Uncle Meat is former co-worker, now friend. He worked at one of the other record store locations for about a year. Back in Part 78, he told his side of the story, but I thought I should return the love.
RECORD STORE TALESÂ Part 258: Â Uncle Meat
My first encounter with the man known as Uncle Meat (his parents still call him Eric) happened in 1987.  I didn’t meet Meat in 1987; I met Meat officially in the 1990’s when he was hired at one of our stores.  As we chatted about people we both knew, we pieced it together:  Both of us were friends with a talented local singer/songwriter named Rob Szabo.  Way back in the 80’s, Rob was in a band then called Under 550, and they won the Battle of the Bands at Grand River Collegiate Institute in ’87.  I remember they knocked out a version of Rush’s “YYZ”.  They were sent to the next round, to battle it out regionally at the Center In the Square.
They added a lead vocalist for the big competition, and temporarily changed their name to Over 550. Â 550 lbs was the total combined body weight of the band. Â They were just under 550 lbs, until they added the singer. Â Get it? Â They were up against a neighbor of ours, George, who was playing bass in a band called Zephyr. Â Also in the running were such luminaries as Stomach Acid, and F.U.H.Q.
It was when discussing this gig that Uncle Meat and I realized we were both in the same place at the same time — except he was on the stage and I was in the crowd! Â I have a distinct memory of watching a very heavy thrash metal band. Â They were just too heavy for most in attendance, but they had chops and a good singer. Â That singer was Meat. Â One thing I’ll never forget about his set is this: Â a whole row of long-hairs ran down in front of the stage during the first song, and banged their heads through it all. Â When Meat had played his two songs, they went back to their seats. Â I’d never seen anything like it before, at that tender age of 15.
Spring 1991 – Uncle Meat singing “Fairies Wear Boots” with Heavy Cutting
Many years later, I worked a shift at the store with Uncle Meat, and that was our first “official” meeting. Â I remember that it was a pre-Christmas shift, and I was helping out another store. Â It was the two of us and Meat’s arch-nemesis, a girl who did not get along with him at all. Â (The story of why was recounted in Top Five Discs That Got Us In Shit.) Â It was a fun shift, busy as hell, and I remember stopping at an HMV store on my way home and picking up a Savatage CD (their then-latest, Wake Of Magellan).
Here I am, almost three decades later, remembering that night in ’87 like it was yesterday. Â I could tell you details like what jacket I was wearing (a dark blue leather one). Â I could tell you who I went with: Bob, Scott, and Todd Meyer. Â I couldn’t tell you who won anymore, but I do know this: Â It was fate. Â It was fate that Meat and I should meet. Â When we work together on a project, it’s peanut butter and jam. Â Thanks for friendship Uncle Meat, and thanks for contributing so much to mikeladano.com.
Same night, same gig: Szabo on axe shreds some Judas Priest.
Listen to that fucking singer!

