Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - Richard Rodwell a.k.a. Maximum 60: Toronto Mike'd #1353
Episode Date: October 28, 2023In this 1353rd episode of Toronto Mike'd, Mike chats with Richard Rodwell a.k.a. Maximum 60 about Beat Factory Productions and his work with The Dream Warriors, Maestro Fresh-Wes, Michie Mee & L...A Luv and others. Also, his composition for many YTV shows, Cash Cab and more. Toronto Mike'd is proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery, Palma Pasta, Pumpkins After Dark, Ridley Funeral Home, Electronic Products Recycling Association, Raymond James Canada and Moneris. If you would like to support the show, we do have partner opportunities available. Please email Toronto Mike at mike@torontomike.com
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Season 5 of Yes, We Are Open.
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and ridley funeral home pillars of the community since 1921 today making his toronto mic debut is
richard rodwell better known to me as maximum 60 hello richard, Richard. Hey, how are you? How do you want to be addressed?
Mr. Richard Rodwell or Maximum 60?
Oh, let's just go with Richard.
Let's go with Richard.
Maximum 60.
I will call you Richard from now on,
but we'll get into the origin of that name, Maximum 60.
But how are you?
How are you doing?
I'm great.
Great.
Great feeling good. good to be here
did you recognize the cold open off the top so here i'll play it again here yo where'd everybody
go does that resonate with you yeah that's for sure that's off the dream warriors album
uh i think that one's called maximum in a dream i think is that the one called Maximum in a Dream. I think, is that the one? Maximum 60, Lost in a Dream.
Like that's the name of that.
That's like a track.
You buy the CD, which I did.
Yeah.
And I got, okay, I'm a big Dream Warriors fan.
So we're going to get really deep into this album.
This is everything.
I'm going to ask you a million questions.
But that track is called Maximum 60, Lost in a Dream.
It's like five seconds long that's it in
its entirety that's the whole track yeah yeah it was it was like and we use it at the end of the uh
my definition uh video as well it's like i know it's just in the studio and just yo everybody go
okay so not to bury the lead but that's your voice on that track that is that is me yes yes
dude i'm so excited to be talking to you.
I mean, I don't know if you do a lot of press.
You told me right off the top
you don't do a lot of podcasts.
No.
Is this your podcast debut?
This is my podcast debut, yes.
I'm honored.
And I made you come all the way from far away.
You know, we won't dox you here,
but it was a long trek for you.
So I just want you to know
I do have parting gifts for you. This is sort of like like i don't know the like when you lose on jeopardy
and they give you the board game or something but congratulations to you because this is like
recent news i think this news broke after i scheduled you to appear on toronto mic
the canadian songwriters hall of Fame is celebrating four classic songs
from the 80s and 90s.
I'll name them in no particular order.
One is Informer by Snow.
Do you like that song, Informer?
Of course, of course.
Great song.
I had a chat with Snow's manager
just the other day.
I'm going to get Snow on this program.
Darren, as you know,
just like i won't
call you maximum 60 i guess i should call snow uh darren but informer big toronto jam martha and
the muffins echo beach what do you think of echo beach oh my who doesn't love echo beach i love
that song you know the guitar and and what those guys are doing is just ahead of its time great
song i should have wore my martha and the muffins t-shirt big fan they're they're fotms like you and what those guys are doing is just ahead of its time. Great song.
I should have wore my Martha and the Muffins t-shirt.
Big fan.
They're FOTMs like you.
That means Friend of Toronto Mike.
Richard, you're now an FOTM.
Cheers.
Welcome to the family.
All right.
Excellent.
That's another epic Toronto jam.
This song, before I get to the last one, which will lead us into the opening remarks here,
Drinkin' in L.A la by brand band 3000 that's
a montreal band but what do you think of that song drinking in la um it was it was it was cool i i
wasn't i wasn't like a huge fan of it but i thought wow this is this is really cool and and like what
they're doing creatively as far as the um the samples and the programming because i'm always
looking at things from a uh from a sort of, from a picking a point, picking apart, you know, a technical view.
But yeah, it was a great track, cool track.
Because I mean, we're going to get to know you better in moments, but you're a, you're a composer.
You're, you're, you know, that's, that's how your brain, you, you pick apart a song. You can kind
of see how it gets assembled, right? You can break it down.
Yeah. Like I'll be in the mall and in, in, in like a clothing store and I'll hear
something playing, you know, in, in the background on the speakers in the store. And I'll be like,
oh, and I'll remember, I'll remember the drum pattern or something. And I'll go,
I got to try that when I get home and stuff like that.
I wish I had your brain. Can I borrow it like for a weekend? I'll bring it right back. Well,
the problem is you don't want to switch with my brain
because you'll be thinking, you know,
the thoughts that are popping in there,
like why weren't the Dream Warriors on this?
Okay, so we'll get to all that.
We'll get the final.
I don't want to bury the lead.
This is going to open our conversation.
But the fourth and final song being inducted
into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame is,
hey, you know what?
I can play this song.
What am I thinking?
Let's start a little bit of this,
and that'll warm us up here, get us going here.
What the fuck is this?
My definition of a boombastic jazz style. Here we go, are you ready for one another?
Dream Warriors, noise, noise is new, discover old
Once again with a new blend, so telephone a friend
Yo, Dream Warriors got this new song, it's dope, man!
I'm back this to the prime as Optimus
Fans are friends, I'm universal and cosmic
Concrete jungles abound
Stand by the speaker, you're smothered and covered up in the sound
You stand strong as you pump your fists
I'm talking all that jazz
Now what's my definition?
My definition
My definition
My definition is this
My definition
My definition
My definition
My definition is this
My definition
My definition is this
My definition, my definition is this, my definition.
Okay, Richard, now is your time to shine.
You were there.
What exactly, firstly, I guess right off the top,
when you hear that song in the cans right now,
and I don't know if you've heard it a million times or if it's been a while, I have no idea,
but what are you thinking as you listen to
My Definition of a Boombastic Jazz Style
by the dream warriors wow you know um because i was when i created i i just i just
think of the time in the studio i think of the the intricate uh programming and stuff that went into
making it all come together uh it brings back um visions of eng England as well because we were in a jazz club in England
and and that's sort of how the the sample came together we met a DJ and he's like oh you guys
gotta you know do some stuff and and so here I'm gonna send you guys a bunch of albums and
Louie is the one that went through the albums and we found these samples
and we just put them together
and that's how this song came together.
Okay, let's break that down.
Just like when you hear a song in the mall
and you start breaking it apart,
I got to take that sentence and break it down.
So this, of course, for Canadians,
we're Canadian here,
this is like, we know it as like
the definition theme song,
which is, of course, why it's called my definition of a boom bastic jazz sound.
But this is a Quincy Jones sample, right?
Yeah, yeah, it is.
Okay, so I want to know who's involved.
I need to know.
In fact, the more detail, the better.
You know, I know you're probably used to these guys want their two to five minute sound bites
about, you know, this
great song by Dream Warriors, but
specifically...
Oh, yeah, let's hear it.
Oh, yeah, no, no, we got another minute left.
Okay.
You hear this, obviously, you hear the bossa nova?
Is that the name of the... Soul bossa nova.
