Saturday, August 27, 2005

brilliant photography, rebekka



...what?

"Rebekka is open, honest, a bit eccentric, fit, smart, witty, self-taught portrait artist, I do that for people from photos, anyone interested in that sort of thing send me a line.. I'm now absolutely obsessed w photography.

Icelandic but grew up in Florida.

Proud owner of two very cute and very smart little boys that think I'm really cool :)

Live life while your alive and do what you mean to do while you're able to do it.

and before I forget: many thanks to Carl Johnson for gifting me with a pro account;)

I'm Female and 27.

Iceland"

Tuesday, August 16, 2005

for sentimental reasons



Diana Sweets mourned in song

Ron Sexsmith laments loss of downtown diner

The Standard (St. Catharines - Niagara)
Tueday, August 16, 2005
By Erik White

Whenever he's back in his hometown, Ron Sexsmith tries to make time for a walk down memory lane. Usually to see what's changed.

It still surprises him a little whenever he strolls by the St. Paul Street storefront that was home to Diana Sweets for 75 years.

Even nine years after the landmark diner closed and its historic insides were scooped out, it still seems like it will always be there.

"It was very authentic," said the St. Catharines-born singer/songwriter. "I miss those kind of places."

Although the diner is already immortalized in local nostalgia, Sexsmith has taken the unspoken mourning for The Di to a new, public level.

His new album, Destination Unknown, on which he partnered with longtime drummer Don Kerr, comes out today. It includes a track called Diana Sweets.

Some have guessed it's a love song to a girl named Diana. Sexsmith calls it a love song to a lost time and place.

But the 41-year-old Juno Award winner was never a regular at Diana Sweets and never cemented a puppy love by carving initials into the wormwood booths. He admired it from afar.

"Even before I went there, it seemed like this magical place like Willy Wonka's or something," said Sexsmith.

His first memory of the old eatery is from when he was six. He had a cast on his leg and was afraid to get it taken off. His uncle George promised him a soda from Diana Sweets if he was brave. He thinks it was cherry.

When he was in his early 20s, Sexsmith worked part time at The Standard and would spend his breaks at Diana Sweets over coffee and a piece of pie. He also remembers writing some halfway-decent songs there.

"I liked the idea of it," he said. "You felt connected to something."

Sexsmith remembers being surprised to hear of the Di's closing in 1996. Every time he thinks of his uncle George, recollections of the old soda fountain usually follow.

They did the night he wrote the song in a hotel room outside of Krefeld, Germany. The tune was a natural fit for the new album. Most of the songs are about glances back at childhood.

"I find it strange that people are constantly looking backward," Sexsmith said.

"It's almost a disease in a way, nostalgia. But I guess it comes with the job as a songwriter."

Diana Sweets
Destination Unknown (2005)
Ron Sexsmith

Down St. Paul there is a gaping hole
Where once Diana used to be
But summer's faded into autumn
Gone with all her golden opportunities

I was sipping on a soda
Once with my Uncle George
He said he'd take me
If I was a good boy

That was long ago
A door forever closed
Still in my mind I see Diana Sweets
And the sweet sweet summers I've known

Sweet summers now long gone
When everything seems to be wrong...
Diana....

From Western Hill cut to my window sill
In some hotel near Krefeld, Germany
Am I doomed to wander every back road
Of my mind for all eternity

Why do I keep on knocking
When there's nobody home
And calling where no one
Can pick up the phone?

For sentimental reasons
I keep on believing
In some fading dream of Diana Sweets
And the sweet sweet summers I've known
Sweet summers now long gone

Diana where have you gone?

-30-

Rock star status for Ron Sexsmith

By Mike Bell

The Calgary Sun

July 21, 2005

To some people, Ron Sexsmith is a rock star. Actually, to rock stars, Ron Sexsmith is a rock star.

Especially in the Canadian music industry -- the brilliant singer-songwriter is looked up to in something approaching awe by the younger crew of Canuck talent such as Sam Roberts and Feist.

"They all make me feel like I'm a -- I don't know how to describe it," the always humble Sexsmith says from his T.O. home. "Everyone's really supportive of what I do, and they make me feel like I'm the old guard or something ...

"But I'm always surprised when people come up and they know my music or they say they're fans or whatever because I'm always clued out about that stuff.

"I just assume that because I'm still relatively unknown to the masses that these people probably don't know my stuff either."

Sexsmith's last album Retriever went a step or two farther in getting his name out to the music-buying masses.

For the first time in his lengthy career, Canadian radio actually embraced some of the upbeat, poppier fare.

