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Brownstein: Jeannie Arsenault remembered as ‘the soul of Hillbilly Night' at N.D.G.'s Wheel Club

Brownstein: Jeannie Arsenault remembered as ‘the soul of Hillbilly Night' at N.D.G.'s Wheel Club

Hillbilly Night at N.D.G.'s Wheel Club will take on a more sombre tone than usual on Monday. The hootin' and hollerin' will probably be kept down to a minimal roar. Even the trusty cowbell, rung after a crowd-pleasing, country music performance, will probably sound relatively muted on this evening.
The Hillbilly Night faithful, ever-loyal country musicians and fans, are in mourning. Jeannie Arsenault, the diminutive dynamo and spiritual force behind Hillbilly Night, died on Monday, July 28 at 82, succumbing to the cancer she had been battling since last fall.
Arsenault, frequently attired in her favourite fire engine-red dress and customary country chapeau, was the spark plug who helped keep Hillbilly Night going against all odds through venue and musical taste changes. She remained true to the dream of the late Bob Fuller, leader of the Old Time Country Music Club of Canada when the soirees began.
Fuller founded Hillbilly Night at the long-defunct downtown Blue Angel club nearly 60 years ago. After a few moves, it found a home in the endearingly ramshackle Wheel Club and managed to survive COVID.
But after Fuller, who had been in ill health for a long period, died seven years ago, it was left to his disciple Arsenault, a Hillbilly Night performer for 50 years, to keep the fires burning.
Arsenault was a no-nonsense yet much beloved figure. She made certain that the rules first established by Fuller were still strictly followed. The cardinal rule being that any instruments — save for the steel guitar — requiring an electrical boost from an amplifier were verboten. And drums, natch, were a no-no. And, oh yeah, no crooning or strumming of any country or bluegrass tune written or performed after 1965 — when it was deemed by some purists that Nashville took a turn for the electrical worse — were to be tolerated.
It was and will always be hail to the Hanks, Williams and Snow, and, of course, to Arsenault fave Patsy Cline, among other pioneers from past eras.
No one protests. The prevailing view among the faithful is — no disrespect to the strides made by Beyoncé's Cowboy Carter or the rap wailings of Shaboozey — that amplification has totally altered the country music sound and would truly drown out Hillbilly Night if permitted.
Terry Joe 'Banjo' Rodrigues, one of the foremost pluckers in town of the instrument that bears his middle name, is one of the faithful. He has no problem adhering to these rules, fearing that the music he and others so love would be otherwise lost.
A Hillbilly Night regular for 25 years, Rodrigues was extremely close to Arsenault. He visited her at her South Shore seniors' residence the night before she died.
'Jeannie had begged me not to come when I called her a few days before,' Rodrigues recalls. 'She told me she looked terrible, but I just felt I had to go. When I got there, she was sound asleep. She was on so much medication for the pain. She was so frail. It was heartbreaking.
'I pulled out my banjo and started to play one of Jeannie's favourite tunes, Grandpa Jones's Eight More Miles to Louisville. Though she seemed asleep, her hands started rising up while I played and she began calling out at me to get a little closer. She heard the banjo. That moment will stay with me forever.
'Bob (Fuller) had the vision to create it, but Jeannie was to become the soul of Hillbilly Night. Jeannie had the biggest heart of anyone I've ever known.'
Rodrigues is in the midst of crafting a song in her memory, titled Ode to Little Jeannie's Gone, which he will perform at Monday's Hillbilly Night tribute to her. He sings me the chorus:
'She was little, but she was loud.
She made country music proud.
Little Jeannie, that gal from P.E.I.
And now even though she's gone,
We know her spirit will live on,
'Cause country music legends never die.'
'Jeannie's wish was that Hillbilly Night survive, and it has, thanks to her efforts,' Rodriguez says. 'It's going to keep going as strong as ever. A new generation of fans has come aboard and is loving it as much as us older folk are.
'But what's most sad is that Jeannie, our little Annie Oakley, won't be there, singing for us anymore. I'm just so thankful I have so many great memories of Jeannie, either playing with her or even getting deservedly scolded by her.'
Rodrigues points out that Arsenault died last Monday night at 7, the same time the Wheel Club opened, 'when she would have been there to greet us.'
Craig Morrison, ethnomusicologist, professor and performer of pretty much all known musical genres, has been a Hillbilly Night regular the last 40 years.
'Jeannie was a true force of nature,' Morrison says. 'It all started with me at the Blue Angel so many years ago, but what kept me coming me back then and through the ensuing years was the warm welcome Jeannie always gave me and everybody else who showed up. She captured our hearts.'
He notes that Arsenault's special gift was making everyone feel at home.
'Hillbilly Night has always been a place where old and young, hip and square, professional and amateur, anglo and franco, were comfortable,' says Morrison, now No. 2 in terms of seniority after the inaptly named Bill Bland.
'There's absolutely no pretence here. Music has always been the common denominator, with acoustic country music and songs about things that people feel as its foundation. And there's a core group of a dozen of us to make sure the music never dies here. So many great memories of Jeannie will always remain.'
My favourite Arsenault memory goes back four and a half years ago to the Hillbilly Night's 55 th anniversary at the Wheel Club. She did an inspired take on the Cline classic I Fall to Pieces.
