Wednesday, January 15, 2025

The Zellots Part 3: Back In London ON

 

Part 3  Zellots back in London

The Zellots playing outside Flamingo Hair Salon August 1980



C=Chris DeVeber: guitar    J=Jane Colligan:bass   H=Heather Haley:vocal   G=Greg Moore:drums  CN=Conny Nowe  WW=What Wave


WW: So you came back (London ON) here about 1980 then?

 

C: 1980, that sounds about right.

 

WW: So you reformed the band and how did you get Cathy (Destun, vocalist)?

 

C: We just asked her. She was from the theatre people. And she hung around with Tom McCamus who is a pretty well known actor now and a bunch of other people. And we just really liked the way she looked, and she was just so cool. We didn’t even hear her sing before we asked her. ‘Do you wanna sing in our band’ and she said’ sure I’ll try’ and it just went on from there and then we got Greg (Moore on drums). It was Greg first, then Greg left, then we got Craig (McGauley). Greg was just on loan from The Stoves (London Ontario punk band) and then Craig left to go to Toronto (to form United States, postpunk trio). It was an amicable type of thing. Greg was just a fabulous drummer. I remember feeling his drums, standing up at the edge of the stage and he hit those drums and you could feel it in your back. He had a really rock steady locomotive train sound!

 

Greg Moore:  I joined the Zellots in 1980 after Craig McGauley was their drummer. I had been in a band called the Stoves prior to that. I played with the Zellots until we disbanded.

 


Poster for a show at the Cedar Lounge 1980. Rob's New Music refers to Rob Brent (who had left the Demics) and his combo before they were called Mettle.

WW: Greg, what was it like being the only guy in the band?

 

G: I didn't really think of myself as the only guy in an all girl band. Jane, Chris and Cathy played and sang as good as, or better than other bands I was in that were all male. I guess I thought that maybe more doors would open for us having the three women in the band, but once we played I think the gender thing was not a factor anymore.

J: We just played like mad from the minute we got back. Get some people in the band, learn some new songs…

 

C: We had a lot more experience…you were saying a lot of people didn’t get in bands before punk, because you had to be so perfect before you hit the stage. That’s really true, because more bands split up in the basement before they ever get on stage. If they could just get up there and play one date, even when they’ve only got 4 songs, it does something, it cements you and you’re even more protective from breaking up.

 

WW: Why don’t we talk about some of the bands that you opened for in London….Psychedelic Furs?

 

C: Oh, that’s the best story. Craig Deans (booked bands in London ON with partner Dave Felner RIP) was our manager and worked at Records On Wheels (part of a chain of record stores and the London store that was probably the first to sell punk/new wave records in town), as the manager there. Craig was in charge of the import section there, so he was great from the point of view in that he had all of the bands from England with their releases in Canada. One of them was The Psychedelic Furs, their record hadn’t even been released in Canada and we were doing covers by them. And the weirdest thing happened, we were playing Larry’s Hideaway (rock club) in Toronto and we had a couple of their covers and the Psychedelic Furs, it was their first time in Canada and they were I think, trying to find the Edge (famous Toronto punk/new wave club that closed in 1981) where they were playing and they happened to be walking by the bar and they heard one of their songs..

 

J: We were playing it! They were going ‘That’s one of our songs!’

 

C: They didn’t even have an album (in Canada) yet and they were freaking out. They go down (into Larry’s) and they see us playing it and it turns out, the following Monday, this is a Friday or Saturday and they are playing the Monday in London. And they introduced themselves and really liked the band and they invited us to open up for them at the Cedar in London. It was just so cool, the combination of events. So we opened for them on the Monday. (Ed….Rumours are it was a fantastic show!)

 

J: It was insane, one of those quirky things!

 

C: So they asked us and we got to meet them and talk to them. They were complete gentlemen, they really were. And really nice. The drummer, he said if you guys ever get to England, he had a studio, and said I’ll produce you and help you get on a tour and I think it was John Ashton, the guitar player gave us one of the albums and signed it for me, on the back of it for me, and in those days I never had my own amplifier and that caused all kinds of problems, every time we played and he signed it ‘I hope you get an amplifier soon’…LOL. And it’s somewhere, it’s a great keepsake.

 

WW: What about Joe King Carrasco?

