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COVER STORY by Steve Colm Do Makin’ Money & Makin’ Music Go Hand In Hand? Success is measured in many ways and local musicians pull all the right strings to keep the music playing. Drop Dead Famous band members from left: Dave Sinewitz, Rob Higgins, Chris Holmes, Scott Holmes and Chris Blais (seated) strike a pose during a photo shoot for their new album and promotional materials at the Walkerville Brewery. Photo courtesy of Gene Schilling. “When you’re ridin’ 16 hours, and there’s nothin’ much to do And you don’t feel much like ridin’, you just wish the trip was through... Here I am, on the road again. There I am, up on the stage. Here I go, playin’ star again. There I go, turn the page.” (Bob Seger, “Turn the Page,” 1973, The Silver Bullet Band, “Back in 72”) T hey’ve been around for centuries, across continents and cultures and dynasties, always ready to tell the stories that speak to people’s hearts. The faces of the minstrels change, they rise up, share their gifts and turn to dust, but their contributions to the wellbeing of society can live on for many lifetimes. We know them as working musicians. But all too often we share a wink that says they’re somehow trying to fool everyone. Is it fair to judge them that way? Or should we appreciate what musicians add to our economy and our lives and grant them leave to chase their dreams? The truth is, they don’t need our approval, 18 until it comes time to applaud. And every star started from humble beginnings ... Drop Dead Focused There’s excitement in the air when Rob Higgins talks. His delivery – rapid fire from behind a broad smile – tells you life is good for the lead singer of Drop Dead Famous (dropdeadfamous.com; DDF). DDF, after all, is getting a taste of success these days, having shed their cover band safety net in favour of an artistic leap of faith in original music. So far, so good, Higgins says. Six DDF songs are now available on “iTunes” and B I Z X M A G A Z IN E • F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 3 they’re getting positive feedback (and even a little money) from far and wide. With “Survive Tonight,” “Ten09,” “Again,” “Surrounded,” “Lost Your Way,” and “For You” perhaps reaching ears across the globe, Higgins and Drop Dead Famous aren’t content to bask in the glow of nascent success. They are working hard to get noticed. Ironically, that means taking a risk by eschewing live shows in order to record their music. “We kind of had to put our cover gigs on the back burner,” Higgins says, partly because all the band members have regular jobs and family obligations. They have made a name for themselves as a cover band, gained a bit of a following, and started to introduce the original stuff. “But it was a business decision, something had to give,” says Higgins. “We decided to put the live shows on the back burner to spend our time writing.” Five-member DDF’s pedigree is evident. Higgins previously played with Chris Blais in Vibe-A-Tribe and No Ordinary Machine, while Chris Holmes, Scott Holmes and Dave Sinewitz earned their stripes with Heat Mizer. Higgins (Firefighter), Blais (Mac Computer Tech), Chris Holmes (Engineer), Scott Holmes (Firefighter) and Sinewitz (Pharmacist) also represent disparate musical tastes, but, that too, is an important piece of the puzzle. Higgins admits they had to learn to blend their different styles and interests. “But now we’re like brothers – well, two of us are brothers, so we even fight like brothers – and we’ve learned how different guys bring different cards to the table,” he says. “So we’ve taken the dance music that Chris Blais would do and brought the rock into it ... and with the other influences it all helped create our sound, as opposed to everybody liking the one style. We’d just be writing that one style and that wouldn’t work.” With tracks in hand DDF turned to Marty Bak’s SLR studios to get “radio ready.” “Finding the right studio really helped us get to the next level with a professional recording,” Higgins says, and they have since worked hard to make sure all the local radio stations have copies of their songs for review. “Going on iTunes really increased our accessibility,” Higgins says, awed by the change in the industry from the expensive days of lugging around boxes of CDs. “You got all excited about it, and your best friends and family would all support you,” but the logistics of distribution were a nightmare. Higgins says, “Now, with iTunes, within an hour of me texting friends