Musicians Collaboration Studio

Gerry B-Cool Beyond Zero

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Offline canuk62

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Guess it's time to let one loose from the CBZ dungeon!
I enjoy those reality/regional based type of folk songs..this one (Gerry B) is based the legendary Ottawa (Canada) bouncer Gerry basically regarded as the toughest guy in the world (at least if you were ever unfortunate enough to have him come after you! ;D). I'll post what some guy wrote in a blog which sums it up pretty well:


 
Quote
Gerry Barber Was One Tough Son Of A Bitch


He was the meanest, toughest, nastiest bar bouncer in the Hull-Ottawa area, and probably the entire country. And me and my friends hold the tremendous honour of being thrown down the stairs by him.

We weren't the first and we weren't the last, but at least I can tell my grandkids someday that I once got tossed around like a pillow by the great Gerry Barber.

He wasn't a giant of a man, this Gerry Barber, maybe five feet, 10 inches and maybe 250 pounds, but he took on all comers - drunken bikers a handful at a time, snotty teenaged kids with one too many quarts of beer in their gut, and shady characters toting guns and knives.

He broke up fights nightly at the Chaudiere Club, busted a lot of heads, and had his own head cracked open several times from pipes and other things that would damage you and me much more than him. Absolutely, Gerry Barber was one tough mother.

The Chaudiere Club sat alone on the road that led from Hull to Alymer on the Quebec side of the river across from Ottawa. It was a testament to a golden era, a massive dirty-white, two-story club built in the 1930s, and it was a monolithic marvel of balconies, rooms, and murals. In its prime, it was one of the finest jazz and swing night spots found anywhere.

Louis Armstrong, Gene Krupa, the Inkspots, Duke Ellington, they all played this house affectionately called the Chaud, and folks came from all over the Ottawa Valley tossed their fedoras and mink shawls aside and swung the night away.

But the Chaud, beginning in the 1960s, took a hardcore turn as music and minds changed, and toughs from all over began to make it their beer-soaked clubhouse. Fights, loud arguments, passing out at tables, stabbings, and angry confrontations in the parking lot all came along.

Luckily, so did Gerry Barber.

It didn't matter how many he had to throw out, he just threw them out. Anybody. Any amount. Any time. He did his damage with sheer power, and was willing to takes great cracks on the head and knuckles on his nose to get the job done. And he'd return the favour.

Gerry Barber's reputation grew. National magazine write-ups, stories in the Ottawa papers. Curious profiles. Several years ago, Ottawa Sun columnist Earl McRae held a long and fascinating poll with his readers to determine Ottawa's toughest man ever. Yep, Gerry Barber won.

That's why being thrown down the stairs at the Chaud by the great Gerry Barber is such an honour for me. I don't remember what my friends and I had done to deserve the treatment, but guessing that we were young, obnoxious, drunken morons would be a really good guess.

Gerry Barber has been gone many years now, but I'm sure he's still talked about with reverence and awe in the Ottawa area. The Chaudiere's gone now too, levelled by a wrecking ball that was probably almost as hard as Barber's fist and head. Now, for those who partied there, all that's left are memories, several scars, and a few missing teeth.

The Chaud really had something when it had Gerry Barber to keep things in line. The place might have been out of control if it wasn't for him. He not only rearranged noses, but he probably saved many lives by booting them out head-first into the parking lot before the worst could happen.

He was a man who can be an inspiration for all bouncers who decide to be the best they can be. Just don't try to be like him, because you could get hurt. And I don't want to get thrown down any more stairs.

The only thing I can add to this saga (it's in the song) is Gerry more or less retired after an incident where some scumbag unloaded an entire clip from a .45 semi-auto handgun into Gerry...then to the shooters  horror, Gerry kept calmly walking towards him and surgically implanted the barrel into his ear, then scumbag and his buddy were "escorted" from the bar by the nice gentlemen from the Satans Choice motorcycle gang and given a scenic tour of the Quebec countryside tied up in the back of their van and  eventually fed to the Pike in a lake somewhere. ;D ;D Anyway, was a great place to play and cut my teeth there (had a few loosened along the way I might add). :)
Keep rockin'!
Marc

Title: Gerry B/Traynor-Copyright 2008
Band: Cool Beyond Zero
Mix: Canuk

Gerry B (Traynor)

Born at the stroke of midnight under a blood red moon
Came into the world with a scream and a bad attitude
The doctor took one look at him and then he walked away
Mama didn't have a clue but the devil had a son that day

Many men will try him and many more will fall
Gerry B will nail them to the wall

Slow down mama, forget those plans you made
Your son won't be no preacher man, he's a hand grenade
Lay low brother forget those moves you make
Unless you're looking forward to the grave
He's a nasty boy

The boy grew up into a great big man 350 six feet four
Bouncing bikers at the Chaude hotel out that big green door
I've seen him take a belly of lead and crush the little bastard's head
Then he finished off his buddy who would be better off dead

Many men would try him
Just as many would fall
Gerry B would nail then all to the wall

Slow down mama, forget those plans you made
Your son won't be no preacher man, he's a hand grenade
Lay low brother forget those moves you make
Unless you're looking forward to the grave
He's a nasty boy

Many men will try him
Just as many will fall
Gerry B would nail then all to the wall

Slow down mama, forget those plans you made
Your son won't be no preacher man, he's a hand grenade
Lay low brother forget those moves you make
Unless you're really looking forward to the grave
He's just a nasty boy
A real nasty boy
A super nasty boy



Offline Pleasuredome

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Offline AndyG6508

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Hey Guys,

Its good to see another CBZ tune in the finished section!!!.

