Harvey Kostenchuk - drums, vocals.
Harvey K would be have to be considered a true veteran of the Canadian music scene. At age 55, Harvey has been playing drums and singing in bands for 45 years. He was raised in Neepawa, Manitoba by strong Catholic parents. He was an alter boy and had intentions of being a priest until that fateful day in February 1964 with The Beatles North American debut performance on The Ed Sullivan Show, changed the course of his life dramatically. First he started to grow his hair. Then he began learning the lyrics to Beatles songs and singing them to girls in the schoolyard. By the fall of that year his dad bought him a second-hand drum kit for $100.00, and it was all over. Mass didn't have the same appeal. Rock and Roll was the new passion
Harvey learned his craft playing in the high school band, dance halls and pubs (before he was legally old enough to be in them) with friends, cousins and uncles. He began his TV experience at the age of 14, playing a 15 min. weekly spiritual show with the local Anglican Church minister, broadcast across South Western Manitoba. Harv also gained experience in local Neepawa bands such as "Nonsuch Incorporated", "Fingletoad Resort", and the infamous "Railroad". The members of Railroad were together for nearly 7 years before moving to Winnipeg in 1972 to launch their professional musical careers.
After 6 months in the big city, the realities of the working musician's lifestyle became very apparent and 'Railroad' disbanded, with most of the band members returning to the country. Harvey stayed in Winnipeg and began making some musical contacts in the city. He soon auditioned and was accepted as drummer for a funk/soul/R&B band called "Skin Tight". As a member of "Skin Tight", his education into the world of Black Music and it's culture was an eye opener and truly, a long way musically an culturally from his upbringing in Neepawa. The musical education was invaluable, and his time with "Skin Tight" marked the beginning of a long love affair with "Soul Music" that is evident in his playing to this very day.
The Winnipeg music scene was prosperous in the 70's, alive with pubs, clubs and of course "Socials" ( large musical events with music, food, drinks and dancing). From thursday to sunday, you had a choice of three or four Socials, featuring two or three bands at each location.
By 1974, Harvey had established himself in the local music scene and began teaching drum lessons at a popular Winnipeg music store "Guitarland", where he hooked up with guitar teachers John Hannah and Dave Wood. Along with Rob Wallace(brother of Guess Who bassist, Bill Wallace) they formed the rock band "Wood'n Hannah". Rob Wallace unfortunately had a motorcycle accident and was replaced by Scott Smith. This band received high acclaim in Winnipeg for it's original brand of dueling guitar rock. The band only lasted about a year before it morphed into "Hurricane Hannah", when Dave Wood was replaced with Bob White (future BobCat) on vocals and guitar.
This change in personnel, was the beginning of a long friendship between Harvey and Bob. The band toured Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Southern Ontario until 1978. Soon after disbanding, Hannah was asked to replace Paul Dean in Streetheart, and soon after that Smith crossed paths with Dean to form Loverboy.
Harvey began to really spread his musical wings by doing freelance drumming gigs, recording sessions, radio and TV dates with anybody and everybody that called. With his previous roots in Country, Rock n' Roll and Soul/R&B Harvey soon landed another full time gig with local Blues band "Houndog". Now, with even more experience and style to his playing, Harvey could handle most musical situations with ease.
In 1979, he crossed paths with ex Guess Who members, Greg Leskiw and Bill Wallace, and along with Steve Heigi formed the band 'Les Q'. The band played extensively in Winnipeg clubs and pubs and layed down original music tracks in local recording studios.
By 1980, there were other musical opportunities available to him and so Harvey left LesQ to play with singer-songwriter Rick Neufeld ( composer of "Moody Manitoba Morning", an international hit for Montreal band, 'The Bells") and his band Prairie Dog. In Rick's band Harvey was reunited with Bob White and eventually Danny Casavant to play a prairie brand of country rock.
At a sound check at the University of Manitoba the warm-up frat band leader Peter Jordan (aka. Rocki Rolletti), jumped up to the microphone for a guest number with Prairie Dog, and after the tune said "I'm going to hire you guys one day" and not long after made good on his promise. Thus was the beginning of "The Rocki Rolletti Band" which lead to many CBC television musical variety shows and eventually their own 13 show CBC TV series called "Flamingo Hotel". They followed that by winning a Canadian CHUM Network songwriting competition. The prize was a recording session with Pink Floyd producer Bob Ezrin and his personal engineer "Ringo".
