Posts Tagged ‘suicide’

CC PRESS : 2B MAGAZiNE; Getting It Right : New Album and single by CC Trubiak / May 20th 2012

Published by cctadmin on May 20th, 2012

Music

Getting it Right: new album and single by CC Trubiak

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by Jordan Arseneault on May 20, 2012

When you go to C.C. Trubiak’s website, the first thing you see is a Joe Dallessandro/Peter Berlin-inspired photographer of the musician’s lower torso and crotch. The “Enter” icon wittily appears as your cursor hovers over the fly in his jeans. What you see when you enter – as 2B did when we visited his charming apartment in Ottawa’s Gliebe for a private concert in his living room – is an artist living a trunk-full of paradoxes: the sensitive diva, the exhibitionist introvert, and perhaps the most contradictory of all: the gay folk musician…

When I arrive at C.C. Trubiak’s charming home in Ottawa’s historic Gliebe neighbourhood, it’s the morning after a big show with collaborator Danniel Oickle at the Mercury Lounge. Dressed as satyrs in vintage fur pants with ornamental horns, the sprightly Trubiak had sung and read in Oickle’s song cycle Corruption of the Flesh. Readers may recall Oickle and Trubiak as coverboys for the Capital Pride special issue in a sexy series shot by Dan Ziemkiewicz. Over the past year, the two have evolved in tandem, each singing on the other’s albums – Oickle sings on the track “Blue” – and supporting their live shows. Though their styles may differ, their drive to create is their common ground. While Oickle seeks inspiration in Kate Bush et al, Trubiak workships at the altar of one great diva: Dolly Parton.

From Fags to Bitches

For the folkster and photographer, Dolly represents the contradiction “between something glittery and shiny to look at, but underneath there is so much more depth.” On this, he picks up a copy of Dolly’s autobiography, My Life and Other Unfinished Business, and reads a passage about her rags to riches story. “Materially lacking but more than rich in spirit,” is the mantra that Trubiak returns to when he’s mustering up the fire needed to make it as a queer musician. (We decide that our shared middle class semi-rural stories aren’t so much rags to riches as fags to bitches, possible title to a memoir, depending on who writes theirs first!). Icons like Dolly, mixed in with some Joni Mitchell and Peter Berlin, were the inspirations that helped the pensive songster overcome his emotionally difficult childhood in remote Flin Flon, Manitoba.

“The primary message that I learned from growing up in Flin Flon was ‘you’re different, you’re not welcome, you make us uncomfortable,’” Trubiak recalls. “What I learned from that was ‘don’t express yourself.’ That was where the birth of my art and writing started in high school, soaking in books and film, alone.” Trubiak describes growing up in the 80s in rural Manitoba as “living amongst the cultural detritus of the end of the Seventies,” which may be why so much of his music is imbued with a deliberate anachronism. Trubiak’s preoccupation with the analogue past is reminiscent of the nostalgia and eccentricity of certain other Prairie visual artists with tendencies toward the pre-digital. Is it about reclaiming the tough times?

“Back then, my influence musically was with folk and country: Joni Mitchell, Dylan, the confessional aspect of their music.” The otherwise mild-mannered empath says he sticks to folk because he loves the idea of being able to tell a story. “I’m in pain, are you in pain?” he asks in his plaintive but rich tenor. The pain of being a queer boy in an unforgiving rural place could have made Trubiak into a statistic: in high school, like so many who feel different, he struggled with feeling suicidal. “Prairie Boy” was written for the occasion of Victims’ Voices Matter, a conference he was invited to perform at by the GLBTTQ Community Centre and the Department of Justice. The pun on “fairy boy” is a part of healing his teenage self, much as his photographer side expunges any thoughts of shame around his sexuality. (Seriously, folks: check out his photos.)

The transition from loner to performer was a decade-long process, and one that paralleled Trubiak completing a social work degree, which may take him back to Flin Flon some day. The country influence on his music stays low-fi, including a Tammy Wynette cover – “Till I Get it Right” – that he sang to me live, finishing with the wet eyes of someone who lives the emotions of the song every single time. “One of the toughest things about performing live is that I feel like I could cry every time I sing,” he says as I wipe my own eyes.

Check out CC Trubiak’s “Lonely Blue Waves (I Want You)” on Youtube.

They Say I’m Different is available on iTunes or at www.cctrubiak.com

 


QUESTiON : WHAT SONG LYRiCS iNSPiRE YOU? / SERENDiPiTY & THE POWER OF LYRiC iN MUSiC : A CC CONFESSiONAL

Published by cctadmin on April 1st, 2012

The other day I was in conversation with a friend,  specifically sharing song lyrics that iNSPiRE us in some way.  The conversation had started out light enough – did we love the new MADONNA song GiRL GONE WiLD or … not so much?  Our views on MADONNA aside the conversation steered away from her and more towards the direction of citing lyrics that  have left an impression or were/remain significant on some level (often in a healing or comforting way).  Music can hold all kinds of meaning to people, and to each of us a song will stand out for whatever reason we a drawn to – rhythm, voice, what have you – in this instance we were referring to the meaning of a good lyric.  Song writing can be a powerful art/tool.

