Gavin's Woodpile-The Bruce Cockburn Newsletter Online
2009 MEDIA
Posted: December 16, 2009
Poughkeepsiejournal.com
Seeger Madison Square Garden concert DVD released
A two-DVD
set featuring the star-studded concert held last May that celebrated
Fishkill folk singer Pete Seeger's 90th birthday has been released.
"The Clearwater Concert" was held
May 3 at Madison Square Garden and included performances by Joan
Baez, Bruce Springsteen, Dave Matthews and many others. Arlo
Guthrie, Richie Havens, Kris Kristofferson, John Mellencamp, Emmylou
Harris, Ani DiFranco, Bruce Cockburn, Toshi Reagon, Ladysmith Black
Mambazo, Tom Paxton, Billy Bragg, Taj Mahal, Michael Franti, Kate &
Anna McGarrigle, Bela Fleck, Tommy Sands, Tony Trischka, Dar
Williams, Steve Earle, Bernice Johnson Reagon, Ben Harper and Tom
Morello also performed.
Visit the
Clearwater Concert website for information. The DVD costs $35
and all proceeds from sales will benefit Clearwater, which has taken
an active role over decades in cleaning up the Hudson River and its
watershed.
In a press release, Seeger said,
"I never expected to see 18,000 people in Madison Square Garden for
a birthday party, much less one of my own. Bless you all and bless
all the great musicians on stage! This is one of the greatest
singing audiences I ever heard in all my life.”
Backstage at the PEN Canada benefit “Cockburn
& Ondaatje: An Evening of Music and Words,” which was held at Toronto’s Glenn
Gould Theatre on Nov. 21, 2009. From left: Bruce Cockburn, Lydia Cacho (the
recipient of PEN Canada’s One Humanity Award), musician Sarah Harmer, Michael
Ondaatje, and moderator Laurie Brown. (Photo courtesy of Matt Hayles)
Touch of Canadiana
By Greg Burliuk
The Kingston Whig Standard
November 21, 2009
Some groups celebrate the
release of a new CD in a halfhearted way, using a date that had already been
booked and calling it a release party.
Not Kyra and Tully. The local Kingston folk
duo spent three years making their new album, Wildlife (in and out of the city),
and they want to celebrate. So they've booked a legitimate concert venue,
Sydenham Street United Church, and some first-rate talent to perform with them.
Headlining will be Halifax's Jenn Grant,
whose music is the theme song for the popular CBC-TV show Heartland and whose
recent album, Echoes, has won critical accolades. And in a real coup, they have
managed to snag Bruce Cockburn, who has a house near Kingston, who will perform
a couple of songs on stage just before intermission, including one with Kyra and
Tully.
The duo (whose married name is Pearson) have
known Cockburn for a few years now. Each had songs on the Artists For The
Algonquin benefit CD last year.
"When I asked him, he said I'll let you
know," says Kyra. "So we waited on pins and needles for three weeks. And then he
said he could do it and feel free to leak it out but that he would only be doing
a couple of songs.
"It's an amazing thrill to share the stage
with him."
It might seem like a big task to stage a
concert, and it is, but the duo are not without resources. When the Sydenham
Street United Church is used for concerts, Tully is usually part of the tech
team. And Kyra has front-of-house experience, both at the Church for Queen's
Performing Arts Office concerts and also at the Baby Grand. Plus, many of their
musical friends have volunteered to help out.
"We just can't wait to get it out," says Kyra
of the CD. "It's a really big deal for us and we put a lot of sweat and tears
into it."
It's not that the journey wasn't a pleasant
one, however. The process started in 2007 when 13 bedtracks were laid down,
including vocals, bass and drums. From there, the process became a little more
leisurely.
"Chris (Coleman, at whose Leopard Frog
Studios the CD was recorded) was a real pleasure to work with," says Tully. "And
if we wanted an extra bit added, we could ask some of our musical friends."
The songs themselves date back as long as 10
years ago. One of them is one of Tully's favourites, Thunder Bay. "I did it with
Me Man Jack as a reggae song but it really begged to be done this way as a folk
song," he says. "At the time, I was writing songs about going to San Jose, which
I'd never been to, so why not Thunder Bay, which I had.
"I like songs that have that
feeling of a ghost in them like Bruce Springsteen's Atlantic City. That's what
I'm attempting to do in that song."
Kyra's favourite is one she wrote called
Stitched on a Cloth.
"It's about our little community of friends
and how we can feel their embrace and their help," she says.
The 11 songs on the CD can roughly be divided
between Tully's songs from the road and Kyra's from the heart.
Tully says you could also say that the CD is
"Canadiana for the whole family.
"We mention nature, and [Hwy.] 401 and
Thunder Bay, which are Canadiana themes. And I even say I'm sorry."
- - -
The essentials
Who: Local folksingers Kyra and Tully are
celebrating the release of their new CD Wildlife (in and out of the city).
What: They are having a concert in which they
open for their friend, Halifax's Jenn Grant, and get Bruce Cockburn on stage to
play a few songs.
When: The concert is tonight at 7 p. m. at
Sydenham Street United Church. Cost:Tickets are $12 in advance and $15 at the
door. Children under 12 free.
Where to get tickets:Tickets are available at
Queen's Performing Arts Office (JDUC), Zap Records, Tara Foods, and Brian's
Record Option. Album: The CD is available at the concert for $15 and also at Zap
Records and Brian's Record Option. Also present will be Lake Ontario
Waterkeeper.
What's On
Kingston This Week
Posted By KTW Staff
November 19, 2009
Kingston, Ontario
Kingston's folk-pop duo Kyra
and Tully are launching a new CD with some very good backup Saturday, Nov. 21, 7
p.m., at the Sydenham Street United Church.
Jenn Grant, the orchestral pop singer, for
one; and Bruce Cockburn, Canadian folk icon, for another.
Kyra and Tully will release their new album,
Wildlife (in and out of the city), coming off successes of their own including a
recent showcase at NXNE in Toronto, positive reviews in Exclaim!, Broken Pencil,
and Toronto's NOW. The new record is being released on filmmaker Lenny Epstein's
imprint, Buster Records.
Grant, who has earned several East Coast
Music Awards nominations, has had a busy month, playing shows in New York,
Halifax and a couple of dates with Hawksley Workman in the eastern U.S.
Tickets are $12 in advance ($15 at the door)
and are available at Queen's Performing Arts Office (JDUC), Zap Records, Tara
Foods, and Brian's Record Option. Children under 12 get in free.
Bruce Cockburn and Michael Ondaatje blow their horns
Musician and author planning an onstage chat to benefit PEN Canada
by Brad Wheeler
Toronto Globe & Mail
November 18, 2009
When Bruce Cockburn
and Michael Ondaatje chat onstage Thursday, they will speak on the “joys and
challenges of the creative life,” according to the press release from Pen
Canada, the champion of free expression that the discussion is to benefit.
The activist and singer-songwriter Cockburn might talk about rocket
launchers and kicking at the darkness “till it bleeds daylight.” He may
wonder out loud as to the whereabouts of lions. The author Ondaatje knows
where the lions are. There's his 1987 novelIn
the Skin of a Lion, and the
king of the jungle is a national symbol of Sri Lanka, his native country.
It's possible Cockburn and theEnglish
Patientwriter might discuss
Buddy Bolden, the legendary New Orleans cornet player whom Jelly Roll Morton
once described as the “blowingest man ever lived since Gabriel.”
Ondaatje was inspired by the legend of Bolden to writeComing
Through Slaughter, a novel
and, later, a stage play, loosely based on the unrecorded jazz-inventor's
deranged last days. Cockburn too knows about Bolden: The songLet
the Bad Air Out(from
Cockburn's 1999 album, Breakfast in New
Orleans Dinner in Timbuktu)
references a line from Morton's ragBuddy
Bolden's Blues. “Open up the
window, let the bad air out!” refers to the stale air of the funky dance
halls in which Bolden blew his horn.
Will Ondaajte and Cockburn blow their own horns onstage? No
they will not – moderator Laurie Brown from CBC Radio 2 will do that for
them, justly acknowledging the talents of a pair of lionized Canadians.
Cockburn & Ondaatje: An
Evening of Music and Words happens Thursday Nov. 19 in Toronto, 7 p.m. $50.
Glenn Gould Theatre, 250 Front St. W., 416-872-4255.
Posted: October 7, 2009
A tribute concert to Bruce will
be held at Hugh's Room in Toronto on October 10, 2009. Artist's include Andy
Sheppard, Liam Titcomb, D'Arcy Wickham, Heather Luckhart, Hobson's Choice,
Michael Johnston and Paisley Jura.
Posted: October 3, 2009
Bruce Cockburn
contributes Waiting for a Miracle to benefit CD
Designed to appeal to a
broad range of musical tastes, One Voice includes music
donated by Canadian Music Hall of Fame member Bruce
Cockburn, Celtic songstress Loreena McKennitt, top-ten
star Serena Ryder, jazz great Oscar Peterson, rock
fiddler Ashley MacIsaac, folk legend Stan Rogers, hip
hop artist Shad, rock headliners Blue Rodeo, R&B pioneer
Jully Black, our own Three Cantors, top Canadian choirs
such as Elektra Women’s Choir, Chor Leoni Men’s Choir, U
of A Madrigal Singers, Vancouver Chamber Choir and many
others (see full track list at the bottom of this page).
One Voice is a unique
gift for Anglicans to proudly share with friends and
family members. The CD sets will sell in Anglican
churches for $20 each, and it is strongly recommended
that parishes order early to avoid disappointment.
Shipping will begin in early September 2009: the minimum
order will be 10 CD sets (one case) plus shipping and
handling. Contact Sheilagh McGlynn, PWRDF Public
Engagement Associate, at
smcglynn@pwrdf.org
or 416.924.9199 ext. 316.
Download the One Voice poster and order form.
One Voice is a PWRDF
50th anniversary initiative, with 100% of the proceeds
going to support the work of PWRDF – sustainable
development, relief, refugees, and global justice.
Join us in bringing
our voices together as we celebrate the 50th Anniversary
of PWRDF.
Disc 1:
Celebration
1 Waiting for a
Miracle • Bruce Cockburn
2 Never-Ending Road (Amhrán Duit) • Loreena McKennitt
3 Je T’aime • Roxanne Potvin
4 Ever Present Need • Steve Bell
5 Higher • Tara MacLean
6 Finger Lakes • Blue Rodeo
7 Just Another Day • Serena Ryder
8 Lovely Irene • Lucie Idlout
9 Let Me Be • Elizabeth Shepherd
10 Delivery Delayed • Stan Rogers
11 A Miner And A Miner’s Son • The Men of the Deeps •
composed by Tony Aucoin
12 McNabs • Ashley MacIsaac
13 Dizzy Nest • Oliver Jones
14 A Better Place • Julie Crochetière
15 I Travelled • Jully Black
16 I’ll Never Understand (featuring Bernadette Kabango)
• Shad
Disc 2:
Inspiration
1 Amazing Grace •
Chor Leoni Men’s Choir • arranged by Robert Sund
2 Can You Imagine? • Vancouver Children's Choir
•composed by Rupert Lang
3 Hymn To Freedom • Oscar Peterson Trio • composed by
Oscar Peterson
4 Inverness • Joe Sealy • composed by Joe Sealy
5 Balm in Gilead • Vancouver Chamber Choir • arranged by
Jon Washburn
6 O Vivens Fons • Elektra Women’s Choir • composed by
Hildegard of Bingen
7 Hymn Of The Cherubim • The Choirs of St. Thomas’s •
composed by Sergei Rachmaninoff
8 Os Justi • Pro Coro Canada• composed by Anton Bruckner
9 Ave Maria • CapriCCio Vocal Ensemble • composed by
Anton Bruckner
10 Eternity • Hamilton Children’s Choir • composed by
Michael Bojesen
11 Alleluia (from Exsultate Jubilate) • Rachel Snow •
composed by W A Mozart
12 Abide With Me • The Three Cantors
13 Chorale Prelude On St. Columba • Angus Sinclair •
composed by C V Stanford
14 The Cuckoo and the Hawk • Nathan Hiltz • composed by
Nathan Hiltz
15 Evening Hymn • The Parish Choir of St. John’s Elora •
composed by H B Gardiner
16 Hail, Gladdening Light • University of Alberta
Madrigal Singers • composed by Charles Wood
17 The Ballad of Skipper Knight • Shallaway • composed
by Stephen Hatfield
Cockburn/Ondaatje
Event Supports PEN Canada
September 19, 2009
Canadian News Wire
Alice Munro/Diana Athill IFOA
event sold out
TORONTO,
Sept. 29 /CNW/ - PEN Canada is thrilled to announce
that Bruce Cockburn and Michael Ondaatje will appear onstage
together in a rare collaboration of music and words at the Glenn Gould
Studio on November 19. The two Canadian legends will give their
fans a once in a life time opportunity to witness a unique artistic endeavour,
as well as to see them share their thoughts on the joys and challenges of the
creative life. CBC Radio Two's Laurie Brown will host the
evening. The event starts at 7:00 pm at Toronto's Glenn
Gould Studio. Tickets are $50 and can be purchased now
by phone through Roy Thomson Hall at 416-872-4255, or online at
http://www.roythomson.com.