 

J: Oh, I forgot about that one, that would have been at Fryfogles (legendary showcase club that Muddy Waters and many others played and was located where the Downtown Public Library presently is)? As time went by we got into Fryfogles, which was huge. Eventually the local bands were headlining at Fry’s.

 

C: Well, I can hardly remember, but I’ve got a vague memory that it was really fun.

 

J: You have to realize there was a lot of alcohol being imbibed and it was a long time ago. Like first you learn how to play sitting down, then you learn to play standing up, then you learn to play so drunk that you don’t even remember the gig. And you were good, because people tell you you were really good. And there’s 3 stages and I think Joe King Carrasco might have been in that third stage.

 

WW: What about Bauhaus, did you open for Bauhaus at the Polish Hall?

 

J: You know Bauhaus meant a lot to Cathy because she was artsy…

 

C: Ya, Cathy and Craig Deans too. We invited them back to our band house (after the gig), we had a band house where we all lived on South St, it turns out it was the old Kingsmills (London Ontario department store) mansion. It was all dilapidated and no heat, anyway, they came back there, not all of them, but the road manager, somebody else from the band, maybe 2 of them.

 

J: That was very close to the end of the Zellots too cause that band house was kind of our last stage. I’m not saying living together broke us up, cause it didn’t and we lived together quite well.

 

C: This was also their first tour, and the road manager was actually one of the higher ups at Beggars Banquet Records and he accompanied them as the road manager. And he was super nice. And anyways they called us from Niagara Falls (after the London gig) and said we’re playing here and do you want to come down. Jane didn’t come. I went with Cathy and Dave and Matt (Sheep Look Up singer) and we went down and met them and we were drinking red wine with them, with the lead singer there, Peter Murphy and he was so cool.  And then in the morning we all went out to breakfast and walked around the falls together and it was really cool. Cause we really admired them a lot.

 

J: We did get out of town, we played Detroit (as well as Toronto, Windsor, Kitchener etc). Craig Deans was a great manager, he got us on Suzi Quatro’s brother, Michael Quatro was trying to make a comeback at that time and we played this amazing, marble palace in Detroit. With these huge pillars, like an old ball room.

 

C: It was in this completely black area, when we went in to find it, it was so eerie cause you don’t see this in Canada. You go into this one area, and you didn’t see any white people for miles and miles. But we were treated so well, everyone was so cool to us. There were more than a few bands that night and it was one of the best gigs! That was a good one. And we also played in Detroit at another venue that Iggy Pop used to play at all of the time, I can’t remember the name of the bar (Greg remembers it as being Bookies), but I remember the dressing room, I hadn’t seen anything so disgusting in all of my life. It was really bad and I think there was a toilet in the same room and a broken mirror in the sink and the toilet was backed up, it was just awful and there was nowhere to hangout while we were waiting between. So we went to a chicken place down the street to eat. And we came back and we had to play earlier cause one band had been held up, literally held up at gun point…LOL…so they were late or not coming or something. It was a cool bar and a cool experience…

 

WW: Did you open for Simple Minds?

Poster by Al Cole and probably 1981


 

C: We opened for Simple Minds at Mingles (former disco converted to a rock club) and we caught the sound man, or whoever was doing the monitor mix for us, feeding back at us cause we were going over too well. So he started, and the audience couldn’t tell, cause it was mostly on stage all through our set…

J: Maybe it wasn’t on purpose…

 

C: No, somebody saw him doing it…all it takes is to just feed the volume back a little bit…

 

J: What a dirty business…LOL.. We opened up for a whole bunch, Chris Spedding, John Cale…

 

WW: Let’s talk about Chris Spedding first.


Chris Spedding at Aeolian Hall, London ON 9/28/2024

C: At the old Noodle Factory, the Piccadilly 5-0, that was the night The Payolas played too. I’m pretty sure The Payolas were the last band, and he played the second set.

 He was really nice and again, Jane and Cathy were really big fans of his. Cathy was trying to get his attention to ask him about, cause I had an original Les Paul and to ask him. If anybody would know about that guitar it would be him, so she showed it to him and he said ‘I’ll show it to my roadie (Ed….met the roadie recently and it’s true) and he could tell you what the guy ate for breakfast the day he made it’. So he was nice.

 

WW: John Cale (at Fryfogles July 2/1981)?


