A few years after graduation Jim Cuddy and I started a band called the Hi
Fis, which was in that new wave amphetamine punk school. I listened to a lot of
British Invasion stuff and then, a lot of bands that came out in 76 and 77.
After starting that band, we went down to New York, lived there for a while,
came back and started Blue Rodeo. We needed some players and thought of Cleave
Anderson, our first drummer, as he was in a lot of our favorite bands at the
time. He asked his friend Bazil Donovan to join.
Bobby Wiseman was the younger brother of a friend of ours and we just ended
up jamming with him a few times. His influences were quite different, as he was
more into the improv school of music and jazz, and he brought a whole new
musical avenue to what we were doing. It was very exciting at the time. We
picked the name Blue Rodeo just to underline the country a little bit. I liked a
lot of that San Franciscan music of the late '60s, country Joe and the Fish,
Quicksilver, all those dreamy countrified landscapes.
In the early days we were part of the punk school, so everything was really
loud and aggressive. Even though our records didn't sound like that, we were
always playing maxed-out and fast. I was a little more berserk back then. Now,
the way we play music is consciously different. It's a little more connected. We
were still unruly on stage sometimes, but, as musicians, we were a lot more
disciplined. Like, with this record "Nowhere To Here", it's a little darker, a
little more laid-back. It wasn't meant to be that way. It's just the way it
turned out when you had six guys together in a room in a house in the country,
for four months during winter. Its definitely got a winter feel to it; kinda
spare and reflective.
When I was writing songs for this record I had been living on my farm for an
extended period of time, by myself, without much contact with people. Everything
had equal life to me out there. It was a very pleasant state of mind to be in.
I'd be sitting in this room with this fireplace, and I'd be singing songs to it
all the time like it was listening to me, and we sort of fell in love in a way.
And then, one night, I woke up and my whole bed was covered in flames. There
were tongues of fire everywhere, my mattress was burning and I was consumed in
this fire. I realized that the fire had woken me because she wanted to
consummate her relationship with me, but she knew that if our spirits were to
entwine it would kill my flesh, so she sacrificed herself. To love me she would
have to kill me, so she gave herself. That's where the song "Flaming Bed" came
from. - Greg Keelor