The evening is in honour of
Constance Rooke (1942-2009), who was a past president of PEN
Canada and a passionate advocate of freedom of expression and the
arts.
PEN is also pleased to announce
that its opening night IFOA fundraiser with Alice Munro
and Diana Athill has sold out. The opening night gala at IFOA will be Ms Munro's
only onstage interview connected with the launch of her much-anticipated
collection Too Much Happiness! Joining Ms Munro will be esteemed British editor
and celebrated memoirist Diana Athill, whose most recent book, Somewhere Towards
the End, was published last year, when she was 91. CBC Radio personality
Matt Galloway will host the evening, and author/broadcaster
Bill Richardson will moderate the conversation between Munro and
Athill.
"As an organization that defends
freedom of expression and advances literature and literary dialogue, we are
extremely pleased," says PEN CanadaPresident Ellen
Seligman, "to launch our 2009/2010 season of PEN events with
Alice Munro and Diana Athill, followed by Michael Ondaatje and
Bruce Cockburn in creative collaboration."
Event proceeds will go to PEN
Canada in support of its vital work on behalf of writers in prison,
writers in exile, and freedom of speech.
About PEN Canada
PEN Canada
is a centre of International PEN that campaigns on behalf of writers around the
world persecuted for the expression of their thoughts. In Canada,
it supports the right to free expression enshrined in Section 2(b) of the
Charter of Rights and Freedoms. In the past five years, PEN Canada
has helped to free over 40 writers from prison.
http://www.pencanada.ca.
About the IFOA
The International Festival of
Authors was inaugurated in 1980 with a mandate to bring together the best
writers of contemporary world literature. Like the weekly reading series, the
IFOA includes readings, interviews, lectures and round table discussions as well
as public book signings and a festival bookstore. The IFOA also presents a
number of special events including readings by Scotiabank Giller Prize, Governor
General's Literary Awards, and Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize finalists, as
well as the awarding of the Harbourfront Festival Prize.
For further information: Media contact for PEN Canada: Bruce Walsh:
kickinghorse@livec.com, (416)
465-5237; Media contact for IFOA: Becky Toyne, Communications Coordinator,
Authors at Harbourfront Centre, 235 Queens Quay West, Toronto, Ontario, M5J 2G8,
Office: (416) 973-5836,
btoyne@harbourfrontcentre.com
Cheering up Canadian troops
in Afghanistan-
Cockburn brothers in Afghanistan - musician and military MD - sing
from same songbook.
By Bruce Ward,
Ottawa Citizen, September 10, 2009
Canadian singer-songwriter Bruce
Cockburn performs for Canadian troops at a forward operating
base in Kandahar province, Sept. 10, 2009.
Photograph by:
Finbarr O'Reilly, Reuters
KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan — When
Bruce Cockburn arrived here Tuesday with a team of musicians and
athletes to entertain the troops, he brought birthday gifts for his
younger brother, Capt. John Cockburn, a doctor at the NATO hospital on
the base.
The gifts were pretty much what you
might expect from the singer/humanitarian: granola, organic almonds and
cashews, and some special bread.
But Cockburn's stance on the war and
his admiration for Canada's troops might be surprising to some of his
fans.
" I'm full of admiration for these
kids," he said in an interview. "The older I get, the more I see these
young faces doing what they are doing and the chances they are taking —
they feel like my own kids, and I love them and am happy to be here to
show them my support.
"I've never been with the Canadian
troops. It's a good feeling."
Cockburn, 64, does not think the
Canadians should pull out of Afghanistan, as the government has said
they would do in 2011.
"It's a long discussion on whether we
should be in Afghanistan — whether anyone should be in Afghanistan. But
since we are and we've gone this far, I don't think it's appropriate to
leave at this stage.
"Certainly I have not had the idea
that anyone I have talked to among the soldiers is hiding anything or
trying to slant things to a particular view. They believe in what they
doing and are witnesses to what they are doing and I have to accept the
truth of what they are telling me. I don't think it's a good plan to be
pulling out of here — with the circumstances at this time."
In an interview after the singer's
performance, Capt. Cockburn joked that the birthday presents were
payback for the musical misery he endured when the brothers were growing
up in Ottawa.
"He used to drive me crazy with a
song called Musical Friends. It's a nice catchy song, but he practised
it incessantly when I was studying in the basement at the time. But I'm
generally a long-term fan. I was the roadie in his first two bands."
Capt. Cockburn, 57, joined the army 2
1/2 years ago after working many years as a family doctor in northern
Ontario.
"My main reason was just wanting to
do something different. I had done a stint in Rwanda volunteering and it
was the first time I really got a sense of the military and their
medical role. I thought I would be too old to join but I wasn't and I
was interested in coming here and it all kind of worked."
Capt. Cockburn has been in
Afghanistan for six months.
"I still have another two years to
go. Now that I've gotten to do this, they're not likely to send me
back."
What was his brother's reaction when
he joined up? "He was jealous," laughed Capt. Cockburn.
"He has always been interested, even
as a kid, in military issues and hardware and explosions. I think that's
just remained and with all the various exposures he's had to conflict
zones I think he's accepted the reality that the military is necessary,
like it or not. And I think he's gained a lot of appreciation of what
military people do. He's always pretty sympathetic to the downtrodden
but without the military to keep things in balance, things don't work
out."
Cockburn, the rock band Finger 11,
and singer Ricky Paquette performed at several forward operating bases
Thursday in volatile Panjwaii district.
Cockburn sang his classic anti-war
song If I Had A Rocket Launcher at every stop.
At the last show, Brig.-Gen. Jonathan
Vance, commander of the Canadian Forces in Kandahar, presented Cockburn
with a real rocket launcher in a mock ceremony that delighted the
troops.
"I was kind of hoping he would let me
keep it," Cockburn joked to reporters.
Most of the troops here are members
of the Quebec-based Van Doo regiment and former Montreal Canadiens
hockey star Guy Lafleur received the loudest ovation from the troops at
every stop Thursday.
Canadian
entertainer Bruce Cockburn was part among entertainers who performed at a
forward-operating base in the Panjwaii district of Afghanistan on Thursday.
(Bill Graveland/Canadian Press)
Canadian songwriter Bruce Cockburn is
known as much for his political activism as he is for his music.
His song, If I Had a Rocket Launcher,
was written after he visited Guatemalan refugee camps in Mexico that were
attacked before and after his visit by Guatemalan military helicopters.
Cockburn, who has made 30 albums and has
had countless hits, visited another war zone this week: Afghanistan. And the
conflict involves a member of his own family. His brother, Capt. John
Cockburn, is a doctor serving with the Canadian Forces at Kandahar Airfield.
"I was very curious. I have my own
reasons aside from national pride and the love I feel for these people,"
said Cockburn, 64, who has a long history of being outspoken about human
rights.
Ottawa-born Bruce Cockburn, left, visited his younger brother, Capt. John
Cockburn, at Canada's Kandahar base hospital. (Bill
Graveland/Canadian Press)
"The older I get, the more I see these
young faces doing what they are doing and the chances they are taking — they
feel like my kids."
Ottawa-born Cockburn has travelled to
many countries, including Iraq and Mozambique, and written songs on
political subjects ranging from the International Monetary Fund to
landmines.
Arriving in a land that is rife with
landmines, and with Canada in the middle of a war and with soldiers dying in
the war-torn country, has given him pause to think.
"It's a long discussion on whether we
should be in Afghanistan — whether anyone should be in Afghanistan," he said
thoughtfully.
"But since we are, and since we've gone
this far, I don't think it's appropriate to leave at this stage.
Troops 'believe in what they do'
"Certainly I have not had the idea that
anyone I have talked to among these soldiers is hiding anything or been
trying to slant things to a particular point of view," he said. "They
believe in what they do and are witnesses to what they are doing, and I have
to accept the truth in what they're telling me."
Cockburn spent some time visiting with
his younger brother, John, 57, who joined the Canadian military two years
ago. The former Canadian national ski coach was looking for something new to
do.
"I had done a stint volunteering in
Rwanda and it was the first time I really got a sense of the military and
their medical role," John Cockburn said. "I thought I would be too old to
join, but I wasn't, and I was interested in coming here and it all kind of
worked."
Big brother Bruce was supportive about
his decision to join the military.
"He was jealous," he said with a laugh.
"He has always been interested, even as a kid, in military issues and
hardware and explosions.
"I think that's just remained and, with
all the various exposures he's had to conflict zones, I think he's accepted
the reality that the military is necessary, like it or not."
Bruce Cockburn, along with other
entertainers — including the group Finger Eleven and sports celebrities such
as Guy Lafleur and Patrice Brisebois — got a rare look "outside the wire" of
the main base in Kandahar when they were flown to a number of
forward-operating bases in the Panjwaii district.
The reality of war hit home as the
Canadian military responded after a suicide bomber blew himself up near a
police vehicle in a bazaar in the nearby village of Bazar-e-Panjwaii. Six
police officers and three civilians were injured in the attack.
The experience was an eye opener for the
members of Team Canada visiting Afghanistan.
Performed If I Had a Rocket
Launcher
Cockburn drew wild applause when he sang
If I Had a Rocket Launcher, which prompted the commander of Task
Force Kandahar, Gen. Jonathan Vance, to temporarily present him with a
rocket launcher.
"I was kind of hoping he would let me
keep it. Can you see Canada Customs? I don't think so," Cockburn said,
laughing.
The most popular visitor for the largely
francophone contingent of soldiers was former the Montreal Canadiens great,
Lafleur.
*****
Canadian entertainer Bruce Cockburn
was part of a group of entertainers who performed at a forward operating
base in the Panjwaii district of Afghanistan on Thursday, Sept. 10, 2009.
After Cockburn sung If I Had a Rocket Launcher Gen. Jonathan Vance jokingly
presented him with a rocket launcher of his own. The Canadian Press / Bill
Graveland.
Freedom of expression was
the order of the day at the Ottawa Folk Festival on Saturday, with a program
that ranged from the politically charged music of Bruce Cockburn to the
wacky comedy of the Arrogant Worms. Both acts are folkfest favourites in
Ottawa, and have played at the Britannia Park site in past years.
Under a starry sky, the
darkness was alive with possibility, as Cockburn sang in the 1986 song World
of Wonders, with which he opened his headlining performance. Wearing a
purple shirt and black jeans, the silver-haired troubadour performed solo,
creating magic with little more than his voice and an acoustic guitar. At
deadline, he was deep into the hypnotizing fretwork of Night Train.
Earlier in the evening, the
Arrogant Worms were in fine form, obviously comfortable during their 89th
performance at the Ottawa Folk Festival (or so they estimated). Joking about
being pushed back to an earlier time slot, they declared their unhappiness
with their "diminished role" and asked to be traded to Chamberfest.
The trio displayed a quick
wit and improv ability and gleefully teased the folkfest audience about the
hydration stations, falafels, and their concern for the environment. The
jokes were fresh, but many of the songs were familiar, including the Worms'
declaration of love to Céline Dion and the misfortune of being Jesus'
brother, Bob.
Satirizing social issues is
also a growing part of the Worms' show, as demonstrated in the song, Big Box
Store. "How can you ever have enough," they sing, "when there is so much
more?" Another song, Hollywood Girl, tears apart starlets like Britney
Spears and Paris Hilton with devastating wordplay.
Another of Ottawa's
favourite artists, ukulele wiz James Hill, surprised everyone with a bold
performance, featuring his partner Anne Davison, a talented cellist. During
their mainstage slot in the early evening, the couple debuted a new piece
they've been working on that combines a experimental ukulele sounds with
modern dance. "Maybe it's because we feel safe in Ottawa," Hill said. "We
always feel like we can take chances here."
Forget about stepdancing to
jigs and reels; this was something entirely different. As Hill inserted a
chopstick into a uke laid across his lap, he altered the uke's fundamental
musical nature. Davison rose from her cello stool, lunging into a series of
jerky dance moves that reminded me of Tinkerbell, while Hill created a
techno backdrop on his uke, complete with throbbing bass. No computers were
used, he noted, to create the mesmerizing effects. Kudos to Hill for
constantly pushing the limits of the pint-sized acoustic instrument.
Last night's bill also
featured excellent sets by the Good Lovelies and Digging Roots, as well as
several brief between-set performances on the small satellite stage, this
year dubbed the Moon Stage.
When Bruce Cockburn takes the Ottawa Folk
Festival stage tonight, it will represent something of a full circle for the
venerable Canadian songwriter, political activist, humanitarian and true north
musical treasure.
Before embarking on an odyssey that would see
him release some 26 albums over a nearly 40-year span, garnering numerous
accolades -- including his 2001 induction into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame
-- the Ottawa-born and raised Cockburn could be seen rubbing shoulders with the
icons of Canada's '60s folk explosion at the legendary Le Hibou club.
