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Thursday, October 2, 2025

Trevor Hursts Talks New Econoline Crush Music, How His Wellness Employee Profession Influences His Creativity – And Extra!


By Jim Barber

For greater than 30 years, Canadian different rock band Econoline Crush has pushed and prodded the boundaries of widespread rock music, infusing their ever-evolving sound with revolutionary components of business, electronica, alongside incendiary vocal performances and compellingly cinematic lyrical depth from frontman/songwriter/founder Trevor Hurst.

Finest identified for hit songs similar to ‘Sparkle and Shine,’ ‘You Don’t Know What It’s Like,’ ‘Depraved,’ ‘House,’ and ‘Soiled,’ the band went on hiatus for a number of years within the early 2000s earlier than reforming to make the Ignite album in 2008. Lately, even after taking up a really intense, very fulfilling second profession as a psychiatric nurse working in Indigenous communities close to his house in Brandon, Manitoba, music has re-emerged as a severe precedence and highly effective draw as soon as once more for Hurst, as Econoline Crush has launched a brand new single, ‘New Gold Magic,’ lower than two years after issuing their most up-to-date full-length album, When the Satan Drives. The brand new single is the primary of many coming over the subsequent months, with Hurst saying they are going to be main to a different new Econoline Crush album quickly.

‘New Gold Magic’ in addition to a pair different songs presently underneath development, was co-produced alongside ex-pat Canadian Kane Churko, who’s a part of a household of famous, well-respected, and prolific rock producers, which incorporates his father Kevin and uncle Cory.

“I simply love Kane’s backstory. There’s his father and uncle, and so they’re all from Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan. And I really like the truth that they’re these prairie boys, and so they can perceive the place I come from, however now they reside in Las Vegas. They’ve a state-of-the-art recording studio. And Kane has been raised on this atmosphere his entire life. I’ve been following his profession for some time. I don’t understand how previous he was when he began doing stuff with some fairly huge bands, however he was fairly younger. And I keep in mind he was a engaged on a Papa Roach document, whereas his dad was engaged on 5 Finger Dying Punch and Ozzy Osbourne. And I’m like, ‘have a look at these guys go! They’re from Moose Jaw, individuals!’ And I simply beloved it. So I knew that he would perceive me,” Hurst mentioned.

“It was actually wild as a result of we performed Cranbrook, British Columbia, and after the present, signing stuff on the merch desk, I bumped into this lady, Julie. And he or she requested me one thing about whether or not I used to be going to make a brand new document and who I want to work with? And I mentioned, ‘oh I might like to work with Kane Churko. I really like the man, he’s revolutionary and he’s new and he’s an artist. Like, he’s by no means not been an artist in some methods.’ So, she was the one who linked me. We talked. It appeared prefer it was going to work, and certain sufficient, it did. And I’ll let you know how dedicated I used to be. I drove to Winnipeg from Brandon. I used to be going to get a Aptitude Airways flight to Las Vegas to document. It was snowing and Aptitude mentioned they couldn’t fly to Vegas on this snowstorm. I used to be so mad. I drove again to Brandon, after which drove from Brandon to Vegas in, I neglect what number of hours. It wasn’t that many, however I obtained there in a day and a half, I believe. I used to be not going to let a stinking snowstorm cease me from recording with Kane. I used to be not going to let the flight cancellation cease me, however I knew it wasn’t going to work out until I simply obtained within the automobile and drove. So, I simply powered via the snowstorm and obtained down there and obtained it accomplished.”

There’s a full album projected on the finish of this course of, though Hurst mentioned by way of bodily it’s in all probability solely going to be launched on CD in the intervening time. Likening a full album to a multi-course meal, Hurst mentioned he’s all the time seemed on LPs, be they on vinyl, CD, cassette and even simply in a digital format, as encapsulating the emotional journey the band or artist was on over the time interval throughout which they have been creating.

