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Tag Archives: British Columbia
Hey over there…Sincerely, over here.
I’ve never used this site for its actual blog purpose so I thought I would crack on to it. I also dont know if I’ll use this same time as I am on my break at work. I’ve been working primarily on music lately, so since that stuff isnt hear and I have some weird cough thing, right now is momentarily fine.

In the style of Dwight…ground rules.
I will try, i promise, to swerve from the political. I address this plenty elsewhere but, as still a fan of things like the tv shows Early Edition and Vicar of Dibley and other remnants of the nineties when things were simpler and I still actually didnt know the difference between and American democrat and a republican (yes…i know), I would like this to stay primarily in that world. Suffice to say, much of my other social media gets involved there. I also am to write sans any close-proximity-politics, more commonly known as gossip. I have learned only too well how that bites you on the ass, especially considering (and this is a lesson I continue to learn and more should) nothing is simple and you really dont know that much about people around you. You only have your perspective which is flawed at best so why present the idea that your and expert.
The other thing I like the idea of is creating a space which I actually dont use in a marketing way. Now it is very tricky not to be disingenuous here as all social media is about connections but what I mean is my goal isnt to meet you at the store front where I’m doing everything with a morning dj voice and the happiest emoji I could find.
Ill meet you at the back of the store by the garbage lock up where I use to smoke. Been two months now so I don’t do that but you can if you want. It’s weird but someone else smoking really doesn’t trigger me. Being adhd and missing those near-meditative breaks does that, amongst other physical things.
So that’s about it. I’m Tom. I work, I make music and write off and on. I’ll be back in a bit.
Cookeilidh at the Dave Dunnet Theatre!
Making Spirits Bright
Trying to find a family event on the island this Christmas?
Get your tickets now for Cookeilidh – Making Spirits Bright
Saturday December 17th at 7:30 pm.
We will be playing a variety of celtic and festive songs of the season in this beautiful theater. We will also be joined on stage by the world class O’Brien Irish Dancers so get your tickets today and mark your calendar!
Tickets are available now at…
http://marywinspear.ca/event/cookeilidh-making-spirits-bright
Cheers,
Tom
😄
Ollie and Emma is now online!!

What makes this webseries different than all the other indie films and romantic comedies? Is it just because she’s First Nations and he is a white suburban guy like myself?
Well, there’s that.
But to me as one of the writers on the show, Ollie and Emma is something that needs to happen. We need to see cultures coming together and making connections. We need to see First Nations characters played by First Nations actors in day to day life. And while there is certainly very serious and sobering realities about Native culture that everyone should research, there is also laughter, love and friendship.
My working partnership with Saulteaux comedian Cheri Jacobs is an example of this. We started work together almost four years ago now on a previous project and the subject of her being of Indigenous heritage never really came up until we started the first initial sketches of Ollie and Emma. I didn’t inquire before that or think “How do I work with this person? Do I have to be careful how I talk here?” It was more like “let’s write something funny!”
Since Ollie and Emma, and with some of the other First Nations projects we started (some more serious in tone, some set in earlier times) I have been asking more, reading more and listening to Elders speak about culture and holy cow…I have been just overwhelmed by the diversity of history, language, complex social structure, traditions and folklore. It is such a steep learning curve that for anyone to think “I’m going to learn about Native culture”, I like to say it’s a little like saying “I’m going to learn everything there is to know about Europe, Africa or Asia.” Dude, they’re all huge! You’re going to need an absurd amount of Red Bull, and even then you won’t get through it in one lifetime!
So yeah, I’m mostly focused on Coast Salish culture now. And even then, I have stacks of books to plow through (and being mostly an oral history, books are more of a tip-of-the-iceberg starting place!)…(whew!)
Returning to my point thought, Cheri and I are an example of where we are right now and how we all could one day be, all over the world. We can all make connections like this. I grew up on shows like Robotech where the whole world pulled together to make the impossible possible.
But don’t get scared after my little(ish) rant! Ollie and Emma is fun. It’s non-political, get’s a bit meta and plays with stereotype. I am so lucky to have worked with not only such a kickass co-writer/co-producer but also such a hardworking and talented cast and crew and of course our production team of Less Bland Productions and Telus Optik. I still stand in wonder how they took us on (not that we’re not good, but wow!)
To me, I’m still Jim and Joan Pogson’s kid whose somewhere in the rumpus room, sitting crosslegged somewhere amongst the storage boxes in the old house we had in Langley, BC, reading books and making up random stuff.
Enjoy the show!
Just click the link below!
http://www.ollieandemma.ca
Cheers,
Tom
The Ollie and Emma first look!
Please check out the first Ollie and Emma webseries trailer! So excited to begin sharing this story I have been working on with Cheri Jacobs for over two years now.
The story to me is all about starting a conversation across divides, something that has to happen for everyone’s sake. This can happen when we are inclusive, and everyone can join the fun.
So click below and enjoy! Look for our show on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and WordPress to find out about this upcoming release!
Government Street, 1910

