CLIPS AND COMMENTARY FROM CANADA'S BEST KNOWN UNDISCOVERED OLD WHITE BLUESMAN

Monday, September 30, 2013

Homeroutes Tour Diary - Day 10

We’ve been trekking across Manitoba and Saskatchewan and met some great folks and this morning I am thinking about one family in particular.  The Macdonalds, where we played two nights ago in Brandon were most hospitable and generous.  They even insisted on buying a CD even though I was glad to leave a complimentary copy to our hosts. They had a few obstacles to making this show happen, Betty’s mother had just passed away a few days before and they thought of cancelling but in the end the show went on and it turned out to be a great opportunity for friends and neighbours to come by and be with her at this time.  My buddy Russ Kelley had suggested before the tour that my tune “Sailing” would be a good one to include for the Homeroutes audience and on this night I wish I could have pulled it out but it would have needed a little run-through.  At the Macdonalds they say grace before every meal and mean it. They are truly grateful for what they have.  The parents are two dedicated teachers and the kids are both equally dedicated musicians.  I jammed a little with 17-year old Katy after the place had mostly cleared out and she played a couple of originals – she had it all, a confident voice and a solid right hand on the guitar.  I told her she should have at least one blues tune in her repertoire and when she said she never heard of Etta James I suggested she check YouTube and learn “At Last.”  (Every other aspiring female vocalist knows that song so she might as well learn it).  Their son Dylan plays in a band and he had a gig on the night of our show but we had a chance to chat in the morning.  He played a couple of rough mixes of the album they’re making in Winnipeg and they had a sound all their own.  If I’d had a chance to tell him, I would have related the time Terry Wilkins stopped the band as we were rehearsing one of my tunes and said “You, you and you are all playing the same thing – I think one of you has to find something else to play…”

As I type this, it’s the morning after our gig in a 1902 bank building in Holland, Manitoba. It had been converted into a private home and was now the region’s arts centre.  

One of shows was cancelled because the host couple was breaking up.  Hey, you don’t have to cancel the show just because you’re having a few personal problems!  As it turns out, an uber-fan of Fraser & DeBolt came through with an alternate venue so the night is saved, and a whole new crowd will get to see Allan and Brian in full flight. I can’t say an “act” has been forged from these two weeks of continuous playing but I have been singing a lot of harmonies to old Fraser & DeBolt songs and even though singing harmony is not my strong suit, I have been having a great time exploring it and I ain’t no Daisy DeBolt but I certainly feel her channeling through me on occasion.  There will be a celebration of Daisy’s life on October 6 at Free Times CafĂ© in Toronto and on that note I will pack up and hit the road.

Friday, September 27, 2013

Homeroutes Tour Diary - Day 9



"Wide open spaces on #homeroutes tour with Allan Fraser @dancehallgirls"  We drom 30 klics om this dity to get to s small picturesque Saskatchewan town called Montmartre.



They even had a replica to the Eifel Tower on their town square and the Eifel motif was quite prominent in the restaurant where we played.  #0 or so, all totally into it. There's nothing like an attentive audience. If you're ever driving on the Trans-canada Highway between Winnipeg and Regina it woth the detout to discover the Sisters Cafe, Bistro, Boutique

Homeroutes Tour Diary - Day 8

"Bacon-wrapped French Toast. Mmmm start my Day 8 on #homeroutes tour"



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"Bacon-wrapped French Toast. Mmmm start my Day 8 on #homeroutes tour"
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Thursday, September 26, 2013

Homeroutes Tour Diary - Day 7


Looks like we'll be bunking together tonight.  Till now, it's been separate rooms and 5-star accommodations and meeting lots of wonderful people along the way. Now halfway through the tour, my cold seems to have backed off, easy driving and it's all good

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Homeroutes Tour Diary - Day 6




This house concert in Inglis, Manitoba was in a living room as big as a lot of clubs in Toronto, with a crowd that was probably more than I usually draw in town.  When you play in farm country, you live and die by the rain. If it rains you get a crowd. If it's going to rain the next day, nobody comes because they're working late in the fields.  If it rained the day before, they'll come because the fields are too wet to work.  One of our attendees at the previous show was a bona fide Wika and we should have take her along for the rest of the tour so we could manage the weather a little better.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Homeroutes tour diary - Day 5





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Lovin' my new Hagstrom guitar. Four shows later and it was still in tune (bringing truth to the old musician's tuning joke "It was in tune when I bought it").

At the first show of the tour I announced that it was this guitar's inaugural performance and said I would give a free CD to anyone who could come up with a name for her (Mitch Podolak, who organized this tour said I should do this routine at every show!)  I got a few suggestions... Blackie, Black Beauty, but nothing that stuck. However among the numerous comments on my Facebook post was Danny Marks' comment "Happy Hagstrumming" and I believe he has unknowingly christened this axe. 

Henceforth he/she shall be known as The Hagstrummer! (and I guess Danny gets the free CD)

Monday, September 23, 2013

Homeroutes tour diary - Day 4

Allan Fraser playing in a hi-tech log cabin with wise owl looking over his shoulder



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#homeroutes tour day 4

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Homeroutes tour diary - Day 3

Crossing the Narrows at Lake Manitoba. 

Homeroutes tour diary - Day 2

Nice crowd in Eriksdale (33) and beautiful accommodations - I'm waiting for some pictures, but suffice to say we were treated like royalty. Jerry has some beautiful guitars but was a little shy about joining us for a tune or two.  He cooked up the best ribs ever (and enough mashed potatoes to feed a whole band)

Homeroutes tour diary - Day 1

Got to know the Homeroutes crew a little as I camped out in their office working on the October Maple Blues. Their office is in the back of a very classy hair salon.  I was tempted to get a wash and trim from them especially considering the pipes had burst at Mitch & Ava's where I was staying so no showers and very little water consumption otherwise.

Had a nice lunch in a Danish restaurant with the gang and folk songwriter Jay Aymar who was kicking off his Homeroutes tour from Winnipeg. He is a genuine road warrior and he had taken advantage of VIA Rail's programme which swaps a berth for some entertainment in the club car. Not an ideal audience but hell, it's a free ride.

