Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - Ron James Kicks Out the Jams: Toronto Mike'd #939
Episode Date: October 27, 2021Mike catches up with Ron James before he kicks out the jams....
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I'm Mike from torontomike.com, and joining me this week to kick out the jams is Ron James.
Mike.
Ron, how you doing, buddy?
I am good, sir.
Let me see if I can set something up
where there's better light in here.
It's okay.
I'm not actually recording the video.
It's okay.
It's okay.
I actually think kicking out jams in the evening,
let it be dark.
You know?
That's a cool vibe.
Kicking out jams in the evening. Yeah it be dark. You know? That's a cool vibe. Kicking up jams in the evening.
Yeah, what is it there?
It's about 8-11 there?
It is.
Same as an hour later.
Who wants light?
Like I say, you remember when
Venus Flytrap,
it would be dark with candles?
Was that a band? No, man man you didn't watch wkrp in
cincinnati i did oh yeah yeah of course yeah yeah venus flytrap man you know what i have to tell you
bro yeah i've got the uh i've got a terrible uh pop culture television reference i don't know why. I mean, I do remember the time the Lions ganged up on the Hyena pack in that National Geographic special. uh, he who breathes fire and, the high heat of pack had destroyed his buddy,
turned on his buddy hard.
Right.
And killed him.
And,
uh,
he's,
he came back to seek revenge.
And you remember that.
And,
uh,
you don't remember,
uh,
necessarily Venus fly trap,
uh,
late into the night with the candles in the dark.
I just feel like for this particular,
I remember the Barney Miller episode where everybody had hash brownies though.
You know what? That was a, that was a show for my youth, which was,
I think it went over my head, but it was like omnipresent.
And I think I'd appreciate it far more if I revisited it today.
Uh, it was a,
it was a great show and they went off the air at the peak of their
fame but you know i'll tell you how it's interesting yeah uh everyone thinks it's all
important and you know these shows that um channel the zeitgeist and uh when we went to los angeles to way back in the early 90s to do my talk show
um we were in um a issue of tv guide several of them and i saved one of them
and uh to go through that old tv guide and see some of the shows. For instance,
Cosby was on the front.
Of course. Right.
And to see the shows that
everyone
tuned into
and how important they
were in people's lives.
I don't even think Seinfeld had come
on yet when we got on TV.
Anyway, it's
all ephemeral.
It's all passing.
Where in Tonto Mela, he who breathes fire,
who sought revenge on the hyenas, still lives strong in my memory.
Well, Ron, you know, that time, and I'm old enough, I appreciate this time.
The time, I call it before internet, when basically it was,
basically we were all
watching the same stuff. Like it was a kind of a monoculture world. Now it's so fragmented. Like
there might be, you know, I don't know, 30 things right now that everybody's digging,
like just 40 different things. Back in the day, it was like, oh yeah, everybody watched like,
I don't know, 30 something or, you know, did you see last night Seinfeld? It was a completely different universe.
The popular culture was a cohesive community.
Right.
And just like politics, that's fragmented into a million different pieces.
Right.
So have our viewing habits.
And it's going to be interesting to see what coalesces comedically from the stage these days.
I'm on tour in the East Coast right now, and I'm about to start.
And I've not been on tour since March 7th, 2020, a week before they brought the drawbridge up and the plague came calling.
the plague came calling and cause everybody will tell you
just like you said, Oh, are you watching this? Are you watching that?
So what are the references for? I mean,
there was a while you could make a game of Thrones reference to elucidate an observation, right. Or a walking dead, but there's just so much out there now.
And then you'll hear everybody talking about a show like, let's say Ted Lasso,
right?
And then you'll hear,
Oh,
it's up for,
you know,
I don't know,
20 Emmy awards.
Meanwhile,
go,
go to a,
go on the TTC one day and ask like 30 people,
how many of them subscribe to Apple TV?
Like,
go ahead.
It's like,
that's an interesting observation,
right?
Yeah.
So, but you know, our business and our calling demands we tune into popular culture.
And I'm sure somebody who's taking the subway to work at 530 in the morning or whenever it starts and works a 12 hour shift and goes back home.
The last thing they're relating to is, or watching is Ted Lasso.
They probably don't even have Apple TV. It's once again, George Packer in the Atlantic a couple of weeks ago, broke it down into four different demographic categories. I think it's an
interesting article anyway, but but yeah you're right
you know just what you think is important
maybe to the next person or the next
several dozen
even Game of Thrones which you're right that was the last big
finale people were talking about really
what percentage of the populace
gets HBO
like I don't have the numbers
in front of me or I didn't do my
homework on this but I suspect it's a lower number than you'd guess.
I imagine because I can't get it out east where I am now at my place.
I wanted to stream the Capitol Hill riot
because Doyle gave it an endorsement.
Not that I only watch things that he does,
but I find he's pretty fair in his critiques.
He's been hard on me and endorsed me at the same breath.
So anyway, yeah, I don't know.
Where do you sit, Netflix or HBO?
I'm a huge HBO guy, but I do pay i and there's two levels at least in this
neck of the woods we have a crave right which is owned by bell canada uh and you have these two
tiers like you can get the ten dollar tier of crave and then you can you know cough up the big
bucks and get the twenty dollar tier which means you can watch the latest episode of curb your
enthusiasm or succession and i'm telling you right now, Ron, I cough up the $20 because the vast majority of stuff
I want to see happens to be HBO.
So that's my big entertainment expense anyway.
Well, I find they get you in these small increments.
It's like Apple TV, right?
Doesn't seem like much. $ much 1299, isn't it?
Right. It's something like that. Something like that.
And or Apple news, you get all the Apple news.
And then of course I feel guilty if I don't donate to the guardian,
then I like to tune into Canada land and I like to help independent
journalists out. Right.
I say I'm probably coughing up about 200 bucks a month
just in these kinds of entertainment channels.
I read a lot, so that's it.
But let me ask you this.
Yeah, sure.
Do you find that our addiction to social media has compromised your ability to concentrate and read a book from
cover to cover like you used to? Oh, well, it's, I would say partly that, but also partly that,
I don't know, since 2002, I've sort of been manically creating content for the World Wide
Web, like before this like before the podcast.
And I produce a bunch of podcasts too,
including one you were on the other day.
Prior to that, I was blogging at torontomike.com.
So I find like if I have that time,
let's say I'm watching,
heaven forbid, I'm watching the Leafs game.
That's a whole separate topic here.
Did they ever suck last night?
I'm indifferent to it all, my friend since we blew the uh three to one lead
against the canadians last year i mean you're gonna laugh that that's the straw that breaks
the camel's back but i'm just like completely like numb to it all i'm just like like wake me
up i said i was i mean what's shanahan's plan what's the plan right what's the plan why get
rid of lamorello you know voted two years in a row the
best general manager in the league you know when i should have walked from the leafs when they blew
that 4-2 lead with chicago in the third period six years ago oh i can't even remember that instance
because there's so many uh examples like that but there's so many there's just so many ron i wrote over to the seattle game the nfl game well i i wrote a piece
on torontomic.com a couple of days ago called uh i think i called it comfortably numb leafs fan or
something like that basically like this complete numbness like uh we haven't won a playoff i have
a 19 year old son who actually loves hockey. He loves football and baseball. And sorry, he loves football and basketball too.
He has zero memory of the Maple Leafs winning a playoff round
because we haven't won a playoff round since 2004.
Okay, if I do the math on that, that's 17 years ago.
We're 17 years removed from winning a playoff round.
It's a macabre puppet show for multimillionaires.
Right.
Right?
Right.
Every now and then, I used to get a pass to what had once been called the Platinum Lounge.
Right?
These little perks.
Sure.