That is, until he had to head back into the
kitchen to finish a load of dishes.
"It started with hanging out there a lot, and
I got to know the owners well enough that they hired me as a dishwasher," says
the 64-year-old Cockburn.
"We were all hanging around there so much and
we'd always play at open mics."
It was there that Cockburn cut his teeth
playing his distinctive fingerstyle guitar to the coffeehouse crowd, and it was
there that he met up with like-minded musicians to form seminal Ottawa band The
Children.
"That's when the songwriting really started,"
says Cockburn, who flirted with mainstream success in various group incarnations
before setting out on his own in the late '60s.
His first experience playing the folk
festival circuit came in 1969, when he was asked to play a side stage at the
Mariposa Folk Festival, only to be thrust into the main stage spotlight when the
headliner took a gig at that little backwoods jamboree known as Woodstock.
On his most recent tour, Cockburn alternated
between expansive outdoor stages, intimate club settings, even a run at Madison
Square Garden.
"It doesn't matter how big the venue is, it
doesn't matter how big the audience is. I feel comfortable as long as there's an
audience that wants to listen," says Cockburn.
"It's not about the size of the audience,
it's about the contact you have with whoever is there."
And there's no better way to make that
connection than in the intimate and informal environs of the song circle, that
heralded tradition of the folk fest scene.
Tomorrow, Cockburn will host Songs From the
Road, a sit-down songwriters' circle with fellow festival headliners Joel
Plaskett and Steven Page, and local songstress Ana Miura.
"From the audience point of view, the
workshops offer an atmosphere of informality that you don't get in main stage
concert situations," says Cockburn.
"We're all sitting there trading songs, and
the great thing for the artist is you get introduced to these great people and
great songs that you don't know."
Posted: August 21, 2009
Two new docs exploring Canadian
music scene in '70s, '80s a sweet ride
By Bill Brioux (CP)
BRAMPTON, Ontario. — Two new documentaries
exploring the Canadian music scene in the 1970s and '80s sound like they could
be a bad trip in a hippie van, packed with a mullet band and a punk hitchhiker.
But chill, dude.
Nicholas Jennings takes viewers on one sweet,
tune-filled ride with "This Beat Goes On" and "Rise Up," two two-part docs that
add up to a fun, four-hour salute to Canadian pop music.
The first part of "This Beat Goes On" begins
Aug. 27 at 9 p.m. ET on CBC's "Doc Zone," with the series playing over the next
three consecutive Thursdays.
Jennings, a Toronto-based author and
journalist who used to cover music in the '80s for Macleans, previously wrote
and produced "Shakin' All Over," his entertaining look at Canadian music in the
'60s.
"This Beat Goes On" continues on from there
and starts with the landmark Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications
Commission decision in the early '70s mandating that radio stations play at
least 30 per cent home grown music on our airwaves.
"It was very controversial," says Jennings.
"Canadian radio resented being told what to play and didn't want the quota."
Some stations shoved Canadian music into a
midnight to 6 a.m. ghetto, or just played usual suspects like Gordon Lightfoot,
Joni Mitchell, The Guess Who or Anne Murray, says Jennings.
But by the mid-'70s, you could really start
to see the fruits of the play-Canadian mandate.
A second and third wave of Canadian stars
rose up directly as a result of all the airplay, he says.
Among the great rock 'n' roll stories told in
"This Beat Goes On" is the almost too-good-to-be-true tale behind the making of
Bachman Turner Overdrive's 1973 hit, "Takin' Care of Business."
The story goes that the band was rocking out
take after take of the song when a pizza-delivery man - who happened to be a
session musician - knocked on the door of the studio.
"What you guys need with that song is some
keyboard," he told Randy Bachman. The pizza guy was invited to sit in,
contributed a Jerry Lee Lewis-like piano riff, and took off again before Bachman
could get his name.
"Whenever we stumbled on a story like that,
we just pounced on it," says Jennings.
Bachman is just one of dozens who took part
in the two documentaries.
Many gathered earlier this week at Toronto's
Gladstone Hotel, including Donnie Walsh from The Downchild Blues Band, Kim
Mitchell, Murray McLauchlan, bizarre electronic musician Nash the Slash - still
in mummy drag after all these years - and Lorraine Segato of Parachute Club,
who's 1983 anthem "Rise Up" gave the '80s documentary its title.
The lookback at the '80s benefits greatly
from the rise of MTV and especially MuchMusic, and Jennings and associates were
able to dig through stacks of music videos to help tell their story.
The explosion of music videos and the role
MuchMusic played in promoting homegrown bands had a great deal to do with the
growth of the Canadian music scene. Montrealer Corey Hart, for one, is seen as
somebody who rode his "Sunglasses at Night" good looks to MTV glory in late
1983.
Sam Roberts also comments on how the '80s Men
Without Hats hit "The Safety Dance" was played "fifty times a day" when he was
growing up.
Jennings also relied heavily on the
well-maintained CBC archives for much of his footage, although he occasionally
stretched his budget to buy clips from American shows like Dick Clark's
"American Bandstand" and NBC's "Saturday Night Live," (where Bruce Cockburn is
seen performing "Wonder Where The Lions Are").
But he was disappointed to discover that the
entire run of CTV's daily afternoon music series, "After Four," was either
erased, taped over or destroyed.
"Everyone who was in Canadian music appeared
on 'After Four' and they wiped the entire series away," says Jennings.
Sometimes the tributes get a bit too
reverential. Gushing praise for the Spock-browed '80s act Dalbello seems a bit
over-the-top.
And clips of well-coifed Montreal balladeer
Gino Vanelli performing "I Just Want To Stop" invoke memories of Eugene Levy's
hilarious "SCTV" send up, which had Levy getting hairier and even gorilla-like
every time he turned around as Vannelli.
"We could have gone down that road, but,
ultimately, this was a celebration," says Jennings. "We're not 'SCTV."'
Bill Brioux is a freelance TV columnist based
in Brampton, Ontario.
August 2009
From the Ottawa Folk festival Website
Bruce Cockburn to host Joel Plaskett
and Steven Page in “Songs From the Road”
Our jaws have officially hit the floor. Not
only will each of our headliners perform their own shows, they have decided to
combine forces and present a workshop entitled “Songs From the Road”.
They will be seen together around 1 p.m. Sunday
afternoon, on the Hill Stage.
It wasn’t so long ago that the singer
Madeleine Peyroux, with her kittenish voice and sultry behind-the-beat phrasing,
was described somewhat dismissively as a vocal clone of
Billie Holiday. That her repertory includes several songs associated
with Lady Day only contributed to the impression.
But as her recent album, “Bare Bones”
(Rounder), all of whose songs she had a hand in writing, and her performance
at Town Hall on Thursday evening demonstrated, she is a much more
complicated musical figure.
The show, at which she was accompanied by
a mostly acoustic blues band, suggested that for Ms. Peyroux, Holiday’s
music is a template from which she has branched out to refine an enigmatic,
low-key personal style that is all her own. Only intermittently settling on
notes, she likes to swoop and glide around them, sometimes ignoring the
melody altogether. Her rendition of the
Patsy Cline standard “Walkin’ After Midnight,” arranged as a blues
shuffle, not only forsook the tune but also seemed unmoored to a key.
If the ups and downs of heated romantic
love inform some of Ms. Peyroux’s songs, the timbre of her voice, more
ethereal than Holiday’s, doesn’t convey the defiant masochism that made
Holiday’s sound, even in upbeat moments, suggest an open sore. The wounds
described in Ms. Peyroux’s best new lyrics are more familial than erotic.
Introducing “Bare Bones,” the album’s
title song, written with Walter Becker and Larry Klein, Ms. Peyroux said its
opening lines — “I remember what my daddy taught me ’bout how warm whiskey
is in a cold ditch/And one more thing about good and evil: you can’t tell
which is which” — are something her father really told her. The song goes on
to describe her skepticism about the existence of any firm truth but ends
with a tentative affirmation: “There’s somethin’ lovely after all.”
An ambivalent relationship with a
drinking man (probably the same father) who “could sit and drink the way a
monk could pray” is remembered in “River of Tears,” at the end of which the
narrator picks up “that old decanter that he used to drink from.” In “Love
and Treachery” she recognizes her genetic inheritance by hearing the same
man’s voice in hers and acknowledges, “All your love and treachery ended up
as mine.”
Because Ms. Peyroux lived for a time in
Paris, where she worked as a street performer, she has been described as
French-American, although that would be stretching the definition. The most
perfect musical moment on Thursday was an accordion-laced rendition of
Serge Gainsbourg’s waltz “La Javanaise,” sung in impeccable French with
the members of her band clustered around her.
The Canadian singer-songwriter Bruce
Cockburn, who opened for Ms. Peyroux, performed selections from his new
album, “Slice O’ Life: Bruce Cockburn: Live Solo” (Rounder Pgd), and other
familiar songs from a solo career that spans nearly 40 years.
From the beginning, a lofty Christian
mysticism (cosmic, not evangelical) and left-wing politics have been the
twin themes of Mr. Cockburn’s lyrics, written in an impressionistic
post-Beat style. Alone on the stage, he accompanied himself on guitars that
seemed to send up little sprays of fireworks.
Mac sings
praises of Cockburn, Elford
Wade Hemsworth The Hamilton
Spectator
June 9, 2009
They are two distinctly Canadian artists,
both recognized for their creative work and for their altruism.
While he was earning Juno Awards in the
recording studio, she was designing and making them in the glass studio.
He has used his influence and profile to
raise awareness about human rights and the devastation of war while she has used
hers to serve her community in countless public and private acts of service.
McMaster University recognized musician Bruce
Cockburn and Hamilton glass sculptor Shirley Elford as outstanding artists and
conscientious citizens by presenting both of them with honorary doctorates at
the humanities convocation ceremony yesterday.
"Bruce Cockburn is a Canadian original," said
McMaster provost Ilene Busch-Vishniac, who introduced the singer-songwriter.
"His drive for musical excellence and innovation, combined with his unrelenting
pursuit of social awareness and justice, has distinguished him as one of the
most respected musical influences of the last four decades."
McMaster's dean of humanities, Suzanne
Crosta, said Elford's sculptures are part of important public and private
collections around the world, but that locally she is known just as well for her
community work on boards and committees ranging from the Hamilton Public Library
to the Hamilton Health Sciences Foundation.
"Shirley Elford is one of the true jewels of
our community," she said. "Her art has moved and inspired thousands, and her
dedication as a volunteer has helped shape and lead our city."
Later, Cockburn addressed the graduating
students from the Hamilton Place stage, where he is more comfortable playing
than speaking.
"I get freaked out in situations like these,"
Cockburn started. "Making a speech for me is like walking a tightrope, with
Hunter S. Thompson holding one end and Spinal Tap on the other."
The musician who rose to prominence as the
writer and performer of such hits as Wondering Where The Lions Are, Call It
Democracy and If I Had a Rocket Launcher was alternately philosophical and
humorous as he reflected on the hollow nature of modern celebrity that creates
fame without substance.
"I believe respect is a basic human right,
along with the right to breathe and have access to water and to vote for the
bozo of your choice," he said. "But if you want more than that basic respect,
you need to be respected for something."
He told the graduands that he didn't have
much practical advice for them, except that his own life and career have taught
him simply to try his best.
"Striving to be the best you that you can be
is the one thing you can exercise a degree of control over. Try to do it with
love, if you can," he said.
"Respect comes from being good at what you
do. I'm talking about art, but that can just as easily be said about teaching,
or police work, or the practice of medicine."
The film will be screened in
Toronto on June 26, 2009.
This romantic
‘Canadiana’ tale centers around two former childhood friends;
Todd, a small town could-have-been, and Allison, an overly
nostalgic children’s book illustrator, who are reunited at their
ten year high school reunion and embark on a childish yet
romantic adventure recapturing the life they use to live.
However, major questions arise, like “what does it mean to have
shared a bathtub at three?” and things get even more complicated
when Todd’s younger hockey star brother returns home. The result
has them spiraling into delinquent behavior where scorching
campfire antics, teenage bush parties and childhood memories
only delay their impending return to adulthood. In the end, it’s
a story about those that are unwilling to let go of their youth
and the means they will take to hold on to it.
These fragile bodies of touch and taste
This vibrant skin, this hair like lace
Spirits open to the thrust of grace
Never a breath you can afford to waste
There is a sense of the world split open in the
work of
Bruce Cockburn, like a ripe fig pulled apart by strong hands, the
innards tasted hungrily and savored with closed-eye wonder. Since his
self-titled 1970 debut, the Canadian singer-songwriter has extended what
Wallace
Stevens termed "the palm at the end of the mind." There is an intensity
of experience and colorful, wholly engaged beauty that runs from head to
tail in his music. His lust for life makes one feel a bit more alive just
for being exposed to his bold observations and gorgeous melodies.