Add to that his Juno win for songwriter of the year, and it was another move towards the fame he deserves.

"With each record I always felt that I've moved a few notches forward," he admits.

"I've just been really lucky that through it all I've had a solid fanbase -- and that was enough for me to keep going."

Sexsmith is all ready to get started recording the followup -- he'll hit the studio after his folk fest appearance this weekend including a mainstage show tomorrow.

And while he won't preview any of those songs for the folk faithful, he will treat us to some new material.

Sexsmith recently recorded an album with Don Kerr called Destination Unknown.

Set for an August release, it features music he compares to the Everly Brothers, with no electrics but gorgeous harmonies.

"We originally thought we'd just sell it from the stage," he says. "And then we got wind that a lot of labels wanted to get involved and put it out."

So I guess it is true -- everyone wants a piece of you when you're a rock star.

-30-

Thursday, August 04, 2005

he's not going to go quietly



Extradition likely for Emery, legal experts say

Ottawa can save him, but U.S. pressure will make that unlikely, law prof says

Vancouver Sun

Thursday, August 4, 2005

By Peter O'Neil, with files from Simon Doyle, CanWest News Service

OTTAWA -- "Prince of Pot" Marc Emery will likely face extradition to the United States and a possible lengthy jail term unless he is rescued by a federal government that Emery has spent an adult lifetime criticizing, two legal experts said Wednesday.

Emery, the B.C. Marijuana Party leader, was released this week on bail by the B.C. Supreme Court after being charged by U.S. authorities with money laundering and cross-border trafficking of marijuana seeds.

A former candidate arguing for the legalization of marijuana in federal, provincial, and municipal elections, Emery will have a tough time fighting against extradition in court and may not even get a reprieve from the federal government, University of Ottawa law professor David Paciocco said.

The federal justice minister has the discretion to refuse a Canadian court-ordered extradition, but Paciocco said there would be considerable pressure to cave in to pressure from U.S. authorities and allow Emery to be sent south.

"I think the likelihood of extradition is high," said Paciocco, a former prosecutor and defence lawyer who specializes in criminal law issues.

He said the federal government would have to weigh Canada's long-term interests against public concern over a Canadian receiving a possible long jail sentence in the U.S. for selling seeds, which is illegal in Canada, although the prohibition is rarely enforced.

"There would be naturally a sense of discomfort on the part of some to throw this man to the lions over something we haven't really bothered to enforce."

But Paciocco said authorities can't ignore the allegation that Emery, 47, would have been aware of vastly tougher drug laws in the U.S.

Canada has an interest "in supporting the law enforcement efforts of a neighbour jurisdiction who you're going to count on for support in the future, in the enforcement of your own laws," he said.

"It's hard for us to say, 'Yes, one of our citizens is contravening your laws in your country, but because we wouldn't prosecute him you can't either.' For a minister of justice to take that position would be extremely difficult."

He said Emery's best hope is that Canada would launch diplomatic efforts to have U.S. authorities back off.

"It's just a question of political will. How much political will is there to go to bat" [for Emery]?"

Former University of B.C. graduate student Gary Botting, a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Washington, said amendments to Canada's Extradition Act in 1999 gives Canadian judges little flexibility to refuse a U.S. extradition request.

"I think it would be extremely disappointing if they did [permit Emery's extradition] but they probably will, because the law has changed so drastically since 1999 that the judges have their hands tied," Botting said.

The amendments were passed following pressure from U.S. authorities frustrated over fraudulent cross-border drug sales and jewel scams on the Internet, he said.

"Before, the [Canadian] judges had wide discretion -- they could look at the facts," said Botting, who is writing his third book on extradition issues.

"Basically the case had to be proved on evidence delivered in Canada. In other words, you had to have affidavit evidence that outlines what case the prosecutor had in the United States.

"That's out the window now. All the prosecutor has to do now is state his opinion that, 'Yes, this is a good case.' "

He said Emery's extradition could take two or three years, with the federal justice minister's decision appealable all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada.

Botting said Emery's best hope is that current Justice Minister Irwin Cotler, a strong human rights advocate who is pushing for legislation to decriminalize marijuana, is still minister when the extradition decision is made at the political level.

"Given the climate of relaxed punishment for marijuana possession and given the fact we don't prosecute for selling seeds in Canada, I think there's a very good chance that Cotler would intervene and say, 'In this case there's some legitimacy' [for refusing extradition]."

Meanwhile, friends of Emery charged that Canadian authorities deliberately singled out Emery to disrupt Marijuana party politics and cut off a source of funding for activists across the country.

