Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - March 6, 2022, Winnipeg, Manitoba
SUNDAY SPECIAL
A4 SUNDAY MARCH 6, 2022
SUNDAY SPECIAL EDITOR: KELLY TAYLOR ● KELLY.TAYLOR@FREEPRESS.MB.CA ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
WHEN you need some bass in your neighbour-hood, who you gonna call? Vaughan Poyser.Wait, who?
Vaughan Poyser — he’s a man who’s turned four strings
into about a million opportunities. A prolific and talented
professional bassist who has been deeply involved in Win-
nipeg’s music scene for 40 years, you may have never heard
of him by name, but you’ve probably heard his stylings or
seen him on the stage without even knowing it.
Bass players are often ribbed for being the “forgotten”
members of bands, and rarely get the limelight. It’s high
time one takes centre stage.
Poyser was adopted at one-and-a-half years old by his
father Lindsay and mother Evelyn; his two older siblings,
Mike and Madelaine, were also adopted.
Lindsay and Evelyn didn’t know much about their youngest
son’s birth family, except that he came from a “musical back-
ground.” Indeed, Poyser was smitten by music at a young age.
He’d sneak into Mike’s room when Mike was out, listen to his
records, and bang on his drum kit.
“I always had a love for music, always,” Poyser said during a
wide-ranging two-plus-hour chat in the basement studio in his
River Heights home on a recent weekend afternoon. “I never
wanted to do anything else.”
Lindsay and Evelyn, trying to support their son’s interests,
put him in every musical and artistic activity they could — the
Royal Winnipeg Ballet, the Winnipeg Boys’ Junior and Senior
Choirs, and piano lessons.
At 13, Poyser quit them all — “I didn’t think it was cool
anymore.” He took a year off, but then picked up a bass for the
first time.
It wasn’t because he had a strong attraction to the instru-
ment. His best friend Eric Matheson and Eric’s older brother
had already bought a drum kit and a guitar, respectively.
“What else do you need?” to start a band, Posyer asked
rhetorically.
His parents told him they’d buy him one if he took lessons,
and he agreed. After a year, his instructor told him he needed
a better bass.
“I had the choice between a Gibson Grabber, which was
Gene Simmons’ — this is 1978 — or Geddy Lee’s Rickenbacker
4001.”
“Well, I picked the Rickenbacker, and…” he said, pulling a
cream-coloured bass off a stand behind the reporter, “I still
have the Rickenbacker today.”
Teen jam bands only last for so long and when Poyser was
about 19, put an ad in the paper as a bassist for hire. He met
many new friends played in a rock-and-roll group called Ses-
sion that got some local gigs.
He was then a member of a band called Steelwater that
toured all over Western Canada for weeks at a time.
“We made very little money, the adventures were crazy —
near death adventures,” he said of that time. During one drive
through northern Alberta in the middle of winter, the band’s
sound tech and driver fell asleep at the wheel of their school
bus, which went into the ditch, hit a culvert, caught air, and
landed 30 feet away from the highway in a snow drift.
This experience did not dissuade Poyser from wanting to
pursue a music career, and his parents continued to support
him in his endeavours.
“They never kicked me out, or said ‘come on, it’s time for
you to get a job,’” Poyser said. “They never did that. I guess
they always believed in me and believed in music.” He remem-
bers his father would play ragtime piano every night after his
children were put to bed.
But something soon happened that made Poyser call it quits.
In his mid-20s, he was dating Leah Speirs, who is now his
wife of 30 years. While Poyser was on a tour, she called and
reported she had come home to find her father dead; he had
suffered a brain aneurysm. Her mother was already sick and
in the hospital.
“So I came home, and quit, and got a job,” he said. But soon,
Leah, who’d known her boyfriend since he was 15, knew he
was unhappy.
“She just went ‘you’re going crazy, Vaughan. You’re sad. I
can feel it… so go find a band and start playing.’ She kicked
my butt back into playing. And so that just launched it again
and it’s never gone backwards.”
He played in a number of bands thereafter, but his first big
break came in the 1990s with a country group called Saddle-
tramp. The band did tons of touring, had songs on the radio,
clothing endorsements, and was raking in big money.
Photos of that time show Poyser with a mane of long, curly
red hair and either an impressive Fu Manchu or goatee; during
the interview, his red hair, long in the back, was held neatly
back under a black backwards beret; his beard was trimmed to
stubble and has turned white.
Playing in Saddletramp came with a hard-partying lifestyle.
“People were sending liquor up to us every night, six nights
a week. So I would be coming home drunk six nights a week
and we had two young children at the time,” he said. “That
lasted two weeks and my wife said ‘make a decision. Music or
your family.’ I went ‘well, there’s no choice. My kids, I choose
my kids.’”
“She didn’t say ‘quit.’ She said ‘quit the alcohol,’” Poyser
clarified. He acknowledged it’s important to hang out with
fans and still did so on weekends.
“When my wife saw that I was working for music — not for
the girls, not for the liquor, not for the drugs or anything —
that I was doing it for the music, she was good with that.”
