Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - Sammy Kohn Kicks Out the Jams: Toronto Mike'd #567
Episode Date: January 6, 2020Mike catches up with Sammy Kohn before he kicks out his ten favourite Canadian jams....
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KBILLY, home of rock.
Welcome to episode 567 of Toronto Mic'd, a weekly podcast about anything and everything.
Proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery, Palma Pasta, StickerU.com, The Keitner Group, and Banjo Dunk from Whiskey Jack I'm Mike from
TorontoMike.com and joining me this week
to kick out the
jams
is Watchmen drummer Sammy Cohn
Hello Mike
Happy New Year
Happy New Year to you sir and welcome back
Thank you, good to have
me here, no it's great to be here again.
Thank you.
I've already started up with my,
still my favorite Watchmen track.
And I know you're a fan.
Yes.
Big fan of this song.
I think it caught me at the right point in my life,
like struck a chord that hasn't stopped reverberating,
as they say, but...
Before we jump into it,
I just have to ask,
we're sort of chatting off the air, but do you always broadcast without clothes?
Just when you're on, man.
It's the Sammy special.
I know that's the way you like it.
That's your preference.
I know that you think I'm a real sweetheart.
I like that callback, too.
I try to use it as often as possible.
Ever since I heard it was offending somebody.
I saw that thread. I was to use it as often as possible. Ever since I heard it was offending somebody. I saw that thread.
I was enjoying that from the sidelines.
I'm going to lean in, especially because the guys I called sweethearts that offended this gentleman was Tom Wilson and Stephen Fearing.
I know all about it.
You know I'm a fan.
But they're sweethearts, right?
They are sweethearts.
And I've got to tell you, before we jump into it here,
because when we were last chatting,
you wanted me to come and talk about some music and what have you.
Any excuse to talk about music, I'm all over it.
But the episode with Bernie Finkelstein was top five for me.
Toronto mic'd.
Thank you.
I thought it was great.
Yeah.
I went back and I, first of all, I listened to a bunch of Bruce Coburn that I hadn't heard
because I am a fan, but I've never dug into the catalog.
And then Lacking the Rodeo Kings.
And I didn't know about Marin McLaughlin.
And then he's got that book out.
And I was really fascinated.
He was very articulate.
And it was a time in Canadian music.
And we're going to jump into lots of Canadian music soon.
It was just a time that I knew very little about.
And I really enjoyed it.
True North Records.
I want to shout out
Tyler Campbell who helped me book Bernie.
I wanted Bernie. Tyler made
it happen. He tracked him down. He was in Prince
Edward County. It turns out, I thought
Bernie was coming
from Prince Edward County to do Toronto Mike
and it made me feel like, oh wow!
How special is this?
But he actually had a condo in downtown
Toronto. So he came from toronto
to do toronto mike okay which is still great because it's bernie but not coming who is tyler
i don't know tyler campbell has been helping me book the odd guest he actually helped me book
uh hoxley workman okay i heard that one too there's another good one oh and actually we have We have a guest in common.
Well, hold on.
Who's the... Danko Jones.
Oh, great, great.
Who's the guy we have in common?
Because you have a podcast with Cam Gordon.
I do, yeah.
The Completely Ignored podcast.
We've been sort of on hiatus since last summer.
I know we're both pretty busy,
and it's kind of in the back of our minds.
But if you go to iTunes, it's still there.
We've done about probably 40 episodes.
You were on the show. Well, I can tell you a few guests we share so danco jones was on your show yes tyler helped uh he came on this show tyler helped book him on toronto
miked uh you had on uh cam's good buddy uh the legendary stew stone yes who has a great doc out
right now that i i i god what's it called i'm drawing a blank
jack of all trades jack of all trades thank you i think you might have introduced me to that as
well because you guys were talking about it and i didn't know about it and then i found it on
netflix and i was really blown away i i really enjoyed it i think it's um it took a lot of people
back back in terms of its content it's It's simply not about collecting baseball cards.
It's about way more.
So anyway, yeah, that was great.
And that's Stu Stone.
But Danko, he was a guest too.
I have a lot of respect for Danko.
He's been plugging along for probably 30 years now.
Do you think Danko, I got to ask you, you're a musician.
Do you think Danko's found gotta ask you, you're a musician, like, do you think Danko's found
that they're,
not a loophole,
but he found a way
to take advantage
of grants
and money
that you can receive
for going over
to Europe
and touring?
Because Danko
said himself,
he said,
you know,
he spends most of his
tourings in Europe
and he's not as well known
here as he is there. That doesn't matter. No, that doesn't matter. The fact that he's got audience in Europe and he's not as well known here as he is there.
That doesn't matter.
No, that doesn't matter.
The fact that he's got
audience in Europe
and in many other countries,
Canada can be irrelevant
for Danko Jones
and good for him.
He's carved out,
from what I could see,
a great career.
It's the journey.
It's not the destination
and he's been doing it
for many years.
He's jumped up on stage
with Motorhead
and he should be very
he should be proud
that guy
and as far as
capitalizing on grants
why not
I mean
everybody does it
Watchmen did it
I don't know anything
about that
no shame
I just wondered
if that explains
the constant US touring
I'm not European
sorry
European touring
like if maybe
he's found a way
to use grant money to do that is that what he does I'm sorry, European touring. Maybe he's found a way to use grant money to do that.
Is that what he does?
Maybe.
That was certainly something that the Watchmen never did
was access grant money for touring support,
but I suppose that's an option.
Never too late, man.
Let's hire one of those.
You can hire those grant application people.
The problem is we're incapable of being in a room together
for more than 48 hours at a time.
So touring is not an option.
Well, hey, I want to say on that note,
I saw you at the Danforth Music Hall.
By you, I mean the Watchmen at the Danforth Music Hall.
Opening band, by the way, was Grapes of Wrath.
And I thoroughly enjoyed myself.
You guys sounded better than ever ever like as good as you ever
sounded you guys sound honestly uh i tell everybody go see a watchman show go live and see a watchman
show you guys sound great yeah thank you well you know we play infrequently but when we do, we really give it our all. And that show was, it was special.
It was a great crowd, and we paid tribute to...
John Mann.
John Mann, thank you.
I'm a little early for me.
It's okay.
I couldn't remember the name Danko Jones for a moment,
so we're both struggling here.
But yeah, John Mann, it was a fantastic tribute.
Yeah, I'm glad you came out.
Yeah, it was a lot of fun.
We often have shows.
It's so hard for me to concentrate when I have music in my head.
Oh, I know.
I can kill it.
I can kill it.
So just here, 10 seconds.
10 seconds of Watchmen before I kill it.
Just let her rip in here.
Then I'll bring it down.
For sure. Just let her rip in here. They don't bring it down. Sure. She's listening to that drumming, man.
Holy, what great drumming I'm hearing there.
Yeah, so thank you.
So yeah, Danforth was a fine show.
We played more shows last year than we have
since we've sort of reformed, so to speak,
in 2008 or 2009 or something.
We played probably about 10 or 12 shows last year.
And to have a sellout crowd in Toronto
with Grapes of Wrath,
we try to keep the set list fresh and updated
and throw a few sort of surprises
and then to keep everybody interested, including us.
So yeah, it was a good one.
Well, you got to, as a band,
you know, you guys have to keep the fans happy.
So you got to go hard on some of those hits,
like stereo, right?
Like you can't skip out on any of those staples.
Well, you know, I think I've mentioned this before.
We don't have casual fans.
We have people who've seen us literally 40, 50, 60 times.
And I'm not joking.
I don't know how they do it.
I mean, I don't know how they don't die of boredom,
but I mean, it's important for us to keep it as fresh as we can. Certainly,
there's a few songs we can't not play, but we always ensure that even one or two songs,
surprisingly, can add a lot of freshness to a set. So that's something that you'll always
expect at a Watchmen show. Now, you mentioned the John Mann. You kind of did it twice because there was some John Mann earlier in the show
that Danny kind of put in the middle of another song
kind of during a break or something.
I heard some Spirit of the West.
And then you decided,
and I think it was the first encore,
I think you played Political,
one of my favorite Spirit of the West songs.
And it was really like a moment,
like just you guys were great
so
yeah
thank you
yeah well you know
we kind of worked that up
in Soundcheck
it's a pretty
straightforward song
and Danny had
played it at some
of those Spirit of John
shows that
that happen
around the country
or at least in Toronto
in the past
so he knew the words
which is kind of
half the battle
so we
we kind of
threw it together
and it sounded good
and that
John had passed away
I think less than a week
before that show
so we knew we had to pay homage
we've worked with him in the past
so it was our pleasure
okay and on a very serious tip here
what is the relationship like
between you members of the Watchmen
oh real talk
real talk
I know that you made a passing comment there
but we need
now we need straight up
like you guys are all getting along
oh yeah
yeah listen you guys go way back like you guys uh well you and danny are related
yeah we're first cousins actually so listen anybody who says that there's no friction or
arguments in a band it doesn't have a real band i mean we we've been together for close to 30 years and there are definitely
tumultuous times, ups and downs. There's friction when we're all in a room together,
hammering out ideas. But that is what amounts to what the Watchmen do. So there's no band that's
perfect and we're not perfect and we have our thing and, uh, I'm super proud of it. But,
you know,
to say that,
do we hang out on the weekends all the time?