At a news conference in Ottawa, friends of Emery suggested his arrest and the extradition request amounts to American political influence that could disrupt Marijuana party politics.

"Mr. Emery, while he is claimed to have made $3 million a year and is claimed to be a kingpin, he actually funds a lot of activism in Canada and around the world," said Tim Meehan, a Marijuana party candidate in the last federal election.

Russell Barth, spokesman for Educators for Sensible Drug Policy, suggested Friday's raid was an attempt to silence the marijuana activist movement and damage the party's aspirations in the next federal election.

The Marijuana party received $10,600 in political contributions in 2004, according to Elections Canada. In the 2004 election, the party won 33,000 votes, just below the Christian Heritage Party.

-30-

Email Peter O'Neil at poneil1@hotmail.com



America targets Emery

London friend says U.S. wants to make an example of pot activist

Sharon Ho, London Free Press Reporter

2005-07-31

The arrest of Canadian pot activist Marc Emery is being used to advance the agenda of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, a London friend charges.

"Someone needed to made an example of (him) to further the agenda of the American drug enforcement agency," said Teresa Tarasewicz, co-owner of the City Lights Book Shop.

"He's a pawn in the politics of drug enforcement between the two different countries," she said. "It'll be interesting to see whether Canada holds fast or hands him over."

Tarasewicz bought the bookstore from Emery, a former Londoner, in 1992. She last spoke to him about a month ago.

Emery was arrested Friday by RCMP in central Nova Scotia after Vancouver police raided his pot seed and paraphernalia store and arrested two others, Gregory Keith Williams and Michelle Rainey-Fenkarek.

They are wanted in the U.S. on charges of conspiracy to manufacture marijuana, conspiracy to distribute seeds and conspiracy to engage in money laundering.

A conviction on the charges carries a sentence ranging from 10 years to life in prison.

Emery, leader of the B.C. Marijuana Party, was in a Halifax-area jail yesterday waiting to be returned to Vancouver, while U.S. authorities try to extradite him.

The U.S. Attorney's Office has said the three were indicted by a U.S. federal grand jury in May after an 18-month U.S. police probe of the sale of marijuana seeds on the Internet and by mail.

Emery moved away from London in 1992, but was well-known in this city for his various campaigns. As owner of City Lights, he wanted the downtown business improvement area organization dismantled and fought its right to levy a charge on his store.

The high school dropout founded the Freedom Party with Robert Metz, its current president. The two later started two-short lived newspapers -- the London MetroBulletin and the London Tribune.

"If you want to change the law, you have to be prepared to break the law," Metz once said in describing Emery's philosophy in life.

Emery became known for his pot activism in 1994 after moving to Vancouver from Indonesia.

In Vancouver, he started the Cannabis Cafe, a meeting place for marijuana smokers, Hemp BC, a supply store, and Little Grow Shop, a seed and plant outlet. These places were raided a few times and eventually closed.

For the last 10 years, Emery has been selling marijuana seeds on the Internet. He's made more than $2 million from the business.

"He's receiving attention because he's successful at it," Tarasewicz said.

"Whatever happens, he's not going to go quietly. He'll raise awareness (of the marijuana legalization issue). The business wouldn't be profitable without the support of regular folks."

Emery has been convicted in the past of trafficking in marijuana seeds.

He spent three months in jail last year for passing a joint at a Saskatoon pot rally in 2004. It was Emery's 11th drug-related conviction, but the first time he was sentenced to jail.

Yesterday, City Lights customers were asking for Tarasewicz's reaction to Emery's situation. Londoners tend to think of him as someone regularly "raising controversy and trouble," she said.

-30-

Wednesday, August 03, 2005

wiggy recommended alt.rawk



Cuffs closely linked

Canada's latest indie darlings are bound together tightly

Mike Doherty

National Post

August 3, 2005

The history of pop music is filled with serendipity. Avril Lavigne was discovered in a bookstore; Jewel in a coffee house; Michael Buble at a wedding; Jessica Simpson at a church camp. Not to be outdone, Oshawa's Cuff the Duke discovered drummer Matt Faris in a washroom.