Soul bossa nova. Okay, so you hear this
thing, and then what your
brain automatically starts uh thinking about how you can uh sample that loop that and get you know
king lou and capital q to to rhyme over it like break it down for me again i you know um a lot
of people don't know this but like louie is lou or king lou is the creative genius really behind
the whole project the whole and now the legacy begins album genius really behind the whole project, the whole,
and now the legacy begins album because he's the one that took the,
took the records home and listened to them.
And then he would come into the studio and say,
Hey Rich,
we're going to sample this.
Let's sample this.
Let's sample this.
Let's sample this.
Let's cut that.
Let's do this.
Let's do that.
And sometimes,
especially with this song,
I was like,
Louie,
what?
No,
no,
no, we can't do that.
He'd be like, Rich, no, trust me, man,
just trust me.
How I describe it is he was
the architect and I was
the builder.
He would bring all the raw ideas.
He'd have a blueprint or something.
You'd have to build this thing.
Exactly, and add finishing
touches to make it all sound seamless in that.
Okay.
Step back a little bit before we get back to,
and the legacy begins.
I mean,
I've had,
I say,
I should say I've had DJ Ron Nelson in the basement here and I've grilled
him,
but now I'm going to grill you,
Richard,
but build us up to how do you end up getting involved with,
I guess,
beat factory,
right?
This is,
this is when you're,
you're not only the,
the dream Warriors,
but FOTMs like Maestro Fresh West,
Mishy Me, Kish.
Like, I love this scene.
So how do you end up involved in Beat Factory productions?
And just give us that origin story.
Wow.
That goes way back, right?
Because you don't, I mean,
I thought an older guy was going to be at my door.
I'll be honest.
I thought you'd be older.
Because I know you're doing this in 1984 and i'm doing the math
but you must have been very young when you began um well i'm i'm a lot older than i look okay let
me see some id sir oh you got a driver's license there i'm gonna i i have no shame in telling
anybody i'm gonna be 60 next month so that's what 60 looks like 60 feels
great bro yes all right i gotta i gotta i gotta know what you know i'm about a decade away but
now i know i got my work cut out for me all right so you know ivan berry's part of this story
the beat factory productions uh i need the whole story the mic is yours give it to me now i'm
documenting this history in toronto rap uh, so we're going to go deep.
Let's go deep.
Let's go deep.
So it's funny because I was speaking to a guy,
and everybody has to know this person's name
because this is the person that got me interested
in electronic music from the get-go.
His name is Lennox Grant, L-E-N-O-X Grant.
And Lennox and I actually met when we were five years old at a place called
scarborough gospel temple there's a church um in scarborough and we sort of you know we're banging
on the piano together and then years later years later lennox um goes to a high school in pickering
and i go to the same high school i'm Hey, aren't you the guy that was back?
Hey,
since five years old.
Right.
Wow.
He's like,
yeah,
that's me,
man.
And he had a Casio keyboard.
I don't know if you remember the little ones,
the ones that played da da da.
Yes.
No,
I remember.
He had one of those little ones and he would play in the halls of the
school.
And so I was like, man, this is great.
So, of course, I had to get a Casio keyboard, right?
So I think it was a version bigger or something.
And we would play these sort of off-the-top-of-our-heads songs
around the hallway of the school.
And Ivan Barry went to the same high school as us.
In Pickering.
In Pickering, yes.
And one day Ivan said, hey, you guys are pretty cool.
I could get you some gigs and I could get you to play at the roller skating rink and stuff.
So that's how it all started.
We started as a group called Traffic Jam.
jam um it was lennox and i with like six keyboards each going on on stages and just playing electronic music and just you know with with with no vocals or anything um and then we did that for a while
and then we got a singer involved who was rupert gale uh rupert gale got involved um because people
are like you guys need a singer and so rupert came on board and we sung in traffic jam toured around toronto and
ontario as a quarter kind of like a rock funk band and we did that for a while and then traffic
jam sort of broke up and then it was lennox who came up with the idea of beat factory he he he
created the name and um beat factory became a production company producing um music for other artists so he started
working with be cool and all those guys um and then after that he sort of finished with
beat factory and that's when i came on board and then ivan said hey you know i've got there's a
girl called missishimi.
And so Ivan would go and find the talent.
And then I'd be the guy that would put the music together.
All right. So specifically, let's start here with Mishimi.
I love Mishimi.
Yeah.
I've been over here a few times.
She knows what I think of her.
So specifically, what was Beat Factory Productions doing with Mishimi?
And LA Love, I guess.
And LA Love, yeah. We started just making tracks for them. was beat factory productions doing with mishimi and la love i guess and la love yeah um we we
started just just making tracks uh for them and then they got involved with boogie down productions
that's all through through ivan and um yeah it was just just making music it was just you know i i did
jamaican funk and uh victories calling and on this mic that you know different tracks like that
those were big i mean you're talking to a guy who watched a lot of much music back then these were these were big much
music jams i loved it yeah making funk wow yeah yeah yeah and then um yeah and then we you know
the dream warriors album that we did that and so what was your so because i want to dive deeper
into dream warriors specifically but what uh were you guys doing with maestro fresh wes maestro um i did a track on his album he wasn't really involved with with with the beat
factory camp he was under farley's wing so farley sort of guided his career and and got production
for him and all that but um maestro reached out to me and said, Hey, I need a slow song. And so I, I said, okay, I'll bet I'll do it. So I created private symphony.
that was like a single after like Love in an Elevator.
Like you always had to slow it down or whatever.
And I did notice there was a time in the like late 80s,
early 90s when, you know,
rappers would throw like a slow jam in the mix.
Yeah, yeah. So that's Private Symphony.
Yeah, yeah, Private Symphony, yes.
Okay, which also, now this gives me an opportunity
to shout out a good FOTM who actually connected me with you.
And he also directed a number of the videos
that we're talking about, Maestro Fresh West videos, etc.
And Dream Warriors videos.
But let's shout out, I know him as J Gold, Joel Goldberg.
What do you think of Joel Goldberg?
Joel Goldberg, he's a mensch.
You know, he's just like...
And that's a good thing.
Yes.
Pepsi taught me that.
It's a good thing. Okay taught me that it's a good thing
okay good to be a mensch yes joel goldberg is is a solid guy uh creative um just creative
juices flowing you know uh he created electric circus with uh as you probably know with with
sharon cavanaugh and always a always a visionary pleasure to work with great guy look if i don't
know that then put a put a bullet in me.
I'm done here.
Absolutely.
He's a co-creator of Electric Circus and a good guy.
And every time he's on the show, I'm sorry, every time he's mentioned on the show, I like
to drop a little sample here.
No Cleveland, no Bowie.
A little louder this time.
No Cleveland, no Bowie.
So that's for Joel Goldberg, who's a good Cleveland guy.
So that's Michael Williams on Toronto Mic'd.
And every time Cleveland gets mentioned or Joel Goldberg gets mentioned,
I'm probably going to drop that little sample here.
So let's get very specific about one album in particular.
And now the legacy begins.
In fact, I'm going to play a little more music.
You can't stop me.
