Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 19, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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THIS CITY
. OUR WEEKLY LOOK AT THE PULSE OF THE CITY
.
A8 SUNDAY, JULY 19, 2015
I N the mid- 1960s, the biggest- selling Manitoba-
based recording act wasn't the Guess
Who, but Ukrainian- language country
duo Mickey & Bunny.
Their recording of Woody Guthrie's This Land
is Your Land , sung in both Ukrainian and English,
sold more than 70,000 copies, making them
one of the most successful recording artists in
Western Canada.
Mickey & Bunny recorded for local V- Records,
which Alex Groshak established in 1962 and
operated out of his home on Fleury Place in
Windsor Park. Groshak was a visionary who saw
a vast untapped market for ethnic music in the
Ukrainian- Canadian community.
" I feel that Ukrainian music is very unique
and one of a kind, given to us by previous generations,
and it should be preserved for future
generations," he said in a 2005 radio interview.
" There was no exchange of cultural information ( between
Ukrainian- Canadians and Ukraine) during the Cold
War, so people here had to create their own culture and
music," says Brian Cherwick, a former Winnipegger with
a PhD in Ukrainian folklore and ethnology.
Already a veteran of the music business, having worked
for Phonodisc, Quality and Regis Records, Groshak recognized
the potential with V- Records.
" There was a big demand for Ukrainian music for weddings
and socials," he said in the radio interview.
The label featured artists such as Tommy Buick, Jim
Gregrash ( no relation to Joey Gregorash), Peter Hnatiuk,
John Yuzyk, the Royal Polka Kings, Peter Lamb, the
Primrose Trio, Mae Chwaluk, Joe Jedraski, Anna Kraichy
and Peter Picklyk - all well- known in the Ukrainian community
- playing and singing popular Ukrainian songs.
But the most consistently successful V- Records artist was
Mickey & Bunny.
Ethelbert- born Modest Sklepowich ( Mickey) and Orissia
Ewanchuk ( Bunny), who was from Rosa, met serendipitously.
" We actually met in the middle of the Arlington Bridge,"
chuckles Bunny. " I was in a car with a friend who knew
Mickey, and when we saw Mickey coming in the other
direction, we stopped in the middle of the bridge. Mickey
asked for my phone number and called me the next day."
Playing guitar and singing since his early teens, Mickey
was a pharmacist by trade, while Bunny was a qualified
school teacher ( she would later teach Ukrainian language
classes). They married in 1957.
Under the name Mickey & Bunny Sheppard, they began
performing in bars, where Groshak spotted them and
signed them to his fledgling label. Their debut album,
1964' s Mickey & Bunny Sing Ukrainian Country Music,
sold more than 10,000 copies.
" Mickey was the driving force," Bunny says. " He had so
much energy."
Mickey understood the entertainment business and how
to make money. At their peak in the mid-' 60s, he said the
couple earned $ 60,000 to $ 75,000 annually and purchased
a brand- new Cadillac every year.
Often mislabelled a polka act, Mickey & Bunny leaned
more toward the twangy, pop- country sounds of Bakersfield's
Buck Owens. Their success was based on an ability
to sing songs in both languages, a style known as " half na
piv," half- Ukrainian, half- English. Their big hit This Land
is Your Land was presented in that style.
" We were helping preserve the Ukrainian language for
young people," Bunny says. " That song really connected
with younger people. We also introduced them to traditional
Ukrainian music they had inherited but didn't know
about."
Their success came quickly.
" We were playing the Winnipeg Auditorium, and Mickey
looked out the window at all these people standing outside
waiting to get in. He thought there must be someone else
performing next door," Bunny says.
The duo released 13 albums for V- Records and toured
Canada more than a dozen times, selling out Toronto's
Massey Hall for three nights ( yielding a " simulated live"
album) and appearing at Detroit's Ford Auditorium.
They even played in Las Vegas. But their strongest base
remained rural Western Canada, where they toured often,
appearing on television and radio.