Janice was the last person Samuel ever expected that afternoon. Outside the drowsy city moved on, the street cars, carriages and passersby oblivious to the moment she emerged into his store barely upsetting the chiming of the bell Samuel had nailed into the frame.
There was nothing to prepare him for the moment. That Thursday in mid September the morning sun glinted off the bottles on the west side of the room like they always did when he arrived to unlock the dispensery. Sun poured across the street between the buildings on Government street. The younger clerk arrived in a rush under the slight scowl of Samuel’s gaze, the key his was given lost somewhere in his coat pockets. Samuel waited for a moment, looking over the rim of his steel frames as the man outside continued to fumble, his movements jerky and his face occasionally looking up to stare contrite at the older man in the white coat behind the black cash register. Finally, pushing the latch to open the low swinging gate he came to the young man’s rescue, with the boy in the long coat and felt riding hat looking regretfully at the older face on the other side of the pristine, clear glass.
“Eight thirty, Joshua,” the older man said simply as he opened the door.
“I’m sorry sir, I mean…it’s not an excuse but the tram left early…I tried to run after it but…”
“Well, at least you’re here,” he said as they both went back behind the counter surrounded by vials and bottles, the disinfecting alchohol in the large teardrop shaped glass and the wall of pestal and mortars. The room smelled only slightly of lavender and the disinfectant that was used to clean everything in the white walled dispensary that sat near the corner of Broughton between the café and the grocery.
The young man scurried into the back quickly as Samuel continued to go over the notes he made the day before on Mrs. Wensten’s prescription for anti-fungal cream and her Humalog diabetic insulin supplements. He kept all his notes in perfect order, his handwriting as clean and clear as the Colonist’s printing press, with every necessary note organized within the confines of the single black leather book. The book remained in the same place of his low front shelf, it’s corner’s frayed and smooth like the skin of a well worn leather shoe.
Samuel had just finishing entering the journal notes when he realized they were getting closer to opening time. Exactly fifteen and half minutes away by the pocket watch which never left his favorite red waistcoat, the watch a gift from a friend of the St. Andrew’s and Caledonia Society which he met with on Wednesdays like so many others who had come from Scotland or, like in his case, had parents from the old country.
Soon, Joshua emerged from the back of the dispensery in his white coat, doing the regular cleaning that was his job first thing each morning, only the young man was trying to do the same cleaning at twice the pace, quickly rushing over the furthest corner with the store’s straw broom.
“Slow down there!” Samuel said firmly with his eyes never leaving the black book and his smaller notes ledger beside where he wrote down the specific notes for that day.
“I’m sorry Sir, it’s just…we open in just over ten minutes and I was late. That’s my fault.”
“I’m very aware of the time, Joshua. You can continue to clean after opening hours just this once. I can’t afford for anything to be damaged,” he explained.
“Yes, Sir.”
“Now, can you please open the front door and clean our exterior walk? Mrs Amberson will be by early this morning to pick up her supply for the St. Joseph’s dispensary. I’ve already laid out the packages on this back table with the documentation. I hate to keep the lady waiting.”
“Hallie Amberson!” He replied suddenly with a desire to straighten his coat and tie, pushing his hair back, looking at the mirror that hung over the topical creams on the south wall “She is beautiful, isn’t she?”
“None of that, if you please,” Samuel said to the smirk of Joshua.
Soon the young nurse from the Fairfield hospital arrived to the smiles of Joshua who continued to sweep door the outside walk. Samuel felt back the urge to roll his eyes at him as the young man then came in to gather all the parcels for her to put in the large case that she had brought. She smiled back at him and he just stood there for a moment, mooning like a cat.
“Now you can sweep the back of the store, Joshua.”
The young man managed one more smile at the young lady before going to fetch his broom. Samuel could swear the young man was one step away from being better off as a coal miner like his brothers. It seemed if he wasn’t prattling on about this or that he was talking about his new accommodation over by the bird houses.
Samuel could only just remember those younger days in his life when he was still studying under Mr. Hainsbury. He now owned a small house down Moss Street which was perfectly situated near the Foul Bay streetcar line. Each morning he woke quite early in the quiet when the sun had not yet risen, having his breakfast in the front room that was shaded during the day by the two arbutus trees he had planted himself out front. After his morning routine was finished he would head out early, paper under his arm to the corner of Moss and May where he would meet Scott Cook driving the first street car run of the morning, a fellow member of the Scottish society and a recent arrival from Aberdeen. The red and white sided car would click and clack its way along the smooth rails towards Cook Street and the park before turning it’s way towards the heart of town.