Of course, I'm going to play a little more music. You can't stop me. Of course, I'm going to play a little more music. How about some of this? You wash your face in my sink In my sink sink In my sink sink
You wash your face in my sink
Simplicity with synchronicity makes a mind-mail
Revealed impossible like a walkthrough on my field
Sadly get up to bat and take a swing
Think should I, should not
Try too late
You sunk into the sink then I wash my face
You wash your face in my sink
In my sink sink
You wash your face in my sink You wash your face if I sing, if I sing, sing, sing You wash your face if I sing, if I sing, sing
You wash your face if I sing, tougher
That's what I'm getting, I'm getting rougher
And you beat me, suffer
The loss of an attempt, well tried
Well your side tried, but my side will never be denied
Cause I'm swinging and stinging, neglection with an injection of truth
I've come to untwist the twisted
How does it feel now that I got you all to think?
Yeah, and wash your face if I sing, if I sing, sing I've come to untwist the twisted. How does it feel now that I got you all to think? Yeah.
And wash your face in my sink.
Wash your face in my sink.
Here I go, I, here I go, I, here I go again.
I have a little face.
I don't want to fade it down, but I want to hear your voice, of course, Richard.
But, again, what are you thinking now when you're listening to Wash Your Face in My Sink?
Again, I'm thinking just the intricacy of what is going on musically.
It's almost like a dream.
It's like I kind of remember doing it I, I kind of remember doing it,
but I kind of don't because I've done so much stuff.
You know,
it's,
you've done a lot,
but I'm guessing that this is a particular point of pride for you because we're talking about over a million units sold worldwide.
This was a big album.
Yeah.
Huge album.
And,
and you know what?
In fact,
it's this track that started off everything.
Watch your face in my sink. You know, we did the demo we sent it over to england and island records freaked out
and they're like hey you guys got to do an album immediately and wash your face my sink blew up
went to top 10 and across europe uh top of the pops and all that so this is a track that really
started it so this was um when i hear this song it's like man this is this is a track that really started it. So this was, when I hear this song, it's like, man, this is like the beginning.
This is like really the beginning of everything.
Yeah, for most of us, particularly us normies,
this is the first Dream Warriors song we heard was this song right here.
And it was a love at first listen.
I'll be honest with you.
Even 2023, I'm listening to it and I'm just digging it.
It's great.
Great. I have a question about the popularity of the
Dream Warriors in England.
What do you
think they got that maybe
wasn't resonating as strongly
with Americans, for example? I'm just curious
because we often hear the Dream Warriors
far more popular, I believe, in
England than in the United States of America.
What are your thoughts on that?
Canada has eventually caught up to England and Europe.
But back in those days, Europe was way more advanced
in just the way they thought, just in how they dressed,
in the kind of foods they had.
Just their whole creativity and mindset
was just much more advanced than Canadians, especially in certain genres of music.
So I think it just took a, you know, they saw the creative more of the project.
And also there seems to be like there's a jazz fusion in the mix there, which I think later, you know, with Dillasoul and Tribe Called Quest,
for example, it's almost like possibly, again, these are my thoughts.
I want to hear your thoughts.
But Dream Warriors were almost on the bleeding edge,
like almost too ahead of the curve in that kind of a blend.
Yes, yes, great analogy.
Yeah, yeah, you captured it.
That's exactly what it was. Sometimes being on the bleeding edge uh you're you're you know maybe it's king lou is the creative
force but you can you're visionary you see almost too far ahead and it's like it's like that scene
in um back to the future where he's playing the van halen or whatever and he's like you're not
ready for that yet you know what i mean it's like but you still sold i mean it's hugely popular and
influential album that sold over a million units canadian rap artists simply didn't sell a million
units back then this is way before you know you know drake probably could like sneeze into a
microphone and it'll be uh streamed a million times by lunch but But back then, no, this was a rarity.
And the scene was sort of, you know,
and this will tie in back to DJ Ron Nelson
because I'm curious of his role in all this
because am I right that the
And Now the Legacy Begins album by the Dream Warriors
is literally recorded in DJ Ron Nelson's basement?
Yes, yes, yes.
You know, it's funny you mentioned that
before coming over here today
i listened to the the kish interview oh yeah i love kish yeah kish is my boy and kish described
it perfectly you you went downstairs and beat factory was to the left ron nelson was to the
right wow and um yeah i i lived in that studio so i lived in a little little 10 by 6 room.
I was there probably for like three or four years.
And I had a little microwave in the corner.
And I slept on a futon with no board.
So just a futon mattress on the floor.
And broke like they had these pizza pizza coupons and i'd have to
you could get two sandwiches for five bucks and i would i would go and get the the five dollar
sam's have one for like you know mid-morning and the other one would be for dinner and
like just tough times and just yeah well if you heard Kish's episode, you know, Andrew Cascino,
who was wizened up and became a voice actor
so he could pay his bills.
He's in California.
Hello to Kish.
Then you heard him disclose to me in that episode
what he made from Order From Chaos.
Like I purchased the CD Order From Chaos.
I remember buying it in the basement of HMV
at 333 Yonge Street.
Just like I bought it now The Legacy Begins.
These were CDs I purchased
and I loved.
But I was personally blown away
when Kish revealed, you know,
what he made from that album,
which wouldn't buy you
a large pizza today.
Mm-hmm.
Like, it sounds to me
like a criminal level,
like that the artist
would be so squeezed like that.
It just just something smells
there and i would wonder what your thoughts are well you know what you know what at the end of
the day at the end of the day all of us all of us back in the day just did it for the love of doing
it you know we just we just simply somebody was making money somebody was making not the artist
yeah but we didn't you know at least i didn't i can't speak for everybody but at least i never i just never thought about the the financial
part of it and they appreciated that because they knew they could exploit that naivety
i'm getting mad here okay i'm still mad at the what i uh i watched the fifth estate yesterday
with the the buffy saint marie uh revelation so I'm kind of fired up on all this stuff, these injustices, et cetera.
I think it's messed up that the artist
seems to make the least from their art
in this structure,
this music production infrastructure.
It should be flipped.
Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Things are just the way they are there's various groups
you've moved on from that
yeah
better place, better opportunity
these days
DJ Ron Nelson, I'm curious
since we talked about some of these early
Canadian hip hop acts like Mishy Mee
Maestro Fresh West
of course Dream Dream Warriors, more.
Kish, what role does Fantastic Voyage on CKLN play in all this?
And specifically DJ Ron Nelson?
Well, Ron Nelson, I mean, without Ron Nelson,
there would be no hip hop scene.
Point blank, done, finished.
I mean, he brought all of the American acts from New York and all over the place to concert halls so that we could see them live.
And, you know, man, these guys are human beings that we can touch. You know, because without them, without seeing them perform, you know, there's,
there's no, um, nothing to look up to, nothing to.
So when those guys came on stage, it was like, oh man, I could,
I could be one of the, it gave us all hope.
And, and Ron really exposed that hip hop scene on a national level to
everybody. So, uh, he's not in red respect for Ron Nelson.
Absolutely. Uh, There's actually,
you're bored one day, I had Chuck D on the
program and we talked about
DJ Ron Nelson and Fantastic Voyage
and bringing the
first hip-hop shows to Canada and it's
quite an interesting listen.