Not really.
No,
but,
but we communicate as best as we can.
And that sometimes takes a bit of a backseat because of our personal lives
and what have you.
But,
uh,
I'm,
I'm,
I don't have any issues with anybody in that band for sure.
On the contrary.
Well,
you all like,
because you know,
this is your part-time gig,
right?
Your side hustle, if you will, sort of like you've all got well i'm a other job i don't
know if i'm allowed to mention this in your podcast i am a full-time real estate agent
with forest hill real estate sammy cone.com if you're interested i don't know if you're
allowed to do that but uh i'll try to create some distance between you and the kite. Or maybe you'll have to edit this thing, Mike. Never.
I refuse.
Yeah, I mean, we all have other
things, but
it's certainly a big part of
who I am to be playing
music, and as
we can maybe segue into some Canadian
rock here. I'm a music
fanatic, always have been, always will
be, and it's wonderful to have the opportunity to continue to perform together. Canadian rock here. I'm a music fanatic, always have been, always will be.
And it's wonderful to have the opportunity to continue to perform together.
Okay, so what we'll do is I will let people know
that if they want to go back and hear the,
I would call it the deep dive with Sammy Cohen
from The Watchmen.
That's episode 448.
So just to read the description, I wrote at the time,
by the way, it was a long episode
because I'm reading the description now.
It said, in this 448th episode,
Mike chats with the Watchmen's Sammy Cohen
about the most underrated band in Canadian music history.
I believe I gave you that moniker.
That's my humble opinion,
most underrated band in Canadian music history.
Dubious honor, but why not?
But yeah, that's not to say you're not rated high.
I know it sounds like, oh,
because people think you're junk
and you're actually really good. It just means you, I don't know say you're not rated high i know it sounds like oh because people think you're junk and you're actually really good it just means you i don't know why you're not up
there with for example blue rodeo like why the hell not well i mean there's no there's no catalog
there we've got six records we put out and um yeah i i i kind of know what you mean we don't
have to explore all that you're just describing the last episode go Go back, listen to it. It's a good episode.
My wife still teases me
because she's like,
I said to her on the weekend,
I'm going to speak to Mike again.
And she's like,
is that the guy who you spoke to
for like three hours last time?
Okay, so it was two hours and 31 minutes.
And I don't,
other than,
sometimes, of course,
other than the Mark Wiseblood 1236 episodes,
other than those,
and other than live recordings at Tmlx events i don't ever go
two and a half hours like we must uh hit it off we hit it off i listen i think it's safe to say
we did and uh and it was a great chat and but but it's funny because literally my wife when she did
need to clarify she she only got through about half an hour of that and and and she loves you
she does and she i started to tease her and say you never even listened to that podcast i was proud of that it was a good it's good you did you know
nice editing on the fly and we incorporated some songs and but it was just too long but you know
it's listen it's i i love podcasts and there's many instances where i'll listen to a half an
hour i would like somebody get my car i'll listen to another bit so it's it's worth it yeah i mean
i'm of the opinion that if it's good stuff i like it that it's two and a half hours if it's good stuff like i like
a lot of a good thing and don't like a lot of a bad thing okay so speaking of good things uh i
also want to tell people if they want more watchman talk your cousin danny graves came over for episode
473 mike chats of danny graves lead singer and co-founder of the Watchmen about his
career in music a nice simple description I wrote
and that one was only two hours and one
minute so a half an hour less than
yours but your cousin Danny
was fantastic like I almost
got a feeling from him that he was almost
a little bit like
embarrassed by the
the praise I was heaping upon
him like he just like like like he you know
he's just like he was just a regular guy and i'm like now with a voice like that and the hits that
you guys wrote you're not a regular guy well i mean he's a regular guy but but the truth is
none of us really live in in this world where we go to radio stations every day and we're doing this
full time and we're trying to sort of push things forward on a regular basis so it's sometimes it's
a bit uh we i know i can only speak for myself but when i from time to time somebody be like hey i
love your band you know they recognize me from something or other and i am kind of taking it
back because it's just not where my head is at right um so anyway um thank you for for you so
those are two episodes and again uh did you ever like do you and cam have plans to do another you
call them seasons i noticed but another season of your what's your podcast called again it's called
the completely ignored podcast and it's on itunes it's uh we've we what we do is we speak to people
who we uh know love and respect in the music industry, either musicians or broadcast people like yourself,
whatever, podcasters, and we ask them to sort of pick an album
that they sort of can't live without, sort of a kind of a desert island disc.
And we dive deep into that for half an hour.
Typically, we end up talking about the band almost more than the album,
but Cam is a real music aficionado,
and we learned that quickly when we were working
together years ago and uh yeah we'll do it again i last we were texting back and forth
maybe about a month ago he said he was sort of had something cooking that that uh prevented him from
um doing that podcast that i don't know much about huh so um but we'll see it we'll probably
hopefully we'll do another one this year but but it's actually, as you know,
better than anybody, I'm sure,
because this is your thing.
It's a lot of work putting it together. I just remembered another shared guest
that I enjoyed on your program, Davnet Doyle.
Love Dav.
Yeah.
Great, talented East coaster.
Yeah, she was great.
I really enjoyed her bit with you as well.
And she's out there right now talking about her, I guess, not sobriety, but her kind of drive.
Sort of, though.
Yeah, like sobriety.
I'd say she doesn't drink anymore.
I'm not a drinker either.
And that was something I stopped about six years ago.
Okay, I'm taking this back then.
The Great Lakes Brewery.
Yeah, you can.
I mean, you can give it to me and you can mention it, but I'll take a second lasagna maybe or something.
If only I could do that.
Now, here's what I can do for you here, since we brought it up here.
I'll give you the six-pack of Great Lakes Brewery,
because you have friends, right?
And people drop by.
Nobody you know drinks craft beer.
Honestly, it's a much-coveted fridge space.
Okay, good.
No, this is good, because I'm going to drink your six pack of craft beer.
I'll give it back to you.
You can have it, Mike.
I want you to drink this.
Sammy, my favorite.
No, I'm going to have you on more often.
Every time you come on,
I get a six pack of Great Lakes.
Anyway, that was great.
She was very candid
and I think she's very talented and sweetheart.
So that was a good one.
Another guest we had in common,
she talked about, about Lucinda Williams, Car Wheels on a Gravel Road, which is a great album,
so. Now, funny, funnily enough, Davna Doyle is actually coming here this week, not for another
appearance on Toronto Mic'd, but she's going to be a guest on Ralph Ben-Murgy's new podcast,
Not That Kind of Rabbi, with Ralph Ben-Murgy, and they, Not That Kind of Rabbi with Ralph Ben-Murgy.
And they're going to have a one-on-one discussion
about spirituality for an hour.
And that'll be part of the new Ralph Ben-Murgy podcast,
which everybody should subscribe to
because the first episode is going to drop
on Thursday morning.
So go to your podcast machine
and search for Not That Kind of Rabbi
with Ralph Ben-Murgy.
And yeah, Davnet Doyle.
I think she'd be fantastic on that show.
She's so well-spoken and smart and interesting.
I really, really, really liked her.
And I met her for the first time when she came on.
And 90 minutes later, I'm like,
wow, I totally dig what Dav is all about here.
Well, it's your work too.
You listen and you ask good questions.
And so you guys made a connection. We made a connection. And she's coming over this week. dab is all about here well that's your work too you're you listen and you ask good questions and
so that's uh you guys made a connection so we made a connection and she's coming over this this week
here so uh shout out i want to shout somebody out here uh lisa uh levy or levy l-e-v-y yeah
eugene levy that's levy so i'm gonna go with levy here. Lisa Levy created Banjo-Dunk's fantastic poster,
which is, if you're watching on Periscope, it's right here.
In fact, there's a really cool Banjo-Dunk caricature
that Lisa's husband designed.
His name is John May, and he owns Heroic TV.
So thank you, Lisa and John, for the very cool poster.
And here's a message from Banjo Dunk.
Duncan Fremlin here.
You know me as Banjo Dunk.
And on April 16th, 2020, I'll be bringing my band Whiskey Jack to Zoomer Hall in Liberty Village
to host the 7th annual Stompin' Tom birthday celebration.
This is the highlight of the year for our touring show, Stories and Songs of Stompin' Tom.
This year, we'll be joined by FOTM and Funny Man Sean Cullen, as well as Great Big Sea's Murray Foster.
More guests will be announced soon.
The show will be broadcast live on Robbie Lane's nightly show on AM 740 and 96.7 FM.
