Have you ever been to a concert to see the headlining band and suddenly
find yourself asking, "Who the fuck was that awesome opening band?!"
Well, that's what happens the first time you see The Trews perform live.
This Canadian band has stolen the limelight wherever they play and it seems
that they are finally being rewarded with a fan following that is both dedicated
and loyal, and media types who are normally bored writing about the "next
great band to come along in years" are finally sitting up and taking
notice. These four Antigonish, Nova Scotia guys are just what you need to
clear your mind of the same old mundane crap that seems to come out of the
here today, gone tomorrow music industry. With melody-laced tunes, beautiful
lyrics and the voices to sustain them, plus their energy-induced live shows,
The Trews are not going to be forgotten anytime soon.
Getting their start wasn't easy however, especially when you live on
the forgotten East Coast of Canada. They decided to relocate to Niagara
Falls, Ontario, and in 2002 the band won a contest at a local rock radio
station that proved to be the break they needed. Realizing this hard rocking
band had something different to offer, Sony/BMG liked what they heard
and snapped them up quickly, signing them to a record deal. They released
their first full-length CD House of Ill Fame in 2003, which garnered
them hit singles such as "Every Inambition", "Tired of
Waiting", "Fleeting Trust" and "Confessions".
The single "Not Ready To Go" hit number one on Canadian rock
radio and was the most played song of 2004 in that format. Not surprisingly,
it hit Certified Gold in Canada. The band released their follow-up to
House of Ill Fame, Den of Thieves in late 2005. Singles off that
album include, "So She's Leaving", "Yearning", "Poor
Ol' Broken Hearted Me" and "I Can't Say." The Trews released
Den Of Thieves in American stores on April 18, 2006 through Red
Ink/Sony/BMG. I had the opportunity to speak with lead guitarist and vocalist,
John-Angus MacDonald, the day after they won an Indie Award in Toronto
for Favorite Rock Group, as voted by the fans.
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JA: Yeah,
we sort of came to realize that it was time for a break in December. We
wrapped up the last leg of the Canadian stuff for Den Of Thieves.
We did a few dates with Guns N' Roses, and we'd been on this campus tour,
and we were all getting pretty tired. So we consciously decided to cut
down from then on. And we haven't been super busy since then, intentionally,
just because we kind of feel that in this business, it's all about your
next record and your next song and what you can do next. And albums and
songs stick around a lot longer than live performances, so it's becoming
increasingly important to take some down-time, reflect on what we're doing
and writing. So since December, we've only done probably around twenty
shows or something like that, which for us, is not very much. We did a
couple of weeks in the States in February, at the end of February. We
just got back last week actually and that was good. We did a New York
show and did a conference down in Nashville and went to Chicago and a
few of the major cities and it was good, but right now our main focus
is "what's next?"
TP: You've had great success in Canada already, with
two gold albums and 6 top ten rock radio singles. How does it make you
feel to know that the band is finally being recognized by their peers
in the industry, as well as media types, as a hard-rocking, hard-working,
melody-laced, rock band, something your devoted fans have already known
and appreciated for years?
JA: Hmmm, that's a loaded question...
TP: I know...
JA: I think that's a nice way to describe us, hard-working/hard-rocking.
We work as hard as we rock and we rock as hard as we work. It's nice that
the industry at large has been acknowledging what we've been doin' all
along. You know, we ask ourselves this question a lot, it's like, "Would
we be doing this without it?" And I think we would always be playing
music, but the avenues that it has afforded us, it's totally changed our
lives. We're really grateful for it, you know?
TP: Totally. In your opinion, do you think it's easier
or more difficult than in the past, for a Canadian band to make it in
Canada?
JA: Easier. I think it's getting easier, because people
are finally paying attention to Canada in a big way internationally, and
of course the Internet has just blown the whole thing wide open, which
is obvious. There are so many ways to get out there now. I was doing a
phoner with a Japanese magazine and they were asking about all the Montreal
bands and all the underground bands and they were totally hip to that,
everything is instantaneous now. So I think in a lot of ways you can get
more attention, but I guess by the same token, there's more competition
because everybody's got the same avenues available. But I think what's
good ultimately floats to the surface, and I think right now is a good
time for Canada.
TP: What about a Canadian band trying to make it in the
States?
JA: Well that's a tough one. Like an age-old question,
who gets to make it in the States? It seems like the luck of the draw
to me sometimes. For us it's been a rough ride so far because we got involved
in this record deal that wasn't too beneficial to us and they didn't work
very hard, so one thing we did do, was tour a lot. We did like fifty or
sixty shows down there and the fans we earned from doing that, still come
to see us, as we learned a couple of weeks ago from going down there.