The fateful moment occurred at a 2003 gig in Walkerton, Ont., by the band's then-labelmates, the Constantines. Cuff the Duke were facing a crisis: They'd recently released their adventurous, widely praised alt-country debut, Life Stories from Minimum Wage, but their original drummer, Brad Fudge, had just quit. Guitarist Jeff Peers recalls: "There was a guy in the urinal next to me, and he was like, 'Hey man, you're in Cuff the Duke!' I'm like, all drunkenly, 'You don't play drums, do ya?' And he's like, 'Oh, no, man. Why?' And the next urinal down, Matt sticks his head around, and says, 'I play drums. I love your band.' "

Lead singer Wayne Petti remembers what Peers told him the next day: " 'Dude, I dunno, I figure we might as well give it a go. We'll try the washroom guy last.' He showed up and nailed everything."

Chance is a fine thing for Cuff the Duke, who got their name from a phrase emblazoned on a shirt Petti happened to pick up at a thrift store; they still have no idea what it means. After maverick singer-songwriter Hayden hired them as his backing band for a tour, he decided he might as well release their new sophomore album, Cuff the Duke, on his own label -- the first time he had done so for another act.

According to Petti, "He had apparently thought about putting out records by some friends, but never wanted the responsibility of his friends coming back and [asking], 'Why is my record not selling?' "

Bassist Paul Lowman adds, "He was not intimidated by us. That's why he did it."

It would be difficult to find Cuff the Duke intimidating -- each member of the fresh-faced foursome of early twentysomething lads seems unpretentious, good-natured and eminently approachable. Gathered together in a restaurant/bar on Toronto's College Street, they come across as a group so cohesive that -- except for the taciturn but affable Faris -- they like to finish each other's sentences.

They're charged with a spirit of optimism promoting the new album, which sees them trade in the daring but uneven eclecticism of their debut for a more focused approach -- both in terms of songcraft and performance. This isn't to say Cuff the Duke lacks variety: Meet You on the Other Side, for instance, hints at the art rock of early Roxy Music, while the fittingly titled closer It's Over rises to a triumphant melancholy that's strikingly reminiscent of minimalist film composer Michael Nyman. Petti, who sports an Iron Maiden shirt for the interview, is quick to point out the album even contains an old-school, heavy-metal harmonizing guitar solo.

The 19th-century frontier iconography on their sepia-toned album cover hints at another influence: The Band, circa 1968's Music from Big Pink.

"For us," says Peers, "that's rock 'n' roll, country, Canadiana -- everything. Stellar playing, stellar songmanship all wrapped up in one." The visual reference to The Band, he explains, "suited the mood of the record, expanding on music being all different things at once, not being afraid to throw in a carnivalesque circus solo and be like, 'I'm Garth Hudson. I can do what I want!' "

Once hugely popular, The Band have largely slipped from the North American musical radar; their music is unlikely to be found on many young Canadians' iPods. The members of Cuff the Duke, however, didn't grow up as average suburban kids. Their hairstyles and clothing, and especially musical tastes, marked them as outsiders. Even their parents, it seems, were bewildered by their non-conformity. Their catchy, sometimes anthemic songs, however, have a much bigger potential audience than just indie kids.

"I think we can be an indie-rock band and still appeal to a working-class crowd," says Lowman. At last month's Hillside Festival in Guelph, Ont., the band dedicated Take My Money and Run, their rollicking tirade against fat-cat bosses, to a fan whom they'd just met; he'd mentioned he was being laid off from his job at Oshawa's GM plant.

"He'd worked there for over 20 years," says Petti. "He was proud of what he did.

"He was touched -- we played it with a little extra je ne sais quoi. Whether we like it or not, we're pretty blue collar at heart."

In the coming months, Cuff the Duke will look to spread their message to anyone who'll listen during headlining gigs across Canada. They'll also be eager to be inspired by anyone, from indie kids to auto workers to the rock stars they meet on tour.

"All the people that you'd think are intimidating," says Peers, "they're just people. Nick Cave was actually a super down-to-earth nice guy. Well, I was intimidated by the fact that he rolled a cigarette with one hand while sitting playing a song on the piano."

Petti picks up the thread: "And then came in with the left hand. And we were just like, 'This man is a god. We need to get a piano.' Soon after that, we got a piano."

-30-

Suburban Cowboys

By Jason Schneider

EXCLAIM! Magazine

July 27, 2005

Having a beer with the members of Cuff the Duke on a scorching afternoon in Guelph, Ontario, it’s hard to imagine four more diverse personalities making up a band who’ve been together for five years. Singer/guitarist Wayne Petti’s studious facade barely masks a wickedly dry sense of humour, while his guitar-playing counterpart Jeff Peers’ openness borders on manic. Straight-laced, bearded bassist Paul Lowman appears the odd man out as he smokes hand-rolled cigarettes, but it becomes evident that he’s the glue holding things together. It’s hard to tell what drummer Matt Faris thinks of anything, since the others seem to have all the angles covered. He’s content to keep everyone’s glasses filled.