It'll also be streamed on the internet.
But there's nothing quite like being part of the crowd when everyone stands to sing what is clearly our national anthem the hockey song it's not a large theater folks so get your
tickets early go to hello out there.ca and click on show to buy your tickets we'll see you april
16th you're not supposed to be crazy to write songs like that but it helps a hell of a lot. Was there ever a Watchmen Stompin' Tom bill?
Never.
Never?
Not a No Canada Day festival?
I don't think so.
There might have been.
I don't think so, though.
That's too bad that you can't put that on your CV.
Played with Stompin' Tom.
Not on the CV.
I certainly heard him at many hockey games, but yeah.
I heard him at the World Junior Game yesterday. Did you watch the canada russia game i did not i did not you had uh other things to do
my house it's a boring story i'm dealing with an insurance claim right now so that is boring yeah
you want to have your you want to have your listeners turn this thing off well here then
skip that story you missed a great game we got the gold medal spoiler alert okay you finally this is a big moment uh i've had a note to like drop these off or get these to you
for like some time now but then i knew you were eventually because you were going to come over
in december i think right and we had to postpone it or whatever so you need your toronto mic
stickers from sticker you.com and here they, they're here for you, Sammy.
Yeah, they're great.
I like them.
Yeah, this is, I like stickers.
They're kind of retro and fun.
And I remember you brought these to the podcast that we did.
So yeah, they're great.
Thank you.
Sticker you.com.
And you didn't get one.
I did not.
Maybe I didn't.
Did I not bring you one? I can't remember.
Anyways, Cam took yours.
Aren't there a few different?
Is this the only one? Is there another one Aren't there a few different, is this the only one?
Is there another one?
There's a few different ones, actually.
There's one that's got more white around it,
so it's like a more white,
and this one's cut closer to the...
All right, we'll take one of each.
But I can, before you leave,
I'll get you one of the other kind.
That's good.
For sure, for sure.
So thank you, StickerU.
A quick note from StickerU,
I was actually talking to Laura today, and the big news there is on just on january 30th which is a thursday night sticker
you is launching a sticker museum and permanent sticker art exhibition at sticker you the store
that's at 677 queen west and that we're hoping will be the location of the next tmlx so tmlx6 will be at uh 677 queen west so
check out the new this is january 30th that this museum opens and you mentioned lasagna
in my freezer upstairs is a large frozen lasagna for you sammy courtesy of palma pasta excellent
and have you had one in the past yeah Yeah, it's funny because you gave me one
last time, a meat lasagna, and I think I ate it that night with my family. I brought it over. We
didn't have anything set up and it was thawing in my car on the way home and it was excellent.
Really, really good. Yeah. So looking forward to the next one. Yeah, well, you got it. You got one
for sure. Everyone's happy. Thank you, Palma Pasta, for sending over the lasagna for sure. Everyone's happy. Thank you, Palma Pasta for sending over the lasagna for Sammy.
And I want to thank our newest sponsor on Toronto Mic. It is the Keitner Group. And we're going to
start a little segment called Toronto Real Estate Minute with Austin Keitner of the Keitner Group
at Keller Williams. Austin's a great guy. And we're looking for questions about Toronto real
estate. Any questions you have, if any FOTM out there has a question for Austin
from the Keitner Group, DM it to me on Twitter.
I'm at Toronto Mike.
You got a question, Sammy?
Sammy thinks there's a conflict of interest,
but Sammy, you know how it works.
Send the questions my way.
Send the questions to Toronto Mike, not Sammy,
and then Austin will address them.
More editing required here.
I refuse.
Darn, you're going to see how far you can push it before I end up
pressing the edit button. You want real talk,
Mike. You got it.
Austin, great guy, and KiteNer Group are fantastic
people. They sponsor the real talk here.
Sammy, you could have stepped up. How come
Sammy Cohen didn't step up? You never asked.
Is that how it works?
People got to knock on my door and say,
please take my money.
Any questions for the kaitner group
send them to me by email if you like mike at toronto mike.com i understand we're kicking out
jams here sammy but give us the rules like what not just your 10 favorite songs of all time there's
something uh specific in the criteria here yeah i mean well you asked me last time we're here you
said you can come and kick out the jams and i asked you what that's all about you mentioned your 10 some of your favorite songs
maybe 10 favorite songs and i just that's an impossible thing with me because that is going
to literally change on a weekly basis so i thought i'd sort of narrow the scope a bit and find 10
important canadian songs that we can discuss and i also thought it'd be helpful and provide some color to consider
that I don't have a sort of a guilty pleasure rule
in my world.
I love lots of different types of stuff
and some of these songs might be considered
to some people very uncool.
But I just think a great song is a great song
and I'll tell you why I picked these 10 songs.
There's a variety of different reasons.
I tried to sort of tie them into relationships I've had with my instrument, with drumming
and with the Watchmen, with the band and some stuff I currently listen to.
But most importantly, it's all Canadian.
So hopefully your listeners will enjoy some of the stuff.
Some of the younger people probably won't even know of some of the stuff,
but that's my preamble.
When I heard you were going to kick out your Canadian favorites,
there's a jam I was looking for in your list that did not appear.
And I'm just going to play a little bit of it
and you can maybe explain how was it omitted?
Where was this jam, Sammy?
I know this.
Oh, this is...
Yes.
I know Cam, for example, our mutual friend Cam Gordon,
will be disappointed.
Where was the Doug and the Slugs on your list?
Just don't meet the criteria, Mike.
You know, it's interesting
because the first few seconds of that song,
it sounds like sort of German rock or something.
Play it again.
Play the first few seconds
because up until everything kicks in,
it's got a really dark feel to it.
But that's pretty...
It could be like Rammstein or something.
This sounds cool, right?
You think, oh, it's cool jam coming up.
What's going on here?
It's ominous. And then all of a sudden, sudden it's not but maybe now you're turning around like maybe
you realize oh maybe this is a good song maybe day by day it's a good song it's a good song
that's good so cam you have to add a little sort of uh context here cam and i joke about
dug in the slugs for one reason or another no disrespect to these guys i mean they were a
popular west Coast band,
and we played with them years ago.
And I don't really know their music
outside of a couple of hits,
but three big radio hits in this market anyways.
Day by day, making it work, and...
There's another big one.
In fact, let's get it before we move on
because it's going to drive me crazy.
Too Bad.
Yeah, okay, okay. It's too bad that you're not as smart
as you thought you were
in the first place
too bad
I just have very clear
memories of making the video for making it work
it was very sort of literal and a guy
who literally can't make it work
and it was just a little cheesy
but again no disrespect
so you mentioned the beginning of that uh day by day by doug and the slugs reminded you it could
be something else and i had a moment so my my wife likes to just play spotify playlists like so we
have a little google mini in the kitchen and it's playing music randomly and my thing which she
loves she doesn't really love this but i love that i do i love that she doesn't love it but i
will try to name the song,
name that tune within like five seconds.
Like I'll hear five seconds on,
I'll go, that's whatever by whatever.
So if it's a hit, usually I can get it.
The other day a song comes on
and like in the first five seconds,
I scream out, oh, that's U2, Angel of Harlem.
Like, yeah, cause I knew it.
I could, it was like, I was-
Guitar intro, I know the song, yeah, yeah.
It was Bob Dylan's... Guitar intro. I know the song. Yeah, yeah.
It was Bob Dylan's Like a Rolling Stone.
So I was...
Very quickly I realized,
oh my God,
that's Bob Dylan's
Rolling Stone.
And I was sure
after five seconds
it was Angel of Harlem
by U2.
And this is the first time
in my life I realized,
I didn't realize it
until this moment,
which happened on the weekend,
that the opening
of those two songs
are very similar.
I don't know if I agree.
I'm going to have to call you on that.
Do I have to play these for you?
One of them has a wild organ intro.
One of them is exclusively guitar.
And so I hate to be that guy.
Do we have time?
It only took me four seconds here
because I'm just going to go to YouTube here.
You can get all your listeners to agree with me.
Sure, go ahead.
Angel of Harlem, hold on.
Maybe the same chord structure. So we're on YouTube now.? Sure, go ahead. Angel of Harlem. Hold on. Maybe the same chord structure.
So we're on YouTube now.
So I'm going to play Angel of Harlem now.
Okay.
All right.
That's Angel of Harlem.
Heavy tambourine.
I'll give you that.
Brass.
Lots of brass.
Okay, so that was, you know what that was.
Now here.
This is Bob Dylan.
Remember, I hadn't heard either song in quite a while.
Yeah.
It's closer than you thought.
It's close.
It's close. Okay, I closer than you thought. It's close. It's close.
Okay, I'll give you that.
One song is just a stone cold classic
and the other one was a band
at probably their lowest ebb.
But they had that great choir version
of Where the Streets Have No Name
on that rattle and hum, I remember.
Okay, which is, I still dig that.