Or the Director's Lounge.
And you walk in, and I learned a lesson there.
Never be in a room filled with people you make fun of for a living.
It was filled with pink face,
Bay street,
Illuminati movers and shakers in the Toronto power broker scene.
Conrad black is there.
I took my 80 year old father.
Who's gone now.
God bless him.
And this little Newfoundlander.
And we were standing in the corner, double fist and free draft,
wondering what the hell was on top of our cracker.
Right.
I know.
I know.
And you see these people who own these kids, who own these men.
And they're Roman consuls, really, aren't they?
You know, who spend their afternoons at a Pompeii spa
having their balls powdered by eunuchs.
Whatever.
And, Ron, look, let's start here,
even though we've actually already begun,
but let the listenership know how you're doing.
Last time we checked in, I actually took a note on this.
Finally, I took a note.
It's December 2017 that you made your way here.
You were actually here, sitting here in the
basement here. Oh my gosh, was it that
long ago? Yeah, December 2017.
And that was the episode 296.
So I like to tell the new listenership
that if they're hearing
their first Ron James on
Toronto Mic'd experience, to get the deep dive,
the A to Z of Ron's
career.
Episode 296.
And here's the description I wrote at the time here.
Mike chats with standup comedian,
Ron James about moving to LA,
returning home to hone his craft and finding his voice.
And by the way,
I don't know what you think of this,
but we actually chatted for over two hours that day.
I don't know how many
interviews Ron James
does that exceed two hours.
Wow, man.
No kidding.
And it was never boring. It's all killer, no filler.
Thank Christ.
I never want to be boring.
Never, never, never.
I mean, that's the thing, isn't it? When you,
when you become a pedantic arsehole, that's when it's time to hang up the spurs.
But you're not doing that, my friend, because not only are you, uh, back on tour and where do
we find you exactly? Like, where are you in this country right now? I'm listening to a hundred kilometer hour winds roll in off the Atlantic and
the South shore of Nova Scotia.
I got a little spot down here by the water and,
uh,
my 89 year old mother is still in the home.
I was raised in,
I went to see her yesterday and,
um,
then I'm heading around.
I got a dozen dates through the maritimes and then
fast turnaround drive back to the big smoke and I'm out in BC for another dozen and it feels
mighty good after talking to the four walls for the last two years in my Toronto condo because
you know what bro a man talking to an audience in front of a microphone is a comedian telling jokes a guy
doing it alone at home is rupert pupkin in his mother's basement it's not healthy well we've
come out it sounds like we're back here so what exact is it tomorrow when exactly is your first
show my first show is in sydney capeon, the little corner of Nova Scotia.
Once upon a time, the industrial heartland of Atlantic Canada,
where the Sydney steel plant employed 7,500 people and 11 coal mines pumped out the fuel for the furnace of the Dominion,
and our beams rebuilt war-torn Berlin during the Marshall Plan. And then everything fell away. And it's, you know, trying to,
I suppose, build an economic stability. But that's where I was born in the coal town road
of Glace Bay. And I moved to Halifax when I was nine. So I'm in Sydney, which is the capital down there of Cape Breton,
really the big city. I had two shows there and then one up the road in Pictou. And I'm happy
to say we're sold out in all of them. And we added a second show at the Cone in Halifax.
Great news.
Yeah, it's good news, man. But you know what? I stayed active during this COVID, right? I streamed a couple shows from my living room and I did half a dozen virtual gigs for one thing or another. And then, you know, I wrote the book.
Well, let's talk about the book here. So, of course, we're here to kick out the jams, but I got to find out about this book. Tell me, like he wrote this during the pandemic? I started it prior to the
pandemic. And that was the silver lining in the cloud of the plague was that I had no choice but
to be shackled at the desk. I mean, as a recipient of attention deficit hyperactive disorder,
to sit indoors on a sunny day is a
labor of Hercules for me. Is that a professional diagnosis or a self-diagnosis? Okay. Nope,
no, no. Neopren, uh, neopenephrine and the other one do a daily tap dance on the frontal lobes of
my neocortex. And that's been the case my whole life. In fact, when I, it was my kid that said, dad,
I think you should get checked. I got checked and I've got ADHD and your symptoms seem similar. And
then when I did the checklist, it was like I was checking boxes for my father's behavior growing
up, you know? Interesting. Yeah, it is interesting. So it's just a genetic thing. Although I really wish that I had inherited a really great slap shot. But instead, I had the ability to get lost chasing a bee for three weeks when I was seven. That's the joke.
But do you mind if I ask, and it's very personal, of course, but what kind of symptoms are we talking about here?
The inability to concentrate on one thing at the time, you know, you're always pulled in different directions.
Repetitive forgetfulness, tangential thought process.
Yet, and that's just three that I can think of off the top of my head, a sense of restlessness. You know, I mean, to use the metaphor, your car is already 100 kilometers
down the road before you've even pulled it out of the driveway.
And when I was a kid, I stuttered a lot.
You know, I was a stutterer.
My father stuttered too, actually.
or my father stuttered too, actually.
And I remember the doctor saying his thoughts in the brain are happening too fast for his words to get out, right?
And oddly enough, it was stand-up comedy that gave me control over that.
And they told me that, these specialists,
They told me that the specialists, that the ability to juggle and cut and paste two hours worth of material in front of a live audience happens to be one of the strengths of the ADHD afflicted. So as much as it can be a liability, like I was never good at math, but anything that had to do with, you know,
talking or clearly performance or memorization and wrote,
I was great at.
But the A plus B equals C, yeah.
I'd rather talk than think.
But I put that in the book.
And the book really, it's called All Over the Map,
Rambles and Ruminations from the Canadian Road.
And I was delighted to discover we held our place
on the top 10 of the bestseller list for two weeks.
And it's really an embrace of people and place
in this adventure I've had the last, in my career
really, traveling from coast to coast
performing and how people from
indigenous guides in the Northwest Territories to
an elder statesman of the Woodchoppers League and hockey
on Lake Huron to an aging waitress at the Delta Hotel in Alberta who'd found her second chance in the promised land opened the window on their world for me.
And that was the hidden boon in the road less traveled.
That was the they provided a currency far greater than a payday's treasure.
And there's stories about my uncle who found sobriety after being on the streets of Toronto for two years as a homeless man.
And there's stories about these incredible indigenous people I've met and just people who spoke to me.
And they spoke to me years before I had notoriety on television, too.
We were just shooting the shit and food courts, coffee houses are on planes.
And it was it was the greatest reward besides being able to pull a career up one gig and at a time do you think
you would have been able to you know document all this in the fashion you've done so with all
over the map if we hadn't had a global pandemic see that's the that's the thing that i was so
happy about that's a great observation when i was writing writing the book, I said, oh, wow, man,
this is a world I walked through once where people sat side by side in coffee shops for a morning and
talked to each other over a bran muffin. And it gave me hope. It was the light at the end of the constant lockdowns and worry and woe.
And, but I never lost, look,
it takes an awful long time to be proficient at this craft.
And a blank page is still a blank page, bro.
Right, you have to do the grunt work at the desk
before the fun happens on the stage.
And I'll be damned if a pandemic was going to scuttle the 42 years I put into this calling.
With Second City initially for 10 years, the struggles in L.A., coming home, starting at the Laugh Resort in 95,
home, starting at the Laff Resort in 95, and finally becoming proficient at this wonderful and peculiar calling. I didn't want the muscle to atrophy. It's just, you know, I just
couldn't. So that's where it really helped. And yes, to answer your question, this book could not have been written during a pandemic because it's about
engaging with the wider world of wonders.
Do you have a preference with how a listener,
somebody listening to us right now, they realize I need to get all over the map
for my mom or my dad for Christmas or I want to read this.
