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EDMONTON
JOURNAL, MARCH 16, 2007
CANADIAN COWBOY ROUNDING
UP FANS
CALGARY MUSICIAN IS HEADING OFF OFFERS
AS HIS ONSTAGE PRESENCE MATURES AND HIS TOUR SCHEDULE FILLS
UP
by Peter North
It’s an enviable position for an emerging artist to be
in: wondering where the next available hole in your schedule
is. That’s exactly the situation Tim Hus finds himself
in these days.
The Calgarian, who calls his sound “Canadiana Cowboy Music,”
has so impressed audiences and promoters over the last while
that he is going to be focused on the white lines of the nation’s
highways for months to come, travelling from rodeos to soft
-seat theatres.
Playing a two-night stand at the Early Stage Saloon in Stony
Plain this weekend, Hus blew away buyers at the showcase for
the Canadian Association of Fairs and Exhibitions to close out
2006. He has since landed bookings around the country, including
a summer stand at the Canadian Lakehead Exhibition in Thunder
Bay, which will sit nicely with his booking at the Dauphin Countryfest,
Manitoba’s version of our Big Valley Jamboree. “I’ll
be making my first mainstage appearance at Big Valley this summer,”
says Hus, who writes about everything from pipeliners and long-haul
truck drivers to the bootleggers and bronc riders who owned
the West a century ago.
Influenced by the clipped cadence of Stompin’ Tom Connors
and the imagery of Ian Tyson, Hus likes to wrap his tunes with
a bailing-wire bow that comes from the twang of a Telecaster.
Sonically it allows the singer-songwriter to get the immediate
attention of any crowded barroom and cut through any racket
he might be competing with at the start of a night. “We’re
please with how the audiences are responding. These are pretty
good times for us and it’s a nice predicament to be in,
trying to fit in all the offers to play,” adds Hus, who
was one of the featured artists at the Smithsonian Folklife
Festival in Washington last summer.
It was there that popular country broadcaster Alison Brock thought
Hus really showed signs of coming into his own. “Tim has
always been so real onstage and he writes about real things
and situations, but he’s now got this poise and is able
to interact more closely with his audience. He’s matured
as a performer and when he does Danny Mack’s Canadian
Cowboy, I’d swear it was written for him. It’s so
cool to see his star rising,” Brock says of Hus, who has
another big fan and friend in Corb Lund. “Tim’s
awesome. He’s one of my favorite Canadian songwriters,”
insists Lund. “Nobody captures the rough-and-ready frontier
imagery better than him.”
Hus will play three sets featuring tunes from his latest disc,
Huskies & Husqvarnas, starting at 8 p.m. The early Stage
Saloon, which should be packed, is located at 4911 52nd Ave.,
in Stony Plain.
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Tim Hus Music Copyright 2008
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