But, okay, so more similar than you thought,
but let's get to the Sammy Cone jams here.
And here's your first jam.
Oh, isn't that groove?
So good.
This is the edited version.
There are lots of versions flying around.
I wasn't sure.
This one, this is Running Back to Saskatoon by The Guess Who,
but there's a version that kicks off.
It's got about three minutes of harmonica intro that Burton Cummings does,
and it just winds this groove over and over again and chugs on that intro this one kicks into the course about 15 seconds this is the radio edit
yeah for sure is it because these guys are from winnipeg well i'll tell you why so it needs to
be all gone because i i maybe i will i know i know keep every once in a while
somebody comes on who simply can't they they don't like any music under them and i'm respectful of
that so if you say uh bring it all the way down i'm happy to do it bring it maybe i see the problem
is i have like the attention span of a gerbil so i when i hear the music that i love i it's hard
for me to continue to articulate so um I picked that song because, yes,
wouldn't pick Connection for sure,
but it was a really, really cool period for me
in terms of what the Guess Who were doing.
They were kind of in their kind of hippie-ish period.
It was the days were long gone
in terms of the very earnest, these eyes, no time,
like the cliche sort of hits
that certainly one could have picked
if they were looking at the Guess Who.
But they recorded this, I think it's called live of the paramount in seattle and the album just sounds great it's just a beautiful live recording and i think there's a lot of myth
to this record i think the bass player i think i read they had two nights they're recording he was
just so um wasted or something or hung over or something on the first night. They couldn't get any proper tracks.
And so that intrigued me a bit.
And it's just this song in particular
I love because it's just so Canadian
and he's cross-referencing
so many sort of prairie rock.
Edison hat.
Yeah, exactly.
Phrases.
And it also kind of reminds me,
and this is a bit of a stretch here.
Work with me here.
It reminds me of the hip.
And I'll tell you why.
Because it chugs along
and it doesn't have many chord changes.
It's mid-tempo.
The groove is something that
Johnny Faye from the hip would play.
If you listen...
Can I bring it a little bit up
just to hear a bit of it?
Bring it up a bit.
Like a so hard done by kind of...
Yeah, just two guitars, left speaker, right speaker.
This is a chorus.
The hip don't have a lot of choruses, frankly,
but the fact that it just kind of chugs along at a mid-tempo rate
with a very simple drum feel,
and of course the Canadian content is very hip too.
Yes. I don't know, maybe get your listeners to weigh in with their opinions i just piano is certainly not tragically but
some burden coming
so again they were bearded and they they had the days were long gone of, again, the earnest, and what's
the song now?
Lee's Eyes.
Right.
They were kind of a weathered season road band at this point.
And it was a very prolific period for the Guess Who at that time.
Here's the end.
So yeah, it's a great song.
Great album. so yeah it's a great song great album inspired choice too because uh you know somebody's gonna
pick a great uh you know a song by uh uh guess who the guess who i was gonna call him the grateful
dead i'm like we know this is not the great that the guess who they might go with something like
even like a share the land or something or no sugar tonight or exactly yeah this is not a cliche guess who song and i know it it stood the test of time one more
point uh about this i i i don't love live albums but if you go back this one just it just sounds
really it sounds like glenn johns recorded it or something with like one or two mics it's just
really nicely recorded and when they did a guess who in, I think it was early 2000 or something,
with Randy back in the band,
it was the first time in many years,
they opened their sets with this song.
And Randy had not been a part of the band
when they composed this song and released it.
And I thought that is a real sort of testament
to the fact that it's a great song.
If Randy, who I understand is pretty picky
about these sorts of things,
actually performed this track and they opened with it
and Burton did that big, crazy intro on it was just it's just a great groove so on that note
the um the watchmen have only ever recorded one album without sammy cone correct how many
typically and i think i know the answer but how many songs from that album might make it into a
live set in 2019 or uh let me think maybe three or four
oh that many okay i would guess like uh maybe is it absolutely any time is that's one of them like
that's the one you'd think might make it in but yeah there's holiday we do that we've kind of
reworked them holidays on that album isn't okay they're all yeah they replaced you with like a
drum machine or something computers or something you're stirring shit right now. I know you are.
But you quit, according to you, right?
You quit.
Let's not go down that rabbit hole.
There's something there.
Yeah, there's different memories.
Don't pull at this thread, Mike,
even though you want to.
No, it's fine.
I don't mind talking about it.
Listen, the album to me was a little bit unfinished.
I've said it on record before,
and the versions we're doing now
are superior to me
than what's on that
album um but uh that's kind of neither here nor there it's uh there's some great songs on that
album here's a great song oh yeah kind of headphones are these can you say that okay
it's not too much of a plug for your uh no i don't those ones are these? Can you say that? Okay. Is that too much of a plug for your...
No, I don't...
Those ones are actually...
The ones you're wearing, I can't remember.
I just picked them up like maybe six weeks ago
because I have these long corded ones
that I have from when I first launched the studio
and then one of them broke and I picked these up.
They're Sony something or other.
I can't remember.
I have to check my receipt.
I don't know.
Sound good. I know you're liking this, Michael.
I am. I'm not going to bring, Michael. I am.
I'm not going to bring it down until I get to the chorus.
Don't you dare.
Woo! So hot tonight But where will it be tomorrow?
It is hot tonight So hot tonight
But where will it be tomorrow?
Okay, before you tell us why you love this song,
you're a baseball fan at all?
Blue Jay fan?
Not huge, no.
Okay, well, Barry Davis, do you know this name?
If you're not a Jays fan,
you might not know the name Barry Davis,
but Barry Davis came over to kick out the jams,
and this was one of his jams.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Okay, great.
So tell us.
Well, okay, so you remember my preamble
about guilty pleasures.
Some people might not think Loverboy are the coolest, but I absolutely love their sort of opening statement, debut, self-titled Loverboy album with this song.
It opens the album.
And this one is particularly of interest to me and has stuck with me over the years.
to me and has stuck with me over the years. I have a very, very clear memory of being a kid when I was probably 10 years old, 11 years old with my first set of drums playing along to this
song with headphones with a Sony Walkman. My mom had brought me the tape and this song came on and
I instinctively felt like I could maneuver this song on a drum kit. It's got a real sort of four-in-the-floor, basic sort of beat.
Again, it sort of chugs along in sort of a mid-tempo.
But I was able to sort of play along with this song,
and I remember being very proud of that.
And there was actually, I have a funny story
about a drum teacher I used to have
when I was a young kid, about 10 or 11,
and I never used to want to play in front of him.
His name was Jim Thompson.
He's a Winnipeg guy.
And he was very talented.
He used to play all over the city with different pickup bands.
And I was sort of intimidated by his talent
and sort of just starting off as a drummer.
I never used to want to actually sort of lay down a groove
and show him what I could do.
He was my teacher for probably a year.
So here's the point.
One afternoon, he was set to come and give me a drum lesson it was about two o'clock or something i
had my headphones on i was playing along to the kid is playing along to the kid is hot tonight
and i finished the song and my door opens and he had been standing outside my door for about five
minutes listening to me play this song wow and um and he said that's amazing that's fantastic what
are you playing what is that and
and and so it just kind of stuck in my mind as being kind of an important song and comes up on
the shuffle when i'm running and i turn it up and and matt fernette is a great drummer this band i
think a lot of some of the members were street heart another another sort of um canadian band
and mike mike reno um at the time was this skinny, sexy dude.
And a real sweetheart, if you will, Mike.
Real sweetheart.
You know, you're telling the story
and so much of music is the fact
that it's like a time machine, right?
Like when you hear this song now,
you're that young guy of the drum kit.
That's you, man.
That takes you right back.
What, you know, that's amazing.
That's like the power of music.
And, you know,
you mentioned this,
the loyalists will come,
the Watchmen loyalists
who come out
to all those shows.
They've been to 60, 70 shows.
You know what they're doing, right?
They're all back
in high school again,
back in college again.
You know,
there's another band
I like to go see all the time
for the same reason,
Lowest of the Low
and the Watchmen
and all these bands
from this era of my life. I love to go see them live. Wait, what's the Lowest of the low and the Watchmen and all these bands from this era of my
life.
I love to go see.
Wait,
what's that?
What's the band called?
Did you see that tweet from Lawrence?
I did.
I thought it was very funny.
Very funny.
Shout out to,
uh,
to Lawrence.
Hello Lawrence.
Uh,
but yeah,
it's like,
it's a time machine,
man.
How else are you going to be back in high school?
There's no other way.
Yeah,
no,
I fully agree.
So that,
that one made my list.
It's a DeLorean.
Okay.
Let's kick out another jam.
You know this one, Mike?
Of course.
Fresh as a daisy.
Oh, this sounds really good in the headphones.
I haven't heard it in a while.
That's great.
It's like you're listening to CFNY in the mid-80s.
Great time for Canadian music.
Oh yeah, you were in Winnipeg. You didn't get CFNY.
