Apostle of Hustle

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  • Genres: Rock

Biography

Andrew Whiteman created the atmospheric post-rock/experimental sound of Apostle of Hustle in 2001. Whiteman returned to his native Toronto to resume writing and recording with Broken Social Scene after a two-month stay with his godmother's family in Cuba. He learned to play the tres, a Cuban guitar, during that time. But in the midst of making the Juno Award-winning You Forgot It in People album, Whiteman couldn't escape the Spanish musical flavors of his time spent in El Barrio Santo Suarez. In order to make his fascination come to life, two of his fellow bandmates, Julian Brown and Dean Stone, joined Whiteman for what would become the cinematic, Latin-tinged portrait of Apostle of Hustle. Folkloric Feel was released on Arts & Crafts in late summer 2004. Unlike for their debut, which was put together during breaks from BSS touring, the band was able to spend more time on their follow-up, enlisting the help of percussionist Daniel Stone as well as Stars members Evan Cranley and Chris Seligman, among others. The album, National Anthem of Nowhere, came out in the first part of 2007. ~ MacKenzie Wilson, Rovi
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Apostle of Hustle

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Apostle of Hustle

Apostle of Hustle performing at the Bowery Ballroom in New York City, June 10, 2009
Background information
Origin Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Genres Indie rock
Years active 2001–present
Labels Arts & Crafts
Website Apostle of Hustle
Members
Andrew Whiteman
Julian Brown
Dean Stone

Apostle of Hustle is a Canadian indie rock group, formed in 2001 by Andrew Whiteman.

Contents

History

The band is more or less the brainchild of Andrew Whiteman, who has been in such groups as Bourbon Tabernacle Choir and Que Vida. He released a solo effort titled Fear of Zen in 1995.[1] He is also the lead guitarist for the indie supergroup Broken Social Scene of Toronto.[2] Whiteman returned to his native Toronto to resume writing and recording with Broken Social Scene after a two-month stay with his godmother's family in Cuba. He learned to play the tres, a Cuban guitar, during that time. But in the midst of making the Juno Award-winning You Forgot It in People, Whiteman couldn't escape the Spanish musical flavors of his time spent in El Barrio Santo Suarez. Whiteman returned to Toronto invigorated about a possible music that did not yet exist. Knowing he wanted to create it, Whiteman took up residency at a local dive as Apostle Of Hustle, a quartet that includes Julian Brown, who also tours with Feist, Whiteman's former girlfriend, BSS bandmate and his travel companion to Cuba. The band played Brazilian and Cuban folk songs, as well as Tom Waits/PJ Harvey/Marc Ribot covers.[3]

Folkloric Feel was released on Arts & Crafts in late summer 2004. The follow-up to Folkloric Feel is National Anthem of Nowhere, released in Canada on February 6, 2007, and the new album Eats Darkness was released on May 19, 2009.[4] In an interview Whiteman said this new album is "about going through hard times and coming out the other end."[5] Apostle of Hustle was featured as the X3 Artist of the month by Aux.tv, CBC Radio 3 and Exclaim! Magazine for June 2009.[6] An Apostle of Hustle poster appeared in the seventh episode of the U.S. television series Skins.

Discography

Albums

Lemon Tree (EP, 2004)

Music videos

  • "National Anthem of Nowhere" (2007, directed by Jeffrey St. Jules and Adrienne Amato)
  • "Cheap Like Sebastien" (October 2007)

See also

References

External links


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Mentioned in

Folkloric Feel (2004 Album by Apostle of Hustle)
Apostle of Hustle (Rock Band, 2000s)
National Anthem of Nowhere (2007 Album by Apostle of Hustle)
Do You Trust Your Friends? (2007 Album by Stars)
Let It Die (2004 Album by Feist)