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“A Perfect 10” - The Randy Bachman Concert
- “Every Song Tells a Story”
(Randy Bachman: Formerly of the Guess Who and Bachman Turner
Overdrive)
Malkin Bowl
Vancouver - Stanley Park
August 24, 2003
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Randy Bachman
- middle, Colin Arthur
Wiebe second from right (back) |
RANDY BACHMAN:
WEB: www.randybachman.com
(CDs, songbooks, lyrics, discography, and merchandise)
For Randy Bachman Band inquiries: manager@randybachman.com
COLIN ARTHUR WIEBE:
(Randy’s back-up lead singer):
WEB: http://www.saltspringmusic.com/artists/arthur/arthur.htm
For inquiries and booking information send email to:
info @colinarthur.com
or call (604)275-1996 or (604) 940-8273
To send Colin an email: colin@colinarthur.com
TOM HOOPER: Randy’s Opening Set
WEB: http://www.tomhooper.ca
Email: tom@tomhooper.ca
Publicity: info@tomhooper.ca
Management: manager@tomhooper.ca
Reviewed by: Caesi Bevis and Paige Garnett
“Looks like rain”, we voiced as we entered into
the parking area nearest Malkin Bowl. Oh, we were hoping not
as this is an outdoor concert. Armed with umbrellas, we entered
the plastic lawn chair seating area to find the seats needed
wiping down. The rain had beat us to our seats in General
Seating “behind ‘the rope’ ” - where
all media seemed to be being sent. Paige found a roll of well-placed
paper towels, and we wiped down the chairs. Now content, we
settled in for the evening, full of anticipation. We noticed
off to the left in the back the concession trailer was open,
and that the Subway ad sign off to the right of the stage
was covered up with a Jack FM sign. Seemed strange. Couldn’t
help but wonder who’s food was being offered for sale
in the concession stand area. Across the back of the seating
area, the Bachman booths had t-shirts and CDs for sale.
I had heard the taped version of Randy’s concert from
the Culch (East Vancouver Cultural Centre) late night on a
local TV show, and couldn’t believe how awesome he still
is, and was wondering why such a gifted musician songwriter
isn’t still out there writing / producing number one
songs; he clearly still has what ‘it takes’. (This
coming from my (Caesi’s) Los Angeles media and professional
entertainment background humble opinion.) He’s still
damn good!
The show, impressively, started pretty close to the promised
6pm, with Tom Hooper opening the show for
Randy. We’d never heard of this barefooted guy singing
in the rain with an electric “acoustic” guitar,
and his back-up group, but he clearly had a following of at
least a few in the audience. Since there were many Bachman
family members in attendance, it may have been them cheering.
There was genuinely a reason to cheer. The guy is great! We
wished we had a show program (none handed out) so we would
know what we were hearing and liked so much! Tom also has
a really warm way of relating to the audience with his in
between song banter. He has a wonderful voice, and sing-along
type ballads and songs. He mentioned that his CDs are available
at the music stores, so we would be interested in reviewing
his CDs. He’s very, very good!

Shortly after he finished his set, Randy Bachman
(pronounced Back’ -man - all these years we thought
it was “Bock-man”!), who looks amazingly young
and hasn’t changed much for his years, took the stage.
He opened up with “Prairie Town”
right at 7pm. The song is about living on the Prairies in
Winnipeg and winters being 50 degrees below zero C. This was
the beginning of Randy walking through his life and his rise
to fame with two successful bands, first The Guess
Who, followed by Bachman Turner Overdrive.
Randy explained how we ended up coming to Vancouver and hooked
up with The Guess Who, which then opened in Seattle, Portland
and San Francisco in 1967. Before leading us into “No
Sugar Tonight”, Randy explained how he
came up with the hook for this song. It seems that when he
was in San Francisco, he, being a Prairie boy and rather innocent,
had seen three guys dressed alike, coming toward him on the
sidewalk. He crossed the street only to have them cross over
as well. He was getting very worried about this being a gang
(any cluster of guys over two people to Randy was a “gang”).
Soon a little car drove up and two guys took off running,
and the one guy was left to deal with the older lady from
the car. She started yelling at the guy, telling him he was
late getting home - again- and that “No Sugar Tonight”
for you, Buddy. Randy thought it was a great line, so he used
it for the song.
