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-   -   HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014 (http://www.corfid.com/vbb//showthread.php?t=27349)

charlene 04-28-2014 09:05 PM

HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
http://thechronicleherald.ca/artslif...to-nova-scotia

Gordon Lightfoot brings extraordinary musical tales to Nova Scotia
STEPHEN COOKE ARTS REPORTER
Published April 28, 2014 - 6:01pm

A Gordon Lightfoot concert is like an aural trip back through time. Audiences remember when they first heard If You Could Read My Mind, or summon up strong mental images to go with epic songs like Canadian Railroad Trilogy and The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald.

Thankfully, they predate the age of music videos, ensuring everyone experiences them in a completely different and wholly personal way.

But Lightfoot, still going strong at 75 — with shows in Antigonish Tuesday night and Halifax on Wednesday — had his own personal experience of musical deja vu recently. Watching the Coen brothers’ ode to the early ’60s New York folk scene, Inside Llewyn Davis, he had a distinct feeling of “I was there.”

The title’s misanthropic Greenwich Village balladeer is rumoured to be loosely modelled after folk legend Dave Van Ronk, but Lightfoot saw many familiar faces mirrored in the film’s cast of characters, including some he’s pleased to call friends.

“I loved the whole idea of the film and the context of the story, and I even recognized a lot of the names and the implications of Dylan arriving on the scene,” he recalls from his Toronto home.

“But why did they have somebody beat the (crap) out of him at the start of the movie and at the end?

“I thought it was in bad taste. We already know the guy is down and out; they didn’t have to pound the hell out of him.

“But he had a bad attitude throughout the movie, and I remember when he went to meet Bud Grossman, who is actually based on Albert Grossman, at the Gate of Horn in Chicago; he makes him this offer to go with a trio he’s forming with a girl singer. That would have been Peter, Paul & Mary, but Llewyn doesn’t want to do that.

“He just wants to do his own thing, but I was like that too in a lot of ways. I used to shy away from a lot of things. It was a very interesting movie; overall I thought it was just great. It was well played, and I loved the song he did with Justin Timberlake.”

The appearance of Grossman in the film is one of its more intriguing intersections with Lightfoot’s life, as the real impresario was the singer’s manager for seven years, making him part of an impressive stable of acts that included Janis Joplin, the Band, Jesse Winchester and a Minnesota songwriter named Robert Zimmerman, who would find greater fame as the aforementioned Dylan.

“He made both of my record deals, with United Artists and Reprise,” says Lightfoot.

“He was absolutely one of the most amazing people I’d ever met. I have a picture of him hanging up right here in my study, with all the other riff-raff. He kinda looked a little bit like Ben Franklin, with the glasses that he wore.

“He didn’t say much, but when he said it, you’d hear it. When I went on stage for the first time at the Fillmore East in New York, he was with me and standing there as I told him I was really nervous. He said, ‘Just remember, Gordon, you can never give them less than they expect.’”

Another one of Grossman’s early clients also became a close acquaintance, folk singer-songwriter Phil Ochs, whose song Changes appears on Lightfoot’s self-titled debut album.

It’s a rare cover song in the singer’s large catalogue, recorded 10 years before Ochs killed himself following bouts of mental illness and addiction.

“It was tragic; he was done in by a combination of alcohol and politics,” Lightfoot sighs.

“I knew him very well. He was a great friend. I learned Changes from him while he was still writing it. I remember sitting on the back steps of the Gate of Cleave coffee house on Avenue Road in Toronto, and he was playing it for me.

“‘God, that’s a nice tune,’ I said to him, and I was in the middle of doing an album myself so I just added it on there. I could have probably done a better job on it — we did it rather quickly — but it’s a great song. Neil (Young) did it too just recently at Massey Hall when I went to see him in January.”

Personal demons and career-derailing illness are not unfamiliar to Lightfoot either, but since the 2002 abdominal aneurysm that put him in a six-week coma he’s been following a healthier regime and focusing on putting his best foot forward on stage. These days, he plays 70 to 80 shows a year with his band: guitarist Carter Lancaster, Barry Keane on drums, bassist Rick Haynes and keyboardist Mike Heffernan.

