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Over at radio CKMO in the late 40's bassist Andy Fraser
would sing on air when he wasn't spinning the latest
discs while Bill Rea, a young dreamer from Saskatchewan,
tuned in and made plans.
The mercurial and irascible Rea would soon found
the mighty CKNW where country music was the staple
into the 60s. He regularly invited local talent to
his Bill Rea's Round-up like the Beckett Brothers,
Evan Kemp - later a big name in Canada and the States
- and the Rhythm Pals, who went on to work in national
TV in Toronto.
The biggest hit the Rhythm Pals never had was called
"My Home By the Fraser", recorded in 1947.
Written by one Keray Regan, the song was a local hit
until the Fraser River swelled its banks in '48, carrying
off homes and dreams. Suddenly tributes to the mighty,
muddy Fraser weren’t so popular. Later Evan Kemp hosed
off the song, made it a hit and kept it in his repertoire
for years.
Over at radio CKMO in the late 40's bassist Andy Fraser
would sing on air when he wasn't spinning the latest
discs while Bill Rea, a young dreamer from Saskatchewan,
tuned in and made plans.
The mercurial and irascible Rea would soon found the
mighty CKNW where country music was the staple into
the 60s. He regularly invited local talent to his
Bill Rea's Round-up like the Beckett Brothers, Evan
Kemp - later a big name in Canada and the States -
and the Rhythm Pals, who went on to work in national
TV in Toronto.
The biggest hit the Rhythm Pals never had was called
"My Home By the Fraser", recorded in 1947.
Written by one Keray Regan, the song was a local hit
until the Fraser River swelled its banks in '48, carrying
off homes and dreams. Suddenly tributes to the mighty,
muddy Fraser weren’t so popular. Later Evan Kemp hosed
off the song, made it a hit and kept it in his repertoire
for years.
Songwriter Keray Regan's brother was Bob Regan, a
partner with Lucille Starr in the Canadian Sweethearts.
The two had a serious run of success locally and south
of the border in the latter 50s but their marriage
would later crumble in rancor over Lucille's solo
stardom, peaking with her mid 60's international hit,
"The French Song".
In October 1962 the mighty Hurricane Frieda blew
in up the Pacific coast knocking down 3000 trees in
Stanley Park and plunging the entire Lower Mainland
area from Horseshoe Bay to Hope into darkness for
hours. A former morning man at CKNW tagged “Uncle
Joe”, Chesney had just been granted a license for
a 1000 watt country station out of Langley. Through
the 60s and until the 50,000 watt CKWX went with the
format in 1973, CJJC – JC for Joe Chesney – was the
home of country music in the Lower Mainland.
Running CJJC gave Chesney the chance to meet and
help plenty of rising country stars from Johnny Cash
to Dolly Parton but especially a young Loretta Lynn,
based in nearby Custer, Washington, just down the
road from White Rock, who received many a career boost
in these parts from Uncle Joe.
Meanwhile in 1964 entrepreneur Jim Howe began running
a West Burnaby club called The Lamplighter which,
in an era when nightlifers still packed illicit bottles,
boasted BC's first liquor license. While local country
music remained a mainstay of the legions, the Lamplighter
was where you went to catch country radio stars of
the day like Waylon Jennings and Bobby Bare.
Howe was also an early promoter of a BC country legend,
Ray McAuley. Working with guitarist/songwriter Ed
Molyski and managed by 50's Vancouver rocker/talent
promoter/restaurateur Les Vogt and, later, Howe himself,
McAuley had a pending international RCA record contract
when he died young and suddenly of a brain aneurysm
in the mid 70's.
After his death Molyski went on to found the Midnight
Rodeo Band featuring Jess Lee on vocals, bassist Al
Hildebrand and one Chris Volkaert on drums, brother
of ace guitarist Redd Volkaert who in 1997 began a
long association with Merle Haggard playing lead guitar
in his band The Strangers.
Through the latter 70's and into the 80's country
music in Vancouver diverged. On one hand CKWX's Super
Country man, fiddling Elmer Tippe, maintained the
traditional, cozy feel of the genre, playing records
and interviewing visiting Nashville glitteratti and
emerging local stars like Laurie Thain and Rocky Swanson
on his mid-day show.
On the other hand the 80's saw the rise of hip, left
of centre acts like Danny Mack's Cement City Cowboys
and the Billy Cowsill/Ray O'Toole led Blue Northern
harmonizing on their memorable "Can't Make No
Sense Out of Loving You."
When entrepreneur Jimmy Pattison's JR Country began
broadcasting in the mid 80s, a friendly rivalry with
'WX emerged and local country singers, musicians,
songwriters and producers won unprecedented attention
and support. Bootleg and Alibi were two big bands
of the time, the latter managed by Claude Lelievre
and Diana Kelly who later mounted the massive, annual
Merritt Mountain Music Festival summer gala. Both
have also been enthusiastic presidents of the BC Country
Music Association.
The brainchild of a woman named Charlie Galbraith,
the non-profit BCCMA was conceived in 1975 as an awards
vehicle for local country music and today holds an
annual conference and awards show. It has encouraged
and jump-started national and international careers
for the likes of Patricia Conroy, Lisa Brokop, Gary
Fjellgaard, Rick Tippe and Farmer’s Daughter.
The once dominant CKWX switched to an all news format
in 1996 and 'New Country' JRfm is Vancouver's country
music home now, winning multiple national Station
of the Year awards over the years. A longtime JRfm
staple is one Carolyn Dawn Johnson, an Alberta native
who spent formative years in Vancouver honing her
songwriting skills before heading to Nashville and
finding big success, first as a writer and soon after
a solo artist.
By 2006 and the 30th anniversary of the BCCMA the
big smoke in B.C. was coming from a pair of excellent
stage and recording artists, Aaron Pritchett and Karen
Lee Batten, plus the Cruzeros trio out of Kelowna
while up and comers like Damian Marshall and Rachel
Matkin were showing real promise.
Meanwhile traditionalist artists like Wolfe Milestone
and the indefatigable country stalwart Kenny Hess
are ever on guard to remind the young ‘uns what the
real thing is all about.
From Billy Blinkhorn to Lisa Brokop, hillbillys and
hoedowns to the sleek sounds of a new millennium,
country music has always been integral to Vancouver's
cultural life and, so long as hearts ache and the
beer is pouring, it always will.
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