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  Gordon Lightfoot

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Author Topic:   Gordon Lightfoot
CHIP FOSSA
Member

From: Monson, MA 01057 U.S.A.

posted 20 March 2004 09:11 PM     profile     
Saw Gordon about 3-4 years ago at the
Calvin Theatre, NHampton, MA.

And, well, he did not look so great. Gaunt.
But still sang and delivered like the REAL
hero he is.

Is the beloved Gordon Lightfoot headed for
that big barroom in the sky???????????

I hope not to be a morbid moron, but I love this guy; and I know things have been quiet,
as of late......

ChipsAhoy

Joey Ace
Sysop

From: Southern Ontario, Canada

posted 21 March 2004 07:54 AM     profile     
Gordon almost met his maker about two years ago. He collapsed before a concert and was in a coma for several months in a great hospital (in my town).

After several operations he was released to recover at home. He has since worked on his new CD "Harmony" which is scheduled for release this May.

He plans to retun to public performances early 2005.

Here's a recent newpaper report.

also see www.gordonlightfoot.com

CHIP FOSSA
Member

From: Monson, MA 01057 U.S.A.

posted 21 March 2004 08:38 AM     profile     
Thanks Joey.

I appreciate it.

Chipper

Rick McDuffie
Member

From: Smithfield, North Carolina, USA

posted 21 March 2004 11:59 AM     profile     
My daughter Faith and I saw Gord in Greensboro, NC about 3 years ago. His voice had lost some of the rich timbre of the 60's and 70's, but he still outsang almost everybody you could name- and he and the band were GREAT. Man, the songs that man has written... it's amazing.

One footnote... there weren't many people under 50 at the show. We folkies are getting OLD.

Stephen Gambrell
Member

From: Ware Shoals, South Carolina, USA

posted 21 March 2004 12:54 PM     profile     
If the rest of you "Gord-heads" wanna hear something incredible, check out a CD called "Tony Rice sings Gordon Lightfoot." Everything on it is old stuff, since Tony lost his voice, but it's good stuff. I'd bet Joey has a copy!
Rich Weiss
Member

From: Woodland Hills, CA, USA

posted 21 March 2004 12:58 PM     profile     
His early stuff, the Bitter Green era, was truly amazing. He could really connect on an emotional level. I miss that era and I miss folk music.
Joey Ace
Sysop

From: Southern Ontario, Canada

posted 21 March 2004 01:44 PM     profile     
"PeeWee Charles" was Gord's Steeler in those early days.
When he left there was never another Steel in the Gord's band.

I'll rattle his cage and see if I can get some "first-person" insight to this discussion.

Gene Jones
Member

From: Oklahoma City, OK USA

posted 21 March 2004 05:18 PM     profile     
PeeWee Charles is a literate, knowlegeable, and an accomplished steel guitar player. It would be interesting to hear his observations about his years with Gordon Lightfoot.

www.genejones.com

CHIP FOSSA
Member

From: Monson, MA 01057 U.S.A.

posted 22 March 2004 10:28 AM     profile     
I've brought up Gordon in the past, here,
and I'm pretty sure PeeWee chimed in with some posts. Might be worth a little SEARCH.

On the other hand, he may have seen the posts and emailed me directly; not quite sure.

I've heard that Tony Rice CD, and it is outstanding. A collaberation of 2 greats.

Chip

Bob Blair
Member

From: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

posted 22 March 2004 12:25 PM     profile     
Joey, I think the Bitter Green era of which Rich speaks pre-dates Pee Wee's involvement with Gord. I think the original version of Bitter Green was on his fourth album (Back Here on Earth...does that sound like the name of the alnum....it was a blue cover as I recall...)and didn't have steel. New versions of the earlier stuff were recorded later, with Pee Wee on steel. I think that's so, anyway, but would love to get it from the horse's mouth.

When I was about 16 I heard Lightfoot live in Victoria - three pieces then - Gord and Red Shea (a fine Canadian guitar player, who was in Great Speckled Bird at the same time Pee Wee was and who later was in the house band on the Hunter show) with acoustic guitars, and Rick Haynes on bass. The version of Early Morning Rain they did gave me chills, and to this day if I drive north from Victoria over the pass called the Malahat (which I do frequently en route to our place in the Gulf Islands) I still hear it echoing in my brain. What a songwriter. Of course, later on, with the full band including Pee Wee, those were great shows - I saw that lineup at Masssey Hall in Toronto once, a not-to-be-missed experience. And yeah, I loved Tony Rice's covers of Lightfoot songs too.

