Dec. 4, 2003. 12:15 AM I'll be back, Lightfoot vows Plans stage return in `early 2005' Lively gala kicks off Hall of Fame GREG QUILL ENTERTAINMENT COLUMNIST "There's a different sort of feeling here, different from other (music industry) parties," veteran Canadian songwriter Gordon Lightfoot said last night after being inducted into the inaugural Canadian Songwriters Hall Of Fame at a ceremony and concert held at the Glenn Gould Theatre in the CBC Broadcast Centre. "We have some great songwriters in Canada, a lot of people to honour, so this event will go on for a long time." In his acceptance speech, which was bookended by performances of two of his best known songs - "Early Morning Rain" by Tom Cochrane and "If You Could Read My Mind" by Blue Rodeo augmented by a string quartet - it was clear Lightfoot was in his element. He told the standing-room-only crowd of about 600 that he plans to "reappear (on stage) in early 2005." The 64-year-old composer has been recovering from a near-fatal abdominal hemorrhage that hospitalized him a year ago. He faces more surgery and has lost a great deal of weight, but last night he appeared fit and sounded optimistic about returning to the recording studio and the concert stage. "I hope to see you somewhere down the path," he said at the conclusion of a start-studded ceremony in which he and four deceased Canadian songwriters - Hank Snow, Alfred Bryan, and Quebec chansonniers Félix Leclerc and Madame Bolduc - and 12 songs were awarded the first spots in the Canadian Songwriters Hall Of Fame. The brainchild of veteran Canadian music publisher Frank Davies, the non-profit, bilingual institution's first event was this week's hot entertainment ticket, attended by a virtual Who's Who of the Canadian music industry who turned out to see performances of classic songs by many of Canada's most popular music stars. Among high points of the two-hour show was a performance of the rousing Galt MacDermot/Rado/Ragni anthem "Aquarius" from the 1960s stage sensation Hair by the original cast members of the Toronto production, augmented by youngsters in hippie costumes who handed out flowers in the auditorium. Other highlights were two pieces - "What A Friend We Have In Jesus" (lyrics by Canadian Joseph Scriven) and "The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise" (Eugene Lockhart) - by opera singer Measha Brûggergosman and Toronto jazz pianist and Hammond organist Doug Riley. The duo set fire to these two timeworn classics and brought down the house, much to the delight of one-time movie star June Lockhart, Eugene's daughter, who was in the audience. Toronto singer-songwriter Ron Sexsmith served up an astonishingly simple and refreshing version of the Anne Murray chestnut "Snowbird", written by Hall Of Fame inductee, the late Gene McLellan. And Murray McLauchlan - with some assistance from Cindy Church, Marc Jordan and fiddler Anne Lindsay - delighted the crowd with inductee Wade Hemsworth's whimsical Ontario bush chronicle, "The Black Fly Song". Early in the show, Jordan, in a shimmering purple jacket, and Toronto chanteuse Molly Johnson, in a crimson gown, turned Alfred Bryan's World War I anti-war lyric "I Didn't Raise My Boy To Be A Soldier" into a steamy, lugubrious saloon piece that somehow seemed not at all inappropriate, and young Toronto singer Sarah Slean, alone at the piano, gave a wistful, world-weary reading of Toronto composer Ruth Lowe's abiding masterpiece, "I'll Never Smile Again." The concert will air Sunday on CBC Radio Two at 2:05 p.m. and on Radio One at 8:05 p.m. Additional articles by Greg Quill http://www.theglobeandmail.com/entertainment/ go to link - pic included Lightfoot celebrated at gala induction By GUY DIXON From Thursday's Globe and Mail E-mail this Article Print this Article Advertisement Gordon Lightfoot stood quietly on a stage in Toronto Wednesday night, a familiar sight, his simple features seeming much like his songs, as he collected his award as one of five songwriters inducted into the Canadian Songwriters' Hall of Fame. "It's nice to be available for me to [accept the award] because I wasn't quite sure there, after a while . . . and I hope to reappear somewhere early in 2005," he said, alluding to his current recording work and possibly plans to return to performing. On stage, he looked healthy. He had his characteristic, chiselled smile. He waved his hands briskly as