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Old 11-28-2023, 10:55 AM   #1
charlene
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Join Date: May 2000
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Default The lightfoot band - going forward

ARTICLE ABOUT THE LIGHTFOOT BAND AND THEIR PLANS GOING FORWARD:
FROM: Orillia newspaper (link does not work to share-Canadian law)

By John Swartz
Sometimes you get to decide. Sometimes decisions are made for you.
May 1, 2023 Rick Haynes, Barry Keane, Mike Heffernan and Carter Lancaster faced the prospect of being unemployed upon Gordon Lightfoot’s death. They were Gordon Lightfoot’s band. They are now The Lightfoot Band.
“Through the summer, we were kind of in shock. I was in shock, I still am. None of us were ready for it,” said Haynes, Lightfoot’s bassist for 55 years.
“It sort of evolved. People started saying, “I guess you guys are all retired now.” That’s probably when the wheels started turning and I started thinking, “old musicians can’t retire, they have to look for work.” For me personally, I needed to find work.”
Haynes and the band would normally play 50 to 75 or more concerts a year. In the last year they had just one gig, at the Mariposa Folk Festival in July. While they communicated with each other, they didn’t have a formal get together to determine their future. But, it turns out they were all thinking about it.
��Rick Haynes
“I had people saying, you guys are in the perfect position to keep the songs of Gordon Lightfoot going. That was rolling around in my head,” said Haynes. In early fall Haynes suggested it was time to meet.
“I said, “listen guys, let’s meet and sit down and have lunch. That’s kind of when the conversation started about this getting this thing up and running. Nobody else had anything blazing on the horizon,” said Haynes.
“Everybody wants to play and everybody thinks the songs of Gordon Lightfoot are gold standards and they need to be played properly.”
There was just one problem, who would sing the songs?
“At first it went a couple different directions. We could have the core band and travel around maybe and have guest singers. We decided early on that would be problematic.”
“Then we drifted into, we have to find one guy.”
Meet Andy
Enter Andy Mauck. Mauck has a story to tell. It’s a long one because he has a history with the band members. Originally from Worthington, Ohio, Mauck retired to the Virgin Islands, but only stayed a couple years before moving to Punta Gorda, Florida.
In his youth, he and some friends started what he calls a musician’s club, organizing their own gigs. He put that down to be a businessman, but you never really put down your instrument.
“It was always a side thing, but over the last couple years I started playing bar gigs,” said Mauck.
In the Virgin Islands he played solo gigs in small clubs, and continued to do so in Florida where he had two long standing engagements.
He developed a following, playing Lightfoot tunes.
“You’re not going to be a real popular guy at every bar if all you do is Gordon Lightfoot; I would have happily have done that, but you have to know other songs. I love other musicians. Gord is my favourite songwriter of all time, I love John Prine and people like that,” said Mauck.
His repertoire includes 150 Lightfoot songs and 60 written by others. He found he could get away with playing a lot of Lightfoot.
“It made me realize how many fans Gordon Lightfoot has in Florida,” Mauck said.
Going back in time to 1976, Mauck went to a Lightfoot concert.
“A year later I saw them again and I hit off with Terry (Clements) in particular. We exchanged phone numbers and he’d invite me to gigs. Then I got to know Rick,” said Mauck. “I got very close with the band pretty quickly. It took many years before Gord would invite me over.”
“I’ve known Andy for more than 40 years. He was a fan, a very enthusiastic fan.” said Haynes. “He showed up a lot with a couple of friends. They were charming, happy guys that were always fun to be around. They weren’t pests, really good guys. It was a friendship that developed over the years as it happens when you get to know people in various places that you go to. We have probably dozens like that we’ve gotten to know over the years.”
Mauck has been to a lot of Lightfoot concerts, including every Massey Hall concert since the 1970s. He became such a familiar face someone one would invite him to join the band after concerts, but he didn’t let them know he could play.
��Andy Mauck
“I consciously didn’t play in front of the guys, especially not Gord. One time in ’78 at some hotel on the road somewhere, we went into Gord’s room and there’s a little party going on. I’m there and the new person in the group (of friends). Some young guy, younger than me, came in with a guitar and proceeds to play If You Could Read My Mind – really badly – in front of Gord. I said right then I’m never going to be that guy,” said Mauck. That would change.
“Everybody just goes home after the (Massey Hall) shows,” Haynes said. They weren’t a partying band. “I can’t have couple of beers and drive home. It’s part of my culture. I won’t drink when I’m playing music and I won’t drink and drive.”
That doesn’t mean they don’t like a cold beer now and then, or to celebrate with friends after something like the string of successful Massey Hall concerts. It became a habit after the Massey Hall shows the band would book some rooms at the Pantages Hotel on the last night of the run so no one would have to drive home at the end of the night. It was at the Pantages Haynes first heard Mauck sing one of Lightfoot’s tunes in the hotel lounge.
“You know the song 10 Degrees & Getting Colder – that’s my all time favourite – I noticed Rick was talking to people; he quit talking to people and was walking around. He was just paying attention to me and by the time I got done with the song he was right next to me and he whispered, “you don’t know how good that was.” That made me really feel good, so I got a little more open about playing.”
And he did play in front of Gord.
“I got one chance to play with him in his house, a year and a half ago when the premiere of the Lightheaded movie (Lightheaded: A Gordon Lightfoot State of Mind) was in Toronto,” said Mauck.
Making Sure
This is all back story to recent events. The band has decided to continue on, but they need a singer. While hashing out who to find to make the band complete again a light bulb went off. The end of the band’s search was closer at hand than they thought it would be.
“Rick called me two months ago,” said Mauck. “How soon can you come up?”” Mauck was about to board an airplane at that moment. “I was up there two weeks later and had that first session with the guys.”
“I’d heard him sing more than the other guys,” said Haynes. “He found himself in a situation where he had far less to do and he started singing in local bars. I’d said, “I think you’re really good and if you keep doing it you’re going to develop your craft and you’re going to get somewhere.””
Somewhere was Toronto for a series of auditions. Mauck didn’t think he did well with the first one.
“I’m thinking I’m dead in the water, I can’t get the timing,” said Mauck. “I’m nervous as hell. We start playing. It was pretty good; except, they kept stopping and saying, “Andy, slow down, and you don’t have to sing so loud.” “OK, got it.” This went on for quite some time. I’m thinking, OK, I blew this audition.”
“They said, “Andy, this is exactly what we expected. You’ve been playing solo bar gigs, this is what happens. In a bar you have to play loud, you play faster, you’re trying to fill the space. We get it.””
“He was very nervous. It was an audition. The other guys didn’t know him as well. The band needed to shake him down,” said Haynes. “I was nervous too, working with a new singer.”
“You can find a better singer I’m sure, I’m all for you if you want to do that,” said Mauck. “They said, “Andy, there’s a lot more to this, you’re fine.””
They asked him to come back for another session two weeks later.
“We wanted to do a couple more (sessions) just to see if he could change a few things, improve a few things. We’re a bugger for detail,” said Haynes. They learned that from the boss. Lightfoot was very much into details and is known to call other performers he’s heard sing his songs, offering tips how to perform the songs better – some might say, and have, correctly.
There’s a limit to the notion of being sticklers for detail. The band members knew there would never be another Gordon Lightfoot.
“We’re not looking for a clone of Gord. We don’t want anybody to behave like a clone of Gord or impersonate Gord in anyway shape or form,” said Haynes.
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