By this point, the rain was flirting with the audience and
we sprung open our umbrellas only to pity the older ‘late
50-something couple’ just one row up from us, hiding
under a well -soaked hood and a pulled-up jacket collar. It’s
one of those awkward moments - Do you lean forward to offer
to share your umbrella? Ours were small…The rain stopped
again just that fast, before we had to decide.
Randy further explained that “No Sugar Tonight”
was really just too short for a song and needed a bridge.
Since it was written in the key of F# (an unusual key to write
anything in) the song had remained somewhat unfinished. One
of his band-mates (Burton Cummings) had another song, “New
Mother Nature”, also ironically written in
that same crazy key of F#, and it needed a bridge, too. So,
the band merged the songs, opening with “New Mother
Nature” and finishing with “No Sugar Tonight”.
And - it worked! They performed the two songs for us to hear,
and the transition at the end was natural and smooth.
Randy, dressed casually in an oxford shirt tails out and
light green slacks, was performing with mostly with an electrified
“acoustic” guitar, and backed up with an amazing-vocalist
on keyboard, Collin Arthur, a bass guitarist
(both dressed in open collared suits without ties) and a drummer,
began sharing with us about the American Woman album. Colin
was necessary for many of the songs due to his amazing vocal
range.
He digressed a little into explaining that “…these
are the days of Flower Power, staying at the Sands Hotel at
Denman and Davie, and the very earliest days of FM Radio.
This was the time of Bob Dylan’s first album, where
he actually did a ballad…”
Randy explained that he had grown up playing violin first
from age 6 to 14 and in high school, and then switched to
guitar. He learned the Chet Atkins style of playing (and demonstrated
a few notes), as well as jazz chords and progressions (and
demonstrated a few notes) from his mentor Lenny Breau. Out
of this love for jazz progressions, came his song he wrote
called “She’s Come Undone”.
The stage backdrop was becoming quite pretty now, taking
on the light-cast of the closing in evening light. The overhead
blue and pink gel-covered stage lights cast a warm glow on
the painted ragged-edged curtain, and the forest scenery painted
on the backdrop.
Before launching into “Let It Ride”,
Randy explained this song he wrote came about while the band
was on the way to New Orleans, and had been sandwiched-in
between two semi trucks gabbing back and forth on CDs. They
were playing a game of cat and mouse with them, not letting
them pass and the band was afraid that they would be late
for their gig. When this when on for an hour before the truckers
let them pass when one trucker took an exit, then band followed
the trucker to chew him out for doing this to them. The trucker
noticed the mud covered license plate and had just said, “I
can see you are from ManiBoba - hey, man, you are Canadian…just
‘let it ride’ - we were just having fun with you.”
Randy had “a moment” - and the song came to him.
I looked up to notice another seagull had joined the first
on top of the stage roof. Maybe they liked the great traveling
rhythm of the song “Let It Ride”?
Randy talked about the time they were booked to play the
Ed Sullivan show in New York. They had arrived and Ed hadn’t
even heard of them. The time was 1965, when they were to perform
“Shakin’ All Over”.
Some of the band members were now in college while some were
still in high school. Around this time back in Manitoba, The
Guess Who was competing with another band, the Devron’s,
which was trying to take their place as the number one band
in Winnipeg. There was a lead singer, Burton Cummins, who
was getting a reputation as being a little wild and crazy.
He had slithered across the top of a concert piano, and apparently
created some scratches, so the media picked up the story and
ran that he had caused several thousand dollars in damages.
“It made for a good story.” according to Randy.
Meanwhile, The Guess Who, which was known
for being laid back and ‘good boys’, thought maybe
Burton would be a good addition to their band to balance out
Randy’s laid-back style. When Chad Allen decided to
leave the band in the summer of 1966, the band called Burt
to see if he wanted to join them. He first told the band,
“You’re too late, the Beatles called me last night.”
then he left the room. The Guess Who thought
the Beatles really had called him! Turned out he was joking,
and he joined The Guess Who. So, the band
broke in Burt by having him tour Saskatchewan, playing places
like the Westward Ho in Regina, and Yorkton, and Saskatoon.
Randy explained that at this time, cover charge was $1.00.
Joni and Chuck Mitchell were the group that just preceded
them at one venue. “Joni was just out of high school.”
according to Randy.
