Windsor Star

Guess Who tapes saved from dumpster

Trove from ’70s to go to museum in Winnipeg

- Rob DRinkwateR

W I N N I P E G • A trove of The Guess Who tapes recently saved from a Winnipeg garage are stoking speculatio­n there might be unfinished songs from the legendary Canadian rock band that have never been heard before. “There’s lots of boxes marked in the ’70s that say ‘Rehearsal tape: Guess Who’ that are of great interest to us,” says Tom Kowalsky, a longtime veteran of Winnipeg’s music scene who donated the approximat­ely 100 tapes to a small museum in the city last week. The dates on the labels run from 1971 up to 1996. They include masters recorded at studios in Winnipeg, videotapes of performanc­es on public television in Iowa and live recordings.

According to Kowalsky, they belonged to an employee of The Guess Who who got them from a band member, but ended up needing to store them in the garage of his sister and brother-in-law for a few months.

A few months turned into more than 10 years, and Kowalsky says the relatives were about to throw them into the trash.

“I don’t understand the circumstan­ces how he secured them from a band member, but of course, in the topsy-turvy rock ’n’ roll world, we don’t all live in comfortabl­e three-bedroom bungalows. Sometimes you gotta bug out, as it were, and move, and that’s what happened and things get lost.” “Literally, the day before they were going to throw them into a dumpster, they just couldn’t sleep over what they knew they were tossing away. But an abandonmen­t order had been written up and there was no reply, and really they needed to get this huge plethora of stuff out of their garage.” Luckily, they called Kowalsky, who picked them up and donated them to the St. Vital Museum, which has a collection of Winnipeg rock memorabili­a.

The Guess Who was formed in Winnipeg and became Canada’s leading rock band of the late ’60s and early ’70s, with such millionsel­ling hits as These Eyes, Laughing and American Woman. Kowalsky hasn’t heard or watched any of the tapes yet because they’re on a variety of obsolete formats and he doesn’t have the machines to play them. There’s 24-track, DAT, ADAT audio tapes and large-format Beta video cassettes.

But the city’s music community has stepped up with their own vintage players and are bringing them to the museum next weekend.

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