“I assume a single can converse to a small second in time, however I don’t suppose it captures the emotional journey an artist or band was on over that point interval. After we went in to work on our final document, When the Satan Drives [2023], it was an introspective document. It was intentionally considerate. It was intentionally addressing some heartfelt moments as a result of that’s the place we have been as a band. We have been in the midst of a pandemic, and we didn’t know what the world was going to be like on the opposite aspect of it. And I believe that’s necessary to contemplate. I believe that as artists our job, and I don’t know who mentioned it, however anyone mentioned it was the job of the artist to carry up a mirror to society and in some methods to ourselves, and analyze what we’re seeing and to offer our voice to it with a purpose to, you realize, give the general public, the listeners, a option to perceive, or to only vent their frustration or no matter it’s that’s happening. The album, for no matter purpose, that full size of time, that 45 minutes or no matter, it simply appears the correct quantity of time to utterly cowl an emotional interval in historical past – the artist’s historical past or what’s happening on the planet – the way in which they see it and interpret it. I don’t suppose a single can try this. It simply doesn’t fairly cowl it,” Hurst mentioned, including that the snapshot in time being lined throughout his present inventive outburst, which incorporates ‘New Gold Magic’ was stuffed with emotional tumult, deep soul looking out, and a renewed sense of himself and his interior rock and curler.

“It’s occurred to me on multiple event the place the method got here at a time after I was actually going via one thing. Do you keep in mind when VH1 had that ‘Storytellers’ present? I went to one of many ones with Ray Davies of The Kinks and Ray was speaking in regards to the songs that he had written, and he was saying how he although he was ‘sticking it to his brother [Dave]’ after which he realized years later that he actually wasn’t writing about his brother – he was writing about himself. And I had that second after I went all the way down to Las Vegas with Kane. I used to be engaged on these songs and there was one thing amiss in my private life, however I couldn’t put my finger on it, and I wasn’t able to even tackle it. However my unconscious was energetic. And in these first two songs, the second goes to be the subsequent single, after I return now and take heed to them, I’m like, oh my gosh, behind my thoughts I knew what was occurring. And it’s a wild factor as an artist the way in which that issues work. It boggles my thoughts.

“And I don’t even know methods to clarify it. It’s simply that, deep down, someplace in there, you simply know that’s one thing’s up, and it’s popping out via your inventive course of. Despite the fact that you don’t need to convey it to the entrance of your thoughts as a result of perhaps it’s too painful to take care of or no matter, it finds methods to squeak into your artwork. A phrase will pop up and also you go, ‘oh, that’s fascinating,’ and also you simply comply with that path. You go down that path and you then end the music, and also you suppose, that is great, however what’s all of it about? Properly, I used to be writing about these emotions I’ve about this and that. However actually, if you dig deeper, you’ll be able to see that, holy crap, this was some unconscious message to myself. And I discovered that basically fascinating when Ray Davies talked about that very same factor when he was speaking about it in that Storytellers present.”

So, what was Hurst’s unconscious attempting to say? Was he capable of ultimately determine it out and convey it to the floor for emotional and psychological processing?

“Properly, sure. I imply I did, really. I’m going via a divorce and a few points associated to that. And it hit me like a plank. And it’s robust, nevertheless it’s a kind of issues the place life goes on and also you’ve obtained to select your self up by the bootstraps and keep on. It was a surprising factor, and it’s been overwhelming, however yeah. And hell, life is all the time a piece in progress,” he mentioned, including that ‘New Gold Magic’ is what got here straight out of the method of working via the emotions related to such a big life change, and realizing that some inner retooling was wanted.

“I believe, subconsciously, I used to be pushing again on my scenario and the individuals round me. I believe that I felt like I used to be perhaps making myself small to slot in. And, you realize, you undergo a whole lot of thoughts video games as an artist. You query sure issues. Why did this work? Why didn’t this one work? What did this transformation? What was it about that sure factor that folks linked with? So, after I went into the studio with this music, the way in which that the riff was and every part, I really felt type of lippy and type of, like, cheeky. And I needed to make it like that. After I learn these lyrics, I used to be pondering, it’s so rattling tragic and stuff, and I spotted I used to be type of this overwhelming character to be round. And I additionally realized that, identical to sure vegetation, you’ll be able to’t develop in some locations for those who don’t have sufficient gentle, for those who don’t have sufficient water, for those who don’t have no matter. I used to be simply not in the appropriate spot, and I can see that now, however I couldn’t on the time. However on the identical I used to be type of complaining. I don’t know methods to clarify it. I wanted that man, that rock and roll man to indicate up and go, ‘dude, come on. What are you doing? Go and let your gentle shine. Go kick some ass. Go rock!’ I wanted that swagger.”

In different phrases, whereas the self evaluation was good, and productive and academic, in the end what Hurst’s unconscious was telling him was to get out of his personal head, to reconnect along with his mojo, and get to work being a badass rock and curler.

