Sometimes I peek at things and accidentally get information that I regret having. Which character dies in Season Three, that kind of thing, when I was only trying to find out what new cast members were added, say. Then I have to watch the rest of the season while keeping my mouth shut so as not to spoil it for Erika, you know? She always gets annoyed when she finds out that I knew what was coming: "You peeked!"
Tonight, I really only wanted to see if the Tranzmitors were going to do "Weight of the Watching World" so I could shoot a clip of it, when I leaned over to photograph their setlist, and instead learned that the show closer was going to be "Stay With Me." And suddenly I spent the rest of their set, up to that song, expecting a cover of the Faces' song of that title, which I was having a hard time imagining (but it coulda worked).


On the way to that song, I had a startling revelation about my slow progress as a Tranzmitors fan. Years ago, when I first saw them at a Scratch Records anniversary event (when they were still a five piece), I only loved one song they did, "Look What You're Doing to Me", which remained my favourite Tranzmitors song for years, until I heard "I See the Writing on the Wall". But since then--this is what I realized tonight--I have come to like so many Tranzmitors songs now that when they got round to "Look What You're Doing to Me", it was no... longer... my favourite... song... on the set!
I think my favourite song last night was actually their opening tune, which I happened to shoot vid of, which then blended into the second song off their set, which appears on the setlist to be "Post Atomic"; it must be a new one, because I can't find it on their bandcamp.
During one transition between bands, Grant Lawrence very likeably brought his son's band onto the stage, briefly! Which led to a silly thing later: I thought his son was standing right up at the front of the stage, so I tried taking a shot (thinking of Grant) with both his son and the Fellows in it. Then I realized that it was just a small woman in her 60s who was kinda Blue-Jay-Valley height.
Oops!
Speaking of the Faces, I chatted a little with Rob Frith about Rod Stewart (he's met him, of course!). He gave me his unwanted french fries (he doesn't do fries, they'd come with his whatever-he-had-had, and so he just offered them to me, and... once I started I couldn't stop. Thanks, Rob!). He also poured me a glass of white wine, which was also most welcome. I kinda wanted to find out if he had a "cutoff date" for liking Rod Stewart (for me, his "Downtown Train" is a wincefest; the Tom Waits original is good, and I admit Rod sings it well, but he also makes shmaltz of it. I'm with him up to, I dunno, "Gi' me Wings" and "Passion" and even "Young Turks," though none of that touches the Faces; that first Faces album he's on... which I know as the last Small Faces record... is particularly marvelous).

And then when the rave-up finally happened, at the end of the night, with Andrew Molloy and Grant Lawrence trading off lead vocals and Beez, liberated from bass duties but very much present, cheerleading and providing background vocals, while the Tranzmitors covered the instruments, it turned out NOT to be the song by the Faces, but a cover of the Dictators-- a song I didn't even know. I had to ask Eric Lowe, sitting beside me. I begged him to forgive me for not knowing the Dictators so well, and he did: "You don't have to know everything! It's impossible!" (Stephen Hamm, reading this on social media, rather disagrees and "dictates" I play catchup. He was also at the show, of course!).
Eric Lowe, meanwhile, further observed that "half of Victoria is here", including (that I saw) Kev Lee, Tim Chan, and Pete Campbell, who actually HAD NOT KNOWN THE SHOW WAS HAPPENING. He had heard about it but blanked on what night; if I hadn't emailed him, he would have missed it!
So I gave Pete an extra ticket I had. I am very glad I thought to check in with him; I would have felt like a real idiot afterwards to learn that he missed the gig.
He was pretty pleased Kurt remembered him...
Anyhow, not only did I not know the Dictators' song, I heard the lyrics wrong. "My heart is calling,won't you stay with me" became "My articles are all in, won't you stay with me," which I think must have been my subconscious dropping a reference to the three articles I wrote about tonight's show: Scott McCaughey, Kurt Bloch, and Nick Thomas. People have no sense how much work that took, I don't think!
Both the Tranzmitors and the -- BUM Smugglers? Tranz-BUMSmugglers? Smugglebummitors? -- were delightful. "To Serve, Protect and Entertain" off Selling the Sizzle! was the first Smugglers song we heard; they also did "She Ain't No Egyptian" off that album. Super-cool vinyl reissue, if you've missed it (I wish I'd gotten Beez to sign it but he was long gone by the time I was shlepping around my Sharpies. Grant, Nick, and Bryce will have to do!).
And the funniest bit of stage patter came from Nick, who quoted his mother-in-law as saying, when he talked about Andrew Molloy joining the band onstage, that he was going to do "two from the BUM."
Everyone I talked to, myself included, enjoyed Like Whatever, the openers, who did a fabulous original about not wanting someone to interfere with your sleeping in, "Sunday", which reminded me of Erika, and was probably my all-round favourite tune of the set for that reason, but they also did a wholly unexpected cover, given their other songs, of Iron Maiden's "The Trooper." Which Riley, the guitarist, blessed me to put online.
Pete likened them to the Enigmas, and that's kinda reasonable, but their music seemed more varied.
I liked the singing sax player's crazy pink ponytail. It matched her shoes! Gord McCaw got some great shots of her. Erik Iversen had come, too, but sans camera; I gave him my other extra ticket, which he gave to John Clark (the two of them may or may not feel they owe something to Bob Hanham!).
I felt so excited to see the Young Fresh Fellows. Their set was marvelous and lengthy and went all over their career, including the tune Neko Case does on Loft, "Destination", which made me realize: hell, I'm a Vancouver music writer and I wrote three articles involving that album and never once did I mention that Neko Case was on Loft. She isn't even in the unused material. I mean, I actually don't pay Neko Case any mind, musically, to be truthful -- just not my thing -- but still, I kinda probably should at least asked about her! Ha.
The two standouts for me of their recent stuff were (Loft's) "I'm a Prison" and "Never Had It Bad", off Toxic Youth. But "Killing Time in Union Square" has really grown on me; "Three Gasconading Saints" was fun live and made me glad I had put it in the artlcle. There were a few songs I didn't know, from the years I missed out on, and some cuts they probably could not not do ("Get Out of My Cave," "Where is Groovy Town," "Rock'n Roll Pest Control",and most surprisingly, the sweetest, saddest of deep cuts, "Backroom of the Bar.")
Oh, and they did the Kinks' "Picture Book" and closed with the Sonics' "Strychnine."
Scott quipped at one point that with the brick wall behind him, if the room were smokier, he'd think he was in the Town Pump again. Multiple references to 40 years having passed since some of the songs were recorded; I can't believe it's been that long, either. I don't recall most of what he said about the whole then-and-now of it, but at one point, sipping a Phillips' Iota, Scott observed that one thing that's changed is that the de-alcoholized beers keep getting better. I also really like Iota! I hope they can get it down south of the border.