A tireless veteran live performer, he's never
achieved U.S. recognition on the same level as contemporary
Neil Young,
but the two share a number of striking similarities: a distinct voice in a
art field that makes individuality difficult, wicked guitar playing skills,
a ribald and rebellious nature and an embrace of most of the finest,
enduring traits of human beings. While widely celebrated in his native land,
in the States he's only occasionally popped up on the mainstream radar with
singles like "If I Had A Rocket Launcher." However, he's developed a devoted
core audience in the U.S. and around the world that understands the
pervasive oomph of his massive catalog and always-intimate concert
appearances.
His newest release, Slice O Life (released March 31 on Rounder Records), is a
double disc live collection that's as fine an introduction to Cockburn's work as
any assembled. It presents his potent baritone tackling pieces from all across
his career as well as signature influences like Willie Johnson's "Soul of a
Man," with the lot embellished by entertaining, informative anecdotes that offer
off-handed insight into one of the most complex, poetic men in contemporary
music. Culled from live performances and soundcheck explorations, Slice O
Life provides a winning snapshot of an artist of tremendous stability and
unbroken quality.
Few things are simple with Bruce Cockburn. He
likes to qualify and broaden his ideas and answers, but in the way the Japanese
admire, where complication and clouding in language rarely points to one
meaning, one destination. In this way, Cockburn's music is spacious, diverse and
capable of mutable forms, drawing readily from blues, jazz, rock and folk to
create a flexible, inviting hybrid overlaid with vivid imagery and open feeling.
Given JamBase's own love of variety and
intense talent, we are tickled several shades of pink to have scored an hour of
Cockburn's time, where we discussed spirituality, playing solo, his influences
and much, much more.
JamBase: One of the challenges now after
30-some albums and almost 40 years of professional work is where does one jump
in? That's a lot of music, man [laughs].
Bruce Cockburn: It's a challenge for me when
somebody says, "Where do I start? What should I listen to?" I don't know [laughs].
JamBase: The new live album provides a pretty
good foot in the door. It offers a pretty wide cross-section of what you've
done.
Bruce Cockburn: It sorta does go back to the
beginning, so I guess it is that [introduction], partly because it's solo and
that strain of what I've done over the years, which is how I started.
One man, one guitar. There's something very
pure about that.
I don't think I was thinking purity, exactly,
at the time [laughs]. There certainly is simplicity, in musical as well
as practical terms. It was a choice. I'd come out playing in a bunch of bands in
the second half of the '60s and I was tired of noise and tired of bad jamming,
and I figured maybe other people were, too, and there might be a place for a guy
doing things alone with an acoustic guitar. And I'd been interested in folk
music and traditional music for a while, so it wasn't too big a leap.
JB: Had you been writing songs already at
that point? It seems like you arrived on your debut with a fairly intact vision.
There's a sense of personality to even the early records.
During that band period I was writing songs;
originally I was writing songs for all the bands I was in and thinking, to some
extent, of those bands when I was writing songs. But after a few years went by I
noticed I had this little repertoire of songs within that that really worked
better when I played them alone. And they were all the best ones [laughs].
When I came out as myself and not as the guitar player in somebody's band it was
with a sense of the songs I wanted to do and an idea of how I wanted to see
myself. In some sense, it was an embracing of the sensibilities of the era but
also a reaction to the collective thing, which never really sat right for me. I
never did very well as a hippie [laughs].
JB: There's very little hippie-like about
your records in that period.
I just didn't fit with that. I never really fit
with anything, which is partially why I sound like me and not somebody else.
It was certainly true then. I felt like I'd learned a lot being in bands. I
learned how to be onstage and what worked musically and what didn't, and
certainly what I was capable of. There's always room for growth, of course,
and you never really know what you're capable of, but I had a pretty good
sense of it relative to what I'd been doing. So, it was a natural step.
JB: One of the things I'm struck by in your
music, and it's there from the beginning, is, I wouldn't say an overt
spirituality but an engagement with that type of subject matter. I've never
found your work to be preachy but I've also never found it tenuous, which tends
to be the case when people take on those types of concepts.
When we talk about taking on things in terms
of songwriting, well, I guess if that's what you do it carries certain
conditions and risks perhaps, but I never felt like that's what I've done. I
always felt like I just wrote about what's sitting there. So, when it looks like
I'm taking on something it's because I've been thinking about that thing and I'm
having a reaction to that thing. If it's a political song, a spiritual song or a
song about sex it's all the same. This is what I've experienced and how I feel
about it, and it's kind of grabbing you by the lapels and saying, "You better
listen to this!" I just need to convince somebody they should [laughs].
JB: I think terminology matters. I used the
phrase 'taking on' but it's clear your work emerges from a more personal space.
It's not like you have a cause you're trying to grind out. It's not like you're
a cause person anyway, though you have been labeled as such by some over the
years.
Yeah, I've been associated with all sorts of
causes, and I don't really mind that generally. If I get labeled as an
environmentalist because I care about the survival of the planet for my
child and grandchildren to me that's not a cause, it's just, "Come on, let's
stay alive! Let's get on with it! This is life!"
JB: Yeah, I guess if there's one unifying thing
I've picked up on about your music as a long-time listener is it's about life,
it's about being engaged with things and sometimes in a very earthy way, which
wins you points with me.
Sometimes it's downright smutty! I think it's
just about truth, and not wanting to sound pompous, it's about the human
experience, what we are. And we are creatures of the flesh and we have the
capacity to comprehend a larger reality than our sense can encompass but we feel
is there. At some point in the future scientists may discover what spirituality
really is, and if they do it's going to look something like capitalism [laughs].
I think there's going to be all kinds of mysterious strains in there, maybe
reducible to numbers, maybe not. To me, that's at the core of everything.
JB: There's a tendency to divorce the
physical aspects of humanity from the spiritual aspects.
It's unfortunate. The senses may lie – and do
from time to time – but they always connect us to a bigger reality. And by
senses I include whatever we consider to be extrasensory, too. I think that's
just a word for senses we don't have a proper name for, but the capacity for
feeling that bigger reality exists in all of us. In different ways, to different
degrees, it gets expression in often radically different languages, and that
expression suffers badly from the attempt to detach it from the flesh.
JB: When you take those two things away from
each other they're both going to suffer.
There's no question of that, and you're
probably going to go out and make someone else suffer, too!
JB: So true! When we carry some big wound or
detachment in us there's a tendency to cause damage around us.
We project it out and blame other people for it.
We blame Jews or we blame Communists or we blame Muslims or they blame
Christians. It's all bullshit! It's all about projection of that interior
wound.
JB: We're getting pretty lofty [laughs].
In more practical terms, I'm interested in the process of playing solo. How has
that developed over the years?
For one thing, there's the obvious difference
that when a band's playing it covers up a lot of what the guitar is doing. Even
if we've been careful about keeping space clear for what the guitar is doing
there's other stuff for people to notice, or should be; those musicians aren't
standing up there to be models, they're playing their instruments and you want
people to hear that. But, what happens when you don't have those musicians there
is you have a greater focus on what the guitar is doing and how the guitar and
voice relate to each other, which is how I write the songs. So, something more
essential happens with respect to the song. It's less of a performance, though I
hope the performance aspect is adequate and interesting to people. But it's less
about that and more about the song itself as a composition.
JB: With the guitar work more exposed you
have to carry a bit more on yourself but at the same time the original
intentions of the piece are more naked. Your guitar work comes out of the blues
tradition initially but I've always liked the echoes of the British guys I've
long been mad for like
Bert Jansch,
John
Renbourn and
John Martyn.
It's interesting because I never listened to
them but other people have said that. I attribute it to the fact that those guys
and me all listened to the same things. And we're not coming at it from an
American perspective, whatever that means. There is something different. There's
no denying the whole vibe of England is much different than America, and
different from Canada as well. The fact that I was filtering those influences
through my Canadian experience may have been enough like the English thing for
there to be similarities.
Nick Drake
is another guy that comes up a lot with me, and I've never listened to a Nick
Drake album all the way through. I've listened to a few songs here and there
because people said I should check it out and I didn't like it! It was okay,
respectable stuff, but it didn't touch me particularly. The exception [in this
area] may be Bert Jansch and his first album before there was
Pentangle. Really, the people I was listening to were the old blues guys
and, of course, Bob Dylan, and the world of finger-picking that was out there
didn't escape my notice.
JB: That's interesting. Maybe the way things
move in the world is they hit a few different places simultaneously, the
lightning hits in a few spots at precisely the same time.
It's one of the really good reasons to not
get a swelled head about all the really cool stuff you're coming up with [laughs].
There's a really good chance somebody out there is doing the same thing.
JB: How did this stuff come into your life?
How did a young white guy in Canada discover that he really liked black blues
music?
At first it wasn't black blues, it was the early
Sun Records era of Elvis [Presley] that made me want to be a musician. I
liked the music and wanted to play it before I even got a guitar. And Buddy
Holly, too. It was white people playing things that were basically based on
black music but where I grew up there weren't any black people! That's what
you heard, that's what was on the radio. I loved rock 'n' roll and then when
I started taking guitar lessons I was exposed to other stuff, and that
wasn't very black either – Les Paul and Chet Atkins – a step removed from
the rock thing – and then jazz. Eventually I came around. Towards the end of
high school I met some people that played so-called folk music, and I was
fascinated. I had never finger-picked before that; I was strictly flat-pick,
a little jazzy and a little of that. So, I brought something to my contact
with those guys that they didn't have in their background, but here were
these guys playing Leadbelly and Brownie McGee songs and finger-picking.
Once that door was open, well, you see what happened.
There was a club in Ottawa that I used to go to all the time that I
eventually ended up doing dishes and making espressos at, and ended up
playing at in time. You weasel your way into the scene. Chances are you
don't arrive fully formed. This is a way to enter a scene. You're just a guy
who plays guitar and you know a few things, and the way to gain entry to a
group that's relatively closed is often social. You don't just crash your
way in and say, "You need me because I'm a great guitar player." You do it
by being friends with people, and when you're 17 and excited by this stuff
you do it by washing dishes and hanging out and just being there.
JB: There's a vividness to your lyrics, a
sense of scene that's cinematic and full of strong imagery. I wonder if poetry
has had a strong impact on what you do. It does seem you draw a bit more from
that world than the usual verse-chorus-verse folk singer kind of songwriting.
It's had a huge influence, and predates the
effect of hearing Elvis. I was interested in poetry before I knew I wanted to
play music. I remember somewhere in the middle of grade school encountering in
English class studying what I think of as dumb rhyming, and it wasn't very
interesting to me except for something like "The
Highwayman," which had a kind of gothic quality. A lot of stuff we studied
was just boring. Then, along comes this poem called "Ars
Poetica" by Archibald MacLeish that I memorized, and it was kind of an
abstract or surreal poem. That shocked the shit out of me and this world opened
up right there. Words! A poem doesn't have to be defined by the strictures of
rhyme or the need to tell a story or whatever kind of stuff we'd been taught.
Language assumed a whole new significance for me right there.
JB: It is a different way of communicating
ideas. There's a comfort level with making leaps that sort of poetry has that's
closer to songwriting than structured poetry.
The leaps are what it's all about, really.
There's a lot of different things that can be called poetry, and I guess
justly so, but you can tell the story in a poetic manner and it doesn't have
to be
Beowulf or The Iliad. Those have their strengths and power but
they too rely on their ability to create visual imagery. They paint word
pictures you're invited to dive into – the shiny helmets and whatever it
might be – even with Homer, who apparently couldn't see any of this stuff!
I've always loved movies, too. I think movies are
as big an influence on what I do as poetry or old blues guys. The first
movie I ever saw was a Roy Rogers movie my dad took me to, so it wasn't a
good beginning but I really liked it. In the latter years of high school I
got introduced to Fellini, Bergman and the more cutting edge people of the
day, and I loved them, Bergman in particular because it related to that
northern sensibility and because a couple of his films are set in medieval
times, and I was always fascinated with that, too. Here were these movies
that were SO not Hollywood and so intelligent that represented a realm,
especially then, that I fantasized about being in.
JB: I think the title of the new live set,
Slice O Life, almost suggests a film, and in a way you paint a series of
scenes within it, especially because it jumps back and forth across your career.
I guess I thought when I was putting together
the repertoire for these shows I wanted to do a cross-section; I always do that
but I guess I thought about it a bit more here. We didn't know what would end up
on the album. You throw all this stuff out there, and I spent weeks and weeks
weeding through 40 hours of recordings to find the right performances of the
right songs. It was quite excruciating actually [laughs]. But it was
something that worked quite well in the end.
JB: The editing is crucial. It can pour out
of you pretty fast but then you wonder, "What the hell do I do with all of
this?"
Exactly! You wonder, "Does this make any
sense?" I feel very fortunate to not have to answer to suits, but some of the
same weeding process has to happen; you have to be tough with yourself. There
are exceptions to this; Dylan does very well with this, creating songs that
sprawl all over the place but are still powerful. Usually you need to edit what
you're doing and weed out all the crap, though sometimes not weeding out the
crap creates the strength of the "film." So, I don't know. I guess I back away
from making any kind of generalization.