“I’ve reinvented myself a couple of times since those days. We keep improving our team,” he says.

“It’s like the sports business. There are a lot of details involved in that, so we kept it up to the proper level.

“By the time I was done, I’d done 20 albums, through the end of my contract. It’s amazing to think I was under contract to Warner Brothers for over 30 years.”

charlene 04-30-2014 10:00 PM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
1 Attachment(s)
Carter:I'm performing tonight with Gordon Lightfoot and his legendary band at the Metro Centre in Halifax NS. It's going to be a great show. Too big to squeeze into the photos but I did my best!

charlene 04-30-2014 10:02 PM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
1 Attachment(s)
Rick: Speaking of Arenas, We played here in the New Metro Center in Halifax, NS in 1978. (Feb.18-1978)We were part of the Grand Opening weekend. We're back again tonite.

charlene 04-30-2014 10:02 PM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
1 Attachment(s)
Stephen Cooke-Ent.writer-Halifax-Chronicle-Herald newspaper-TWITTER pic:

charlene 05-01-2014 12:10 AM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
1 Attachment(s)
http://thechronicleherald.ca/novasco...ather-press-on

Lightfoot would Rather Press On
STEPHEN COOKE ARTS REPORTER
Published May 1, 2014 - 12:12am

“I’m Gordon Lightfoot, and the rumours of my death have been greatly exaggerated!”

And the 4,000-odd Lightfoot fans gathered at the Halifax Metro Centre on Wednesday night couldn’t have been happier to hear him say it, greeting the Canadian folk icon with a standing ovation for him and his four-piece band.

This week’s shows in Halifax and Antigonish mark Lightfoot’s second visit to Nova Scotia since that false report of his passing on a Toronto radio station in 2010, which he seemed to take as a challenge of sorts.

At 75, he means it when he sings I’d Rather Press On, striving to present songs from all corners of a 40-year catalogue in the best possible light onstage.

Early on in the evening, he explored the latter years of that catalogue, partly to let his voice warm up and also for the sound to be adjusted for a room now full of warm bodies. But songs like The Watchman’s Gone and A Painter Passing Through also set a stage with wistful lyrics about love and loss, and passing your prime.

There would be plenty of time for a trip down the memory lane hit parade, but even though he hasn’t released an album of new material since Harmony in 2004, the singer from Orillia, Ont., felt like keeping us in the here and now before going way back when.

“I first came to Halifax in 1967,” Lightfoot told the crowd early on.

“Then I played this very hall in 1978, the week it opened.

“I remember I had a couple of bloody marys on the flight back to Toronto, and our ride from the airport got stuck. The trip home became more of an ordeal at that point.”

Apparently he doesn’t hold it against Halifax, as the radio hits started flowing soon enough, with Rainy Day People and Beautiful generating enthusiastic responses right off the bat. His seasoned band kept the sound smooth as silk, allowing for standout moments like Sundown, with Rick Haynes’ eerie bass line and the snakelike solo rendered flawlessly by guitarist Carter Lancaster.

As often happens at Lightfoot shows, audience members attempted to influence the setlist, with one cry for Song for a Winter’s Night earning a response.

“We can do that!” the singer replied enthusiastically. “We can do it later … not too much later, you hope.

“Don’t worry, there are two sets.”

Lightfoot and the band started strong after intermission with Sweet Guinevere off 1978’s Endless Wire and a song you’d expect to hear closer to encore time, his signature 1976 hit The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald.

While a few of the songs played no longer match the current timbre and range of Lightfoot’s voice — Cotton Jenny especially comes to mind — this was not the case with the famous tale of a Great Lakes freighter tragedy, which has become a modern sea shanty thanks to the patina of time on his vocals.

The power of the song remains, in Lightfoot’s grimly frank delivery, as well as the band’s chance to unleash itself a bit behind the drive of Barry Keane’s drums.

“You might be thinking, ‘Where does he go from here?’” he said with a grin, echoing the thoughts of myself and some of the fans sitting around me.

With that, he made a lateral move, opting for Never Too Close, from the same album, Summertime Dream. Not a hit, but still a welcome friend, and another tune that’s taken on added meaning with the passing of time.