How would you like them to buy all over the map?
Or do you care? Just find it.
I think everybody buys a book for a different reason.
There's readers who just like to read.
But I would like them to buy the book
so they're made aware of a world beyond the myopic perimeter of the big smoke
so they can see that the country's not as fractured as we might feel it is. That once, that the gray areas of relationships
beyond the front page and the pundits,
that's where the soul note sings.
That's where you hear the heartline hum of people in place.
Whether it's in the Northwest Territories
watching caribou move through a spectral dawn behind a boulder that was dropped eons ago during the Ice Age, as a Dene elder looks to drop a caribou for a supper at Fort Resolution.
Or whether you want to know what it was really like to struggle in Los Angeles, chasing the bogus sitcom dream another lifetime ago.
And if you want to find out what the industry's about from a perspective of
somebody who was just a foot soldier in the entertainment industry,
because that's all I've ever seen myself as. And, you know,
it's like Billy Connolly said to me at jfl and i put his quote in the book
chase fame see what that does to your soul just sing your song isn't that a great thing to say
brilliant and it's funny because your answer there was so like so fantastic but i was actually
i was asking a much less intelligent question i was thinking like logistically like do you want
them to go to amazon do you want them to go to Amazon? Do you want them
to like, is there a, I prefer that they, uh, I prefer that they see, this is a trick question
because a lot of people, and look, I'm as dubious about Amazon as the next person, right?
It's the new sweatshop of North America. Uh, but, um, independent bookstores may only carry half a dozen of my books.
For instance, I discovered in Nova Scotia that Indigo never ordered my copies,
and it hit the stand September the 28th, and they had to put a rush on copies.
I don't know what clueless buyer at Indigo, but we still made the top 10.
So there you go.
But I think the independent bookstores, I mean, I want those guys to succeed, but they
may only order half a dozen copies or 10 copies.
Right.
So I would suggest that go to your independent bookstore first.
And if you need to buy it and you can't find it, then go to Amazon.
But also, Amazon carries the Audible version too, right?
Right.
Because I read it.
And I take a lot of tangents in the studio.
It would be amazing, I think, to pick up the audio version of this book that you're reading just to hear it.
Because nobody really spins a yarn, like, has, you It has such a way with words.
I think hearing it in your voice would add that extra dimension.
And by the way, just last week I had Ralph Ben-Murgy on the show.
And he wrote a book.
So people should buy both, okay?
I don't want you to pick Ben-Murgy's over Ron James'.
Buy both.
But Ben-Murgy was complaining about how a bunch of big stores,
I think he called out Indigo and some others,
simply didn't have it.
Oh, no, they're awful.
They're awful.
And tip of the hat to Ralph, it pisses me off so much.
And you talk to some poor bastard on the floor
working 10 hours a day,
why the books aren't on the bestseller list,
Mansbridge's face is there because, you know,
God love Peter, he needs the press. And I'm sure that's a... I had him on the show last week too, of course.
Did you? Good. Great. But it's not there. And I asked the guy, I said, why is it not there? He
said, I don't know. I said, he goes, a lot of people came in asking for it. We didn't have it.
I said, why didn't you have it? He Said, I don't know. That's above my,
that's above my pay grade. I said, do you have any now? He said,
I don't know. I said, well, why don't you go back and see? He goes,
we have 24. I said, well, why don't you put them on the fucking shelves?
What is it? Like people just don't give a shit anymore. Like, what is that?
You know what? No, there's an entrepreneurial lethargy in Canada.
To a certain degree, there is. Look, I signed with a publicist in the States for the book,
too, because it's it's being released in America. And I was a little dubious at first,
but they found me. They hunted me down. OK, cool. And I'm going 24-7.
I mean, they got me hopping all the time.
And granted, there's 375 million people there,
but there's follow-up calls, right?
And there's an enthusiasm, an enthusiasm for the work.
And I don't mean to, and I'm not saying I don't want to piss Canadians off because
God knows I've decided to make my living here and I love it I love traveling but when push comes to
shove uh and the I think people take the easy route sometimes and as somebody who's pulled this career up from the muck and started touring the frozen lip of Lake Superior in February,
playing church basements, community centers, and high school gymnasiums in Dryden, Attaquok, and Manitowosh, and Terrace Bay,
when logging trucks threatened to bounce me into the afterlife off their Peterbilt logo
so my dubious end
would be marked by one of those spooky white
crosses coyotes happily hop
the highway to piss on
I
over the years
in concert with my producer
we've developed
a system and the system
is really simple get Get the word out. And
once the word is out, capitalize on the momentum and deliver a good show. It's so simple. You know,
I mean, if you're running a dairy, you're not going to drop off sour milk. Right. Right. Your
product has to be ready and longevity doesn't get get, anyway, this opens up another door for expectations.
That people have expectations that they should be somewhere where they're not.
I certainly had expectations, though, to be featured on the bestseller table at Indigo when I made it.
But that's not a guarantee here for some reason. I don't know why. Maybe they don't want to sell books. featured on the bestseller table at Indigo when I made it.
But that's not a guarantee here for some reason.
I don't know why.
Maybe they don't want to sell books.
Bizarre.
I find it bizarre. Because when Ben Murgie was explaining this,
it's tough enough to sell a book in this damn country,
let alone having the deck stacked against you like that.
Well, it's very frustrating.
And as Ralph will attest, and anybody who sat down, it's like Flannery O'Connor said, the great Southern writer, everybody knows what a book is until they sit down to write one.
prior to the onset of social media, where I, like everybody else,
felt compelled to post innocuous photographs of whatever the fuck I'm eating on a Tuesday afternoon in Restagouche, so somebody in Salmon Arm, B.C.
follows me on Instagram could get the dopamine hit.
Oh, look, Ron's eating French fries with a funny comment and rest the goosh. How about that?
Right. And, but, but I, I, at the same time, I do love Instagram, you know, and Facebook has been so
instrumental in sustaining my business. Right. Well, it's a, it's a, it's like cell phones,
you know?
If everybody knew where every component for the cell phone came from,
we'd throw them in the ocean.
You know, we're complicit with warlords in the Congo for the tantalum that runs them.
Right, right.
It's nuts.
It's nuts.
You got a book, and I'm going to kick out the jams with you.
I don't know if,
if you're ready,
do you know exactly how this works?
Like,
have you,
did you,
did you,
you didn't decide to like,
let me hear,
I don't know,
name,
name somebody here,
how they kick out the jams.
You're going in blind here.
Yeah.
Okay.
So you got 10 jams.
I literally,
I'm going to play,
I'm going to start playing the jam and I'm going to let it go.
Depending on the song,
I might let it go for 45 seconds to 60 seconds or something. Then I'm going to start playing the jam, and I'm going to let it go, depending on the song. I might let it go for 45 seconds to 60 seconds or something.
Then I'm going to fade it down.
Then we're going to hear you tell us anything you like, really.
Maybe there's a story about the song.
You can tell us why you love the song.
Basically, that's where it's the Ron James show, if you will.
And this might be my favorite type of Toronto Mic'd episode
because I love
hearing people tell me why they love the songs they love.
Like,
I'm just so excited about this,
but before I press play on the first jam,
did you Ron James ever come across Norm MacDonald in your standup travels?
I did not.
I did not know Norm.
My buddies did.
I came to the game late and I didn't start at Yucks. I came to the game after LA. I came to the game at the age of 38. Right. 38.