Ottawa poet
Bill
Hawkins, who was kind of a mentor to me when I first started writing songs,
told me that when you're writing a poem just write what's coming out of your
head and then go back and cross off everything that doesn't absolutely have to
be there. And you're left with something like the finished poem. Although you
wouldn't necessarily know that listening to my songs but it's been an important
principle to me over the years. It's true and it remains true for me.
Bruce Cockburn Lesson Your insider tour
to Cockburn's brilliant one-man-band guitar style.
By Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers
Anyone
casually familiar with Bruce Cockburn's music is likely to think of him as a
front man: in his best-known songs, from the lilting reggae of "Wondering Where
the Lions Are" to the
edgy rock of "If I Had a Rocket Launcher" to the danceable pop groove of "Lovers
in a Dangerous Time," Cockburn has led full-sounding bands that feature
sophisticated interplay among guitars, keyboards, bass, drums, and more. But
take away the backup musicians and put Cockburn on a stage alone with an
acoustic guitar, and something remarkable happens: the songs sound fundamentally
the same as their band versions. The thumping bass lines, the syncopated
percussion, the instrumental riffs that harmonize with the vocal melody, the
jazzy single-line solos—all can be heard clearly right from Cockburn's guitar,
and in real time (no looper required). Combining a composer's sense of detail
with a jazz musician's taste for improv, Cockburn delivers a complete
instrumental sound rarely achieved—or even attempted—by singer-songwriters
performing solo.
The Canadian
songwriter has been honing this one-man-band guitar style ever since he dropped
out of the Berklee College of Music in the '60s to follow his muse. Forty years
and 30 albums later, Cockburn's newest release, Slice o Life, captures his solo
acoustic show on two exceptional live discs. Tracks include not only his "hits"
but lesser-known gems such as "Wait No More," a haunting bluesy workout on an
open-tuned resonator guitar; the gorgeous ballad "Pacing the Cage"; and the
meditative, effects-heavy "World of Wonders." Throughout these songs Cockburn's
spiritual and political concerns shine through, along with his poet's love of
vivid imagery.
On a winter
afternoon in Manhattan, Cockburn cracked open the case of his well-traveled
Manzer acoustic guitar and spent a few hours sharing the inspirations and
techniques behind his solo style.
You've said that back at
Berklee you pictured yourself arranging music for big bands. In a way, it seems
that's exactly what you do: you've just compressed it all onto six strings. COCKBURN I guess so—it sunk in, in spite of my
resistance to being taught. But that was not just from Berklee. I had studied
composition and classical theory, too, and thought about composition a lot. When
I went to music school, I didn't think I was going to be a songwriter. I liked
playing folk and blues and rock 'n' roll, but the real intent was to be a
composer in the jazz idiom mainly. There were a lot of things that people were
starting to do with jazz, like mix it up with classical stuff in the so-called
third-stream music of that era. The jazz world was discovering the music of
other cultures, of Indian and Arabic traditions, so a lot of people were
interested in broadening their horizons. I was coming into it green, so it
seemed like, let's go for the broadest horizons possible. But composing was my
intention.
I really see the
songs as compositions. They're not lead sheets. They are not just a melody and
chord symbols, although some of them work that way and I'm happy when they do,
because it means that somebody who likes the song can play it without being
particularly skilled on the guitar. But the songs are written as compositions,
so that the guitar part is integral to the song as a whole.
Why, in retrospect, do you
think songwriting won out over composing instrumental music? COCKBURN I love words. There was something missing from
the equation in the study of composition per se, and it turns out to have been
the words.
I'd always tried
to write poetry and compose music, but I didn't think of putting the two
together until Bob Dylan and John Lennon—and then it was like, OK, you don't
have to write sappy songs. There were a lot of other writers in that era, but
Dylan and Lennon, in particular, were emblematic of the best that you could do
in the two different directions that they wrote in. It just opened up the whole
idea. Gordon Lightfoot, too. Coming out of the world of folk music, I liked the
bluesier stuff because of the edginess and rawness and sometimes smuttiness. I
never had much patience with some of the flowery folk things. But somebody like
Lightfoot comes along and writes songs, especially on his first two albums, that
are perfect examples of the [folk] idiom. And it's like, "Wow, I know how to do
that. I can fingerpick like that, I can put words together, and I should try
it."
And then I had a
mentor. When I dropped out of Berklee I went back to Ottawa and joined this band
called the Children. The Children were the brainchild of a guy named Bill
Hawkins, who was the éminence grise behind the band and didn't actually perform
with us. I got involved in writing music for his lyrics, and then he would
encourage me to write more of my own. So in the middle '60s I sort of started
being a songwriter.
Let's dig into your guitar
style and what I imagine is your starting point: the bass. COCKBURN Yeah, it's really the thumb. It took a long
time, relatively speaking, to get that to work. When I was starting to learn to
fingerpick, I couldn't coordinate the thumb with anything sophisticated with the
fingers. A guy who goes by the name Sneezy Waters currently was my main point of
access to the world of blues and folk music when I was in high school. He
pointed out that the thing to do is to get the thumb going independently first:
watch the hockey game, make the thumb go, be on the phone, make the thumb go,
until it becomes second nature. And then you can think about how to add the
finger things on top.
The model for me
in terms of adding the finger things was Mississippi John Hurt, who had a style
based on an alternating bass and playing a melody on top. It's a beautiful,
effective way of making the guitar work with a song, which will translate into
almost any kind of music. If I wanted to do a Beatles song, how would I apply
Mississippi John Hurt to a Beatles song? Long ago I learned how to do "Penny
Lane" with a moving bass part and some of the horn lines. That was the approach
really: to take the guitar and have it be the band.
It's one thing to make the
bass automatic but another to make it groove. What's your secret? COCKBURN The blues guys like Bill Broonzy or Lightnin'
Hopkins would mute the bass usually—or they'd have strings that were so dead
they might as well have been muting. That sound becomes a percussive thing; it's
less about the harmonic function of the note and more about the rhythmic pulse.
I don't think I
really understood the rhythmic groove until the beginning of the '90s when I did
an album with T Bone Burnett, and T Bone was so insistent that everything be in
the pocket. We were playing with [drummer] Jim Keltner and [bassist] Edgar
Meyer, who are also incredible sticklers for being in the pocket.
By "pocket" you mean more
than just tempo. COCKBURN Yes, I do. In the broad sense it's all about
tempo, of course, but within the tempo there's the feel. Whether you play faster
or slower isn't the issue so much as within whatever tempo you have agreed upon,
you all play together and where the beat wants to be felt. That's what is meant
by a pocket.
Are bass lines on the
guitar ever a starting point for you in writing songs? COCKBURN No, not really. I can't swear that I've never
done that, but it all tends to come as a package. The songs start with lyrics
and work upward from there, so what kind of music gets applied depends on the
feel of the lyrics and what they seem to want. If I have a set of lyrics that's
waiting for music, I'll be consciously looking for music anytime I pick up the
guitar.
Do lyrics sometimes wait
around a long time for music? COCKBURN Usually it's not too long before I find
something. But one song took about 20 years: "Celestial Horses," from a couple
of albums ago, is mostly made up of lyrics that I wrote in the '70s. I didn't
get the appropriate music until the '90s. The music that I ended up with was
very similar to what I had in my head when I started, but I could never get a
grip on what that was.
Do the words come attached
in your mind to some idea of a melody? COCKBURN Not usually. A rhythm, yeah, but the melody
kind of gets constructed as the song unfolds. I don't really think in melodies,
and I have a hard time remembering melodies and even hearing them sometimes. But
there's a rhythmic feel [to the lyrics].
There's an old
song of mine called "Going to the Country." There are a lot of blues songs that
make reference to going to the country—"Going to the country / Sorry but I can't
take you." My song was a folkie pastoral thing quite different from that, but
the original music I imagined was [plays typical blues shuffle], just like the
old blues songs. Once I'd lived with my lyrics with that music for a while, it
was clear that the music didn't carry the lyrics the way they needed to be
carried. So it was a question of finding a different landscape to put them in.
Your guitar parts remind me
of piano, because of the way you focus on individual voices and strings rather
than strumming. COCKBURN I don't think of it that way myself, but it
makes sense. You can make the guitar work really well if all you do is strum
chords. It's a good effect, but what I do instead is try to find things for the
guitar that complement what's being sung or that help support it. Sometimes it's
playing the melody along with myself; at other times it's more of a moving
background part. It gives the song a color that it wouldn't otherwise have. If
you're playing with a band, the tendency is to let the keyboard or the horns or
the lead guitar do stuff like that. But because I write these songs to play them
in any context, solo or with any combination of instruments, I tend to hog all
the space, play all the parts, and then anybody who plays with me has to fit
around that or join me in playing those parts.
You often use an unusual
tuning you call "drop-F#," with the third string tuned down a half step and the
rest standard. What does that allow you to do? COCKBURN It gives you a [different] open string. One of
the things that an acoustic guitar does beautifully is have notes ring against
each other, and they ring best when you're not fingering the strings. I use this
tuning quite a bit—there's a song called "Don't Feel Your Touch," for instance [Example
1]. You get a sense of flow that's different from what you could get
in standard tuning.
I was comparing the solo
version of "If I Had a Rocket Launcher" on the new record to the original
recording, and your guitar part—despite being solo acoustic on one and electric
with a band on the other—is essentially the same. COCKBURN Yeah, the only reason it's different is because
25 years have gone by. Of course the solo changes from occasion to occasion.
"Rocket Launcher" is that Big
Bill Broonzy [monotonic bass], except you put another note on the bottom for the
second chord [Example 2], and it's the same whether it's
electric guitar or acoustic. On the record at the time I was really interested
in what you could do with the guitar and the Chapman stick as a combination, so
Fergus Marsh is playing Chapman stick and adding upper harmonies that are very
guitarlike but sound slightly different. I thought the combination worked really
well.
On the chorus of that song,
you use a lot of muting. COCKBURN It's a combination of the heel of your
[picking] hand hitting the bottom string and of letting go [with the fretting
hand]. It's all fretted strings [Example 3]. There's no
systematic way that I come up with rhythmic things like that. It's trial and
error, bumbling around and finding something that feels cool.
In the solo section of
"Rocket Launcher" you move between the two bass notes. When you're improvising
over that, do you think about chord positions or scales? COCKBURN Scales. It's partly what's within reach, given
that you're going to have those bass notes. Because you want the fingers to be
free, you can't tie them up making that [C] chord—you've got to use your thumb
[to fret the sixth string].
And it's all
modal stuff. One of the reasons I didn't do well at Berklee is I could never
grasp the ii–V kind of harmonic approach—that means if you're in the key of E it
would be an F#m to a B7 to an E. The old style of jazz that was around in the
'60s was almost entirely made up of combinations of that sequence. And to me
that was boring. It isn't boring when you hear great players doing it. Coltrane
could sit there playing ii–Vs and blow your mind. But he could also play not
doing those chords, and to me that was more exciting when I heard him stretching
out without the limitations of that predictable movement.
But I got into the modal thing early on and
it never went away. So most of what I write follows that pattern. In "Rocket
Launcher" this is the scale [Example
4]. When you go to the C
chord with your thumb, you're in position at the eighth fret to play in the key
of C [Example 5].
There are double-stops again
using open strings, because that's what these guitars do well [Example
6]. It's easy because it's all pull-offs with two fingers. The thumb
has to be pretty automatic for that.
You recently made a solo
arrangement of "World of Wonders." How did that come about? COCKBURN I can't remember any of the guitar part that's
on the original record. [That song] was born in an era when I was always playing
with a band. I didn't do much solo stuff in the '80s. I played a lot of electric
guitar, and over the decade as the bands got bigger and denser, the guitar parts
got smaller, which is the reason I went the other way subsequently: I was
arranging myself out of existence.
The solo version has a totally different feel
from the record, which is kind of Afro-R&B. It became a more dreamlike song. The
guitar forms this continuum underneath the imagery of the lyrics with the
conscious inclusion of elements like the paraphrase of the horn parts. This is
also in drop-F#, with alternating bass [Example
7].
Again, instead of just
strumming an Em chord, you give the guitar something to do, a little pattern
behind the melody. And when you're up the neck there are all kinds of nice
little tinkly things [Example 8]. That's the drop-F#
working. It's just hitting even one fret and then the open strings.
How about "Pacing the
Cage": is that more of the Mississippi John Hurt school? COCKBURN Very much. "Pacing the Cage" is in a C
fingering, capoed at the fourth fret. Mississippi John would have done something
different, but it's his style [Examples 9 and 10]. If
you think of "Creole Belle," which is archetypal Mississippi John, it's the same
thing really—just a different sense of what to do with the top strings.
What qualities do you need
in a guitar to facilitate what you do? COCKBURN I need enough bottom that I can hear the thumb.
For it to feel like the thumb is actually doing the job of a rhythm section,
there needs to be enough oomph from the bottom of the guitar. Not every guitar
is like that.