Always liked the song, ever since the first time I heard it (in the CBZ forum) and I think that being inspired by a real life character - gives the song so much more depth and soul.

The new mix is great, with the usual brilliant performances on the vocals, bass, guitar,  keyboards :D  and drums!!

Into the ipod she goes....and the boyz ARE back in town! :)

Cheers
Andy


« Last Edit: June 29, 2009, 11:00:08 PM by AndyG6508 »



Offline canuk62

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Thanks guys/yeah, this one has been kicking around for a long time and seemed like forever to do the final  touches and kick it out of the basement so-to-speak.. we've got a whole bunch recorded just waiting for the 'ol heave-ho out of the dungeon as well! ;D
Take care!
Marc


Offline CosmicDolphin

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Shame we can't get a gig there  ;D
We never finish a mix... we simply abandon them.
You can't polish a turd, but you can always spray paint it GOLD
Great songs are not written, they are re-witten


Offline NickT

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Nice job guys.

Cool story and of course I love all the poppin' guitar riffs!

Solid beat and performance by all!

Nick
NickT

"...My life just Ain't TV..."

www.AintTV.com

www.TestafiedRecords.com


Offline canuk62

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Shame we can't get a gig there  ;D

Thanks guys! :) Yeah, Mark...was a great place to rock out the classic hard rock which wasn't classic then yet (played there a few times..paid pretty well from what I remember compared to most..seated about 1200 X $2 cover)...Steve would have been a demigod blasting out the Zep and Purple there, would have been the house band for all the bikers for sure! ;D I do remember through the haze the waiters bringing tray upon tray of cold quarts of beer  up on the stage for the band and lots of little treats from the audience making their way up there as well (cops weren't allowed in there so it was a pretty rauncy place where everything (except fighting) was allowed....I do seem remember the band sleeping in the truck/bar or something to that extent most nights as the whole crew was a little too tipsy to leave the parking lot until the next morning, and our guitar player got a very severe case of mono as well after a 5 nighter with the biker girls! ;D ;D ;D
Marc
« Last Edit: June 30, 2009, 07:41:08 PM by canuk62 »


Offline nitch

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Great job CBZ.

This song drives hard from start to finish.... I LIKE IT


Offline Stoney

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Thanks guys! :) Yeah, Mark...was a great place to rock out the classic hard rock which wasn't classic then yet (played there a few times..paid pretty well from what I remember compared to most..seated about 1200 X $2 cover)...Steve would have been a demigod blasting out the Zep and Purple there, would have been the house band for all the bikers for sure! ;D I do remember through the haze the waiters bringing tray upon tray of cold quarts of beer  up on the stage for the band and lots of little treats from the audience making their way up there as well (cops weren't allowed in there so it was a pretty rauncy place where everything (except fighting) was allowed....I do seem remember the band sleeping in the truck/bar or something to that extent most nights as the whole crew was a little too tipsy to leave the parking lot until the next morning, and our guitar player got a very severe case of mono as well after a 5 nighter with the biker girls! ;D ;D ;D
Marc

Ha! sounds like a perfect rock house and a great memory to look back on and say you were there and survived.... a few scares at the time I suspect ..... There is a place I used to play that I now wonder how the band made it out with the gear and body parts.

A cool stompin tune Marc and great performances by all as usual

Great stuff
Ian


Offline canuk62

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Thanks Ian :) Yeah, some of those places could be intimidating...pulling up and seeing 50-60 Harleys all parked in a row (with the same skull and crossbones sticker on them), but actually the scariest ones I can remember was way back in redneck country (where the nearest cop was an hour away at best) with blood/teeth on the front steps, and walking in and seeing all these people eerily all having the same facial features...we played a round of gigs (I don't know why) in Indiana in the US in the little hellhole towns (we wanted to kill our agent...what were we thinking?), all these toothless rednecks with big 357 magnum handguns strapped to their belts in holsters getting completely drunk on whiskey (they'd approach us on our breaks giving us change to program the jukebox as they couldn't read! "Ah, yer Canadian..bet you fellas can read?")....spent the night hiding under the bed as the street below us was a couple gunfights (think their sherrif was fishing or something) and stray bullets whizzing/bouncing around...now THAT is scary! ;D ;D ;D (can almost hear the banjo part in Deliverance playing in my head! ;D ;D ;D)
Marc
« Last Edit: July 01, 2009, 07:03:00 PM by canuk62 »


 

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