John Cale at Fryfogles 7/2/1981. Zellots opened the show.

C: John Cale for instance was willing to take us on tour to Europe, but we had to have our own money, to pay our own way, and it would have been $5000. But after, John Cale did come with us to a party and listened to our demo tape. And we met Bubba Jones, the famous bass player….big black guy, apparently he played with everybody in NY and he was a gun for hire type bass player. And he (John Cale) came to a party afterwards and listened to our demo tape and listened to all of the songs and he really liked it and that’s when he said he’d take us to Europe if we could pay our own way. 

J: But we didn’t even have amps and how were we gonna do it?




Zellots at Fryfogles 7/2/1981 opening for John Cale.

C: You know, care packages would come to our house (the band house) from our parents and we’d just be…makes eating noises.

 

J: And we were always so worried and trying not to cross that line, because we were women, that there would be some kind of misappropriated interest that did not have anything to do with our music…ya, we did run into it and we were very wary of it but…

 




More shots of the Zellots opening for John Cale at Fryfogles.

C: But John Cale offered to take us on tour and we didn’t have money to go, that was one heart break. Another time was Bauhaus cause the road manager, the guy from Beggars Banquet said if you ever come to England. If we could have ever gotten to England we would have had quite a few little contacts. Beggars Banquet said they’d set us up with a tour, probably opening for somebody, if we could get to England. We tried really hard to get a backer or something and we ended up with this crazy guy, remember, that wanted us to sign a contract through our soundman Hal….

 

J: Hal was from the country rock genre…

 

C: He was a great soundman though and he got this guy down to see the band and he was crazy. He got this contract written up and we were, a little bit naïve and pretty young and at the end of the contract, he had stuff in there  like if you don’t get signed within a year, here was his deal where he would send us to England and set us up for one month only, one month only, right  and then we’d be on our own and after a year, if we hadn’t been signed to a certain kind of major label for $50000 or more and all of these stipulations and if that all didn’t happen then he’d be allowed to come in legally and do anything he wanted with the band, tell us what to wear, how to work, what music to make…

 

J: And we’d already had one bad contract experience way back, in 79 or 80 when we first came back, we signed with Peter Brennan (Jeans’N Classics founder, arranger, guitarist), who is a wonderful person and he was in a band called Newcastle Brown. He was a wonderful person, a good business person too and we had signed a contract with him cause he really believed in the band. And it was kind of like that (above mentioned contract), and we ended up breaking the contract with him and it was not a good experience. Then there were 2 other guys we signed with for a contract for management with and they had told us, they had us scheduled to go to Toronto to be sized for jump suits, one piece jump suits and we had a big parting of the ways with them too. We’re not wearing one piece jump suits and it’s stupid and trite as that may sound, but it was a huge deal. It was ridiculous, preposterous and we weren’t going to do that.

 

C: Undiscovered as we were, we were really against selling our souls to get famous. Now in retrospect, this guy who would have gotten us to England, after that, he went to India and he ended up in one of those cults and they took all of his money Now in retrospect with everything that happened, I think that we should have just gone, what could have happened, we could have just changed our name. We should have just gone…

 

J: Hindsight is 20/20…

 

C: But we were really averse to signing that contract. He left and was never heard of again, so we never got to England and the band ended up folding awhile after that, there were just too many brushes with success.

 

C: It had to be near the end of the band when we went to Springfield Sound (located south east of London ON and co-founded by London media personality and archivist/author Jim Chapman) and we recorded an album there. The lost tapes and that was when it was one of those cases where being female is definitely not a benefit. Sound man Hal had a friend that worked at Springfield Sound

 

J: Which was a big studio back then!


Poster by Al Cole 1981.  The Stranglers played Fry's shortly after.

C: But I can’t remember this guy’s name, but he’s the one that has the master tapes. It was just sad, because we almost lived in the studio. The guy who was generous enough to take us in there and do it all for free, and he was a super cool guy, I can’t even remember his first name. But, he got a crush on Cathy, he really, really, really, liked Cathy and it was really evident and he had fallen in love with her or something and somewhere towards the end, she had to tell him that she didn’t have the same feelings for him and guess what, he took the tape and he said if you want it, you have to give me $500 which might as well have been $5 million at the time. And we never heard back and then the studio folded so we have no idea what happened to that. I think that recording was just the 4 of us.

