charlene
06-22-2024, 10:36 PM
September 2022 - Brennan Matthews/Route Magazine
A CONVERSATION WITH GORDON LIGHTFOOT
Canada is a nation that has always given birth to a talented crop of music stars. The country’s entertainment industry is mature and growing, but true success has always been defined by an entertainer’s ability to make it south of the border, to have their music top the larger, more competitive, success-making charts found in America.
In the 1960s and ‘70s, along with Joni Mitchell and Neil Young, no one was more successful in this regard than Ontario native, Gordon Lightfoot. The singer-songwriter’s sound was clearly embraced by a wide audience who appreciated his folky pop sound that could be relied on to tell a story.
Lightfoot’s sweet simple sound waxed poetic about lost love and broken relationships or the lure of the open highway and took listeners on an emotional journey.
Bob Dylan once said that Lightfoot sang songs that an audience wished would never end. And now, even at the age of 83, Gordon Lightfoot is continuing on his quest to bring his much-loved music to the world.
You come from a small town in Ontario, Canada, and have gone on to become one of the world’s most celebrated singer/songwriters, with timeless hits and an enviable career that spans decades.
Did you always know that you wanted to become a musician?
It began when I was three years old. When I would go to sleep at night, I would dream. Scores of classical music would go through my head. Music that I had never heard before. My mother and father would be sleeping in the next room, and my mother would hear me singing along with this stuff, and she, as soon as I was old enough, I think about five, started me on piano lessons. Then two or three years later she got me singing and entered me in the junior choir at the church. Soon after, I started to perform solos [there].
In grade seven my teachers began training me to sing. So, by the time I was twelve or thirteen, I competed two years in a row, in the Kiwanis Festival in Toronto. The first time I ever sang in Massey Hall was at age thirteen. I did a solo performance where I had my own keyboard accompanist.
Did you play both the piano and the guitar at that time?
I never became a piano player. I know all the keys and all the scales, how to transpose... I know all that stuff. The keyboard was a tool that I used to figure out my musical problems. Somewhere along the line I picked up on the guitar. When Elvis Presley came on the scene, I was fourteen years old, and when I heard You Ain’t Nothin’ but a Hound Dog and Heartbreak Hotel, I immediately went and got myself a guitar. That’s how it all got started.
When did you make the big move to California?
When I was in High School, I used to read Downbeat Magazine. It was a jazz magazine. There was an advertisement for a school called Westlake College in Los Angeles. And being an adventurous kind of a kid, I thought that it might be good to go there. By eighteen, nineteen years of age I was attending Westlake College. I had to talk my parents into letting me go. When I was there, I took the keyboard. I took five different subjects, but I only stayed for two semesters. I came home to [Ontario] for the summer and took a job as a driver for a linen supply company.
I also joined a dance band. I was a vocalist, and I played the drums. When the fall came, I had to decide if I was going to go back and start my third semester, but I decided to stay in Toronto. I played with the band for a period of two-three years. I was beginning to write songs by then, so I needed to move on.
You got your first record deal in 1966, but it was with a Canadian label.
Yeah, I recorded for Chateau Records. I got involved with the recording company early. Eventually, I had to buy myself out of contracts that I made earlier.
When I was twenty-one, I got my first contract for a management deal, with someone named Arch Snyder. [That] got me signed up with a guy named Edward Cassner whose office was located in Britain. On Denmark Street, in London! The next thing I know, I’m in London, I’m playing in a summer replacement series. I had a good voice. I was a good performer. I did seven shows in Britain during that summer. It was 1963. Then I got married, that was my honeymoon. I put together a little band from this studio orchestra who played in the TV show that I was doing, and we went around and played all the American bases. I’d been over there for about five months when I came back to Toronto.
A CONVERSATION WITH GORDON LIGHTFOOT
Canada is a nation that has always given birth to a talented crop of music stars. The country’s entertainment industry is mature and growing, but true success has always been defined by an entertainer’s ability to make it south of the border, to have their music top the larger, more competitive, success-making charts found in America.
In the 1960s and ‘70s, along with Joni Mitchell and Neil Young, no one was more successful in this regard than Ontario native, Gordon Lightfoot. The singer-songwriter’s sound was clearly embraced by a wide audience who appreciated his folky pop sound that could be relied on to tell a story.
Lightfoot’s sweet simple sound waxed poetic about lost love and broken relationships or the lure of the open highway and took listeners on an emotional journey.
Bob Dylan once said that Lightfoot sang songs that an audience wished would never end. And now, even at the age of 83, Gordon Lightfoot is continuing on his quest to bring his much-loved music to the world.
You come from a small town in Ontario, Canada, and have gone on to become one of the world’s most celebrated singer/songwriters, with timeless hits and an enviable career that spans decades.
Did you always know that you wanted to become a musician?
It began when I was three years old. When I would go to sleep at night, I would dream. Scores of classical music would go through my head. Music that I had never heard before. My mother and father would be sleeping in the next room, and my mother would hear me singing along with this stuff, and she, as soon as I was old enough, I think about five, started me on piano lessons. Then two or three years later she got me singing and entered me in the junior choir at the church. Soon after, I started to perform solos [there].
In grade seven my teachers began training me to sing. So, by the time I was twelve or thirteen, I competed two years in a row, in the Kiwanis Festival in Toronto. The first time I ever sang in Massey Hall was at age thirteen. I did a solo performance where I had my own keyboard accompanist.
Did you play both the piano and the guitar at that time?
I never became a piano player. I know all the keys and all the scales, how to transpose... I know all that stuff. The keyboard was a tool that I used to figure out my musical problems. Somewhere along the line I picked up on the guitar. When Elvis Presley came on the scene, I was fourteen years old, and when I heard You Ain’t Nothin’ but a Hound Dog and Heartbreak Hotel, I immediately went and got myself a guitar. That’s how it all got started.
When did you make the big move to California?
When I was in High School, I used to read Downbeat Magazine. It was a jazz magazine. There was an advertisement for a school called Westlake College in Los Angeles. And being an adventurous kind of a kid, I thought that it might be good to go there. By eighteen, nineteen years of age I was attending Westlake College. I had to talk my parents into letting me go. When I was there, I took the keyboard. I took five different subjects, but I only stayed for two semesters. I came home to [Ontario] for the summer and took a job as a driver for a linen supply company.
I also joined a dance band. I was a vocalist, and I played the drums. When the fall came, I had to decide if I was going to go back and start my third semester, but I decided to stay in Toronto. I played with the band for a period of two-three years. I was beginning to write songs by then, so I needed to move on.
You got your first record deal in 1966, but it was with a Canadian label.
Yeah, I recorded for Chateau Records. I got involved with the recording company early. Eventually, I had to buy myself out of contracts that I made earlier.
When I was twenty-one, I got my first contract for a management deal, with someone named Arch Snyder. [That] got me signed up with a guy named Edward Cassner whose office was located in Britain. On Denmark Street, in London! The next thing I know, I’m in London, I’m playing in a summer replacement series. I had a good voice. I was a good performer. I did seven shows in Britain during that summer. It was 1963. Then I got married, that was my honeymoon. I put together a little band from this studio orchestra who played in the TV show that I was doing, and we went around and played all the American bases. I’d been over there for about five months when I came back to Toronto.