Our first show was not that well attended but Allan brought along a harpist (Dianne?) who sat in on Dance Hall Girls. Real hard-core folkies at this one.  I pulled out a Steve Goodman song, Chicken Cordon Blues, and everyone knew it. Turns out Steve was a favourite at the Winnipeg Folk Festival. Mitch talked bout how sometimes an artist becomes part of the "glue" for a festival and Steve was that for the Winnipeg Folk Festival.  Michael Cooney was the glue at early Mariposa and I suppose Dave Brubeck was the glue at Downtown Jazz.

One guy even came up to compliment me about my version of "Chicken Cordon" but added "it's supposed to be a 'regular' fella"  Apparently I was just singing "fella".

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Homeroutes tour diary - Day 0

Allan and I landed safe and sound (though both a little stiff and sore). We got to the car rental place and then to the Homeroutes HQ. Back at Mitch's place, he cooked up a fabulous meal, tho not on his custom modified Weber BBQ

At the Homeroutes HQ in Winnipeg

Many pictures on the walls

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We Have Landed

"Day 0"

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Saturday, September 14, 2013

Steve Fruitman @sugarcamp2 on washboard with whiskey jack @baincoop 100th Anniversary party


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@baincoop 100th Anniversary party @jacklayton miniature memorial house

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Friday, August 30, 2013

Blainletter #62, August 2013

Well that last Blainletter was a bit unwieldy at 3000 words, and I heard about it from some Blainreaders so I won’t be doing that anymore. In a couple of days August will be over (and summer too, almost) so here’s the skinny. First the gigs:

Tuesday, Sept 3, 5–8pm Blain, Davis & Gould at Gate 403, 403 Roncesvales, Toronto

Fri Sep 6, 2:00-3:00 pm The BLUESgrass BOYS at Grandparents Day, Cedarcroft Retirement Residence, 260 Church St., Stratford

Sept 19-Oct 2 – Allan Fraser & Brian Blain Homeroutes.ca tour: Winnipeg - Eriksdale - Polonia - Grandview - Gilbert Plains - Inglis - Regina - Lumsden - Montmartre - Brandon - Holland - Lockport



Brian Blain BAK Trio 1964

This is Allan and I (with my cousin Karo) 50 years ago  and this is Allan and I today:

Photo: Tickets bought for mid-western tour with Fraser and deBlain Sept 19 through Oct 2.

Oct 6, I’ll be playing not one but two memorial celebrations, one in the afternoon for that great Hamilton guitarist Alex MacDougall (Crowbar, King Biscuit Boy, Groove Corporation) and the other at Free Times in the evening celebrating the life of Daisy DeBolt (2nd anniversary of her passing)

...and stand by for a CD Launch in October or November

CD Update: Last month I did a call-out here for contributions to the CD fund for New Folk Blues 2.0, and thanks to three “renewing donors” we have made some significant upgradesbut we still have to master & manufacture and I need CDs in hand before I head out on tour on the 18th and any funds raised beyond that will be used for the promotion and marketing. Some would say that you should spend as much on that as making the record. Ooops, I’m starting to ramble again. You can stream the most recent mixes below and if you like what you hear and you want to contribute, do it now so I can put your name on the CD. And as before, any donation over $250 gets you a Brian Blain house concert.



Today I was googling myself – not being a narcissist, just looking for a link to a Blainettes video to send a prospective employer – and this is what I found (at the top of the search results, no less). A sweet young entertainment reporter collared me at the Afrofest media launch and started asking me stuff. I thought I had a pretty good soundbite in there about the evolution/devolution of music:


And for those Blainreaders who don’t have any idea of my other life as a desktop publisher, here’s a (not quite typical) day: Starts with a dead router and no internet or printing at the jazz festival office, submission deadline for the next Crescendo, preparing the presentation of a new website to our Corporate Client, and driving boxes of Mapleblues newsletters to the mail depot and dropping them off in clubs (and getting a parking ticket in the process). That was after a couple of very intense days putting it together. All with my able associate, Joel Blain (yes, we are related).

Like I said, I’m going to talk less and say more – if a picture is worth a thousand words how many words is a 15-sec video worth? I’ve been “vlogging” more than blogging lately. I’ve been posting 15-sec instagram clips on some memorable musical moments from some events I attended this month including Rita diGhent (with pianoman Bill Westcott), Jake Chisholm, The Harpoonist and the Axe Murderer, and the original (Not-So-Young) Rascals. Check it out at www.torontobluesdiary.com

You can give me a “like” at www.facebook.com/brianblain.musician
And follow me on twitter.com/brianblain and instagram.com/brianblain

Monday, August 26, 2013

Harpoonist and Axe Murderer at Rivoli



They have a buzz and they are living up to it!

Groovin with the Rascals on a Sunday Afternoon





Announcement not usually heard @mirvish theatre: "if you have a cel phone, leave it on, take pictures, dance in the aisles, do whatever the f*** you want"

a great introduction to a "rhythm method" for blues harmonica

They don't get any better than Jerry Portnoy

http://www.youtube.com/user/SonicJunctionLessons?v=dwhscer1cQc


Surprise appearance at Monarchs UK pianist Ben Waters with Chris Whiteley

Friday, August 9, 2013



Bill Westcott doing the 4-hand piano thang with Rita diGhent at her CD launch

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Blainletter #62, July 2013

Blainletter #62, July 2013

Not a lot of gigs to promote in July (in fact, none) but June was real busy and I just got a call to play with my Buddy Larry Kurtz at a new venue in Orangeville (and I think I have a few new fans in Orangeville – you know who you are):

Aug 9 Brian Blain & Larry Kurtz Mill Creek Pub, 25 Mill St., Orangeville

And I’m pleased to announce that I’ve been invited to do a 2-week Homeroutes house-concert tour with my old buddy Allan Fraser starting Sept. 19 in Winnipeg and winding around Manitoba and Saskatchewan. On the road again!

And here’s some Big News! Mixing has begun on New Folk Blues 2.0 and I like what I hear so far. Still a couple of overdubs to do but we’ll have this wrapped up (but not shrunk-wrapped) in time for the tour.

Meanwhile, I’ve been...

Out and About

And some of you may not need to read the next 2000 words about shows I’ve seen, shows I played, shows I wish I'd seen...unless you enjoy reading about all the behind-the-scenes stuff and occasional griping the music establishment (biting the hand that feeds me, as it were).