 

WW: Then there’s some recording you did at EMAC (London studio) right?

 

C: Yes, that was early. His (Rob Nation) studio had only been open for awhile, so it says volumes for him because it’s a pretty good recording. (6 songs)

 

J: Rob Nation was wonderful and his engineer, Joe Vaughn too!

 

WW: And are those songs the same ones that are on the Japanese CD (see below)?

 

Pic of one shot at the bigtime

 

C: No, actually they are remastered by Peter Moore (Toronto based producer of Cowboy Junkies and many others and Grammy winner, passed away in 2023), There’s 2 songs, Blades and Social Elite, he remastered them. But they sound almost identical. If you listen to them right after another to hear the difference and there is a great difference.

 

J: That Japanese CD is called ‘You Only Get One Shot At The Big Time’ (on Wizzard In Vinyl), how appropriate!

 

WW: And you also recorded some other stuff with Peter Moore?

 

C: He did some recording. At one point he was recording everybody in London. He had this binaural head that he put in the audience.

 

J: He invented the binaural head (it looked like a styrofoam manikin head with the microphones where the ears should have been).

 

C: If you put headphones on, on any of those recordings, you can hear people behind you and beside you and you’d swear someone just lit a cigarette behind you.

 

J: He was so ahead of his time.

 

C: He really was and he wanted to help us a lot back then and since. There was a period he went through for years, where we hadn’t been in bands for years, where he was working with Chris Spedding in Toronto and they were putting together these compilations of punk music (OPM CD compilations of many Toronto and area punk bands), there was this great market happening for punk music that we were unaware of.

He recorded a lot of the bands back then, live recordings. And right now, he has become so busy in Toronto and LA, feature films and TV shows. It’s a shame, because a few years ago, he was really trying to promote us and he had more time and he was doing that and he couldn’t get ahold of us. He was getting frustrated, ‘I can never get ahold of you guys’ and now it’s the other way around.

So we’re waiting for him right now, to get his stuff out of the archives, because there is a record company, Rave Up Records (Italian punk record label who did an album for local band 63 Monroe) and he definitely wants to record the band. Definitely wants to put us on vinyl. But I’m worried, because what happens if Peter takes so long, you never know with these kinds of things because we’ve had opportunities slip by, slip through our fingers because of the timing. Maybe in a month the thing folds or something. So I’m a little anxious that Peter will come through for us. He would be perfect if he wasn’t so busy, cause number one he has all of the archives and number two he specializes in restoring old tapes, it’s one of the things his studio does and number 3 he is a brilliant producer and engineer so if he could take it and do it, it would be ideal, but I don’t know it that will happen.


The Cult Heroes were from Detroit and Zellots had opened for them at the Cedar Lounge previously.

J: But the band ended up being like an 8 piece, we ended up getting Lisa Patterson (on sax). She joined us informally; she was in Edna and Edna (local duo). And John Francom (sax) lived in my house, him and Gilbert Smith (guitar)…John and Gilbert (both were in Sheep Look Up as was Lisa Patterson) were phenomenal, but unfortunately at that time, we didn’t have the benefit of recording. Cause when you’re playing, you need that counter point where you go somewhere, anywhere and record and listen back to what everybody is doing and if it falls short of your dreams…

 

C: Some great songs were written during that period, and we don’t have anything to show for it.

 

J: Ya, we had this song called The Game, I think we only played it live once at the Embassy with John Francom, Lisa, Gilbert, nobody recorded it. There weren’t any cell phones back then with recording and I only have it in my mind. We were going somewhere that was intricate musically so, you know futuristic, everybody was going in and out, I tuned my bass down to an open D on the E string and I start the song off and whip it back up to an E, it was an amazing song and it almost had that feel, like The Doors, This is The End, it had that kind of blackness to it. Or Joy Division, combined with Gang Of Four, it was phenomenal and we played a lot in rehearsal, but we only got to play it out once with those people.

 

WW: To bring it full circle, another band you played with was Certain General with Marcy Saddy at Doug and Rose’s wedding (in London at the Cedar Lounge August 17 1981), later Rose joined Chris and Jane in Ukase, another London based band).

 

J: Wasn’t Certain General Marcy’s next band (Ed….B-Girls were her next combo after Heaven 17)…she went to NYC and she was in Certain General and we started with her and ended with her.