Getting to know Cuff the Duke, it makes sense why their music is equally diverse, and subsequently unclassifiable. While they’re primarily rooted in classic pop songwriting, with heavy leanings toward the country/folk end, they have also experimented with a variety of sonic textures. It’s an approach that has managed to be the perfect complement to lyrics that often deal with the isolation and frustration of modern suburban existence in a way that’s far more real than what the traditional outlet for teen angst — punk — has become. Of course, the band members can only speak from the first-hand experience of living in their hometown of Oshawa, just east of Toronto.

“I grew up skating, so I know that it’s all about sticking with your friends and making fun of everybody else,” Peers says.

“That’s what the suburbs are all about,” Petti adds.

“Punk has just started to feed off that,” Peers continues. “You’ve got guys who form bands for all the reasons except to be in a band. There might be one guy who’s really into it, but the rest are only in it for chicks and beer, or to have their friends come out and see them at the local club.”

“That’s probably why we were always inspired more by guys like Johnny Cash,” Petti says. “They played for people no matter who they were or what they were about. Because at the end of the day it’s all just music, and if you can make anybody happy through what you’re playing, then you’ve done your job.”

It’s probable that Cuff the Duke will make a lot of people happy with their new self-titled album, the long-gestating follow-up to their acclaimed ’02 debut, Life Stories For Minimum Wage. While that album was driven by the innocence of discovery — both in writing and production, drawing on everything from folk balladry to Pet Sounds — Cuff the Duke reflects precisely what the band has become: a confident live unit who have honed their varied influences down to a keen knack for melody.

It is a sound that still can’t be called strictly pop or country, folk-rock or Americana. It remains as enigmatic as their name, yet as unpretentious as the players themselves. “After the first album came out, we looked at each other and said, ‘Well, we’re a band now, we have to tour, that’s what bands do,’” Lowman says. “Some bands make great records and don’t tour, but any band who tours are going to be a better band.”

In the two years that followed Life Stories, Cuff the Duke embarked on several cross-country jaunts with the Sadies, Sloan and Hayden that had a big impact on new material. “By the time we did the last few tours, a lot of these songs were staples of our live show,” Petti says. “It was a little weird seeing people respond to them right away. They knew the words to some of the songs too.”

Peers adds, “It was also weird because by then we were almost at a point where we resented having to promote the first album, just because it seemed so far removed from what we had become.”

It all started with a T-shirt. Petti and Peers were indie rock kids in Oshawa looking to do anything other than play the same punk rock they had been conditioned to listen to. Peers had a four-track and the pair began pushing it to its limits in an effort to find something that felt right. One day, rummaging through a thrift store, Petti found a homemade T-shirt that simply said “Cuff the Duke.” Its creator and meaning remain a mystery, although at least one person has suggested it’s an antiquated hockey term for pulling the goalie. But it made a great band name, and immediately became Petti’s trademark garment every time he took the stage. “I’m saving that shirt for the Canadian rock’n’roll hall of fame,” he says. “Or maybe the Canadian country music hall of fame. It can go beside the Good Brothers’ display.”

Petti and Peers played a few shows as a duo before enlisting Lowman and drummer Brad Fudge, who lasted until the release of Life Stories before being replaced by Faris. By the summer of 2000, they were gigging regularly at home and in Toronto, but it was clear that they weren’t the typical band from the suburbs looking to make it big downtown. The Oshawa scene revolved around local heroes Sum 41, who were just becoming one of the biggest bands in the world.

“We started playing in Oshawa at a place called the Dungeon that didn’t have anything close to alternative music or country music going on,” Peers says. “It was all bad SoCal skate punk. We’d play a lot of these shows and go over really well, just because we were different enough that people got interested in what we were doing.”

Peers says they knew early on that the Oshawa/Ajax scene was too narrow. “We got a little resentful over the fact that we couldn’t buy, or even hear about, the music that we were into. And also the fact that there weren’t many other people around who related to us and wanted to make things better. You can either stay in the bubble or break out of it; staying in Oshawa was never in the cards for us.”

Peers now lives in Guelph along with Faris, while Petti and Lowman are in Toronto. Peers says the change of scene was a revelation when it finally happened. “To live somewhere where there’s an actual community, and people go out and do things has given us all a new perspective. The thing that people don’t realise about the suburbs is that nobody walks around. Dogs become these crazy beasts because they’re just chained up in the backyard all day. People who were out walking around were viewed as suspicious.”

