Benjamin Dakota Johnson has scored a Juno nomination in the Traditional Roots Album of the Year category for his 2023 release Paint Horse. He is a Southwestern Ontario native having grown up there on his family farm. His bio draws attention to his “distinct, immediate, and truly wild voice,” which is certainly true. The album is also full of beautifully played fiddles and banjos and all that a traditional roots music fan could desire.
As for the material, according to one reviewer, “Rogers’s biggest feat with Paint Horse is the way he’s fused the hardscrabble tales of the people from songs with a lived-in love for his surroundings.”
It is truly a beautiful album containing some very fine cuts. The new release follows a 2019 album called Better By Now. This is of course the title track from the current release.
If you like lists, this one was once named the 29th greatest Canadian song of all time by a Canadian Broadcasting Corporation radio program despite the fact that several of Cockburn’s subsequent singles reached a higher chart position. It was, as well, his only Top 40 hit in the United States, peaking at No. 21 on the Billboard Hit 100. The track is from his 1979 album Dancing in the Dragon’s Jaws.
Living in Canada, as I do, it is a bit of a classic here, and though I like some of Bruce’s other hit singles better, it is a good one. Gotta say that a song roughly about the world surviving another days seems pretty appropriate at the moment.
As I listen to this one and the beautiful guitar work by Bruce, I recall being in Ring Music in the early 1980s, which used to be a guitar shop near the corner of Harbord and Spadina in Toronto. The repair shop was in the back behind a big glass window. Beyond that window I could hear somebody checking out a new guitar and just tearing it up. As I looked up, there’s Bruce and I had a moment I have never forgotten.
Posted inFolk-Rock|TaggedBruce Cockburn, CBC|Comments Off on “Wondering Where the Lions Are” – Bruce Cockburn (1979)
As noted yesterday, the Toronto-based folk/country harmony trio The Good Lovelies have been nominated for a Juno Award in the Contemporary Roots Album category for their 2023 release We Will Never Be the Same. The group consists of Caroline Brooks, Kerri Ough and Sue Passmore. They have been recording together since 2006 with this latest offering their 10th album.
I had a chance to listen to the new release this morning and it is gorgeous, with the kind of vocal harmonies you would expect. And, as their website says:
This new album is both a return to a more elemental, acoustic-based musical platform reaching back to the early days of the Good Lovelies, as well as an immersive emotional experience crafted by three seasoned songwriters who bring their own real-life stories in all their dynamism and messy complexity to the fore.
If people know anything from the late singer-songwriter Townes Van Zandt (1944-1997), it’s this song. Van Zandt first recorded “Pancho and Lefty” for his 1972 album The Late Great Townes Van Zandt. It’s been widely covered including in a duet by Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard where it got a fair bit of notice, reaching No. 1 on Billboard‘s Hot Country Songs chart in July of 1983. That same year there was a music video with Nelson as Pancho, and Haggard as Lefty. Van Zandt appeared briefly in it was well.
In broad stroke, the song is about a Mexican bandit named Pancho and his friendship with Lefty, the man who ultimately betrays him. It has been noted that some details in the lyrics mirror the life of Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa, who was, in 1923, killed by unknown assassins. Van Zandt always said, sure, but it’s more complicated than that.
In any case, it is by many accounts one of the best story songs ever written, certainly a classic.
The final scene of the series finale of “The Newsroom” includes Jeff Daniels and a few others singing the Tom T. Hall classic “That’s How I Got to Memphis.” I was not familiar with it, which isn’t surprising because I know precious little about country music, but that is entirely my loss. A great song that is now considered a standard.
Thomas T. Hall (1936 – 2021) was an American county music star. He wrote 12 No. 1 hit songs, with 26 more that reached the Top 10. He wrote “Harper Valley PTA ,” which was a No. 1 international crossover hit, and “I Love” which reached No. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100. He is included in Rolling Stone‘s list of 100 Greatest Songwriters.
A quick refresher on the Newsroom: It was an American political drama about life in a newsroom. The television series was created and principally written by Aaron Sorkin of West Wing fame. It premiered on HBO on June 24, 2012, and concluded on December 14, 2014, consisting of 25 episodes over three seasons.
If you didn’t know, actor Jeff Daniels is pretty serious about his music, as you can read about here.
As with so many country songs of the classic variety, “That’s How I Got to Memphis” is a sad tale in this case of a man who comes to Memphis to find an old lover who would likely be just as happy if he failed in the attempt. The song first appeared on Hall’s 1969 album Ballads of Forty Dollars: His Other Great Songs and has been covered by many other since.
First the classic version by Tom T. Hall and then the Newsroom cover.
Is “A World Without Love” a roots/folk tune? I don’t know, but if some duo got up at a folk festival and sang it, no one would blink. Sixty years later it sounds pretty folkie to me, certainly folk-rock, or maybe just pop.
There is some adorable folklore out there about the song, credited to Paul McCartney and John Lennon, having to do with the fact that the song was deemed either too lightweight for The Beatles to record or so silly, especially the first line (“Please lock me away”), that it induced giggles from a certain members of the Fab Four (hint: the smart one) whenever they took a run at it.