Drew Howard
Member

From: Mason, MI, U.S.A.

posted 22 March 2004 02:46 PM     profile     
Hey Joey,

I grew up in London, Ontario. Haven't been back in years, although I'm just a few hours away in Michigan. Someday...

cheers,
Drew

------------------
The Saltines

Peewee Charles
Member

From: Waterloo,Ontario, Canada

posted 24 March 2004 04:01 PM     profile     
Hi Everyone, So nice to hear all the nice comments on Gord Lightfoot, who I toured & recorded with for 14 years. I'm sorry I have not replied sooner, I just returned from vacation in Mexico with my wife of 28 years!! How time flies!! Thanks Joey for the email. After 14 years touring & recording with Gord there are so many memories, from the great fans we met at his prime, performing to 20,000+ people a night which was just unbeleivable for a 24 yar old new member of his band, the great group of family musicians we met travelling the same circuit, from Bob Dylan, Billy Joel, Eric Clapton, Neil Diamond, a show with Harry Chapin & Waylon Jennings & Harry forgot his guitar at the coliseum in New Jersy, borrowed Gord's, and so many more!! It was a fabulous career touring the world with Gord, remembering playing Belfast, Ireland when the hunger stikers were causing havoc & coming out of the gig with army guards with shields to get us back to the hotel!! So many stories......I could go on & on & then there was the recording sessions in Toronto & LA, another time! Thanks for all for your nice comments. I was a fortunate young player to get a break when I was 21, after studying under Reece Anderson in Texas for 7 months. When I returned I got the gig with Ian Tyson & The Great Speckled Bird, a national TV show that backed a lot of artists. After doing that for 4 years Gord asked me to play on his record, Cold On The Shoulder, with the first single being "Rainy Day People". A month later he offered me the gig & the rest was history for 14 years. Had a great opportunity to learn from the master himself & take the steel guitar into a total different genre of music. Remembering going in to the studio @ 3 am, he read an article in Newsweek the day before, stayed up all night & went into the studio to record this song about The Edmund Fitzgerald. It was meant to be an album filler & it sold over 2 Million copies & we got it on the second take. I had an old Fender Champ from my Dad with a hole in the speaker that got that sound!! Gord was a great guy to work for & treated everyone very well. We even had our own private Lear Jet, that's another chapter!!!! Played on some great records from 1975-1980 & had a chance to see the world. He was like a Dad & treated all our family & kids great with trips etc. He did have his personal problems, like a lot of artists do, but we're all human & no one is perfect. I decided to get off the road in 1989 to be with my young family, they were more important than flying all over the world, the financial rewards & all the rest! It was one of the best choices I feel I ever made in my life & am happily married to a great wife, Kathy for 28 years & two great kids, a daughter 24 married & son 22. I love them very much. It was a great sacrifice, but worth every bit. Playing with a group of Studio guys in a hot country/rock/jazz band & having fun. I have had a very successful career in radio sales & marketing the last 12 years. I still see Gord & after his illness, a pancreatic anurism suddenly before a show in Orillia, he almost died a few years ago. He is coming along & I still stay in touch with Gord & all the guys! They still are my second family. He has had a hard recovery, but knowing Gord, he'll be back. The new CD, which vocal demos were recorded before he got sick, has been completed & I am looking forward to hearing it. I wish him all the best & a speedy recovery, as he has contributed so much to music, & all the other great artists that have recorded his songs. Never know, maybe he'll have a reunion with all the origianl players, that would be so much fun & I'd be there!! Thanks to everyone for the nice replies. I'll keep you informed with any updates, I talk with his office on a regular basis! All the best to everyone & Health and Happiness!! Peewee Charles (Ed)
Rick McDuffie
Member

From: Smithfield, North Carolina, USA

posted 24 March 2004 07:05 PM     profile     
PeeWee,

I heard Rainy Day People today, and was thinking, "Wow, that's nice... I wonder if that's PeeWee Charles..." Simple, but very tasty stuff- and all in tune! Great song, too.

In my opinion, Gord is the greatest songwriter of all time...and, yes, I know that's saying a lot. I have such an emotional connection with his stuff!