Yeah. Yeah. So that's when I started playing the Laugh Resort. And I think Norm was called
to the stage at the age of 18. But Keith Tomasek, who I've worked with diligently for the last six years in
terms of my IT and my social media, he worked at Yuck Yucks in the days when Norm came in as an
18-year-old and he was doing Ed Broadbent material then. When you start doing stand-up. It's, you know, it's cats and dogs and dick joes. And he was already playing at the
top of his game. And when you talk to people who work with Norm, I mean, he'd be bombing on the
road at these, you know, biker bars. And he would never be playing to his lowest common denominator.
He always adhered to the dictates of his art.
That takes a lot of guts.
We'll return to this jam-kicking with Ron James in just a moment.
I want to thank Great Lakes Brewery for their continued support.
Fresh craft beer brewed right here in southern Etobicoke.
I also want to thank Palma Pasta.
They've been on board for a few years now,
and it's authentic, delicious, authentic Italian food.
Guests who visit leave with not only the Great Lakes beer,
but they get a Palma Pasta lasagna,
and it's just a great pairing.
Speaking of gifts,
ChefDrop.ca wants to give everybody listening here in Southern Ontario
a, well, it's buy one, get one 50% off. It's a fantastic promotion. You just need to go to
chefdrop.ca, order one of their fantastic pre-prepared meal kits and use the promo code FOTMBOGO. That'll get you the 50% off the second
one. What a deal. Thank you, Chef Drop. StickerU.com has been sending over fantastic Toronto
Mike stickers for guests. If you need stickers, decals, badges, anything of that nature, head over to stickeru.com.
The Yes, We Are Open podcast is hosted by FOTM Al Grego.
Al travels the country interviewing small Canadian businesses, and then he tells the
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If you're a small business owner or entrepreneur like myself,
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I post a new episode on toront TorontoMike.com every week. And now
let's get back to
those Ron James jams.
Ron James,
are you ready to kick out
the jams? I am, sir.
Ah. Scarlet land And late at night
A hand would knock
And there would stand a stranger
Yes, I'm the son
Of Hickory Holler's tram
Yes!
Here you go!
Woo!
Yeah, the weeds were high
The corn was dry
All right, Ron, tell me about this jam.
What are we starting with here, buddy?
Oh, hold on, actually, you know what?
It's funny.
You're coming in on the same channel as the song.
I'm used to people doing this in person, and you're on a different pod.
But if I bring down the song, I bring down Ron James.
So I fixed it now.
Now let's hear you.
O.C. Smith, i believe 1970 i think and uh
used to have a little um sony transistor radio and i think like some of the songs i've chosen
it's just so evocative of a time and i don't think CanCon had made its introduction yet. Maybe the
Stampeders were coming in with Sweet City Woman at this point. Not quite sure.
But I love the arrangement in this song. I love the congas and the great
instrumental that comes in. I can't explain it that well, but I always like
this song. And it's a maudlin tune. It's a song about perseverance, right?
Where this guy's father leaves his mother with 14 children,
and she becomes a hooker in order to feed them.
And the path is worn to the front door with the red light above the door.
And I guess as a 12-year-old kid, I was impressed with the perseverance of the matriarch
to sustain them through that.
And then it ends with,
even though she died and passed away,
there's 14 roses left on her grave every year.
So anyway, it's just evocative of a time and place.
Can you share with us what radio station
you might have been listening to
at the time?
T.J.C.H.
Halifax AM Radio.
In fact, when I joined Second City
and I knew all these songs,
they'd say,
did you only listen to AM Radio?
Because I can still tear up a little bit.
I still tear up a little bit
at the Christmas version
by the Royal Guardsmen of Snoopy and the Red Baron.
Right.
When the Red Baron has a change of heart and he doesn't riddle him with bullets.
Right.
Right.
In this neck of the woods, you would have been a chum bug.
I imagine I would have liked chum.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
And shout out to my mom who reminds me that all she did was listen to 1050 Chum back at this time.
So I love it.
And this gentleman, O.C. Smith, I don't know if I'm familiar with O.C. Smith.
Yeah, he didn't stick around.
And he was an independent, and he wasn't of the Philadelphia sound, and he wasn't from Motown.
But he's got such an incredible voice.
He kind of reminds me of Lou Rawls a bit, but he's faster.
Right.
Love it, Rob.
And see the big trumpets.
Ba-ba-da-ba.
And a nice little fade out there.
Okay, love it.
Love it.
Love it. And are you ready for your second jam ron yes sir
seven lonely days and a dozen towns ago
I reached out one night and you were gone
Don't know why you'd run, what you're running to or from
All I know is I want to bring you home
So I'm walking in the rain, thumbing for a ride to bring you home
So I'm walking in the rain
thumbing for a ride on this lonely
Kentucky back road
I've loved you much too long
and my love's too strong
to let you go
never knowing
what will grow you go, never knowing what we'll grow.
Kentucky rain keeps pouring down, and up ahead's another town that I'll go walking through.
With the rain in my shoes.
Kentucky rain.
My favorite Elvis song.
My favorite Elvis song.
And the opening, once again, is just, it sounds like rain falling.
And the orchestrations and the arrangement.
And then, of course, the best voice of rock and roll in the 20th century.
Hands down.
Yeah, I'm
hearing you. I'm hearing you.
It puts me, and it was before
he got obese,
right? I mean, this song
came out shortly after
his comeback special
when he shows up in Memphis. That's the 68th comeback special, right? 68 was the comeback special, when he shows up in Memphis.
That's the 68th comeback special, right?
68 was the comeback special, and I believe Kentucky Rain may have come out in 69 or 70.
Okay.
Around Aloha from Hawaii, when he was just starting to eat too many chocolate bars.
All right.
He could still do a dropkick, though, I think.
It is true. I will say this as a
slightly younger man than yourself, that
the Elvis that first comes to
mind now, unfortunately, seems to be
that mid-70s Elvis
just before he passes.
A bloated figure in his
jumpsuit. A bloated parody of
his former self, which is too bad.
Do you realize that he opened for Hank Snow his first gig?
I honestly had no idea, but that's an amazing CanCon fun fact right there.
Can you imagine what Hank Snow, a surly...
He wrote 627 songs, I think, Hank.
A surly, he wrote 627 songs, I think, Hank, but a surly bejeweled Nashville transplant from the Maritimes who never moved, singing Miller's Cave and songs about dead dogs.
Right.
Sees that force of nature open for him and every young woman in the audience lose their minds yeah is this uh is this like mid-50s uh well whenever elvis broke i think it was 55 wasn't it
yeah i think so i think you know years ago um when my buddy was a vj on much music in the early days chris ward i know christopher ward
of course he's a he's also an fm yeah please yeah went on to write black velvet well we used to do
a scene in second city a sketch called uh melvis and delvis the elvis brothers that we were the
illegitimate spawn of elvis presley and we'd i'd go over to much music when it was on Queen Street in those days,
and we would do Melfis and Delvis,
and a fellow from Agincourt would go on and do a little character called Wayne. That became Wayne's World.
Right.
Wayne Campbell.
A little fella.
The funny thing is I just had his brother on.
Paul.
Yes.
Paul is the salt of the earth.
They all are, Peter, Paul, and Mike.
I've known them all for 42 years.
But Paul is just, they came, he and Lacey came to visit me in Nova Scotia a couple years ago.
Yeah, they knew people down here, so it was always, always good to see them.
We go back a long way.
Yeah.
He's of the Gravel Berries,
of course.
This is the,
the 90s alt rock band.
And yeah,
I noticed on,
you don't have any Gravel Berries
on your list here,
but I do have some great jams to come.
You ready for number three?
Yes, please. Yes, please. the echoes of my mind People stopping still
I can't see the faces
Which still has the record
for the only X-rated movie
to win Best Picture at the Oscars.
I saw that a while ago
and I don't know why it was X-rated.
Do you?
Honestly, it must have been of a time when it didn't take much to get the X-rating
because that would sure change very quickly.
