INTERVIEW
WITH FAST FORWARD WEEKLY, APRIL 29, 2004
WORKIN' MAN
The driving beat of Tim Hus’s Alberta Crude
Preview
TIM HUS
Saturday, May 1
Merlot
"I’ve got quite a list of jobs," says
Tim Hus as we discuss the blue-collar, workin’ man
background that crops up in so many of the Calgary troubadour’s
songs. "You want them all?"
Naw, that’s OK Tim. Suffice to say
that the guy has been around – with stints as a
saw-hand at a logging camp and another on board a salmon
fishing boat being two of his past gigs. What’s
more important to note is that this is an uncommon case
where the singer is almost indistinguishable from the
song. Over the space of two records – the newest,
Alberta Crude, being released mere days from now –
Hus has populated his tunes with miners, gravel pit workers
and a host of other workin’ men and women that bear
scant difference to himself. When it came time to start
writing his own acoustic driven, rootsy songs, Hus says
it just made sense.
"It’s not calculated, it’s
just that musically this is where I fit in," says
Hus. "It’s something I can do. I’ve got
a voice for it and those are songs I can write because
it’s something that I know." Indeed he does
have a voice for it, one reminiscent of Stompin’
Tom Connors, one of Hus’s heroes. It ain’t
an affectation though – after a minute of conversation
you’ll realize his husky twang comes naturally and
Hus is just singin’ with the only voice he’s
got. The comparisons would probably end there but Hus
also shares Connors’s penchant for keeping his subject
matter north of the 49th parallel. That’s mostly
because Canadian country music, he maintains, is already
overfull with clichés about the American south.
"How come we’re all singin’
about the bayou and Mississippi and shit?" he asks.
"I write about Canada. It’s something I can
honestly write about and, ironically, pretty much nobody’s
doin’ it."
True enough. There’s a handful of
like-minded musicians such as Alberta’s Corb Lund,
but country music is increasingly less about the actual
country and, as Hus states with a sardonic chuckle, more
about "pop music made for secretaries in office buildings
now." Which makes Alberta Crude something of an aberration
– and refreshingly different too.
Kicking off with the title track, a detailed
story of the original Alberta oil boom, all 11 tracks
are devoted to uniquely western Canadian experiences with
sparse, rustic guitar licks and simple, driving beats
– the kind meant to keep fingers drumming on the
steering wheel. Whether it’s a tune about a quintessential
small town saloon with a 12-point elk rack on the wall
and Ian Tyson on the jukebox, or the tale of a life chasing
Yukon gold, it’s all custom designed to please both
urban roots fans and the small town and rural folk.
It’s the latter crowd Hus prefers
playing for, "the old guys out there stringing fence
wire." Too long have they had to endure chart topping
"boy bands" (Hus’s term) like Emerson
Drive and Rascal Flatts – and they appreciate the
step back to an older form of songwriting. "They’re
like, ‘Holy shit it’s nice to have this back,’"
he says. "Because there’s only so many old
Marty Robbins songs you can listen to, right?"
CELEB TOP FIVE
The Top Five best day jobs ever held by
singer-songwriter Tim Hus
1. Beer truck driver in Germany –
You always have the right of way and people cheer when
you arrive
2. Employee at a trout farm fish hatchery
3. Carpenter
4. Saw hand at a logging camp
5. Deckhand on a fishing boat
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