Rick

Don Walters
Member

From: Regina, SK, Canada

posted 24 March 2004 09:44 PM     profile     
I don't have the vocabulary to express what GL's music has meant to me over the years, and if I should try anyway, b0b doesn't have the space. As much as I love steel guitars and country shuffles and Ray P and Merle and etc, etc, GL is just on a special plane of his own musically ... he is classically trained (piano) if I remember correctly, and his compositions are extraordinary!

I don't remember how many times he's been in Regina over the years ...a dozen? ... but I've been to all of them. And when he starts Canadian Railroad Trilogy, the crowd never fails to go wild, the chill bumps start, an you know you're hearing something very special both musically and about our great country.

I was going to list my favourite GL songs ... can't ... there are just too many. But i agree with Bob B, the original recording of Early Mornin' Rain is awesome!

And Peewee, you've been such a part of the sound for so long, I want to express my heartfelt thanks for your contribution to the GL sound.

As a side note, my sons who are not steel guitar fans think your Ghostbusters on the Northern Steel CD is great! Thanks!

[This message was edited by Don Walters on 24 March 2004 at 09:44 PM.]

Andy Greatrix
Member

From: Edmonton Alberta

posted 25 March 2004 06:33 AM     profile     
"Pussywillows, Cattails"
would make a great steel
instrumental!
Don Walters
Member

From: Regina, SK, Canada

posted 25 March 2004 07:14 AM     profile     
quote:
"Pussywillows, Cattails"
would make a great steel
instrumental!

Yes!!

Mr. Cohen? Seems to me you'd to a great version ...

Jerry Hayes
Member

From: Virginia Beach, Va.

posted 25 March 2004 10:56 AM     profile     
I never paid much attention to Gordon Lightfoot until the late 60's. I was in a band with a Waylon Jennings freak (Johnny McKnight) and he started doing a song WJ had recorded called "That's What You Get For Lovin' Me". I didn't know it was a GL song until at breaktime one night a customer remarked to me how much she liked that Gordon Lightfoot song we were doing. I said "We don't do any of his" but she mentioned the song and said she'd bring me in a copy of his original version. Needless to say, I was hooked!! I've got most of his stuff on vinyl and cassette but only one CD. My favorite ballad is "The Last Time I Saw Her"... Someone mentioned "Canadian Railroad Trilogy" which is a masterpiece IMHO. Does anyone know if there's a box set out on this artist. If not, there damn well should be...JH

------------------
Livin' in the Past and the Future with a 12 string Mooney Universal tuning.


Ray Minich
Member

From: Limestone, New York, USA

posted 25 March 2004 02:17 PM     profile     
I became more interested in Gordon Lightfoot's work after he did "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald". That great lakes ship used to dock right behind the chemical plant my dad worked at on the Buffalo River (actually the Buffalo Chemical Disposal Rivcr) when I was a little boy. It was HUGE to my eyes then, loaded with yellow sulfur.

Every time I hear his tune, I remember the ship and think of the poor souls lost 'cause they had an overloaded boat in a very bad Great Lakes storm.

He certainly did a fitting tribute to them.

Rick McDuffie
Member

From: Smithfield, North Carolina, USA

posted 25 March 2004 05:50 PM     profile     
Wasn't "Ribbon Of Darkness" a country hit for Marty Robbins or somebody?

I love "Don Quixote" and "Softly". "Canadian Railroad Trilogy" is on the same level as Longfellow's "Hiawatha"... an epic!

And I'm about ready to move up to Canada!

Joey Ace
Sysop

From: Southern Ontario, Canada

posted 25 March 2004 05:57 PM     profile     
Jerry,
Rhino Records released a box set a few years ago. http://www.rhino.com/HotPress/75802pr.lasso

Go to Amazon.com and search for "Lightfoot".
There's a list of the songs and samples.

[This message was edited by Joey Ace on 25 March 2004 at 06:02 PM.]

Richard Bass
Member

From: Hendersonville, Tn

posted 25 March 2004 06:04 PM     profile     
GL's guitar player on many of his songs was Red Shea, a fantastic acoustic guitar player.
Richard
CHIP FOSSA
Member

From: Monson, MA 01057 U.S.A.

posted 25 March 2004 06:21 PM     profile     
How 'bout...
Sundown; Carefree Highway; Fine As Fine Can Be; Summertime Dream; Dream Street Rose; Steel Rail Blues; Early Morning Rain; Cotton Jenny; 10 Degrees And Getting Colder (recorded a few years back by Nanci Griffith); A Painter Passing Through;
I Used To Be A Country Singer (Ewan McGowan
song, but when GL got his hands on it, well.....)

