A review of the show in the Dallas newspaper...not much that is not already known. This article requires a paid subscription, but if you can get redirected from a search engine (i.e., Google) the full article comes up; otherwise, it should be in the dallasnews.com archives in about a week.
http://www.dallasnews.com/entertainment/columnists/michael-granberry/20120131-an-aging-gordon-lightfoot-still-has-it-is-still-adored.ece
An aging Gordon Lightfoot still has it, is still adored
The Dallas Morning News
Michael Granberry, Columnist, Arts and Features
mgranberry@dallasnews.com
Published: 31 January 2012 08:46 AM
GRAND PRAIRIE — It was April 1976, when a 37-year-old Gordon Lightfoot strode onstage at the Anchorage Sports Arena and blew the Alaskan faithful away with a set that was bold, confident, charismatic and daring. The Canadian was a superstar, and the crowd adored him.
The long-haired troubadour who walked to the microphone at Verizon Theatre on Saturday night is a much different man. Eerily gaunt in black pants, a white shirt and blue suede jacket, he looked more like Dumbledore from the Harry Potter movies or leathery Brit Bill Nighy.
But just as a few in the crowd gasped or whispered at the realization of how much their favorite folkie has aged, they greeted him as one would a beloved king. And he rewarded them with a stirring set that filled nearly two hours and embraced 26 songs that define the legend.
At 73, Lightfoot has been through a lot. In 2002, he underwent surgery for a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. A coma, a tracheotomy and multiple operations followed. He suffered a minor stroke during a 2006 show but has regained full use of his right hand and continues to tour, Grand Prairie being the last of 15 shows since Christmas. Bob Dylan once praised Lightfoot as one of his favorite songwriters and said that his wish upon hearing almost any Lightfoot song is that “it would last forever.”
Of course, the crowd had its favorites and openly cheered for the ones they cherish the most: “Rainy Day People,” “Beautiful,” “Sundown,” “If You Could Read My Mind,” “Song for a Winter’s Night” and “Canadian Railroad Trilogy,” which brought tears to several eyes. The voice is but a raspy shadow of the buttery baritone it once was, but like an aging boxer, Lightfoot is a proud warrior who is not afraid to push on, to do what he loves and does so well.
As a woman in the crowd yelled out, “You’ve still got it, and we still love you!”