Of course when I
go to the Dobro, Dobros don't have a lot of bottom. But what they have is a very
even tone from string to string, so everything reads well. It's a different kind
of effect.
Are there any new
directions you can sense in your songwriting these days? COCKBURN
Well, I've done a little bit of collaborating, which is a pretty rare thing for
me since the '60s at least. There's a young woman, Annabelle Chvostek, who was
formerly with a group called the Wailin' Jennys. She and I wrote a couple of
songs together—one that she recorded and one that's a work in progress right
now, which I expect to record the next time I do an album.
I've been doing
gigs with [violinist, singer, and songwriter] Jenny Scheinman that have opened
up some harmonic sense, in the process of learning her tunes. There's one tune
she does where the chords are in G minor but the melody is in A major. It's
totally weird. I actually have to sing that melody along with her violin when we
do that piece. Singing in a totally different key from what you're playing in is
very educational!
I look forward
to getting lots of those little epiphanies and seeing where they go. In the
meantime, the songs I'm writing are much more acoustic than I thought they'd be.
I'd wanted to get into noise more—just raucous electric guitar and formless,
violent music [laughs], and I haven't done that. So apparently that wasn't the
way to go. I've got a few new songs, and they're going in a pretty folky
direction.
You have to follow where
the songs lead you. COCKBURN Yeah, where is that next idea? It's what you
live through, it's what you think about. And after 30 albums, what do I say that
I haven't said before?
Anchor Steam
Most of the time when he's finger�picking,
Cockburn anchors his pinky on the top of the guitar because he feels it provides
extra leverage and power. But on songs such as "Last Night of the World," in
which he picks clusters of notes rather than following an alternating-bass or
steady-bass pattern, his anchor finger freely rises and falls. In fact, the
sound of the pinky dropping onto the top becomes a percussive effect.
Bruce Cockburn's Guitars and Gear
Guitars: Two six-strings and a
12-string by Toronto luthier Linda Manzer (manzer.com).
Cockburn's main six-string, built about 20 years ago, has an extra-deep
body, cedar top, Indian rosewood back and sides, blue finish (which tends to
look more green), and Maya-inspired inlays designed by Manzer and Cockburn.
Metal-body Dobro (chosen for the "self-consciously Arabic-sounding" song
"Wait No More," for instance, because it sounds more like an oud than does a
regular guitar). Tony Karol baritone acoustic (karol-guitars.com),
used on "Peace March" from Life Short Call Now.
Strings: Martin Marquis
light-gauge strings.
Capos: Kyser Quick Change.
Amplification: Cockburn's main
six- and 12-string acoustics have side-mounted Fishman Prefix Pro preamps
with Acoustic Matrix pickups and Audio-Technica internal mics. The mic
signal goes direct to the board; the pickup runs through a pedalboard, as
follows: Boss TU-2 tuner, Empress tremolo, Boss DD-5 delay, Line 6 MM4 and
DL4. From there the signal goes to a rack-mounted Lexicon Alex reverb (used
for its infinite reverb on songs such as "World of Wonders") and a Demeter
tube DI
Posted: May 4, 2009
An email from
Bernie Finkelstein sent from the field in the wee hours of this morning,
following the Pete Seeger 90th birthday celebration event at Madison Square
Garden on May 3.
It was an
incredible event. Loads of highlights.
Bruce did a great great duet with Ani
DiFranco, "Whose Side Are You On."An old union song. And a fabulous version
of "Dink's Song" with The McGarrigle's (that's Kate and Anna) and Rufus
Wainwright and Martha Wainwright. Basically the McGarrigle family and Bruce.
"Dink's Song" is also known as "Fare Thee Well." Both songs were great. He
also participated in a few larger ensemble songs.
I'm dead tired so I'm signing off for the
night.
Very special show all the way around. It
will be shown in an abbreviated version on PBS but I don't know when.
Springsteen, Mellencamp, Morello and More Celebrate Pete
Seeger’s 90th Birthday With Sing-Alongs
RollingStone
May 4, 2009
Pete Seeger has always maintained that
his greatest joy as a performer is to lead others in sing-alongs. At his
90th birthday concert at Madison Square Garden last night he must have
been ecstatic since for nearly four and a half hours he and 51 other
artists transformed the massive arena into an intimate campfire
sing-along, where toddlers, senior citizens and everyone in between
belted “Michael Row the Boat Ashore,” “This Land is Your Land,” “Turn
Turn Turn” and many others songs Seeger wrote or popularized over his
seven-decade career. “There is no such thing as a wrong note,” Seeger
said after leading a group rendition of “Amazing Grace” midway through
the show, “just as long as you’re singing along.”
The concert — a benefit for Seeger’s
Clearwater
environmental group that works to clean the Hudson River — began with
Seeger playing a mournful tune on a recorder in front of a group of
Native American musicians. “Ever since a guy named Hudson went up that
river, it’s gone to hell,” one of them said. John Mellencamp then came
out and performed a solo acoustic version of Seeger’s “If I Had A
Hammer.” “This song was written in 1949 and made quite a stir in 1949,”
“Mellencamp said. “We were all afraid of the reds back then.” He then
did his 2008 tune “A Ride Back Home,” which he said he wrote “after
listening to a bunch of Pete Seeger songs.”
After brief introductory remarks by
Tim Robbins, a long evening of musical collaborations kicked off — which
included Tom Morello, Bruce Cockburn, Emmylou Harris, Kris
Kristofferson, Patterson Hood, Taj Mahal, Warren Haynes, Richie Havens,
Arlo Guthrie and others playing in many permutations. Highlights
included Morello and Taj Mahal dueting on “Waist Deep In The Big Muddy,”
The Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Hood, Haynes and Pete’s grandson Tao
Rodriguez-Seeger doing Seeger’s anti-war tune “Bring ‘Em Home,” Baez,
Scarlett Lee Moore and Mike and Ruthy Merenda doing “Jacob’s Ladder” and
Kris Kristofferson and Ani DiFranco’s playful duet on the children’s
song “There’s A Hole In My Bucket.”
In
keeping with the folk tradition, some songs were updated to reference
current events, like the addition of “The curse of Reagonomics has
finally taken its toll” to DiFranco and Cockburn’s version of the 1930’s
union classic “Which Side Are You On.” The most surreal performance of
the night was when Tom Chapin was joined by none other than Sesame
Street’s Oscar the Grouch for Seeger’s eco-friendly tune “Garbage.”
“Have a rotten everything,” the muppet said while throwing banana peels
and other bits of garbage onto the stage.
Dave Matthews first hit the stage
around the four-hour mark. “What a night!” he said. “The first concert I
ever saw was when my mom took me to see Pete Seeger,” he added, before
breaking out his falsetto for an acoustic “Rye Whiskey.” He was followed
by Bruce Springsteen, who released an album of Seeger tunes just three
years ago. “Pete is a walking, singing archive of American history,”
Springsteen said during a long, moving speech. “He had the audacity and
courage to sing in the voice of the American people. At 90, he remains a
stealth dagger into the country’s illusions about itself.” Along with
Tom Morello, he did “The Ghost Of Tom Joad,” which Seeger himself
covered two years ago.
For the finale, every performer of
the night crammed onto the stage for “This Land Is Your Land.” “I gave
you the words and you sing along,” Seeger told the crowd. As he did at
Barack Obama’s inauguration, he included the often skipped verses about
the relief office and the private property sign. After leaving the stage
to “This Little Light Of Mine,” everybody returned for “Goodnight Irene”
— which Seeger’s group the Weavers took to Number One in 1950. Watching
the nonagenarian at work is truly astounding. His energy and joy seem
limitless, and he really doesn’t look a day over 70 — a point
underscored when Pete’s older (!) brother John sauntered over to the
microphone to address the crowd: “If I’m 95, Pete’s going to make it to
100!”
-Andy Greene
MusicOMH.com
April 26, 2009
Bruce Cockburn - Slice
O Life: Live Solo
(Rounder) UK release date: 4 May 2009
Bruce Cockburn has been
making music for the best part of 40 years now, which is time enough for any
self-respecting songwriter and musician to have got all the experimental urges
out of their system and realised exactly what it is they are best at and what
their devoted fanbase wants to hear.
All of which is a rather long-winded way of
saying that the two-disc live solo collection Slice O Life may just be an
essential purchase for anyone with only a cursory interest in the Canadian
singer-songwriter's music (a national treasure in his native country, Cockburn
has at best only had limited success outside its shores).
Released on his North American label of the
last few years, Rounder Records, Slice O Life is drawn from ten shows on his
2008 summer tour. It's a measure of the devotion in which his fans hold Cockburn
that this album opens with nearly a minute of applause.
Cockburn is a consummate professional on
stage and knows just which buttons to press. Hence, he opens with two of his
most melodic and engaging songs; World Of Wonders and Lovers In A Dangerous
Time. Both tracks are suited to the stripped down solo format, allowing
Cockburn's masterful guitar playing to shine and giving his powerful baritone
free range to express his wordy but insightful insights into the human
condition.
Cockburn is another of those singers whose
vocals have got better with age (the parallels with Warren Zevon are
interesting), developing extra nuances with the passing of years. And it is a
delight to hear his songs stripped of the dated production flourishes that often
made his studio albums difficult to love.
The singer's self-deprecating stage banter
with his fans is a joy to hear and should be required listening for all those
young acts who shun their audiences. Three 'stories' even make the track listing
in their own right, the best of which is Bearded Folksinger.
Slice O Life's generous running time allows
the inclusion of some of Cockburn's instrumental interludes, but to be honest a
track such as the shimmering The End Of All Rivers must have been a strong
contender to make it onto a single disc.
Long-time fans of Cockburn will be delighted
with the versions of his most famous songs on show here, notably the
aforementioned World Of Wonders and Lovers In A Dangerous Time, but also the
'hits' Wondering Where The Lions Are and If I Had A Rocket Launcher. The latter
is dated, true, but Cockburn invests the song with the same level of passion as
he did in 1984.
Slice O Life ends with three soundcheck
performances that are a reminder of what a great guitar player Cockburn is
(often overlooked by lazy critics who prefer to tag the man as a Christian
songwriter). Pleasingly, the album ends with a bluesy version of one of his
earliest songs, Mama Just Wants To Barrelhouse All Night Long.
This is a fine career overview that will be
an essential purchase for Cockburn fans and is also worth the investment for
those wishing to investigate neglected singer-songwriters.
MUSIC: Folk Under the Clock concert
The Peterborough Examiner
April 22, 2009
Bruce Cockburn played Showplace
Peterborough last night to a capacity crowd of the converted.
Twenty albums and numerous Juno Awards
into a self styled career, Cockburn is not, nor does he need to be a melodic
or lyrical "stock"model.
Innovative guitar playing and poetic
flight of fancy mark his work in a category very much his own and the man
may very well have the hardest working thumb in show business (outside of a
few funk bassists).
Over the years Cockburn has fronted some
unique combos, but he really just needs a guitar in hand and a roomful of
folks to serenade.
This listener last heard this particular
troubadour in the venerable auditorium of PCVS, fresh from a junket in Latin
America; a young(ish) firebrand with a retaliatory chip on his shoulder and
an acoustic axe that he could most surely grind.
Recently he has turned up on the tribute
compilation to the Ottawa poet/lyricist William (Bill) Hawkins; where he was
quoted on the liner notes as having written his first music to accompany the
iconic wordsmith's musings on the melting pot of Canadian culture.
Cockburn has come a long way on a path
pretty much his own since those early days, managing to create a niche that
he alone inhabits, complete with (honest to God) hit records in the face of
some pretty dire musical landscape.
His Slice o' Life tour to promote his
double live recording of the same title brings a remarkable canon of
original material to the masses and the crowd in attendance for last night's
show was not left wanting (though this listener has always been particularly
fond of the quintessential Candaian classic "The Coldest Night of the
Year"--one of the many Cockburn gems that just could not be fit into a
single evening's performance).
Bruce's "chops" have never been in
question; it's great to hear that his voice is just as rich and warm as it
ever has been, a perfectly relaxed foil to his driving fingerstyle guitar.
Cockburn capped a generous show with a
call and response version of "Wondering Where the Lions Are" (this listener
looking forward to hearing the evening recorded by CBC Radio 2), followed by
the early bump 'n' grind hit "Mama Just Wants to Barrelhouse (all night
long)" ... and just prior to the guaranteed standing ovation a lovely tune
with the hook "I Don't want to Say Goodnight."
It was a good night, Bruce; and to quote
another Canadian music icon "Long May You Run"... safe travels, and come on
back if and when you can.
Dennis O'Toole is a singer, songwriter
and a freelance reviewer for The Examiner.
Posted: April 18, 2009
Bruce Cockburn topical as ever on new
live CD
by Kevin Ransom
The Ann Arbor News
April 18, 2009
Bruce Cockburn has been making records for so
long - almost 40 years now - that he's recorded three live albums over the
course of his career - in 1977, '90 and '97.