The Rocki Rolletti Band continued for many years with many of Winnipeg's finest musicians having done time in the band including future BobCats Bob White and Danny Casavant.
At some point in the early 80's, Harvey was offered an opportunity to do a Western Canadian tour with West Coast singer songwriter and ex-Hometown Band member Shari Ulrich. This tour led to a small West Coast Tour with singer/songwriter Valdy and recording sessions with other prominent Salt Spring Island musicians. Harvey then began to divide his playing/career time between Vancouver and Winnipeg.
In 1984, while playing gigs with singer Cathy St. Germain and her band The Rage in Winnipeg, Harvey was given the opportunity to play a United Nations Tour, entertaining the Canadian Armed Forces troops on military bases in Lar and Boden Boden Germany, the Golan Heights Israel, and Nicosia Cypress.
Harvey spent 17 years in Winnipeg, playing live in pubs, clubs, concerts and doing radio and TV shows, recording sessions for artist demos and commercial record/CD releases, TV and radio commercials.
In 1989, Harvey did another Western Canadian Tour with singer Kathi McDonald (Long John Baldry, Ike and Tina Turner, Joe Cocker, Rolling Stones) which led to his permanent relocation to Vancouver which eventually led to gigs with Long John Baldry, Jeff Healey, Jim Byrnes, Barney Bentall, Suzanne Gitzi, Angela Kelman, Joani Bye, Gary Comeau, the BigDawg Band, Damian Marshall and many others over the last 20 years on the West Coast.
Harvey has performed music for the Queen of England and Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. He has done shows with The Doobie Brothers, The Beach Boys, Cheap Trick, Joan Armatrading, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Loretta Lynn and many others.
Most recently, besides rockin' hard with The BobCats, Harvey can be seen in Ferron's new DVD, 'Girl On A Road' playing at International Film Festivals around the world and on the Bravo Network.
Harvey K brings his many years of musical experience along with his considerable musical talents to the BobCats as it's newest member. Harv truly Rocks!!
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Jimmy Walker - Original Founding Member - electric bass/harmony vocals.
Jimmy Walker is a walking encyclopedia of Pop and Rock music who,
in addition to being an excellent bassist and harmony singer, possesses a
highly tuned and accurate ear for picking up the finer points in the music the
BobCats perform.
Jimmy's high standards and attention to detail contribute greatly
towards the highly polished sound the BobCats produce. Jimmy is truly a Pro!
On a certain
day in February 1964 when a certain band from Liverpool appeared on a certain
American variety show, life forever changed for BobCats bassist/guitarist
Jimmy Walker. While the family was watching the Beatles historic performance
Jimmys mother pointed at the TV and remarked, I dont care what you do with
your life, as long as you never do that! He was nine years old. Dad, curiously
enough, didnt seem to mind.
One week later
he was in a band at school miming to I
Wanna Hold Your Hand. One year later, the band was playing the Beatles
latest hit Day Tripper live (along
with Walk Dont Run, All My Loving and other assorted instrumentals
puberty had yet to adjust their singing voices). So started his obsession with
rock and roll. He took his beloved Sears acoustic guitar to school every day
and has been playing guitar and bass in a band ever since. Long Live Led
Zeppelin!
In the early
80s Jimmy decided to go into music full time and for the next 10 years played
and toured continuously throughout BC with many different bands. Oddly enough,
he cant seem to remember the names of any of them. He just says it was major
dues paying time! In 1985 he joined Dawn Patrol (as bassist/guitarist
Don Page, with future Odds member Stephen Drake, and later on with Prisms Al
Harlow) which the following year got the gig playing Expo 86 at the 86 Street
Music Hall. We were the first band to hit the stage on opening night and the
last band to leave the stage on closing night six months later. At the time, it
was the dream gig of a lifetime for a cover band from Vancouver. I got to meet
BB King how about that! By the way, the BobCats Song Request Sheets idea came from Stephen a brilliant idea.
Around the
same time, Jimmy joined (Tom Harrisons) Bruno Gerussis Medallion,
first as bass guitarist, then as lead guitarist when Toms brother Don left to
form Sons of Freedom. BGM put out two records, the first with WEA Canada (on CD
and Vinyl LP & 45) and the second
under the new name Little Games (which was originally released in Germany on
Bellaphone Records finally a Beatles connection! Check out Beatles Live at
the Star Club its on Bellaphone!). The Little Games Guitar Damage CD
featured the song Faith In The Season which was one of CBCs David Wisdoms
favourite Christmas songs and is still being played on the radio every holiday
season to this day.