Wow. I just find his voice so haunting.
And I find the...
I've just always liked it.
It carries me away.
It's got the wind.
Beautiful song.
Really is a beautiful song.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And look, I realized when I gave you this list,
I didn't have anything from the 80s,
because I should have given you some.
No, man.
Your jams are your jams.
I don't have enough old country either.
I don't have enough old country.
I'm a big old country fan.
Emmylou Harris, Guy Clark, Jimmy Dale Gilmore, and Steve Earle's son, of course.
I'm kicking my butt.
I didn't put Harlem River Blues on there.
Gee whiz.
He's named after Townes Van Zandt.
Yeah, sadly, he passed away not too long ago.
Absolutely.
Here, I'll help you out here.
Yeah, Justin Townes Earl.
Justin Townes Earl, yeah.
Amazing voice.
Thought he was as great as his dad his dad
was in my favorite
television show of all time
speaking of TV because his dad has a role
in The Wire
yes and he had a regular
role in I Love The Wire
how great is that
there's my box set here
oh good for you
look at that uh were you gonna say Treme or what were you gonna tell me next yeah
yeah Treme yeah which is also fantastic love it and uh okay oh it's uh these songs are actually
I guess of an era when they were a little bit shorter because nowadays you know some people
kick out jams and it's like, oh, I'm kicking out this
Bob Dylan song and it's like, okay, 11 minutes
later, this thing will fade down.
I have no Dylan, you know. How about that
15-minute song you get on the Titanic?
I don't even know what this song...
What is it?
What is it?
I'm saying it more articulate than he would.
By the way,
I will let you know that at some point we could do a sequel,
like,
and that would let you get in some eighties jams and some,
Oh,
fantastic.
Let's do that then.
And I'll give you some Dylan and some all country.
I mean,
I listen and I have nothing from Johnny Cash's
five American recordings
that Rick Rubin produced,
which are phenomenal.
What would you have from there?
Would you have the cover of Nine Inch Nails hurt?
Or would you have...
No, I would have...
Delia's Gone?
Sorry, go ahead.
No, no, no, no.
I wasn't listening.
I'm sorry, I was babbling.
What was the second one you said?
Oh, Delia's Gone is a song.
Delia's Gone is a good one. That's from the first one.
Right.
I would have When the Man Comes Around.
Yeah.
I would have...
That's the one. I would have Row Your Boat.
Right.
And I would have...
Rusty Cage, maybe?
Would you throw in a Soundgarden cover?
Rusty Cage is a pretty good one.
That's pretty good.
And what's the Depeche Mode one?
Reach out and touch faith.
Personal Jesus, I believe, is what it's called.
That's great.
Yeah.
You're on top of this.
I love it because now you're in my scene here.
The Rick Rubin, Johnny Cash stuff is sort of, for my peoples, my Generation X, you know, that's sort of what delivers Johnny Cash to us.
It's like these are the people.
It was just, I mean, it was redemptive.
And by the fifth one, I mean, when he sings Four Strong Winds, I love the fact that he does a fifth album and there's two Canadian songs on it.
If you could read my mind and Four Strong Winds.
And I can't believe I don't have any Neil Young on this list either.
I did it too fast.
Well, you do.
I would have had Neil Young singing Four Strong Winds.
You do have that.
I'm literally, in fact, let me play your fourth jam for you, Ron.
It'll jog your memory.
Oh, there it is! Great!
Great!
Think I'll go out
to Alberta
Oh, beautiful.
Weather's good there in the fall.
I got some friends
that I could go
to work in for.
Beautiful.
Alberta features strongly
in my book.
I mean,
it was
absolutely the land
of the second chance
for maritimers.
And it's where I shot
my second special
Quest for the West at the Jack Singer for maritimers and it's where i shot my second special quest for the
west at the jack singer in 2006 and when i travel the length and breadth of alberta i always listen
to ian tyson's albums and i'm going to put a song from him on in the next jam uh live at longview
and it was ian and sylvia who wrote four strong winds of course right. And he has some, I used to rock my daughter to sleep
to Navajo Rug, his Navajo Rug.
Morning out Navajo Rug, aye, aye, aye. Katie, shades of red and blue.
Ah, beautiful song. And so I would travel the length and breadth of Alberta.
And that's why that's in there.
I mean, I was playing Alberta in the days when oil was 421 bucks a barrel, man.
Every time a car blew up in Baghdad, there were two new trucks in the Western driveway.
It was a heady time to be making some bread.
Right, right.
It's wild to me how unsure you are of the jams you've submitted,
that you were just about to chastise yourself for not picking Neil Young doing four strong wins.
Here I am.
Have you ever had the pleasure of meeting Neil Young?
I have not.
I met Steve Earle, though, backstage in Belleville several years ago.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And he told me there's no way that Oswald could have shot Kennedy with the gun he was using
because he used one just like it himself.
Wow.
I thought maybe you should let that go.
It's funny.
Just earlier today, I had an email exchange with Dave Hodge
because Dave Hodge comes on this program once a year,
just before kind of the end of the year,
to kick out his 100 favorite songs of the year.
And Dave's a big...
Like Dave Hodge from the NHL days?
Pen flip himself, Dave Hodge.
The Dave Hodge.
Wow, man.
Every year he does that.
In fact, we have a...
I'm trying to remember.
I think it's called thehodge100.com. VPps sales and we maintain a website just just for these special episodes anyways
today he was trying to book his time and place because he doesn't want to do it by zoom now you
are in nova scotia you have to zoom this in that's a you're a long ways away but dave wants to make
the trek here maybe even in the backyard to do hisams. And I was just thinking he would love to hear you kicking out some Steve Earle.
That would be right up Dave Hodge's alley.
Oh, boy, I've got all Steve Earle stuff.
Yeah, I mean, that was a pretty brave album he put out called Jerusalem shortly after 9-11.
Come on, man.
Shortly after 9-11, when America invaded Afghanistan, he was speaking
Arabic on his album
about the kid who got... Remember the
kid who they found
at that... The American kid who
joined the Jihad and the
CIA agent got killed in the fort
when they were looking at the guy and they put him away
for 25 years?
I have a faint memory of it,
my friend. Yeah, it was a big issue at the time,
but there was a guy singing in Nashville
doing a song like that.
Man, oh, man.
You know, I used to get them going quiet
when I made fun of donuts in Hamilton,
not far from Ron Joyce's headquarters.
Right, right, right.
Hard to keep it sane.
All right, my friend,
we're going to kick out your fifth jam,
which was a late-breaking change.
So maybe the jam it replaced gets brought back to life for your second round.
But I guess what I was saying, so the Dave Hodge thing,
every year he comes back and kicks out these jams,
favorite 100 of the year.
And we could have a regular thing, depending how much you dig in this,
like maybe once a year.
Buddy, I am so up for that.
Are you kidding?
All right, good, Cause I would love it.
Once a year Ron James kicks out 10 more jams and we're going to kick out your
late breaking jam here. But I have a question about something you mentioned.
You mentioned that, you know, singing a song to your daughter.
How old's your daughter now?
She's 33 tomorrow.
Oh, happy birthday. That's exciting.
Yeah. Kaylee, my eldest is 33 tomorrow.
And my youngest Gracie is 28 on, I can't believe it, 28 April
the 14th.
And that's your baby, the 28 year old.
Yeah.
Yeah.
A firecracker.
Because I would sing songs.
I have teenagers and then I have the younger ones who I'm still kind of singing songs to.
But if I hear a song that I used to used to sing to my one of my kids um
be a james who's 19 or michelle who's 17 i will i get so emotional like it triggers like i would
just i could just start crying because you remember and i don't i mean i literally just
got the five-year-old her flu shot today and she was screaming and crying didn't want to get her
flu shot like this just happened before i turned on the Zoom call. So I'm still in that world.