One thing to note is that McCartney wrote it when he was just 16 years old – not an awful effort for such a pup. It appears, too, that though the Lennon-McCartney stamp is it, it was written by McCartney along. It does seems odd that a band that shot to stardom with poetic nuggets like “she loves you yeah, yeah, yeah,” would find this one so lightweight and hilarious.
As for where the song ended up, the story goes that in 1963 Paul had a girlfriend by the name of Jane Asher. Jane had a brother by the name of Peter Asher who happened to be a musician. Peter asked Paul if he could use the song after Peter and Gordon Waller signed a record contract as Peter and Gordon. Whatever one thinks of it, it must have been pretty sweet to be in a position to ask McCartney for one of his throw-always.
“A World Without Love” was in fact released as Peter and Gordon’s first single in February 1964. It was then released on their debut album in both the UK and the U.S. It proceeded to reach No.1 in the U.K. and reached the top of both the Billboard Hot 100 and the Cashbox Top 100 in the U.S., as well as charting in countries around the world.
I would guess The Beatles were too busy being the most successful rock and roll band in history to regret one lost opportunity, but it is worth noting that “A World Without Love” has been listed as one of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll.
I am well past trying to figure out whether every song I loved as a kid and still love is really that good or just hard-wired to my personal pleasure zone. Don’t care. This one is a classic.
The wonderfully serendipitous nature of the Internet never ceases to amaze. I was thinking of one of my favourite singer-songwriters John Gorka and clicked around to find a video of him singing a beautiful song called “Potter’s Field” by Jack Hardy (left). I must confess I was not familiar with Jack Hardy, so upon some online research got myself educated.
Sadly, he passed away in 2011 at the age of 63 as a result of lung cancer, though not before making his mark.
Mr. Hardy wrote hundreds of songs, protest songs, political talking songs and romantic ballads, his lyrics often consciously literary, his music tinged with a Celtic sound. With a singing voice raspy and yearning, he performed in clubs and coffeehouses in New York and elsewhere and recorded more than a dozen albums, many of them self-produced, though two boxed sets of his work were released by a small, independent label in 2000.
A reference in an obituary I thought most interesting was that since the late 1970s and up until he became too ill Mr. Hardy hosted Monday night songwriting workshops at his Greenwich Village apartment.
Songwriters from as far away as Boston and Philadelphia would come to share a pasta dinner and their brand-new songs. Critiques were expected; the rule was that no song was supposed to be more than a week old, a dictum, Mr. Hardy said, that forced writers to write. Ms. Colvin, Ms. Vega and Mr. Lovett are all alumni.
By providing a setting for emerging artist to develop their craft, and I am sure in many other was, Mr. Hardy was, as the Times put, “perhaps not famous, but he was, in his way, influential.” Nice tribute.
The song by Jack Hardy I discovered recorded by John Gorka was, as I noted above, “Potters’ Field.” Without sounding too obtuse this is the kind of song you wouldn’t understand unless you already knew what it was about. It helps to know that criminals and unidentified persons, usually poor, are buried in potter’s fields, and also that
The original potter’s field takes its name from the Bible, specifically the book of Matthew in the New Testament. In chapter twenty-seven, Judas Isacariot returns the thirty pieces of silver the high priests gave him in exchange for betraying Jesus. The priests did not return the silver to the temple coffers, as it was blood money. They used that money to buy a field to bury paupers in. As the story goes, the field they bought was the area in which potters dug their clay.
I’ve got a book on my shelf that I have rarely considered. It’s called “Singing Soldiers: A History of the Civil War in Song.” Selections and historical commentary are by Paul Glass. Musical arrangements for piano and guitar are by Louis C. Singer.
One of the grand things about the information age in which we we live is that one can pick up a book like this, go to pretty much any song within, and quickly find a YouTube video of someone singing it. I randomly chose this ditty, “We’ll Fight for Uncle Abe,” originally written in 1863 – words by C.E. Pratt, music by Frederick Buckley. (The 1987 date above is of course the year it was recorded it). I then did a bit of computer searching and clicking and found Bobby Horton “a bluegrass musician, music historian, songwriter and arranger, best known for his extensive discography of Civil-era music and his long-time collaboration with documentarian Ken Burns.”
Horton is a member of Three on a String, which performs frequently in the Birmingham (Alabama) area, and has recorded and released fourteen volumes of Civil War songs on his own label. He is best known for providing period music for documentaries created by Ken Burns, including “Mark Twain,” “Lewis & Clark,” “Baseball,” “The Civil War,” “Thomas Jefferson,” “Frank Lloyd Wright”, “Horatio’s Drive” and “The National Parks: America’s Best Idea”. Horton has also provided music for sixteen National Park Service films and has performed educational songs for the “Lyrical Learning” series.
As a guitar player and occasional clawhammer banjo picker, and someone with a mild in interest in Civil War music, I sometimes threaten to learn more about the songs of the period. I have now apparently tripped on the motherlode. Good for me.
A picture I took several years ago at an outdoor gig in Aurora, Ontario with the Borealis Big Band. This is the way trombones look when they’re not being used, which I call “Bones at Rest.”