Lowman’s take on the situation is more personal. “People thought I was weird for wanting to move to Toronto. I think I made the decision when I was 15 and it was just a matter of time. It wasn’t uncommon for me or any of us to be walking down the street and have guys drive by and call us fags. It happened to me once, and I remember looking into the car and there was just one guy by himself. I couldn’t believe it; he just felt like calling me a fag. That sort of epitomises Oshawa for me now. None of us is gay, and I can only imagine how tough it is there for kids who are.”

It was largely experiences like these that propped up songs on the first album such as “The Difference Between Us,” “The Trouble And The Truth,” and “Anti-Social,” the last re-done for Cuff The Duke in a much heavier, streamlined fashion. The inevitable move out of Oshawa was aided greatly after the band caught the ear of Three Gut Records’ Lisa Moran and Tyler Clark Burke, who made them the label’s first signings outside of their immediate circle of friends. From there, the band recorded Life Stories over two sessions at Umbrella Sound and Andy Magoffin’s House Of Miracles, turning their primitive four-track ideas into full-blown band arrangements.

“We never had to compromise anything because of the people we’ve been involved with,” Peers says. “No one ever had zany schemes or anything. They just wanted to do what we wanted to do, and that was really important for our first record.”

Petti concurs. “Three Gut might not have had as much mainstream support as we would have hoped, but in essence we got to be a part of a great moment in time. We’ll always be grateful for everything they did for us, but we started feeling like we should go elsewhere. I think everyone was starting to think about doing other things.”

Leaving Three Gut was not a problem, since the band were touring steadily through the help of manager William “Skinny” Tenn, whose other primary client is Hayden. In fact, one of Cuff the Duke’s better tours was a North American trek with Hayden where they also served as his backing band. It turned out to be a perfect match — the Canadian indie legend is also a refugee from Toronto’s suburbs with a desire to do folk-based music. With the band’s new album already in the works, the suggestion was made to release it on Hayden’s own Hardwood label, distributed by Universal, and once again Cuff the Duke became the first outside act to land with someone’s personal project.

“Hayden turned out to be a fan even before he found out that Skinny was working with us,” Petti says. “For the Elk Lake Serenade tour, he wanted to tour with a band, and it made sense in a lot of ways to have one that was already together, so we ended up opening the shows and then backing him up. It worked out great because we all travelled in our van and it gave us a chance to really bond. At one point we were talking about our new record and who would put it out, and he just said, ‘Well, I can try to do it.’ He’d thought about doing it with other friends of his, like Bodega and Howie Beck, but never felt responsible enough. We were really flattered that he would make that effort with us.”

Peers adds, “It’s really the ideal situation for us, being on an artist-run label and sharing the same manager. It keeps the lines of communication open. We can still have complete control over everything we do, and that was probably our biggest concern after leaving Three Gut. There really aren’t a lot of options like that in Canada for a band like us.”

One of the perks was the luxury of recording the new album at their own pace. The band chose to work with one-time Sadies sideman Paul Aucoin as producer. They even undertook pre-production at Hawksley Workman’s studio in northern Ontario during the dead of winter before moving to more comfortable environs at Halla Studios in Toronto. The band credits Aucoin with getting to the core of their sound and revealing subtleties they hadn’t even noticed.

“Paul’s a classically-trained dude, so we were totally in awe of his ideas in terms of arranging,” Peers says. “But he also had a great way of encouraging us just to do things in a more logical way.”

“He really does understand how we work,” Lowman says. “We felt way more comfortable with him than other people we’ve recorded with in the past. He knew our strengths and didn’t try to change us at all, but at the same time he pushed us to develop a vision for the record, because we didn’t have one when we started. He reminded me of the high school teachers I had who got me into things I never would have considered.”

In an odd way, Cuff the Duke are bucking the current trend in alt-country by making a more straightforward sounding album, rather than opting to get continually more experimental, as artists like Wilco and Joe Henry have done. “In the early days it was all about trying to use toy pianos, and Moogs and saws — anything we could make cool noises with,” Lowman says. “We’ve been able to get that under control. Now we’re more concerned about the challenge of making something as big as it can be, and then taking it that extra step further. Nothing’s better than getting people to react to something like that.”

In Petti’s view, “On the first record, a song like ‘The Difference Between Us’ sounds great, but we never played it live because of all the studio trickery that went into it. With this album, on songs like ‘It’s Over’ and ‘There Was A Time,’ Paul did a great job arranging strings, but not having that when we play live won’t really affect those songs as much as earlier songs.”