Actually, it feels like the live music scene is on an upswing Just last night I was at two (count ‘em, 2) CD launches. Colleen Allen was brilliant and the new Jazz Bistro is a great showcase room, with that big steinway piano. I gather they had a big high-priced PA system too, though that is now replaced by a much more rudimentary set-up, which works just fine. Colleen's Quintet got pretty intense, I have to say.

Later Mark Bird Stafford at Monarch’s Pub was a little more accessible but just as uplifting.



They have sound-sytem challenges there too and they will continue until they aim their speakers at the audience instead of at the dancefloor. Mark has never played better and this is a town full of great harp players (though you didn’t see any of them springing $42 to see James Cotton). Funny, the next night the Shoe was filled with organ players (Fonfara, Pomanti, Jesse Whiteley and others) to hear their B3 Guru, Dr. Lonnie Smith. He was phenomenal. And I will say here, that was my favourite show of the festival).

Anyway, back to harmonica players, Dr. Nick was at Mark’s thang and I had just seen him sitting in with Sugar Brown and Bharath at the Paddock...



Bharath a harmonica/guitar player from Montreal who was a bit of a mystery man. Every harp player in town was singing (blowing) his praises. And now that I’ve heard him, I see what they are talking about. He takes you right back to Chicago in the 50s – plays effortlessly, no showing off at all. Solid. And now I got to meet him and he still remains a little mysterious to me. The band had a couple of ringers from the west coast, Junior Watson and Fred Kaplan…both alumni of the legendary Hollywood Fats Band). And of course, Sugar Brown was front and center – kudos on pulling this off, and thanks for helping develop this new blues venue, The Paddock.




It’s been festival mania around here. Beaches Jazz just ended and I got a couple of hits of blues – Sunday it was Sugar Ray Norcia with some of the top players on the New England blues scene including “Monster” Mike Welch and bassist Mudcat Ward.



The day before I was pumped to hear one of my favourite guitarists, Anson Funderberg, who was coming with a New Orleans artist, Eric Lindell. Eric played fine but I was there to hear Anson digging in on his Telecaster and even though Lindell was trying to coax some longer solos out of Anson, he was his usual understated self and if he was saving the best for last it never happened because the rain came and I could see puddles forming on the stage and at the first clap of thunder they shut it down.



Sugar Ray was preceeded by Bill King sharing the stage with his son Jesse (aka Dubmatix, multi-JUNO winner). They played a ska & reggae flavoured set with ska-pioneer Everton ‘Pablo’ Paul. Errol Nazareth wrote a nice piece on this conglomeration – read it here http://www.torontosun.com/2013/07/25/reggae-show-a-family-affair.

Finally got to see La Bottine Souriante after a gap of maybe 10 years. I remember seeing them at Harbourfront in the 90s and being knocked out by the horn section – I loved the way they integrated the horns into traditional Quebecois jigs & reels. This time I was not as knocked out but there were some great moments where they took it to that place but there was an awful lot of step-dancing. Here's an Instagram Clip:



No slight to the dancer, but I'd like more horns and less dancing! While at Mel Lastman Square, I got to meet one of my CBC Radio regulars – The Current’s Anna Maria Tremonti. She’s on her summer break and was talking about an upcoming trip to Ireland or Scotland…whatever, she was expressing some concern about driving on those narrow winding roads - I said that was surprising to hear from a journalist who is no stranger to war zones and other far more hostile environments…

Closer to home (in fact just a few blocks from my house), Afrofest was jumping and I never saw Woodbine Park so full as they were when Alpha Blondie hit the stage. I had to walk through the Festival of South Asia which was taking place at the foot of my street. Earlier that day I got detoured up on St. Clair Avenue because it was closed for some Italian (?) Festival. Up in Orillia it was Mariposa Folk Festival and there were probably several small jazz festivals within driving distance. At Fort York there’s was a new Festival call “Urban Roots” with some pretty big name like Xavier Rudd and Neko Case. This fest was just started by our old friend Jeff Cohen (who runs the Horseshoe and much more but who I especially remember for his rants on CIUT radio).

Jeff, and several other folks I know, were part of a “focus group” of live music stakeholders who have been trying to make Toronto into a music tourism destination like Austin or New Orleans. I was thrilled to hear that a comprehensive online event calendar was part of their mission but I have since heard that maybe not. I hope it’s not because I scared off the lady in charge with all my stories of false starts, failed objectives and wasted resources I have encountered since the early 90s when I was working with the visionary Barb McCullough and a little City of Toronto funding, to start a “Toronto Festival Alliance.” That never got off the ground because we were hard pressed to get all of those festival organizers in the same room with their rivals and sworn enemies. Then there was Gene Wilburn’s “Presenters’ List” for the Ontario Arts Council - Under-promoted thus under-utilized. Toronto Arts Council, Canada Council, all the damn councils spent a fortune trying to do it but all these schemes were labour-intensive and depended on participation from the stakeholders (artists and venues) and that is not something you can take for granted. Now Magazine and Wholenote have the most comprensive listings but that’s because they have gnomes in dungeons parsing all those emails. And I can’t imagine the people at Now offering to share their listings with any perceived competition. Still, I predict the day is coming, and it won’t be long, that if an artist or a venue put an event online in one place, it will be scraped off the web and shared with the rest of the world in the blink of an eye (or rather, the click of a mouse). Anyway if you want to know more, it’s called the 4479toronto project. Their first challenge is to get people to recognize their “brand” and it seems that Canadians are much quicker than Americans to recognize that 4479 represents longitude & latitude. I hear they have got the City to agree to having a “music office” at City Hall and that will certainly be a good thing for the big players like Massey Hall and Live Nation, and maybe there will be some trickle down benefits for the scuffling musicians on the club scene.

Blues@Jazz

At the Toronto Jazz Festival, Boz Scaggs started with some a blues shuffle and ended with “Brother Can You Spare a Dime” desiccated to Bobby “Blue” Bland who had just passed away. He had a great band and a powerhouse vocalist who captivated the crowd although it was Boz’ voice that they came to hear and it was smooth as silk. His crew, however, didn’t make any friends in our town, being extra niggly and, according to Richard Flohil, treating the opener Paul James quite shabbily. At the other end of the spectrum were the Willie Nelson crew, who bent over backwards to accommodate Alex Pangman and her band, to the extent that they packed up the drums and helped load them out.