I'm not as far removed as you are.
But if I think about, you know, big man James and when I would be, you know,
cradling him, maybe he had a fever or something.
I'm singing these songs.
It just gets me so hard and I just want to just weep.
It's quite the emotional response.
It's incredible, isn't it, what music can do in that respect. I can't hear
when my, during
the lean years of Los Angeles
when my daughter was little, we went there when she
was 18 months old and came back when she was
almost five.
I took her to see Beauty
and the Beast, just her and I.
And
I can't listen to that theme song
without tearing up.
I mean, come on, man.
You've got to be a cynical, hard comedian
in order to survive this world of thick skin
and drunken hat wears, the second show of Sudbury.
But I'm telling you, it just slays me.
Yeah, and that's the power of music.
And here is this I mentioned.
We had another jam.
I won't reveal it because we're going to hear it the next time you kick
out jams with me,
but this is the jam late breaking.
Here we go.
Oh,
get off.
I left my home in Norfolk,
Virginia,
California, home of mine. I straddled that gray-handed road in Norfolk, Virginia, California
Holdin' my mind
I straddled that greyhound and rode him in the Raleigh
And on across Carolina
Had more trouble to turn into a struggle
Halfway across Alabama
Well, a hound broke down and left us all stranded
In downtown Birmingham
Well, right away I bought me a through-train ticket
Right across Mississippi.
I was on that midnight flyer
out of Birmingham
smoking in the New Orleans.
Somebody helped me get out of Louisiana,
just helped me get to Houston town.
There are people there
who care a little about me
and have all had to pull more down.
Hey!
Yeah, sweet. you. Yeah.
Sweet.
Sweet.
Great.
Once again,
another Elvis song from the same,
uh,
same era,
the same era as Kentucky rain.
Only this is the live album.
And,
um,
I love the way the base of the drums come in.
I believe Sonny West was the drummer,
and I forget who his bass player was.
I don't think it was one of the Jordanaires.
I think it was a great session player from Nashville,
and this is an old Chuck Berry tune, of course,
and, you know, Chuck Berry's only number one song was Mike and Elaine.
I know the answer, which is shocking.
Isn't it?
Shocking, absolutely.
And that's one, I like to drop that fun fact
just to blow the odd mind of somebody
who's not paying attention
because nobody would guess that in a million years.
It's just like a novelty song.
A novelty song.
It's hello, mother.
Hello, father.
Here I am at Camp Grunner.
It's, yeah. Anyway. On that Camp Grunner. It's, yeah.
Anyway.
On that note, though, Ron, real quick, because we're on this topic.
Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan, a couple of artists you probably dig,
never hit number one as the singers of their song,
but they both hit number one with someone else singing their song.
Did Bruce hit number one with Blinded by the Light
when Manford Mann did it?
Correct.
And Dylan hit number one with somebody else
singing...
Turn, Turn, Turn.
No, he hit number two. It was a bird singing turn turn turn you got
it you got it wow you got it yeah so anyway continue i just like to drop these fun facts
on people i'll tell you this one uh years ago at university uh we used to have a variety show
at acadia each year and uh elvis had died in the summer of 78, I believe.
I think it's 77.
Was it 77? Okay, summer of 77.
And so we wanted to do a tribute to him.
So we went down to the local undertakers and got a coffin,
like something you'd bury a pauper in.
Right.
something you'd bury a popper in.
Right.
And so me and I had pallbearers and I was in the coffin and we walked down the center aisle of the auditorium to the music of Elton John funeral for a
friend playing.
Right.
And we got on stage and boom,
this song kicked in and I jumped out of the coffin and said,
how are you doing? This was my first live performance since i died last august and you just lip sync this shit sure yeah way we went it was fun so it brings back good memories
of days when you were just doing it for fun man love it now i have to wrap up my uh bruce
springsteen bob dylan fact that neither hit number one as a singer,
but both hit number one as a writer of someone else singing their song,
covering their song and hitting number one.
The third guy in that trifecta there that has the same fun fact tied to them
is Randy Newman.
So Randy Newman hit number two as a singer,
but only hit number one with someone else covering his song.
Do you want to take a guess at which song hit number one with someone else
singing it?
I thought he hit number one with short people.
Two. And of course we're talking here, of course,
about the billboard hot 100 here, but number two.
That hit number two, short people.
Right. Correct.
But somebody singing his song hit short people. Right. Correct. But somebody singing his song
hit number one.
Right.
And it's okay to...
Okay, give me a hint.
Give me a hint.
Was it a while ago?
Or was it a cheap song to a film?
I think we're talking 1970.
Oh, I know.
Three Dog Night.
Mama told me not to come.
You got it, buddy.
Well done.
Thank you.
Well done.
Hey, I'm happy about that one.
Well done.
Well done.
All right.
Let's bring it back to some CanCon here.
Here's your sixth jam.
Here we go.
Picking up the pieces of my sweet shattered dream
I wonder how the old folks are tonight
Her name was Ann and I'll be damned if I recall her face
She left me not knowing what to do
Every highway, let me slip away on you
Every highway, you've seen better days.
The morning after blues, from my head down to my shoes.
Every highway.
Yeah, I had to have one from Gordy in there.
I saw that documentary on him, did you?
I have not seen it yet.
No.
Yeah.
It's pretty interesting.
It's not the happiest of campers.
When they asked him at 84, what would you like something to happen this year?
He's got a head like a flying Dutchman, right?
And he's looking in the camera.
I just want to be happy.
I just want to be happy. I just want to be happy.
I said, well, buddy, you're 84.
You might have figured it out by now.
But I love this song, Carefree Highway,
because I think it was written,
it's so emblematic of the redemptive powers of the road to run away from your pain and your sadness and to be redeemed by the big wide road and how painful it is to spend time in the belly of the whale
to get out of Toronto and to stretch my legs and just feel the wind on my face far from the
confines of the big smoke where everything went south. I just loved And I loved this song before I really knew what it must have taken Gordie Lightfoot to write that.
See, I work best in comedy when I'm happy.
Because it's deconstructionist by nature but for songwriters who are feeling such bottomless pain uh it's pretty courageous
to put it all on the page like that man without a doubt i think you know and i think i i'm no
stand-up comic like yourself but it seems to me like some of the the best stand-up seems to come
from people who have a sort of,
uh,
darker souls.
I don't even know the terminology for this,
but less than happy go lucky people.
Well,
it,
that never worked well for me.
It just didn't.
Uh,
although my buddy saw a set of mine that I did in Coburg,
uh,
a week after I separated and they brought some friends from the States and they were watching me and I was raw. And he still says, that's my Lenny Bruce set. He said, I've never seen anything
like it. People reached out to me and said, I hope you take that because I've never heard anything
like it in my life. And I was raw and broken and sad and estranged from my kids. Right. And I just opened a vein.
And their friends were just looking at me open mouth.
And it wasn't profane.
It was just personal.
Right.
And my friends and his wife looked at each other and they looked at them and they said,
this is really different than it usually is.
It really is.
But to live on that razor's edge every night and work like that,
I understand why darkness might get people.
And I never wanted to slip over the edge to that bottomless pit of despair.
I always feel, and I know this might sound maudlin and corny, but so what? I like people leaving my audience feeling lighter than when they went in.
I don't think it's my job to add another brick to their back on the journey,
but to lighten the load.
That's the truth.
Well said.
Well said.
Here's jam number seven.
Oh. ¶¶ Further up the road, further up the road
I'll meet you further on up the road
Where the way is dark and the night is cold
I'll meet you further on up the road
Where the road is dark and the seat is sold
Where the gun is cocked and the bullets cold.