I knew what they were doing, though. You could sense it almost. It was an important time. Do you remember the station you would listen to in Winnipeg that would play a jam like this?
Probably 92 City FM.
That was the big FM radio station.
So that's Martha and the Muffins,
of course.
Yeah, that's,
that one struck me
at a time
when I was sort of discovering
what it meant to
be listening to cool music.
I'm putting air quotes.
It was a veritable new wave
at the time.
Right. I'm not sure if that term has a veritable new wave at the time.
I'm not sure if that term has been used,
but I mean, we can take credit for it.
New wave.
So it was,
that was kind of what I think a worldwide smash, Echo Beach.
And another sort of reference
to what I was doing musically
when I was, I think, probably a teenager,
I did this song in a cover band,
one of my early bands.
We played this song.
I remember learning it, performing it,
and it holds up.
It's a great little lick at the beginning.
It's got wonderful sort of sax on it
and great vocal line, great, great.
Memorable lyrics, right?
Yeah, sort of mysterious.
And it's, I love it.
I loved 80s Canadian rock.
It was the sort of basic videos
that would often accompany these songs.
What are your thoughts on The Spoons?
Love The Spoons.
I could have put a song by The Spoons on this list for sure.
The same sort of circa as Martha and the Muffins.
They have another song
called Dance Park
which I was going to put on there
as well.
I don't know if you know that one.
Do you know Dance Park?
Was it?
Because I know they changed
their name, right?
Martha and the Muffins.
I think they moved it
to Eminem or something.
Oh yeah,
the Black Stations,
White Stations,
tear down the door now baby.
Baby.
This is 1984.
I remember liking that they dropped the year in the lyrics,
so I would never have to forget what year that song came out.
I don't know.
Blackstations, Whitestations, I think.
Was there a big, much music hit?
They had a song, another song that I absolutely love.
I don't know that one,
but there's a song in an album called Dance Park.
Okay.
And it's got a very,
I don't know if you could pull that up with ease.
It's not.
Well, I'll go to you.
And if it's on YouTube, I can pull it up.
Yeah.
It's like one word dance, D-A-N-S-E-P-A-R-K or something.
It's like it's misspelt, but it's got a great guitar riff at the beginning and sort of a
funky little sort of sax section.
And it sounds like, it just sounds like absolute Canadian new wave to me.
Like listen to the drum machine right here.
Talk about the spoons.
Oh, it sounds a bit like
Give me
a kiss. I wanna know
just what you need.
Yeah, Teenage Wasteland.
Listen to that guitar.
That jerky
sort of... Oh, in great Toronto scenes
I saw the old English sign that's that was a
staple i've seen the old english sign near the cne there oh look at this old toronto views i'm
looking at the youtube video
1983 yeah that's like a
no wave
Gang of Four
like guitar riff there
that's
absolutely ahead of its time
and you're right
they misspelled it twice
right
because it's S
and there's a C in part
right
wow
okay cool
and that black station's white
since we're doing this
real quick here
and your wife will be upset if this is less
than two hours, but
Black...
We need to give her more content not to
listen to.
Okay, so this is
the same band.
They were called different names. I know this is
on YouTube. It's credited to Martha and the Muffins,
but they were calling themselves something
else. Wasn't it Eminem?
Yeah, Eminem.
Why would they do that?
I bet your record company
said you'll sell more records if you call yourself
Eminem. That's my guess.
They were ahead of the curve then.
Eminem, not the rap artist,
but literally Eminem like the candy.
Right.
Like Martha and Muffins.
Yeah, this is less interesting to me.
This sounds like any 80s song.
Okay.
Well, we never got to the chorus, Sammy.
You can't never.
You must have been told you don't judge a song until you get through that.
You don't judge a song by its verse.
Anyway.
It still sounds good.
Like, my ears respond well to this type of production.
And it is a...
What's this one called, Mike?
It's called Black Stations, White Stations.
And we'll give it, like, ten more seconds,
and it'll kill her dead.
Yeah, I don't know this one.
Black Stations, White Stations
Break down the door with a set foot
Stand up and play some music.
This is my DNA.
That's cool.
And now that I think, it wasn't even, I think it was like a, I would hear it,
I think it was like Toronto Rocks or Video Hits or one of those two shows I used to watch on weeknights.
Okay, so let's get back to the Sammy jams.
And, oh yeah, you know what, by the way, a lot of feels in a lot of your songs,
they bring me right back, including this one.
So good.
Another vintage drum machine at use here.
one two three four
it could only be from one era when it sounds like this
yep So I love the way you've got the drum machine here
and then right here the acoustic drums kick in right here.
Right here.
Bang.
Bang. I want you to see if you're real Is it nothing but something I feel
Will my heart take the strain
Or will it break down again
It's like
a danger
You've got
the eyes
of a stranger
Sammy, are these one-hit wonders
the Piolos? Because I can't name another
Piololas song.
They had other hits.
They had a song that I could have put on this list called
Where Is This Love?
Where is this love that comes from above?
Where is this love?
It's on an album called Hammer on a Drum.
I loved and love their Piolas very much.
They represented, again, a gateway for me to a&m
slash irs records which is digging kind of nerdy deep here do it there's a lot of nerds listening
yeah i know there are a few for sure but but they they at one time they're on a label called irs
which was owned by the drummer uh uh the uh sorry stew Stuart Copeland's brother, Miles Copeland,
who was kind of a legend
in the early 80s.
And he ran a label,
the Go-Go's,
the Police,
the Cramps,
Oingo Boingo.
Sorry, did I unplug myself here, Mike?
No.
I think The Fall
put out an album on this.
And so the Pales
had a record out on IRS.
This was A&M.
It's an album called
No Stranger to Danger.
But I just,
again,
it opened up a lot of
doors for me this band but I just they wrote great songs and actually a story we the Watchmen
played uh at the Horseshoe must have been maybe 1990 or something and we opened up for
Paul Hyde from the Paolas it was probably a Tuesday night or something. And I remember being excited to meet him.
And he was not that friendly.
And in hindsight, I would imagine that it was a tough time for him.
He was playing a club, a small club in Toronto in front of maybe a couple hundred people maximum.
His former colleague, what's his name?
The producer who was also in the Paolasos uh who produced metallica and produced why
am i drawing a blank god damn um bob rock of course uh bob rock was ascending by the day in
terms of his career and uh you know i'm totally projecting i don't know what he was thinking of
course but it was uh he was again not that friendly but he was great and i remember going
up to him and telling him how much i loved his band the paolos and he was, again, not that friendly, but he was great. And I remember going up to him and telling him how much I loved his band,
the Paolos, and he was polite, not overly enthusiastic.
But anyway, great band, still love this song.
It was also in a great movie called Valley Girl.
Remember the movie Valley Girl?
I remember the song.
Yeah, the song was in Valley Girl.
And it's featured in a couple of key scenes.
It's an early Nick Cage movie.
Was he still Nick Coppola?
As a matter of fact, he wasn't.
It's funny you mention that because I was just reading about this.
And I think it might have been his first movie that he was credited as Nicolas Cage.
Because in Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Nick Cage shows up, but he's credited as Nick Coppola.
That's right.
That's right.
You're absolutely right.
So go see Valley Girl.
It's a fantastic movie with an even better soundtrack.
And,
uh,
eyes of a stranger was,
was on there.
And I,
I,
I have a place in my heart for these guys.
Well,
this jam you chose,
I,
uh,
eyes of a stranger is,
uh,
like can't that's can con royalty as far as I'm concerned.
Like when they literally,
when they,
cause I bought it when it came out,
but they put together the bot Juno people put out the old canada box set yeah like the definitive
canadian uh singles or whatever that was on the list that the martha and the muffins track was on
that list as well bona fide 80s smashes you know i i i feel like at that time when the labels were not handing out record deals
like they were in the 90s, like Candy,
it was harder to get attention.
Videos were just sort of taking shape.
And I don't know a lot about that decade
other than the fact that it seemed like it was harder to access
and get attention in terms of what you were
what you were doing musically as a band i i didn't i didn't know much about the pales i knew that
they were from out west i knew that they were in soundtracks in and amongst um um international
bands so that was an immediate stamp of of cool right and um they just intrigued me
for for some reason and uh sorry my phone is going off here um so and i still love that song
very much when people come up to you and say uh oh i love your band and do you remember like to
be nice and appreciative always oh absolutely i mean i've had instances where I've met people who I really respect and they've been less than kind. I met David Byrne once in New York and he totally, totally snubbed me.
But he's probably, I don't know if he's on the spectrum, there's something there.
Maybe.
