Essential music
Jun. 30, 2006. 05:08 PM The further back we went in time, the easier it was to find consensus, which probably accounts for the omission of any song written after 1985. The panellists pushed for the inclusion of songs written after that time, but there didn't seem to be any agreement about which of the more recent songs were worthy. But all 10 choices are bona fide Canadian classics. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----- Huron Carol (1643) Jean de Brébeuf This transcendent Canadian seasonal classic was written by French Jesuit Jean de Brébeuf in 1643, four years after construction began at the missionary outpost Sainte-Marie among the Hurons, near Midland, Ont. The original version, "Jesous Ahatonhia," combined Huron lyrics with the melody of the French folk song "Une Jeune Pucelle." The familiar English translation was done by Jesse Edgar Middleton in 1926 and arranged two years later by composer Healey Willan. It has long been a staple of youth choirs. The Toronto Children's Chorus offered a magical rendition on the 1990 recording Dancing Day. Another fine version can be found on Christmas With Chanticleer, released in 2001. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----- Hymn to Freedom (1962) Oscar Peterson Jazz pianist Oscar Peterson ranks alongside Glenn Gould as one of the greatest musicians Canada has ever produced. "Hymn to Freedom," inspired by U.S. civil rights movement leader Martin Luther King, is one of Peterson's most beloved works. The inspirational, gospel-influenced instrumental piece first appeared on the Oscar Peterson Trio's 1962 masterpiece Night Train. "The melodic and harmonic line is total simplicity within itself, and to my thinking, personifies a form of Negro spiritual that might be sung in almost any of the black churches of America," Peterson has written. The vocal version, with words by Harriette Hamilton, has been performed by choirs around the world, a testament to its enduring power. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----- Four Strong Winds (1964) Ian Tyson With the eyes of the world upon him as he closed out last year's Live 8 event from Barrie, Neil Young opened his set with this indelible folk gem, voted last year by CBC Radio One listeners as the greatest Canadian song ever. Remarkably, the song, which appeared on the 1964 Ian and Sylvia album of the same title, is the first composition Tyson ever wrote. Young, who recorded the song on his 1978 album Comes a Time, also accompanied The Band in the version that appears in The Last Waltz box set. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----- Mon Pays (1964) Gilles Vigneault The beautifully metaphorical "Mon Pays" romanticizes winter as its narrator's spiritual homeland. That possibly explains why the song was recorded a couple of times by the Red Army Chorus and Dance ensemble, although it doesn't entirely account for the adaptation of the melody line for the Patsy Gallant disco hit "From New York to L.A." Originally composed by Vigneault for the soundtrack of the NFB film La Neige a fondu sur la Manicouagan, it was later adopted as an unofficial anthem by Quebec nationalists. Vigneault has never embraced that narrow application. "A song is a small bridge between the banks of a river, between two people or cultures," said Vigneault during his induction into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame earlier this year. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----- Suzanne (1966) Leonard Cohen Is there a listener who hasn't yearned to be fed tea and oranges that come all the way from China by Suzanne at her place near the river? "Suzanne" appeared on the singer/poet's landmark 1968 debut The Songs of Leonard Cohen, but it had been recorded two years previously by the popular U.S. singer Judy Collins. It is timeless. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----- :) Canadian Railroad Trilogy (1967) Gordon Lightfoot Yes, there is a version of Woody Guthrie's "This Land is Your Land" adapted to Canadian place names, but no song comes closer to defining the breadth of this country than Lightfoot's literally breathtaking tour de force. Commissioned by the CBC for a 1967 centenary broadcast, the song appeared on Lightfoot's album of that year, The Way I Feel. Pierre Berton, whose books The National Dream and The Last Spike cover the same ground, is said to have told the songwriter, "You know, Gord, you said as much in that song as I said in my book." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----- Both Sides, Now (1968) Joni Mitchell In the simplest terms, songs survive because singers yearn to sing them. By the reckoning of the All Music Guide, more than 100 artists have recorded the beautifully introspective and impressionistic "Both Sides Now," encompassing a vast variety of styles ranging from Frank Sinatra to Willie Nelson. The most famous cover was by Judy Collins, who had a Top 10 hit with the song in 1968. Mitchell was inspired to write the song while reading novelist Saul Bellow's Henderson the Rain King during a flight. "I put down the book, looked out the window and I immediately started writing the song," Mitchell told the Los Angeles Times a decade ago. "I had no idea the song would become as popular as it did." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----- American Woman (1970) The Guess Who The most instantly recognizable Canadian rock song of all time, "American Woman" was also the first home-grown hit to make it to No.1 on the Billboard chart. If that wasn't enough to ensure the iconic Vietnam War-era hit's enduring stature, U.S. singer Lenny Kravitz's 1999 cover gave it renewed life, with an assist to Canadian Mike Myers, who used both versions in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. The song still encapsulates the mixture of attraction and revulsion many of us feel toward our bigger, flashier, more powerful southern neighbour. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----- Big Yellow Taxi (1970) Joni Mitchell Inspired by a trip to Hawaii, Mitchell's oft-quoted signature composition struck a chord at a time when environmentalism and urban sprawl were increasingly becoming public concerns. While not a protest song in the overt sense, its many allusions - paying to see trees in a tree museum, preferring spotted apples to those sprayed with toxic pesticides and, of course, paving paradise to put up a parking lot - have as much or more resonance today. The song has been interpreted by several artists, including Amy Grant, but Mitchell's own version, which originally appeared alongside "Woodstock" on 1970's Ladies of the Canyon, is beyond improvement. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------*----- Hallelujah (1985) Leonard Cohen Leonard Cohen has been much blessed by other singers' interpretations of his work. That is perhaps no truer than in the case of "Hallelujah," which is more revered today than when it first appeared on Various Positions, the 1985 album Cohen recorded with one of his most devoted interpreters, Jennifer Warnes. In recent years, Rufus Wainwright and k.d. lang have worshipped at the song's spiritual altar. But it was the highly dramatic version by Jeff Buckley, recorded on his 1994 album Grace, that exposed Cohen's brilliance to a whole new generation of ears. |
Glad to see this Charlene, really enjoyed your Happy Face besides the Lightfoot one. :D Way to go girl. :)
[ July 06, 2006, 15:56: Message edited by: Jesse -Joe ] |
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