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Old 11-19-2008, 05:22 PM   #1
imported_Next_Saturday
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Default Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/ar...902524,00.html

Greek bard, Provencal troubadour or Negro blues man, the folk singer has always played the role of a romantic wanderer. Fashioning his songs from real or imagined experiences along the way, he has sung for his supper and moved on. But lately, that style has been in danger of fading. The modern bards team up with commercial rock groups, or pa rade into well-publicized seclusion, or go wandering in their own psyches in stead of the countryside.

Canada's Gordon Lightfoot, 29, is one up-to-date folk singer who maintains the old tradition. He comes onstage in a battered buckskin jacket, as if he didn't plan to stay long enough to peel down to shirtsleeves. His mellow bari tone has a countrified accent that, no matter where he is, seems to come from somewhere else. And most of his 130 songs are plaints of a latter-day drifter. "Movin' is my stock in trade," he sings in For Lovin' Me. In Early Morning Rain, broke and marooned in an airport far from home, he sees a "big 707" on the runway,

But I'm stuck here in the grass . . .

As cold and drunk as I can be.

You can't jump a jet plane

Like you can a freight train.

Much of Lightfoot's wandering, musically speaking, is done amid the vast geography and pioneer history of his native country. "I believe there are times when you should return to the soil, at least in your own mind, and when you should live in the past," he says. Canadian Railroad Trilogy evokes a time

When the wild majestic mountains stood alone against the sun,

Long before the white man, and long before the wheel,

When the green dark forest was too

silent to be real.

But he also lives very much in the present, and his roving eye takes in the topical as well as the topographical. Black Day in July is a commentary on the 1967 Detroit riots:

They wonder how it happened, and

they really know the reason,

And it wasn't just the temperature,

and it wasn't just the season.

Lightfoot's assured, straightforward delivery shows him to be that rarity in the folk field, a well-schooled singer. He got his early training as a high school student in the central Ontario town of Orillia. "Man, I did the whole bit —oratorio work, Kiwanis contests, operettas, barbershop quartets." He also played drums and sang in a dance band, and taught himself folk guitar. After a year of study at California's Westlake College of Music, he launched his career by working as a studio singer on Canadian and British television. "Musically, I'm the product of a sophisticated background," he once said, "yet my songs are basic and simple. I hope to be known as a cosmopolitan hick."

Underground Figure. In the U.S., he hopes to be known—period. Lightfoot is Canada's top-selling male singer, with an annual income of about $250,000 and a 17-room house in a stockbroker-and-executive neighborhood of Toronto. But south of the 49th parallel, where his songs are performed by such singers as Harry Belafonte and Peter, Paul and Mary, he has remained chiefly a popular figure in the folk underground. Until recently, at least. Now he is getting numerous engagements in the club circuit; during the past few months he has performed at Manhattan's Bitter End, Los Angeles' Troubadour, and San Francisco's Fillmore auditorium. Is he about to wander into popular success in the U.S. too? Lightfoot shrugs. "The public gets around to you," he says. "You don't get around to them."
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Old 11-20-2008, 01:01 AM   #2
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

Thanks,

It was great to see this.. In a lot of ways Gord hasn't changed.

Kevin
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Old 11-20-2008, 06:14 PM   #3
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

Thanks for posting this...
interesting read for sure...
the author must have had a crystal ball, or just keen insight!
and I agree with Kevin, it seems Gord hasn't changed all too much.
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Old 11-20-2008, 07:42 PM   #4
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

Very much interesting read from 1968... thanks for sharing this Next Saturday !
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Old 11-20-2008, 08:26 PM   #5
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

Toronto 1966 article
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Old 11-20-2008, 09:36 PM   #6
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

What song is about Gerda Munsinger ?
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Old 11-20-2008, 09:57 PM   #7
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

Nice find...thanks for sharing! yeah, it's great to "return to the soil"
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Old 11-21-2008, 12:12 AM   #8
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

i think the Gerda song was a 'one-off' and was never heard again..
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Old 11-21-2008, 01:17 PM   #9
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

Quote:
Originally Posted by charlene View Post
Toronto 1966 article
Nice one Modem Madarator