Let me share a personal story.  The year was 1992, so this was 20 years ago now.  I was 13 years old and struggling very much at school, from a social perspective.  You know the story:  delicate gay boy conflicted by life  in a small mining community up north of what seemed nowhere.  I was a decent student, certainly not at the top of the class but I did well enough.  Not involved in sports, I  didn’t have the confidence to participate in real interests like band, choir or drama classes.  Incredibly shy and insecure as well as unabashedly gay – there was no hiding what came natural to me, making me susceptible to being on the receiving end of enough ridicule.  Those were and are arguably still the times but that was my reality, along with many others everywhere around the world, although I would only grow to  really grasp this in future years.

Bullying was a regular part of life, as was music.  I could spend the day at school, invisible or ostracized, yet I could always rely on coming home to where it felt safe.  This was usually in my room, listening to music, writing, playing and singing.  I was not sharing these difficulties with adults around me – for this is what fear and shame can do to a young and developing mind.  I did however turn to music. I found that lyrics were as important to me as any beautiful melody;   my natural affinity was to gravitate towards music that lent itself to story-telling, confessions – and I had no shortage of music to listen to; NEiL YOUNG, JONi, JAMES TAYLOR  and of course, MiSS DOLLY PARTON.  I could always find peace or calm with music.  At the very least, sweet escape.

If any of you can remember the movie STRAiGHT TALK (which came out in 1992 and there is NO shame if you do remember!) you must recall the song at the opening credits of the film, you know where SHiRLEY KENYON (DOLLY) ditches her small town life for CHiCAGO in search of her big dreams.  The song that opens STRAiGHT TALK is called LiGHT OF A CLEAR BLUE MORNING.  Here are some lyrics:

Its been a long dark night
And Ive been a waitin for the morning
Its been a long hard fight
But I see a brand new day a dawning
I’ve been looking for the sunshine
Cause I aint seen it in so long
But everythings gonna work out just fine
Everythings gonna be all right
That’s been all wrong

Cause I can see the light of a clear blue morning
I can see the light of a brand new day
I can see the light of a clear blue morning
And everythings gonna be all right
Its gonna be okay

When I picture my 13 year old self watching this film & enjoying it for the escapism it provided – these lyrics did not register.  I knew little of hope – I didn’t know what it meant to SEE THE LiGHT OF A CLEAR BLUE MORNiNG, much less what it meant to feel like EVERYTHiNGS GONNA BE ALL RiGHT.  This was not my state of mind at the time; I was in a perpetual state of fear and anxiety, hopeless  and holding all said fears inside due to the intense  apprehension of judgment.  Like so many stories of gay boys and girls, or just any youth struggling with depression and isolation the only thing on my mind was escaping the pain – the iMMEDiATE pain of which I could not see my way out of.

At 13 years of age I attempted suicide as the summer of 1992 wrapped up and it became time to re-enter school for grade 8.  The fear of the unknown and the anticipation that life was always going to be surrounded in this kind of energy and treatment became too much, and no song or lyric could reach me or help me escape that reality.  I have no shame in telling this story, in fact I know that having come out on the winning end of it all (unlike so many unfortunate stories) it gave me the keys to my freedom and it eventually liberated me.  The details of the story are less important but what is important is that I received that help, and although it took those serious actions from me, adults in my life (including family and the school board) had no choice to to hear this cry for help from a youth in severe crisis.  Fortunately I did receive support and slowly but surely began my healing path.  Of course I will always remain grateful for those who rallied around this former self – to help build a stronger foundation.

To bring it back to music and the power of lyric, many years later I found myself randomly listening to LiGHT of a CLEAR BLUE MORNING somehow, and just like that <CLiCK> – something about the familiarity of the song in context to that former place and time went on like a light switch and I realized the essence of the song;  EVEN WHEN THE SKY IS GREY AND FULL OF CLOUDS – THE SUN IS BEHIND THOSE CLOUDS – JUST WAITING TO COME OUT made more sense to me than ever before.  Though the memories had long since been buried of that time and place, like the Universe sort of nudging me along my path I found myself finding a certain resolve and appreciation for the pasts effect on my being in the present.  To me this defines finding meaning in lyric – hence the healing power of art.

The power of these specific lyrics hit me and I found it serendipitous back then and even today.   It was impossible for that 13year old boy to see what treasures life could behold – and although life as an adult has its own pressures and challenges, one always has to hold on to that hope for a better tomorrow.  Typing the words I know they look and sound cliche but that’s just the real way it is.  The message was there for me although it did take me some time to make a connection.

Today this is why I find myself curious and interested in hearing from other people.  Is there a song or a lyric out there that holds for you great power and meaning?  If so - TELL ME YOUR STORY!! – share it in any way you can, as you can rest assured that the meaning it holds for you has the capacity to impact another person as well, and for the better.  I’d love to hear what you have to say!