All of this has led to a shared excitement over getting back on the road, knowing that their audience will finally be familiar with most of the album. Anticipation breeds expectation, something the band haven’t really thought about. “I think the only expectations we feel are from ourselves, that we’ve made a good record,” Peers says.
“We all agreed that this should be a self-titled record because I think we’ve now finally found out what Cuff the Duke is about,” according to Lowman. “The first record we did without much of an idea of what was going on, but on this one we all knew our places, and could grasp what the songs should sound like right away.”

It’s a given that Cuff the Duke’s fan base within the indie rock community will embrace the new album, but with all of the accolades they have earned they could be the next Canadian indie to cross over. If that indeed happens, it will be on the back of the album’s first single, “Take My Money And Run,” an infectious country rocker that, despite a lack of typical production sheen, would not sound out of place on country radio.

“We were actually just at a Universal party, and were told that people at CMT were big fans of our first album, but we never made a video,” Petti says. “Now that we’re making one for ‘Take My Money And Run,’ it’ll probably get a few spins, which is cool.”

The notion sparks a flurry of unflattering references to current new country artists, and it’s a little surprising how well-acquainted they are with the genre. “It’s funny how much we hate new country, but we totally immerse ourselves in it,” Peers admits.

After the cheap shots die down, and thoughts of potentially becoming a CMT band sink in, Petti says, “I’m sure we learned a long time ago that you can’t choose your fans.”

“There’s a void in country music,” Peers adds. “I’d be so happy if my grandpa could turn on CMT and see us instead of some bad new Vince Gill video.”

The irony is still that country music has never been the domain of suburban Canadian kids. Yet, without being conscious of it, Cuff the Duke has become one of our nation’s best country bands. “Our only real connection to country music is that we’re a song-based band,” Lowman says, “and the best country music has always been about great, honest songs.

“Maybe we’ll be to country what the Arcade Fire are to rock’n’roll right now.”

Surviving the Sadies and Other Road Adventures

All four members of Cuff the Duke agree that the key to their success has been touring. It’s hard work and little money, but it also means a lot of good times with the bands they played with. Their best stories concern the Sadies, with whom they did their first nationwide tours. “The first show we did with them was in Winnipeg and we were terrified because we’d never met them before,” Jeff Peers says. “I’d just got busted for pot coming from Thunder Bay and I was totally freaked out. That really broke the ice, and Dallas [Good] started telling me about getting busted in Missouri. They kind of took us under their wing right away because of that. Dallas gave me the best advice later on: ‘Don’t break two laws at once.’ We were doing stuff like setting off firecrackers and pissing in public at the same time.”

“They’ve called us ‘the Duke boys,’ since then, which is really flattering because I found out that they don’t really talk much about their opening acts,” Petti says. “The only time I got scared was our second show with them in Saskatoon. There was this article about us with all these totally fabricated quotes about us working with the Sadies. Dallas came over, slammed the paper on the table, and said, ‘Better get your fucking facts straight.’ We found out that they were putting us on, but after that we never wanted to get that look from Dallas or Travis [Good] ever again.”

“I think the best moment was when we played Pop Montreal together with Matt Mays,” Petti adds. “Matt went way over time and really pissed off everyone in the Sadies. I was sick as a dog, so I said, ‘Let’s just play for 20 minutes so the Sadies can do their full set.’ I guess they never forgot that, and still mention to me how much they appreciated the gesture.”

Touring with Hayden turned out to be an entirely different experience, as they discovered how loyal his fans are. “My first reaction when I heard we were backing him up was, I’ll get to play ‘Dynamite Walls,’” Petti says. “What was cool was that he really seemed to be having fun, especially playing some of his older songs. I’ll never forget one of the last shows in Ottawa, when he played ‘Skates,’ after never playing it the whole tour. I wanted to tell the whole audience how lucky they were.

“I guess that was the tour that really made a difference, because on the way home we did our own shows and that was the first time we noticed a lot of people actually coming out to see us.”

Monday, August 01, 2005

on the job in iraq: shippy's privateers

U.S. 'coalition of the billing'

Foreigners hired to fight in Iraq. Colombians trained to fight in drug war taking higher-paying combat jobs

The Gazette (Montreal)

Monday, August 1, 2005

By Sonni Efron / Los Angeles Times

For hire: more than 1,000 U.S.-trained former soldiers and police officers from Colombia. Combat-hardened, experienced in fighting insurgents and ready for duty in Iraq.

