Edmonton Journal

Bachman brings stories behind the songs.

Randy Bachman When: Tuesday at 8 p.m. Where: Winspear Centre Tickets: $31.50 to $67.50 plus service charge at the Winspear box office or winspearce­ntre. com/tickets

- PETER SIMPSON Postmedia News

Randy Bachman is speaking of his upcoming concert tour and being either disingenuo­us or modest.

“The good thing about Vinyl Tap,” Bachman says of his national radio show, “is that it’s on CBC everywhere, so I can go to Inuvik or Iqaluit … and get a crowd who listen to my show on CBC. They know who I am and they know my music.”

Bachman may be the only person in Canada who believes he needs the exposure of his radio show, as hugely popular as it is, to earn name recognitio­n from coast to coast and ensure good crowds at his Vinyl Tap Live concert tour, which hits Edmonton on Tuesday.

Decades have passed since the Guess Who and BachmanTur­ner Overdrive earned him internatio­nal fame and a secure space on the highest shelf of Canadian popular culture.

What Canadian hasn’t heard a dozen of the classics created by the bands of Randy Bachman? American Woman, No Time, Takin’ Care of Business, You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet — all staples of the classic-rock radio format, and on both sides of the Canada-U.S. border.

How ironic, then, that Bachman’s radio show, Vinyl Tap, has succeeded by being precisely what classic-rock radio is not. As anybody who listens to the program on CBC Radio on Friday, Saturday or Sunday nights knows, the only format for Vinyl Tap is whatever strikes Bachman’s fancy, based on a list of changing and whimsical themes.

The theme format of the two-hour show, he says, “allowed me the broad spectrum of drawing from 50 years of me growing up with rock ’n’ roll, and being able to play Frank Sinatra and Lady Gaga, and then Madonna and then Led Zeppelin, all in the same show. I found out my audience really likes that diverse kind of programmin­g, rather than hearing the same songs every three hours, like most radio stations now that have a loop.”

From one week to the next the theme on Vinyl Tap could switch from songs with double words in the title to songs about motorcycle­s, but what’s never been a theme is the music of Randy Bachman.

Now it will be the theme, not on radio but onstage in his new concert format.

“It really is welcome to Randy’s Vinyl Tap, the stories behind my songs,” he says. With the musicians who have backed him onstage for years — Brent Howard, Marc LaFrance and Mick Dalla-Vee — Bachman will perform 15 of his most popular songs from his years with the Guess Who and BTO, and introduce each song with a story. A screen behind the stage will show old photos and videos to illustrate the stories.

“I start with Prairie Town and I then go to Shakin’ All Over, tell how the Guess Who got their name, how Burton Cummings joined the band, how we went to play in Saskatchew­an, went to a Joni Mitchell concert, met Joni, met my first wife there, wrote These Eyes for my first wife, on and on and on.” On and on, indeed. Bachman is an irrepressi­ble storytelle­r, and during an interview it’s difficult to get a word in.

He raves about how good his backing band is — “They know about 10,000 songs, they’ve been together 25 years.” — how the stage will be decorated to look like a working studio — “open guitar cases, pizza boxes all over, drinks everywhere” — how the music onstage will sound — “The songs are going to sound exactly like on the records.” — and how pleased everyone will be after the show.

“Everybody leaves totally blasted with four decades of Canadian soundtrack rock ’n’ roll.”

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 ?? LANCE THOMSON/ NHLI VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Randy Bachman tells the stories behind his songs on his upcoming concert tour, which comes to Edmonton on Tuesday.
LANCE THOMSON/ NHLI VIA GETTY IMAGES Randy Bachman tells the stories behind his songs on his upcoming concert tour, which comes to Edmonton on Tuesday.

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