" They were cultural ambassadors, unifying the mostly
isolated rural Ukrainian communities, as well as generations,"
Cherwick says.
Early on, Mickey & Bunny recruited Winnipeg band the
D- Drifters 5 as a backing band on the road and for recordings.
The band was formed by the Roman ( a. k. a. Romanyshyn)
brothers, who were originally from Fraserwood.
Dave played accordion and bass, and Tony played guitar.
The band, which included Ihor ( Yogi) Klos on fiddle, Mike
Klym on drums and Andy Pokolinski on saxophone, had
been together for a few years when Tony was hired to back
Mickey & Bunny on tour.
" Mickey would hire additional musicians in each place
they played," Dave Roman says. " Then he realized he
needed a full- time band, so he auditioned us. We barely
got through the second song when he stopped us and said
' You're hired.' "
It was a big step for the band.
" I made more money the first night with Mickey &
Bunny than I did in a whole month working as a draftsman,"
Roman says.
But the merger was not without its hurdles.
" Mickey fired Yogi after two weeks," Roman says, " because
Yogi wouldn't do what Mickey wanted."
Besides working with Mickey & Bunny, the D- Drifters
5 also recorded on their own for V- Records, releasing five
albums of Ukrainian dance music.
" The albums came about because Mickey Sheppard
had his own studio in his house ( at 11 Gillia Dr.) in West
Kildonan," says Roman.
Versatility was the band's calling card.
" We always thought of ourselves as a
rock ' n' roll cover band, but we could play
anything," Roman says.
In 1965, the D- Drifters 5 released an
album of Beatles and British Invasion
pop songs sung in Ukrainian.
" Yogi and I and my mother translated
them," Roman says.
Groshak dubbed the band
" the Ukrainian Beatles."
By the latter ' 60s the D- Drifters, as they were now
known, left Mickey & Bunny for a career on their own,
becoming an instant sensation.
" Because of our association with Mickey & Bunny,
people knew who we were," Roman says. " Our first gig
was at the Lincoln Hotel, and people were practically
knocking down the door to get in. We couldn't believe it."
Over the next two decades, the D- Drifters remained one
of the top bands in the province and beyond, playing pubs,
dances, weddings - you name it. A later lineup included a
pre- BTO Fred Turner.
" We did very well in the music business, even though we
never had a hit record," Roman says.
Mickey & Bunny divorced in the early ' 70s but continued
to perform and record for a few years. Mickey then went
out on his own ( at one point employing local blues guitar
legend Billy Joe Green on guitar), while Bunny embarked
on a teaching career up north for several years.
Their hit version of This Land is Your Land received
official recognition with inclusion in the national archives
in Ottawa.
" We couldn't believe how two small- town people could
create such a big to- do," Bunny says. " The Ukrainian
community loved us and loved that music. It was a glorious
eight- to 10- year run."
In an effort to duplicate the successful Ukrainian model,
Groshak sought to tap into Winnipeg's bustling Italian-
Canadian community by signing popular performer
Carmine La Rosa and releasing records in Italian. La Rosa
had been around the local scene since he arrived in Winnipeg
in 1954 at age 10.
" My parents were already here, so they sent for me to
come over by boat all alone," he recalls. Within weeks,
he was singing at popular Pembina Highway restaurant
Mama Trossi's.
" They would bring me at 6 p. m. for the dinner crowd,
then I would sleep in the back of the restaurant until about
2 a. m., when they would wake me up to sing for the latenight
crowd after Rancho Don Carlos closed. I was taking
home $ 35 to $ 40 a week, which was more than my mother
made working in a factory for 60 hours a week."
He remembers the night he performed at the Royal
Alexandra Hotel on Main Street and took home $ 70.
A friend of the family offered to take young La Rosa to
Chicago to sing in restaurants and clubs.
" He would make sure I went to school and send my parents
$ 200 a month," La Rosa remembers. " They said no. I
had only been reunited with my family for six months."
