Inside
◆ Integris recycling centre P. 12 ◆ Letters P. 6
◆ Fort sets record P. 9 ◆ JRP oral statements P. 7
PHONE: 996-8482 www.caledoniacourier.com
WEDNESDAY, May 2, 2012
VOL. 35 NO. 09 $1.34 inc. GST
NEWS BRIEFS Counter confusion The Fort St. James Canada Post outlet is responding to complaints being put forward regarding their hours. The post office lobby is open Monday to Friday from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. for people to pick up their mail from their post office boxes. While the counter service is only open during the day to send or pick up parcels or use other services which require an attendant, the mailboxes are open for people beyond those counter hours. Mayor and council had brought forward concerns from the community which had been raised around their hours, but staff has been working to get the word out the lobby is open beyond counter hours to accommodate people’s schedules.
Fort U12 team wins gold The Fort St. James Girls Under 12 soccer team won gold in Quesnel. The youth soccer tournament in the river city saw the local U12 girls beat out the hometown team from Quesnel in the gold medal match 3-1. Gilbert Schotel, director of the Quesnel Youth Soccer Association, called it a very physical game.
Twenty-one year-old Cody Karey from Fort St. James has toured with David Foster and has now signed a recording deal with Universal/Verve Records. Photo submitted
Cody Karey signs record deal Ruth Lloyd Caledonia Courier At four years old his mom remembers him telling her: “The next time you sing Mommy, I wanna sing too.” But even at four years old, Cody Karey didn’t just want to sing any old place, he told his mom he didn’t want to sing where she sang. She asked him where he wanted to sing then. He told her he wanted to be on stage where she saw the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band perform. That was the CN Centre in Prince George. “He’s seen himself on the big stage since the earliest days,” recalled the ambitious singer’s mom, Stacey Karey. Well, Cody Karey apparently didn’t grow out of his ambitions, instead they grew with him. Since his four-year-old declaration, Karey, a 21-year-old from Fort St. James, B.C., has gone on to perform with huge stars and has performed at the Madison Square Gardens in New York. “That’s got to be right on top of my things, walking out on stage and saying ‘Hello New York City’ at Madison Square Gardens, that was pretty cool,” said Karey. He has gotten to share the stage with Michael Buble, Barbara Streisand, Cher, Donny Osmond, Paul Anka, and toured with David Foster and Friends. The timeline, while short from the outside, has been a bit of a grind for Karey,
who left Fort St. James in September of 2008 to pursue his singing career in Vancouver after entering a singing contest in Vancouver in August of 2007 which got him connected with David Foster, the Canadian music industry icon. “I was able to get out of the Fort a little bit and go and do some pretty incredible things and caught the bug from there for sure,” explained Karey. In the summer of 2008, he went to Toronto and was the finale number for an audience of 40,000 people for the opening of a new building at the Royal Ontario Museum. He then went to Dallas, Texas for a private event and as he listed his accomplishments, he became a little self-conscious of them and interrupted himself. “I feel like I’m name-dropping in a huge way right now,” he said. But his mom was not so reluctant to name names, and said he performed at Farah Fawcett’s funeral service and Mohammed Ali’s 70th birthday party. She describes him as a really humble kid, but when I speak to him on the phone, Karey comes across as very articulate and confident, something he likely has learned in the years of performing and self-promotion he’s put into his career to date. “It was a lot of work there for awhile,” he recalled. “A lot of people have this vision of people going from relative obscurity and into the limelight fairly quickly, when in reality, in the vast majority of
cases, an overnight success is ten years in the making,” he added. His manager, Su Bailey, who “discovered” Karey when he was 14 and a half years old, echoes this sentiment, and said she’s a firm believer “it takes 10 years to be an overnight success.” But Karey, while only 21, has been working towards where he is for a long time. “The good news for me is I’m six years down that road already.” And where he is right now is just having signed a record deal with Universal/ Verve Records. The deal means Universal/Verve will now begin putting their promotional machine behind Karey. The company has committed to doing a record with Karey, which he said is a big deal for them to commit to the type of music he does and the shape of the music industry in the digital age. “It’s an indication and a commitment which is pretty cool as well,” he said. The deal also includes the possibility of five more records, as long as the music hits some markers along the way. With the power of David Foster behind him, Karey seems pretty confident something he will be able to make something happen. “It’s hard to imagine not having some level of success, it’s pretty exciting,” said Karey. After all the hard work to get a deal
signed, Karey won’t be sitting back anytime soon, however. “First I want to start with making a really really great record with really really great material, honest stuff, real stuff, great solid music and you know, just be able to get out there and perform it,” said Karey. His determination to keep improving is obvious, and he said he is also focussing on becoming a better musician and diversifying his skills. “You know I play a little bit of everything but being able to hone my skills to a certain level of expertise is really important, especially in the type of music that I want to do and that I’m really passionate about,” he said. “I’m a person that is always striving for more and always striving for perfection.” “The sky’s the limit as far as I’m concerned.” A record deal with Universal/Verve Records is a long ways from starting out in Fort St. James singing at coffee houses, but when Karey tells people he’s from Fort St. James, he said it always makes for a good story, and has given him a good grounding. “It was really a fantastic place to grow up as a kid and have a childhood and to be able to sort of move on with a base of a) humility, and b) a really solid understanding of community,” said Karey. Now what exactly does Karey’s music sound like? Well, it’s complicated. Continued on Page 3