If you get a minute. Alright, before we
conclude, because you've done so much more,
it's funny, it's like, oh, this guy invited me to his basement
and he just wants to talk about and now the legacy begins it's like you're like i have so many decades
of great stuff and we're going to cover a lot of that but just one more Ludi, Ludi, Ludi, Ludi, Ludi
My mother wanted me to make another song
Something brand new so she could dance to too
So this one's dedicated to no other than my mother
My father, my sisters and my brother
Or you could say the family, or better yet the families
Oh wait a sec, what the heck This one's for Jamaica, Africa, Dominica, Trinidad and Tobago, St. Kitts,
Bermuda, Antigua, St. Lucia, St. Martin's, and do not forget Montserrat, Nevis, Aruba,
Grenada, Guyana, and Cuba, St. Vincent, Anguilla, Bahamas, Puerto Rico, Curico, Dominican Republic,
and Rio, Martinique and Guadalupe, and Virgin Islands.
Truly, this one's for my mother when we were playing.
Luli, Luli, Luli, Luli, Luli, Luli.
So Richard, when the albums dropped,
did they drop them back then?
I guess that's a modern term.
But now the Legacy Begins is released,
and it becomes a commercial and critically acclaimed album.
Were you at all surprised, or did you know it all along?
That's a great question.
I was surprised.
I was really surprised at the reception,
and I guess it's something we created that people just resonated with around the world.
And when a media company from England called me, I remember lying in bed and they called me,
Are you Richard Arnold?
And they did this whole interview on me.
That's when I was like, okay, this has gone big.
There's something happening.
Yeah, there's something happening there, yeah.
Wow.
And on November 1st of this year, that's only a few days away, okay?
It's the October 28th today at Toronto's, the Glenn Gould Studio there by the CBC.
They're going to induct my definition of a boombastic jazz style into that
Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Will you be there?
Absolutely.
Yes.
Good for you, man.
Get your flowers.
You deserve them.
I'll be there.
King Lou will be there.
Capital Q.
Yeah.
It's going to be a great evening.
To bring it back to the great Joel Goldberg,
he is actively working on getting King Lou,
Louis Robinson,
and Capital Q.
Does he have a real name,
or is it just on his birth certificate, Capital Q?
I don't know if I'm allowed to divulge that information.
We know Snow is a Darren O'Brien,
but yeah, we don't have to.
But Capital Q, King Lou,
got to get them on Toronto Mic'd. We got to talk more about that scene here.
So you, co-owner of the Beat Factory, got to get them on Toronto Mike we got to talk more about that scene here so you
co-owner of the Beat Factory
we talked about you doing that
with Ivan Barry
when does it end and why
I mean you run for
you have a good decade there but
why does it end for the Beat Factory production
it was really good
everything has it's time
everything has it's start everything has it was really good um everything has its time everything has its start everything has its end and um i just when we did after the european tour um which was six
weeks across europe um promoting the album i i just i just felt it was when i get i was like
you know when i get back to canada i'm gonna i'm gonna do something different i'm gonna
i'm gonna pursue a different uh direction in what direction was that
um it it worked out that it was it was television that i i didn't know at the time but i i just knew
that um i just knew that i was like okay i'm kind of done with with producing rap uh after that
yeah so it's funny because uh uh or at least a coincidence that joe goldberg now you know he works at the
zoomer plex the zoomer plex is in liberty village it's he's it's uh the ytv the old ytv studio it's
the same geographical location and you maybe i'll play another this is not not the dream warriors
but and i hope i pulled the right clip here it It's tough to find quality. I should have said, hey, send me some files, but listen closely
here. time to compete when your time's up so what you gonna do with that minute screen who's rapping on that track that is me
sir that's you take you on a ride to a
place that's live with the music is bumping to make you vibe but that's you take you on a ride to a place that's live where
the music is pumping to make you vibe but there's always something new around the corner gonna play
a little uh-oh make you jump to the beat because it's time for a treat but the question's next you
try to compete many times up to two say what you're gonna do let me just scream uh-oh you're
not only the rapper on that track you're not just a hired gun you compose that track everything yeah
that's your baby right there okay so some of the listenership because i know You're not just a hired gun. You composed that track. Everything, yeah. That's your baby right there.
Okay, so some of the listenership,
because I know I am,
will be a little too old to remember
Uh-Oh, the game show for YTV.
So what was Uh-Oh?
Uh-Oh was a half-hour game show
where kids would compete against each other.
So it was actually created as a spinoff
from another show called It's Alive,
which I also did the opening theme for.
Okay, well, hold that thought then.
Let's see if this is it here. tough to find by the way uh my research skills here okay so that's awesome it's alive so start
with that what's it's alive it's a ytv show that you compose the music for but it's alive and then
bring us to uh-oh and then tell us uh in this this part of your professional life like you're
just doing you're just like the musical guy doing YTV shows, but
yeah, start with what are these shows and what you did for them. And, uh, so how, how this all
started another interesting story. Uh, and it all ties back to the dream warriors when, when, uh,
YTV did a segment on the dream warriors. Um, they, they came in down into the Ron Nelson studio and
they did a piece with them. I think they were interviewing him for some uh clip or a show or something okay cool and after the dream warriors interview a gentleman
by the name of rick watts uh i owe my entire tv career to him uh he he was the producer at ytv at
the time and he said to me he said hey richard have you ever thought about doing music for
television and i said no and he said um well you know because i'm here thinking like the only way have you ever thought about doing music for television? And I said, no.
And he said, well, you know,
because I'm here thinking like the only way to, you know,
do music is to do an album and go on stage and get beer thrown at you and perform in smoky clubs.
Only if it's Great Lakes beer, though, remember.
By the way, you're going to take, just so you know quickly,
fresh craft beer from Great Lakes Brewery.
You're taking that home with you today.
Cheers.
Awesome.
Cheers, man. And so, yeah, he said um so i said no he said well we've got a new show called it's alive um
and we're looking for an opening theme and i said interesting i said what's an opening theme
i i had i didn't have a clue i agree i don't get an idea what this guy was talking about and so
he's like so we're looking
for music for 30 seconds like 30 seconds and he's like yeah you know because i'm here used to doing
tracks for three minutes four minutes and he's like 30 seconds yeah and and and so i i told him
at first i told him no i said nah man nah and we went we literally went back and forth for about three weeks he's calling me
hey did you want to do no rick no hey it's me again do you want to do this and i said okay
and so i finally caved and i said okay let me do this 30 second opening theme and so i did it i
sent it to them and they loved it so they used that as the opening theme for It's Alive. And then It's Alive had a little segment called Uh-Oh! The Game Show.
So It's Alive was sort of like a sketch comedy thing.
And Uh-Oh! The Game Show was a little 10-minute segment in It's Alive.
And apparently the viewers loved it, so they decided to do the Uh-Oh! The Game Show as its own separate thing, its own separate show.
So again, he needed an opening theme um uh-oh didn't even have the green light until i sent the opening theme so they
didn't have the they didn't have the green light to go ahead with the show until until i sent the
opening theme wow so so you know he asked for the opening theme i gave it to them everybody at yt was
blown away and he's like okay yes we've got the green light to go ahead and then the animation
was created to the opening theme so and the whole set design i don't know if for all you
uh-oh fans out there because first the animation was created and then they designed the entire set
around the animation but it was all from the music.