I noted that at that time Gord had a different bass player not John Stockfish but one Paul Weldman.
Who he??
A google for Paul Weldman bass player did not provide an answer
I also noted the reference in the 1966 article to "Go My Way"
As I have written before I distinctly recall being impressed by this song when Gord played it in a concert in a Gymnasium
at McGill University in Montreal in 1969 yet it was not released on record until 1971's Summer Side Of Life
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Old 11-21-2008, 09:28 PM   #10
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

Ok, who is Gerda??? any guesses?
and what's this Toronto-Dominion Tower that the writer speaks of??
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Old 11-21-2008, 10:10 PM   #11
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Bro10 View Post
Ok, who is Gerda??? any guesses?
Guess if you want. Wikipedia offers this :

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerda_Munsinger
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Old 11-21-2008, 10:33 PM   #12
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

TD Centre bldgs. are Toronto Dominion Bank towers right inthe heart of TO-in the banking district.-
http://www.tdcentre.ca/home/index.ch2?pageNumber=2
http://images.google.ca/images?hl=en...h+Images&gbv=2
Gord did a song about the men who build them.
from another article:
Some men are paid good money to climb to the top of The Toronto Dominion steelwork.
Gordon Lightfoot would like to get to the top of the Commonwealth's tallest building too. But he can't get clearance.
"I'm writing a song about it," he says."But I'd feel a lot better about it if I could go up there and get the feel of it for myself."
Steelwork on the building is now at 46 floors, with 10 to go.
"I'm disappointed there aren't any Mohawk Indians on the project" he says. "It would add a twist to the song. I'm told most of the steelworkers are from Newfie."

Gerda Munsinger: http://www.corfid.com/vbb/showthread...erda+munsinger
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Old 11-22-2008, 05:10 AM   #13
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Bro10 View Post
what's this Toronto-Dominion Tower that the writer speaks of??
hey, Peter
this photo (the bottom one taken by father from the Toronto Island Ferry with one of my sis's in the gold/yellow sweater) shows the Skyline of Toronto early 60s ...the top one shows same view, present day

I've circled the Royal York Hotel in both photos - quite a change, eh?

The black TD Tower(s) are in behind the hotel...we used to go on class trips to the TD Tower as at the time it was the tallest building around at that time....today, there are many new condos that seem much higher, lol
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Old 11-22-2008, 01:10 PM   #14
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

Quote:
Originally Posted by charlene View Post
TD Centre bldgs. are Toronto Dominion Bank towers right inthe heart of TO-in the banking district.-
http://www.tdcentre.ca/home/index.ch2?pageNumber=2
http://images.google.ca/images?hl=en...h+Images&gbv=2
Gord did a song about the men who build them.
from another article:
Some men are paid good money to climb to the top of The Toronto Dominion steelwork.
Gordon Lightfoot would like to get to the top of the Commonwealth's tallest building too. But he can't get clearance.
"I'm writing a song about it," he says."But I'd feel a lot better about it if I could go up there and get the feel of it for myself."
Steelwork on the building is now at 46 floors, with 10 to go.
"I'm disappointed there aren't any Mohawk Indians on the project" he says. "It would add a twist to the song. I'm told most of the steelworkers are from Newfie."

Gerda Munsinger: http://www.corfid.com/vbb/showthread...erda+munsinger
Very true.. Newfies and native folk guys love the high steel work.

They also built the skyscraper buildings in New York as well as those in many other cities.

Not this Newfie guy though. Me a terra-firma with a hint of vertigo. Ground zero, a guitar in hand between two barrels of sweet brown ale would be my dig.
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Old 11-22-2008, 02:12 PM   #15
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

Quote:
Originally Posted by lighthead2toe View Post
Me a terra-firma with a hint of vertigo. Ground zero, a guitar in hand between two barrels of sweet brown ale would be my dig.
I'm also a member of that ground zero club, Ron! i don't even like being below ground...and make my barrel of Captn Morgan
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Old 11-23-2008, 01:55 AM   #16
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Default Re: Cosmopolitan Hick--Time Magazine 1968

I think the bass player was Paul Weidman who also played bass for Ian & Sylvia...
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