Saddletramp’s members eventually clashed over finan-
cial problems and executive meddling caused by a certain
member. The rest of the band left and formed a group called
Hatfield McCoy, the name being a nod to Saddletramp’s feud.
But Poyser saw the band going downhill after a while and
he’d had enough of touring small towns and being away from
Leah and his daughters Lindsay (named after his father) and
Rebecca.
That’s when his career turned to the trajectory he’s still
on today — from band musician to freelancer, teacher and
producer.
Tyrone Rogers, a “dear friend,” recognized Poyser’s desire
and drive. He told him to quit the band and go to school to
study music.
“He convinced me to go to university, so I went to the
University of Manitoba for three years,” Poyser said. While he
didn’t graduate, it was a huge boon to his skills.
“Reading music, writing music, understanding music — it
was everything,” Posyer said of his education. “I became a
force. My ear training, all of that, became so much better…
studying music, analyzing music and being able to write it: it
changed my life.”
If not for that schooling, Poyser said he’d be working a day
job.
After leaving school in 2003, the benefits of being a free-
lancer who stuck mostly in Winnipeg became clear. His
income tripled, he could play more styles of music with more
types of artists, and spend more time at home.
Rogers planted that seed as he’d told Poyser in the past: “the
reason you’re not getting any phone calls right now is because
you’re fixed in on this one band, you’re going out of town all
the time, so people can’t book you or rely on you. Once you
stay home, you’re going to get tons of gigs in town.”
Poyser didn’t believe Rogers at first, but soon found he was
right.
“I could take a gig that required me to learn 30 songs. The
night before, I could chart all the songs, do the gig, and get
paid good money. I understood music more completely, harmo-
ny… lead singing, and all that. It made my life way better.”
Poyser kept working hard to improve his aptitude, not just at
bass, but also on the business and management side.
He manages social media — when he started, it was Mys-
pace and now it’s Facebook and Instagram — and websites,
finds gigs for the bands he freelances with, and books them.
“That’s just all I do. I’m never just the player… people say
I’m very helpful,” he said.
Poyser has a well-deserved reputation as a go-to-guy in
town. He’s played and recorded with countless groups over
the years, including Chris Bigford, Leanne Goose, Billy Joe
Green, Joey Gregorash, Jennifer Hanson, Hillbilly Burlesque,
Solomon King, Big Dave McLean, the Round-Up Band (which
has been playing country tunes at Transcona’s Silver Spike
Saloon for 20 years,) Streetheart, and Brandi Vezina
He also acted as a consigliere of sorts for friend Don Bouch-
er, who ran a jazz festival in the Bahamas throughout the
2010s. It was originally established to raise money for Bahami-
an women on the island Boucher lived who couldn’t afford to
fly to Nassau to get breast exams.
Some of his biggest influences are world-famous titans such
as Donald (Duck) Dunn, Geddy Lee, Jaco Pastorius, and Victor
Wooten.
He also credited local bassist Gilles Fournier for giving him
an “aha” moment.
At a party for Poyser’s cousin, a prolific piano player, five
different bass players performed. “They were all great but
there was something over-and-above with Gilles, and that
night it was totally apparent,” Poyser said.
After the show, Posyer asked Fournier: “Throw me a bone
here. Whatever you tell me, I’ll go home and I promise I’ll
practise it for a year. Give me something — give me a little bit
of Gilles Fournier so I can bring it into my playing.”
Fournier’s answer was cryptic. “Vaughan, there’s only 12
notes.”
Poyser didn’t get it. “I’d been to university. I knew there’s
only 12 notes,” he said to the reporter.
Fournier repeated: “Vaughan, there’s only 12 notes.” Then
Poyser got the lesson.
Fournier wanted Poyser to cultivate his own identity as a
bass player — not just sound like him.
“What I took from that was that I just saw five guys all
playing the same notes, but it was his choices… what choices
you make, makes you sound who you are… I’ve always carried
that with me.”
Poyser is an influence on bassists himself. He has taught for
the past 20 years, conducting private lessons for people of all
ages and skill levels.
He describes his lessons as a “constant conversation about
music” and doesn’t give tests or exams. Lessons involve a
whole lot of playing and some theory; halfway through his
teaching career, he took a “right turn” to focus on the songs
and music his students are interested in, rather than make
them play certain genres. This is a similar tack to Poyser’s
early teacher.
“He would teach me my favourite songs — not teach me his
songs — he would teach me songs that I liked so that way I
would go and practice every day,” he said.
“Music theory applies to every song, so why would I get
them to learn my songs?”
He simply asks his students to play every day. He doesn’t
care how long (he plays at least an hour a day), as long as they
enjoy it. He has students that have gone on to Berkeley and
The Julliard School in New York City.
The past two years have been challenging for musicians.
Once COVID-19 arrived in Manitoba almost 24 months ago to-
day, performances were cancelled and venues shuttered, amps
off, stage empty, lights down. Even between waves, shows
were few and far between.
Poyser admitted to being depressed at first. “Never in my
40-year career, have I ever not had gigs,” he said. “The pinna-
cle to your hard work is a gig. Gone. Every gig is gone.”