Miles are marked in blood and gold.
I'll meet you further on up the road.
Further up the road, further up the road.
I'll meet you further on up the road.
Where the way is dark and the night is cold.
I'll meet you further on up the road where the way is dark and the night is cold i'll meet you further on up the road this live in dublin album is my favorite album i play it non-stop it's my workout album
and um it's about 12 years old now i'd say and they do a lot of Pete Seeger songs on here too old Mary don't you weep um
keep your eyes on the prize um he does a great version of Atlantic City one of his own
Ballad of Jesse James uh and uh
Jacob's Ladder the The orchestrations are incredible.
And to watch it on DVD is remarkable.
And, I mean, I grew up with the boss.
He's encoded in my DNA.
Seen him five times. My buddy who runs the Empire Theatre, who plays in a band with Jake Clemens,
Clarence's nephew.
I've had him over here.
Have you?
Yes.
Yes, sir.
Mark Rashad and Jake?
I've had Jake on.
Yeah.
Good guy.
The little big man, I think, is his nickname.
Yeah, a good cat.
Anyway, I think Mark, who plays lead with him a guitar impresario
i think he's seen the boss more than 40 times i think he saw the rehearsal at the stone pony
in new jersey for live in dublin then he saw him in dublin wow wow yeah well i i just want to name
check somebody in another fotOTM like yourself,
but Brad Fay, who people might know best as a Sportsnet personality,
you see him on Raptor Games, et cetera,
but Brad Fay has seen the boss over 100 times.
Holy Jesus.
I know.
Really?
Yep.
Yep.
Wow.
So he's played a fair bit of air piano then.
I dare say he's moved into air piano.
That's what my sister and brother-in-law came up to Toronto to a concert.
And my brother-in-law said, wait till the lights come on.
You see all the guys playing air piano.
Right.
Right.
And the piano, the keyboard is huge and it rises in height.
I'm a great air piano player.
Hey, you're doing so well at the
trivia. So, you know, I mentioned
earlier that Bruce Springsteen's
biggest hit went to number two
on the Billboard Hot 100. I'm referring to songs
of his that he sang himself.
Do you want to guess which song that was
that went to number two on the Billboard Hot 100?
I think it's from Born in the USA album.
Correct.
Which is my least favorite album.
I think it's Born in the USA.
Good guess.
Hold it, Dancing in the Dark.
You got it.
You're doing well at this, buddy.
There you go.
Because I'm trying to think,
I was just trying to think of a song that had so many pop hooks in it that the masses would dig it.
I find this generational.
I'm not surprised to hear you say you don't like Born in the USA.
I think if you're a 70s Bruce guy, then you don't love this pop star that we had in the mid-'80s,
Bruce Springsteen, alongside Madonna and Michael Jackson.
No, I don't think he likes that version of himself either.
I don't think he likes it either because when you –
it was a wonderful autobiography.
I thought it was amazing.
I thought he really laid it out there, man,
especially with his struggles with mental illness, right?
That's pretty great.
Right.
And he, but he doesn't spend a lot of time on that album.
And one of the nicest things about Born in the USA, though,
was that he told Reagan to take a hike where they wanted to use it
as a Republican rallying cry
when he said, listen to the lyrics, Tool.
One of the most misunderstood rock songs in music history.
Unbelievable.
How can you misunderstand that song?
I know.
Absolutely.
My brother, Apkason, now he's all gone.
Really?
How do you miss that?
You know this.
Nobody digs beyond the headline, right?
So nobody puts in the work anymore.
Man, this has been great fun.
Did you know the word anti-penultimate?
I bet you you're a wordsmith kind of guy.
You know how to turn a phrase.
I bet you you know the word anti-penultimate.
Well, you got me on that one. I don't. So the third last the word anti-penultimate. Well, you've got me on that one. I don't.
The third last is
the anti-penultimate.
Okay, that makes perfect sense.
Right. And I always
knew about penultimate and then there's
the ultimate, the final one.
It's hyphenated too, I would expect.
I don't think it is.
A-N-T-E. Right.
Okay, Excellent.
So I've only recently kind of started throwing this word around,
but it sounds a lot more, maybe a little bit pretentious,
but it sounds better than saying third last.
So here's your anti-penultimate jam.
One, two, three, four. And it's from the album Transcendental Blues.
Nice.
A lot of great songs on that album, but this, he was my road sage
throughout, pretty well from 2004 until 2010. I played him non-stop, non-stop, and He's a prolific musician, a prolific songwriter.
And he, I mean, you know, he kicked heroin twice.
He did time in jail.
He's been married five times and now he's lost a son and he's still singing.
I don't understand how you do it.
I don't understand that.
understand how you do it. I don't understand that, how you continue to take those torpedoes to the bow and keep producing the way he does. And beautiful songs. I love that duet he does
with Alison Moore, his ex-wife, which was a beautiful duet. And the stuff he sang with
Lucinda Williams, who I'm a fan of as well. Right.
Although I saw her live show at Massey Hall years ago and she just said,
okay, here's my next song and just played it from a,
she had her songs on a stand and that was that. Huh.
You know, and then you see that, that,
that piece of rock and roll jerky Mick Jagger.
How old is he now?
111?
He's getting there.
Anyway, I love Steve Earle.
All his albums are just great.
Here's a parallel for you, and maybe you'll say, Mike, you're out to lunch,
and you wouldn't be the first one to say that,
but if you look at an artist like Steve Earle
and you compare him to an artist like Warren Zevon,
and the reason I say that is because these are fantastic singer songwriters
that each had like a hit,
like this one hit that sort of permeated to the masses.
Cause you ask the average Joe,
well,
Warren Zevon had a big hit with werewolves of London there and that was it
for hits.
And you got,
I would say,
it's hard to believe considering he's so incredible.
Right. But again, sort of like drugs and money, um, uh,
the, the ballot of Frank and Jesse James, um, um, uh,
oh my gosh, why are these things not coming into my head? Um,
that's okay. It's late.
That great ballot from the late seventies, uhs where he's trying to get his fix.
It'll come to me.
It'll come to you.
But Steve Earle, to bring it back to Steve,
when I was a teenager growing up,
the big song on Q107 was Copperhead Road.
That's the one that everybody goes to on Steve Earle.
Because it was the big hit.
If you're going to hear a Steve Earle song on the radio,
that's going to be it.
That's going to be it, yeah.
So that's why I always think of
Zeevon and Earle in the same spirit
because these are guys with big catalogs
that music fans love
the depth of the catalog. But if you're going to hear
a song on the radio, you're only going to hear one Warren Zeevon
song probably on the radio
and you're only going to hear the one Steve Earle song on the radio.
That's the gentrification of taste.
That lays solely in the lap of whatever kind of person is running these radio stations.
Is it advertisers that run them?
I mean, you know, rock and roll would never have existed
had it not been for the rebel voices who said,
look, I'm not going
to play Percy Faith anymore. Right. Right. I'm not going to play Doris Day. I'm not going to pay,
you know, Jim Reeves. We got to, there's this new kid called Elvis. Right. So if you hear Copperhead
Road, one would assume that it would open the door to say, okay, let's see what else this guy's got. Right.
Yeah, I'm with you.
I'm with you. Yeah, there's a few artists like that
I always think of that are kind of like your...
By the way, the Warren Zevon album,
that last album that he cut before he died is amazing.
And what were those words he said to David Letterman
on his final appearance on The Late Night with David Letterman on his final appearance on the late, late night with David Letterman.
Do you remember?
No.
He said,
uh,
enjoy every sandwich.
Fantastic.
And I've never forgot.
I've never forgot those words.
Enjoy every sandwich.