By the time he got to If You Could Read My Mind, the wispiness from the early part of the evening was gone, and the song’s beauty was perfectly intact, although these days the song has the poignant tone of a conversation with someone who left the room a long time ago.

The same held true for Baby Step Back, introduced by Lightfoot with a chuckle as “Meet Me By the Rockpile Honey, I’ll Get a Little Boulder There.”

“I think he used that one when he played the Horseshoe Tavern in 1964,” groaned one fan near me. It doesn’t matter, we all laughed anyway.

It’s easy to forgive, after all, this is the man who invented the concept of the Canadian singer-songwriter, as he reminded us all too clearly with a set-ending Canadian Railroad Trilogy, a continent-spanning vision that has yet to be surpassed. And if it’s performing that keeps Lightfoot feeling young, we’ll gladly have him back again.

charlene 05-01-2014 12:11 AM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
and this guy didn't have a good time: http://www.bevboysblog.com/.../post-...rdon-lightfoot...

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Post 2652 - Gordon Lightfoot
Hi. Back home from the Gordon Lightfoot concert.

What can I say?

Gordon Lightfoot is 75 years old. He has had horrendous health issues in recent years, some of which came thisclose to killing him. That he is able to get up and around let alone endure the rigours of a concert tour, is not much short of amazing. I hate to state these things. I really do.

The man's voice is shot. Notes that I could hit if someone kicked me in the Bevboy's, were beyond his ability to reach. His voice would just disappear for those brief moments. Songs were barely muttered. The audience members had to sing along to provide any kind of context. It was barely above bad karaoke.

The show started promptly at 8pm. By 8:50, the show was half over. Lightfoot shuffled off stage to take oxygen or whatever. Patricia and I looked at each other and sighed and both of us wished that we could have seen him when he was in his prime.

There comes a time when people have to call it a day. They may want to keep working, but it is in their best interests to quit. I mean, Bob Dylan doesn't even sound like anything human. Bruce Springsteen doesn't so much sing as bellow. Anne Murray's voice was getting raspy, so she had the good sense to retire, but others just keep going on and on and on. There are so many other examples.

We didn't pay for tonight's tickets. We were in a sky box. We are glad to have been able to see a Canadian icon like Gordon Lightfoot. We just wish we had seen him when he was a younger guy, when his voice was working properly, and when his fans could walk away from one of his shows feeling satisfied, not vaguely ripped off.

Tomorrow is Thursday, but it is my Friday as I am off after tomorrow until Monday. Looking forward to it.

See you tomorrow, my lovelies.

Bevboy

charlene 05-01-2014 10:37 AM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
2 Attachment(s)
banjomanjeff twitter pic -

charlene 05-02-2014 11:15 AM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
Halifax, NS
Metro Center - April 30, 2014
The Watchman's Gone
Waiting For You
Drifters
All The Lovely Ladies
I'd Rather Press On
A Painter Passing Through
Rainy Day People
Shadows
Beautiful
In My Fashion
Carefree Highway
Cotton Jenny
Ribbon Of Darkness
Sundown

Sweet Guinevere
The Wreck Of The Edmund Fitzgerald
Never Too Close
14 Karat Gold
Clouds Of Loneliness
Wild Strawberries
Let It Ride
If You Could Read My Mind
Restless
Baby Step Back
Canadian Railroad Trilogy
Song For A Winter's Night

Rob1956 05-02-2014 10:41 PM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
I've heard people say that Gord's 20 albums from 1966 to 2004 really isn't that much, but that's 38 years divided by 20 albums equals 1.9. So I take that as an average 2 records a year over 38 years, not bad at all. Is my math correct?

charlene 05-02-2014 10:59 PM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
if he made 2 albums a year for 38 years he'd have 76 albums..

he made approximately 1/2 an album per year... a bit less actually.. (20 divided by 38 years = 0.52 )

Jim Nasium 05-03-2014 09:21 AM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
I think you have to divide 20 by 38 to get circa 0.52

charlene 05-03-2014 10:50 AM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
I did the math right-but typed it wrong..lol..

Jim Nasium 05-04-2014 06:32 AM

Re: HALIFAX, NS article-April28-2014
 
Easily done.


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