not as abrasive they're not as they don't announce themselves as what they are like this is
not a love song and it sure isn't you know and and uh the sex pistols obviously i mean i think
given the music that we've already heard were a big influence on me. I got to meet Johnny Rotten once, and I know he's all mega these days. But, you know,
meeting him was extraordinary for me. And it was during the Toronto International Film Festival.
He was part of some movie that was brought through 10 or 12 years ago. And I was doing
interviews and, you know, I'm wearing a suit
and I look like I do now.
And I thought, oh, he's going to hate me on site.
And as it turned out, I found him to be not only super interesting,
but beyond charming.
And, you know, he seemed to, the way I spoke to him
and the things that we talked about,
he seemed to sort of find a kindred soul in me somewhere.
And we actually hit it off in a really kind of interesting way.
And the photos we have from that day are kind of cool because he was just having fun.
And every now and again, doing this job, you get to meet someone who was an influence on you or someone who made your childhood different.
Johnny Rotten was one of those people.
Bruce Springsteen was one of those people when I met him.
Those are the moments when I have to check myself and say, I cannot believe that this is happening right now because my 14 year old self would not have
believed that this would ever be possible i've had those moments my friend i've had those moments uh
but my my worry is and i'm wondering if it's also your worry is that they say never meet your heroes
the reason for that is because you know it sounds like it went great for you and uh johnny rodden but
uh sometimes it goes the other way. Yeah, it could do.
I mean, I haven't really had that Iggy Pop.
I was concerned about meeting Iggy Pop because I'm such a huge fan of him.
And I'll tell you, he transcended even my biggest idea of what he might be like.
We not only hit it off, but, you know, he was talking about the Stooges, his band, the Stooges, and, you know, how some of them weren't around anymore.
He started to cry.
He was just like so absolutely human and real and raw and all the stuff that you want Iggy Pop to be.
So for me so far, you know, it hasn't gone south,'t gone South, but you know, there's a chance.
Yeah.
Hopefully that never happens for you here.
Now,
uh, we're halfway through your jams.
I'm absolutely loving this.
I love it when someone who's passionate about music talks about the music they
love.
Like even if you were picking songs,
I hated,
I would enjoy this experience and you're not,
but I would enjoy this experience here.
Uh,
I just want to give some
love to really quickly here to uh mike majeski because mike majeski is helping to fuel the real
talk here on toronto miked and he's a fantastic partner of the program he serves the gta uh he's
with remax majeski group if you follow him on instagram he's got these outlandish entertaining videos about homes that are for sale.
Majeski Group Homes is how you find him on Instagram.
He was actually the number 14 Remax sales representative in Canada last year.
So Mike knows what he's doing.
So reach out to Mike Majeski and just let him know Toronto Mike sent you.
Jam number six for Richard Krause.
I shook the hand of the president and the pope in Rome.
I've been to parties where I've had to be flown.
They said everything was sacred, nothing was profane.
And money was something that you'd throw off the back of trains.
Oh, always keep a dime in your mind.
You've got to always keep a dime in your mind. You've got to always keep a dime in your mind.
Wherever you may wander, wherever you may roam,
you've got to always keep a dime in your mind.
Steam of the great.
Solomon Burke.
Just one of the greatest singers to ever stand in front of a microphone for one thing.
And, you know, there is no such thing as a bad Solomon Burke record.
I happen to love Don't Give Up On Me, which is the record that this one is from, because it does something a little different.
This is a record that takes songs, some of which have been recorded before,
but most of which were written for Solomon Burke by great songwriters like Van Morrison and Brian Wilson and Elvis Costello.
And that one was written by Tom Waits.
And he reinterprets them in his own extraordinary way.
And this is a record that is beautiful from start to finish,
not only for the music arrangements,
which were recorded by Danielle Lanois, the great Canadian,
but it's just the thing that I love about this record
is how they've taken all these songs by different songwriters and they all sound like Solomon Burke songs.
He's put his stamp all over every single one of them.
And that one just has such great lines in it.
You know, I always thought money was something you threw off the back of trains and stuff.
It's just it's fantastic.
Top to bottom, lyrically and musically.
top to bottom, lyrically and musically.
He's one of, I mean, he's no longer with us, sadly,
but he's one of those underappreciated, underrated artists.
Yeah, I think so too.
I think so too.
And I never got a chance to see him,
but apparently he used to do a great deal of his show.