“It’s bizarre as a result of as you age as a human being and as you age as an artist, you do get this stage of confidence and perhaps a higher understanding of how the world is round you. So, you’ll suppose that issues would turn into simpler and in some methods they’re. However on the identical time, you continue to have that stuff that all the time comes with being an artist and placing music out. You let the newborn go, you launch it to the world, and also you hope they’re type to you and also you hope for the perfect. I assume that by no means goes away. Plus, I believe it’s good that that feeling doesn’t go away as a result of it retains us humble and retains us sincere and it retains us working exhausting to make the stuff we’re making. If it have been straightforward, everyone could be doing it, proper?”

Hurst mentioned he knew issues have been particular in regards to the course of as a result of there have been instances of actual musical magic when engaged on the brand new songs alongside Churko. It made the entire course of not solely revelatory by way of what he realized and the way he processed the emotional trauma of earlier months, but additionally in how liberating it was to take the leash off and simply go together with the inventive move.

Econoline Crush. – Contributed picture

“We have been sitting there engaged on the music and I have a look at Kane and we have been like, okay now we’ve come to the bridge of the music, now what? We have been each sitting there pondering after which I began making these faces and attempting to make guitar sounds with my voice, and he simply picked up what I used to be type of placing down and he mentioned, ‘oh, so we’re going to show this into some type of Rob Zombie twisted factor.’ And I’m like, ‘yeah, yeah, yeah!’ It was an alchemic ingredient, synthesized for human creativeness and simply saying all these bizarre issues. And he simply stored recording. These are the type of moments of impromptu weirdness the place you don’t know if it’s going to work or not, however who cares. Simply press ‘document’ and let’s simply attempt. And it turned out great. It was enjoyable. And I keep in mind once we completed that day’s recording, he seems to be at me and says, ‘thanks for that,’” he mentioned, including that regardless that the music is about his personal private journey, what he’s gone via, and listening to what the little voice inside his coronary heart is saying, that the sense of empowering swagger of ‘New Gold Magic,’ has the spin-off impact of lifting up listeners who’re enduring their very own challenges.

“I believe it was Eddie Vedder, again within the Nineties, who mentioned that after you launch the music on the market into the world, then the way it’s interpreted and the way individuals embrace it and the elements of the songs they embrace, you’ll be able to’t management. That’s their factor. And what it means to them isn’t any much less vital that what it means to me as the one who wrote it. So, if ‘New Gold Magic’ turns into a combat music that folks love, the place individuals say to whoever, ‘I’m going to offer you all of the ache I really feel’ and throwing it proper again of their face, then, sure, I embrace that totally and wish that. However it’s additionally one thing that has to occur naturally, prefer it did for these new songs. For me, it’s very tough to sit down down and begin with the idea that I’m going to magically write a protest music after which write a protest music. I would like to attend. Within the studio, I’d present up and look ahead to the songs to indicate up. The music will get performed after which abruptly you’re feeling this obtain of data the place you’re like, ‘okay that is what we’re going to go for,’ and also you simply begin writing. I envy the individuals who can simply sit down and say, ‘oh I believe I’ll write a symphony immediately that invokes the considered fall and crunching leaves on the bottom.’ I simply can’t do it.”

Most followers of Econoline Crush know that the band is a big if not preeminent a part of his life, because it has been now for greater than 30 years. However over a decade in the past, Hurst launched into one other, simultaneous profession path, learning and ultimately incomes his diploma and accreditations as a psychiatric nurse. A lot of his work is finished in high-risk conditions, notably in Indigenous communities close to his house in Brandon, Manitoba. What he has realized and skilled from the depth of his interactions along with his shoppers, the successes, the tragedies, the visceral ache and depredation and the moments of affection and despair have undoubtedly influences the music he creates – and vice versa. It’s as if one side of his life depends on the opposite for inspiration and emotional evolution.

“It is a key level you simply touched on, as a result of music allows me to be a greater psych nurse and a greater counsellor and a greater wellness employee. And it’s due to the truth that music is an outlet for all of that pent-up frustration and vitality, and it provides me a chance to handle the issues like suicide, which is a giant deal in our neighborhood – it scares all of us and we don’t need to see any of it. I give a chat each single evening on stage in regards to the significance of checking in in your pals, about saying sincere issues if you’re feeling scared and if you’re feeling like you could have some suicidal ideation. I convey that up each single evening. So, I get a chance to speak about it via a PA to a bunch of individuals and have them cheer about it. And that feels good,” he mentioned.