The Beaches Jazz Festival starts today At the media launch AD Bill King finally said what everybody’s known for a while - that all these festivals, regardless of their name, have become “music” festivals and working for a jazz festival that kicked off with Willie Nelson and closed with Steve Martin, I guess I have to agree.

It will come as no surprise to local blues fans that the first show to sell out at the Toronto Jazz Festival was Dr. John & Mavis Staples. Danny Marks was the MC at and started out by extolling the virtues of Mavis’ longstanding guitar player, Rick Holmstrom, who is the guitarists’ guitarist. And the consummate pro, even though the airline lost his luggage (which included his pedals - he only carries two - an overdrive and a reverb - he doesn’t like the reverb on the reissued Fender amps). He even had to buy a suit at the Bay an hour before showtime but he looked as sharp as ever.

Mavis was having a few physical difficulties but she sang great and had the audience entranced. Dr John was in great shape and positively chatty backstage, not the Dr. John we have encountered at previous Toronto Jazz appearances – and there have been many. Local musicologist Rob Bowman is Mavis Staple’s biggest fan and best friend in this town and he got a shout-out from the stage. He even delayed his trip to Europe where he is promoting his film on the life of Curtis Mayfield.

A couple of nights later, Bettye Lavette was quite mellow herself with a lot of soulful ballads as is her wont but James Hunter had the feet tapping plenty in the first half so it all balanced out. He’s got a great new organist called Kyle Koehler who does the classic chunka-chunka that was part of James’ signature, but he could also rip it up a la Lonnie Smith, who happened to be playing at the Horseshoe the night before. Dr. Lonnie was really ripping it up with his amazing trio, and every organist in town who wasn’t working that night was watching and loving it. The Shoe also hosted the legendary James Cotton who can still blow that harp, but leaves the singing to Darrell Nulisch who has his own special charisma judging from the 3 young girls who followed him all the way out to Queen Street. Apparently Cotton has been in town for a few days and was spotted checking out the scene. He’s moving slow, but he’s still got the groove, and he can still hit those high notes:



Speaking of moving slow, Dr John was looking a little frail at his last Toronto Jazz appearance but seemed quite full of energy this time. I heard he was parting till 3am. He was positively chatty backstage and so happy to see his old friend Mavis and catch up. His new bandleader/trombonist Sarah Morrow did a great job and I’m told she’s originally from this area.

This year Brian and the Blainettes played Toronto Jazz again and I even got a last minute gig doing an opening set for Groove Corporation’s show at the Monarch’s Pub in the Delta Chelsea Hotel (soon to be renamed the Eaton Chelsea). It seems their guitarist was going to be delayed so they called me in and I was happy for the opportunity to play with Lily Sazz (Groovecorp is her band) because we have done many duo gigs in the past. We were having a great time until some patron complained that they had been waiting since 7pm for the funk band and obviously our country blues was not to their satisfaction. Anyway, we got the bum’s rush and were told to stop now, and worse yet, the band was obliged to start without their guitar player. That is positively Medieval. The good news is I got out of there in time to get down to Nathan Phillips Square and hear a couple of tunes by Smokey Robinson and it was pretty damn special.


Getting to know Joni

Luminato festival got a lot of bang from Joni Mitchell’s appearance. Joni Mitchell has left such a huge mark on modern music (and don’t be surprised if her painting becomes equally celebrated once she’s gone – that’s usually how it works with visual artists). I have always had a great attraction to her and just spent the last couple of hours watching here Luminato interview (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B8VQgRnghb8) and last week I was glued to the radio for Jian Ghomeshi’s interview (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pEJuiZN3jI8). What a revelation!

Back in the 70s I was invited to be part of a fundraising concert for the Indians of James Bay. It was at Sir George Williams (now Concordia) University in Montreal. I opened the concert and Joni closed it (and it was a long concert – a bit of a precursor to the Live-Aid concert phenomenon. I remember getting there late and getting through my set and being a good “warm-up” act. No one had ever heard of me but I remember it was a short set and the crowd wanted an encore and I think it was Claude Dubois, a huge star in Quebec, who came out on stage to hug me and explain there were many more artists to play. As I was making my way to the stage door with my amplifier and other gear somebody said “don’t you want to come up to the green room and meet Joni?” I just had shrug my shoulders and said something like “what am I going to do with all this shit?” and just made my way out of there. For all I know, she might have been watching from the wings thinking “there’s somebody I’d like to meet…” (in your dreams, Brian).

I just Googled that event trying to recollect some of the details and had a little rush to find myself mentioned on Joni Mitchell’s website (“Brian Blain, Peter Yarrow and Loudon Wainwright III also performed”). Then I clicked on a review by the famed Montreal music critic Juan Rodriguez who wrote, “Unfortunately her lyrics are quite often merely prosaic. She sings of personal encounters, describing them in excruciating detail. With her long blonde hair and her long blue swaying skirt, she's quite a presence but the songs themselves don't amount to much.” Nasty!

For those Blainreaders who are wondering how the hell an unknown artist (which I still am, I guess) ended up on that stage in such illustrious company, it’s a good illustration of how the music business works. My producer was their conduit to Loudon Wainright and I guess he told them something like “I’ll get you Loudon if you put Brian on the bill.”

Many years later, I was standing just a few feet from Joni at a Neville Brothers concert at Harbourfront in Toronto and I was building up the courage to say hi and maybe relate my past close encounter but I got such a dirty look from her overly-protective boyfriend, I just went the other way. I don’t think he remembered me but we had jammed one time with Daisy DeBolt. His name was Don…somebody. Let’s just call him “Don the Protector.”