in BC and California about the music, they’ve downloaded it, listened to it, given us a review and shared it. We’ve sold more songs in a week than we ever sold in CDs in prior bands.” Nurturing that buzz is a multi-tiered effort that includes “iTunes,” local radio stations and even exposure at Windsor Spitfire games. “Anywhere we can get heard, it helps,” Higgins says, because repetition is key to recognition. “It’s still all about knocking on the door. It’s a matter of creating your own buzz, networking as much as you can, getting one person to believe in it, and then the fire’s lit. It still has to be a good product, but if you have a great product and you get it in the right hands ... I’ve always thought there are millions of great songs on shelves somewhere that we’re never going to hear, and that’s a shame ... so there’s always the luck of the draw.” As Higgins says, “there’s not a good band out there that doesn’t put a lot of effort into being a good band.” And success is elusive, no matter how easy it may seem in hindsight, so Higgins tries to be realistic about DDF’s chances, keeping the dream grounded in his love for performance. “Yeah, how lucky are we to find something that we love?” he says with a smile. “We are working very hard to get to the next level, and I truly believe we’re going to get there. But I realize how tough it is, and if we don’t get there I will never look back at this as a waste of time. The whole process has been awesome.” Been There, Done That Mark Chichkan knows only too well that choosing music as your life’s work means choosing to live your dream no matter what the cost. Higgins calls him “the most talented combination guitar player/singer in the city,” and Chichkan has the war stories to prove it. Bob Seger’s “Turn the Page,” that dirge-like glimpse at the emotional and social ups and downs of a rock musician’s life on the road, comes to mind and probably rings true for Chichkan more than most. The former Helix and Mindstorm guitarist is one of those rare cases – a man who was drawn to the bright BI Z X MAGAZI NE •FEBRUARY 201 3 Mark Chichkan is a full-time musician with a long and storied career that includes stints with Helix and Mindstorm and cross country tours. These days, he’s happy to stay close to home playing gigs in Windsor and Detroit. Photo courtesy of Frank Piccolo. lights of success only to realize he might be better off at home. So there he was in January 2013, with his right leg freshly freed from a cast after he broke his fibula, as the artist of choice for the opening of Carparelli Sound Lounge, downtown Windsor. He’s been performing for more than 35 years, starting with local clubs as a 16-yearold with special dispensation from the liquor licence board and a guardian to keep him out of trouble. He left the GM Trim Plant in 1985 as an 18-year-old (he had previously been granted a six-month leave of absence to play with Mindstorm, but was refused a second leave and quit). “Everybody was shocked, of course, because you didn’t quit a job like that, especially back in the ’80s, but I was trying to follow a dream and ended up doing it fulltime,” remembers Chichkan. “So I started early and it probably became a full-time thing in 1987.” That “full-time thing” included touring with big bands, complete with the baggage 19 of major record labels and management teams. Chichkan saw his share of the world, rode the highways with Mindstorm and did two albums with gold and platinum-selling Helix, but the money wasn’t good. “With Mindstorm, we were playing week long gigs, and I was making about $125 a week, and if the club didn’t comp your food you were buying Ramen noodles. We were living like dogs. But to be honest, I didn’t give a ---- because I was livin’ the dream,” he laughs. Career highlights include playing with members of The Guess Who, Red Rider, BTO and Georgia Satellites … “but my bread and butter has always been locally here in Windsor.” “Being with Helix may have been a prestigious gig, but it just started making sense to me that I could do gigs here and be in my own bed at night,” says Chichkan. Touring was also damaging his reputation with local bar owners who would book him months in advance, only to have him cancel. “So I really hated that,” he says. “They understood my situation, but they still had a business to run; they had to take care of themselves.” This message eventually sank in and led to a decision. “I started to rethink how I was going to earn my income,” he says. “I thought about my hometown