Ron,
this is,
I know.
Amazing.
Now,
um,
this is a guy who's,
I mean,
this guy could play Rachmaninoff when he was nine.
Right.
His father was an accountant for the mob, right?
I didn't even know that.
Yeah, I think so.
But he was also.
The song I'm trying to think of is Carmelita.
Carmelita.
Carmelita, hold me closer.
I think I'm going down.
Cause I do, do, do that heroin on the other side of town.
Anyway, he's a beautiful voice too.
No, I mean, he's got a great hockey song too. He sings hit somebody.
Do you remember the song?
Oh, I didn't know that.
Yeah. And in fact, there's, speaking of David Letterman,
he's got a cameo in the song. He's the guy who says hit somebody.
It's about a, it's about a pugilist.
It's about a fighter in hockey whose only job is to get on the ice and be a
goon basically. It's quite the song.
Actually.
It's beautiful.
My friend,
this has been amazing,
but we're at the penultimate song.
You ready for this one?
Yes,
sir.
Ah,
okay. You always won
Every time you placed a bet
You're still damn good
No one's gotten to you yet
Every time they were sure that you caught
You were quicker than they thought
You just turned your back and walked
You always said cars will never do you wrong This album's Still the Same, was the pillar to Born to Run.
I mean, it came out later, but still.
It was Born to Run, 1979 or 78?
78, I think.
Was it?
No, 80.
No, no, no, no, no.
I'm sorry.
The River was in 1980.
Right. And this was in 1979
and uh once again evocative of a time my last year in university and uh i just love
seagr's working class detroit rock and roll great piano player and one of those
one of those voices
that just stands the test of time
and this is a great song
I mean it's
who's it about
who is it
is it about
it seems to me it's about
that kind of person we all knew
or maybe that person we'd like to be.
It's anthemic too.
As you can probably tell, I'm a sucker for anthemic songs.
No shame in that.
No, no, no, no.
What fun this has been, my goodness.
I'll tell you this.
So I will have people on typically the first time we do the,
I call it the A to Z.
You heard me earlier describe it.
But we walk through the career and we kind of get a feel.
Okay, you know, you did this and then you went to L.A.
and it didn't work out.
You came back, but look what you did here.
Now you can tour the soft seats theaters across the country
and then you do these New Year's Eve specials.
We kind of do the A to Z of, you know, Ron James. Rightames right but then i find and i've been doing this for almost 10 years now
that when i get you back the second time to kick out the jams now i learn about you like this is
when i this is what reveals ron james is when you talk about why you love the songs you love
and people don't even notice they don't even realize how much they're
giving you and how open they are because it's sort of sneaky that way it's like i love it i i feel
i know ron james in a way i didn't know from the uh the a to z you know walk through well that a to
z career stuff gets redundant after a while doesn't it it? It's, it's not the sole note that they're,
that you're shooting for and vice versa. May I say the same, you know, uh, uh, it's, it,
it feels so totally different than the last time I'm older too. I don't, I, I just want substance
in my life, man. Well, there is one thing better than this, though,
and you'll experience this next time you kick out the jams, I'm sure,
but kicking out the jams in person is a whole next level.
Like, we do this in person.
Next time you're going to be here, buddy.
Next time you're going to be here.
Fantastic.
I look forward to it.
I look forward to it, man.
Yeah, this has been just excellent.
And we'll get more alt country
in next time i'll pick my favorite dylan song get some guy clark another we'll get a clip from the
we'll get a song from the rick rubin johnny cash section maybe emmy lou harris will come in there
too there's a song of hers i really enjoy and love it cindy williams that'll be the theme next time
and i i almost put Brandy in here.
Oh, you know what?
You know, we've only done nine, right?
Oh!
There's one more to go here.
That was the penultimate.
I think Brandy's my last one. There's a port on a western bay
And it serves a hundred ships a day
Lonely sailors pass the time away
And talk about their homes
and there's a girl
in this harbor town
and she works
laying whiskey down
they say Brandy
fetch another round
she serves them whiskey and wine
they say, they say Brandy
you're a fine girl
what a good wife you would be
Yeah, your eyes could steal a sailor from the sea
Love it. I never tire of it. Ever.
It's a good story.
He walks you through the town.
You're in the seaside town, wherever it is.
There's great licks, great hooks, nice backup. And it's once again reminiscent of the day when life was simpler.
So nostalgia, I always think of a line from Mad Men. I think he talks about, Don Draper talks
about how it's looking back with this
like this pang though. It's sort
of a bittersweet look back at simpler
times.
I like nostalgia, but
there's a, it's not all, you know,
you know, bread and roses here. It's
you can't go back.
You can't, but
it's how you go back that matters.
If you go back and just dip your toe in the pool, that's what my book's about.
I mean, I spend time in the book, and I don't want to sound like I'm suddenly wrapping up with a shameless plug.
No, do it, buddy, do it. the word nostalgia has corrupted a deference for memory of a day that's gone.
And I think it's how you embrace those memories and how you articulate them that makes sense.
I mean, I know people who have never left high school, right?
You go in their man cave and their jackets up there and their letter and, you know, the photos of their hockey team or their football team.
And you know that that's somebody who is still measuring worth based on standards from when they were younger men.
I don't want to be that younger guy anymore.
I don't want to be that younger guy anymore. I don't want to be that fella.
I've worked too hard and I've lived too much
and I've raised children
and I've had my successes and my sorrows
and they've tempered me.
They've made me what I am today.
And the only way that I was able to look back
and break out all those journals
from a day long gone and to reflect on being a kid growing up was because I'm stronger now.
Right. I'm stronger. And I think people who are unduly nostalgic think that they were stronger then.
I don't. I don't. I like where I am right now. I'm going to be 64 the end of January.
I've never felt more optimistic about the way things are going. And it's not just career.
optimistic about the way things are going. And it's not just career. And I know the world is in a state of perpetual flux. As I said to someone the other day, I said, geez,
given how fast the geopolitical landscape has changed, I wouldn't be surprised if the Martian
invasion is the next thing we have to deal with. But maybe that would be good. We'd stop hating
each other's guts and could concentrate on fighting guys with
big green heads. But I, and I just don't mean in terms of career,
I just mean in terms of, of comfortability with the craft, right?
With, with how you're,
how you're walking through the world, I guess. And don't get me wrong, I have blue days and stuff too.
It's not like I'm, you know, the baton major and up with people for Christ's sake.
But I...
I get that reference.
Look, man, it's been two years since I've had an opportunity
to embrace my calling and make a living again.
And I'm going to enjoy every minute of it.
As Warren Zivon says, enjoy every sandwich.
Beautiful. What a statement.
And that brings us to the end of our 939th show.
You can follow me on Twitter.
I'm at Toronto Mike.
Ron is at the Ron James show on Twitter.
Follow him there.
Our friends at Great Lakes Brewery are at Great Lakes Beer.
Chef Drop is at Get Chef Drop.
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McKay CEO Forums, they're at McKayfDrop. Manaris is at Manaris. McKay CEO Forums,
they're at McKay CEO Forums.
Palma Pasta is at Palma Pasta.
Sticker U is at Sticker U.
Ridley Funeral Home,
they're at Ridley FH.
And Mike Majeski of Remax Specialists,
Majeski Group,
they're at Majeski Group Homes on Instagram. See you all next week. The wind is cold, but the snow won't stay today.
And your smile is fine, and it's just like mine, and it won't go away.
Because everything is rosy and green.
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started. You know that's true because everything is coming up rosy and green.
Yeah, the wind is cold, but the smell of snow won't stay today.
And your smile is fine, and it's just like mine, and it won't go away.
Because everything is rosy and green.
Everything is rosy and green