During this Saskatchewan tour, Randy had an “uh-huh”
moment (which he says only “comes with music and with
women”) when he looked out across a dance floor and
noticed a striking brunette. The brunette would be become
his wife and raise six children with him.
“These Eyes” originally
started out as “These Arms”. Randy was waiting
for a date to come down and was messing around with the piano
in the living room while he waited and waited. He really didn’t
“play” piano; what he had played growing up were
the keys on his little brother’s accordion, while his
little brother focused on creating the ins and outs for feeding
the accordion air. So, as Randy explains, “…anything
in the Key of C, I could pretty much fake.” He had an
“uh-huh” moment, and the song poured from him
while he waited for his date. He started it out as “these
arms long to hold you…” He finished writing the
words and music in under 12 minutes. The time was 1968.
He took the song back to the band, and after changing the
opening lines to “These Eyes” and working up to
the arms wanting to hold someone. The song became a number
one hit, and sold over one million copies at that time. They
played Dick Clark’s American Band Stand. Soon, a record
producer told them, create another song like “These
Eyes”. One problem: now the band had a hit ballad and
the band wanted to be known as Prairies rockers. So, the band
wrote “All Across the Prairies”,
which came out of listening to the melancholy minor key of
the Bee Gee’s “New York Mining Disaster”,
which they added a B4 chord to make it “happier”.
“You Took Me By Surprise”
ended up being the follow up to “These Eyes”.
When they released “She Came Undone”,
which sold over one million copies, they no longer were considered
a “one hit wonder” band.
Randy wanted to focus more on jazz progressions and bring
these progressions into their sound. He wanted to study “Mean
to Me”. He always liked jazz progressions, as it seemed
to get musicians out of songs that they didn’t know
how to end when they were writing them. Randy wrote “This
Little Girl of Mine” and “Be
a Trouble-Shooter - Look Out for Number 1”.
Once again Randy digressed into a Winnipeg story, this one
featuring Neil Young. It seemed that Neil Young was blocked
from doing a gig in Winnipeg at one point as a The
Guess Who band member had the only amp in town!
Randy mentioned that the way Buffalo Springfield came into
existence was that Neil Young had driven into LA in his renovated
hearse, which then broke down on the LA freeway. Stephen Stills
stopped to help Neil Young, who was somehow (not clear) stuck
behind a bulldozer tractor. Thus, they met and the rest is
history!
An interesting slice of life: at one point, Neil had told
The Guess Who to “steal something from
someone else (their song), just turn a riff upside down, or
something, and write a song.” So The Guess Who
wrote, “No Time - Need Not Wonder Why”,
which became a hit all based on a Doobie Brothers riff.
“American Woman”: Randy explained
that during the Viet Nam War they had booked a gig in Texas
and were driving across the border from Winnipeg, the same
crossing where they normally crossed, but this time the INS
officer had directed them to go park and enter a certain building
on the U.S. side. They thought this was a little strange,
as this hadn’t happened before. So, they opted to gas
up first at their usual gas station, where the owner knew
them. The owner told them, after hearing them tell their experience
at the border which had just happened, “Oh, don’t
go in there! They are drafting Canadians with green cards!
Go back to Canada. I already lost my nephew to them, and I
am afraid my son is next. Take this road for about a couple
hundred miles, and then turn left. You can get back into Canada
that way.”
So, they turned in their green cards and went back to Canada.
The road led them to Kitchner - Waterloo area, and since they
weren’t going to their Texas gig, they had to earn some
money fast. They ended up playing a three-hour dance using
their music and faking their way through Beatles and Beach
Boys cover tunes. Randy ended up with a broken string and
the band took a break, scattering around the building and
parking lot. Randy replaced his string, then started messing
around on his guitar, only to get an “uh-huh”
moment. He started a riff, feeling an “American
Woman, get away from me.” (This was referring
to the Statue of Liberty and the lyrics continued on to talk
about ‘not needing U.S. war machines’.) He knew
that he was on to something, so he motioned for the band to
return and get on stage so that they could work the song out.
Eventually they got their last band member out of the parking
lot where he was “buying something”, and he got
back on stage. Out of this, the number one American anti-war
song, which went number one on the Call Box and Billboard
charts, sung by Canadians, was born!
Around this time they were invited to play muddy, rain-soaked
Woodstock - and they turned it down. Instead, they were in
a studio recording “American Woman”.
