As Homer Simpson stares down the count-down clock, and Pogo HQ gets ready to move to bigger and reno’d digs; as the evil weatherman announce six more weeks of winter, Greg Godowitz heads for the hills in Calgary, Jeff Healey heads for the busy blues session in the sky; as we rally ’round the poor folks who lost their stuff in the Queen Street West fire and pray for pals entering hospitals; and as we all slowly thaw out from this record-breaking winter, we at Pogo HQ are posting our last despatch for a few weeks, ’cause there’s just too much going on, and we gotta get busy.
First up is a reminder of Nash the Slash’s birthday party on March 29th at Stratengers in the east-end of Toronto. Free admission, free food and free cake. How can you go wrong?! Give our beloved masked man props and birthday noogies. Many of them.
Next up is the new press release by the re-upped Scenics, busier than they’ve ever been, writing new tunes, getting set to release the second of three new releases this year (who do they think they are, Jandek?), and getting set to test the waters by dipping their toes in the murky clubs in Hamilton and Toronto, to wit: “April is the coolest month. Original Toronto New Wave band THE SCENICS are playing their first live shows in 26 years in support of their CD “How Does it Feel to be Loved: The Scenics play the Velvet Underground”.
“How Does it Feel to be Loved” was recorded live 1977-81 in Toronto’s Punk Clubs, has been getting great reviews and has been charting on campus radio ( #28 nationally, and #4 in Halifax, #9 in Hamilton #3 in Ottawa). The CD is distributed nationally by Scratch/Sonic Unyon, and is being released in the USA on April 15.
SCENICS APRIL SHOWS:
Sunday April 13 at the Horseshoe Tavern, Toronto:
Scenics supporting Carla Bozulich in an early show.
Scenics on at 8:45, Carla to follow at 10.Monday April 14 at Club Absinthe, Hamilton
(233 King St East)
Scenics on at 10 PM for two sets
Tuesday April 15 at Club Dakota, Toronto.
249 Ossington Avenue,
Scenics on at 10 PM for two sets
MORE SHOWS TO FOLLOW IN JUNE:
(Quebec film maker Chester Lebeaux’s Video for “I’m Waiting for my Man” has been enthusiastically accepted in NXNE, and the Scenics expect to follow).
In September, more gigs and the CD release of “Do the Wait”, the Scenics in the studio 77-79 and 2008.
The Scenics are available to talk about their music, those punk years, or their trip back to performing-whether that means heading out to a radio station in London or sitting in a coffee shop on clinton. We’re a lively, musically knowledgeable, opinionated chat: check our interview with Toronto journalist Liz Worth. We will be available for interviews from April 5 to April 15, and before or after that by phone or internet.
Contact: Andy Meyers
Selections from CD, live video from 1978 and “Waiting for my Man” video.
Let us know if you can make it to the shows.
Hope all is great in ‘08 for you!
-ANDY MEYERS
The Scenics
Margarita Passion visited Toronto recently and hung with pals Nora Currie and Dr. Anna Borque and Zero and Chris Haight and Liz Worth and The Last Pogo Jumps Again director Kire Papputs at the scene of the crime, the Horseshoe Tavern; we get daily calls from Rayme Mulroney, determined to get back to Toronto; Teenage Head are out touring, and getting set to release their album of old tunes with guest drummer Marky Ramone; The Mods are getting ready to jump back into the studio and do some old tunes new ways; Tommy Ramone is coming to town, and we’re hoping for a quick chat; Joey Shithead’s coming to town, and ditto; we have not yet given up on getting interviews with Stompin’ Tom Connors and Dan Aykroyd and Keith Richards; Steven Leckie keeps in touch weekly; Blair Richard Martin’s Guillotine video has gotten a half a million hits on YouTube; The Screwed continue to remind us on a regular basis that they’re now playing classic punk tunes better than the originals did. Pogo director Aldo Erdic is putting the finishing touches on his Diodes documentary, Pogo filmmaker Ollie Brunton is getting ready to take the plunge by chopping off his mop by the Poles’ original manager Bruce Appelby…and it continues.
The Pogo Mega Server had steam coming out of it’s various orifices for the past month as we continue to get, on an almost daily basis, more jpgs, clues, hints, gossip and rumours, and in a couple of weeks we find out if we can get any money from the Feds to get The Last Pogo Jumps Again rolling along — we need assistant editors…and researchers… and fleet-footed street-corner dicks to burn some shoe-leather and get us even more stuff…and we need shooters…because the world must know of the dynamic and underrated punk rock scene in Toronto and Hamilton and London, Ontario circa 1976 to 1978.
To steal some style from a favourite author of ours: “…we take refuge in our notes and piles of video tapes and stacks of photos…it’s premature to make a serious effort to turn these into coherent history. Maybe it will always be premature. Because the data keeps coming. Because new lives enter the record all the time. The past is changing as we edit and shuffle and transfer and, every so often, wonder — what the hell were we thinking?!” And we keep staring at Homer up there at the top of the page, and like, totally relate man.
Last but not least, the next time we make an entry it’s going to be on an all-new, factory-tested, sealed with a kiss website created by artist Clayton Hanmer and executed by a staff of underpaid pale worker bees. The past logo of the Last Pogo will be launched; sweat and blood and tears will flow, hilarity will ensure, and so on and so forth.