5 Questions with Rags #83 - Judas Icarus

One of my favourite things about wrestling is it starts at different places for different people. Everyone has such a radically different entry point. Maybe it was someone who raised you that instilled a love for it. Maybe it was an older brother who performed spectacular maneuvers on you (shout out, Kelly!) Maybe it was a friend at school who introduced you to it. Or maybe you were just flipping through the channels one day and got captivated by the image of a monster. “My first go was just flicking through channels as a kid and I remember something to do with The Great Khali. I was like, 'Wow, that’s crazy.'” That's how it started for Judas Icraus, one of the most unique, hard-hitting and fast-rising wrestlers not just on the West Coast, but in Canada as a whole. The Great Khali. As I write this, I'm having a hard time thinking of two more different wrestlers than Judas Icarus and The Great Khali, but really, isn't that what makes this wrestling thing so special? There's room for everyone – performer or fan. Everyone can belong.

But we don't exist on an island and we gotta have people who support our interests or get weirdly into them with us. And thankfully for everyone in the PNW (and quickly beyond) who likes wrestling now, the man known as Judas Icarus found himself in an environment where his experience seeing The Great Khali could germinate and grow into, quite frankly, a fucking awesome young wrestling career. “Then my mom, for Easter, which was crazy, because my mom never got me a present for Easter, but she got me a triple-pack of figures – Triple H, Batista and Randy Orton. Awesome. And I got into wrestling figures.” Icarus tells me in his shockingly soft-spoken out-of-the-ring voice. (His in-ring voice – and uhhh sounds? – is hard, rough, and kinda scary.) “Then I met a friend, my longest friend that I still have, who was really into wrestling figures. He was a huge Jeff Hardy guy. We bonded over it. Played Smackdown vs Raw all the time. Then we met more friends in elementary and high school that were really into it. Then we started doing backyard wrestling a bit, had a backyard fed. We had a trampoline fed. We had entrances. We had full episodes, full seasons. We ran in it pretty well into the depths of high school.”

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The People's Champ - Krofton - on a great year and the rise of 365 Pro Wrestling

For almost as long as I can remember, music was the thing – my love for it was the thing that drove me. But I say “almost” because before that, there was professional wrestling. Some of my earliest memories are watching wrestling with my grandfather and my uncle (Not together though, because, from what I can remember, they were very different wrestling fans). By the time I left high school, wrestling started to fade from my vision and that's when music took hold. But over the last five or six years, wrestling has taken its place back at the forefront of my mind. Wrestling is what gives me the feeling that music used to. Wrestling is what gets me out of my house. Wrestling is where I've found new community. Wrestling is what makes me feel like a kid again. And it's 365 Pro Wrestling has been the key to regaining that feeling. And there is no one that represents 365 like the Peoples Champ, the man known as KROFTON. I’ve interviewed hundreds of musicians but I’ve never interviewed a wrestler, or even written about wrestling. There is no one I could imagine starting this new wrestling-based phase of my writing with than the very tall man, Krofton. Luckily, he was more than game to dish about this insane thing he loves and when it finally happened, after weeks of planning, he answered the phone ready to go.

He may not the champ of 365 anymore, but he’s the champ of our hearts. Photo by Darren Ho Media.

It genuinely warms my heart to hear Krofton, a 20+ year veteran of the west coast indie wrestling scene, echo the feelings I have as an outsider, a fan. “We are a family, honestly. All the way from Garrett to Eddie and everyone in between, even outside of wrestling, if something's going on or someone needs something, we all know we can reach out and talk to each other. We all go out and support each other for different things. We all just want to see each other get better. Nobody's negative, we just want to do the best we can in the ring and we're always trying to help each other get better. There's really nothing better than 365.”

A clear fan-favourite, evident by the number of Krofton shirts often worn by children at 365 shows – perhaps the greatest marker of a professional wrestler's popularity – Krofton is there before and after the shows, interacting with fans. His in-ring cohorts speak of him with high praise. There's a reason he's been a mainstay on the scene for as long as he has. And, even after all the time he's spent between the ropes, the legend of Krofton continues to grow, with 2023 being a banner year for the man himself. “Last year I had a really good year. God...I wrestled Sebastian Wolfe not even 24 hours after he made his AEW (All Elite Wrestling) debut. I felt it. I felt that energy from him. I was in the ring with Max (Benson) and Travis (Williams) when Legacy came back. That match was – there was a point in that match where we were screaming at each other and we couldn't hear anything in the ring because you guys were so loud. That won match of the year for 365 and it's a high placement.”