Lunch was the small café just next door run by Annie and Nathanial Humphries, which had been a family business since the earliest days of Victoria. She was always happy to see Samuel and frequently insisted that she could offer him a discount for her famous coffee and sandwiches that always comprised his meal. This was due to Samuel looking into a diagnoses that he found didn’t square correctly with what she had been diagnosed before. Samuel had actually visited and discussed with the physician so the prescription was changed to medication that took her relentless migraine headaches away. Samuel appreciated the offer of the discount each time she brought it up, but respectfully declined, not out of a dismissal of charity (which he also did not approve of) but due to the fact that it was his job to do exactly that and that he would stop practicing the moment he ever cut corners.
Back in his shop, with Joshua over by the other side of the room cleaning the tables where the recent shipment had just arrived by train, the door chimed softly.
That was the moment when Samuel’s eyes went wide. He felt something inside his chest that he had not felt since he was the same age as the young man across the room. He set his pen down and walked slowly to the front of the counter as the two people entered, their presence in the room raising Joshua’s eyebrows as well. They rarely ever saw people from the Songhees inside their dispensary.
Behind Janice, whose brown eyes fixed on Samuel, stood her large framed brother, George Andrews Jr. She was dressed in a shawl and he was dressed in the clothes of a labourer. Samuel pushed his glasses back slightly.
“Good Afternoon…George…Janice,” he said trying to steady his voice. He could only hope that his voice didn’t sound wrong. Beneath the cotton white coat, waist coat and shirt, his heart thudded hard.
“Samuel,” George replied, with Janice just looking at him before averting her gaze to look around the room.
“Um…what can I do for you both?”
“Janice?” George asked his sister.
“Yes…sorry,” she said before looking at Samuel sorrowfully and then looking down into the pockets of her shawl and finding a written paper. She walked up to the counter and Samuel swallowed slightly as she came close, her shawl brushing the other side of the white wooden counter. She handed him the prescription, Samuel looking down at her soft slight brown hands covering the doctor’s scribbles. He looked up at her and then back to the paper which he took. Coughing, he studied the paper.
“I can…” he said before coughing again “set up an account for you with us, if you want so we can track…”
“That won’t be necessary,” George said firmly.
Joshua came over the side of his employer, looking at him with his head slightly tilted to one side.
“Can I get you something, Sir?”
Samuel just looked at the notes on the paper, his head focused on returning to his work immediately. People came to him because he was a professional. In truth, he was considered the best pharmacist in the finest run dispensary on the south island, but he always refused to accept this notion.
“It’s…it’s a prescription for Miss Janice Lynn Andrews for the following medication,” he said beginning to write a note for Joshua to follow in his usual precise handwriting so their could not, would not be a mistake. One was an expectorant…one 250 mg of Azithromycin…another special tropical cream that was less commonly used but otherwise benign. At least, he thought for a moment, it was nothing really bad. Most of these were for simple ailments.
“These are for yourself?” he asked.
“Yes,” she answered.
He cleared his throat and with his hand slightly shaking he wrote the note and passed it to Joshua who rushed off with a small bag to fill for her.
“How much this gonna be?” George asked, his voice firm.
“Shouldn’t be too much. These are fairly common medications and from what I understand the physician you met set a one-week trial dosage. If anything feels wrong, stop taking them immediately, but they should clear up things within one week,” he explained consulting the pricing book next to the register and entering the numbers.
She handed him the forty-two cents it cost for the bag of medication that Joshua produced. He fingers brushed his only slightly when she gave it to him which set a rush of fire through Samuel, something he felt in his legs so strong, he had to keep one hand flat on the counter. For a moment, all for of them stayed put like they were posing for a photograph.
“Come along, Janice.”
“Goodbye, Sam,” Janice said with her eyes locked on him. The rest of the world seemed to stop. The rest of the world seemed quiet.
“Take care,” Samuel replied. He could not move.
“Come along, Janice!” George said more firmly. It was firmly enough for Joshua to look at the taller Native man with concern.
As they left, the younger clerk looked at his employer who seemed dazed, staring out the door as they left.
“You alright, Sir?”
“Yes, perfectly fine. Let’s get back to work.”
Get visable!