bars where I really actually cut my teeth in this business, and how I felt indebted to those guys because they keep me working year round. That’s gold to any musician who does this for a living.” With his girlfriend Teresa Medeiros getting a crash course in the life of a musician (“it’s a bit of learning experience … she’s a widow on weekends, but she’s been real supportive”), Chichkan counts his blessings. “I’m just really lucky,” he says. “I chose to do this for my entire life, and I knew from the moment I had the chance to play a guitar and sing that this is all I wanted to do.” Chichkan refers to solo shows as his bread and butter, and he still plays with Bomb Squad (bombsquadboom.com) and United Snakes (unitedsnakesrock.com) at the 20 casinos and for corporate events here and in the US. “But it’s not like it was 13 years ago when we first formed Bomb Squad and we had every casino, every racetrack and played both sides of the border and up and down the 401,” he says. And while the acoustic gigs keep Chichkan busy, “it’s not as plentiful as it used to be, so I still hustle, man. It’s a hard life, and it’s not for everyone. It’s not like the work comes to me; I work like anybody else in this business.” He is part of the online musical community too, maintaining two websites and a “Facebook” profile. “But I’m on the phone a lot and do what I have to do to keep myself working,” stresses Chichkan. “Always On The Clock” Dale D’Amore echoes Chichkan’s endorsement of social media. As a familiar face on the Windsor/Detroit music scene for more than two decades, D’Amore knows Internet-based marketing is here to stay but still believes in the value of the personal touch. Detroit-born Windsor musician Dale D’Amore, seen here performing at a downtown Windsor bar, THE ROOM, with the Magnificent Bastards, plays hard rock gigs as a guilty pleasure. D’Amore has played in most bars in Windsor, and is also a fixture in plenty of Detroit clubs. Photo courtesy of Dale D’Amore In an age where supply – of varying quality – exceeds demand, D’Amore still finds plenty of work. But, like Chichkan, he has to hustle. It means paying attention to personal connections and constantly B I Z X M A G A Z IN E • F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 3 sending information out: “You have to visit the bars and promote yourself through the Internet, he says. “Facebook is a huge one.” The bottom line? “If you can get a crowd out, that keeps the bar’s owners happy.” D’Amore says keeping his name out there is key. “My wife kids me that I’m always networking, talking to people, trying to get a gig here, a gig there; it’s hard work. It’s enjoyable, but you’re always on the clock.” D’Amore, a construction worker by day, has fine-tuned his booking strategy over the years. Time was, he’d book every weekend for the whole year. But he was having to turn down good opportunities that popped up from time to time. “I would miss out on good gigs that I wanted because I was already booked, so I decided to back off a little bit and wait for the holes to be filled with jobs like Balloonapalooza and other festivals,” says D’Amore (read more at reverbnation.com/daledamore). “You’ve got to be open for those, so I’ve changed my format for booking.” His act includes cover tunes and original songs: “That’s part of survival in the music business,” D’Amore says, as the paying gig pie dwindles. “If you look at an event like New Year’s Eve, say in 1990, a band was getting paid maybe three times their own pay scale for that night. Now, to get paid at all on New Year’s Eve is a feat; the people don’t come out and drink like they used to,” pinning the new reality on tougher laws and a tougher economy. He says the pressure is always on to stay relevant and solvent, so he plays guitar with classic rock band Guitar Army, and hard-edged punk music with Magnificent Bastards, ranging from FM Lounge, The Dugout and The Room (“they treat us like kings there - I love that place”) to Phog Lounge, The Lion’s Head, Average Joe’s and The Dominion House and clubs in Detroit. “The classic rock gets me the paying gigs, and my paying gigs pay for my recordings and my original music,” he adds. In the end, it all comes back to winning over an audience. “It’s a lot of work, and you get very little money, so having someone enjoy it is more fulfilling than getting paid $100,” D’Amore says. Go Bigg Or Go Home The audience appreciation D’Amore describes reaches new heights when Bigg Wiggle (check them out on “Facebook”) takes the