Krofton & the mighty Eddie Osborne (pre-recent hair cut) - Guilty By Association. Photo by Darren Ho Media.

When I pressed him to narrow it down, it turns out his high point last year didn't even come in the familiar confines of his home 365 crowd. “I gotta say, it was going to Ontario and wrestling Joey Allen. Going in to a building where I've never been, not knowing if anyone there even knew who I was or the history of what was going on – we went out there and we beat the shit out of each other. And then not even 20 minutes later I was out there in a 3-way hardcore match getting skewers stabbed into my head and getting superplexed through a table. And the greatest thing, I never even expected, I got a “Please come back!” chant at the end of the match. That will always mean something to me and I'm going to go back for sure.”

And in case you are wondering what's worse – skewers to the dome or taking a superplex through a table – you can put those worries to rest. “Skewers are worse. It was a 'Oh my god, they're stuck in my head!' and then seeing the horror on everybody's faces as I'm staring at them in the crowd. Looking at the four little kids staring back at me with the same look I know I had on my face. Going through a table? Whatever. I used to jump off fences to impress people in high school and go through particle board stacked on those little blue rubber chairs. I busted my tailbone a few times as a teenager doing that stuff. It's not so bad.”

Yeah, okay, I buy that the skewers are worse. Photo by Steve Skullmaster.

Krofton may be the man, but he's just a cog in the beautiful machine that is 365 Pro Wrestling. It's a machine that's only been gaining momentum in Victoria over the past few years and is ready to hit the next level this Friday, February 2, with Capital Combat. Running at the First Met Church (Corner of Quadra and Balmoral) for the first time, the venue will be their biggest to date in the city and they've got a card to match. The excitement in Krofton's voice is palpable when I ask him about this momentous night. “Talk about a show. 11 matches. The best of the best. Judas Icarus and Travis Williams. You got Evan Rivers making his debut out here. Those three alone are crazy. I've never met Evan, I've watched all his stuff. I'm looking forward to him and Legacy – that match is...I don't think the ceiling is going to be high enough for them. Artemis Spencer and Devon Shooter – talk about a 10-Star match. Becky Beech & Josh Caldwell, the Yacht Club – I love them. They're going to die but I love them. I'm 6'5 and I'm about to wrestle a 20-year midget wrestling superstar. I don't know his exact height, but I've seen videos of him and it is going to be something. I don't know what the hell I'm going to do but I plan on bringing it all.”

“It's 365. $5 beers. It's great entertainment. If you got nothing to do February 2nd, that is the place to be. Some of the best wrestlers in Canada, including some that are not going to be around much longer, so you gotta come see them before they're gone.”

An absolutely insane of PROFESSIONAL GODDAMN WRESTLING. I can’t stress how great this night will be.

PS. I didn’t really have anywhere to put this, but the world really needs to know how good of a wrestler Devon Shooter is. Every time my friends and I go to a 365 show, we walk out talking about Devon Shooter. He is so good at seemingly every aspect of wrestling, I had to ask Krofton if it was true. “Devon Shooter is so underrated. People don't even know. He's the man. Anyone who's in the ring with him learns something. Even guys who have been in the business for 20 years. He is such a humble, good person, I don't think any of deserve the right to know him. I'm so happy he's in our lives in 365 but I'm so grateful to call him a friend. In that ring, he can go. He's probably forgot things most of us couldn't figure out how to do in the first place. “

Yeah, Devon Shooter is awesome - but I’ll still root for Krofton if/when they share a ring again.

5 Questions with Rags #72 - SIDEWAY

I first found out about SIDEWAY (formerly Sidewaysounds) a couple summers ago when he laid down tunes on a old school bus that was transporting people from downtown Victoria to the top of Brown's Mountain for Tall Tree Music Festival. (Note: That old school bus is known as The Community Action Bus and it's usually doing more important things than transporting festival goers.)`I knew literally zero things about him or what kind of music I would hear on this journey, but I was quickly pulled out of my comfortable anti-social bubble at the back of the bus, into the midst of people, closer to the speakers. Dude had the two most important things I look for in a DJ - instantly recognizable taste and no genre allegiance. Turns out, on top of being a solid DJ he's also a damned-fine producer, creating some pretty smashing, forward-thinking bass music. “For me the tune has reach up and grab your attention, that's when you know you're onto something,” Sideway told me, talking about what in music is grabbing at him these days. “I like to browse SoundCloud for hours and just have it on in the background, and when a song grabs my attention I know its worth taking a closer look at which often leads me to brand new artist discoveries. Same goes for when I’m making music… I’m very hands on, just creating until something sounds interesting and grabs my attention and then building around that as inspiration. But it's all a very fluid process for me, my tastes have evolved many times over the years and I expect that will continue.” Probably get on the train now, because if current Sideway trends continue, whoa! You're gonna be glad you got on these sounds early!