Afterwards, I had to check in with Scott about his having (at least) three different versions of "I'm a Prison" and he really kinda affirmed what he said in the Straight piece, that he liked augmenting and adding to the song. Which, if you think about it, is kind of a mean thing for a guy who has some stroke-born language issues to do to himself: having three very different sets of lyrics to choose from makes things that much worse for him. I realized this myself in trying to sing along (or at least mouth the words): which words was he going to do? There are so many to choose from!
But maybe that was the point: I wondered if maybe the multiple variants would liberate him from having to remember exact verses-- with no one set of words to remember and the audience not really knowing what to expect, he could just make stuff up on the spot, which, in fact, he did do for parts of tonight's performance of the song; but he responded that he doesn't WANT to be doing that. It wasn't something he'd strategized for. It just ended up being what happened!
Didn't mind at all.
The Fellows, late in their set, also got unexpectedly and directly political with a song of Christmas wishes, but it's probably best to leave those undocumented. They involved the future health of a certain American personage, put it that way.
Mostly I danced. I did not take notes. I did shoot a couple of clips ("Get Outa My Cave" and a twofer of "Hang Out Right" and "How Much About Last Night Do You Remember" -- I just couldn't resist the classics). And I took lots of photos. Mostly the photos will speak for me!
One thing they clearly say was that Kurt Bloch was the most fun person to watch last night. Just crazy-enthusiastic, and what a great guitarist!
Afterwards, I gifted Kurt a 7" of the Spores' "Narcs in my Pants" because I thought he'd dig Sandy Beach's guitarwork. I also gave him a Polly CD which I hope he will listen to! (It was hard to convey over the DJ set that was going on that the song I had mentioned to him in the interview was on that disc, "Put a Little English On It.").
People hung out pleasantly late, dancing to a set DJ'd by Mike of the Tranzmitors. While other people danced, many things got signed, including some things of mine. And Scott gifted me a Loft T-shirt!
There were people I'd thought I would see there who I didn't, including a few folks who got siphoned off by the Bad Beats, but one person I hoped to see, but didn't, was Nardwuar. Apparently he was there! (I didn't get to say hi to Doug Smith, either). During the interview with Scott, Scott had mentioned hoping Nardwuar was going to be there, too and said something about how he and Nardwuar used to talk mostly about music, now they just talk about having had strokes.
I'm getting that way with my friends who have cancer! (And wondered if Kurt Bloch and Joe Keithley have ever talked jowls: I have been trained by Joe to weed out the photos that are unflattering on that count!).
Boy, I bugged Kurt to sign a bunch of stuff, though the person who got the most requests from me was actually Jim Sangster, who had not been here with the Minus 5, so I hadda pester him to sign the stuff I didn't get his scrawl on then, plus the stuff I have acquired since.
I was the Gerald of the night, in short (just as well that Gerald wasn't there: two of us would have been too much. One of us nearly was!).
Anyhow: it was a marvelous night, all-round. I've been hoping to see the Young Fresh Fellows since the 1980s, so this was a very fulfilling experience. And Nick of the Smugglers/ Tranzmitors was very appreciative of the feature on him, as were his bandmates. Excited about the new Tranzmitors album! (And got one of their records signed, too).
Thanks, guys, for coming up here, and thanks to Nick and Grant for having put the show on. And thanks for the Loft shirt, Scott! I'll be wearing it to my bookstore gig today. Great record, to be had in a few of our better stores at the moment. And one of two records where I could get all four members to sign it (because Tad Hutchison was not here, though at one point Scott did make a joke about "how young Tad looks now," gesturing at John Perrin).
PS: the American doesn't have a great rep, soundwise, but I thought the sound last night was just great!