Can people find you? Imagine getting an online readership of over 25k!
One of the things I have been working on this morning, due to the fact that I am now full time self employed, is the whole world of self promotion. This of course takes a myriad of forms, but what’s interesting is how there are bloggers out there that make over 25k in just WordPress followers. That number is amazing and from what I’ve seen it isn’t entirely impossible to do.
Here’s one link to kind of wet your appetite, or maybe even give you some immediate insights with identifying your target audience…
That said, I have been working with a number of newer companies and artists over the past few years and one thing that I find myself saying all too often is…
“Ahh! What are they doing!? I’m really looking for them and I can’t find them! If I can’t find them, how can there be an audience!?”
This is not a place I think you want to be.
The Social Media creator pitch
(I don’t know about you but I hate those posts out there that lead you down a garden path and then after hours of your time hit you with “I can tell you for only 49.95!” Ugh. So here we go…)
I am absolutely happy to help anyone set up there social media platforms for a competitive cost. I am not a massive Html and Java slinging pro designer who worked for Apple or Google any time recently so my costs for this would be relatively low.
However I have had success in my work, and I can easily assist someone outside of the Greater Victoria Area as well, but it will take some emailing back and forth to set up things such as a Twitter platform which typically requires a text message conformation from a unique phone number (your cell). This is because, well, I can’t afford to buy dozens of cellphones.
The nice thing about me doing it for you is that you can get on with what you do and leave the social media setup to me. As an example, I set up the entire http://www.westsoundmag.com campaign of website, Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and email all in about three hours with images and content. Some of it was from the back of a friend’s car.
My background with all this came slowly, starting with my earliest music projects and just running around with posters. Posters are still in my world, but we have other people who do that sort of thing these days. Still, the basic advertising theory is essentially the same.
A show, an event or whatever that’s going on in real time isn’t about the show in itself. Any event is a reason to put the name out! With something coming you have suddenly a great reason to advertise the name and then it becomes about repetition. They say it takes about five years to really lock down a brand in people’s minds. You don’t expect anyone is going to see your poster, or whatever and suddenly take out a notepad and start jotting things down. It’s all about seeing that name one more time so that they later on say “Oh yeah! I’ve heard of them!” We move towards what is familiar. Familiar seems way more reliable and enticing then “Never heard of those guys.”
Hiring me or not is totally up to you and your project, but the main thing is to make yourself visible. Everything is converting to online activity. Despite all this tech I’m older than I look, and I have had younger folks ask if I dyed my hair this way (It’s grey). I remember when if you wanted to seem like someone who puts in initiative for work, you would show up with a resume in a shirt and tie. I have been informed more recently that no one wants you to do that. They prefer emails.
Emails!? What a different world this is! I can distinctly remember a friend in the nineties saying how if a resume and cover letter were faxed they would throw them to the, let’ just call it, “less interested” pile as fax=lazy!
But that’s the thing, and it covers everything these days. If you want to find the next bus do you use the bus schedule book? No. You google the location and it tells all. Order pizza? I don’t even know where my classic phone book is right now. I use the Yelp or Zomato App.
The point of this side trip in the direction of memory lane is that if your product can’t be found online, your product has a problem. You don’t want to spam people as that has a reverse effect of course, but you do need to at least get visible.
You know what the last thing most people will use their smartphone’s for these days?
As phones.
Telling someone to just give you a call might just have you sitting there listening to your Hootie and The Blowfish album, and that’s about it.
Cheers,
Tom
7 Bass Books every bassist needs
No introduction needed really. Got your metronome and your axe? Let’s do this.
7. Joel Di Bartolo – Serious Electric Bass