He had a big throne on stage and he would sort of come out on stage and sing and sit in the throne and uh and and perform
and i just i love that i love that i just i i can't get enough of his voice love it love it uh
while i have a little bit of that song left in the background where if somebody uh needs an update on
where exactly can they see and hear richard krauss days? Do you want to run down the lengthy roster of places we might hear or see you? Yeah, well, everything, you can find out everything
that's happening at richardkrause.ca, my website. That's probably the way to do it because the list
is lengthy these days. And it's good. I'm knocking wood that the list stays lengthy. During the
pandemic, I've been in this room that I'm
talking to you from, which is my home office.
And this side
of it, where I'm sitting, is kind of
the radio side. And then
the other side, there's lights and
microphones and things over there. And that's
the TV side. And so
I've been able to keep working
by and large. But right now,
you know,
CTV News Channel, CP24,
the stuff that you mentioned off the top of the show.
The Bell Media Stations.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And there's the radio show.
I know you're primarily interested in radio.
There's the radio show that's an interview show
that goes across the country on iHeartRadio and Bell Media.
And, you know, we talk to interesting people
about interesting stuff.
It's arts coverage.
And again, you know, we have everyone from,
you know, Simu Liu, who was the star of Shang-Chi
and the Ten Rings on, he was on a little while ago,
to M. Greiner, the great singer,
who's just got a fantastic new book out,
who talks about how you can use your voice
to heal yourself
when you are feeling, you know,
on the outs in whatever way.
Using your voice can really,
can help you.
And she's learned from personal experience.
So lots of, a variety of interesting people
and they stop by and they tell great stories.
Love it.
Sounds like it's right up my alley.
And, uh, M.
Griner, much love to her.
Uh, when my good friend, Mike Kick was battling esophageal cancer, M.
Griner wrote a song actually.
And I, if I talk about it too long, I'll start crying.
So I'll just quickly say she wrote a song called Visiting Hours about Mike and his wife.
Yeah.
Beautiful song.
Uh, I closed Toronto Mike with it when she came over and talked about it,
but M. Griner is fantastic. I got a lot of- She is fantastic. Yeah. I think she's on this week,
so tune in. Okay. Okay. Because this will drop right after we press. And by the way,
we're going to see your office too, I'll tell you. So we'll pose for a Zoom photo screen cap
at the end of this so people can see that office of yours as well. Absolutely.
If you went back in time, I don don't know let's put you back 20
years did you see the day you would uh conquer uh you know the bell media stations across this
country like did you envision that i i don't know if conquer is the word i would use but
no listen i'm i am you know i was talking to em about this m grinder we just did the interview
a few days ago and you know i was saying that every time I step in front of a
microphone or step in front of a camera, or these days, I guess, more rightly, my, you know, cell
phone camera that we use to broadcast from, I still understand what a privilege it is to have
this job and to be able to make a living talking for a living and sharing ideas. And, you know,
I love the idea that I can have an idea in the morning.
I can write about it, you know, by noon and have it online or a video or something out in the world
quickly. And that's mind blowing. I mean, when I first started doing this, if you were to, I mean,
well, the idea of just broadcasting from home, like we have just wouldn't exist, except if they
had a truck parked outside with three or four people sitting in it making you know with a satellite dish on top of
it you know everything has changed so much uh and i just feel grateful and and that there's an
audience out there you know somewhere that's still interested in what i have to say Turn the lights down Turn up the music
All the gangs here
It's a crazy city
Get the picture
No, no, no, no
Walk a tightrope No, no, no.
Walk a tightrope.
Such a bright way.
What's your name?
You're mine.
Take a powder.
Have you found the corner? Woo, woo, woo.
Have you a future?
No, no, no, no guitar solo Well, I've been up all night again
Party time wasting is too much fun
Then I step back thinking of life's inner meaning
And my latest flame
It's the same old story
All love and glory, it's a pantomime
If you're looking for love In a looking glass world
It's pretty hard to find
Oh, Mother of Pearl I wouldn't trade you for another girl.
Divine intervention, always my intention, so I take my time.
I've been looking for something I've always wanted but was never mine
but now i've seen that something just out of reach glowing very holy grail
oh mother of lustrous lady of a sacred world
I do
wow
this is fantastic
so I love Roxy music
there's nothing like a little blast of art
rock from the early 1970s
and this
Brian Eno isn't on that record
but certainly his presence is felt i think it was i
think this is their third album and uh he left after the second one i think i might have that
wrong don't at me but it's in and around there somewhere and and but you can still you can feel
his presence on this uh you know from that wild overture uh to the lyrics that seem disconnected
and listen i can't tell you how many times i've listened to this song i mean it could be it's in wild overture to the lyrics that seem disconnected.