This eye-popping advertisement recently appeared on an Iraq jobs Web site, posted by a U.S. entrepreneur who would supply security forces for U.S. contractors in Iraq and elsewhere.

If hired, the Colombians would join a swelling population of heavily armed private military forces working in Iraq and other global hot spots. They also would join a growing corps of workers from the developing world who are seeking higher wages in dangerous jobs, what some critics say is a troubling result of efforts by the United States to "outsource" its operations in Iraq and other countries.

In a telephone interview from Colombia, the entrepreneur, Jeffrey Shippy, said he saw a booming global demand for his "private army," and a lucrative business opportunity in recruiting Colombians.

Shippy, who formerly worked for DynCorp International, a major U.S. security contractor with ties to the CIA, said the Colombians were willing to work for $2,500 to $5,000 a month, compared with perhaps $10,000 or more for U.S. citizens.

But where Shippy sees opportunity, others see trouble.

Representative Jan Schakowsky, an Illinois Democrat, worries that U.S. government contractors are hiring thousands of impoverished former military personnel, with no public scrutiny, little accountability and large hidden costs to taxpayers.

The United States has spent more than $4 billion since 2000 on Plan Colombia, a counterterrorism and counternarcotics program that includes training and support for the Colombian police and military. In June, the U.S. Congress moved toward approval of an additional $734.5 million in aid to the Andean region in 2006, most of it for Colombia.

"We're training foreign nationals ... who then take that training and market it to private companies, who pay them three or four times as much as we're paying soldiers," Schakowsky said.

"American taxpayers are paying for the training of those Colombian soldiers," she said. "When they leave to take more lucrative jobs, perhaps with an American military contractor ... they take that training with them. So then we're paying to train that person's replacement. And then we're paying the bill to the private military contractors."

An estimated 20,000 Iraqis and about 6,000 non-Iraqis work in private security in Iraq, said Doug Brooks, president of International Peace Operations Association, a trade group representing the burgeoning industry.

Security accounts for as much as 25 per cent of reconstruction costs in Iraq, eating a substantial portion of an $18.4-billion rebuilding package funded by the United States.

Fijians, Ukrainians, South Africans, Nepalese and Serbs are reported to be on the job in Iraq. Peter Singer of the Brookings Institution, author of a book on the private military industry, said veterans of Latin American conflicts, including Guatemalans, Salvadorans and Nicaraguans, also had turned up.

"What we've done in Iraq is assemble a true 'coalition of the billing,' " Singer said, playing off U.S. President George W. Bush's description of the U.S.-led alliance of nations with a troop presence in Iraq as a "coalition of the willing."

There are no reliable figures on the number of guards from Colombia or other countries. According to Shippy, private military experts and news reports, North Carolina-based Blackwater USA has sent 120 Colombians to Iraq. In addition, the company is reported to have hired 122 Chileans.

The reports are difficult to verify because many large companies, including DynCorp, which is based Reston, Va., and operates in 40 countries, have policies against speaking to the media. Gary Jackson, president of Blackwater USA, said he had no comment.

Shippy, a U.S. air force veteran whose work for private military contractors has included stints in Saudi Arabia, Ecuador and Iraq, extolled the Colombians' virtues.

"These forces have been fighting terrorists the last 41 years," he wrote in his Web posting seeking work. "These troops have been trained by the U.S. navy SEALs and the U.S. (Drug Enforcement Administration) to conduct counterdrug/counterterror ops in the jungles and rivers of Colombia."

The recruitment of Colombians shows that although, "There's still a local demand (for high-end military services in Colombia), the global demand is far higher," he said.

Two experts on the Colombian military said highly trained officers constantly were being retired from the armed forces to face low wages and widespread unemployment in the nation's troubled economy.

There is no hemorrhage of manpower in the 200,000-strong Colombian army, which relies on a draft and a plentiful supply of volunteers, said Thomas Marks, a specialist on the country's military.

Colombians who have completed their military service are entitled to seek higher-paying private-sector jobs when their stints are up, as are U.S. soldiers, he said.

"What's wrong with them using their skills, their know-how in Iraq?" asked David Spencer, a Washington, D.C.-based security consultant who has spent nine years working in Colombia.

Colombia has no law discouraging citizens from going to work in Iraq, in contrast to attempts in Nepal and the Philippines to ban or regulate such work after some of their citizens were killed or kidnapped in Iraq.

It is unclear what legal responsibility, if any, the United States or other foreign governments might have to foreign nationals who are killed, wounded or kidnapped while working for U.S.-paid contractors in Iraq, or to any Iraqis they harm.