All three were folk-rock performances, where
he was backed by a band. But Cockburn probably does as many solo-acoustic shows
as he does full-band shows over the course of a year or two - so he figured that
his live-disc output wasn't a fully complete reflection of what he does onstage.
"Some fans have been requesting a
solo-acoustic live disc for a while, and I had some down time between albums, so
this seemed like a good time to do one," says Cockburn, who comes to The Ark on
Monday for a sold-out show. Hence, "Slice O Life," the live solo album he just
released on March 31 - an ambitious two-disc set drawing from almost all phases
of his career.
"I thought that making it two discs would
give it more of the feel of a complete live show," says Cockburn, a Canada
native who lives in Kingston, Ont.
For years, Cockburn (for the uninitiated,
that's pronounced CO-burn) has been lauded for his dazzling guitar chops. His
earliest guitar influences were country-blues stalwarts like Big Bill Broonzy,
Mississippi John Hurt and Mance Lipscomb, but he's also incorporated world-music
styles into his syncopated guitar attack over the years. And he will also let
'er rip on the electric guitar when he's backed by a robust rhythm section.
Bruce Cockburn will
play a sold-out show at The Ark on Monday. His new CD, "Slice O Life," was
released March 31.
But Cockburn says he still plays his guitar parts the same way on any given
song, whether he's backed by a band or on his own. "My songs are
compositions with the guitar part as an integral part of the song, so that
doesn't really change," he says by phone from a Vail, Colo., tour stop.
"Like on 'Rocket Launcher' I'm still playing it the same way I did on the
record, except I'm playing it on acoustic."
He's referring to "If I Had a Rocket
Launcher" from 1984, one of his most popular songs and a good example of the
topical, politically conscious songwriting that has always been a big part of
his appeal.
But we can't let someone as politically
conscious - and as politically active - as Cockburn off the phone without asking
him to share his thoughts on the transition of power in the U.S. from George W.
Bush to Barack Obama.
"Well, I feel like most Americans do," he
says. "I'm glad Bush is gone, and I think it's fantastic that Obama got elected.
But that's tempered by my awareness of how difficult it will be for him to clean
up all of the messes made by Bush and his people
"But I'm still very hopeful, because this was a welcome and important change -
and one that was long overdue.
Posted: April 16, 2009
McMaster announces honorary degree recipients
McMaster Daily News April 15, 2009
Prolific Canadian singer/songwriter Bruce
Cockburn, a pioneer of evidence based medicine, a world renowned art detective,
and a local activist who has dedicated her life to raising awareness about ALS,
are among the distinguished list of those being awarded honorary degrees at
McMaster University's spring convocation.
Approximately 4,500 students will graduate in
May and June this year. Honorary degree recipients are recognized for their
contributions in such areas as public service, education and scholarship,
creative and performing arts, and for their work within the McMaster community.
Please note: Convocation will take place at
Hamilton Place, unless otherwise noted below. Where two or more people are
listed as honorary degree recipients, an asterisk indicates the recipient will
address convocation.
Divinity College
Tuesday, May 19, 8 p.m. (Convocation Hall, McMaster University)
Nancy Bell, active member of the Baptist
church, Doctor of Divinity
Lois Crofoot, active member of the Baptist
church, Doctor of Laws*
Faculty of
Health Sciences
Friday, May 22, 2:30 p.m.
Dr. Alvin Zipursky, chairman and scientific
director, The Programme for Global Paediatric Research , The Hospital for Sick
Children, Doctor of Science
Dr. David Sackett, a pioneer of evidence
based medicine and founder of the first department of clinical epidemiology at
McMaster University, Doctor of Science*
Faculty of Humanities/Arts & Science (Art, Art
History, Classics, Communication Studies, Comparative Literature, Multimedia,
Music, Peace Studies, Philosophy, Theatre and Film Studies, Women's Studies)
Monday, June 8, 9:30 a.m.
Bruce Cockburn,
Canadian folk/rock guitarist and singer-songwriter, Doctor of Letters*
Shirley Elford, celebrated Canadian artist
and glass blower, Doctor of Letters
Faculty of Humanities (Graduands in a single or combined program with majors
in Humanities programs not included in the morning ceremony)
Monday, June 8, 2:30 p.m.
Maurizio Seracini, a world renowned
diagnostician of Italian art, Doctor of Letters*
Maximilien Laroche, one of Haiti's foremost
intellectuals, working in the areas of Haitian, Quebec and American studies,
Doctor of Letters
Faculty of
Science (Biochemistry, Biology, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Geoscience,
Kinesiology, Molecular Biology, Neural Computation, Psychology, Science)
Tuesday, June 9, 9:30 a.m.
Herbert M. Jenkins, professor emeritus of
psychology at McMaster University and the first director of the Arts & Science
program, Doctor of Laws
Peter Nicholson, inaugural president and CEO
of the Council of Canadian Academies, Doctor of Laws*
Faculty of Science (Graduands in a single or
combined program with majors in Science programs not included in the morning
ceremony)
Tuesday, June 9, 2:30 p.m.
Sir Martin J. Rees, president of the Royal
Society, Doctor of Science
Faculty
of Business
Wednesday, June 10, 9:30 a.m.
Charles Coffey, retired executive vice
president of government affairs and community development, RBC Financial Group,
Doctor of Laws*
John Howard, founder of Megalomaniac Wines,
Doctor of Laws
Faculty of Social
Sciences (Anthropology, Geography, Labour Studies, Psychology, Social Work,
Sociology)
Thursday, June 11, 9:30 a.m.
Philip Awashish, Cree political leader and
advisor to Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, Doctor of Laws
James Bartleman, former Lieutenant-Governor
of Ontario, Doctor of Laws*
Faculty
of Social Sciences (Graduands in a single or combined program with majors in
Social Science programs not included in the morning ceremony)
Thursday, June 11, 2:30 p.m.
The Honorable R. Roy McMurtry, former Chief
Justice of Ontario, High Commissioner to Great Britain and Attorney General for
Ontario, Doctor of Laws*
Robert Fitzhenry, director of the Woodbridge
Foam Corporation, Doctor of Laws
School of Nursing/Faculty of Science (Medical Radiation Sciences Program)
Friday, June 12, 9:30 a.m.
Dr. Yasmin Noorali Amarsi, interim director
of the Human Development Program, Aga Khan University, Doctor of Science*
Elizabeth Grandbois, diagnosed with ALS and
passionate activist who has raised awareness about the disease, Doctor of Laws.
Faculty of Engineering
Friday, June 12, 2:30 p.m.
Gilles Patry, former president of the
University of Ottawa, Doctor of Laws*
Stephen Elop, president of the Microsoft
Business Division, Doctor of Science
Cockburn displays
guitar mastery, diverse songwriting in Aspen
by Stewart Oksenhorn
The Aspen Times (Colorado)
Photo: Lynn Goldsmith
April 9, 2009
ASPEN — Exiting the
stage after his first set Tuesday night at Aspen’s Wheeler Opera House, Bruce
Cockburn walked into one of the five guitars arrayed in a semi-circle behind
him. The guitar fell to the ground with an amplified crash, putting the usually
placid Canadian in a momentary foul mood.
The incident proved that Cockburn does not have complete and total mastery of
his instruments. But put a guitar safely in his hands, and he does things that
few other musicians can even think of. That the 63-year-old has fabulous
technique is a given, but beyond that is an even more singular imagination
regarding the instrument.
Performing solo at the Wheeler — and promoting “Slice O Life,” the live solo
album he released last week — Cockburn didn’t have a chance to play much lead
guitar, per se. Instead, he focused on using chords in inventive, dynamic ways —
often while keeping a rhythm by hitting the bass string with his thumb, and
occasionally adding electronically looped guitar figures.
But on “The City Is Hungry” Cockburn took on the role of a lead guitarist, part
Richard Thompson, part Jimi Hendrix. The solo was a thing of fierce energy — for
a while beautiful and jazzy and melodic, and then for a brief moment, breaking
down into anarchy, as he played a flurry of notes that had no relationship to
one another. And then in the next instant, beauty and order were back. “The City
Is Hungry” — which Cockburn mentioned was inspired by Brooklyn, a place he has
been spending much time lately — is a new song, and the instrumental break made
certain that it earned plenty of attention.
Cockburn is not only an instrumentalist of the first order, but also a
distinctive and diverse songwriter with an ability to deliver his ideas
effectively. His voice isn’t on a par with his playing, but he makes up for any
shortcomings with utter conviction and sincerity. The Wheeler show began on an
upbeat note: The folky and optimistic “World of Wonders” opened the show,
followed by the sublime “Last Night of the World,” which anticipates not a dark
apocalypse, but Champagne with a special person. Later on came the more
socio-political material: songs that decried the state of the environment, war
and corruption, and a new tune that mocked the Bush administration’s brief,
strange effort to rehabilitate the image of Richard Nixon.
And Cockburn had more to offer. His encore opened with “Wondering Where the
Lions Are,” a song catchy, simple and popular enough to turn into a group
singalong. He followed with “Mama Just Wants to Barrelhouse All Night Long,”
which might have been a straight-up blues if only Cockburn weren’t so good at
adding sophistication to the simplest structure.
And he left the stage collision-free, leaving the guitar-related errors for the
night at one.
Posted: April 4, 2009
Press Release
“Kicking the Darkness”
St. John’s Anglican Church Hosts Bruce
Cockburn Event
For more than
thirty-five years Bruce Cockburn has been recognized as one of Canada’s most
insightful and musically creative singer/songwriters. Touring his 30th
album, Slice of Life, Cockburn brings his one man show to Peterborough’s
Showcase Theatre on Tuesday, April 21.
In celebration
of Cockburn’s significant artistic contribution,
St. John’s Anglican Church will
host an event called “Kicking at the Darkness: Bruce Cockburn and the Renewal of
a Christian Imagination” on Sunday, April 19 beginning at 6pm. Local
singer/songwriter Sarah Loucks will be performing a number of Cockburn songs in
support of a lecture by Dr. Brian Walsh. Walsh has been writing articles and
reviews of Cockburn’s work for many years, specifically reflecting on Cockburn’s
Christian faith and the power of his songs to awaken a Christian imagination.
“Cockburn has
never shied away from identifying himself as a Christian, though he has always
been clear to distinguish himself from what he considers dangerous and
unattractive expressions of Christian faith,” Walsh says. “My point isn’t to put
Cockburn into some kind of religious box, but to explore creatively the rich
spiritual images and themes in his work. Anyone drawn to Bruce’s music should
enjoy this evening.”
Cockburn is
also well-known for his work on behalf of various social justice and
environmental organizations. In that spirit, all the proceeds from this event
($10.00 suggested donation) will be donated in support of the “Our
Space Community Centre” and its work amongst the homeless of
Peterborough. For more information contact Christian Smith at St. John’s Church
.
Posted: April 5, 2009
Bruce Cockburn: A ‘Slice O’ Live’
in Aspen
His latest CD is a solo smorgasbord of
vintage material
ASPEN
— Canadian musician Bruce Cockburn returns to the Wheeler Opera House in
Aspen on April 7, and he says he’ll feel right at home, even though the last
time he was here was in 2004, at least as far as he can recall.
Since he will be continuing the habit of solo, or nearly solo touring that
began back in the 1990s, the show will feel familiar to his more dedicated
fans. His set list will be made up largely of songs from his newly released
CD “Slice O’ Life,” a two-disc collection of live performances drawn from 10
stops on a tour in May 2008.
“Aspen is a great place to play,” said the musician by telephone, as he
drove between San Francisco and Tuscon, Ariz.
He said he has had “great skiing experiences” in his past Aspen gigs, and he
has enjoyed the interplay with the audiences here. He seemed to wince when
told that the snow is pretty good right now — and likely will still be good
when he gets here next week — because he won’t have time to ski this
go-round due to a cramped touring schedule.
All 25 songs on Cockburn’s new compilation are drawn from his own broad
repertoire — tunes he minted himself and has perfected over the years. And
with this collection, Cockburn has fashioned a powerful look back at his
musical legacy, with his inimitable spicy wit and barbed political
sensibilities woven into complex and often haunting melodies.
The only new song on the CD is a tune called “The City is Hungry,” drawn
from his having spent considerable stretches of time in Brooklyn, N.Y., in
recent years. It is a bluesy, soulful ballad, with Cockburn’s plaintive
voice stretched over simple, blues-tinted runs on his guitar.
The song list is sprinkled with his few U.S. hits, including rollicking
renderings of “Wondering Where The Lions Are,” “If A Tree Falls,” “If I Had
A Rocket Launcher” and a couple of others, as well as rearrangements of fan
favorites such as “How I Spent My Fall Vacation,” “Tibetan Side of Town” (a
hearkening to his travels to the Far East) and “Put It In Your Heart.”
Aside from the music, Cockburn treats the listener to his patter between
songs, a mini-monologues that showcase his quiet humor and self-deprecating
nature.
For example, leading into “Tramps On The Street,” he talks about his
hometown of Kingston, Ontario, and the fact that “the bums there all know
who I am” and recognize him on the street, interrupting their panhandling
routine to chat with him.