But after watching these interviews I feel like I’ve met Joni, now in her 70th year, and attractive as ever. Maybe I’ll run into her again…

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Out and about




They say (I don't know who) that everybody has to see the Rolling Stones live at least one time. My friend Jacquie is someone who felt the need to see them twice in a row and I was lucky enough to be her guest at the concert on Thursday Night at the ACC. I've since seen a couple of reviews and all agree that they delivered, despite some nay sayers that poo=poohed their 50th Anniversary Tour as a bunch of geriatric rockers still cashing in. The reviews I read didn't say much (if anything) about Mick Taylor's presence - and he was very present, though Mick J. never introduced him. Maybe the reporter didn't know who he was. He played some fine guitar but like the rest of the boys was not the "flawless" presentation that is de-rigeur these days if you want to be on the big stage. Well the Stones are still breaking all the rules, and many of those guitar intros were pretty loose...you could say they had a fumbeling tumbeling quality. There were many loose, spontaneous moments, and of course, that's what people really want to experience. They want to have been there when the Stones did something that they never did before and will never do again. At the very end of the finale, once the last chard had be strummed, somebody started up another groove on the guitar - it must have been Keith. You could see the close up of Charlie Watts on the big screen and his expression was saying "When's it gonna end?"

At the Toronto Blues Society Talent Search Finals (Night 2) I heard three fine blues bands. Sorry I missed the three that played on Friday night but I was gigging in London. The winner was Sugar Brown, who played on the night I wasn't there. I suspect he gave the rawest representation of the blues and it's to the credit of the judges that they were not swayed by a more slick presentation, though it might have a better chance of success in the music mainstream.

Friday, May 31, 2013

Orangeville blues and jazz

Day one

Discovery of the day: Ben Racine  blues band from MontrĂ©al.  Righteous guitar and great horn section -tenor & bari, just like the Blainettes. Methinks we both dig James Hunter.

Brian Blain Awards (the BBs) to Lisa Watson, Norma and Larry Kurtz for "Hosts of the Year." "Best Musical Moment": Playing with Adam Gussow, "Discovery of the year": The Ben Racine Band,  "Highest Energy Performance": Steve Strongman, "Best Quiet Moment": Hanging with Harry Manx, "Best Festival Meal": Veal Picatta at Il Corso, "Busiest schedule of the year": 5 (five) 3-hour shows in 4 days in OrangevilleI. Special "Thanks for the Memories" Award to Shrimpdaddy  Michael Reid who is moving to the East Coast and "Haven't Seen You in a While" Award to Andie Maranda, bluesfan extraordinaire.

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Blainletter #60, April 2013



Not much time to play guitar this last little while - peak period for my desktop publishing enterprise. Two newsletters and a website all due practically the same day. But's it's done and no major screw-ups (even got a nice fanmail complimenting the website). So now I'm back in music mode and hitting the road….

Fri May 10 9-11pm
Gladstone Hotel - Melody Bar
9th Annual Motherless Day Blues Concert with Brian and the Blainettes

This is probably the only time you'll get to hear me singing my cult classic, "Don't Forget Your Mother". And if you like you can hear the mega production here

Thu May 30, Fri May 31 and Sat June 1 6-9 PM
THREE NIGHTS at the fabulous Il Corso Restaurant
(part of The Orangeville Blues and Jazz Festival)

Sun June 2, 2-5pm Grand River Chop House - 5 Amaranth W, Grand Valley, ON
(part of The Orangeville Blues and Jazz Festival)

Fri June 7 Black Shire Pub 511 Talbot St London, ON (519) 433-7737
(Blues Masters Series)

Sun June 30, 3-6pm Distillery District Main Stage - Brian and the Blainettes
(part of the TD Toronto Jazz Festival)


It's been a little while since the last Blainletter so I'm trying to get this out before the end of the month and I think I'll keep it short this time. I've had some friendly comments that it gets a little long-winded (and one not-so-friendly comment from an ex-girlfriend who writes "I never hear from you except for that stupid Blainletter which I never read anyway…"). So we've unsubscribed her but I'm glad to report that whenever I'm out and about there's always an encouraging word to keep it up.

I had some great gigs with Robert Davis and Malcolm Gould last month and was happy to play a couple of tunes with Shrimp Daddy and Danny Marks at a fundraiser for the lovely Jenn Martin, my rep at Indie Pool who had a nasty snowmobile accident. I hope she's back in the saddle now.

Lots of folks have been asking me when I'm going to start up a weekly campfire jam but the stars have not aligned for that yet. Meanwhile, young Jake DeBolt (Daisy's son) got something going at the little "Sideshow Cafe" just down the street from me so I've gone over a couple of times and I will again. It's on Wednesday nights. It's attached to the Center of Gravity Circus HQ at Gerrard and Greenwood.

On the "Living Album" project I upgraded my computer with Protools and even though it's giving me a little trouble right now, it's been a pretty smooth transition. I never thought I would end up with ProTools - I've hated it ever since it started out as Sound Tools but it's what everybody is using and now I am too. I'm glad to report a couple more contributions to the recording fund and I intend to get into the studio in the next month to do the final overdubs and then we can come out with New Folk Blues 2.0. Thanks for your patience (and if you really can't wait, then most of the raw tracks (just guitar, vocal and bass) are available for download on my Reverbnation. Even though I don't have a new release, I still hear a teack on the radio now and then so thanks to my friends in radio land who haven't forgotten Brian Blain, especially Ted Crouch who gave me a spin on the inaugural edition of "Acoustic Avenue" http://voiceoftheshuswap.ca/programs/

I saw a few great shows lately including James Hunter at the Horseshoe. I love his sound with the tenor/bari combo. He'll be back at the jazz festival opening for Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings. That will be a great night. I guess the biggest show I got to last month was Fleetwood Mac as a guest of my dear friend Jacquie and it was pretty awesome. The Air Canada Centre was packed and the production was great. Before the show starts, a booming "voice of doom" warns about any picture taking or recording, listing all the different devices that are not allowed from throw-away cameras to cell phones. Then the show starts and all kinds of people rush the front and start taking pictures - some are tapped on the shoulder and others are allowed to the front (usually cute girls with big smiles and short skirts). I guess they have to make the official request…but then how are you gonna stop them from taking pictures? I haven't been to too many, but I can tell arena shows have come a long way. I was interested to hear pioneer impresario Michael Cohl (who promoted the Rolling Stones & U2 tours and lots of others) he was speaking at Canadian Music Week. Bob Lefsetz said "he told us NOTHING!" but I thought it was a real eye-opener about how that industry operates. Then next day, his arch-rival and former employee gave his take on the state of the industry and the one thing they could agree on was how they both hated Bill Graham (and I guess he hated them back). I ran into another pioneer promoter at the coat-check - it was Donald K. Donald and I was surprised that he remembered me - he seemed happy to see me though we had a bit of a falling-out in the 70s when I bailed out halfway through a tour where I was opening for April Wine. I just couldn't keep going out onto those stages (solo) and trying to play a "warm-up" set while thousands of kids yelled "A-Pril-Wine, A-Pril-Wine" I was told in no uncertain terms that I would never work for him again and I never did.

