MUSIC PREVIEW
by SEE Staff
Bob Egan
With Robin Hunter
Saturday, May 5
At the New City Likwid Lounge
He might well be the secret link that binds the new wave of Canadian
country rock bands together. He's certainly someone they all agree
on. In the short period of time that pedal-steel-player Bob Egan
has been in our country, he just seems to have taken over. Even
Egan thinks it's funny.
"I was talking to the Sadies, who just came off the road,
and they were saying people kept coming up and telling them, 'Oh
yeah, we know Bob,' or 'Bob Egan played on our record' all across
Canada."
Originally hailing from the U.S., Egan made his mark with Freakwater
in the mid-1990s. A crossover tour with Wilco resulted in his being
asked to join that band for the album Being There through to the
Mermaid Avenue collaborations with Billy Bragg. He hit Canada as
a backup musician, working as part of the Billy Bragg band that
played the Folk Festival a few years back. Within a year he was
Canada's first choice for pedal steel, turning up on the Tragically
Hip's Phantom Power, Neko Case's Furnace Room Lullaby and Oh Susanna's
Johnstown. It was at the latter session that he first met Blue Rodeo
bassist Bazil Donovan, who struck up a rapport with the guitarist.
The two ended up touring Norway together, and Egan was eventually
asked to join Blue Rodeo. The guitarist characterizes the resulting
150 shows in one year as "a pretty intense introduction to
Canadian culture," but also seems to be enjoying his tenure
with the easygoing icons of Canadian country rock.
"We're just finishing up our next record, and that will be
coming out in October. In October the Rodeo will hit it really hard,
the big tour behind the record. It's part of the cycle, but between
now and then, we're not going to be working much, so every spare
moment I have will be used towards making the most of this wonderful
opportunity."
Recorded in Greg Keelor's farmhouse studio in the winter of 2001,
The Promise is Egan's second solo album and a considerable leap
from his 1999 debut. The songs are co-written by Bazil Donovan,
while the band includes such well-regarded musicians as Donovan,
Travis Good (the Sadies), Richard Bell (Janis Joplin, the Band)
and Blue Rodeo bandmate Glenn Milchem, with the Be Good Tanyas popping
in for some background harmonies. In preparation for a May release,
Egan has already started to work on the new album, having just returned
from a bare-bones tour of Europe, where he hooked up with Richard
Buckner for a few shows. Ready for anything, Egan not only opened
the shows with his own material, but also lugged his pedal steel
around in order to back up Buckner. The hard work has started to
pay off, as Egan was gratified to learn.
"We played in Manchester, in this really seedy, bad neighbourhood.
We were pretty tired from London, and a lot of people came out.
During my opening set, it became apparent that these people knew
the songs from my first record. I was blown away; afterwards I sold
a whack of records, and people kept coming up to me saying how much
they liked my record. And so
there's this little pocket in
Manchester." He laughs happily. "Fans of Bob, right?"
He's rounding them up one by one, but that doesn't seem to phase
the indefatigable steel-player.
"I'm grateful for opportunity to work at music. I'm a very
lucky man. The thing is, I owe it to the craft, y'know? I'm in the
rare position of being able to make a living at playing music, and
I don't take that for granted at all. That's probably the tenth
time I've said that," he notes wryly. "But I think what
that means is that there's a responsibility: step up to the plate,
and learn and grow."
Bob Egan helps the New City Likwid Lounge celebrate their fifth
anniversary with guest Robin Hunter, who isn't such a bad guitarist
himself.
TOM MURRAY
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