The Real Guess Who Finally Have Their Name Back

To a passerby, the Guess Whoâs Jan. 31, 2026, gig at Fallsview Casino in Niagara Falls, Ontario, probably didnât seem like a significant event. After all, the Guess Who have been mainstays on the oldies circuit for decades, playing hits like âAmerican Woman,â âThese Eyes,â âNo Time,â and âShare the Landâ at clubs, casinos, and fairs all over North America.
But for the Guess Who faithful who traveled to Niagara Falls for the show, it was an evening of triumph many thought theyâd never live to see. Thatâs because the band masquerading as âThe Guess Whoâ since 2003 was little more than a group of competent ringers assembled by original bassist Jim Kale. Guitarist Randy Bachman and singer Burton Cummings â the heart of the real Guess Who and the songwriting duo behind all the classics â were completely frozen out and had to hopelessly watch from the sidelines.
But a legal maneuver finally gave them back their rightful name last year. Niagara Falls was the first of many shows theyâll play in 2026. Weeks after the gig, as they prepare to travel from their homes in Canada down to the Caribbean where the Guess Who are booked on the Rock Legends Cruise alongside the Gene Simmons Band, Rick Springfield, Art Garfunkel, and Blue Oyster Cult, Bachman and Cummings are still in a state of semi-shock that this is really happening.
âItâs surreal in many ways,â says Bachman. âOur songs have become the soundtracks to peoples lives. We look out from the stage and they know every word of them.â
This was the dream back in 1967 when the Guess Who took a job as the house band on the Winnipeg version of the Canadian television show Letâs Go. âYou had to play the Hit Parade every single week,â says Bachman. âAnd our producer came to us and said, âIf you guys start writing songs that are good enough to fit in between âRuby Tuesdayâ and âLet It Be,â Iâll put it in there.’â
That was a tall order, but Cummings and Bachman had spent much of their downtime trying to do exactly that. âI was still living with my mother and grandmother, and one Saturday morning Randy came over with his guitar in his hand,â Cummings says. âHe started playing this riff and singing the line âNo time left for you.â And I started answering over the top of it, âOn my way to better thingsâŚâ We started answering each other. Iâve told this so many times, but it still excites me to tell it.â
Right around this same time, they also wrote âThese Eyesâ in much the same fashion. It was good enough for the Letâs Go producers to let them play it on the air. âThis is where fate comes in,â says Cummings. âItâs the Godâs truth what Iâm telling you, but it sounds like Iâm making it upâŚJack Richardson, who ended up producing all 15 Guess Who albums for the RCA label, just happened to hear us 1,500 miles away in Toronto. He heard us do âThese Eyes,â and he believed so much in the song that somehow he put it together to take our band to New York City and record Wheatfield Soul, our first album for RCA.â
Things happened very quickly from here. âThese Eyesâ hit No. 6 on the U.S. Hot 100. Follow-up singles âLaughing,â âUndun,â and âNo Timeâ were also smashes. Their days of playing cover songs on Winnipeg television were over. They were now playing large halls across North America, and raking in real money. But the members of the group didnât all feel the same way about the rock & roll lifestyle.
âRandy had married his wife Lorayne, and had converted to Mormonism,â says Cummings. âHe wouldnât even have a Coca-Cola or a Pepsi or a cup of coffee or tea, nothing. And Jim Kale and I were not exactly living the life of a Buddhist monk. Before HIV, there was far more crazy casual sex. It was a wilder world. And things didnât go all that smoothly for the band.â
âTo this day, Iâve never done any drugs or drank or smoked,â says Bachman. âThe late â60s was âLetâs go cuckoo.â I was too afraid to do any of that. So I never did it.â
For a brief moment in early 1970, they were on top of the world when the title track to their 1970 LP American Woman hit Number One on the Hot 100. But the tour was a hellacious time for Bachman. âI had a gallbladder attack every night on the road for two weeks,â he says. âMy daughters have had them, and also had children. They said to me, âYou canât compare having a child to a gallbladder attack. Because you have a child once. You have a gallbladder attack, you have it every single night.â And that happened for two weeks on the road. I couldnât get any medical attention.â
He finally went home to Canada to see a doctor, and learned heâd have to wait two months for surgery. The Guess Who were booked at the Fillmore East in four days. He flew out to New York for the show, unable to eat anything but sugar-free Jell-O and crackers, per instructions from his doctor.