he talked. Throughout the two-hour concert honouring him as well as the other inductees, Mr. Lightfoot was a strongly felt, but unseen presence; there were rumours he might perform with Blue Rodeo, Tom Cochrane and others who performed three of his songs; there was also word spread among the smattering of event publicists that he wasn't feeling well, that he was still recuperating from the effects of an abdominal hemorrhage. But there he stood at last after a deferential introduction by Mr. Cochrane, who called him "an everlasting Canadian music poet laureate," with a knowing nod to how much Mr. Lightfoot doesn't like to hear that kind of praise. He is every bit a part of "our collective sense of Canadian identity and culture, as Robbie Burns is to the Scots and James Joyce is to the Irish. Make no mistake about that," Mr. Cochrane said. Accepting the award, Mr. Lightfoot talked briefly as if reminiscing to old colleagues, about his days as a young singer venturing into the record business and being told to "keep working on it and come back and see us. "That's what I've done all my career, I've just kept it all the time," he said. It was a humble speech thanking the audience, praising Canada's great songwriters, but not really acknowledging the praise directed at him. Then he bowed formally to the small audience of record industry insiders in attendance in the CBC's Glenn Gould Studio auditorium, and he walked off. The concert was an equally subdued affair, with sometimes stellar performances. Measha Brüeggergosman sang the hymns What a Friend We Have in Jesus and The World is Waiting for the Sunrise - two of the individual songs being honoured into the hall of fame. Blue Rodeo made Hank Snow's Golden Rocket - another song honoured - seem like one of their own, as did Ron Sexsmith singing a warm, utterly irony-free version of Snowbird. The other songwriters honoured were all posthumously awarded and included the hugely popular early 20th century songwriter Alfred Bryan, who co-wrote the standard Peg O' My Heart, country singer Hank Snow and Quebec songwriters Felix Leclerc and Madame Bolduc. The organization, which hopes to eventually set up a website to explore Canada's musical past and to open an actual hall of fame to visit, has been largely set up to preserve old recordings, particularly those made before the 1920s, before they are forgotten. The two-hour gala will be broadcast Sunday on CBC Radio. Founded in 1998, the CSHF is a bilingual, non-profit organization dedicated to honouring, celebrating and educating Canadians about the outstanding accomplishments of Canadian popular music songwriters and those who have contributed significantly to their legacy. Mr. Lightfoot has been through two rounds of surgery and has another scheduled for the spring. "It's moving along," Mr. Lightfoot, 65, said of his health in a recent interview, one of the few he's given since falling ill in Orillia, Ont., and being rushed to hospital in Hamilton. "I'm blessed in quite a few ways. I've got good help, I am mobile, and I'm feeling not too bad. I'm just getting ready for the next round (of surgery)." Mr. Lightfoot spent about three months in hospital, but began work on a new record, Harmony, from his bed. He plans to release it in the spring. "It's very fortuitous that we were able to complete an album at all because when I became ill we were not able to record either and still are not able to do so," said Mr. Lightfoot, whose voice remains fragile. |
Thanks for posting that Char,we can never get enough articles or clips of GL! http://www.corfid.com/ubb/smile.gif
------------------ Borderstone (Hello! :) ) |
quote:Originally posted by Char1:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/entertainment/ go to link - pic included I suspect that charlene-x would like to have made the pic appear in her message too rather like this http://images.theglobeandmail.com/ar...1203gordy1.jpg Irt really is a cinch ------------------ My Gordon Lightfoot webring starts at http://www.johnfowles.org.uk/lightfoot |
Oh John! you are too smart for me! it would have taken me less taime to paint a portrait than to figure out how to do that!
lol i have two other pics i'll send you to put up! char |
Re: toronto star & Globe articles
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Re: toronto star & Globe articles
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