The Bosswich
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The Bosswich

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The best kept secret in music

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"Passing the Mustard"

Their first performance was kind of a mess.
The Bosswich were competing in a Battle of the Bands at Club Vinyl in Guelph last year. Five minutes before showtime, lead singer Fletcher Planert suggested to Cody Eckensviller that he should set up his drums.

Problem was, he didn’t bring his drum stand.

“So we got a pair of shoelaces and dangled the cymbals above Cody, and some fans from the audience held the drums,” recalled Planert.

That sense of humour and willingness to fly by the seat of their pants is reflected in their music, and The Bosswich won the battle that night.

Made up of six young men from Waterloo, the ska band has just released their first CD, Fun-2-3-4.

The effort is a self-produced but professional romp, complete with a horn section reminiscent of Modest Mouse.

“We really pull our influences from ska and punk a lot, but everything else kind of pools in eventually,” Planert said.

“We started this band to play ska, and we still strive to do that. We kind of delve into other stuff every once in a while, but it always comes back to ska music for us.”

Eckinsviller and the baby of the group, bass guitarist Chris Casher, attend Bluevale Collegiate Institute. The others are graduates who have all gone off to school.

Trumpet player Nathan Shinkar is at Briercrest Bible College in Saskatchewan, and J. D. Vandonk, who plays trombone, goes to Wilfrid Laurier.

Planert is in his second year at Queen’s, taking a concurrent education program and majoring in vocals. His song-writing partner, lead guitarist and saxophone player Nathan Leung, is in the musical theatre program at Sheridan College.

That means the group can only get together during summer, Christmas holidays and reading week. They typically practice in the basement at Eckenviller’s home.

“His parents have been great,” Planert said. “There’s just amps and gear everywhere and racket coming all the time.”

The Eckenvillers don’t just lend their son and their basement. “Cody’s mom is known for her Kijiji skills,” Leung said. “So she goes online and gets all this equipment really cheap.”

She helped them track down a mixer and a bunch of microphones and cables. When Planert’s parents went to Europe last summer, they decided it would be the perfect time to take The Bosswich to the next level and start recording.

“Our initial plan was to get the gear together, and do it ourselves, and get it done in two weeks,” Planert said. “And we started, and we realized we really had no idea what we were doing.”

They pulled in another Bluevale grad, Andrew Schedler, who completed the mixing and mastering. It took several weeks to finish the project.

“We figured we would feel better if we did it ourselves, and more proud of the final product,” Leung said.

Song titles such as Kissed Her Sister and I Like Someone Else belie the vocal maturity of Planert and the tight performance of the band members. But there is no doubt these guys are just out of high school.

They were in Stratford for a performance of The Music Man when they got the inspiration for their band name at a diner called Features. One of the menu items, the Bosswich, layers on three eggs, sausage, and HP sauce.

“I am not kidding, this was without a doubt the best sandwich I have ever eaten in my life,” said Vandonk.

The Bosswich has performed at the Wax, Maxwell’s Music House and the Grist Mill. But, like garage bands everywhere, they’re not above playing a gig in a garage.

Fresh from their triumph at the Battle of the Bands, The Bosswich wanted to give their fans a little more. They drove back to Waterloo and set up in Shinkar’s garage.

“We felt like we’d cheated people, they didn’t get to see us play that much,” Leung said. “We played until the cops came at about 11. We were in the middle of the last song when we saw the cruiser pull up.

“I turned to Cody and said, ‘Hurry up, we want to finish this song.’”

* * *

The Bosswich

Fun-2-3-4

The Bosswich

$10

Available through myspace or facebook

Or e-mail at: thebosswich@hotmail.com

- Waterloo Chronicle


"Waterloo's The Bosswich kicking off summer in spunky style"

Waterloo’s The Bosswich kicking off summer in spunky style

For many bands, summer is the time to head out on the road, bringing to the people what they’ve spent the rest of the year working on. But for Waterloo ska-punk ensemble The Bosswich, summer is the time when they need to be most productive, considering nearly all of its members are scattered at universities around the province.