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1. What was the first album you bought with your own money?

Haha, okay this is going to sound super lame, but music was never really a big thing in our house growing up. Like, my parents didn’t really listen to anything except the odd ABBA album. Exposure for me was through friends and so the first impression made on me was Stan by Eminem. I think I was 12. I couldn't buy the album but my friends did and we had that shit on repeat just like every other kid. Another early favourite was Coolio – Gangsters Paradise. The last album I can remember buying on CD was Kid Kudi - Man on the Moon, used to rinse that out a bunch as well.

But when my cousin snuck me into my first club at 16, I fell in love with electronic music, or techno as it was referred to back then, and have really appreciated everything from minimal to trance to glitch hop to electro and dubstep. These days I favour a pretty bass-heavy, eclectic mix of tunes, basically anything that fits goes in my book.

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5 Questions with Rags #70 - J.F. Killah

5 Questions with Rags #70 - J.F. Killah

Talk to anyone in the know around Vancouver bass and inevitably SHAHdjs are going to come up. (Also, these days it's hard to talk about said Vancouver bass without eventually also getting Levrige at some point – of which J.F. Killah comprises half.) The collective is straight-up legendary at this point, with the various members all building their own reputations outside of the home base. I don't think I've had any other name from SHAHdjs thrown at me as consistently as J.F. Killah. I wanted to chat with the Vancouver legend before she rocked Bass Hive at the Copper Owl here in Victoria last December, but I didn't. Don't really know why. But no matter, because she's back to the city this weekend (Sat., Sept. 15) to rock some ears at Rifflandia (Four of the biggest music days of the year in Victoria) in the intimate brick embrace Lucky Bar. Drum 'n' bass often doesn't jump on my radar, but thankfully, after much prodding from a few choice friends, I listened, open heart and open mind, and BAM! I enjoyed it! Much tasty, grimy hip-hop vibes in amongst the drum ‘n’ bass wilds. Thankfully, in the midst of a move and prepping for all of her serious bass-dealings, she found some time to entertain my silly questions and give y'all a little reading material.

Legit, the only photo I took for the entire

Legit, the only photo I took for the entire

1. Do you remember the first album you bought with your own money?

I was part of that Columbia House club where you could get a bunch of cassette tapes for like a dollar if you committed to buying a certain number more later on. Amongst them were Snow - Informer, MC Hammer - Too Legit to Quit, and I think some Janet Jackson and En Vogue... To be honest, I can't remember them all. I do remember the first time I heard the song "Informer" by Snow at a pool party at a local swimming pool when I was about 10 years old. From that point I really wanted to know what the song was and was stoked when I finally found out.

2. What's your best memory of a teacher growing up?

I had this one teacher, Miss Gonzalez who taught music and played the clarinet. She had a bathtub in her classroom and if it was your lucky day you got to sit in there with a friend instead of at your desk. That same teacher gave a test that said to please make sure you read through the entire test before beginning the questions. I of course didn't want to waste time so immediately began answering the questions. Everyone was panicking because of how long it was taking and time was running out. When the time was up and no one had finished she told us to turn to the last page. Sure enough, the last page said if you actually read through to this page you do not have to answer any of the questions! Definitely a good lesson on the importance of following directions and in such a sly way haha.

3. If you could spend the day with anyone living or dead, who would it be and what would you do?

Shopping spree with Andre 3000. Haha but really I'd hang out with my partner Andrew, working on tunes.

4. When is the last time you did something for the first time?

Just started renting a studio space for the first time a couple weeks ago. Looking forward to being as loud as we want!

5. If you had one wish for the west coast bass scene over the next year, what would it be?

To continue on the path it's been heading. I think we've got a really good thing going! There are so many talented artists all just feeding off of one another. Many are making it to a world class level which is really inspiring.

6. Your Guest Question is from the homie DJ All Good... Can you give me one good, clean joke that you could tell to around a grandma?

How do you make a kleenex dance?

Put a little boogey in it!

This was a very fun set with a bunch of different styles of sounds I played at the Backstage Lounge in Vancouver on November 24th, 2017. Thank you so much to the @Lazysyruporchestra for having me, I don't often get the chance to play sets like this and it was a pleasure <3 Photo by JoffreyPhoto.com