We pick up this look back on the life of the late Ken “Chi Pig” Chinn, singer of the Edmonton-born punk act, SNFU, in the mid 1980s, just as the band has added new bassist Jimmy “Roid” Schmitz to the lineup that included Evan C. Jones on drums, twins Marc and Brent Belke on guitars on vocals and Chi on vocals.
These stories were told to Steven Sandor nearly 20 years ago, as part of a project that was never published before. With Chinn’s passing this summer, these stories serve as a remembrance of a special era, Edmonton in the 1980s was a lot more than the Oilers. If you haven’t read Part One yet, click here and then come back.
PART 2: HOUSE FIRE
New bassist Jimmy “Roid” Schmitz arrived just in time — SNFU was slotted for a half-hour special (play six songs live, plus an interview) on Shaw Cable, and the band had just been asked by a promoter named Barry Peters for a few songs for the compilation LP. It Came From Inner Space. Instead of donating the same two songs they had recorded at CJSR for a previous compilation that was never released, the band put together three new tracks: “Strip Search,” “Grunt, Groan, Rant & Rave” and “(Real Men Don’t Watch) Quincy.”
Jones not only played drums, but added his skills on the acoustic guitar on “Grunt, Groan, Rant & Rave.” And, he got a very special credit for his work on “drums and tweeters” because of his blunder in the warehouse studio.
“I blew out the tweeter struts,” Jones laughed. “I was helping mix the tracks and I thought it needed something more, that it needed more high end.
“I man, that’s what I always did. I was always asking ‘Can we make this heavier?’”
This time, there was no scam; the compilation was released. SNFU had made it onto vinyl (on Peters’ Rubber Records label). Chi Pig could put his own band’s record into his vast album and singles collection. But this was not so much a triumph as it was a beginning; the band had proven to themselves that they had what it took to be a success in the studio. But the band still never entertained too many thoughts of a real record deal — not yet.