Sadly, Randy didn’t get to go on tour with The
Guess Who for the “American Woman Tour”
in 1970. He was really upset that he couldn’t go. He
ended up with gallbladder attacks and had to leave the band
after being with them for ten years. History has its way of
taking care of us all if we live long enough. Thirty years
later, Lenny Kravitz recorded the song. Randy got a call requesting
that The Guess Who re-assemble and play the
Pan American Games to three million people. The band members
said, “no, we are all doing different things now.”
But the Pan American Games organizers didn’t give up
hope. They emailed. They faxed. They reminded the members
that they had been there thirty years earlier and had a video
tape of them playing with the audience having their backs
to them - they were playing in the mess (food) tent in 1967!
This time, they were being invited back and to be paid $250,000!
They finally said, “yes”, and came and played
all their original songs.
This time, in May 2000, Randy got to go on the “American
Woman Tour” - thirty years after his bout
with gallbladder attacks. Now that song is used for many things
from Kevin Spacey movies, to commercials, to TV and Movie
soundtracks including “Seinfeld”, “The Simpsons”,
“American Beauty”, and “Austin Powers 2”.
[Randy has also been animated on “The Simpsons”
and is listed in the Guinness Book of Worlds Records.]
Randy digressed once again as to ‘what happened to
his brother, the accordion player’. Randy’s little
brother, who had a stuttering problem, became the band manager
of The Guess Who. When the band moved to
be based in Vancouver, Randy’s brother opted to stay
behind. The Guess Who went on to record at
Mushroom Studios in Seattle (after the war, no doubt). One
of the songs Randy wrote to tease his brother, and have him
think it would be on an album, was “Ain’t
Seen Nothing Yet”. Only Randy’s
joke backfired. The album was finished and the manager was
looking for something to be released as a single. One of the
band members mentioned the work tape, which included a ninth
song. The manager loved “Ain’t Seen
Nothing Yet” as it is different and thought
they had an instant hit on their hands. The song went number
one in over 20 countries (according to his website), and sold
over a million copies. Randy’s brother was so shocked
by the release of the song that he stopped stuttering permanently!
His watch beeper going off distracts Randy momentarily -
he had forgotten to reset it from an appointment from Saturday
night to do an interview related to this night’s concerts.
Oops, his “humanness” is showing…
Randy always liked “Paperback Writer” by the
Beatles and longed to write something similar. So, he wrote
“White Collar Worker”.
Burt Cummings and others told Randy, “You oughta be
ashamed of yourself.” as the song was so similar to
“Paperback Writer”. It was one thing to turn riffs
upside-down, quite another to come up with a tune and lyrics
that almost everyone instantly recognizes as being based on
someone else’s work.
Later, now with BTO (Bachman, Turner Overdrive), “White
Collar Worker” just sat waiting for revisions.
Randy didn’t give up; he kept pitching it and no one
accepted it. During this time the band was playing six nights
a week for five hours a night. Randy was playing a gig, when
the lead singer blew his voice and told Randy, “You
have to sing the last set.” So, Randy, panicking and
not knowing many songs, saw an opportunity to eventually play
“White Collar Worker”. He got
a fast inspiration while still on break. He didn’t have
his “song writing case” (McDonald’s napkin
and a crayon) with him, so he kept singing in his head, “Take
Care of Business” over and over so as not to forget
it. Randy opened his set with “Oye Como Va” (Santana),
and after running out of lyrics he knew or the band knew they
slipped into Ukrainian lyrics - anything just to keep the
crowd up dancing. At 12:45am, they needed 45 minutes to complete
their set. Randy saw his “moment” and seized it:
“”White Collar Worker” rewrote itself on
stage as “Taking Care of Business”.
In Seattle the band gave the lyrics to the Fred Turner and
the band taped it in one take. “Taking Care
of Business” came out and was a big hit
selling a half-million copies.
Another interesting story Randy related that happened while
they were recording in Seattle, involved a pizza delivery
person. That night, BTO, Steve Miller and War were all rehearsing
and taping in various studios in the same building. A pizza
delivery guy knocked on their door, thinking that they had
ordered the pizza he was carrying. They hadn’t and they
told him to check down the hall with the other bands. The
pizza guy was listening to “Taking Care of Business”
and commented that it could use a piano. BTO thanked him and
said that they “didn’t have a keyboard player.”
