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Fred Eaglesmith’s blue-collar rock
(GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass., March 27, 2001) - For Fred Eaglesmith, writing
songs and performing them were a way out of a dead-end life that, as it so
happens, he hasn't left very far behind.
For one, the small-town, blue-collar characters that Eaglesmith grew
up with in rural Ontario vividly populate his songs, so they're never far
away from his consciousness.
For another, when he's not touring North America 10 months out of
the year, Eaglesmith still calls small-town Canada home.
But more than even that, Eaglesmith brings a blue-collar approach -
call it a work ethic if you will - to the business of rock 'n' roll.
"I make a good living, but I run a business," said Eaglesmith, who
performs tonight with his six-piece band at Club Helsinki, in a recent
phone
interview.
And indeed, to hear Eaglesmith describe a typical day in the life of
the folk-rock troubadour, it's easy to conclude that he has more in common
with, say, a general contractor than Rod Stewart.
"I don't live like those guys do -- I don't hang around the latte shop,"
said Eaglesmith. "I have to phone the manager, the agent, the business
manager, everybody, and make sure everybody's got their job done. There's
already been five phone calls made this morning, and there's five more to
make before I can go on doing what I want to do."
To be sure, Eaglesmith is not complaining. In fact, peers who whine about
the rigors of life on the road exasperate him.
"I mean, nobody asked us to do this," said Eaglesmith, with typical
understatement. "We sort of said we want to do this, and because of that
we
have to go to them. We can't expect them all to come to us. And it takes a
tremendous amount of will power. It's exactly what these other guys do in
business -- it's this positive thinking stuff. It's really setting your
mind
to it and saying I'm going to do this by hook or by crook."
Perhaps it's by staying so grounded to the everyday business aspect of his
work that Eaglesmith is able to churn out the sort of detailed portraits
of
blue-collar life that Bruce Springsteen supposedly does. Hardly a line
goes
by in an Eaglesmith song without mention of a car, a truck, a train, a
beer,
or a gun. Horses and dogs make frequent appearances, as do girlfriends and
more cars.
But even being as grounded and as in touch with the common man as he is,
Eaglesmith -- who began working the fields of the family farm at age 8 and
who left home by age 15 - says there has always been some sort of distance
between him and the other guys down at the corner store.
"I can go down there and wear my orange pants, hang around the coffee shop
all morning, and they'll talk to me," he said. "And they like me. But I
can
never be one of them. And it's been that way since I was very young.
"But I'd rather be with those guys than with the artists. I hate the latte
set. But when you're the writer, the observer, you don't fit in. I had
this
gift. I was born to observe. I had no choice. I couldn't even help it. I
was
weird. And when I was younger and hadn't found my feet yet, I was insecure
about it.
"But when I found my feet it was like, well, f--- you guys. I know what
you're doing. And it's as much bull--- as what I do.
"That's when I wrote my best stuff, when I started hitting that stride.
And
that's actually when they began grudgingly respecting me."
Eaglesmith's newest album, to be released next month, is "Ralph's Last
Show," a double-CD live album featuring backup by his former acoustic rock
trio, the Flying Squirrels. The album includes rootsy versions of
Eaglesmith
classics like "Freight Train," "Mighty Big Car," "Time to Get a Gun" and
"White Trash," in bluegrass- and country-influenced rock arrangements that
harken back to the pre-Beatles era - sort of Elvis Presley meets Warren
Zevon.
The album is a great entry into Eaglesmith's quirky, hyperrealistic tales
of
regular folk who drive pickups, obsess about trains, and fix their
neighbor's cars. For every song that seemingly pokes good-natured fun at
his
subjects -- songs like "White Trash" that ask "When did we become white
trash" and "I Like Trains" that portrays a tragic figure with a psychic
attachment to diesel engines - Eaglesmith invests tenderness and sympathy
in
characters like those in "Pretty Good Guy" and "He's a Good Dog." If at
times he straddles the line between sympathy and sarcasm, it's with the
artful songcraft of a Randy Newman.
Eaglesmith's other albums include "Lipstick Lies and Gasoline" and "50-Odd
Dollars."
Eaglesmith says that he thinks of himself more as a writer than a
musician.
"God never wanted me to be a musician," he said. "And then finally after
twenty years he said OK, I'm gonna let you be one because you're so bad.
You can't sing, you can't do this, blah blah blah. He said, OK, I'm gonna
let you sing in tune.
"I don't know if I was every really meant to be a musician. That's the
thing
that I disciplined myself in. And you discipline yourself in anything
eventually you'll be good at it. And my ego wanted me to be a star. That's
why I didn't become a book writer or a poet.
"I was trapped in poverty, in a rural situation, and I just saw a way out.
So how was I going to do it? You couldn't do it through a regular job. I
had
to have grandiose dreams.
"It's a very classic story. But it doesn't end the right way, because now
I
live really normally. I have no aspirations to be a star. Now I do
everything I can to let my work get out there but not have myself get out
there. I don't need that."
Next month looks to bring another eclectic array of performers to Club
Helsinki, including blues artists, party bands, folksingers and a few
ringers including modern-jazz ensemble Living Daylights (April 19) and
guitarist Gary Lucas (April 20). But the big names on April's schedule
include country-swing artist Dan Hicks and the Hot Licks (April 21) and
venerable jazz-blues singer Mose Allison (April 28).
Also featured next month at Helsinki are singer-songwriter Vance Gilbert
(April 5), Grammy-nominated blues belter Shemekia Copeland (April 6),
singer-songwriter Mary Gauthier (April 7), blues keyboardist Ron Levy
(April
12), zydeco artist Chris Ardoin (April 25), and Vikki True and Bobby Sweet
(April 26). More performers are expected to be announced soon.
[This column originally appeared in the Berkshire Eagle on March 30, 2001.
Copyright Seth Rogovoy 2001. All rights reserved.]
Seth Rogovoy rogovoy@berkshire.net music news, interviews, reviews, et al.
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