“However on the identical time, it additionally feels good to get that PSA on the market, and I can simply beat my physique up the entire time, like simply leap and smash and leap across the stage and get out these frustrations. If I didn’t have music, God forbid, I’d in all probability be in some beer league hockey factor slamming individuals up in opposition to the boards and dropping the gloves each 5 months. I exploit it as an outlet to get these items out as a result of it’s a lot to course of. And I believe that music helps me try this via songwriting and performing specifically.

“I’ve been doing this for 10 years and there’s lots – there’s a whole lot of emotion. There’s a whole lot of harsh actuality that I’ve been uncovered to and a whole lot of lovely moments too. I believe it simply makes me a greater human and that subsequently makes me a greater musician. , it simply informs my life. I’m actually, actually, actually grateful that I’ve labored within the locations that I’ve labored, in Indigenous communities, within the areas the place there’s marginalized individuals inside that neighborhood and dealing with these individuals and attempting to assist get individuals into a greater spot, into a greater life. There’s nothing extra rewarding than having the ability to assist anyone that’s in a really robust spot to get to a spot that’s protected, that’s comfy and that brings them pleasure. I believe that my musical aspect, having accomplished interviews and having carried out, I do little maneuvers, do issues like dance, leap, no matter it takes to get a giggle, to get everyone to loosen up after which to maneuver in the direction of the purpose which is, how will we repair this? How will we make this higher? Daily, that’s what I do, I’m wondering, ‘how do I make this higher?’ And I really like the those who I work with, the shoppers. And I really like the devoted employees that I work with. I believe it simply makes me a greater human. And by being a greater human, I’ve higher empathy and higher understanding of a bigger swath of individuals. As a substitute of this type of small, myopic type of group, I see individuals from the very marginalized to very rich and all factors in between. And I get to listen to tales, good and dangerous. I’m uncovered to lots, and I believe that it’s nice. I really like the truth that it impacts my world in a method that makes me a stronger and higher human.”

The neighborhood wherein Hurst does most of his wellness work known as Sioux Valley, about 40 kilometres from Brandon. There are about 2,700 individuals dwelling there, largely Dakota.

“I used to work at  Canupawakpa, which can also be Dakota. I used to be higher with the language after I labored there as a result of I used to be working extra with the elders. Now that I’m working with the younger individuals, they don’t use the language as a lot, however I’ve realized a number of fascinating issues like, for example, me. I’m a wasi’chu. That’s the identify for white individuals. However if you really translate it, it means fats stealer. They advised me when Normal Custer had everyone type of penned up within the States, the military would include a sledge of a aspect of beef and a bunch of potatoes and greens and stuff. They have been so petrified of the Dakota, they’d pull the sledge into the center of the neighborhood and they’d simply reduce the rope and journey off. The native farmers round, they’d come down with weapons and they’d take all the good things off the sledge and go away the Indigenous individuals with gristle and rotting greens. So that they obtained skinny, and so they referred to as us the wasi’chu – the fats stealers. And I can’t blame them,” he mentioned.

“It’s such an interesting tradition. When my mother died of most cancers and I used to be grieving so exhausting and struggling, a nurse requested me how I used to be dealing with issues. I mentioned I used to be struggling and I requested her for recommendation and she or he mentioned she actually obtained into their tradition and it modified her. She mentioned I ought to go along with her to a sweat. I went that evening and it was superb. And it modified the way in which I felt in regards to the Creator and … nicely, let’s simply say I consider in the next energy now, extra so than ever. I felt the presence of the Creator, and I felt her come into that sweat and I felt her presence and I felt the elders and I felt my ancestors and I felt very linked to my soul, if that makes any sense. I felt linked to my spirit and to different spirits. In that sweat, I might really feel the oneness of all of us, how we’re all linked and the way that is all only one factor. It modified my life and I really feel indebted to the Dakota individuals. And that’s why I really like working with them, and that’s why I really like the neighborhood.”

Econoline Crush launched its first album Affliction in 1995. There have been 4 full-length albums since, together with the aforementioned When the Satan Drives. There have additionally been three EPs and one biggest hits compilation, and hundreds of exhibits over the intervening three many years. Even with out the teachings and experiences gleaned from his profession as a wellness employee, there may be all the time going to be a pure evolution of an artist/musician due to expertise, and maturity. Hurst has labored with quite a lot of top-line producers and throughout the confines of many glorious studios. All of this provides as much as an amassed stage of knowledge and information that has made him, technically and stylistically, a greater author.

