Leslie Spit Treeo

Leslie Spit Treeo
Genres folk rock
Years active 1988-2000
Labels Capitol Records, Page Music
Past members Laura Hubert
Pat Langner
J.D. Nicholsen
Tag

Leslie Spit Treeo were a Canadian folk-rock band in the 1980s and 1990s.[1] The band took its name from the Leslie Street Spit area of Toronto Harbour.[2]

History

The band originally consisted of vocalist Laura Hubert, guitarist Pat Langner and guitarist Jack (J.D.) Nicholsen. Tag, a dog, was the band's mascot and was also listed as their official manager.[3] They first began rehearsing as a band on the Leslie Street Spit, a public park area where they could bring Tag.[4] All three of the human members had a background in theatre, as either actors or writers.[5]

They began as a street busking collective,[2] sometimes with Graeme Kirkland contributing on drums, and won a role in Bruce McDonald's 1989 film Roadkill, playing buskers in a field performing their song "The Sound".[2] They signed to Capitol Records and released their debut album Don't Cry Too Hard in 1990,[6] garnering airplay on rock radio stations with a cover of John Prine's "Angel from Montgomery" and with their own original song "UFO/Catch the Highway". They subsequently won a Juno Award for Most Promising Group at the Juno Awards of 1991.[7]

For their follow-up album, 1992's Book of Rejection, the band brought in guests Jason Sniderman on keyboards, Frank Randazzo on bass and Joel Anderson on drums.[8] That album included some songs from The Book of Rejection, a theatrical show the band had collaborated on with actors Daniel Brooks, Don McKellar and Tracy Wright,[9] and included the band's biggest hit, "In Your Eyes", a Top 20 hit in the fall of 1992 which featured Randy Bachman on guitar. But they felt that they lost creative control of the recording process, and broke their seven-album recording contract.[10]

Nicholsen left the band in 1993 to pursue an acting career.[10] With the core of the band now down to the duo of Langner and Hubert, their 1994 indie album Hell's Kitchen was initially credited to The Spits since the band were no longer a "treeo",[10] but when initial sales were slower than expected, it was re-released under the band's original name.[11]

In 1995 the band appeared in another McDonald film, Dance Me Outside, again playing themselves in concert.[12]

In 1996, the band released the double album Chocolate Chip Cookies in a cookie bag package that closely resembled Chips Ahoy! packaging;[13] after Nabisco threatened the band with a lawsuit, the band burned all the packaging in a bonfire in Toronto's High Park and created a new cookie bag that did not resemble Chips Ahoy!.[13] They re-released the album the following year in a conventional jewel case.[14] For that album's supporting tour, Langner and Hubert were joined by guitarist Jason Reed, bassist Shaun Noronha and drummer Vince Montago.

Chocolate Chip Cookies was the band's last album. Hubert has released three solo jazz recordings and is a fixture on the Toronto jazz scene. Langner is a writer. Nicholsen, who adopted his wife's surname after his marriage and is now credited as Jack Mathews in acting roles, continues to act and sings with The Cameron Family Singers. Tag died in 2000, and was cited as the pretext for the band's breakup.[15]

Discography

Film appearances

References

  1. Kaplan, Jon (2003-11-06). "Matinee idol". NOW Magazine. NOW Communications Inc. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  2. 1 2 3 "Leslie Spit Treeo still true to street-busking roots". Toronto Star, May 11, 1990.
  3. "Two guitars, a kazoo and dog part of acoustic band's charm". Halifax Daily News, January 24, 1991.
  4. "The Leslie Spit Treeo: Still busking for the late-night club crowd". Ottawa Citizen, October 12, 1990.
  5. "Treeo spits in the face of music establishment". Edmonton Journal, December 10, 1992.
  6. "Leslie Spit Treeo, Don't Cry Too Hard". Toronto Star, September 29, 1990.
  7. "An evening at the Junos". The Province, March 4, 1991.
  8. "Fame leaves Treeo fed but jaded; Moodiness of their tunes has record label concerned, band bolstered". Edmonton Journal, September 6, 1992.
  9. "Three's a charm for these six theatre-music collaborators". Toronto Star, May 7, 1992.
  10. 1 2 3 "You can't keep a good Spit down". Ottawa Citizen, December 15, 1994.
  11. "Surviving the music business free fall: Older, wiser, happier Leslie Spit Treeo gets a fresh start". Toronto Star, May 4, 1995.
  12. "Dance Me Outside struts a lively two-step". Toronto Star, March 10, 1995.
  13. "Two humans". Victoria Times-Colonist, April 10, 1997.
  14. "Leslie Spit Treeo breaks up because of death of dog". Sudbury Star, September 22, 2000.

External links

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