And they're loyal. The thing about Americans is that they're loyal as
hell!! When they get something in their head, it's hard to get it out
of there. So when they decide they're into your band, they'll stick by
it. The experience for us has been, it's been a long ride, but we don't
intend on giving up anytime soon.
TP: Great to hear! So do you feel that Canadian musicians
get the recognition and respect that they deserve?
JA: Yeah, I mean, look at Nelly Furtado and Nickelback
and these are like the biggest bands in the world and they're Canadian.
In one way, Canadian music is totally getting what it deserves...it's
not my music, not what I listen to and like and make, but Canada is totally
a serious player internationally and everyone knows it. But there are
lots of other bands I'd like to see have the same success, ours included!
But I can't say Canada is being shunned or anything. Canadians are making
enormous headway all over the place.
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photo by nancy desrosiers
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TP: Yup, I
agree...so Den Of Thieves was released in the United States on
April 18th of last year. How do you think the band has been received in
the States, where most people there have never even heard of Antigonish
(pronounced Ann-ee-gon-ish), let alone Nova Scotia?
JA: Well as I mentioned, we toured and we toured with
bands that were like us, with like-minded fans--one band, called Will
Hoge, have become great friends of ours, and another band called Rose
Hill Drive, who are amazing, and these are bands that are doing it the
same way we like to do it, which is to get out and show people that you
mean business and that you're not some fabrication of machines (laughs)--and
we earned fans from that, from those tours, from those dates, that stand
by us to this day and that's great! As far as the industry at large in
the States, it's like a tough nut to crack, you know, because they tend
not to let too many outsiders in, so you have to get in line and hope
for your name to be called, I guess.
TP: I've heard that there are at least one or two of
you in the band that are the real practical jokers. Who's the worst for
pulling pranks and what did they do to deserve that title?
JA: I think we're all sort of equal in this...you know
the road can get real boring if you at least don't make it interesting
for yourself. So some of the things we like to do is to try and prank
other bands, prank each other, it's like a constant evolution, this constant
circle of pranks. Everybody gets their turn. I dunno, we're all pretty
bad (laughs).
TP: Has any band ever gotten the better of you guys?
JA: Yeah, yeah...
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TP: Have they?
JA: Oh yeah, it's sort of a thing you know, bands, their
last night of touring and they...well, I remember one case, Big Sugar,
on the last day of the tour we were doing with them, had covered our stage
in male porn, just so that we could see it, the audience couldn't see
it, but everywhere we looked, on our monitors, on top of our amps, on
the drum heads of Sean's drums. We couldn't look anywhere without seeing
this really graphic porno, so they got us...but, we got 'em back!!
TP: Too funny! So who is the level-headed guy in the
band, the guy who keeps things together when they seem to be falling apart?
JA: I think that the other guys might bestow that upon
me (laughs). I don't want to say it's me, without sounding, you know...
TP: Well you've got to be honest, right?
JA: Yeah, well that's sort of been my role, just to mediate
between the negative and positive influences.
TP: And who would you say is the least organized of the
group?
JA: Probably...Colin or Jack.
TP: What is the best part of being on the road?
JA: The best part is...the music.
TP: Just playing the music?
JA: I don't think we'd be sitting in a van or a bus or
a plane together, 24 hours a day, just to hang out (laughs). So if there
wasn't a show at the end of the tunnel, at the end of the rainbow, then
we wouldn't be able to do this. The music is the best part of the road.
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TP: It helps
to have him there to bounce creative ideas off each other...
JA: Yeah, and that goes for the other two guys, for Sean
and Jack too, because we spend so much time together. I mean, Sean is
a cousin of mine and Colin's, and Jack is a friend since childhood. We
just know where the other is coming from, generally and creatively. We
know roughly who brings what to the table, so I think that understanding
is cool.
TP: Definitely. And your sister Kate sings as well. I
believe she sang back-up on one of your songs off your debut album, House
Of Ill Fame, titled "You're So Sober". Do you come from
a musical family background? Is everyone in your family musically inclined?
JA: Oh yeah, everybody plays something. I have a little
brother who plays bass, and my younger sister is great at piano. And Kate
is a great singer, and my dad played, and my grandfather on my mom's side
was a country player, and so everybody in my immediate family was musical
and music was always a part of my life growing up, whether it was the
records and tapes and CDs that were on, or just the sing-a-longs and the
kitchen party things. So it's always been a part of my life.
TP: And who were the guitarists that you emulated and
considered your heroes growing up?
JA: Well, early on it was Slash. He was my first love
on guitar, and that was probably what convinced me to pick up the guitar,
was hearing Slash play.
TP: Really...