“What’s actually wild is I will likely be within the studio and I’ll hear a phrase or a line that some producer prior to now has mentioned to me. Whether or not it’s Bob Rock, Bob Ezrin, Sylvia Massey, Ian Alexander Smith, John Wozniak [Marcy Playground] – I hear all of that route, all of that information nonetheless bouncing round inside this skull. And I believe it makes each recording expertise higher, extra environment friendly and fewer tense in a method. I’ll be writing the lyrics and I’ll hear John Wozniak saying, ‘didn’t you simply say that within the line earlier than? Can we transfer ahead? Can we punch that up?’ Or like Ian Alexander Smith encouraging me to decide on a unique, extra uncommon melody, and Sylvia saying, ‘sing it such as you imply it.’ Like, I nonetheless hear these voices, proper? I hear them in my head. And it does, it impacts how I do issues now. I can nonetheless see Bob Rock’s smile if you nail it and it feels good to get that approval. It’s bizarre as a result of we’re like performing monkeys and if I could make the producer joyful, then I’m joyful.”

There’s a sense the music is beginning to acquire a an increasing number of traction in Hurst’s life, by way of the period of time and vitality he spends on it, to the purpose the place he’s pondering stepping again from his wellness work, no less than for a season.

“I’ve this sense that music could turn into extra. And I’m okay with that if that’s the case. As a result of music is like bottling lightning or one thing. If you happen to get an opportunity and also you catch it, then preserve it and go. I can all the time come and work in these communities. I can all the time come and assist. And I’ll all the time be linked. Perhaps I shorten my hours, or perhaps I’m doing a unique position. However I believe it was necessary for me to go down this path, to spend 5 years at school and be taught. It was a problem to get from the place I used to be and stepping into the varsity mode. I had this nice inner debate. I didn’t suppose I might pull it off. Then after I didn’t actually have a selection, I gave myself this type of ultimatum and mentioned I had to do that. Overcoming that concern and persevering via that problem made me a greater human. And I find it irresistible. I’m so grateful that I went there and I’m so grateful that I caught with it,” including that even when music does turn into a bigger focus and eats up extra of his emotional assets and time, he received’t permit it to take over his life prefer it did throughout Econoline Crush’s heyday within the Nineties, when it was a continuing grind of album, tour, album, tour, album tour, with a great deal of promotion in between.

“Whenever you’re in that mode, which was unlucky for myself, as a result of the draw back is that I’m all the time on the lookout for the subsequent factor. You’re all the time wanting down the highway. You get this tour e book, and it’s thick and it’s obtained all of the details about all of the dates and the routing. And also you’re by no means within the second. It’s all the time wanting forward. ‘What’s subsequent? Ought to we attempt to hop on this different tour. Is that tour abroad going to occur? What about that huge Lollapalooza factor? It was terrible. Now when the evening ends and if we’re fortunate sufficient to get an encore, and it’s throughout, I take a second and have a look at each face that I can see. And I attempt to memorize them as a result of I keep in mind what it felt like when it stopped. And that was horrific. So now I sit there and I soak that in. I believe that the viewers understands what I’m doing as a result of I’ve talked about it lots. I believe there’s this mutual factor the place they’re wanting up at us going, ‘I’m so glad you guys confirmed up. Thanks for coming again and enjoying these songs that give us such pleasure.’ However I’m wanting again at them going, ‘thanks for coming and letting me play my songs.’ So there’s this mutual admiration, this mutual connection and understanding. And it’s lovely.”

What can also be lovely is the chance for these connective moments with music lovers that Hurst is so obsessed with partaking in. Econoline Crush, which additionally options David Swart on drums, bassist Troy Zak and guitarist Graham Tuson, all of whom have been within the band for a decade or extra, is occurring tour this fall, in help of ‘New Gold Magic, beginning Oct. 25 in Fort MacMurray, Alberta, with that run ending Nov. 23 in Oshawa, Ontario. Dates for early 2026 are additionally in place, for a slew of Canadian exhibits opening for American alt-rockers Dwell, alongside fellow Canadians Massive Wreck.

For extra info, go to https://econolinecrushmusic.com.



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