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      Cover

      

      Advance Praise for The Legendary Horseshoe Tavern

      At a time when music venues are under attack by gentrification and development, the Horseshoe remains immortal. I’ve long wondered what those checkerboard floors would say if they could talk. Now they can.

      — Alan Cross, music writer and host of the radio series

      The Ongoing History of New Music

      David McPherson does an amazing thing with this affectionate and informative book.… As someone who has performed there and attended countless shows over the years, it made me feel like I was a witness to something much bigger and more integral to the history of Toronto’s ever-changing music scene.

      — Ron Sexsmith

      David McPherson’s tall cold pour of a story left me smacking my lips, nodding my head, and feeling just fine. My recommendation: pull up a chair, drain off one chapter, then another, and the next. Before long, you’ll feel absolutely giddy about the Horseshoe and its raffishly distinguished history, Toronto, music, this excellent writer, and the whole wide world.

      — Charles McNair, author of the Pulitzer Prize–nominated Land O’ Goshen

      … A glorious two-handed plunge into the loam of the most famous rock and roll club in Canada; digging in the weeds to find the bones that find the ghosts who played there, from Hank Williams to Tom Connors to Frankie Venom to Townes Van Zandt and beyond.

      — Dave Bidini, author of Writing Gordon Lightfoot

      … The Horseshoe is Canada’s beating heart of rock ’n’ roll. David McPherson’s book does a brilliant job illustrating just that.

      — Grant Lawrence, the Smugglers

      David McPherson has captured the soul and the sweat, the joy and the chaos of the hands-down greatest music parlour in Canada.… From Stonewall Jackson to The Last Pogo, the spirit that is the Horseshoe lives in these pages.

      — Colin Linden, Blackie and the Rodeo Kings

      David McPherson takes us on a wonderful journey that shows the reader why the club is called the Legendary Horseshoe and where those legends came from.

      — Bernie Finkelstein, founder of True North Records

      This book truly captures the vibe of the best live music venue in Canada: the sweat, the history, and most of all, the sound — and did I mention the sweat? A love song for the musical grande dame of Queen Street.

      — Jay Semko, the Northern Pikes

      A valuable document of the Legendary Horseshoe Tavern history.… Jack Starr’s legacy lives on!

      — Josh Finlayson, Skydiggers

      On the eve of its 70th birthday, author David McPherson finally tells the fabled club’s story.

      — Rob Bowman, Grammy Award–winning author and professor

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      Dedication

      Gracias, Corazón

      Epigraph

      Without music, life would be a mistake.

      — Friedrich Nietzsche

      Contents

      Foreword by Jim Cuddy

      Introduction

      1 The Outsider

      2 Nashville North

      3 Tom’s Stompin’ Grounds

      4 The Garys Shake Things Up

      5 The Show Hank Williams Never Gave

      6 The ’Shoe Rises Again

      7 Rockabilly and a Roots Rock Revival

      8 The Early Nineties

      9 Secret Shows

      10 Tales from the Bar

      11 Ushering In a New Era

      Conclusion: The Next Seventy Years Are Anyone’s Guess

      Acknowledgements

      Sources

      Image Credits

      About the Author

      Foreword

      To understand the significance of the Horseshoe Tavern, one needs to delve into the personal archives of so many Torontonians and visitors to the city to hear the stories of “first time ever” or “best concert” or “mind-blowing after-hours event.” The stories are legion. They represent some of the best reflections on the history of the city.

      First-ever story: We waited for the Horseshoe to open in order to secure a front-row table to see the legendary pseudo-cowboy Jerry Jeff Walker. I believe we got in and grabbed a table shortly after noon — maybe an apocryphal time, but that is how these stories go. We stayed all day until showtime. The stage was low and, at that time, on the west wall. We were well oiled by the time Jerry Jeff took the stage. He was obviously pleased to see a sold-out house and started in with commitment. A number of songs in, with his long arms swinging, he whacked his guitar on the low-hung ceiling. He cursed and thrust his guitar head angrily into the maze of wires and pipes in the ceiling, thereby rendering the guitar unusable. Frankly, it was our real-life Pete Townsend moment. We could not have been more thrilled and hooted our approvals, to which he gave a sheepish grin.

      The story of the Horseshoe Tavern is to a certain degree the history of how Toronto grew up. It starts as a refuge for East Coasters who have come to the city for work and are missing the music and dancing of the homes they have left behind. Count Bazil Donovan, Blue Rodeo bass player, as the son of one of those couples. His parents would venture down to the Horseshoe for some country music and dancing, and to rub shoulders with other East Coasters.

      As the city grew and the music scene matured, the Horseshoe stayed true to its friendly roots. By the time our band, Blue Rodeo, was looking to get its first gig in the city, the Horseshoe was the mythical master. I can still remember going down the dark steps to present our cassette to X-Ray MacRae, the rockabilly motorcycle-man music programmer. It was a long and nerve-wracking walk, and as friendly as X-Ray was he had a stack of other cassettes on his desk a foot high. It was not going to be automatic, that was for sure.

      So we played a few other places before we got the call. But when we did, it was as exciting as anything that has happened since. Some places just have an aura that makes them more special than the rest, and that says it all about the Horseshoe Tavern. We had grown up in the city hearing about shows at the ’Shoe, and had attended a few, but never thought we would have this opportunity.

      How many others have felt the same? Countless, I imagine. The book you are about to read tells the tale of so many decades of entertainers, barflies, doormen, soundmen, scoundrels, poets and can’t-miss-but-somehow-did musicians.

      The Horseshoe we came to know as a band had some historic nights. Each night the room was full of patrons dressed in neo-cowboy gear, continuing the long tradition of dancing to every song. There were solid, colourful characters — Handsome Ned, Keith Demic, Teddy Fury — all outliers in a supportive creative scene. There were quick-draw contests when Ned played and famous actors and musicians coming to check out a band, and one famous night after the regular closing, the guitarist from Dire Straits, Jack Sonni, whom we knew from New York, where he worked in a guitar store, asked if we could set up a jam. That jam drew all the musicians in town and lasted till six in the morning. Once again, the friendly confines of the ’Shoe had added another entry to Toronto’s logbook.

      There

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