BGM also opened up for some legendary acts DOA, Art
Bergman, Prism, Trooper, Odds, Katrina & The Waves, NRBQ, Savoy Brown, Los
Lobos and Nazareth to name a few, and recorded a video for MuchMusic, and a
Molson Canadian Rocks segment for CFOX radio.
One of the bands high points
was being invited to play at The Beachcombers TV wrap party in Gibsons BC.
Bruno himself became a full fledged member and sang with BGM that night and
stole the show, and it was all captured on video by CBC a night to remember!
He even told Jay Leno on the Tonight Show, when asked how popular he was in
Canada, that he was so popular back home that he had a band named after him!
A
few nights opening for the Tragically Hip in Edmonton and Calgary and a
successful tour back east in Ontario and Quebec introduced BGM to many new
fans. A few years back they recorded a live album at Vancouvers (sorely
missed) Press Club. The band has never officially broken up, so who knows what
the future holds for Bruno Gerussis Medallion.
In the early90s Jimmy joined the
Rockolas on lead guitar, with (future BobCat) Bob White on bass/vocals and the
lovely Mary Orban on vocals/percussion. They played around Vancouver in various
pubs, Royal Canadian Legions, and Army/Navy and Eagles clubs (if you see Mary,
ask her about Whole Lotta Boots Breakdown. Led Zep meets Nancy Sinatra in a
Legion!).
One Friday evening
years later Bob was doing a single at a local West End pub, the Dover Arms, and
Jimmy and Danny dropped by to sit in (and Jimmy to show off his brand new
Hofner Cavern Beatle Bass guitar).
The rest is, well you know . . .
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Vic 'Ringoletto' Bicego - drums, vocals.
Vic Bicego (a.k.a. The Italian Ringo - "Ringoletto") is a unique musician who brought a blend of passion, focus and a great work ethic to the BobCats band.
Vic Bicego was born into this world in 1961 in Vancouver. The Eastside Commercial Drive area was his initial habitat. Vic started life as a member of an enduring duo with his identical twin brother Nic. The two would both prove to be very musical guys who would hone their performing skills together for many years to come.
From 1970-72 the two brothers received their earliest musical instruction by way of "Tom" - a Commercial Drive barber who taught guitar, drums and accordion in the back of his barber shop. According to both Vic and Nic this education was somewhat inadequate but at least it provided a beginning - even if it was primitive!
Vic's original exposure to Pop/Rock & Roll music would come via television in the form of the Beatles cartoon series based loosely on the film "A Hard Day's Night", and Beatlemania in general. Vic was merely a pre-schooler at the time, but the experience with the Beatles, even in cartoon form, would prove to be significant to his embryonic musical mind/career.
The seeds of a future musical path were further nurtured by seeing his uncle Domenic Catalano playing drums in his trio at various Italian parties and banquets. An interesting point: the same drum kit that Uncle Domenic played would eventually be passed on to Vic when Uncle Domenic passed on. This is the same drum kit that he plays today with the BobCats. (see Gear)
In 1977 the Bicego family moved to Langley B.C. It was there at Drums Only that Vic took drum lessons from the ages of 15 to 17 from a teacher remembered only as "Vince". Around this time Vic, his twin brother Nic, and Rudy Moser on accordion, began performing live at banquets and parties. They played Latin American and Rock & Roll music.
From ages 17 to 19, Vic played drums in the high school stage band at Langley's Mountain High School. Light casual music gigs, working a day job and chasing and catching girls occupied Vic from age 20-29. At age 30-31, Vic was a member of the Rock band "Tremor", in which he played drums and sang. They played mostly weddings and parties.
When he was 31, Vic (this time on electric bass and vocals) joined his brother Nic (lead electric guitar/vocals), and buddy Ken Busten (rhythm guitar) to form the first of many "Sideburns" combos. This group lasted until Vic was 34, playing the Italian party/banquet scene.
At age 35, Vic (again on electric bass/vocals) and his brother Nic (electric guitar/vocals) joined with female vocalist Tianna Lefebre, and a drum machine to form another incarnation of "Sideburns". One has to ask how this name worked in a group with a female included in the lineup!
Next was yet another manifestation of the "Sideburns" saga with Vic (electric bass/vocals), brother Nic (lead electric guitar/vocals) and Stewart France (lead vocals/rhythm guitar). They mined the party/banquet scene until Vic was 38. From ages 38-41, Vic (electric bass/vocals) and brother Nic (electric guitar/vocals) performed as a duo (with the aid of a drum machine) as - you guessed it - the "Sideburns"!!
