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                      Cummings & Neil Young 1987


SATAN  AND  THE  D-MEN


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Satan and The D-Men
                              1966

L-R:  Wayne Faulconer (lead guitar), Wayne Cardinal (lead vocals/bass), Russ Percy (organ),
John Karwacki (drums), Terry Stiles (rhythm guitar)

Kenora isn’t generally regarded as a hotbed of rock ‘n’ roll, but in 1965, a group of musicians with the unlikely name Satan & the D-Men arrived from the Ontario city and shook up the Winnipeg music scene.  Guitarists Terry Stiles and Wayne Faulconer, drummer John Karwacki, Russ Percy on organ and bass player Wayne Cardinal had played dances throughout northwestern Ontario as the Tempests.  They appeared on a Winnipeg amateur talent show, which led to an offer to play the Twilight Zone Club for, as Stiles recalls, “enough money for a tank of gas and a pack of cigarettes.”

More offers came in, and the band commuted from Kenora before finally making the decision to quit high school and relocate to Winnipeg, taking up residence in a house at 887 Warsaw Ave., in Fort Rouge.  Their manager, colourful local impresario Fred Glazerman, told the landlord a group of Mormons was renting the house.  The name change followed.

“John had remarked that we looked like hell and sounded like hell, so we came up with the name,” says Stiles.

One of Glazerman’s bookings was performing on the Monarch Wear Tee*Jays jeans Cavalcade of Stars show at the Winnipeg Auditorium, with more shows in Portage la Prairie and Brandon.

“Monarch Wear gave us colourful outfits to wear,” says Stiles.

“Orange corduroy sports jackets with black turtlenecks.  We looked like Halloween pumpkins.”

The Pink Panther club, located in a former bowling alley, became the group’s home base, where they performed often.  Satan & the D-Men released a 45 single on Eagle Records, Linda, composed by Stiles and backed by the Cardinal-penned She’ll Lie, recorded at Arbuthnot Studios in St. Boniface.  They also added a line about Tee*Kays in their song All Canadian Boy, recorded for Monarch Wear promotions.

The band was elated when Glazerman promised them an opening slot on the Rolling Stones’ July 1966 arena concert but crestfallen once they learned they were bumped.  Instead, they were booked to back rockabilly pioneer Buddy Knox of Party Doll fame.  The Knox tour was a success, but the band’s van broke down, and the repair costs far exceeded the meagre wages they were paid.  Frustrated, Stiles opted to return to school in Kenora.

“I came home to my parents’ house with 25 cents in my pocket,” he says.

The others carried on briefly, including a move to Vancouver.  But the story of Satan & the D-Men does not end there.  In 1982, they were invited to reunite for Kenora’s centennial celebration, and have performed several times since.

John Einarson
Excerpt from UNSUNG BANDS HELPED BUILD ROCK SCENE as published in the Winnipeg Free Press, January 24, 2016


John Karwacki

John Karwacki
Lucille Emond
                              and Terry Stiles

Lucille Emond and Terry Stiles


Brian Ouelette with Satan and The
                              D-Men

L-R:  John Karwacki (drums), Russ Percy (keyboards), Brian Ouelette (vocals),
Wayne Cardinal (bass guitar), Terry Stiles (rhythm guitar), Wayne Faulconer (lead guitar)

 Brian was the lead singer on She'll Lie. This was a 45 rpm that was recorded at Arbuthnott Studios in St. Boniface, Man.
It has become a garage band classic and is featured on many LP's and CD's.  Brian was only with the band a short time.  -- Terry Stiles


45 RPM Single
                              L-I-N-D-A
45 RPM Single
                              She'll Lie

Cavalcade of Stars
                              Promo 1
Cavalcade of Stars
                              Promo 2

J's
                              Discotheque Newspaper Ad
J's
                              Discotheque Newspaper Ad



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