Some social issues. wife and and it was on the same day i met the drummer for the strokes who was it was the opposite i was he was with his grandfather and we had his grandfather took me took a photo of of his name
is fabrizio moretti we took a picture of fab moretti and my wife his grandfather took it and
i told him how proud he should be of his grandson and he said oh i am absolutely my fabrizio and
then but david burn was uh i saw him at a cross uh section he was at a at a light uh with his bike and i said to him
hey i just looked and he was right there and i loved your music and and he didn't respond and
i thought i gave him the benefit of the doubt said again maybe a little quieter i love your music and
he just didn't want to make eye contact and uh so that stuff sticks with you you know so there's no
doubt in my mind if anybody comes to me and says they listen to what we're doing,
I'm absolutely grateful and appreciative.
Because you don't want them to come on some podcast and talk about the time they met the
drummer from The Watchmen and he was a dick.
Well, it's not a calculated move.
I know what you're saying, but I'm genuinely appreciative.
So it's not hard for me to fake it.
Maybe when we were in the heart of it day after day,
you know, maybe if you had a bad conversation
with your girlfriend or wife or something,
you know, you take it out on a sad little fan
or something, but never what I did, Mike.
Always about board.
Here's another great Canadian jam.
Oh, yeah. Oh yeah We can go where we want to Places they will never find And we can act like we come from out of this world
We don't need no one far behind
We can dance
Safety dance
Stop dancing, Mike. Stop dancing.
It's impossible not to sing along to the safety dance.
Another song that brings back
serious memory. I don't know if anybody really cares about this. I mean, when I was a kid at
camp, I throw on a Sony Walkman once again, and I had one tape one summer. It was called Rhythm
of Youth, and it was the debut. And it has some, I know that album, and this was the first song.
I'm pretty sure it's called R of youth and um it's a great
quirky little pop song i mean i don't know anything about this band they were kind of a
mystery they wrote almost almost like childlike pop goes the world sort of right i remember that
one yeah kid songs and i think i'm friends with a singer on facebook or something i get kind of
geeky with these people who were making music that was important to me before i was in a band but
but this was not,
like, you know,
we talk about some Canadian hits
that were literally like hits in Canada only,
but this song was like,
the Americans were enjoying the safety dance.
Yes, I think so, yeah.
Because I saw Jimmy Fallon once did,
I believe it was Jimmy Fallon,
but I mean,
I've seen Americans kind of spoof this
and go with it.
So I know it's definitely a hit beyond our borders.
I'd be very curious to know
if I'd hope that the singer earns a living from this song
in the event that it does get played worldwide still.
It was just, I didn't know it at the time,
but it's sort of bona fide electro pop.
Some bands we're going to get into somebody later
who I feel is representing electronic pop right now.
But this comes up on a playlist I have.
My kids always ask me why I have a running playlist on my Spotify called Running Electric.
But I say, kids, it's called Running Eclectic.
And it's about a thousand songs.
And it's beyond eclectic.
We go from Judas Priest to Klezmir to Men Without Hats.
And this is on it.
So it's, again, it's a great little song and great melody
and it's pure electronica and I love it.
I could run to this.
Let's let it wrap up here.
There you go.
Nice.
Yeah, that's another monster jam there.
Again, no guilty pleasures, remember?
Men Without Hats are not a name-dropping,
best of 2019-list type of band.
Critical Darlings.
But it's good music.
You made a remark when you were telling that story.
You were telling us, I can't remember,
when you were telling a story just a moment
ago and you said, I don't know if anyone
cares, oh, at camp with your Sony Walkman,
which I think the whole point of
kicking out the jams is that you tell the
Sammy story about being at camp
with the Sony Walkman and we the listeners,
we can totally relate to that.
We all have kind of our own version of that.
Like it might not have been summer camp, but
I mean, I have my own version of like when i had that one cassette and i had i had uh the
clash is london calling and my sony walkman for i think it was like four or five months without
ever taking it out like just just and i mean i have i remember public enemies it takes a nation
of millions to hold us back same deal like there are these examples of your sony walkman memories
and you hear a jam from that era and you're right back there with your sony walkman on it's uh
it's like i said man it's magic we love those stories and i'm excited to play this next jam
because there is a member of this band who is sat in the very seat you sit in right now
and i regard it as an fotm So let's kick this out.
Who is on your show?
Andy Mays, The one and only.
I was recently at a Dave Hodge event for the reporters at the Paradise Theater,
and I met Andy there as well.
He's a big... Nice guy.
He's a good friend of Dave's.
But this, as I told Andy, and as I told you,
you have all uncovered.
This song we're listening to right now is stunning.
Nice choice.
It could be my favorite single ever created in this country.
And that's not hyperbole.
I could listen to this song over and over again.
I could listen to it, and when it ends, I could put it at the beginning, and it would still give me goosebumps.
The harmonies, the layers of harmonies at the end, the quality of Andy's voice, the melody, the beat.
He's using something called blastics, the acoustic instruments.
These guys were alt-country Americana, if you will, before that existed, before there was a genre.
And you want to talk about the most underrated band in Canada, Mike.
You might be right.
I think they're fantastic. You know, another memory with these guys,
the Watchmen used to come to Toronto
and open up for bands who were based out of the city
to try to get some traction.
We were based out of Winnipeg.
We'd come here for a month or two
and play on Tuesdays at Lee's Palace or something.
And we often played with the Sky Diggers.
And they seemed like elder statesmen to us.
They knew something we didn't know.
They were using just acoustic instruments.
They had this record out.
I think it was an indie
deal at the time. I don't remember the labels. A small
Canadian label that put this out.
And it's on their debut.
That's the one
of Penny Moore is on there as well.
No, that's the next one. Penny Moore
might have been, yeah, it's the one right after this.
But this one's got Monday Morning on it.
It opens with Monday Morning and
we don't talk much anymore. I think they lost the masters. I think this is the big thing is they got some record got Monday Morning on it. It opens with Monday Morning and We Don't Talk Much Anymore.
I think they lost the masters.
I think this is the big thing
is they got some record company deal.
They got screwed out
where they lost the masters.
Wouldn't surprise me.
I think I...
Yeah, it doesn't surprise me
because I think they might have re-recorded
some of the songs on this album.
But there's a song called
We Don't Talk Much Anymore.
You know that one?
Yes, yes, yes.
Andy and the boys
played with The Watchmen last Winnipeg last,
last,
last November in Winnipeg.
And I saw Andy from afar and I walked up to him and I said,
we don't talk much anymore.
And it was kind of funny,
but,
uh,
I love that song.
I always will.
He,
they played it in Winnipeg.
They kind of reworked it a bit.
And I was at the side of the stage and I said to Andy,
after I said, still love that song. It's a great song. And, um, it played it in Winnipeg. They kind of reworked it a bit, and I was at the side of the stage, and I said to Andy after,
I said, I still love that song.
It's a great song,
and it gives me shivers.
It's a beautiful, beautiful song.
I think you've convinced me that you're right. This is the most underappreciated band in Canada.
I think so.
You sold me.
And the fact that...
Oh, this part too.
Listen to all those voices.
Pete Cash, the drummer.
There's many, many layers of...
It's very R.E.M., kind of pilgrimage-ish. That thing I thought should live Oh, you never know
How it'll end
And change me again
This song should be re-released.
And it holds up.
You know, Peter went and put a band together
with his brother called the Cash Brothers.
They have a song called Nebraska.
You know that one?
No.
Seek that out.
They put a record out.
It's just called the Cash Brothers.
And they have a single
that i think made some headway in the states it's called nebraska and it's also kind of on this
level and i'm not just sort of blowing smoke here the fact that there became a genre that was that
was called alt country uh when wilco formed a band out of the ashes of Uncle Tupelo.
And Blue Rody are in there too.
Skydiggers are right in there,
and they just never got that credit.
It was, I'm sure, you know, management, labels, whatever.
There's a whole story there.
There is a story.
Yeah.
And Andy does tell, and yeah. And there's, if you remember when the Tragically Hip
played on Saturday Night Live.
Of course.
You might recall Gore dropping a couple of lines from Penny Moore.
Oh, did he really?
Yeah.
In Nautical Disaster?
Yeah, I'm trying to remember if he does it off the top, but my memory's foggy right now.
But yeah, he definitely drops a line from Penny Moore.
Yeah, in I think it's Nautical Disaster.
Because everybody knew.
They did race to an article disaster.
But yes, because I asked Andy how he felt at home watching and hearing that.
Yeah, and he was honored.
Well, everybody knew to instinctively respect those guys
because they were great songwriters.
And it was almost like people just knew that maybe they wouldn't break
into a wider audience people who were you know success guilt was happening maybe or something i
it's one of those stories they slipped through the cracks as far as i'm concerned so if i could
draw attention and shine a light on on that album that band in any way i can i'm gonna do so right
thank you for doing that and if if you can catch the Christmas shows,
they do, usually it's at the Horseshoe Tavern.
The Horseshoe, like just before Christmas,
has a Sky Diggers show or two.
And if you can catch one of those,
I caught one a couple of winters ago with my wife
and they're, yeah, they're full value, man.
That's a good time.
Well, we have the same booking agent
as the Sky Diggers, the Watchmen.
