In today's Toronto Star there was a feature article on the front page of the Metropolis section written by author Dave Bidini ("On A Cold Road") and renowned guitarist for The Rheostatics. The premise of the piece is the '50 Songs of Toronto' by way of Dave's personal experience. No criteria. Just personal picks of classic songs that remind him of Hogtown. The #1 song, ironically, was London, Ontario's The Demics and their somewhere-over-the-rainbow-inspired "New York City". Bullseye Records has three of its artists in this Top 50: Goddo, Bob Segarini and The Kings. Indirectly we have another three: Dave Rave (as a member of Teenage Head), Walter Zwol (who was the leader of Brutus) and The Diodes (whose third album we plan to release this year). Here are the quotes: #40. "(SO) WALK ON" - GODDO Goddo had a management team that handled Long John Baldry, Angela Bowie, and Cathy MacDonald. One night we were playing at Uncle Sam's in Niagara Falls, and they tried to get Clive Davis, head of Arista Records, to come to see us. The place was jam-packed; Goddo was in its heyday. All night we kept looking out into the crowd, thinking, "Where are they? Where are they?" What had happened was, they picked up Clive in New York and flew him to Buffalo on the night of the worst snowstorm of the year. The plane sat on the tarmac for three hours where Clive fought with his boyfriend. What the management should have done was take Clive and his boyfriend to the hotel and say. "Let's do this another night." But instead they drove them to our gig. When they got to the club, the boyfriend got out and came in and the place was going gaga. We were in the middle of an encore, people were going nuts. Clive David refused to get out of the car. He sat there and wouldn't sign us on the principal that the band had ruined his evening. [excerpted from Greg Godovitz's book 'Travels With My Amp']. #37 "DON'T BELIEVE A WORD I SAY" - SEGARINI On marble vinyl, from 'Gotta Have Pop'. In the '80s, Toronto had some great radio shows: The Edge of Night, The Iceman, The Six O'Clock Rock Report, The Eclectic Spirit. (Bob) Segarini, I believe, was on all of them! #28 "NEW YORK (I LOVE MY CITY)" - ZWOL One in a series of tributes to the Big Apple, back when musicians were too frightened and wary to sing about home. Of the second Rheostatics demo, (Walter) Zwol once advised: "It's good, but it's all wrong!!" #9 "THIS BEAT GOES ON/SWITCHIN' TO GLIDE" - THE KINGS Like Max Webster, The Kings walked the suspension bridge between CHUM's Hard Rock and CFNY's New Wave. This delicious pop triptych ("This Beat Goes On" was grafted by producer Bob Ezrin) arrived in the summer of '79 when The Kings played HEATWAVE, the New Wave's Woodstock, taking the stage after Costello and the Talking Heads, playing to a sea of backward denim. That day, Nick Lowe of Rockpile told the crowd: "There's been three babies born here today and they'll all be named 'Heatwave'!". #5 "TIRED OF WAKING UP TIRED" - THE DIODES The Beatles of Toronto New Wave, but what happened? Lots of bands born too early were required to throw themselves across the highway so that Matthew Good could make a living. Such is the nature of progress, I suppose, in industry as in rock and roll. But, in 1979 there was no industry. Just clubs and a few people. And music like a meat hook. #3 "LET'S SHAKE" - TEENAGE HEAD In 1978 they sounded like THE GREATEST BAND IN THE WORLD. And then: the accident. This hippy shaker came post-Ontario Place riot, drawn from an album named for a place that wasn't: 'Frantic City'. Still, the band and its fans emerged at a time when a huddle of 300 kept the threat of rock and roll alive in the face of Bay Street Orange Toronto. "Let's Shake" was more apropos of its time than "Kissin' The Carpet" but both are great tunes. Jaimie Vernon, President, http://www.bullseyecanada.com #1 West Hill Dr., Toronto, ON M1E 3T4 Canada (416) 284-7067 _________________________________________________________________ MSN 8 with e-mail virus protection service: 2 months FREE* http://join.msn.com/?page=features/virus