The pizza guy mentioned that what he ‘REALLY did in
life’ was he was a keyboard player. BTO kind of blew
him off and the guy went and delivered the pizza. He came
back and offered to improvise on the song with BTO, to see
if they liked it. It was late and the band was in a ‘whatever’
mood, and so they let him play. He actually turned out to
be a great keyboardist, so they recorded a work track and
left for the evening, without playing it back. The next day,
their manager mentioned that the song needed piano, or ‘something’.
So, one of the people there mentioned this “pizza guy
work track” with piano, and so they played it. It was
great and the producer wanted to run with it and wanted them
to bring the guy back in. Only problem was, “what’s
his name and how do we find him”?
They asked the other bands. No luck. They called all the
area pizza places, which of course didn’t want to give
out the guy’s phone number when they did think that
they had found him. So, they just asked, “Does he look
like Fidel Castro and play piano?” They found the delivery
guy, ordered a pizza, which he delivered, and finally they
got his name and number. He played the song on the album.
As history unfolded, Norman Duke went on to be Bette Midler’s
manager.
The show was now closing with one final number of “Taking
Care of Business”. Randy brought friends up on
stage to sing along. One of the people, Paul Myers (Mike Myers
brother) did a rap to the song’s lyrics. At this point
Randy invited up the audience to come dance and sing along.
Only a few of our conservative Vancouverites moved toward
the front to sing and dance. Those of us behind the rope danced
in our seating area; those on the lawn on blankets moved forth
only in the lawn area. We are such a well-trained Canadian
bunch - volunteer ushers warnings during seating carried more
weight than the performer’s invitation. Randy made his
request several times, and each time the audience barely moved
up. The last song went on and on, and left the evening with
such an upbeat feeling. We hoped for an encore!
It almost looked like there wouldn’t be one, then the
band and others came back and did a medley of cover tunes,
versus more BTO or The Guess Who songs. We weren’t sure
why this happened - we would have loved to hear just more
The Guess Who or BTO songs.
All in all it was a great evening! The rain had gone away
(and hopefully left for the Okanagan to help extinguish fires!)
and it was a warm enough evening to be cozy comfortable in
anything fleece. The moon was bright enough to well-light
our way back to the parking lot.
One of the best things about coming to this Randy
Bachman’s Concert was flashing back on memories
we had for each of the songs, and reminiscing about what was
going on in our lives at the time the songs were released.
It was such a "time standing still" feeling we shared
with the “community” of 450+ people who had come
to be the audience; we realized we each had our own set of
memories to go with each song. The hardest part, was looking
out over an audience of mostly gray or balding heads, now-limping
bodies or beer-bellies and realizing that most of the people
there were our age, or only slightly older - that we had all
or most of us, had been in high school at about the same time.
Somehow the music had seemed frozen in time, like none of
us were supposed to age. Having never gone back for a high
school reunion, we can only imagine it may be similar feeling.
It was humbling, yet made us feel so aware of getting
o l d e r, in a way the two of us, who - individually - haven’t
raised families, rarely think about.
Would we go again to a Randy Bachman Concert?
A 100% definite, “yes”. He pours his heart into
the show and days later; we are still humming the tunes, or
waking up to his music in our heads. Since Rave! covers over
600 events a year, many involving music, this rarely happens.
Randy, you put on quite the show!
End Notes:
1. According to the Randy Bachman website,
The Guess Who went on to virtually own the pop charts with
an unprecedented run of 5 million-selling singles, all the
product of the gold plated Randy Bachman-Burton
Cummings songwriting team. By 1970, The Guess Who
had sold more records than the entire Canadian recording
industry to that point, even outselling the Beatles that year.
2. According to Colin Arthur Wiebe’s website, Colin
joined with Canadian legend Randy Bachman (Bachman
Turner Overdrive and The Guess Who) in 1991, and
has been singing all The Guess Who material and playing guitar
and keyboards since. Colin is prominently featured on the
new Randy Bachman “Every Song Tells Story”
DVD and is currently touring Canada. Colin Arthur
Wiebe’s debut album, “Livin On
Dreams” was produced by Randy Bachman and the
single “They Grow Up So Fast” is still played
on Soft Rock radio.
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