The rest of Canadian Music Week was a thousand bands all trying to sound the same and then when you went to the panel discussions it was all about "Authenticity" and finding your own sound. One guy said he listens to 11,000 submissions a month and narrows it down to a couple of hundred recommendations for his blog. Yikes!

My Facebook friends already heard about my guitar disaster - My beloved Epiphone took a fall and I didn't even open the case until I got to a gig at Gate 403 and saw it sitting there in two pieces. I posted a picture on Facebook and never got so many comments in my life….The guitar is glued back now, but it's road days are over - it could not withstand another shock - so I've been shopping around for another flat-top.

Maybe you'll get a kick out of this little video we made of me trying out guitars




We brought along the briPhone and shot a little videoclip of my "Great Guitar Search." Linda has latched onto the name "Awful Video Productions" because her first attempt at video - Allan and myself at the Tranzac - was one of Richard Flohil's weekly video pics which he referred to as "an awful video of great song," or something like that… For the great guitar search, I started at Capsule Music then Long & McQuade and played a lot of guitars that were mostly under $1000…still haven't found one that I couldn't put down so I may up the ante and head to the 12th Fret next. I dropped in already and the first guitar I picked up was a beauty - a Bourgeois (never heard of them) but it was 5K. I realize I'm more concerned about how it feels than how it sounds - my Epiphone had a rather small neck - almost like an electric. I've checked out a few guitars that friends had for sale and if any Blainreaders out there might have a suggestion, send it my way.

I'm also on the lookout for female sax player who could fill in for Colleen Allen who had to bale out of the Gladstone gig on the 10th. Both Colleen and Carrie are very busy sax players so I have recruited the phenomenal Alison Young but now need another tenor/bari gal and I'm open to suggestions on that too.

And let me finish with my congratulations to a bunch of great musician friends - Steve Strongman just won the Blues JUNO and Jim Galloway just got married. And my oldest musical buddy Allan Fraser has moved to Toronto and we have had a few opportunities to play together and there will be more. On a sad note, there have been many passings including Richie Havens (who crossed paths with many friends of mine over the years/decades) and the irascible Johnny V - a great guitar player who I always admired even though he was a bit cantankerous. He's the first guitarist I ever saw who leaned a piece of plywood in front of his Fender amp so the people in the front would not get blasted. I think J-W Jones does that too.


Thanks for reading this far. It was snowing just yesterday but I think Spring is in the air. Let's go for a long walk! BrianB

Parking

Anyone who rides with me knows I'm very cavalier about parking but on a Saturday afternoon in downtown Toronto I tread carefully. It worked against me today. I paid to park at a meeting that didn't happen, used only half the time I paid for at the Portabelo for a guest set with Allan Fraser & Bob Cohen then paid for nothing when the restaurant we were going to was closed. Hey this is adding up. I'm back to risking it - hell, a parking ticket is not much more than some lots.

Monday, April 1, 2013

did you play at egerton's restaurant in the 70s? NOT!

I try to constrain my ramblings to these pages but I couldn't resist replying to a query on the Maplepost listserv asking for stories about playing the legendary Toronto venue, Egertons, back in the 70s. Here's my tale of woe:

In 1973 I had just released a single called "The Story of The Magic Pick" on the Montreal label Good Noise Records and was sent to Toronto on a promotional junket which included visits to disc jockeys accompanied by the promotion person from the distributor (Polydor), Lori somebody...I think.

After doing the rounds of radio stations (how often does that happen nowadays?) I was escorted to Eggertons, the premiere showcase room in TO, to do a guest appearance. which I guess had been arranged with Jim Holt and I sat through a long set by whoever was the main attraction that night and just when I thought I was about to be called to the stage, there was a commotion as a large group of important-looking people made their way into the room, and I seem to recall they were being sheperded by an English gentleman with long flowing white hair (I may have blurred this into another similar event - I await some clarification from anyone that might have a better recollection than me).

What I do remember is that I was informed that somebody more important than this unknown Montreal artist would be doing the guest spot. So I sat back and watched someone I'd never heard of singing a song I'd never heard..."Sometimes when we touch...." To add insult to injury, I was later informed by my label that Polydor had released a single called "Spiders and Snakes" in the same week as mine and they only had enough resources (payola??) to promote one "novelty" record at a time. Needless to say, neither of those songs ever made it onto my "favourites" list.



Friday, March 1, 2013

Folk Alliance Conference Rundown


Harry Manx a video by Brian Blain on Flickr.

Missed Harry's Wednesday Showcase at Folk Alliance but luckily he played again on Friday (with a gig in Quebec City between).


Our Folk Alliance adventures began on Wednesday night, a night that was dedicated to showcasing all the Canadian Talent - all the Canadian roots record labels were showing off their favourite artists in 8 different rooms. We had a blues campfire going in one of the rooms but it was hard to compete with all the amazing music that was going on all around us. Hell, even I wanted to skip out and go see Harry Manx, but I stayed at my post and had some consolation when Harry's keyboard player Clayton Doley dropped in and got the joint jumping with some Boogie Woogie. I had my buddies Allan Fraser and Russ Kelley jamming with me then Michael Jerome Browne showed up and that was a delight. Sam Turton and Jane Lewis dropped in to lead a couple of gospel-flavoured numbers. I stepped out for a moment and saw Darcy Wickham wandering around so I lassoed him into the jam (and got him playing some bass, too). He is one of Toronto's best and busiest guitar teachers and now he's got a uke. Look out! Glen Hornblast had fun at our Winterfolk campfire and re-appeared at the Folk Alliance to sit in (his tune "Freedom Train" is destined to be a folk classic). A couple of english dudes sat in for a couple of tunes - a handsome young man who didn't play an instrument, didn't want to start a song and didn't really do blues. Still, he extemporized some lyrics on a couple of tunes and his buddy played some bass. At the end of the week-end I poked in on one of the last official showcases and saw him front and centre. His name is Sam Lee and he was one of the "not-to-be-missed" buzz acts at the Conference. Who knew?