He credited the Canadian government for supporting musi-
cians with CERB, and soon saw the pandemic as an opportu-
nity.
“I just got busy. It’s kind of simple sometimes,” he said. “Ev-
erything’s shut down, so now you’ve got a clean slate? What do
you do?”
He transitioned his lessons to online and gave them for free,
feeling it wasn’t right that he collected CERB without giving
something back. He started a recording studio in his home. He
hit the books. He learned more about fixing guitars and basses
and now offers repair services.
“When COVID hit, nobody was working, but I was.” He saw
the CERB as his wage. “If I’m being paid, I should be doing
something.”
Poyser came through the pandemic all right, but that doesn’t
mean he’s not happy life is becoming “normal” again — he
played with the Jennifer Hanson-led house band at Winnipeg
Blue Bombers’ games half-time shows and also plays with
cover band Go For A Szoda. He’s looking forward to doing
more with his home studio, recording some tunes with Brandi
Vezina, and travelling to The Bahamas again later this month.
I would have been remiss to not give Poyser a chance
to strut his stuff. Putting him on the spot, the interviewer
requests a pair of well-known songs with notoriously difficult
and intricate basslines: Stevie Wonder’s Sir Duke and Rush’s
Red Barchetta.
Happy to oblige, Poyser picks up a well-used Fender and is
quickly in his element.
When Poyser plays, everything else becomes incidental
and the bass seems designed to be around his neck and in his
hands. His head bobs, his foot stomps, and his fingers fly over
the frets. Going through the frenetic solo section of the Stevie
Wonder tune — where the bass plays along with a fast-paced
trumpet — he does well considering the request was sprung on
him, but owns a slight slip with a “sorry!” nonetheless.
Poyser agrees that Sir Duke is a song every bassist should
know, before moving on to the Rush epic about a countryside
race in the titular banned-from-the-roads sports car.
“Oh man, do I remember this?” Poyser asks, but it’s clear he
does. Some parts are rusty, and he acknowledges as such with
a “been a long time.” Soon, though, he’s singing along with
Lee — “I strip away the old debris/That hides a shining car/A
brilliant red Barchetta/From a better vanished time…”
Poyser is as proud of his family as his career. He speaks
glowingly of his daughters Lindsay — who recently began her
“dream job” working with children and adults with neuro-
motor disorders and fights MMA — and Rebecca, who is a
massage therapist.
Leah has been an EA in a nearby school for more than 15
years; she and Vaughan ride his Harley together in the sum-
mer.
He’s also a doting dad dog of Abbie, a nine-year-old pointer
hound, and Tucker, a seven-year-old pug (Tucker’s snoring is
the background track for the interviewer’s audio recording).
Remember when we said it was just by chance that bass
became Poyser’s instrument of choice, because that’s what
was needed for his teen band? Depending on how much stock
you put in kismet or predestination, the story’s a little more
complicated than that.
When his parents died in the 1990s, Poyser bought their
house — where he still lives today — from their estate. With
their estate came his adoption papers. He vowed not to look
at them but Leah and Madelaine did; Madelaine eventually
spoiled his birth name, despite his request to the contrary.
He got a letter that went into more detail about his birth
mother, which devastated him. He ripped it up.
He didn’t pursue more, but his historian niece encouraged
him to get his blood tested and look further into his ancestry.
Within three months, he had names. He discovered he has a
full brother and a half-sister. He connected on Facebook with
his uncle; the two men bear a close resemblance.
He also came across a photo of his birth family’s band —
remember the “musical background?” — and showed it to the
reporter.
In the photo, Poyser’s birth mother, Sandra McAuley, is
playing bass.
“It completed me,” Poyser said. “There was no wondering
anymore who I was.”
McAuley died in 2011. Her grave site is about 50 feet from
Lindsay and Evelyn’s.
“I would really love to tell my birth mom that she did well,”
Poyser said. “That as hard it was to give me up — or not, what-
ever — that if she ever wondered about me, know that she did
the right thing, that she did good, because I’m great.”
“I’m blessed, I’m blessed, and I’m blessed.”
declan.schroeder@winnipegfreepress.com
DECLAN SCHROEDERRiver Heights musician turning
12 notes into a lifetime career
ACE
OF
BASS
RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Vaughan Poyser at home with his pointer hound Abbie. The professional freelance bassist and recording artist has been part of WInnipeg’s music scene for the past 40 years.
MARC COEFFIC PHOTO
At the Eleuthera All That Jazz Festival with bassist Adrian D’Aguilar. It’s an
annual event which takes place on Eleuthera in the Bahamas.
RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Poyser inspects an instrument in his workshop.
RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Poyser in his home studio; the bassist plays at least an hour a day.
SUPPLIED
SUPPLIED
Vaughan’s family: (from left) Becca, Leah, Vaughan, Lindsay, (dogs) Tucker and Abbie SUPPLIED
The Go for a Szozda
Dance Band: Jim
Doe, Jeremy Doe,
Tammy Szozda, and
Vaughan
Jenerator 2021
Blue Bomber House
Band: Mike Polan-
ski, Dylan Thomas,
Jennifer Hansen,
Trevor Urbanski and
Vaughan
;