So that's why they played with us last november and it was funny because andy came and did a an
rem song with us on stage he did a song called driver eight which an early rem song and we're
all like little sort of school kids when he came to the sound check i don't think we didn't really
want to admit it to each other but we were genuinely excited to have andy on stage with us
i don't know if he liked the song or what.
We just said, we know this one R.A.M. song
and we emailed him a week before,
can you come and play with us?
And he did his thing, did his Andy Mays thing
and it was a thrill for me.
Your first clue that Andy is a sweetheart,
as we say, is that he came all the way over here
just like yourself and came down in this basement
and let me ask him all my pestering,
annoying questions for 90 minutes. That's your first your first sign that hey this guy might be decent yeah that's well you know your stuff mike it's a pleasure it's a pleasure to talk to you well
i'm honored to talk to you sammy and this next i'm going to play another a short a very short
uh short song by a great canadian band but a member of this band has also
been down in this basement, so let's go. One, two, three, four.
I forgot about this.
We could make it like we never met Keep in mind that you'll never hear the end of it
You know this one, right?
I couldn't, you know, I thought I knew all my Sloan.
I'm a big Sloan guy.
I just saw them.
Like, in the last month, I saw them at the Phoenix.
But I couldn't remember this one.
And it's like a minute and a half long.
We saw on that album that they had that there was about 20 songs on it.
It was like a double album.
I forget the name of the album.
But it opened the album.
Again, short song, quick to the point.
They all sing.
But insanely short.
It's all right.
No, it's all right, except it leaves you wanting more, I guess.
That's the idea.
Tell us why this particular Sloan jam.
Well, because just digging a little deeper,
maybe I'm just recognizing how much I enjoy this band
and what they did, what they do.
I have piles of respect for any band that's been together for 30 years off
and on.
I know how hard that is.
Right.
And they have done that successfully early on.
I always,
truth be told,
kind of envy these guys in terms of how they approached what they were
doing.
They seem to sort of have a good sense of how to make things really interesting for
for their fans uh with you know you pick your favorite sloan member you know four guys on four
different covers of chart magazine or here's a reissue of twice removed with an extra disc and
outtakes and murder records and very very creative videos artwork artwork. Their artwork was stellar.
And I always, it was around the time when the Watchmen were sort of ascending
and I would often sort of cross-reference
what we were doing with what they were doing.
They were on the same, they were on MCA at the time
as were we in the early 90s.
And I'll admit it, there was just a bit of envy
in terms of how they
approached things.
They seemed to really know what they were doing.
I especially liked the fact that, and I said earlier, that you could sort of
pick your favorite Sloan member like Kiss or like the Beatles, which is,
sorry, go ahead.
I was going to say, like you guys, though, they're a Halifax band that
realized if they were going to make it, they had to come here kind of deal.
And you guys at some point reached the same conclusion
well i mean yeah sure i mean we never moved here i think they moved here from what i understand
but okay so you didn't you never moved here when you were active for that the first we were we we
had an agent early on who said you guys might want to move to toronto and we we uh said no
we had families and girlfriends and it didn't appeal to any of us to relocate but we definitely
spent lots and lots
of time here. Months and months at a time.
So 75% of you
live here now? Is that right? That's right.
And one member lives out close
to Peterborough.
We're all in the same province.
Is that Ken who lives out? Yeah.
But yeah so
these guys did everything right right uh as far as
uh their career another underrated band uh and i think maybe they're you could look back and think
it's hard to sell a band that doesn't have one lead singer and there's a few things that it was
a disservice to them and from a marketing perspective um that they were so eclectic, but they always were interesting and super creative.
And I said it before,
I love the fact that you could pick your favorite Sloan member.
Do you have a favorite Sloan member?
I knew you were going to ask that.
They had an identity.
And I don't know if you know what I mean by that,
but at a time in the 90s when there was a selection,
and not present company included, of sort of rock bands,
grungy rock bands, groove rock bands,
Sloan were not that band.
They were heavily influenced by the Beatles.
They wrote really great pop songs.
And they created a bit of an identity for themselves,
a clear, cool little identity. and they created a bit of an identity for themselves,
a clear, cool little identity.
And so as far as a favorite member,
I think it's usually Chris's songs that I like the best,
but they've all had good songs and there's a lot there to dig your teeth into.
And this song, Flying High Again,
was on an album and again, the's escaping me but it was sort of
a double album and i thought oh again they're doing it they're doing something cool they're
putting out a double record it's got a song that has or album rather it's got 20 north of 20 songs
or something and um yeah check it out and uh it's a great song great way to open an album with a
little sort of minute and a half. I love Sloan.
What's the album called? Never Hear the End of It.
Never Hear the End of It.
There you go.
Great title for,
they had great titles for their albums.
I mean, they just.
Right, one chord to another.
You're right, yeah.
Somebody in that band really knew what they were doing.
Somebody in that band,
I think it's probably Jay Ferguson,
he knows his rock history.
And I feel like,
not to brag,
I feel like I know my rock history a little bit too.
And I saw the touchstones and what they were influenced by
and what they were doing.
And they did it with a fresh take.
And they still do.
So they're on this list.
Long may they run.
Yeah, you got it.
Ooh, what's this?
Now, I'm trying to think what version it is.
I know what it is, except I pulled it from my personal collection.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, got it, got it.
We're moving into the 2000s here.
That sounds great.
Arcade Fire.
Great.
Arcade Fire.
Yeah, I just noticed it's in chronological order.
I just noticed that.
Yes, you start with the guess who.
Try to.
Notice that the beat kind of makes you move.
So this is Arcade Fire.
It's an album called Reflector.
It's a song called Reflector.
We can get to the chorus and all.
I'll bring it down and then I'll bring it.
Okay.
We'll keep it up.
Let it ride, Mike.
Let it ride.
Now he says it.
I've been trying to let it ride.
I know.
I need your stories more than I need the,
people can hear the jams anywhere, but they can only hear Sammy right here, right now.
This change here is cool.
Now, not all this band is Canadian.
It's a Canadian band, but he's American, right?
Is he?
I think he is.
She's from Montreal.
I thought they were primarily Montreal-based.
Yes, they're Montreal-based for sure,
but I believe he emigrated here. You could be right.
I think you're right.
But these guys are on this list.
Wynn Butler, his name is.
That's right.
He's a good basketball player.
I keep seeing him at those NBA All-Star games
when they have the celebrities go in.
I see him in all those.
He's like seven feet tall or something.
His brother plays in the band too.
So here's a band that were kind of rammed
down everybody's throats in 2000, 2002 or something,
maybe a little later.
Yeah, The Power's Out, Neighborhood 3, The Power's Out, that out, Funeral. Funeral, yeah. everybody's throats in 2000 2002 or something maybe a little later yeah uh the power's out
neighborhood three the power's out that at funeral funeral yeah and um i didn't get it i didn't
understand it i'm like what is the big deal with these guys and i'm immediately skeptical when i
have a a company sort of forcing me to listen and to pay attention to something i need to sort of discover it and i'm on my own for the most part and they are getting attention worldwide british magazines that they're
the second coming the best things and to me they're this sort of bizarre looking kind of
dexys midnight runners overall wearing kind of old instruments you listen to funeral hurdy-gurdy
yeah i did. I did.
I did.
I just didn't see what the big deal was.
I wasn't offended by what they were doing,
but I didn't.
And then they had a few albums after this one,
Neon Bible.
I didn't hear Neon Bible,
but then I heard The Suburbs.
And okay, starting to hear some songs here.
This is cool.
And then they put Reflector out
and they made what I think was a calculated move to start some songs here. Like this is, this is, this is cool. And then they put reflector out and they made what I think was a calculated
move to start incorporating dance beats.
Cause if you look into that,
I said,
listen to the tempo.
Cause it's a dance tempo.
Like you could hear that in a club.
And it's got the length of a club jam, right?
Like this song here, at least the version I'm listening to now,
is about seven and a half minutes.
Yeah.
So it opens with that sort of noisy intro,
and then it kicks off with a drum beat,
and then you can hear congas.
So what Winn Butler was doing, for lack of a better word,
he was incorporating sort of sexiness
into what the Arcade Fire were doing.
Because let's be honest, before this album, that wasn't there.
And they brought that in.
They brought sexy beats, sexy tempos.
And sorry for lack of a better adjective,
but that's when I started to get really interested on this album.
That's fascinating because most people heard Funeral
and felt like it was the best thing since sliced bread.
Including me, who if you told me now,
and I've never kicked out the jams,
but if I ever kicked out the jams,
there would be a song from Funeral probably in my top 10 songs.
Is that of Wake Up?
Yeah, that's the jam.
Wake Up's great.
Wake Up's great.
I saw U2 and they opened their show with Wake Up.
That was their intro music.
And it was really powerful.
Wake Up was great.