âIf you got caught with marijuana back then, you couldnât cross the border and work,â Bachman says. âAnd we were earning all our money in the States. John Lennon got to New York, and he couldnât leave. He couldnât work. He couldnât do anything. He was screwed up. So that was alway going through my head. I was the leader of the band. And then getting married and having children also makes you aware of money. Whereâs it going to come from? Where is it going? Youâre not just paying for yourself anymore. Youâre taking other people on a ride. Burton was single and I wasnât.â
Bachman quit the band after the Fillmore show in May 1970, fed up with the rigors of touring, business disputes, and lifestyle clashes. Cummings and the rest of the Guess Who recruited guitarists Kurt Winter and Greg Leskiw to fill the void and scored hits with âShare the Land,â âHand Me Down World,â and âHang On to Your Life.â âBy 1972 and 1973, the bubblegum aspect of the perception of the band had changed,â says Cummings. âWe were being taken much more seriously as a rock & roll band.â
Bachman, meanwhile, formed Bachman-Turner Overdrive with his brothers Robbie and Tom, and singer Fred Turner. And just as the Guess Who were winding down in the mid-â70s, B.T.O. released the enormous hits âTakinâ Care of Businessâ and âYou Ainât Seen Nothing Yet,â which have been staples of classic-rock radio for five decades. (Theyâre also favorites of Homer Simpson.)
Relations were rocky between the former Guess Who bandmates when B.T.O. were ascendant, and Burton Cummings was struggling to launch his solo career. But it was short-lived, dismissed by them both today as a silly spat. âWe were both dedicated musicians,â says Bachman. âAnd shared the same dream.â
They made peace in the late 1970s, appeared on each otherâs solo albums, and signed on for a Guess Who reunion tour of Canada in 1983. They sold a lot of tickets, but it was a miserable time for Cummings.Â
âI remember it as âThe Nightmare Tour,’â he says. âWe were all feuding with each other. We werenât friendly. And they were pushing us so hard to sell Molsonâs. âWeâre doing this interview backstage in Toronto and theyâve got [drummer Garry] Peterson with a Molson shirt on and Jim Kale with a Molson cap. I was more like a Jim Morrison guy. Iâm not going to be paraded around with logos on me. I was furious. At that same time, Kale and I were drinking too much and probably into some other nasty stuff. It just wasnât a happy band in â83.â
Bachman has a wildly different take on the tour. âI loved it,â he says. âBurton had a drinking problem at the time, at that time. He didnât like it. Iâve got the tapes, weâve got the video. He wonât let me put them together. It would be a great thing to have the Guess Who â83 together with all those songs. We did four new songs. And the guy who made the 16-track tapes gave them to me. I had them transferred to digital. Iâve got the film. All I got to do is remix it. Maybe heâll want to do that one day for prosperityâs sake.â
For the next 16 years, the Guess Who again went dormant. Bachman largely blames the chaos of his personal life. âI had six kids, and I was going through my first divorce,â he says. âMusic became very secondary. I was just like, âIâm losing my kids, Iâm losing my money.â You go through all kind of weird stuff when youâre going through that, and you donât want to share your feelings with anyone.â
They reformed again when the Pan American Games came to Winnipeg in 1999, which sparked a series of tours that culminated at the SARSfest concert on July 2003 where they played for half a million people at Torontoâs Downsview Park. âWe were there with AC/DC, Rush, and the Rolling Stones,â says Bachman. âAnd we rocked as good as any of them. When I did âTakinâ Care of Businessâ and said, âClap your hands,â and the hands went up in the air, there were a million hands in the air.â
It was his last happy moment with the Guess Who for a very long time. In the years that followed, Kale â who secured the Guess Who trademark in 1987 when he realized nobody else had bothered to do so â put his own version of the Guess Who on the road with Peterson on drums. They played with them at first, but eventually stepped aside and kept it going as a zombie band. Cummings and Bachman, meanwhile, went out under the name Bachman Cummings in 2006, but discovered it was tricky to get bookings if they didnât own the name to their own band.