And listen, I can't tell you how many times I've listened to this song.
I mean, it could be,
it's in the tens of thousands of times that I've listened to this song.
And when you first hear it, the lyrics seem kind of disconnected and they kind of make up words.
Occasionally favorita is a word that's used in here that I've always loved.
And, but the more you listen to it,
the more you realize that it's kind of like
the words don't have to make sense.
All they have to do is evoke a certain sense
of something in you.
And that's what they do to me.
Like, it's not about a linear thought.
This is about putting words together
in an interesting way,
like David Bowie, who we'll hear from soon. Spoiler alert.
Yeah, spoiler alert. Like he used to do. I mean, he used a technique that William Burroughs used to
use where you'd write a long text and then tear it up, throw it on the ground and put it back
together in a different way just to see what you get from it.
And so when you listen to like some songs like Pretty Pink Rose and things like that from that's David Bowie and Adrian Belus on the lyrics really don't make any sense.
But they don't have to because you know exactly what he meant because he wrote them in this kind of oblique way.
And I don't know if if Brian Ferry did this in this.
It feels like it.
And also, I'll tell you, that vocal.
I mean, come on.
It's fantastic stuff.
I saw him recently.
I mean, I say recently, just before the pandemic.
So either a week ago or 10 years ago,
depending on how you feel about the pandemic.
And an incredible show.
That voice is singular in all of rock and roll.
Nobody sounds like Brian Ferry and no one ever will.
All right, my friend.
We're going to actually roll out of Roxy music
right into the aforementioned David Bowie here.
So let's listen to the end.
So, so semi-precious in your detached world listen to the end. I wouldn't trade you for another girl.
Oh, mother of Poe, I wouldn't trade you for another girl.
Oh, mother of Poe,
I wouldn't trade you for another girl.
Oh, mother of Poe, I wouldn't trade you for another girl. Oh, mother another go Oh Mother of
Poe, I wouldn't
trade you for another
go Thank you. Sake and strange divine You'll make it
Passion with bright young things
Takes him away to war
Don't fake it
Sadling with sandal strings
You'll make it
We'll love a lot
Insane
Battle cries and champagne
Just in time for sunrise
We'll love a lot
Insane
Nota Sensational We'll never let him say Motus and sensational
Paris or maybe hell
I'm waiting
Watches of sad remains
Wait for Aladdin saying
You'll make that
We'll never let him say Actually, hang tight just for the piano solo that's about to happen. Thank you. ស្រូវនប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ Ooh, love alive inside I love that so much.
That piano solo for me,
imagine when I first time I heard this,
I was a child and I had certainly never heard anything like that before.
And I didn't know what free jazz was. And I didn't know any of that stuff. All I knew was that David Bowie was my favorite
artist. And this was something that I was going to have to either accept or not. You listen to
the song or not, either way. But what it did for me, listening to records like that, was made me look into other stuff, you know? So instead of, of going, Oh, I hate that. I was like, well,
why don't I learn about this and see, you know, see what's out there.
And I'll tell you that piano solo for me is so bonkers and so great.
And I think fits the song so beautifully and pre pandemic,
whatever it was, I went see uh mike garson the piano player
uh who plays that song plays that solo and uh he had a band he tours with the i think it's called
the bowie experience and m grinder we were talking about her and she's sung with them and sass jordan
and a few people and uh they played this song in my, my head almost exploded because no one plays Aladdin Sane.
And just before the piano solo started, and you'll note,
that's not exactly a dance song.
People started standing up in front of me and dancing
and waving their hands around.
And I was like, I don't know what I'm going to do here
because I've waited 40 years to see this guy play this solo.
And they, frankly, luckily, sat down and i was able to take it in
because man what a thing to see live love it love that story and yeah of course the the m grinder
connection to david bowie that's uh that's for sure wow in fact when i talked to m uh when she
first came over uh i believe it was like literally like 10 days before bowie passed away it was um when we
did a little deep dive into bowie but dude uh i still remember that day i realized a lad insane
is a lad insane insane yeah well it's you know and you you listen to that record and there's a
darkness to it right there's a it it it came it's the same band that was on ziggy stardust and you
know people he played with for years before that.
But it sounds much different.
And it was recorded at a place called Trident Studios in London.
And Trident Studios is a cool place.
Whenever I'm in London, it is one of the places that I go and pay homage to.
I just stand outside the door.
It's in an alleyway.
