If it was left to the merits of the tape alone, the scruffy bleach blonde whose white tank top reveals arms covered in tattoos, would never be sitting at the Cambridge Suites hotel next to I Mother Earth guitarist and producer (with Paul Northfield) Jag Tanna doing interviews behind the band's third album, Blue Green Orange (due July 13). " /> CANOE -- JAM! Music - Artists - I Mother Earth : New IME singer a colourful character

 


June 30, 1999
Jam
Music
      Artists A-Z
      Album Reviews
      Concert Reviews
      Concert Listings
      SoundScan Charts
      Lowdown Column
      Pop Encyclopedia

Movies
Television
Video
Theatre
Books
Country




ENT Blog
RSS Feed

MACCA



New IME singer a colourful character
By KAREN BLISS


TORONTO -- Toronto percussive rock band I Mother Earth received all sorts of audition demos from contenders hoping to fill the position vacated by frontman Edwin. There was the girl who sang a Moist song a cappella, a guy who roared into a video camera, "If you pick me, I'm going to be the best man for the job, 'YEAHHHH!' then there was the guy whose tape was passed on by a third party. The singer in question was Newfoundland native Brian Byrne from a metal band called Klaven.

If it was left to the merits of the tape alone, the scruffy bleach blonde whose white tank top reveals arms covered in tattoos, would never be sitting at the Cambridge Suites hotel next to I Mother Earth guitarist and producer (with Paul Northfield) Jag Tanna doing interviews behind the band's third album, Blue Green Orange (due July 13).

But there was something about Byrne's voice, raw and gritty, that would prove capable of emoting in a variety of ways on his debut recording with I Mother Earth, from sexy ease on "All Awake" to insistent dementia on the first single, "Summertime In The Void". "That's why we picked him because he had tone in every one of those ranges. He had a character and that's tough to find," explains Tanna, who's sporting micro-Medusa spiked blue dreads and a green elastic wound around his goatee.

Tanna laughs when asked if he enjoyed Klaven's music. "No, not at all," he says honestly, "but I saw a video tape of (Brian). It was like a metal band with somebody else singing, somebody who didn't fit in, and that's what made him stick out."

Once, I Mother Earth -- Tanna, his brother Christian Tanna (drums) and Bruce Gordon (bass) -- heard Byrne's tape, it still had touring commitments with Edwin for Edgefest '97. All the while, Tanna continued talking with Byrne on the phone, getting to know him, before even hearing him sing live. He was certain the Klaven tape did not do him justice.

"By the time we got off the road, I already knew this guy. I kept telling the guys, 'I like this guy. He should be in the band,'" Tanna recounts. "But we still had to hear the final thing -- singing (laughs). We don't need a drinking buddy. We need someone who can sing. But he turned out to be both. By the time, we got back, he just stood in front of us and sang and he sounded way different than the tape."

The band kept its decision quiet for some time, announcing it had found a singer on its web site Nov. 13 , but not disclosing his name. It was actually David Usher who let it slip at a Moist gig at Massey Hall Nov. 21, when he called him out onstage and introduced him as the new I Mother Earth singer.

"We've never gone around and spouted off about things that don't concern anybody," says Tanna. "It was no big secret, otherwise we wouldn't have done a tour. We were going through our learning process with Brian. What if it had gone bad or he just didn't want to do it anymore, then we would have looked like idiots."

For the better part of 1998, right up until Byrne unveiled his youthful energy and unglossy delivery live at a few warm-up club shows then at the Summersault festival, the band all worked on the new material at Tanna's home studio. "We were supposed to start at 10 a.m. every morning and for three months, he kept showing up at eight with coffee," Tanna chuckles. "I found it really refreshing because I'd get up and start working right away before the (Chris and Bruce) showed up."

While the first collaboration, "Butterfly Tree", didn't make Blue Green Orange,, the next two co-writes, "All Awake" and "Autumn On Drugs", did. "He wasn't officially in the band when we wrote these songs," says Tanna. "We were just calling out ideas and seeing how he'd interpret them.

"We just have a certain way of putting music together that I think is very different than a lot of bands. We demand a certain amount of effort and we have a really high standard for everybody in the band, not just Brian. The same standard fits for Chris and Bruce and myself. It's a whole new thing for him, recording, writing, like that, so by the time we had actually got to recording, we had been around each other for so long, there was no question."

As for Byrne, he was quite willing to meet the demands. "I didn't argue that because there's two really great albums as their proof," he says referring to I Mother Earth's 1993 debut, Dig, and 1996 follow-up, Scenery And Fish.


HOT MUSIC HEADLINES
Whitney remembered for her best days
Grammys award lifetime achievements
Tony Bennett says legalize drugs
Live Review: Kathleen Edwards in T.O.
2012 Grammy Awards preview
Winehouse coroner suspended
'TLC' singer's bankruptcy case tossed
McCartney rehearses for Grammys
Whitney Houston dead at 48
Grammy stars honour McCartney
More Headlines
Live Review: City and Colour in T.O
Springsteen set to kick off Grammys
V-Day theme tops CD reviews
Meet Blue Ivy Carter
Madonna calls out M.I.A. gesture
Adele sings for Anderson Cooper
Canuck Grammy class of 2012
Gotye speaks on Walk Off signing
Elton seeks advice on raising son
Pickler considering adoption


Who's coming and when
Want to know when your favourite band is coming to town? Check out Clive, JAM Music's extensive Canadian concert listings.
TV Listings
Wondering what's on tonight? Check out our TV listings for the complete schedule in your area.
Movie Listings
Find out what's playing at a theatre near you.

1. Leonard Cohen: Old Ideas

2. Adele: 21

3. Lana Del Rey: Born To Die

4. Various: 2012 Grammy Noms

5. Gotye: Making Mirrors

Courtesy Nielsen SoundScan Cda








What did you think of Madonna’s halftime show?
She’s still got it
I wasn’t impressed


Results