As part of a "Secret Santa" project in my research group, we were asked to purchase generic gifts for people. As I'm the only Canadian amongst mostly Mexican and British researchers, I opted to make a Canadian mix collection expressing some things quintessionally Canadian and Ein. The actual CD features an artistically produced booklet on peach banana-fiber paper with original artwork. I've included the liner notes accompanying the songs below the list.
Paul Gross is probably best known for his role as Constable Benton Fraser on the television show Due South. He's also a director, songwriter and a singer. This is a song which he wrote and sang for a very memorable episode of Due South. Paul, like me, is a native Albertan. Calgary is 150 km south of Red Deer, my birthplace, home of cowboys, rednecks, and farmers galore.
... Stealin' wheat and barley and all the other grains
It's a ho-hey, hi-hey farmers bar yer doors
When ya see the Jolly Roger on Regina's mighty shores
Regina is situated along a creek (very mighty--not!). In fact, Regina is basically flat out in the middle of nowhere, a fact that didn't stop them from making it the capital of Saskatchewan. I spent part of my undergraduate years in Regina. It's flat, very flat and they have no sense of adventure when it comes to cuisine. If only I'd had the Arrogant Worms then! The Arrogant Worms are more of an improv./comedy troupe than singers, but they do have some pretty funny songs--if you're Canadian!
Moxy Früvous is another off-the-wall odd ball comedy singing troupe. This isn't my favourite track, but it's the track which reminds me most of Edmonton, Alberta. Edmonton is the capital of Alberta and I spent most of my life living around Edmonton. The North Saskatchewan river flows through the city and there's natural parkland on both sides of the river all through the city. Edmonton has more parkland per capita than any other city in North America. It's this river valley that I often miss with its unmanaged forests, deep ravines, wild blue skies, and electric summer storms.
The Rankin Family is a large performing family group who have since split up and gone their own ways. It is usual for them to employ fiddles and that's very typical of music from the eastern seaboard of Canada from where they hail. It's unusual for them to be singing about the North since most of the North is west of them. I'm not really a Northerner either, although Edmonton is known as the "Gateway to the North."
There was a time in this fair land when the railroad did not run.
When the wild majestic mountains stood alone against the sun.
Long before the white man and long before the wheel.
When the green dark forest was too silent to be real.
The building of the Canadian National Railway (CNR) was a big thing in Canada, because the distance to be covered was so vast. As such, it features predominantly in our history and culture. Gordon Lightfoot is one of Canada's best folk singers, specializing in stories and ballads. He wrote this song and the next two tracks.
If there's one thing (other than Mounties and maple leaves) people associate with Canada, it's probably winter and snow. The weather has shaped generations of Canadians and generations of Canadian culture. Sarah McLachlan does a great rendition of this Gordon Lightfoot romantic ballad of snow, distance, and separation.
If I could only have you near
To breathe a sigh or two
I would be happy just to hold the hands I love
Upon this winter night with you
And to be once again with you.
And, to be truthful, it is very romantic to be in candle light and watch the snow softly falling onto the big trees outside the window.
Blue Rodeo formed around Toronto songwriters Jim Cuddy and Greg Keelor in 1984. With two strong songwriters at their core, they write most of their own material. This track is an exception and is part of a tribute album to songwriter Gordon Lightfoot.
This is a very "Americanized" song, but there's something so innocent and so carefree in its lyrics:
Might as well go for a soda
Oh yeah, nobody drowns, and nobody dies
Might as well go for a soda
It's better than slander, it's better than lies
Chilliwack obviously weren't feeling very creative as they named themselves after their home city of Chilliwack, British Columbia, on the Canadian west coast. "Ooh, we like the big wide spaces" and so do I. The cramped corners of Brighton just don't compare with the majestic wide spaces of the Canadian west.
We're here for a good time
Not a long time (not a long time)
So have a good time
The sun can't shine everyday
Good philosophy in an upbeat pop song. Take it to heart and live it!
Although the far north is sparsely populated, it also produces its share of singers and songwriters. Susan Aglukark is an Inuit whose native language is Inuktitut, some of which you can hear in this song celebrating her culture and the roots of her own life.
While Holly Cole is Canadian, this song is a cover of a Johnny Nash's composition. Holly's rendition is much purer and clearer than any of the other versions I've heard of this song and perfectly highlights the Canadian vocal jazz scene she shares with other luminaries like Diana Krall.
The crimson and the claidemaugh make you
'Strangers to fear'
A thin red streak tipped with a line of steel...
Shadows fall over me
All for the 'thin red line'.
Nothing is more serious than being sliced open, if you ask me, however poetically veiled it is.
Posted by Eingang at December 12, 2004 12:34 AM | [Trackback]
Nice article outlining Canadian music. There are a couple of errors though.
1. Lightfoot's Canadian Railroad Trilogy is about the Canadian Pacific Railway, not the Canadian National (which was built later).
2. The band members in Chilliwack are not from that town. Most that I remember are from North Vancouver. They were formerly known as The Collectors but changed their name in the late 60s, early 70s (can't recall exactly) possibly because their old name sounded too "early 60s" and the native name Chilliwack probably better reflected the late 60s philosophy.
Chilliwack (my old hometown) sits at the east end of the Fraser Valley where the mountains begin to home in on the city.
It's not exactly sitting in a narrow canyon, but it's a far cry from the "wide open spaces of Western Canada" that you describe. That phrase might pertain to the Prairies, but not so much in mountainous British Columbia.
Posted by: Pol on June 15, 2006 06:46 PM
The "Thin Red Line" refers to the battle of Balaclava, where a regiment of Highland soldiers, the 93rd Sutherland Highlanders, held the line against a Russian Cavalry brigade. The Strangers to Fear is the regimental motto, from "Sans Peur" meaning "Without Fear". And the "A thin red streak tipped with a line of steel" is what a Times war correspondant reported the action as looking like, and the origin of the phrase "Thin Red Line". The regiment then became the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, and is now the 5th Battalion, The Royal Regiment of Scotland.
Posted by: Robert Stewart on June 13, 2006 09:15 PM
Just sent you an email, Michelle.
What a lovely bunch of songs. Am crossing my fingers that your CD is available by some little miracle....
My awed compliments on everything about you and your outtasite site...
Peter.
Posted by: Peter on July 17, 2005 04:37 AM
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