UNIVERSITY OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND 102.3FM/700AM CABLE CAMPUS presents Tom Hopper, Vocalist and Bass Player with the Grapes of Wrath spoke to Rodney St—Peirre station manager of CIMN Radio, on Thursday, October 26. The following is an excerpt from that conversation: CIMN: I just heard your lat- est recording, “Now and Again” went gold (50,000 sales). Con- gratulations on that. Grapes: thanks, that was about three weeks ago, hopefully it’ll go over platinum, They’re talking that it’ll go platinum, un- less all of a sudden it completely dies, but I shouldn’t complain, a gold record’s great. CIMN: How did Treehouse (Album previously released by the Grapes of Wrath) do, was it as successful as this one? Grapes: No, we thought it was, it was getting close to gold, but it kind of stalled at around 39,000-40,000 (record sales), and it’s about 42,000 or 43,000 now. So you never know, this record might push Treehouse as well. CIMN: Some other bands say they don’t pay much attention to how many albums they sell just as long as they make a good al- bum. Do you guys keep an eye jon record sales? Grapes: Well, if you’re a big band and you’re used to selling hundreds of thousands of records, it’s like no big deal I guess. If we made a good record and it didn’t go gold we’d be happy that we did make this record, because it doesn’t matter how many you sell, as long as it’s good. But we still like to keep an eye on record sales because we have to make a living off of it. CIMN: So are you touring with Blue Rodeo right now? Grapes: No, we’re touring by ourselves. We’re playing in Bal- timore tonight and we played a few backup spots for Billy Bragg the other night in Philadelphia and now we’re playing this mu- sic seminar in New York on Sat- urday night. Then we’re doing a few shows with Blue Rodeo in the SHO} K HRZARD Programming and information you. can't live without from CIMN “REVO Ripa wera ati bs The CIMN Interview | Maritimes, flying to Toronto and then flying home. (Vancouver) CIMN: Do you guys think that you’re a good live band? Grapes: We’re not a flash type of band, the kind of band that jumps around the stage and throws beer on people and stuff . like that. We don’t have the “Big Stage” show. We get into play- ing live. I love playing live, so we just try to get into the songs the best we can for people and play for people. Some people think we’re horrible live and some peo- ple think we’re great. CIMN: What’s the furthest place you’ve played at and the best place? Grapes: Vancouver is a pretty good place. We’ve got a pretty good following there. Every- where in Canada is always great to play. The States is interesting too. The south is cool, like Texas and Georgia was great. The fur- thest place we’ve ever played was Florida, I guess. We’ve never been to Europe. We’re probably going to go in the spring. There’s talk of Spain. I think Spain wants us. CIMN: Do you have a release over there? Grapes: Yes, they’re going to release it (“Now and Again”), and Treehouse is in Scandanivia and Hong Kong. It’s going to be released in Germany and England hopefully. CIMN: Do you think for a new band starting out that the choice of a name for a band is an important one and so you think the name that you choose can affect the success that the band achieves? Grapes: I used to think that, but then look at the Cowboy Junkies! I think that they’re a great band, with a name like that, I couldn’t believe they got as much success as they did. I thought people would freak out with a name like Cowboy Junkies. So i think if you have a really stupid name, it might do some- thing, but if the music’s great, the name always sounds better. CIMN: Who writes in the bands, is it a shared effort? Grapes: Basically, what hap- pens is Kevin (Vocalist /Guitars) or I will bring up a song idea and the band will hammer it out and whoever sings it will have writ- ten the words. The starting idea comes form Kevin or myself. CIMN: How. did _ Vin- cent Jones, you Keyboardist, join the bands was he a friend of the band, or did you put up a “Musi- cian’s Wanted” add? ~ Grapes: He joined us after Treehouse was released. He’s toured with us ever since Tree- house but just became a member before we started recording this album. We placed an ad in the “Georgia Strait”, which is a mu- sician’s weekly paper in Vancou- ver, and he was the second call that we got. It worked out per- fectly, we were into the same kind of music and we haven’t thought about anyone else since, he’s re- ally an incredibly good player. CIMN: About the music that you guys listen to, do you all share the same musical influ- ences? Grapes: Basically, but we learn to play different stuff too, not completely but we all have our basic other things that we’re into. There’s bands like the Bea- tles, Pink Floyd, and the Who, . bands that we all think are great, but then we’re all into special kinds of bands as well that each of us don’t like. We all have some of the same tastes and same dif- ferent ones as well. CIMN: What bands are you listening to and like? Grapes: I like the new KD Lang. I think “Trail of Broken Hearts” is an incredible song. I like Gordon Lightfoot a lot, I like Cowboy Junkies a lot, the Beat- les, they are my favorite band of course, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd. Not that only listen to old stuff, I like Edie Brickell a lot too. She writes really good words. CIMN: I’ve heard someone say that on your latest album, “Now and Again”, especially on the tracks “All the things I wasn’t” and “But I guess we’ll never know” that you sound a Jot like Simon and Garfunkel. Do you think that’s a good compari- son. Grapes: I don’t know, people have said that before. I like Si- mon and Garfunkel a lot, but I never really heard the comparison myself. The guitar playing could be similar... I don’t really think... well, Maybe!!! It’s hard to com- pare our music to anything else because it’s ours and we think it sounds like us. CIMN: The biography that we have on the band says that this album deals more with universal feelings rather than personal as- pects of family, small town life and parental influences. Was this change planned or was this some- thing that just occured? Grapes: On Treehouse, a lot of the songs was written right af- ter we moved from small town Kelona. So a lot of the words were about that because that’s what was going on in our lives. When we write songs now we don’t make an effort to write about a certain topic. It’s gotta be about what’s happened to us. So what happened after Tree- house was we had been living in Vancouver, we had toured, so we kind of had a new life now, so all the writing’s changed because the lifestyle’s changed. CIMN: The song, “Back- ward’s Town”, is that about a particular town? Grapes: It was written by Kevin about him leaving Kelona and his girlfriend who is still liv- ing there. A lot of people in Kelona think we’re putting down the city, but it’s not really a put down on the city, it’s like a de- spair of all small towns and hav- ing to leave and how hard it is to live there too. So it’s not really about any particular city, but any small town in Canada. CIMN: Personally listening to your music, I think a lot of your lyrics evoke insecurities. Grapes: That’s more kevin’s lyrics, I think. Kevin and I write differently, but it’s more uncer- tainty than insecurities. I don’t really want to make a statement about Kevin’s words. CIMN: Who wrote “All the things I wasn’t”? Grapes: That was Kevin. (The Grapes of Wrath are currently touring the Maritimes this week with Blue Rodeo) WHE ROGUES: LANE; (892-2466) Program Highlights On Tuesdays “8 Wet Feet” comes your way!!! Take time to listen to CIMN, with the “8 Wet Feet”, to hear Rock — Pop — Metal - Country. You want it - we play it!! So tune in from 8-9 Tuesday Nights on CIMN. ~ Brian, Sonya, Faye, Rob