stage. And that’s no accident. Bigg Wiggle – Mike Cooper on drums for 21 years, Jerry Leblanc as lead vocalist for 20 years, Dave Labute on keyboard, guitar and vocals for 20 years, and John “JD” Drew on Bigg Wiggle elder statesman and drummer Mike Cooper makes no bones about the secret to the party band’s success. He says knowing their audience and knowing how to get people dancing are at the core of the band’s 300 plus song repertoire. Photo courtesy of Bigg Wiggle guitars and vocals for six years – is one band that never forgets to have fun. “Just four guys having fun” who describe themselves as “Jerry – bald guy; Dave – bald This band is proof disco never really died. Super 70s Live members from left: Joe Trocchi (a.k.a. JoFro); Jack DiDomenico (a.k.a. Sunny Delight); Tony Rivolta (a.k.a. T Bone); Christine Chemello (a.k.a. Sista Cherry); Andria Crabbe (a.k.a. Sista Groove) and Carmen Rivolta (a.k.a. Vinnie Zucchini). Photo courtesy of Ted Kloske/ Maple Grove Studios guy; JD – bald guy; Mike – not bald guy,” Bigg Wiggle enjoys a reputation as one of the most popular draws in Essex County, featuring an eclectic blend of musical styles and more than 300 songs in all. Bigg Wiggle thrives on being a communitygrounded band, so it’s no surprise they dig deep when it comes to charity. This year, on Saturday, June 29, the band hosts the “5th Annual Bigg Wiggle Fest” charity event. “We are fortunate to have been able to raise thousands of dollars for the Special Olympics, for Family Respite Services, and most recently for the International Children’s Games (to be hosted by the Windsor-Essex region later this year),” says Cooper. BI Z X MAGAZI NE •FEBRUARY 201 3 Getting ready to play live “is a huge investment in time for us,” Cooper explains, “... learning parts, booking gigs, staying on top of current charts, looking for new tunes, finessing song arrangements, rehearsals, promotion, etc., but music will always be a required element at any social function; wherever there’s a party waiting to happen, there will always be a demand for the right music.” Boogie Fever All Over Again When it comes to providing the right music, Tony Rivolta has a secret. Actually, he says everyone has the same secret, and it’s their love for disco music. Agree or agree 21 The Walkervilles – Mike Hargreaves, left, Pat Robitaille and Stefan Cvetkovic – joined forces in 2012 to create a soul/Motown sound which they hope gets them noticed. The group is currently mapping out its 2013 gigs, with Windsor firmly on their list. Photo courtesy of Kevin Kavanuagh. to disagree, but Rivolta’s Super 70s Live show band seems set to travel another route to success - the novelty act. New city hot spot Dean’s is on board, with its “Boogie Fever Fridays” and Super 70s Live will perform February 22 there. “What used to be old is new again,” Rivolta says with a hint of mischief, “and with Super 70s Live we bring the boogie to you with a full-contact disco show.” Pithy pitches aside, Rivolta may be on to something. After all, with a band made up of everything from teachers to contractors and big box retailers, they know all about juggling work schedules and family obligations. Who wouldn’t be eager to step back in time to strut their stuff? Having found their retro-niche, Super ’70s Live mostly trips the lights fantastic at Caesars Windsor and MotorCity Casino. But to keep the money flowing, Rivolta also offers The Fabulous Soul Shakers atop a list of groups and solo artists, including harpists to bag pipers, and covers the gamut from jazz to Italian/Latin music. To view upcoming performances, search the group “Super 70s LIVE Fan Club” on “Facebook.” Soul Searching New in the game, and tapping into this area’s love of Motown music, The Walkervilles (walkervilles.com) are a threepiece soul/Motown group from Windsor. Lead vocalist and guitar player Pat Robitaille, a well-known solo musician, has joined forces with ex-Michou members Stefan Cvetkovic and Mike Hargreaves, who provide the rhythm for The Walkervilles (Hargreaves on bass and Cvetkovic on drums). While still filling their docket for 2013, The Walkervilles plan to visit Windsor “a few times,” Hargreaves says, stressing the group is still mostly a Windsor act. Robitaille now in Toronto, and Windsor residents Cvetkovic and Hargreaves are a brand new band “and still finding an audience for our music,” Hargreaves explains. “We started getting serious about the band in May 2012.” “We each make music because it is everything we think about and love, and of all