David Bowie played wake up with them and
some right some awards some fashion thing or something like that that was the best song that
they ever had at that time but they just stepped it up uh in terms of their appeal to me when they
incorporated dance beats and they were just way more interesting and they put an album called
what's it called every day now or something they put a record out a few years ago that sort of followed that thread they're continuing to do that um the the dance beat um feel so
yeah i i the whole record's great our reflector is a great album and they're canadian and it came
out this decade we're getting even more recent now. Here's some more Canadian music.
You know these guys?
Of course.
Yeah.
And from more than the Lego songs, which is popular in this house. So that's, what a great song.
What a great pop song.
Tegan and Sarah.
Yes. I mean, that sounds like it could be the safety dance.
Same production value. Vocals really loud. Super melodic. Yes. I mean, that sounds like it could be the safety dance.
Same production value.
Vocals really loud, super melodic,
all electronic instruments for the most part.
So I'm tying it back to safety dance.
This is not something I thought through before I got here,
but when I'm thinking about it,
this is a band, to me,
I wanted to incorporate some sort of more recent stuff in my list for you.
I remember seeing these guys
probably over 20 years ago at the Rivoli
and they were just an acoustic duo
and they still, there was a germ of an idea there.
They were kind of sarcastic and cute and funny
and you could see that there was something going on there
and sort of, again, to me,
it wasn't until a few years ago
when they started getting really poppy
and incorporating
um electronic instruments so they became something that was of interest to me they were sort of more
of an acoustic act i think for the first while and then they sort of tapped into the lgbt community
and their twins and and i was just thinking what is it about these guys that that i like or what i
think responds um or or resonates with people?
They have something.
They've got something unique.
They're identical twins.
And that's what it takes these days, I think, is just to have some sort of a twist.
It's always the case, been the case, but these guys have a few levers that they've been pulling that really allow them to be an interesting band right now.
Maybe it helps you cut through the noise maybe, like if there's a lot.
Yeah, maybe. Yeah. So I just, I didn't pay attention to these guys for a long time. They
were putting albums out, but then I heard a couple of dance mixes. There's a song called
Closer that they have that there's, if you go on Spotify, there's a dance mix of this song
called Closer that's also great. So, and I know know that they're i think they're working with
warner music canada in canada other other labels outside of this country but they incorporated
a book like a memoir with their last release that i thought was a good idea and you know this day
and age you've got to be sort of different and interesting when you're putting an album out you
can't just throw it up on itunes and for the best, right? So, but there,
there, there's something I listened to a lot of these days, these guys, Tegan and Sarah.
Any new music from the Watchmen, uh, in her future?
Nothing planned. Yeah. It's, uh, we've talked about it at length and, uh, we just have to
figure out a few things. Uh, it sort of harkens back to the
point that when we get back into our lives it just becomes difficult to coordinate schedules and uh
and get that motivation i think it's a different level of of maybe intimacy that maybe we're not
there yet or something to be in a room together and be creative you have to be pretty vulnerable
to do that okay one more real talk question here
before we kick out your final jams.
Any possibility at all of getting some members,
as many as possible, of the Watchmen
to play TMLX7 in June?
Listen, if you got 100 grand kicking around,
is that all it costs?
Because Great Lakes will pony that up.
Yeah, I don't know what's involved.
I know you have those, but let's talk offline.
We'll have to talk offline.
Negotiations have begun.
I have people you can speak to.
How about that?
Do you have people?
Oh, yeah.
My person is Jake Gold.
You ever heard of him?
No, I'm just kidding.
I've heard of him.
I joke.
He's a good man.
I can't afford Jake Gold.
Okay, let's
kick out your final jam
in my secret life
in my secret life
in my secret life
In my secret life
In my secret life
I saw you this morning
You were moving so fast.
Can't seem to loosen my grip.
Sounds so good.
Down the path.
And I miss you so much.
There's no one in sight
And we're still making love
In my secret land
In my secret land I smile when I'm angry
I cheat and I lie
The one and only.
The only person who could say the word making love in a song
and have you take him seriously.
Seriously, the gravita,
like the heft when Leonard Cohen... Do you know this album by any chance?
This song or...
I know the song,
but I haven't dove into this album yet.
The production is superb
and that's all electronic instruments too,
now that I look at it.
That's not an acoustic drum kit.
But I love..., but I love,
listen,
I love Leonard Cohn.
There's been much written about how wonderful he is and how big of a gap
everyone's feeling and seeing now that he's passed away.
But to me,
what's really cool about Leonard,
if I may speak to him on a first name basis or refer to him as Leonard
Lenny,
his music was getting better as,
as he got older,
which is kind of an anomaly.
Usually you come out of the gates with some music as a band or a performer,
and it's good and it's strong.
You're developing and you're building and you're growing and you're learning
and you come at,
you peak with,
with your statement,
your,
your hotel,
California,
and then it kind of drops off a cliff.
But with Leonard Cohn, it was at the time that this album came out, 10 new songs, 2001. He, he,
he had a series of albums after that popular problems, old ideas, dear Heather,
you want a darker, he was, he was doing the best work of his life. Uh, I would, I would argue,
I mean, I loved his early So Long Marianne, Hallelujah,
Nylon String Leonard, Sensitive Guy, Poet Guy.
I love that stuff.
But how many bands can you say that about,
that they're music or artists?
That's a great question.
Because you're right, typically the creative peak is either,
like when the members are in their 20s or 30s,
this is the creative peak of a typical it's very canadian i mean joni mitchell continues to she hasn't put a record in ages but
she put good stuff out when she was probably in her 60s well neil young as well neil's on that
list an american named bob dylan put out some amazing stuff in his uh 50s yeah and yeah i think
it's let's let's take credit for that here in canada neil
gordon lightfoot joni gordon gordon's had some ups and downs but um neil but bid leonard is the
absolute sort of quintessential artist as far as a guy who had his last gasp was some of his best
work and it started with this album i love his titles too. 10 new songs, five new songs, new songs, old songs.
And,
um,
cause they were,
he just was sort of making light of the fact that an album title is just a
banal thing,
right?
That really nobody should care,
but 10 new songs.
I mean,
that's the name of this album and that's,
that's genius,
but it's,
but the music aside is what sort of mattered.
This album start to finish is real thing of mattered. This album's start to finish is a real thing of beauty.
What got me thinking about Leonard again
is because there's sort of a posthumous album out right now
that his son put together called,
I think it's called something Last Dance or something.
Adam Cohen. Adam Cohen. And Adam, it's called uh something last dance or something adam cohen adam cohen and adam uh it's not uncommon miles davis did it and uh who else john lennon with
free as a bird you know you put albums out based on demo tracks that were done oh sure yeah and
it's happened a million times for tupac shakur for example yeah yeah i think i heard a podcast
with with adam saying that he would
get his father to speak to a click track
because he knew that, Leonard knew that he
was dying and he
knew that he wanted to put an album out with these
kind of remaining tracks and
he sort of instructed Adam.
I shouldn't, not going to quote
anybody or anything, this is what I understand
happened is he gave
Adam the sort of like the
the reins to put together this last bit of music on this last album he did um and from what i
understand it's very good but my point is i haven't heard it it's sort of reminding me that
that leonard has been putting out some really great albums over the past uh 20 years now sammy
you were so amazing today kicking out these 10 canCon jams. That was fun. I enjoyed it
so much. I have an extra gift for you here. Oh, wow. This is courtesy of the Electric City Candle
Company. These are special needs adults who sell candles in order to help finance their hockey
league. Let me just tell the listeners that if they go to electric city candles.com, they can buy these candles.
And if they go to electric city,
special needs,
hockey.com,
they can learn more about the,
the hockey league.
I know right now they've been,
uh,
this was ready for you before the holidays because you were going to come in
in December.
So I held onto it knowing you were eventually going to get your butt over
here.
They were fun.
I'm sure they still are,
but they were fundraising to buy a used van
to help with the players'
travels. So enjoy those
scented candles from Electric City
Candle Company. Very cool. Electric City Candle.
Okay. Thank you for that.
Here's your favorite band of all time.
I'm surprised I didn't hear any Bleed a Little Wild tonight
or anything on your list. Next time.
Next time.
Hello, Lawrence.
For the record, I am a fan.
That's on the record now.
That's the only edit I'm going to make in this episode.
And that brings us to the end of our 567th show.
You can follow me on Twitter.
I'm at Toronto Mike.
Now, Sammy, how can we follow you on Twitter?
Thanks for asking.
At Sammy Cohn.
S-A-M-M-Y-K-O-H-N.
At Sammy Cohn.
Our friends at Great Lakes Brewery are at Great Lakes Beer.
Palma Pasta is at Palma Pasta.
Sticker U is at Sticker U.
The Keitner Group are at keitnergroup.com.
Keitner is K-E-I-T-N-E-R, keitnergroup.com.
And Banjo Dunk is at Banjo Dunk with a C.
See you all next week.
Thanks, Mike. and drink some goodness from a tin
cause my UI check has just come in
where you've been because everything
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