And then you walk up the alleyway and you're at the back door of what is a pub called
the ship pub. So the last time we were there a couple of years ago, my wife and I took her,
she'd never been. We go, we go to the ship, we sit down, we have a drink and this American guy
comes in and sits next to us. We're talking back and forth and he's done exactly the same thing
that we've done that day, created his own David Bowie walking tour of London and has done it and ended up
with the ship after having gone to Trident Studios.
And we talked and he looked familiar to me.
I'm like,
and I said,
who are you?
You know,
I said,
you look familiar to me.
He goes,
Oh,
I'm Taylor Hawkins from the Foo Fighters.
So we hung with him for the afternoon and he was super fun.
And as it turns out,
a big David Bowie fan.
Well,
I was going to say, yeah, that's Taylor Hawkins from the Foo Fighters or
as I know him Alanis Morissette
yeah and the new documentary
Jagged which
you'll get it was at the film festival
he's all over it and
I mean the
story of how quickly
she became a superstar and they
went from playing clubs to arenas with 50,000 people is kind of head spinning.
Well, I got to check that one out.
And here we are.
This is your penultimate jam.
It's just fun to say the word penultimate.
And it's also it's a little different.
It's a little different than the other jams.
But I'm going to kick it out because I can't wait to hear you talk about it.
Here we go.
But I'm going to kick it out because I can't wait to hear you talk about it.
Here we go.
I was toting my pack along the dusty Winnemucca Road When along came a semi with a high-end canvas-covered load
If you're going to Winnemucca, Mac, with me you can ride
And so I climbed into the cab and then I settled down inside.
He asked me if I'd seen a road with so much dust and sand. And I said, listen, I've traveled every road in this here land.
I've been everywhere, man.
I've been everywhere, man.
Across the deserts there, man.
I've breathed the mountain air, man.
I've traveled, I've had my share, man
I've been everywhere
I've been to Reno, Chicago, Fargo
Minnesota, Buffalo, Toronto
Winslow, Sarasota, Wichita, Tulsa
Ottawa, Oklahoma, Tampa, Panama
Matta, Wallapaloo, Bangor, Baltimore
Salvador, Amarillo, Tocopilla
Barranquilla, Amphidilla, I'm a killer
I've been everywhere, man
I've been everywhere, man The name's Cash.
Johnny Cash.
Well, this is on here for a couple of reasons.
One, well, maybe three reasons.
I love the song.
I love Johnny Cash.
And I once got to sort of meet him.
I was at Chet Atkins Music Week in Nashville, and I went to see a tribute to
Waylon Jennings and Johnny Cash. And I was sitting in the audience, and from the audience, I could
see on the side of the stage, Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings were sitting like on a sofa
watching the show, one on either end of the sofa. And I had a backstage pass, and I was like,
I'm going to go back, and I'm going to sit on that sofa with them and I I made my way backstage and I bumped into Chet Atkins I met
Brenda Lee there were a few people and I thought eventually someone's going to stop me as I'm
warming my way back here uh and nobody does and so I got up to Johnny and Wayland and uh I said uh
is anyone sitting there and they're like no go ahead and I sat between is anyone sitting there? And they're like, no, go ahead. And I sat between them as they watched Chris Christopherson
and everyone else on stage watching the show.
Kind of like one of the high, and we didn't talk.
I mean, the music's playing.
I cannot tell you that I had any experience with Johnny Cash
other than just being there while he was there.
Were you like sweating bullets?
Or like, I feel like what a moment you're sitting on a couch with Johnny Cash.
I know.
It really was.
I mean, for me, it was a huge deal.
Even though we didn't really share a moment, we shared, you know, I was breathing the same
air as Johnny and Waylon, for that matter.
But the other reason that this is on here is that it was made popular originally by
a guy called Hank Snow,
who was born in my hometown. And if you go to Liverpool, Nova Scotia right now on the south
shore of Nova Scotia, there is a Hank Snow Museum. Phone ahead, make sure they're open. I'm not sure
during the pandemic, but it's in the old train station where we used to play baseball and they've
turned it into a museum and they've got like cars and all the kinds
of,
you know,
all those sorts of things that you would expect from a museum about a music
legend.
Yeah.
He's got one of the first,
I think Hank Snow's got one of the first like Canadian songs to hit number
one on the billboard hot 100 or one of those maybe.
Yeah.
I don't know for sure,
but I would be unsurprised by that.
You know, Hank Snow was a legend with giant hits,
giant, giant hits,
and wrote a lot of songs
that people still sing and record today.
And he came from Liverpool.