Allan and Russ joined me the next day for a session where we got together with Sue Lothrop (who had worked with both of them) and we sang tunes that we had written back in the 60s and early 70s. I sang a couple of tunes that I had never performed in public - and announced that I probably would never sing them again, though one of the audience members (I think he was from Vermont Public Radio) shouted that they were great country songs and should be recorded. He said the same thing when he ran into me in the hallway later. There were a few people in the audience who remembered those days and others who were just thrilled to hear and meet Allan Fraser because Fraser & deBolt had been part of the soundtrack of their lives since back then. Allan and I did a couple of private showcases in a hotel room (Allan has been away from the music scene for awhile and was a little surprised at the new "pay-to-play" paradigm in the music business but we had a good time and several folks mentioned to me how thrilled they were to meet the guy who wrote "Dance Hall Girls." Allan has a new CD in the works with lots of great new material - and hopefully we'll be playing around town some more. At our last showcase (2:30 am on Saturday night - or as Allan insisted, Sunday morning) two German blues musicians dropped in and it was a delight playing with Georg Schroeter and Marc Breitfelder. Marc is an amazing harmonica player who takes Carlos' "over-blowing" technique to the next level. Hope I get to play with him again sometime (maybe in Germany…)

There was so much music to see and I'm now kicking myself that I missed some great artists, Bottine Souriante for one. I really enjoyed hearing Gurf Morlix for the first time. He's a living legend. Saw Catherine Maclellan for the first time and I can see why people are quite enamoured with her. I had seen Tony Furtado a few years ago when he was a banjo hero but he has now re-invented himself into a singer-songwriter - and great guitarist. Jim Kweskin was a howl (see clip below) and so were the Howling Brothers. Ken Whiteley was terrific, as always and I enjoyed hearing Baskery (three gorgeous gals from Sweden who really rock). It was great hearing Rose Cousins again, though I made the mistake of coughing while I was sitting next to her and she was out of there like a shot. Can't be too careful these days.




I would say my "discovery" was a couple of young guys called The Milk Carton Kids. Understated, just the way I like it, so they might slip under the radar but they are worth a listen. One memorable highlight was sitting back and listening to a long set from Judy Collins. I had never seen her live and it was quite magic. She had the whole room singing along, too, and of course just about everybody in that room was a singer. The show started with a strict advisory that no recording devices were permitted, but then after a tune where everybody had sung along in a million harmonies she said "I wish we had recorded that"…Oh well. And I got to meet and hear Del Rey, a great singer-guitarist who Daisy deBolt had always wanted me to meet and now I have. We talked a bit about Daisy, and Del said Toronto was not the same for her anymore without Daisy .

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Jim Kweskin at Folk Alliance 2013

Here's a folk icon in action. Jim Kweskin singing "Blues in a Bottle"

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Jammin' at Winterfolk


This is my favourite part of the Campfire, when I just start making up verses and try to get my Campfire pals to join in. Freestyle, as the young 'uns call it. As you see in this clip, I'm fumbling to rhyme a verse but Kim Doolittle jumps right in and creates a couple of verses from the woman's point of view. That's Michael Jerome Browne in the middle - what a fabulous musician!

This was shot last week-end at the Winterfolk Festival (thanks to Brian Gladstone for inviting me to bring my Campfire to his cozy little February function). The festival closed off with a beautiful tribute to Brent Titcomb with performances by many of his musical buddies including "moi."



Other highlights at Winterfolk this year were hearing Rick Taylor and a gathering of the Whiteley clan (there are clips from both of these on my streaming channel - click above on "Watch The Blaincast" and stay tuned because I will be streaming more from the Folk Alliance Conference.

Tip of the Day

There was a discussion on Maplepost about how to decide on the sequence the songs on a CD. Most would say put your best foot forward and put the best song first, but DJ Paul Corby had this suggestion:

Song one : Sonic Velcro
Song two : The Hit
Song Three : The Song Yr Mom Likes Best
Song Four : My Real Deal
Song Five : Let The Quirk Work
Song Six : I Can't Believe Wrote That One In Fifteen Minutes
Song Six : Buried Treasure
Song Seven : I Didn't Know I Could Dance
Song Eight : Still Rivers Run Deep
Song Eight : Didgereedoo / Ukulele / Accordion Attack
Song Nine : Old Time Religion / Good Enough For Me
Song Ten : The Burning-ness
Song Eleven : Walking Through The Underground Garage, Up The Elevator, On
The Street OMG I Can Still Hear That Song!!!!


(I always thought you've got to grab them in the first 30 seconds :-)

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Schmoozing at the Summit

Here's a few clips from some Blues Summit showcases that I caught on the BriPhone, some from my faves and others from performers I've never seen live. Enjoy a taste of Julian Fauth, Michael Jerome Browne, Bill Durst, Shakura S'Aida, David Vest, Bill Johnson, Ike Stubblefield w/The Sugar Devils, J-W Jones and Steve Hill




The Blues Summit is a unique gathering of blues artists, DJs and presenters from across Canada and beyond. This year there must have been nearly 250 delegates (and a few party crashers) and for an artist who's looking for gig opportunities, all he has to do is hang around the hotel for 3 days and sooner or later he's bound to find himself facing the artistic director of the festival he wants to play across a table or in an elevator (time to try out your "elevator pitch." This year there was even a choreographed pitch session where you could sign up for 3 minutes one-on-one with any (or all) of the participating presenters. The artists I spoke to afterwards thought it was pretty stressful and one festival director was totally exhausted by the process. One artists told me she felt a little "dirty" after going through this dance.





speed-schmoozing at the Summit









I always thought it was pretty pointless to showcase until there were people (presenters) who already wanted to see you. If you don't have a "buzz" or some manager/agent pitching you, you probably won't be selected and if you are, it's not likely you'll get a prime showcase slot. As showcases go, the Blues Summit gives you a better shot because there's never more than 2 or 3 performances going on at the same time. But it's a sad state of affairs when I see those kids driving up from some southern state just to play for 40 minutes at Canadian Music Week or North by Northeast - usually to a mostly empty room. The music business has become a pay-to-play thang. Sometimes just the parking and gas makes the difference between a profit or a loss.

