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The
Jam Canadian Music
website by Jaimie & Sharon Vernon says:
A pioneer of Vancouver's punk scene, songwriter/guitarist
Bergmann has always walked on the edge and a volatile
personality and drug addiction has kept him from reaping the
benefits of his on-again off-again solo career.
Growing up in Surrey, Bergmann, son of Mennenite parents,
would sing along to Beatles songs with a broomstick for a
guitar. He joined his first band, The Schmorgs, in 1977 and
with a crudely made debut LP Bergmann and others led the
Vancouver punk scene into a revolution that Bergmann would
soon sign-post with a number of other legendary acts.
In 1978 he joined the K-Tels who would release two EPs -
'Hawaii' (1979) and 'This Is Your Life' (1980) before a well
known record label threatened copyright infringement action
against them and so they became the X-Tels and finally The
Young Canadians.
In 1981 he joined Los Popularos where a drug addict with
some extra cash invested $10,000 in the band's recording
efforts in an attempt to launder the money. When the band
wasn't able to repay the man immediately he grew impatient
and threatened the members with a gun. The situation
rectified itself when the investor went to jail for first
degree murder. However, the record was finished - a four
song EP called 'Born Free'.
In 1984 came Poisoned, whose material was produced by future
stars Paul Hyde & Bob Rock, and the resulting two demo tapes
and a full 6 song EP 'Poisoned' brought the band to the
attention of Canada. But with the rising popularity of LA
hairband Poison, they dropped the name and put Bergmann in
the spotlight as frontman.
At the very moment that Duke Street's Adrian Heaps was
holding a pen and record contract, the band was getting
ejected from Toronto's Rivoli club for being drunk and
disorderly. His debut solo album on Duke Street, 'Crawl With
Me', was produced by Velvet Underground legend John Cale and
would go gold (50,000) without advantage of much airplay.
Bergmann received a 1989 Juno Award nomination for Most
Promising Male Vocalist based on his 'Sexual Roulette' album
and hit single "Faithlessly Yours". His touring band, The
Showdogs, featured Poisoned's Taylor Nelson Little (drums),
Ray Fulber (bass), Susann Richter (keyboards) and Mick Joy
(guitar).
In 1990, he made a small appearance in director Bruce
McDonald's 'Highway 61'.
Despite critical acclaim and significant airplay, 'Art
Bergmann' (produced by Chris Wardman) only managed to sell
7,500 albums and Bergmann was ditched by his label Polygram
in May 1992. At issue was lack of funding to launch a
national tour which Bergmann ended up not being able to do
because the label offered him half of an estimated tour
budget. Many trial shows cost Bergmann money out of pocket,
but nevertheless, he was out pounding away, sans band, on
the Lollapahoser Tour with the likes of Bootsauce, Pure and
Sons Of Freedom.
In 1993 he decided to finally kick his heroin addiction and
that experience translated into his last album 'What Fresh
Hell Is This?. He has since maintained a live presence with
a newer backing band featuring members of Stigmata and Dead
Surf Kiss.
Bergmann is married to Sherri Decembrini and has a daughter,
Naomi.
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