Okay, amazing.
So you're composing these jams.
And there's a certain demo, maybe just a titch younger than me,
where this is going to just hit.
It's like when I hear the Degrassi Jr. High theme song, right?
It's like those of a certain age, this is going to be key nostalgia.
But I'm curious, when you compose this song for uh-oh and you realize
there's a part for a rapper do you think you'll call one of your buddies i don't know you go hey
kish a maestro you're gonna call one of your buddies or is your thought all along i'll just
do it yeah i'll just do it i'll just do it you don't need to bring in the uh yeah you can do it
yourself okay by the way before i leave that scene uh there is a gentleman from that scene i i loved I'll just do it. You don't need to bring in the, yeah, you can do it yourself. Okay.
By the way, before I leave that scene,
there is a gentleman from that scene.
I loved his music and I'm concerned about his well-being.
I'm just wondering if you have any information
and you don't have to be very specific,
but do you know how Rumble is doing?
Do you have any insight into how MC Rumble is doing?
I have no idea.
No idea. Okay. I thought i'd ask you since uh
rumble and rumble and strong were a part of that scene there too okay so ytv uh-oh shout out some
of the other shows on ytv again this will hit with a certain demo uh younger than i am but
what other shows on ytv did you compose the music for well once once i did uh-oh i mean i was like the guy
so everybody was like okay richard hey can you do this can you do this can you and so i did um
a show called little big kid i did another show called um alpha to omega another show called warp
okay another show called my special book um so yeah i think it was i think that's the well those
are the wide tv shows shows but we should shout out
CKVR right you you also did some composition for CKVR in Barry yeah I did I think something for
the Barry Rogers show yeah what was I'm trying to remember like I this is the new VR era I'm
trying to remember the Barry Rogers show what was that I you never saw it I never watched it
you only watched the opening theme and then you said I'm out of here so if anyone could tell me very Roger show. What was that? You never saw it. I never watched it. Oh, come on.
You only watched the opening theme and then you said,
I'm out of here.
So if anyone could tell me
what the very Roger show is
on CKVR,
I am curious.
All right, man,
that's a great run.
So Uh-Oh!
runs for six seasons
and you did not only
composing and performing
that opening theme,
but you do the underscore,
all the sound effects.
Everything.
Yeah, it was such a great experience because I had my sampler.
So everything was triggered live.
So I had a little setup with my keyboard and a sampler,
and I'm watching the gameplay.
You do it live.
All live.
So I was watching the gameplay, and I had an earphone in one ear,
and I'm watching a little monitor on my right,
and I'm doing everything live.
So when the Pl planco chips are falling
down the thing i'm doing all on live on the keyboard and the bumpers and stings everything
would be triggered from different keys on the keyboard the opening going to commercial all the
sound effects that sounds fun to do it live oh it was great it was great it's fun it reminds me of
like when you learned at some point i learned that the
the those sounds that you hear fired off by a keyboard on uh seinfeld's opening were not just
they were actually done live and like to hit the beats that you know jerry would do a piece of
stand-up this is the early days of seinfeld he'd do a piece of stand-up in the beginning
and somebody would in real time react to the beats and the jokes and stuff with that keyboard
firing off those sounds. But I always figured it was canned or whatever and whatever. So when you
learn it's done live, it adds that extra element. And that sounds like what you're describing
yourself right now, being the musical director for Uh-Oh.
The spontaneity. Yeah.
Yeah. You got to react to what's, you know, it's like this and I don't know when I'm going to fire
off a no Cleveland, no Bowie. It depends on when it comes up organically all right so you do this
for you do it i guess that gets into the the year 2000 but then you kind of move on to some some
interesting ad campaigns right yeah sort of um did did Kellogg's and a bunch of stuff. I think a couple
were through Joel, actually. Joel was
directed, I think, one of them, and then he passed me on to a couple of
the producers, and I did some stuff for that for a while, yeah. I mean, big brands.
Future Toronto Mike sponsors like Kellogg's and Microsoft
and Nestle and AT&T.
Like these are monster multinational brands here.
Yeah.
I mean,
it's cool.
It's cool to kind of dip your,
dip your toes in everything,
right?
Yeah.
You got to try a bunch of different stuff.
Okay.
So when I told my nine year old upstairs that you were coming over,
I didn't,
you know,
I didn't celebrate your work with the dream warriors and I didn't say,
Oh, you know what? You won't believe what he did with Mishi, me and LA love. Uh, no, I,'t, you know, I didn't celebrate your work with the Dream Warriors. And I didn't say, oh, you know, well, you won't believe what he did with Mishi Mi and L.A. Love.
No, I hit on one song in particular, and he's very excited.
In fact, afterwards, he wants to meet you.
So could you compose a song for a series that he just adores?
This is work he did for Nelvana here in Toronto.
But before I play it and talk to you about it, I just want to give you, I already gave you some beer from Great Lakes
but I want to let you know
I have a large lasagna
in my freezer
you can take home
courtesy of Palma Pasta
and I promise you, Richard,
you're going to cook it up
and you're going to report back
that it is the very best lasagna
you've ever had
that came from a store.
That's my pledge to you.
Wow, cheers, brother.
Yeah, and you're going to have
your pasta,
you got your beer. I have a wireless speaker for you courtesy of you. Wow. Cheers, brother. Yeah, and you're going to have your pasta, you got your beer.
I have a wireless speaker for you, courtesy
of Moneris. Oh, wow.
And it's good. Everybody,
I just had Rob Pruce here. He was the keyboard
player for the Spoons. He was here yesterday.
And he was telling me how good that thing
sounds. Moneris sends it over.
You can enjoy anything you want on that thing, of course.
But, you gotta
listen to season five of Yes, We Are Open
because FOTM Al Grego went east.
He went to the Maritimes.
He went to Newfoundland.
And he collects inspiring stories from small business owners.
And then he shares them on Yes, We Are Open.
Season five is dropping now.
So subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
And while you're subscribing to podcasts,
I urge you, Richard, to subscribe to
the Advantaged Investor podcast from Raymond James Canada. Whether you already work with a trusted
financial advisor or currently manage your own investment plans, the Advantaged Investor provides
the engaging wealth management information you value as you pursue your most important goals.
And we're going to get to some of those goals in a minute. Also measuring tape, courtesy of Ridley Funeral Home.
You never know if you need to measure something, Richard.
Insert joke there.
I'm grateful for it.
Too many jokes popped in your head and you're like, I shouldn't say those jokes.
That happens to everybody.
But thank you, Ridley Funeral Home.
They're pillars of this community since 1921.
And I'm going to play that song now.
I hope Jervis is listening.
But I'm shouting out two websites just before I do that.
One is pumpkinsafterdark.com because it's the week.
This is the weekend for Halloween events.
And they have an award-winning monster event in Milton, Ontario called Pumpkins After Dark.
So go to pumpkinsafterdark.com and get your tickets now.
There's only a few days left in this amazing Halloween event.
Tis the season.
And recyclemyelectronics.ca, that's where you go, Richard.
So if you have any old Casio keyboards that don't work,
you don't throw that in the garbage.
