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Gordon Lightfoot – Nostalgia Central

Gordon Meredith Lightfoot was born in Ontario, Canada, on 17 November 1938. He first performed publicly in grade four. As a youth, he sang in a choir as a boy soprano and, as a teenager, he learned piano and taught himself to play drums and guitar.

Lightfoot relocated to Los Angeles in 1958 to study jazz composition and orchestration for two years at the Westlake College of Music. To support himself, Lightfoot sang on demonstration records and wrote, arranged, and produced commercial jingles. Among his influences were Pete Seeger, Ian & Sylvia Tyson, and The Weavers.

After his return to Canada in 1960, Lightfoot performed with The Swinging Eight and became known at Toronto folk-oriented coffee houses.

Lightfoot released two singles that were local hits in Toronto and received some airplay elsewhere in Canada and the northeastern United States. (Remember Me) I’m the One reached #3 on CHUM radio in Toronto in July 1962 and was a top 20 hit on Montreal’s CKGM, then an influential Canadian Top 40 station. The follow-up single was Negotiation, which reached #27 on CHUM in December.

In 1963, Lightfoot travelled in Europe and hosted the BBC’s Country and Western Show TV series for one year before returning to Canada in 1964.

He started to develop his reputation as a songwriter. Ian and Sylvia Tyson recorded Early Mornin’ Rain and For Lovin’ Me and – a year later – both songs were recorded by Peter, Paul and Mary.

Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, Chad & Jeremy, George Hamilton IV, the Clancy Brothers, The Grateful Dead, Marty Robbins, Judy Collins, Richie Havens, and the Kingston Trio all achieved chart success with Lightfoot’s material.

In 1970, Lightfoot achieved a long-overdue US hit with If You Could Read My Mind which rose to the Top Five of the pop charts.

After releasing more albums, he was forced to cut back on his commitments after he was diagnosed with Bell’s palsy. In 1974, he returned with the album Sundown, which included the title tune and Carefree Highway, both of which became major hit singles, and his next two records would also feature pop hits.

Summertime Dream included the modern-day folk narrative The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald and Cold on the Shoulder included Rainy Day People.

From 1978 onward, Lightfoot’s presence on the singles charts began to fade. While he continued to record and tour regularly, his stardom in the United States declined.

Lightfoot also began devoting more time to benefit shows for various charitable concerns, including world hunger and the environment, and he dabbled in acting, starring in the 1982 film Harry Tracy, Desperado as a US marshal and playing a country singer on the short-lived American television series Hotel in 1988.

In 1986, he was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame.

Lightfoot began experiencing a creative revival in the ’90s, recording two of his best-reviewed albums in decades, 1993’s Waiting for You, and 1998’s A Painter Passing Through. However, his career nearly came to a halt in early 2002 when he suffered an abdominal aortic aneurysm. He was in a coma for six weeks and had a three-month stay in the hospital.

Lightfoot survived, and in 2003, he was named a Companion of the Order of Canada, the highest honour the nation bestows on civilians.

Early 2004 saw the release of Harmony, an album he had started working on before he fell ill. By the end of the year, he was back on the road.

Lightfoot experienced another health scare in the fall of 2006, when he suffered a minor stroke that cost him some mobility in his right hand, but within six months he was able to play guitar again and continued to perform on a regular basis, usually averaging sixty shows a year.

Lightfoot toured regularly into the late 2010s and in 2019, released a double-disc collection – The Complete Singles 1970-1980 – which spotlighted songs from his prime.

After discovering a cache of demos of unreleased songs written in 2001 and 2002, Lightfoot decided the tunes deserved an audience, and he recorded ten of them, accompanied only by his acoustic guitar, for 2020’s Solo, his first studio album in 16 years.

He continued to tour, but was forced to cancel dates in early 2023 due to ill health, and he passed away in May at the age of 84.

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