Yeah, Brooklyn, technically.
But it's the next little Hamlet over from Liverpool.
Amazing here.
Are you ready for your final jam?
I am ready for your final jam i am ready
for the final jam
well See me turn out right, I don't wanna grow up How do you move in a world of fogs?
Always changing things
Makes me wish that I could be a dog
Well, when I see the rise of the day
I don't wanna grow up
I don't ever wanna be that way
I don't wanna grow up be that way I don't want to grow up
Seems like folks turn into things that they never want
The only thing to live for is to stay
I'm gonna put on my TV set
I don't want to grow up
Open up with a medicine chest I don't wanna grow up Open up with a medicine chest
I don't wanna grow up
I don't wanna have to shout it out
I don't want my head to fall out
I don't wanna be filled with doubt
I don't wanna be a good boy scout
I don't wanna have to learn to count
I don't wanna have the biggest amount I don't want to have to learn to count. I don't want to have the biggest amount.
I don't want to grow old.
Well, I should not care in spite.
I don't want to grow old.
What's not to love about that song?
For a lot of these artists and for a lot of making up this list,
there are 20 songs from Tom Waits that could have been on here. David Bowie,
if we had the time, we would just play
the entirety of his catalog.
Same with Elvis Costello and maybe
any of them, actually.
But I love that song. I love
just that it's kind of playful,
but it's got some darkness to it as well.
I like that it sounds
like it was recorded in his house, which it probably
was, and on very rudimentary instruments. I remember years ago getting tickets to see
Tom Waits at Massey Hall. And it was a show that I'd waited my entire life to see. I've always
wanted to see him perform live. And so I get tickets. And then my dad announces that he's going to come up and visit on the same weekend, which is going to throw a
crimp into my plans because I hadn't seen him for a while. And so I said, listen, I've got tickets
for a concert that day, but why don't you come to the show with me? I can get us two more tickets.
You and your wife can come. And he said, I don't know.
We're kind of particular about the music we listen to.
I said, he sounds like Louis Armstrong, which I knew would be like a hook to get him in there.
So we go to the show and it's me, my girlfriend at the time, my dad, his wife, Paul Myers is there with us who now writes.
And Paul is along for the ride and we
appalled me i'm just entranced by the show but it's a weird show there's a there's a fridge on
stage where you go to every now and again and pull out a beer and drink a beer on stage there's
instruments that i've never seen before or since you know homemade things and stuff and a lot of
it was that kind of rain dogs, experimentalism that I loved.
And so after the show, we go to the silver rail, which was right across the street,
the legendary cocktail bar. And, uh, Paul and I are raving about what an amazing show it was.
And, uh, I said, and my, and Paul was trying to explain to my father, like he's looking forward,
but backward. And he's real, you know, he's like just giving, giving him the rock critics
take on the show that we'd just seen. Uh, and I said, well, you know, he's like just giving, giving him the rock critics take on the show that we had just seen.
And I said, well, you know, what'd you think of it?
And my dad in his typically understated way said, son,
that did not sound like Louis Armstrong.
And that's about all he had to say about it.
Love it, man. Love it. Love it.
And the nice thing about Tom waits is you could,
you feel like when you're doing karaoke or something like you can achieve that vocal range like that's attainable
for you but seriously my friend if you ever want to kick go deep into either you know tom waits or
elvis costello or david bowie i would drop everything to do that with you richard you're
fantastic we'll do it again mike Thanks so much for having me.
And that,
that brings us to the end of our 916th show.
You can follow me on Twitter.
I'm at Toronto Mike.
Richard, what's your Twitter handle, my friend?
At Richard Krause, capital R, capital C.
Capital R, capital C, not even case sensitive,
but what the heck. When you're Richard Krauss, you get the capitals.
Our friends at Great Lakes Brewery,
they're at Great Lakes Beer.
Chef Drop, they're at Get Chef Drop.
McKay's CEO Forums, they have a fantastic podcast,
fireside chats with CEOs and executives by Nancy McKay.
They're at McKay's CEO Forums.
Palma Pasta is at Palma Pasta.
Sticker U is at Sticker U.
Ridley Funeral Home, they're at RidleyFH.
And Mike Majeski, again, he's on Instagram.
He's from Remax Specialists Majeski Group,
and they're at Majeski Group Homes.
See you all next week.
This podcast has been produced by TMDS and accelerated by Rome Phone. Rome Phone brings you the most reliable virtual phone service to run your business and protect your home number from unwanted calls. Visit RomePhone.ca to get started.