If you have old electronics or devices or tech,
you go to recyclemyelectronics.ca and find out a place near you where you can drop it off and
get it properly recycled. So those are your marching orders, Richard. I almost called you
maximum six there. Where does the name maximum 60? I mean, I know this cause it's obvious,
but tell us where the name specifically came from. Maximum 60.
Louie, Louie and his genius mind, of course. So one way, one day we were in the studio and he's
like,
hey man, you know, you control things, you know,
you control things kind of like the speed limit, you know.
And so it was maximum 60, the speed limit, that's it.
Did you ponder maximum 100?
That would put you on the highway.
Was it 100 back then on the highway?
Yeah, I think it's been 100 for a while now.
Yeah, 60 is like a street like Islington, for example. Yeah, the little streets.
It's 60, yeah.
Bigger, little, because the real little ones are like 40,
and then you get the bigger ones like Islington, Kipling.
Those are like 60.
And then once you get on the Gardiner or the 401 or the 400,
you're now in 100 land.
Although I took a road trip out east like Al Grego just did,
and I can tell you when you get to New Brunswick, it's 110.
Oh, wow.
Did you know that?
No.
I know.
So we're missing out on it.
Who drives 100 anyways on the Gardiner?
Unless there's traffic and you can't go fast.
But if you're on the 401 and you got the space to do it,
who drives 100?
Nobody.
Nobody, right?
Nobody's doing it.
That sounds dangerous to me.
Like if I see one going on, I'm like, that's dangerous.
Like I don't know what your rule is uh my rule is
like if i see it's 100 and it's no traffic my brain says you can go up to 120 like i just i
that's my personal cap is i'm not going beyond 120 but that's still that's still 20 more than
the limit am i saying too much am i incriminating myself there you go but i can tell you richard only drives a 60 maximum 60 okay let's get to that song here jarvis has waited long enough It's a doing it all across the nation
Time to battle now for world domination
Cool in your head, you better get a grip
The battle has begun so let it rip
Hey playboy judges, here we come They should be cool in their hip, you better get a grip, the battle has begun so let it rip!
Good day boy, judges, here we come, rip now, let's go now!
The competition's gonna be number one, rip now, let it go now! I don't know where Beyblades came from.
Obviously, it's been around a long time,
but I only seem to have noticed in the last five years
when it hit the schoolyard that my nine-year-old goes to
and it became like everyone had to have all these Beyblades.
This song is called All Across the Nation.
It's from the Beyblade series.
I got questions.
You composed this.
Yeah, so I composed it with,
it's funny you mentioned his
name uh rumble so so rumble and i had actually created a a duo called the black europeans and
um that's where we you know we started to do a lot of ad work and stuff like that and uh
you know basically i the the the contacts that i had garnered from Chorus, doing the YTV stuff, I sort of branched out to Nelvana,
who was also Chorus at the time.
And I reached out to a guy.
Well, it is now, right?
So Nelvana is owned by Chorus.
Yeah, so I reached out to a guy called Stephen Hudeki,
who was the previous music supervisor.
And he got us gigs like Cardcaptors,
and there's another show, Metabots. And then, no, actually, no, he got us Cardcaptors and there's another show, Metabots.
And then, no, actually, no, he got us Cardcaptors.
We worked on that.
And that's Amazing Combat Machines.
That would be your song for Metabots.
In Metabots, yeah.
So as the black Europeans, we created these songs for Nelvan
and a couple of the ad campaigns as well.
And, yeah. Okay um yeah okay sort of
moved on from that and card captors uh whenever you try and let's go are a couple uh uh jams you
composed for the the movie yeah okay good for you man and this song uh who's singing like who's
singing on that that's not your voice he's singing on the beyblade song all across the nation it's a guy i i forget his name we we asked people we were because because nalvana wanted like
a sum 41 okay so obviously i don't think you know when i hear that i start i don't want to waste
my time be another kind of like i hear some 41 like it's very influenced by some 41 yeah so
they were like there's no shame in that, Richard. Find someone that can sing like,
you know, the guy from Sum...
Derek Wibley, I think.
Wibley, yeah.
And so we...
I don't remember the guy
who sang it.
No, they're from Ajax.
Yeah, yeah, close, yeah.
Something in that Durham water.
Shout out to Durham.
Okay, so that's not Derek
from Sum 41,
but so I think it's
kind of a mind blow to me
that you were working
with Rumble in 2002
when you composed this Beyblade song.
So, all right.
Now, again, at some point you lose touch with Rumble,
I take it, since you have no idea how he's doing today.
But I know Ron Nelson had some concerns for his well-being.
So I just hope that Rumble is doing well.
That's all I'll throw out into the universe right there.
Okay.
So Card Cop, we talked about Beyblades and all this
great stuff here. There's a
I mean, you do so much stuff here, but there's
one more that I think listeners will be like, oh
I can't believe he did that. So I will
shout out FOTM Adam
Groh and he's been over
a few times. We've had some great conversations
and then I'm going to play a jam and we're going to talk
about that.
If you're up for it, let's motor.
Item right there.
Alright, this is
Cash Cab. What's your
involvement with Cash Cab, Richard?
Cash Cab, I wrote the opening theme of the music.
And for season one, I did all of the music.
So it was the opening theme and then all of the music in season one,
which was about 20 minutes of music.
All the different cues, all the sound effects,
the ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, all of that stuff.
I designed it all.
And yeah, so Cash Cab another um great story of how i
actually landed that gig so rick watts from ytv right after he after you know ytv sort of ended
he would always keep in touch with me you know and um he'd go from different production companies
to different production companies say hey you should try out for this hey you should try out
for that and so cash cab came along and so he's production companies to, hey, you should try it for this. Hey, you should try it for that.
And so Cash Cap came along.
And so he's like, hey, you know, you should you should try out for this one.
This is this is this is good.
This is going to be good.
And I'm like, OK.
So so he's like, OK, so here's the producer name.
And so get in touch with.
So I got in touch with them and they're like, OK, so we want we want something like this.
Can you do it?
So I went and I did it. And then they're like, OK we want we want something like this can you do it so i went and i
did it and then they're like okay well that sounds pretty good but you know we're kind of looking for
like lenny kravitz with a sitar you know i'm like oh okay sure no problem i can do that yeah so i i
would send them another track and then well no it's kind of like and so this went back and forth
for a good seven or eight times and then i said you know what this is just this is just for me to get the gig i don't know i don't have
the gig yet right so i said to them you know what i'm gonna uh you know what i'm gonna do i'm gonna
take my gear down to your studio to right into your office and i'm gonna create something on
the spot for you so i took down my computer and my speakers and my keyboard and i set everything
up in their office i said okay what do you want me to do right and so they're like oh this is amazing you're here oh
this is so exciting okay can you do some like rock and so I pulled up like a guitar and logic and
and you know did a drum you know something and put some and so I was there for a couple of hours
and then I packed up my stuff and oh this is fascinating thank you so much and i think it's three days after doing that i got the email
wow saying that hey you know our team you know we're really impressed with you just wanted to
let you know that you've got the gig so you're gonna you're gonna be the guy doing the music
for cash cab wow and cash cab the one thing i remember item telling me is that cash
cab like for a long period people thought there were new cash cabs being created but they were
actually seeing reruns like so i don't i it's something it's very difficult to tell like
what era is like new cash cab episodes or they just rerun in old ones they're just yeah there's
eight they shot eight seasons okay starting in like 2008 or something like that, right?
