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The Barenaked TruthBarenaked Ladies vocalist Steven Page lays bare his hopes for a green future18 Dec 2006
Barenaked Ladies (L to R) are Ed Robertson, Jim Creeggan, Kevin Hearn, Tyler Stewart, and Steven Page.
Photo: Nettwerk Records / Chris Woods
Steven Page has seen the future. In it, there are walkable cities with plenty of bike paths, cleared for cyclists even in the dead of winter. Whole communities are powered by wind and other renewable energy sources. And his pop-rock band, Barenaked Ladies, liberated from its major music label, releases music online and on refillable USB thumb drives instead of CDs encased in plastic. OK, that last part is already happening. A few years ago, Page and his bandmates -- none of whom are ladies, or even naked -- left Reprise Records, their major label for almost a decade, opting to go indie again. The move gave them more flexibility in the decision-making process for their new album Barenaked Ladies Are Me. They've also partnered with Reverb, a nonprofit that helps musicians green their tours and raise awareness with their fan base. But the Canuck fivesome doesn't lecture or "finger-wag," as Page calls it. Instead, they try to share honest versions of themselves and their values. BNL lyrics are clever and socially conscious, their shows fun and lighthearted. They joke about mistakes they make during shows and point out funky dancers in the audience; they're not afraid to dance on stage, give a weather report in the middle of a song, or sing "Tomorrow" a cappella.
Steven Page entertains and educates while on stage in Everett, Wash.
Photo: Sarah van Schagen
I caught up with Page on a snowy afternoon in Everett, Wash., a few hours before a recent show. In a black zip-up sweater, graphic tee, and his trademark glasses, Page looked the part of a grup (as defined by New York Magazine) -- he's got kids of his own and a glint of gray in his sideburns, but he's still a kid at heart. Sipping herbal tea between questions, Page leaned forward while talking, clearly passionate about his "pipe dreams" of greening the music industry, building cities that "really work," and getting fans on board with the issues he cares about.
The new album is Barenaked Ladies Are Me.
At first, it was essentially just the eco-village, so there'd be not-for-profits and companies with new products and so on, with a green focus. But then we're standing there on stage saying, "Go check out the eco-village" -- and backstage, there's all this waste. Our industry had never really paid any attention to the amount of waste that goes on -- whether it's food waste or the fact that you have buses and trucks and, of course, air travel. ... So we decided to work with Reverb a little closer this time and have them help us design a smaller footprint for our tour.
It's been a great way to show the audience that it's pretty easy to make a positive difference. And the response has been huge.
I thought, I'm not doing my job if I'm being everything to everyone, so I realized I had to start standing up for being honest about who I am and what I believe. And you do lose some people along the way, but I think you connect with people on a deeper level when you are actually honest with them about it.
But I think also [it's] because I'm not particularly an outdoorsperson. I have nothing against it, but I'm not particularly comfortable in the wilderness. Being an urban dweller and a lover of cities that really work, I just started to think more and more about the moral responsibility I have as someone who wants to practice what I preach, so [I'm] slowly starting to change the way I live. If we actually like our lifestyle, we have to make sure it's sustainable. And the more I learn -- whether it's about climate change or the state of the oceans or about toxins in the food and the air we breathe and so on -- you start to get more and more passionate.
When I'm in another city -- well, I think about a city that's sprawled like crazy, like Houston -- it just feels like it's soulless in a sense. And I know it's not truly soulless, because the soul in cities like Houston or even Los Angeles often lives in the less-dominant cultures. ... A city that embraces all those cultures and the different neighborhoods -- the cities made up of neighborhoods, I think, are the ones that truly work. I kinda like Chicago, for that reason.
The other thing I really like is bike lanes in a city. I'm fighting for that in Toronto right now. I like to ride my bike a lot to get places, and we have no major east-west bike artery at all in our city, and people are dying on their bikes all over the place. We were in Madison, Wis., the other day, and there are signs on every street for where bikes should go and bike lanes and bike racks -- it's really bike-friendly.
One of the great things is we're bringing Reverb along, and they're helping to work with both the promoter -- which is a company called Sixth Man -- and Carnival on ways to make their impact less. And if we can have little bits of influence on industries who are just changing their ways, that's pretty rewarding, too.
That got us into a lot of trouble in Canada. We ended up having First Nations people -- the Dene, the Métis, and also the Inuit up in the Northwest Territories -- threaten to picket outside of our show because fur is a traditional way of life that fuels their economy. And they were really upset about that line.
We met with them the day of the show. They eventually decided not to picket. But what we realized is they don't share the same sense of humor as us. It was a huge eye-opener -- to see how even the glib things you say in a song can really impact somebody, whether it's an individual fan or a group of people. You do start learning to be careful or choose your words wisely, and really have a reason for them, even the ones that seem nonsensical.
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