My Summit experience was bookended by a couple of piano players - the first music I heard on Friday night was Julian Fauth and he is a delight to hear (and I'm taking notes on some of those tunes in anticipation of the day when we play together again). We were looking for an opportunity to jam but alas it did not materialize. On opening day there was a "Songs and Stories" workshop and I grabbed a clip of Michael Jerome Browne, a master of the folk-blues (and any other kind of blues).

Next day I heard an amazing keyboard player from out west called David Vest and my new favourite guitar player Bill Johnson (who was operating on 2 hours sleep). Vest was a bit of a "buzz act." Who would have thought you could be a buzz act when you're almost 70 years old? I'm encouraged. He has a PHD from Vanderbilt and did some time as a speechwriter/spindoctor in the dark corridors of the military industrial complex but I guess music has redeemed him and "he's Back!" Then I saw Bill Durst play for the first time. In fact I don't think I'd even heard his music, but he was making a buzz in the Kitchener/Waterloo area and now I see why. He was part of a rock band called Thundermug but that was before my time in Toronto.

Speaking of PHD's, young Jesse Whiteley was intensely working on his laptop between sets with the J-W Jones band and when I asked what he was working on he said it was his Master's thesis for York University…and the topic is the Hammond Organ, worthy of a thesis if I do say so myself. And it was a beautiful thing seeing a Hammond B3 being rolled in to the Delta for the Sugar Devils showcase. They had brought in a couple of ringers from the States for some gigs and recording and the organist was Ike Stubblefield, who I had the chance to hang out with a bit. He is a monster on the B3, and I've heard all the greats and played with a few of them.


Steve Hill did a command performance from the coffee table in the Ottawa & Quebec Blues Societies hospitality suite






Steve got a last-minute "official" showcase when fellow Montrealer Ben Racine couldn't make it through the storm and I wonder if anyone was paying attention to his song about his first experience trying to break into the Toronto music scene (not unlike my own).

But now that I'm settled in Toronto, I like to be a bit of a welcoming committee to visiting musicians and my Friday night campfire jam at the Summit was a great occasion for visiting musicians to get to know each other as they pass the guitar back and forth. There wasn't much of an audience, but it was great seeing a veteran like Terry Gillespie sharing licks and stories with a couple of new kids on the block (aka the Axe Murderer and the Harpoonist). And in true campfire style, I even managed to lasso a couple of folks into playing although they never intended to. One turns out to be a festival director from Oregon (and a mighty fine picker) and the other was frequent contributor to the MapleBlues, Richard Barry (I think he's done some time as a speech-writer, too).
Jamming with Shawn Hall (aka "The Harpoonist") and Terry Gillespie (aka "Canada's King of Roots Music" at the Summit Campfire






Besides seeing a lot of old friends, I had some pleasant surprises such as seeing my face in a book called "A Portrait of Blues in Canada" that was launched at the Summit. It's a "coffee-table" book with hundreds of beautiful black & white photos of Canadian blues pioneers and journeymen musicians shot by Randy MacNeil. Then there was the gentleman who spotted my badge and said he plays my CD on his radio show in Berne, Switzerland. The best was when some guy next to me in the urinal starts singing "Saab Story."


But as the week-end wound down on Sunday night with a spontaneous jam around the grand piano on the mezzanine it was another piano player who left a not-so-pleasant taste in my mouth after he totally dominated the jam, even as other players tried to subtely suggest that he was playing so loud that you couldn't hear the guitars. At one point the (in)famous Quebec harp player Jim Zeller appeared and jumped right into the jam making up songs on the fly. The room was filled with amazing players, yet no-one was going to start playing while this kid was pounding that piano. When he stepped away for a moment, the mild-mannered Joe Murphy slipped on to the piano bench but even that did not deter this youngster. He insinuated himself back onto the bench and pushed Joe aside.

I propose at the next Summit there should be a workshop on "Jam Etiquette" (subtitled "or you'll never work in this town again). At 4am, we were shut down by a rather unpleasant security guard and I think most of us were glad to end it because that piano player was not going to quit. This after being evicted from the initial jam location by an another overly-officious security guard makes me think it does not bode well for any late night jamming at Winterfolk or the Folk Alliance Conference which are both coming up soon in the same hotel. Wait till those security guards have to deal with ten times as many musicians.


I wasn't the only one vlogging from the Blues Summit. Here Chris Martin of cbcmusic.ca is getting a harmonica lesson from Jerome Godboo - using TWO iphones



The icing on the cake was the Maple Blues Awards on Monday night and that was one classy event - I think I repeated the phrase "rose to the occasion" a few times as I discussed the performances and the hosting by Raoul Bhaneja. All the performances were stellar. And despite some grumbling about mixing politics and blues, I don't think it hurts that a city councillor and the Prime Minister's wife are presenting awards. There are blues lovers of all stripes. What a great night!


Steve Strongman performs at Maple Blues Awards gala at Koerner Hall January 21, 2013 after accepting awards for Songwriter of the Year, Guitar Player of the Year and Recording of the Year for his recent release "A Natural Fact"

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Blues Summit - Day 1

The Blues Campfire has been a part of the Blues Summit since the beginning but this year it got moved from the mainstream activities and didn't really make it onto any of the marketing or the website so I did not hope for an audience per se but the idea was always to provide a musical setting for blues musicians from all across the country to meet and jam, and true to our purpose that's what happened last night. It was beautiful watching the faces of the young guys in The Harpoonist and the Axe Murderer as Terry Gillespie related the first time he saw Muddy Waters in a small club (Detroit?) when he was only 16 but noticed how the name "Muddy Waters" was spelled out in black tape on the bass drum skin.

here's a short clip from the Campfire



Jamming on a Ponter Sisters hit with Wayne Stoute (on the left - bongos), Axe Murderer (on the right) and Darcy (our audience) with Terry Gillespie (singing off camera), the Harpoonist (playing harp off camera) and Brian Blain (resophonic guitar off camera)