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
But you got, okay, eight seasons and you, yeah, you did the opening theme, background
music, the sound effects for Cash Cab.
So shout out to Adam Groh and shout out to Cash Cab.
I mean, I know a lot of people who've been on Cash Cab.
It's kind of like you're walking around late at night one night and then the Cash Cab cab
shows up.
It's a fun little Toronto tradition there.
Cool, man. Cool. the cash cab cab shows up it's uh it's a fun little toronto tradition there cool man cool now i want to uh point out the fact that you owe your entire career to lennox grant you know that right
like this all of us like hearing you bring that keyboard and you're doing this for cash cabs i'm
like you only got that keyboard because of lennox right yeah yeah he without without him he's the
one that brought me into electronic music he was the one that first got a him, he's the one that brought me into electronic music. He was the one that first got a sequencer.
He was the one that said, hey, man, I got this thing called the MSQ-700.
We're big Roland fans back.
Roland and Apple.
From day one, I've always been a Roland and an Apple guy.
And he showed me this thing, the MSQ-700.
And I think he had a, what drum machine did he have?
Was it the 727 or the 606?
And he's the one that said,
hey man, this is what you can do.
And I was like fascinated.
Lennox, so how's Lennox doing these days?
Great, great.
I was actually on the phone with him
just before coming over to your place today.
Okay, that's good to hear.
And I hope Lennox listens to hear that Richard,
you owe him like 15% of your entire lifetime
of employment income.
Yeah, probably more.
Maybe 20% for Lennox Grant.
Okay, good stuff there.
Amazing.
And that's L-E-N-O-X.
It's only one N.
Right, not like Lennox Lewis.
It's got the two N's in there.
So we kind of whirlwind through your career,
spent a little more time and now the legacy begins.
But is there any other highlights you'd like to,
this is your opportunity, Richard,
because I am going to play the song you did with Maestro,
just to drill into that a little bit.
And then I need to pick your brain really quickly
on something that is bothering me.
So I like to talk about things in the zeitgeist that are affecting me.
And there's something affecting me that I want to just ask your opinion on,
just as a human being, not necessarily as a musical composer.
But are there any other highlights in that fascinating career you've had?
So what are you doing right now?
What is it right now?
You're just composing music? Yeah just for different different uh projects that come along
different um like tv companies reaching out to me and saying hey we need you know we need a pack for
for this and just sort of keeping keeping the chops going right and i'm working on uh i've got a uh a
new uh preschool animated project that i'm actually working on right now. It's going to be the next Baby Shark.
Okay.
Yeah, you got to aim high.
I love it.
Telling everybody right here, right now,
it's a song called Mama Monkey.
Okay, Mama Monkey.
So we can't hear that yet, right?
We got to wait to hear this.
Yeah.
Oh, you're thinking if you could flip me a file,
I would play it.
You never know where these hits come from i have my youngest is seven now but she
latched on to this show called bluey and i never i didn't know i never even heard it you know i'm
not that i'm listening to like the preschool chatter or whatever but i i'm like she's and
it's australian so they've got like australian accents and they even use like terms that i know
are like australian terms like we don't actually use here and it's very australian but she loves
this thing and you know it's likeable enough just like we don't actually use here and it's very Australian, but she loves this thing.
And you know,
as it's likable enough,
just like,
but it's like,
you never know what's going to hit.
Suddenly bluey is hitting,
like,
where did that come from?
So what's yours called again?
It's called mama monkey.
You know what?
So the video's done.
There's an animated video that's done for the song.
And we want to,
do you want to sing it for me?
Oh,
geez.
But it's, it's a kid singing.
So I wrote the lyrics and I wrote the music,
but a kid singing.
It's like,
Mama monkey likes to clap both of her hands.
But you got to hear it.
So I'm going to send you the link.
Okay.
I'll share it.
And you can check it out.
All right.
Let's talk about this.
Yeah.
All right, Richard.
We're going to slow it down.
On a Saturday morning.
South Etobicoke.
Kicking out the maestro.
Memories.
Vintage.
Well, you know, this is a six-minute jam.
I'll bring it down.
Talk to me in real time.
This is like pop-up video.
Okay, so maestro's like, I just need a slow jam?
What do you got?
And I just bang this out i mean you can you can hear the jam and lewis overtones jimmy jam and terry lewis like those
those guys are my idols you know as producers and uh the whole sos band uh that era you know
r&b just whose voice are we hearing here?
Oh, man.
You can't remember.
What the hell is on there?
I don't remember.
Okay.
It's getting hot in here. Flying over oceans while the clouds go passing by.
I kiss you on your lips and taste your scented neck.
We're going on a trip we'll never, ever forget.
I'll take you on a voyage Traveling hand in hand
Yeah
And like an orchestra
Your body
I'll command
Conducting
Instructing
You won't need to move
I'll tell you straight up, girl.
Won't nobody disturb this groove.
You see, you've been more than just my lover.
Is that you whispering in that part?
Is that you?
I think so, maybe.
I recognize the whisper.
Okay, it's getting very hot in here, but I'll just bring it down a little bit.
But yeah, what an era, right?
I feel like LL Cool J started this.
He would always go hard, whatever, hard rhyming,
and then he'd have that slow jam for the end of the night.
Yeah, great vibes, man.
And that album, I mean, that album had, that's simply in effect,
it had Let Your Backbone Slide in it.
And that's like the first, I think that's like your first top 40 Canadian rap song
that really broke on stations like CFTR.
100%.
Big shout out to Maestro West, man.
Another solid guy.
Visionary for sure.
You know, kudos to everything he's done.
And you know Dwight Drummond's in the video
for Let Your Backbone Slide.
Really?
He's got a cameo in the beginning at the stairs when they're in the red jackets there.
And I think that's because he was working security for Electric Circus,
and that's how he hooked up with the director of that video, Joe Goldberg.
Wow.
You can share those fun facts of Lennox Grant when you can.
Okay, so what's bugging Mike lately?
I'll keep this brief because I'm going to explore this with Tom Wilson on
Wednesday.
Tom Wilson is a Hamilton musician who was in a bunch of bands I liked,
but particularly junk house.
That's kind of what we're going to focus on on Wednesday.
This,
uh,
nineties or rock outfit junk house.
I always liked them,
but he's also a man who lived five decades of his life thinking he was,
uh,
born to, born to Hamilton.
His Hamilton parents were of Irish descent.
So he thought he was a white guy.
And then he found out in his 50s he was actually adopted and he's a Mohawk man.
Like this is a kind of a mind blow, right?
You're 50 years.
So it'd be like a few years ago you learned you're a white guy.
I'm white.
What would that change for you, Richard? You'd be like, what the hell? I'm a white guy. I'm white. What would that change for you, Richard? You'd
be like, what the hell? I'm a white guy. Okay. So what's bugging me is really affecting me.