I have the 4-box set that Joey mentioned, and I say, by all means, get this one. You will have pretty much all the great songs of
Gordon Lightfoot. And the sound quality is ULTRA.

Chipper

Doyle Huff
Member

From: Broken Arrow, OK USA

posted 25 March 2004 10:22 PM     profile     
I just finished putting a record on to a cd called Nashville Sundown on which Curly Chalker does 10 of Gordons songs all on E9th. Good stuff
Scott Houston
unregistered
posted 26 March 2004 02:04 PM           
For all of you waiting for Gord's next album, three of the songs are already available as a "preview" of the album at the iTunes music store for 99 cents a pop (yes, there's iTunes for both Mac and Windows available at apple.com). The songs sound great. There's a new video there too (free).
Joey Ace
Sysop

From: Southern Ontario, Canada

posted 24 April 2004 07:05 AM     profile     
Update
Gord says he's doing well and is in the 19th month of a 24 month recovery.

He just made public his intentions to do a benifit concert for McMaster University Medical Center (Hamilton, Ontario), in appreciation of the excellent care he recieved.

Plans, not yet firmed up, are for the concert to be late 2004.

His new CD is scheduled for release May 11, 2004.

Bob Blair
Member

From: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

posted 24 April 2004 09:20 AM     profile     
I'll make sure to buy that cd as soon as it comes out, Joey. Thanks for the update. As I reread the earlier entries in this thread it reminded me of the huge impact Gord's songs had on my life. A day doesn't go by that one of them doesn't spend a little time rattling around in my brain.
Joey Ace
Sysop

From: Southern Ontario, Canada

posted 13 July 2004 04:39 PM     profile     
UPDATE
Gord Performed last weekend! (one song, but it's a start)

from the Toronto Star

quote:
ul. 12, 2004. 08:29 AM


Lightfoot's surprise return to the stage


ORILLIA, Ont. (CP) — Gordon Lightfoot performed Sunday night for the first time since being knocked down by an aneurysm in 2002.

The impromptu performance came at the Mariposa Folk Festival, after a couple thousand fans were told not to leave at the end of a Gordon Lightfoot tribute.

What the audience didn't know was that Lightfoot was backstage, ostensibly to hear the other musicians perform his songs.

When organizers asked if he would make an appearance onstage to say hello to the crowd, Lightfoot said he would sing too.

"I'll just have John (Andersen, Lightfoot's driver) get the guitar out of the car," he told a stunned group that included musicians and festival organizers.

The crowd was on their feet instantly with a loud standing ovation for what would turn out to be Lightfoot's first public singing appearance since he was stricken with an aneurysm while performing at the Orillia Opera House on Sept. 7, 2002.

The Canadian legend left the stage with a bow after playing just the one song — 'I'll Tag Along.'

The singer said he hoped to resume performing in a couple of months.


Paul Graupp
Member

From: Macon Ga USA

posted 13 July 2004 05:26 PM     profile     
Joey: I cannot recall all the facts or details but didn't someone post some pictures about those times ? Something about the Wreck Of The Edmund Fitzgerald if I got it back correctly. I don't even have enough recall to do a search; do you ??

Regards, Paul

Joey Ace
Sysop

From: Southern Ontario, Canada

posted 13 July 2004 05:43 PM     profile     
Sorry Paul, I don't recall that. Anyone?
CHIP FOSSA
Member

From: Monson, MA 01057 U.S.A.

posted 13 July 2004 06:56 PM     profile     
Thanks Joey, for the encouraging update.

My name and password always get deleted after
I run a 'defrag'; and now is no exception.
Just another pain.

Chipper

Rich Weiss
Member

From: Woodland Hills, CA, USA

posted 14 July 2004 11:50 AM     profile     
Hey Peewee, if you happen to read this thread again, I wonder if you'd divulge the secret of how you got your steel to sound so much like a string section. What effects were you using? I saw you a long time ago, and if I remember, the part you played on "If you could read my mind" mimicked perfectly the string section on the recorded version. thanks.

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