Vocalist Bill Mac joined the boys sometime in 2003 and they were renamed by BobCats
guitarist/keyboardist/singer Danny Casavant as the "HipCats", as he felt a group name change was long overdue. Gigs were mostly at the Dover Arms for the newly christened "HipCats", and due to various factors, gigs were somewhat sparse. As a result, Vic was available to fill in for the first BobCats drummer, Darrell Mayes, when he was unable to make the Dover Sunday gig or any of the various other pub gigs they were playing. Eventually, Vic became the BobCats' full time drummer when Darrell's schedule became too busy.
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Bill Mac - special guest artist at some BobCats Performances.
Bill Mac, the mysterious Fifth BobCat, appeared on the scene initially as a guest singer with the band at the Dover Arms Pub. His murky past was unknown until the Bio that follows landed in our hot little hands. What follows is Bill Mac's own account of his journey through the Music Biz that led him to his present BobCat status. Like many others Bill Mac started singing in church, but his first public performance was at the Okalla Prison Guards' Summer Picnic in 1958, where he joined his older brothers Ron, Don and Bob in singing the ballad "Hang Down Your Head Tom Dooley".
While there was a competition that day for a prize pistol belt buckle, it remains a dispute as to which brother really won the prize. It is clear that Bill Mac developed a taste for the stage and an early appreciation for the lyrics and rhythms of early country and rockabilly music.
As lead singer of the Cobras in 1967, with brother Bob on rhythm guitar, and schoolmates Dave Clayton on drums, Roy Stagg on bass and Dick Tassie on lead guitar, Bill Mac performed the songs of the Beatles, Rolling Stones and a host of other British invasion bands that dominated radio airplay at the time. At the same time his appreciation of the songs and singing styles of rocker Elvis Presley, and country singers Johnny Cash and Hank Williams increased.
Influenced by singer/songwriters Bob Dylan, Gordon Lightfoot and Leonard Cohen, Bill began songwriting and performing with singer/songwriter Tom Emmens in the 1970s.
Immediately popular for their harmony vocals and original songs that chronicled the struggles of life and love, William/Thomas (as they were known) would eventually fade into history shortly after performing to a captive audience at the William Head Penitentiary. So okay, maybe it wasn't Folsom or San Quentin Prison . . . but it was in the best tradition of Johnny Cash.
Discussions off stage with Bill Mac's brother Don would be the genesis of Steaming Tears quartet:- the musical storytelling of Emmens and Bill Mac - sweetened with three part harmonies and the tasteful lead guitar playing of brother Don and with former Cobras band mate Dick Tassie on bass.
Named for the Bill Mac song of the same title, Steaming Tears ceased to be a quartet when drummer Harry Chreech joined the band as its fifth member. Russ Barton eventually replaced Harry Chreech on drums and Steaming Tears could no longer claim to have "any old Tom, Dick and Harry" in the band. With a change in personnel came a change in name: and W.T. Flightcrew became the final metamorphosis of William/Thomas (W.T.).
Continuing to pursue his songwriting, Bill Mac signed with BMI Music in 1977. But it was becoming apparent that for the survival of the band as a live performing unit they would have to relocate to greener pastures.
Despite ever increasing popularity,
Flightcrew, as it became known, experienced a decline in live music venues as Disco music swept the nation.
Intended to breath new life into the band, a relocation to Alberta prompted the resignation of Barton:- and although the remaining members headed east in the band's converted 1958 school bus, Flightcrew never regained its momentum and disbanded shortly after arriving in Edmonton.
Before departing Alberta, Bill Mac had developed a serious throat condition and with Flightcrew just posters on the wall, and unable to sing, he dropped out of the music scene.
In 2001, Bill Mac re-emerged, surfacing in Vancouver's West End. His voice fully recovered, and sounding better than ever, the audience response to Bill Mac was immediate, and he quickly established friendships and associations within the Vancouver music scene.
Whether performing with Nick and Vic Bicego in the HipCats, or appearing with musical savants Danny Casavant, Bob White, Jimmy Walker and Vic (Ringoletto) Bicego in the legendary BobCats, the stage presence and popularity of Bill Mac is undeniable.
Bill Mac will be releasing an independent CD of original tunes (some co-written with BobCat Danny Casavant) on the Steaming Tears label in the very near future.
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