And are you at all familiar with the Fifth Estate episode yesterday that talked about
Buffy St. Marie? Do you know who Buffy St. Marie is? I know who she is. I don't. I know
nothing about the Fifth Estate. So I'll put it in a nutshell.
And just curious in your feedback,
because you're literally the next person who came over into the studio to talk.
I did bring this up on Toast yesterday with Rob Pruse and Bob Ouellette.
But now I've got Richard Rodwell, Maximum 60, in the basement.
And just before we say goodbye, I am curious.
So Buffy St. Marie forever, like for the last 60 years, presented herself as an indigenous woman, born on a reserve in Saskatchewan, and then adopted by white parents in the United States.
And then at some point in her early 20s, she rediscovers her birth family, the Cree people, First Nations. So she basically rediscovers her indigenous roots, essentially,
and then has been an absolutely wonderful advocate
and inspiring indigenous musician and, again, advocate.
I love this woman, Buffy St. Marie.
That's her in a nutshell.
But the evidence is overwhelming, and the receipts have been checked
and CBC journalists did a fantastic job.
And if you watch this Fifth Estate episode from yesterday, it's free on YouTube
and I put it on torontomic.com.
But if you watch it, you will learn that Buffy St. Marie is actually not indigenous at all.
She was born to a white couple in the United States,
and the father is of Italian descent,
and the mother is of French descent,
or English or something.
But the white, and that name, Buffy St. Marie,
she's actually Beverly Santa Maria.
And then Santa Maria became St. Marie
because there was anti-Italian sentiment
following World War II.
So she is a white woman, a white
American woman who doesn't
have any connections at all to
the indigenous peoples until
in her early 20s she's adopted
by the Peapod First Nation.
This is her as an adult. So for 20 years
she lives her life as a white girl
in a white family, in a
white neighborhood in
the United States and they are Christian,
and they are middle class.
And she lives that life for 20 years,
and then she seemingly invents
this fictional indigenous story
about being adopted in the 60s scoop.
Apparently this never happened,
et cetera, et cetera.
And I'm grappling,
I'm processing all this and grappling all this,
and the big question is, does it matter? Like she did so much good and she's such a hero to so many
in the indigenous community and people like myself, like does this falsehood, this lie,
essentially negate all the good she's done the past six decades. And this is a heavy topic to
close with. I'm just curious if you have a thought on that
as I grapple with it.
It's a big one, Richard.
You thought this was all about Dream Warriors.
It's a lot for you to process right now.
But, yeah, like here, okay, so you're a black man.
Yeah.
If a white person lives 20 years, you know,
with their birth parents being raised as a white person lives 20 years with their birth parents
and being raised as a white person,
and then in their early 20s is adopted by a black family
and immerses themselves in the black community,
does that make that person black?
At the end of the day, I think it comes down to what anybody's, what everybody's comfortable with.
If,
if you want to live a certain life and you,
if you want to live how,
you know,
as a,
as a,
as a persona,
or if,
you know,
you're a man and now you want to be a woman,
you know,
it's,
it's,
it's okay.
As long as there's happiness,
as long as,
as long as you're happy,
I mean,
she must've done whatever she did for her own reasons.
I can't speculate on what those would be,
but at the end of the day,
if she's happy doing what she's doing,
then so be it.
Okay, one more question
before Lois de Valo takes us home here.
So last question would be,
okay, so she's won many awards,
like earmarked for indigenous artists, etc.
So she's received accolades like earmarked for indigenous artists, etc.
So she's received accolades and awards as an indigenous woman.
And because she won those, and again, she's not indigenous.
She's a white American.
She's not even Canadian, but she's in the order of Canada.
She's won all these things as an indigenous woman. Did she not take those awards and accolades from somebody who was actually indigenous like
because if if they had some award for best uh i don't know what they have but because but something
that uh like like she she was ineligible for these awards that she happily took and celebrated but
someone else would have received these who was actually an indigenous person like do you see
that part like so uh this is all and again no answers here today this is big heady stuff and i'm seeing the outreach
some people are like leave buffy alone she's a national treasure and i totally get that nobody
loves buffy more than i do go read toronto mic.com i mean i'm crazy about this woman i used to see her
on sesame street in the 70s i love woman. But these facts are compelling in this documentary
and I'm just processing like how does that change things
for how I perceive Buffy St. Marie.
It's kind of a mind F.
And Richard, I don't expect any answers from you
because I have no answers myself,
but I feel a need to talk about it.
You know what I mean?
I can see your viewpoints.
However, I have no comment.
You have to process all this.
Okay, but Richard, you hit it out of the park
and you're trying to make debut.
And that was amazing.
We have to take a photo by the TMDS studio tree out front.
And I got to get your lasagna out of the freezer.
But this was great.
If that was your podcast debut, you were fantastic.
Thanks, man. Thanks. I appreciate the opportunity to be able to speak on this platform. I just want
to say to anybody out there who's maybe still listening, feel free to reach out to me,
richardrodwell.com. My direct email is richardrodwell.com. But I got some cool stuff
on there, like some little stuff
i'm working on projects and my discography is on there and all that but yeah richardrodwell.com
to reach out for whatever you need any questions i'm here to help and congratulations again on uh
the uh the award i'm not aware the the honorary honoring honoring of Dream Warriors is my definition of a boombastic jazz style.
And I'm glad you'll be at that event November 1st.
Congrats on that.
Those are four great songs being inducted.
And you had a big role with one of them.
Cheers, man.
Thank you so much.
And if anyone listening has, somebody out there might need some composition production work.
You've got the resume, man. Look what you've done. So reach out to Richard. Somebody out there might need some composition production work.
You've got the resume, man.
Look what you've done.
So reach out to Richard.
He's a cool cat.
And that brings us to the end of our 1,353rd show.
You can follow me on Twitter.
I'm at Toronto Mike.
I'm also on Blue Sky as Toronto Mike. And again, it's at RichardRodwell.com. RichardRodwell.com. Go to RichardRodwell.com for all your
maximum 60 needs. Big thank you to all who made this real talk possible. That's Great Lakes Brewery.
That's Palma Pasta.'s Raymond James Canada that's Manaris
that's Recycle My Electronics that's Pumpkins After Dark and that's Ridley Funeral Home speaking
of electric circus Richard this is an interesting coincidence the next guest on Toronto Mic'd is on Tuesday and it will be Juliet Powell.
Oh,
Juliet Powell,
not only like Miss Canada,
I believe,
but she took over for Monica D'Ole on electric circus and she'll be my guest on Tuesday morning.
Very cool.
See you all then. Well, I've been told that there's a sucker born every day
But I wonder who
Yeah, I wonder who
Maybe the one who doesn't realize
There's a thousand shades of grey
Cause I know that's true, yes I do
I know it's true, yeah
I know it's true how about you
oh they're picking up trash and they're putting down rogues
and they're brokering stocks the class struggle explodes
and i'll play this guitar just the best that I can Maybe I'm not and maybe I am
But who gives a damn?
Because everything is coming up rosy and gray
Yeah, the wind is cold but the smell of snow warms me today
And your smile is fine fine it's just like mine
and it won't go away cause everything is rosy and gray
well i've kissed you in france and i've kissed you in spain
and i've kissed you in places I better not name
And I've seen the sun go down on Shakalaka