âThe fake band was using music that we wrote, and Burton sang on, to promote their shows,â says Bachman. âAnd some of these guys werenât even born when those things were hits. These clowns, they were actually taking our real albums to meet and greets and signing our pictures. I was in Philadelphia one time and I opened a Live at the Paramount album. I was going to sign it for this kid. And I opened the album and someone else had already signed my picture.â
For Peterson, the decision to perform as the Guess Who was a way to preserve a legacy. âThe Guess Who is kind of unique in the way that itâs had four or five successful versions with different members. There was no one definitive band, unless you just want to say the people that recorded âAmerican Womanâ are the definitive version of the Guess Who,â he told Goldmine magazine in 2024. âWeâre just a continuation of a long legacy.â
The situation for Cummings and Burton seemed hopeless until 2023 when they teamed up with attorney Helen Yu and sued Kaleâs Guess Who for $20 million, alleging false advertising, unfair competition, and violation of right of publicity. Before the case could be adjudicated, Cummings took the wildly unprecedented step of terminating the performing rights agreements for all the Guess Who songs he wrote. It meant that nobody could play Guess Who songs to a paying audience since there was no way to properly compensate the rights holders.
âIâm willing to do anything to stop the fake band; theyâre taking [Bachman and my] life story and pretending itâs theirs,â Cummings told Rolling Stone at the time. âTheyâre not the people who made these records, and they shouldnât act like they did. This doesnât stop this cover band from playing their shows, it just stops them from playing the songs I wrote. If the songs are performed by the fake Guess Who, they will be sued for every occurrence.â
This left Kale and his legal team hopelessly cornered. They agreed to a settlement that finally allowed Cummings and Bachman to tour as the Guess Who. They rounded out the lineup with member of Cummingsâ solo band, including drummer Sean Fitzsimons, bassist Jeff Jones, percussionist Nick Sinopoli, and guitarists Tim Bovaconti and Joe Augello. âWe now have three lead guitar players,â says Cummings. âRandy leads a guitar army. Itâs very powerful.âÂ
The set includes the three biggest Bachman-Turner Overdrive songs (âLet It Ride,â âYou Ainât Seen Nothing Yet,â and âTakinâ Care of Businessâ), and Cummingsâ 1977 tune âMy Own Way to Rock.â But the rest of the show is dedicated to Guess Who classics. âThe set is a celebration of me and Burton: Wheatfield Soul, Canned Wheat, and American Woman,â says Bachman. âBetween us, weâve sold 40 or 50 million records.â
Cummings is 78, but his voices shows shockingly few signs of wear and tear, and he still hits every high note without struggle. âItâs luck, practice, and exercise,â he says. âIâm still getting people telling me, âHey, Burton, you still sound like you did when I was a kid,â or, âHey, you still sound like the guy on the records.â And Iâll tell you, man, I think that is something every singer yearns to hear.â
Many singers also yearn to earn a spot in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. But the Guess Who havenât even been nominated despite being eligible for the past 36 years. âI donât really think about the Hall of Fame that much,â says Cummings. âI have enough awards on my doors and walls in my house that Iâm not hurting for any acceptance, put it that way. And logically, who would be up there? Certainly Iâm not going to stand on stage with Peterson and Kale as the Guess Who.â
Bachman feels the same way. âThereâs people in there we love, like Dolly Parton and Leonard Cohen, whoâve never rocked in their lives,â he says. âThey are great artists, but should be in a different Hall of Fame. And donât hold your breaths waiting for us to get in. You might turn purple.âÂ
Right now, his focus is on gearing up for an extensive Guess Who tour of Canada, and more dates are expected to be added in North America in the summer. Later in the year, heâs headed to Japan for a run of Bachman-Turner Overdrive shows.Â
Fred Turner no longer tours because he suffers from vertigo, and both Tim and Robbie Bachman died in 2023. But Randyâs son Tal Bachman now tours with the band, and thereâs talk of cutting a new B.T.O. album with Turner contributing his parts remotely. âHalf of my year this year is with the Guess Who, and the last half of this year will be with B.T.O.,â says Bachman. âIâm working like Iâm 32 years old.â
There are no plans for a new Guess Who record. âRandy and I will be together for hours and hours on the tour bus,â says Cummings. âSometimes he picks up a guitar, starts playing riffs, and I start singing over them. So we could capture some of that wonder of the old days. You never know. I never say never.â
Just donât expect to hear anything new this year when the Guess Who tour. âThere was a big record by Ricky Nelson called âGarden Partyâ and he said something in that song that always surprised me,â Cummings says. âHe said, âIf memories were all I sang, Iâd rather drive a truck.â Iâm so opposite of that. First of all, thatâs a little bit demeaning to truck drivers. And secondly, Ricky, your whole life was creating memories for people. Iâll be glad to sing the memories forever.â
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