“I don’t know what it means, that those are the people that are my
demographic, in the town I live in, but there you are,” he said, getting a
laugh from the audience.
In the CD liner notes, which were written by Cockburn, he tells consumers,
“We’ve made an effort to put them together as one show, in the hope of
giving you the feeling of being present in the flesh. For the same reason,
we chose not to apply too much polish. What you hear is what it was.” He
explained by telephone that the audience sounds and performances were mixed
and matched to give as seamless an approximation of one, solid show as
possible.
Cockburn said he plans to concentrate on the new CD in his Aspen
performance, both because he enjoys playing the songs and because he is,
technically speaking, on a promotional tour and that is what is expected.
Although, he conceded, “because of the nature of the album, it [the tour] is
a little shorter and there’s less of it. It’s a tour-ette.”
Asked if that means the show will be spiced up with sudden outbursts of
obscene language and derogatory remarks about, say, the social elitism many
equate with Aspen [as in Tourette’s syndrome], Cockburn chuckled and
replied, “No. I try to keep that under control.”
Seriously, though, he said the tour is designed as a low-key affair — as is
the CD.
Aside from the songs on the CD, Cockburn said he may venture into some of
the tunes he has written lately as he prepares to go into the studio to cut
a new CD.
One such new song, grew out of an attempt during the George W. Bush years in
the White House to “rehabilitate the image of [former President] Richard
Nixon. It struck me, what would it mean to really rehabilitate Richard
Nixon.”
So he wrote a song, in the first person, about Nixon reincarnated as a
black, single mother trying to make it in a white world.
“It’s kind of a personal song,” he said, “and it’s not, really, that dark.”
He said he may play it in the Aspen show.
Cockburn is not sure what the new album/CD will be, although he has a number
of songs written already and “a few people that I want to be involved with”
in the studio.
Somewhat submerged these days is the incendiary Canadian whose politically
charged, electrified, group-backed style in the 1980s scored several hits on
the U.S. charts. This was a departure for a singer-songwriter who has
typically been ignored by the music industry in this country, despite the
apparent recognition of his abilities that lead him to be picked to open for
a Jimi Hendrix show in Montreal in 1968.
What we have now is Cockburn, now 63, polishing his peerless guitar style on
tours where he is either alone or with a backup musician or two.
He calls his newest tunes “folky” and isn’t quite sure yet if his upcoming
studio sessions will be just him, or will feature one of a couple of new
musicians he has allied with recently.
“It’s quite folky, which surprised me,” he noted. “I suspected I’d be doing
something much more noisy. I have this deep urge to make anarchic,
destructive noise. But, it didn’t work out that way.”
Although he conceded that some of his fans accuse him of mellowing over
time, Cockburn said, “I don’t particularly feel mellow. I feel quite
stressed a lot of the time.”
But the new CD sure doesn’t reflect that stress, giving listeners a
front-row seat at what appears to have been a long and happy concert event.
Slice O Life - Live
Solo
A review written for the Folk &
Acoustic Music Exchange
by Mark S. Tucker
Though Bruce Cockburn's name will not be a
new one to most readers of this forum, there are a couple little-known side
facts that might provoke an eyebrow or two to raise for a moment and perhaps a
small chuckle of mirth to escape from lips. Early in his formative career,
Cockburn joined a couple of groups, then went on to form The Flying Circus
(eventually renamed Olivus) with a guy named Neil Lillie, who was to leave the
ensemble, change his name to Neil Merryweather, and issue a series of LPs under
the new surname, later under the full stage name, then in a trio (Merryweather,
Richardson & Boers), not to mention a duo (Merryweather & Carey) featuring a
singer, Lynn Carey, who formed Mama Lion with Merryweather on bass. She went on
to pose for Penthouse magazine and Merryweather kept seeking the big time in a
blues and psych-rock basis. Too bad he didn't stick with Cockburn, as Olivus
opened for The Jimi Hendrix Experience and Cream in '68…just after Neil
departed. Ironic. Oh, and Bruce appeared on Saturday Night Live
as well.
Merryweather never went much of anywhere, and
his last two tries followed Iron Butterfly's closing LP pair in a synchronous
plummet to psychedelic mediocrity. If it's any consolation to him, though, his
works are now minor cult items in the collector market and not easy to find.
Cockburn, on the other hand, dropped the drug environment and mindbending music,
became a Christian, some say a mystic Christian, and began an inexorable climb
to ever-widening success. With this release, his oeuvre numbers in excess of 30
releases (anthologies included).
Early on, he issued Circles in the Stream,
a double live LP, with an excellent backing band, producing a scintillating
brace of tracks that helped curry aficionados to an ever deeper appreciation of
the man's many talents. Two more live discs arose between then and now, and this
is the fourth but his first solo recital live—just Cockburn, a guitar, and an
effects unit. What's most surprising is how little has changed over the decades:
his voice is confident and clear, lyrics as humanist as ever, and his
fingerpicking just marvelous. In fact, all three may well be more polished than
before—it's hard to tell with someone eternally at the top of his game. What Slice O Life is, then, is a harkening back to
basics, to folkrock rudiments, while looking ever forward, especially in the
writer's concern for his fellow man.
Bruce's handling of his axe is so delicate
and complex that he lacks not a moment for magical sounds, feathering his
distinctive voice in an atmospheric rainbow of sparkling glints and shimmering
colors. Nor is his passion difficult to mistake, going from the contemplative to
firm admonitions in his biggest hit If I Had a Rocket Launcher (a
sentiment and determination the Left could do with a lot more of), convincing
the audience of enthusiastic listeners here of the need to not disregard one's
milieu or the possibility of crushing the evils surrounding us. A good deal of
Cockburn's concerns zero in on being one's own and one's fellow's keeper…as a
certain well-known anarchistic individual long ago instructed in Nazareth and
thereabouts.
This double-CD, then, is a long immersion in
what an individual and his art are capable of and a reminder to never forget
that life is lived every moment, as skillfully as can be managed, radiantly if
possible. The entire gig is completely engaging, accompanied by a number of
spoken insights and humorous asides between cuts, mesmerizing when the composer
is in his constantly unfolding troubadour persona. The entire affair goes far to
resuscitate the essentiality of a single human being pouring himself out to
others, standing as an exposition of what's possible if we have the heart and
discipline to follow our calling. More importantly, though, it's proof that as
the more centered of the Baby Boom generation ages, it's doing so neither
quietly nor without reproof for historic wrongs…but also too often, as the
composer is quick to point out, without the sigh of introspection.
Track
List
DISC ONE
DISC TWO
World of Wonders
Lovers in a Dangerous Time
The Mercenary
See You Tomorrow
Last Night of the World
How I Spent My Fall Vacation
Tibetan Side of Town
Pacing the Cage
Bearded Folksinger
The End of all Rivers
Soul of a Man
Wait No More
The City is Hungry
Put It in Your Heart
Tramps in the Street
Wondering Where the Lions Are
If a Tree Falls
Celestial Horses
If I Had a Rocket Launcher
Child of the Wind
Tie Me at the Crossroads
12-String Warm-Up
Kit Carson
Mama Just Wants to Barrelhouse
All Night Long
Bruce's performance on eTown in
Fort Collins, Colorado on February 18, 2009, will air the week of April 1-7,
2009. Find a station near you.
Photos from the performance
compliments of Tim Reese and eTown.
Artist: Bruce Cockburn
Title: Slice O Life
Format: Double CD
Label: True North Records TND520 (Canada)
Release Date: 31 March 2009
Reviewed by Richard Hoare
March 21, 2009
The two and a half live
albums already in Cockburn’s catalogue feature a jazz trio in 1977, stick and
drum wonderment in 1989, and a rock sound in 1997. The first two albums both
include examples of Bruce playing solo. However, this new double CD album
produced by Colin Linden is the first wholly live solo recording. The sleeve
notes are by Bruce himself and the following extract assists in understanding
what you hear:-
“These performances
are drawn from ten concerts recorded in May '08. We've made an effort to put
them together as one show, in the hope of giving you the feeling of being
present in the flesh. For the same reason, we chose not to apply too much
polish. What you hear is what it was.”
Before the paying audience
ever hears Bruce play a note of a show he has often played a complete set in the
sound check earlier in the day which contributes enormously to why generally he
is so good in concert. The sound check here includes Bruce warming up on his
twelve string guitar which evolves into part of The Trains Don't Go There
Anymore which is a better performance than his studio version on the 2008 CD
Dancing Alone – Songs of William Hawkins. Cockburn continues with a slow
exploratory Kit Carson which ends with a flaring noise from his guitar
effect, prompting a quip about its resemblance to automatic weapon fire! The
bluesy Mama Just Wants To Barrelhouse All Night Long provides the canvas
for Bruce to open up and improvise.
All artists settle into a
live performance which is a combination of a whole host of factors including the
vibe from the auditorium which is now full of people. What I wasn’t prepared for
was that the CD has been sequenced so that there are several tracks of Bruce
settling into the gig. The re-arranged solo version of World Of Wonders
has been one of my in-concert favourites since I heard him play it in Glasgow in
2002 at the end of the gig. The version here is not as ethereal as I have heard
live before and See You Tomorrow suffers from strained vocals. I am also
a little disconcerted by the raucous audience which seems to take away some of
the gravitas from this world class performer.
For me the set really
kicks in five numbers into the CD with a fine rendition of How I Spent My
Fall Vacation, which is prefaced with a completely left field reference – 25
seconds of what sounds like the melody of Silhouettes by The Diamonds, a
Canadian group, which reached No.10 in Billboard in 1957. It was then a hit
again for Herman’s Hermits in1965 on both sides of the Atlantic.
Bruce
then hits his stride with a blistering take of Tibetan Side of Town,
which is followed by an appropriately slow world weary Pacing The Cage.
In fact, for me this latter track and Celestial Horses, later in the set,
are better performances than their studio counterparts. End Of All Rivers
is the instrumental of the set and is a fine example of what you can do with a
delay effect and imagination. Disc one ends with Soul Of A Man, one of
very few cover versions that made it onto one of his regular releases. He dug
deep into the original Blind Willie Johnson performance and makes it his own.
Disc two starts off flying
with Wait No More with that great strident middle-eastern urgency. The
only new number is City Is Hungry which is, by his own admission,
tentative and comprises observations of New York where Bruce has been spending a
proportion of his time recently. From this slow blues Bruce launches into the
other dazzling take of the record, Put In It Your Heart.
It is strange when there
were ten performances to choose from that, to my ears, the dynamite performances
are found in the less well known songs.
A selection of the
performances as snapshots are well described by the term Slice O Life but the
material and the “between song” stories, which often have a playful quality, are
the Body O Work viz:-
Wondering Where The
Lions Are – The breakthrough single that went to the top 40 in 1980 in the
US.
Lovers In a Dangerous Time – U2 borrowed a line from this 1983 single for
their song God Part II.
If I Had A Rocket Launcher – The other song from 1983 that garnered so much
controversial press in the US.
World Of Wonders – A timeless universal lyric from the 1985 album of the
same name.
If A Tree Falls – The ecology single from 1988 that received widespread
radio play.
Tibetan Side of Town – An example of Cockburn’s well observed travels.
Put It In Your Heart – Bruce’s response to 9/11.
Child Of The Wind – An autobiographical tale of being out on the road till
the end of his days.
Tie Me At The Crossroads … “when I die” sings Bruce. The blues myth is that
you went to the crossroads to sell your soul to the devil!
If you are a long term fan
then you might be over familiar with some of this material, but this is a very
cleverly compiled double CD which is in effect a Story of Bruce Cockburn.
Amen
By: John Stewart
January 15, 2009
Bruce Cockburn's first-ever solo live recording
will be issued this spring on the Mississauga-based True North record label.
Called Slice of Life, the CD features some of the Canadian troubadour's most
famous songs over his lengthy career, in which he has issued 29 previous
records.
The album, recorded last spring at various concerts in the northeastern U.S.,
emphasizes Cockburn's enormous talent as a guitar player, something critics have
long admired.
The Ottawa-born singer kicks off another tour this April in Arizona. The only
Canadian date confirmed is an April 21 concert in Peterborough.
Cockburn has been on the True North label his entire recording career.
Mississauga resident Geoff Kulawick, owner and president of Linus Entertainment,
brokered a deal with two other financiers to buy the iconic True North label
from founder Bernie Finkelstein just over one year ago.
Shortly after the deal was struck, Kulawick said in an interview with The News
that outstanding Canadian artists such as Cockburn, who has maintained a strong
career over 35 years, are a large part of the pioneering success of True North.
Kulawick is a particular fan of Cockburn's song, If I Had A Rocket Launcher.
"That's why I got in the business," said Kulawick. "Songs like that still have
the power to change the world."
Slice of Life will be issued on the Rounder label in the U.S.
-My thanks to John Stewart for his permission to
post this article.
Photo: Andrew Stawicki- TheToronto Star, 2003