http://smashinginterviews.com/interv...ngersongwriter
Gordon Lightfoot Interview: From Elvis to Dylan, an Intimate Portrait of a Legendary Singer/Songwriter
After 50 years of hit song making and international album sales well into the multi millions, it’s safe to say that esteemed singer-songwriter and musician Gordon Lightfoot resides with some very exclusive company atop the list of all-time greats. His song catalog is incredibly vast and includes such immortals as “Early Morning Rain,” “If You Could Read My Mind,” “Carefree Highway,” “Sundown,” “(That’s What You Get) For Lovin’ Me,” “Canada Railroad Trilogy,” “Ribbon of Darkness,” “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald” and “Rainy Day People,” just to name a few.
The legendary Canadian-born artist is currently involved in the “Gordon Lightfoot – 50 Years on the Carefree Highway” tour which features well-known hits as well as some deep album cuts for the diehard fanatics. All of which are woven together with some of Lightfoot’s own behind the scenes stories and personal anecdotes about his historic 50-year musical career.
“There was a Canadian duo who were the first ever to record any Gordon Lightfoot song, and that was Ian and Sylvia. They are legendary, but many people probably wouldn’t know of them now because they’ve not been together as a duo for years and years. It was through them and Peter, Paul and Mary that I got the management deal, and I was very fortunate that it took place. Ian and Sylvia came to see me playing in a bar one night, and that’s how two of the songs got started. Those two were “Early Morning Rain” and “For Lovin’ Me,” and eventually both songs were recorded by Elvis Presley.”
Lightfoot has recorded 20 albums and has 5 Grammy nominations, and his radio hits in the USA have earned five number ones, five top 10s and thirteen top 40 hits. In Canada, he earned sixteen number ones, eighteen top 10s and twenty-one top 40 hits. Other great artists who have recorded his songs include Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, Eric Clapton, Hank Williams, Jr., Judy Collins, Barbra Streisand, Peter Paul & Mary, Glen Campbell and Toby Keith.
In 2012, Lightfoot’s legacy was further enhanced when he was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame, and in Canada, he was decorated with the Governor’s General Award and the Companion to the Order of Canada Honor of Merit and has won 17 Juno Awards – Canada’s equivalent to the Grammy Awards.
Melissa Parker (Smashing Interviews Magazine): Are you having a great time on tour?
Gordon Lightfoot: Well, we always get excited when it’s time to go out and play the music because we really enjoy doing that. We know that the people enjoy it, too, and we get a good response. I love the work that we do.
Melissa Parker (Smashing Interviews Magazine): Still enjoying life on the road?
Gordon Lightfoot: Sure. I love it. It’s a method. It’s a system. It’s a way that you learn through the years on how to have enough people. You’ve got to have people coming out to see you to handle it. It’s a truck, a bus and an aircraft. That’s what it takes. We do them fast, too. We do them in tight little groups because we here in the other world have families that we have to take care of like everybody else does. Life in general takes place back in the city.
Everybody lives here in Toronto. We have our little headquarters here, and we go back and forth into the States all the time. Of course we play in western Canada, across Canada. But we’ve played in every state in the United States actually. I bet you I’ve played in four or five hundred places down there mostly in concert halls preferably in the amphitheaters. It’s nice to do the amphitheaters in the summertime. The tour is broken up into six or seven segments, and we go out and do each segment as it comes up, and the rest of the time, we’re back here with our families again.
Melissa Parker (Smashing Interviews Magazine): Cool. Did you begin your music career in Canada?
Gordon Lightfoot: I worked up to the point where I came down to go to an American school. It was highly unusual for a kid like myself to do that growing up in a very small town up in Canada. But I did that because I was interested in jazz. I had been writing some songs in high school, so I wanted to go there and take notation which I did for a couple of semesters, came back to Canada and drove a truck again for several months (laughs). The whole story is so typical, you know. But I would say it started after I came back from music school in LA at Westlake College. I studied notation and how to transpose and learn everything there was to know about the keyboard because I use it all the time when I’m writing my songs. It’s etched in my mind.
I’m not really a piano player, but I know the keyboard, and that’s what allows me to write my music. We always had to write it. Back in the older days, we used to have to write our own lead sheets and do all that sort of thing in order to register the stuff at the Library of Congress. We had to do it by hand, and I wanted to know how to do that, so I went to school to learn it. I was about 19 years old. I did it right after I left high school.
I had written a song in grade 12, and I really didn’t know enough about notation to be able to write the music onto the manuscript. So I used what I had learned as a child when I took piano lessons. I began a singing career at 10 or 11 years old singing at weddings and entering competitions. I was a boy soprano of quite some high renown for a few years.
Melissa Parker (Smashing Interviews Magazine): Were your parents supportive in the early days of your music career?
Gordon Lightfoot: Oh yeah. It had to happen. It really did. I started so early that they knew that something was going to happen. My mother was basically the quarterback of this thing. My dad did his part, but mother was the quarterback, and she made sure that when I started singing that I also took piano lessons at the same time. That was very helpful. It gave me enough knowledge to be able to write that song in high school, but it didn’t teach me enough, so I went to school to learn more.
When I got back to Toronto, I had a day job and an office job for 14 months, which I enjoyed. It was hard to find, but I drove a truck and worked in a bank for 14 months. They didn’t want to lose me. I told them I was leaving because I had a chance to join a choral group on a television show.
Melissa Parker (Smashing Interviews Magazine): I can’t believe it has been over 40 years since I first heard “If You Could Read My Mind,” one of my favorite songs. Was that your first huge hit in the United States?
Gordon Lightfoot: Yeah. There had been some hits by other people like Marty Robbins, Peter, Paul and Mary, wonderful hits, wonderful recordings. But “If You Could Read My Mind” was my first on my sixth album actually. It was when I switched over from United Artists to Warner Bros.
Melissa Parker (Smashing Interviews Magazine): The song appeared on Sit Down Young Stranger, and I believe that was your bestselling album. The name was renamed shortly after release to If You Could Read My Mind.
Gordon Lightfoot: And my manager was Albert Grossman, the famous Albert Grossman who was depicted in the Inside Llewyn Davis movie, but he was called Bud Grossman and was the owner of the Gate of Horn in Chicago. Albert Grossman, my manager, owned that club and came to New York and managed Peter, Paul and Mary, Bob Dylan, Ian and Sylvia, myself and Odetta. Later he had Janis Joplin, The Band, Richie Havens and several other great artists. I was very fortunate. It was my songwriting that got me into that position also.
Melissa Parker (Smashing Interviews Magazine): You’ve stated that you had problems with alcohol in the 1970s. Did you ever become involved with LSD or cocaine?
Gordon Lightfoot: No. I didn’t do any of that stuff. I was an alcoholic really basically right up until 1982. At that point in time, because of the prodding by my sister (who ran my office) and finding a doctor and having a relationship breakup all at the same time, I stopped for good. 1982. Not to mention the fact that it was probably ruining my career. One of my children … he and his mother … we all broke up. They went their way, and I went mine. That was when I stopped drinking all at the same time and had the help of a doctor.
PART 2-next post