 

WW: When did you guys break up, any idea?

 

J: It was 5 years! Five years! From beginning to end! I’ve always said to myself, the best 5 years of my life.


G:  The Zellots broke up sometime in 1982 (as I recall) because of the usual internal band problems. We had chased that illusive carrot for so long that I think we lost focus on what we were about. Mostly I think we were beat up from the promises of record contracts and tours that never surfaced.
During our few years of writing and performing, there were many great shows. I enjoyed all of it, thinking to myself this is the band that is going to really do something. We had many highs and a few lows, but unfortunately that didn't happen.
To this day I still think the Zellots was the best band I played in. The music was very innovative for those days of punk and new wave. The Canadian music scene, then, wasn't as recognized as it has been in the past 15-20 years. A lot of British bands like the Psychedelic Furs, Simple Minds and the like were the so called templates for what was the music of the 80's. I think if you didn't fit into that mold record companies didn't know what to do with you. Unlike today with all the computer technologies you relied on a record deal to gain larger audiences and some sort of success. It's impossible to turn the clock of the past ahead to today, but if you could the Zellots would have a great career with all that is afforded today.

C:: I feel the Zellots broke up because we had so many close brushes with success, only to be let down and disappointed every time, so it was like a roller coaster emotionally. We all had so much of ourselves invested in the band and we sacrificed a lot to keep our vision of the music intact. We were so broke the whole time that it added more stress to the day to day struggle.

The industry back then was still largely corporate and the independent movement hadn't really taken yet. Without internet band sites like myspace, facebook, reverbnation, etc and youtube, we were at the mercy of the A&R people of the big labels, and they were hard to connect with. Some of them wanted to do something with us but didn't know how we fit into the criteria they used to sign artists then. The underground scene hadn't really registered with them yet.  

We needed more support and management. Even though Craig Deans (our manager), did the best he could by getting us great opening gigs for people like John Cale, we really needed financial help and really big breaks like with the Psychedelic Furs, Bauhaus, and John Cale couldn't be followed up on simply for lack of cash. If we had the money to get to England when we had the fresh contacts and interest of those bands and their record labels, we would have had a whole other history to talk about.. and we might have had a chance to make it, or at least have a couple of albums and tours of England to get us on our way. 

In the end we just lost heart.. we tried to keep afloat in the last months we were together. We added John Francom (Sheep Look Up) on sax and keys, and Gilbert Smith (Crash 80s, Sheep Look Up) on rhythm guitar, wrote new material, and planned a tour to go out west. But we were losing our spirit, and when Jane quit just before the out west tour, the band simply folded. I thought we were going to get to England - it was so close.... I was heart broken over it - went to a cottage by myself in the off season, September and went a little crazy for a while watching storms over the lake till I caught myself talking to myself a little too much and decided I better rejoin the human race before I really lost it. The Zellots will always be my best memory of being in a band, but also my most vivid disappointment in how we ended before our time. I feel we could have done so much more if the right people had crossed our path. But all we could do was write and perform - we didn't know how to market ourselves. Today, it would be a whole different story! 


Version 3 of this poster. APK had been booked but it closed its doors shortly before the event.

Since this writing, the Zellots London version reunited for one show. It was the opening for the art show entitled: Graphic Underground: London 1977-1990 which was a display of the underground art, posters and zines of that era. The physical display was at Forest City Gallery in the fall of 2012 and was very well attended. The actual concert took place at Call The Office on October 27/2012 and featured not only the Zellots, but NFG, The Enemas and Uranus, all contemporaries of the Zellots. The Zellots lineup for the show was the longest running version, that being: Cathy Destun, Chris DeVeber, Jane Colligan and Greg Moore. Huge Thanx to Brian Lambert for curating the exhibit, setting up the concert and then releasing the book Graphic Underground: London 1977-1990.

Zellots at Call The Office 10/27/2012

Discogs has a complete discography of the zellots:  https://www.discogs.com/artist/6376299-Zellots?superFilter=Releases&subFilter=Singles+%26+EPs

 

Huge Thanx to all that helped in getting the Zellots story out there; Chris DeVeber (RIP), Jane Colligan, Greg Moore, Heather Haley, Conny Nowe, Craig McGauley and Marcy Saddy.

All pictures What Wave Archives




No comments:

Post a Comment