Apostle of Hustle

Toronto, ON

It’s a long Hitchcockian zoom-in, the omniscient clouds part, the sleazy waterfront scene is set. Like Steve Zissou’s Belafonte cross-section, we can see a number of little hives of activity: a young man loiters behind a cramped bar; faces light by low lights listen intently while one speaks, gesturing wildly; a captain barks orders at his crew to hurry the fuck up; someone throws flowers into the sea; a vintage jukebox amuses the hipsters on a crawl. Welcome to the borough of a possible nowhere.

Apostle of Hustle first took shape after a two-month sojourn in El Barrio Santo Suarez, in Havana, in 2001. This experience was mind blowing for Apostle of Hustle’s lead (Andrew Whiteman) from the ground up: the community, the fashion, the speed and the music. 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. The band played Brazilian and Cuban folk songs, as well as Tom Waits/PJ
Harvey/Marc Ribot covers. Whiteman played guitar and tres; plus he recruited Dean Stone on drums and Julian Brown; an old buddy from the mid 90’s indie scene – on upright bass. The fourth position was a kind of ‘open
door’ to whomever might show up on their nights. Anyone from Bryden Baird (Feist) on flugel horn to Daniel Stone (cache) on percussion.

Apostle of Hustle’s first endeavor, Folkloric Feel, was released in July of 2004. It …

Lineup

Name Role
Andrew Whiteman
Daniel Stone
Dean Stone
Julian Brown

Influences

Stats

FANS PLAYLISTED TOTAL PLAYS
95 2,413 70,543

Fans of this Artist

the road again? whats this now?

the road again? whats this now? some shows i guess, guelph the hammer kingston ottawa, hardly could be a called a "a tour" - esp after the last one, which ended two weeks ago. aoh opened up for do make say think, 24 shows in 25 days, we hit a few canadian cities, not enuf … READ MORE

Videos

Where to Buy

Related Content