Partly for that reason, the band has marked the start of each of the past three summers with a gig intended to bring together all of its supporters, and this year’s show at Kitchener’s Registry Theatre is the most ambitious one yet. The Bosswich released its debut album, Fun-2-3-4, last year and is gearing up to work on new material, some of which will be premiered tonight.

“Summer is definitely the time when we cut loose,” lead singer Fletcher Planert says. “We spend all year round thinking about the next move we’ll make as a band — writing songs, designing T-shirts, making business plans. Last summer we recorded, but this summer we want to concentrate on performing. We feel that our sound is evolving from our first CD, and we’re excited to have people hear that.”

The Bosswich formed out of Planert’s and a few of his fellow Bluevale Collegiate classmates’ love of ska-punk, particularly California band Reel Big Fish. Soon after, they began writing original material and trying to carve out their own sound, which Planert describes as “zany music that people can just dance or sing along to.” He adds, “The first time we ever played was at a Bluevale pep rally, and I think seeing everyone jumping around and having fun that day is what gave us the bug.”

With a full horn section, The Bosswich certainly has a leg up on other aspiring ska groups, and Planert admits that it took some time to find the right combination of players in order to achieve the sound he and the band’s other core members wanted from the beginning. “It was actually quite tough to find musicians that were on the same wavelength as us,” Planert says.

“In 2005 you weren’t hearing a lot of ska bands on the radio or seeing them on TV, so the people who could play this music were really dedicated to it. In 2010 now, things are starting to change. There are more people, we’re finding, who are getting into the ska-punk movement again, which to me might be a reaction against heavy music that takes itself a bit too seriously.”

The band’s approach is really an extension of Planert’s fun-loving attitude. It’s something he’s had to maintain, given how detached all of the members are throughout most of the year, although he says technology has been a crucial element in keeping The Bosswich together. “Songwriting has become an interesting process,” he says. “When I got my MacBook, I started learning how to use GarageBand, and before too long I was emailing demos to everybody.

“It’s cool though, because I can shape the songs how I want, and then everybody can flesh out the tunes in their own way. Once it gets to that point, the key is to put as much energy into our performances as we can. That’s really what matters most to us, getting across how passionate we are about what we do.”

Live: The Bosswich; Thursday, July 8; Registry Theatre, 122 Frederick St., Kitchener; Cost: $10 (all ages); Show Time: 8 p.m.; More Info: 519-573-5981

- Waterloo Region Record


Discography

Fun 2-3-4 (SOCAN 2009)

Photos

Bio

The Bosswich

Fun!!!! From the moment they hit the stage, The Bosswich strives to have a good time!
This high-energy eight-piece group from Waterloo, Ontario implements catchy melodies and zany lyrics, driven by a ska/punk-influenced rhythm section. Sprinkle four (and sometimes five) horns, goofy gang-vocals and an infectious sense of humour into the mix and it’s easy to see why these old high school friends are able to continue engaging their audiences by playing at such a high level of energy (and fun)!
The Bosswich released their debut album, “Fun-2-3-4”*, in December 2009, and have been working hard to establish themselves as one of Canada’s most prominent ska-influenced acts. Listen to their album or come to see them live and you’ll agree; you’re having fun and they’re having a blast!
Listen to their Halloween-themed rocker, “Eat Me”, about zombies or their homage to the Green Goblin, “Pumpkin Bombs & Batarangs”! They even break into some ol’ styled Lighthouse/Chicago-style rock with “On and On”.
“Fun-2-3-4”* is currently being played on CJIQ (Kitchener), CJOS (Owen Sound), CFRC (Kingston), CFFF (Peterborough) and Radio Laurier (Waterloo).
The band is comprised of current students from Queen’s, Sanford Fleming, WLU, Sheridan schools and is planning a spring/summer tour throughout Ontario. The Bosswich are: Fletcher Planert, Nathan Leung, JD VanDonk, Nathan Shinkar, Chris Casher, Graeme McMath, Matt Honsberger and Cody Eckensviller.

The Bosswich is coming to your city! Prepare for FUN!
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*“Fun-2-3-4” is available on iTunes and Amazon on-line music stores

Contact:

Glenn Planert
Goldrun Consulting Services Inc.
519 573 5981
goldrun@rogers.com