JA: Oh yeah, definitely. I mean, he was great. I still
love it. I still listen to those old Guns N' Roses albums and think that
he's so fresh and original and unbridled, and I definitely love that.
And since then it's been about Jeff Beck and Joe Perry and Mick Ronson.
And Gordy Johnson had a big influence, and guys like that.
TP: So besides the great wine, what made the band decide
to relocate to Niagara Falls, Ontario and make that city their home base,
as opposed to staying out on the East Coast?
JA: And what was the first part? Besides the what?
TP: The great wine...
JA: Great wine (laughs), that was it!! I think it was
the heart-shaped jacuzzis and all that stuff...
TP: Oh really?! So you're kind of the kinky guy in the
band then, right?
JA: Yeah exactly! I think we felt that we weren't getting
any love on the East Coast from the industry because we weren't from Halifax.
We were from outside of Halifax, and we just felt like outsiders there,
so why would we be outside of Halifax when we could be outside of Toronto?
(laughs) And we were aiming on coming here (Toronto), but we couldn't
afford it, we didn't have day jobs, and we ended up in the Falls, which
I don't regret for a second, because we met some great people. We rented
this house, and we ended up writing the whole first record in that house.
It was cool; it was a good experience.
TP: So what was it like coming from a small town such
as Antigonish, Nova Scotia and trying to make a name for yourselves in
the music industry, how difficult was it for you, for the band?
JA: It was a long road. We started playing together--myself
and Colin and Jack--and I was like 15 years old and in grade 10, and we
did the high school thing and we'd gig on the weekends. Then once we got
out of school, we decided we wanted to keep doing it. We didn't let anything...we
didn't back down and let anything get us down. A lot of anti-shows, a
lot of industry criticisms of what you should be doing and all that shit,
so we never backed down from what we thought was cool and we kept it up.
It was a long road. It took till--I mean even now, we're still fighting--and
every time you get to a new level, you see the next one and you want to
start climbing towards it.
TP: Exactly. So what are some of the things you want
the band to accomplish in the next year, or say even in the next five
years?
JA: Well I'd like to see us get a little more recognition,
do what we're doing up here, in America, it's important for us--same with
Europe, where we have releases coming up, and in Japan--to develop a rapport
with our audiences, like we have in Canada and in other places in the
world. And also to keep getting better as a band and getting better as
songwriters and making better records every time.
TP: And for yourself, on a personal level, what are some
of the things you want to accomplish?
JA: I'd like to have my own house in the country somewhere,
at some point. That would be nice. But right now we're still in working
mode and I haven't really thought of myself outside of that too much.
TP: Well, you have been kind of busy...
JA: Yeah exactly.
TP: You guys have toured with some pretty awesome bands
and artists over the past three years, like the Stones, Sam Roberts, Evanescence,
Finger Eleven, Robert Plant, the list just goes on and on. Do you prefer
playing large festival-type gigs, or smaller, more intimate venues? Each
one has it's good and bad points and both offer something different, but
which do you guys prefer playing?
JA: I gotta say the best shows that I ever attended,
have been in small clubs. We got to see the Stones in a small club and
Toots And The Maytals in a small club...and these are shows I remember
because you feel like you're a part of something. And the sound's enveloping
you and it takes you away. For the most part you're staring at a screen
at a festival or at an arena. It's just a different approach. The short
answer is we like playing a club better, because, and I think most bands
would tell you, that it's a better exchange of energy, a better exchange
of sound, it's a different mentality when you go out and you're playing
in a rink or you're playing at an arena or whatever it is, you have to
shift your whole thing. You gotta realize that there's people a half a
mile away with binoculars and you've got to play to them as much as you've
gotta play to the front row. So it's just a different philosophy. It's
certainly a lot more glamorous to be playing the arenas, but I think we
like the intimacy of a club better.
TP: Well John, I could spend all afternoon talking to
you, but I know you're really busy and you have things to do and places
to go, so I'll end this interview by asking you if there are any messages
for the fans, or anything you'd like to add that I didn't ask you?
JA: As far as the fans go, I've always got to take the
chance to tell them they're the best fans in the world. They've done so
much for us, from winning that award last night, to being up for Artist
Of The Year, they're always on line supporting us, there for us and helping
us, which is just something we can't be more grateful for.
TP: Yes, I've been on your Myspace site and I've seen
how the fans are extremely supportive of the band and will bash anyone
who says anything negative. They're just right on top of everything. Anything
they need to vote on, anything like that, if they're needed, they're there...
JA: They're so motivated aren't they?
TP: Yeah, it really is incredible! I want to thank you
for taking the time to do this interview today.
JA: No problem!
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