'Now, don't go reading too much into me doing that song,' Arsenault gently admonished me upon leaving the stage to approving hoots and hollers and cowbells from the audience. 'I'm definitely not falling to pieces over our future.'
True that, it has turned out.
AT A GLANCE
Hillbilly Night, Monday at the Wheel Club (3373 Cavendish Blvd.), will feature a musical tribute to Jeannie Arsenault. Doors open at 7 p.m. Admission, as always, is fr ee.
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Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account The U.S. Sun reported this week that Sirius XM, which broadcasts the Howard Stern Show , may not renew Stern's contract when his current deal expires at the end of the year. Stern, 71, has mulled retirement over the last year, but according to the outlet, ' there's no way (Sirius) can keep paying his salary' amidst declining listenership. 'Stern's contract is up in the fall and while Sirius is planning to make him an offer, they don't intend for him to take it,' one insider told the outlet. 'Sirius and Stern are never going to meet on the money he is going to want. It's no longer worth the investment.' Another source said that Stern's criticism of Trump and Americans who refused to take the COVID-19 vaccine were also likely playing a role in the company's decision. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'If Sirius isn't going to give Stern a good offer, I don't think it would have anything to do with his ratings,' the source claimed. 'It's more likely everything to do with the political climate.' Trump was asked by a reporter, Brian Glenn of Real America's Voice, about the goss and whether 'the hate Trump business model is going out of business because it's not popular with the American people.' 'Well, it hasn't worked, and it hasn't worked for a long time,' Trump replied. The president then sounded off on some of his other talk-show enemies, including Stephen Colbert, whose late-night show was axed by CBS last month. 'Colbert has no talent. I mean, I could take anybody here, I could go outside on the beautiful streets and pick a couple of people that would do just as well or better. They'd get higher ratings than he did. He's got no talent. (Jimmy) Fallon has no talent. (Jimmy) Kimmel has no talent. They're next. They're going to be going. I hear they are going to be going. I don't know, but I would imagine, because Colbert has better ratings than Kimmel or Fallon.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 🚨 LMAO! President Trump just CLOWNED on Howard Stern after the announcement his show will be cancelled'You know when he went down? When he endorsed HILLARY CLINTON! His audience said 'give me a break'' 🔥 'Kimmel and Fallon are next!' — Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) August 6, 2025 Trump then linked Stern to the other three. 'Howard Stern is a name I haven't heard. I used to do his show. We used to have fun, but I haven't heard that name in a long time. What happened? He got terminated?' the 79-year-old commander-in-chief asked. Glenn said that Stern's show is in jeopardy of ending because of a salary dispute. Trump mused that Stern 'went down' because he endorsed Hillary Clinton in the leadup to the 2016 presidential election. 'You know when he went down? When he endorsed Hillary Clinton, he lost his audience. People said, 'Give me a break,'' Trump said. Stern returned to the airwaves briefly this week to tell his listeners he is ' refueling' for his return next month, but made no mention of the chatter that his show might be ending. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Stern and Trump were once friends, but the pair fell out after the legendary radio host backed Clinton in 2016. I n the run-up to the 2024 election, Stern, who is on vacation for the summer, promoted interviews with then-U.S. President Joe Biden and the eventual Democratic nominee Kamala Harris. After being known as the 'bad boy' of radio in the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s, Stern had softened his image in recent years and said he was happy to be known as 'woke,' calling it a 'compliment.' 'If woke means I can't get behind Trump, which is what I think it means, or that I support people who want to be transgender or I'm for the vaccine, dude call me woke as you f***ing want,' he said in 2023. Last year, as he plugged campaigns being run by Biden and Harris, Stern alienated some of his listeners when he blasted Americans who cast their vote for Trump. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'I don't agree with Trump politically, I don't think he should be anywhere near the White House. I don't hate the guy. I hate the people who vote for him. I think they're stupid. I do. I'll be honest with you, I have no respect for you,' Stern said. During his interview with Harris last fall, Stern said that he couldn't 'understand how this election is close.' ' I'm voting for you, but I would also vote for that wall over there, rather than a guy who says he doesn't support Ukraine … why do my fellow Americans want this kind of chaos overseas?' Stern asked. Trump seethed after the interview aired and accused Stern of conducting a fluffy interview with the Democratic presidential nominee. 'BETA MALE Howard Stern made a fool of himself on his low rated radio show when he 'interviewed' Lyin' Kamala Harris, and hit her with so many SOFTBALL questions that even she was embarrassed,' Trump wrote on Truth Social . 'He looked like a real fool, working so hard to make a totally incompetent and ill-equipped person look as good as possible, which wasn't very good.' mdaniell@ Read More Sunshine Girls Columnists Sunshine Girls World Canada

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