La Rosa later hooked up with friends from Churchill
High School to form the Thunderstorms. The band was a
popular attraction at community clubs, later graduating
to bars throughout the city, including Chan's Moon Room,
the St. Charles Hotel, the Town ' n' Country's Gold Coach
Lounge and the Black Night.
" We did six months at the Black Night," La Rosa says. " I
used to perform with the band in the pub until it closed at
11, then go sing with the guitar player in the lounge until
midnight."
Like the D- Drifters, the Thunderstorms courted broader
appeal.
" We were more versatile than just a rock ' n' roll band,"
says La Rosa. " I sang the Italian songs like Volare , and we
did Trini Lopez songs and country and western. We also
played weddings and socials for the Italian community."
Groshak approached the band at a gig at the Lincoln
Hotel and offered to record them.
The La Rosa Trio + 1 ( La Rosa, Gary Rogers, Mike Sambork
and Ted Hicks) released a couple of singles and two
albums on V- Records, Italian Songs and A Party- Italian
Style .
" We were an experiment for V- Records," La Rosa says.
" The Ukrainians over here didn't have access to music
from home, so there was an existing market here. Alex
tried to do the same with the Italian community here, but
Italians were able to get records from Italy. You could go
to Nucci's Records and buy the latest Italian records from
home. You didn't need a cover band to play those songs."
La Rosa says the French community ended up buying
more of his records than the Italian community.
Perhaps V- Records' most famous release was a oneoff
single in the fall of 1963 by Winnipeg rock band the
Squires. Only 300 copies were pressed and used by the
band for promotional giveaways.
The band's frontman and lead guitarist was a teenage
Neil Young, who composed both sides of the 45. Recorded
on July 23 at the CKRC radio station, The Sultan , backed
by Aurora , were both guitar instrumentals in the vein of
the Shadows or Duane Eddy that made nary a ripple on the
local scene until Young found fame years later.
Roman attended the recording session.
" Neil impressed me because he had the right idea, writing
your own songs," he said. " That's what I wanted to do."
Nowadays, original copies ( there have been bootleg copies
in circulation for years) of the rare 45 change hands
for thousands of dollars.
" My dad pressed that as a favour to CKRC's Bob Bradburn,
who produced the record," says Mike Groshak, who
replaced his father as head of V- Records in 2007 when the
latter died.
La Rosa crossed paths with Young in 1961 when the budding
musician played bass with the Thunderstorms for a
couple of gigs.
" Neil was a bit of an odd individual back then," recalls
La Rosa. " Kind of anti- social, withdrawn and introverted,
more reserved than the rest of us."
In 1965, Young brought a new version of the Squires to
Mickey Sheppard's basement studio, where they cut two of
his songs, I'm A Man ( And I Can't Cry) and I Wonder .
" I don't know whatever happened to those songs," Bunny
says.
Decades later, Young found the tapes and released the
tracks on his massive box set, Archives Vol. 1 1963- 1972 .
Relocating operations to 221 Flora Ave., Groshak
expanded his record enterprise with offshoot labels such
as K and UK, the latter featuring Bill Woloshyn's popular
Interlake Polka Kings. He also imported dozens of
titles from throughout Europe in an attempt to corner the
market on ethnic recordings in Western Canada. Unfortunately,
the gamble did not pay off, and the label suffered
financially.
" That's when things started to fall apart," Mike Groshak
says.
One- time V artist Ness Michaels ( a. k. a. Nestor Shydlowsky)
formed Sunshine Records in the mid-' 70s to compete
with Groshak. Although no longer active, V- Records still
exists in name under Mike's direction.
" The real joy was in allowing people to hear their own
music," stresses Mike. " It was a cultural explosion for
Ukrainians, and V- Records did a lot to preserve both the
language and culture."
' They were cultural
ambassadors,
unifying the mostly
isolated rural
Ukrainian
communities, as well
as generations
- Brian Cherwick
Cultural crossover
Label tapped into demand for Ukrainian music
JOHN EINARSON
REMEMBERS
A four- man incarnation of the D- Drifters: Mike Klym ( from left), Tony Roman, Yogi Klos and Dave Roman.
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