I love how full this one is. Joel does an amazing job of going over every nuance of playing in detail with attention for those playing five or six stringed instruments. This one I keep coming back to, in fact, I pretty much had to take it off the music stand to take the shot. You can’t go wrong with the guy who played for Johnny Carson!
6. Rufus Reid – The Evolving Bassist

I had this recommended to me by my former bass teacher Joey Smith. Fantastic book for upright and electric players alike going into rhythm, chord structure and how to approach jazz basslines. Really helped me in getting my theory down along with…(drumroll)
5 Jaco Pastorius – Modern Electric Bass

If you haven’t heard of Jaco, bassist or not, go to youtube immediately. He’s pretty much our Hendrix! But anyways, this book goes over the video which is excellent and genuinely teaches you things as opposed to just making you go “Wow, he’s good!” It does that, and you do feel like the least educated chimp when you try playing after but the book also has some great little bits on theory that helped me finally piece it all together. Worth it!
4 Simandl

Yeah, what do you follow Jaco with? This is pretty much the book, which Jaco actually mentioned himself, for studying classical bass. Even if classical isn’t your thing it is the tried and true study of the rhythm section.
3. Slap it! – Tony Oppenheim

We want the funk! Get your groove established by this great little book for woodshedding the basics of funk. Not a really thick book but it gets straight down to it with exercises you can start straight away with and give you a foundation of sound that is not only cool, percussive and funky, but also clean!
2.Teach yourself Advanced Bass – Clive Harrison

And I can hear the “whhaaa?” from here.
Despite how this one looks this little guy has been my straight, no nonsense foundation to so much of my playing and bass philosophy that I don’t know where to start. Formerly with the Little River Band, Clive takes you through all the things you need to get your chops sailing as well as gives you great directions in things you might not of thought of like his section of Chops versus Performance or on Shifting.
- Chuck Rainey – The Method, sadly not pictured
This might be anti climactic but my copy has disappeared in a recent move, which is annoying because not only did I use to come back to that book again and again but literally it is where I started actually practicing. Chuck is such a great book to start with as he goes into great detail exactly what kind of strings to use and proper right hand form and technique as well as getting your from that shaky first C scale and onwards.
Hope you enjoyed this little list! Please feel free to add your own recommendations to the messages below!
Cheers,
Tom
Discovering Georgia’s Eden

This is something that I have always meant to blog about since it first captured my imagination. From simply doing research for a book project I was working on, I have always wanted to travel to the country of Georgia. To venture into the Caucasus Mountains that form its northern border and roam the streets of it’s capital city Tbilisi.
Set between the Black and Caspian Seas, Georgia first caught my attention in a series of videos called Vintage : A History of Wine which are narrated by the author of the original book by Hugh Johnson. It is in this small, beautiful country that the story of wine begins.
In his film, Hugh explains that not only is Georgian Wine still made by the same ancient process of aging in gourds underground but that the history of winemaking there goes back to 10,000 B.C.

I could almost finish my blog there and just let your imagination take things from that point. This country on the border of Europe and Asia was making wine, something that requires patience and planning (and most importantly, civilisation) before most of the great empires of history took their first steps. As an example they were making wine long before the construction of the first of the Egyptian pyramids with the earliest being the Pyramid of Djoser between 2630 and 2611 B.C.
The vineyard owners that Hugh Johnson interviewed were very humble and friendly which is exactly what I experienced myself when I made contact with people from this country myself. Long before the Internet was what it is today I emailed some folks for more information on Georgia. I was sent not only the phrasebook I sent for but a sheet of Georgian recipes and another sheet that contained facts about the country. I still have my copy of this wonderful book by Patricia Hall and Tatyana Bukia which goes over everything from basic survival phrases to what to say at a Georgian Dinner.

What is also interesting has been the increase of archeological discoveries in the countryside. They have found the existence of dinosaurs in the area, ancient caves and more importantly, the evidence of human activity. Near the town of Dmanisi, sixty kilometers south of Tbilisi that go back 1.7 million years. For those who believe in the accounts of the Bible, Mount Ararat of the story of Noah’s Ark is a stone’s throw away.
What ever one believes I am personally enchanted by the wonder of Georgia as one of Europe’s most fascinating treasures. Due to its military position as the border between two continents, its truth may be locked away under centuries of soldiers, horses and the endless scouring of time.
If you are a Victoria, BC based reader you can find Georgian Wine as I have at the BC Liquor Store at the corner of Fort and Foul Bay.
Thank you for reading!
Tom