the many things we could do, we feel music is what we each do best,” Hargreaves says. They spent 2012 working on their music and spreading awareness of the band through word-of-mouth. “Now we are ready to spread the word about our album and our band in 2013; which hopefully means my favourite thing – playing shows,” Hargreaves says. As one of this area’s newest musical incarnations, The Walkervilles are proof that the lure of fame and the drive to create remain entwined in the hearts and souls of performers. This area’s modern-day minstrels are proof that hope springs eternal in the musical heart. And they are proof dreams don’t die just because the economy takes a turn for the worse. 22 B I Z X M A G A Z IN E • F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 3 TAKE ONE... By Steve Colm Local Filmmakers Soar On A Shoestring With “The Birder” W hen Theodore Bezaire (Co-writer and Director), Windsor native Mike Stasko (Co-writer/Actor) and Gerry Lattmann (Senior Producer, The Dot Film Company Inc.) shot their first feature film, “Things To Do,” in 2005 in Windsor Essex, they had little idea of what the future would hold. “Things To Do,” Lattmann recalls, “opened many doors for us in the film industry,” including screenings at the “Slamdance Film Festival” in January 2006 and later in Stockholm, Sweden. Telefilm Canada heard of the film, Lattmann says, “and invited us in to pitch our next concept.” By that time Bezaire and Stasko had come up with “The Ornithology of Ron Spencer,” later renamed “The Birder,” (thebirdermovie.com; view trailer at kickstarter.com by typing the film name in “search projects”) which Co-Producer Jeff Nadalin has been promoting as a “revengecomedy and tale of defiance.” As their website states: “The Birder is about a 40-year-old high school teacher and devoted birder who has reached an extreme low point in his life. His students think of him as passé, his ex-wife Rebecca has finally kicked him out of their home and worst of all, his daughter, Samantha, has adopted modern birding methods.” “Telefilm heard their idea and agreed to help us develop and fund the concept into a screenplay,” Lattmann says. In hindsight, that was the easy part. Crafting the script continued through 2010, “and then I began to put the funding together,” Lattmann explains, and “reality kicked in.” Tom Cavanagh is familiar to television fans as the star of NBC’s awardwinning “Ed” which first aired in 2000. Cavanagh, who stars as the beaten down protagonist Ron Spencer in “The Birder,” lives in Los Angeles. Photo courtesy of “The Birder.” Their considerable budget was soon reduced to a fraction of its original amount. “Near the middle or end of 2011, Jeff and I began working together to raise the funds to make the film,” Lattmann says. “We also managed to pull together a Distributor Union Pictures, actors, crew and, of course, financing,” which for the most part was private funding from a group of about 28 investors. “Jeff played a large role in this part of the process,” Lattmann notes. Other funders included the federal and provincial governments in the form of tax credits, a distributor advance – considered a pre-sale which is banked against a broadcast presale to SuperChannel, “then there was the mother hen, Telefilm Canada, Canada’s largest film funding body,” Lattmann says. “They kicked in as well.” With all the pieces pulled together after six years of effort, the trio had the elements to make the film, and filming took place between August 27 and September 18, 2012. For his part, Bezaire, who calls the feature BI Z X MAGAZI NE •FEBRUARY 201 3 their biggest project to date as filmmakers, is proud of the casting coup for “The Birder,” which stars Tom Cavanagh, Mark Rendall, “Academy Award” nominated movie veteran Graham Green and “comedic legend” Fred Willard, along with a cast of accomplished locals. “The Birder,” which is now in postproduction and due for release this fall, was shot “100% in Windsor-Essex,” Lattmann says. “I can honestly say that if it was not for the private investors we could not have shot the film. One in particular took the time to not only to put cash on the table, but he also showed up on set every day and played an instrumental role in saving us money, time and resources in other more physically tangible ways.” That investor, Lattmann says, prefers to remain anonymous for now, “but his work and efforts should be noted because he exemplifies the kind of spirit that is absolutely crucial to getting films made in this country.” 23