Showing posts with label Ariel Rogers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ariel Rogers. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Stan Rogers – Northwest Passage; From Fresh Water



STAN ROGERS
Northwest Passage
Fogarty’s Cove/Borealis 
borealisrecords.com/artists/stan-rogers/

STAN ROGERS
From Fresh Water
Fogarty’s Cove/Borealis
 borealisrecords.com/artists/stan-rogers/

Northwest Passage, first released in 1981, and From Fresh Water, first released posthumously in 1984, were the final two albums recorded by Stan Rogers for Fogarty’s Cove, his family-owned record label. They are also the final two installments in Borealis Records’ project of releasing remastered versions of the original albums from the tragically too-short career of the artist I’ve long thought to be Canada’s greatest folksinger and songwriter.

These albums also continue Stan’s ongoing project to create song-cycles set in Canada’s various regions – something he began to do on Fogarty’s Cove when he wrote and sang about Atlantic Canada and its people. On Northwest Passage, he wrote and sang about the prairies and the north; on From Fresh Water, about Ontario, particularly the Great Lakes region.

Northwest Passage begins with the anthemic title song, a vivid portrait of Stan driving west across the country recalling the early explorers who searched for the elusive Northwest Passage connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans through the arctic – centuries before global warming actually seems to have made a Northwest Passage feasible. Sung a cappella, the powerful song has proven to be one of the most enduring classics in a song catalog filled with enduring classics.

On other songs, Stan writes as empathetically about the people of the west and north as he’d already done so successfully about Atlantic Canadians.

In “The Field Behind the Plow,” he sings to and about an everyman farmer insightfully and authentically capturing his hopes and dreams, and his sometimes cruel realities.

In “Lies,” he sings, again insightfully and authentically, about a farmer’s wife and the hard life she leads. I’ve always thought of “The Field Behind the Plow” and “Lies” as companion songs married to each other.

“Night Guard” is a modern-day cowboy song worthy of Ian Tyson about a rodeo cowboy – now too old for the game – making a living protecting a cattle herd from rustlers, and “Canol Road” is an exciting, vividly cinematic song about a guy in the Yukon, crazy with cabin fever, who just had to get out and get that drink, no matter what the conditions, and no matter the price he’d have to pay.

A couple of the best songs on Northwest Passage blend the west with Stan’s eastern roots. In “The Idiot,” Stan sings in character as one of the countless Maritime boys who left home to work in the Alberta oil fields. And in “Free In the Harbour,” he sings about Newfoundlanders, stopping in Winnipeg on their way to Alberta, or sitting in the taverns of Edmonton and Calgary, nostalgically remembering home, “where the whales make free in the harbour.”

From Fresh Water begins with “White Squall,” which Stan sings from the perspective of an experienced Great Lakes shipman, used to the fury of lake storms, commenting on a much younger mate who, tragically, didn’t heed his warnings.

One of the finest songs on the album is “Lock-keeper,” sung from the perspective of such a man on the St. Lawrence Seaway. In some ways, I think “Lock-keeper” is related to “Northwest Passage.” In the latter song, Stan sings about leaving “a settled life” for the life of the adventurer. But, in “Lock-keeper,” he sings about the greatness of that settled life – of love and family – in contrast to the ultimate loneliness of the adventurer.

One of the most powerful songs on the album is “Flying,” ostensibly a hockey song about all the young players who dream of making it to the NHL while only a small, select few ever do. In reality, it’s an allegory about reaching for any kind of a star knowing so few will get there.

And, in a very sadly, prophetic line in “Flying,” Stan sang about “go up flying and going home dying” – something that tragically happened to him just a few months after writing the song.

Other favorites include “Tiny Fish for Japan,” which captures the feelings of Great Lakes fishers whose catch is bound for foreign markets, “The Last Watch,” a sad lament about a lake steamer about to be scrapped, and “The House of Orange,” a quiet, but very powerful commentary about the refusing, as an Irish descendant, to be part of the centuries-old conflict in Ireland that still raged in 1983.

As with Fogarty’s Cove, Turnaround and Between the Breaks … Live, as well as The Very Best of Stan Rogers, the remastered sound makes Northwest Passage and From Fresh Water sound better and fresher than they did as LPs or in their first issue on CD and are potent reminders of the tremendous singer and songwriter lost in that airplane fire almost 30 years ago. He was an artist with so much more to accomplish.

Kudos to Borealis Records for reissuing the albums, to Paul Mills, who produced the albums and supervised the reissue remastering, and to Ariel Rogers, Stan’s widow, who has kept the music in print over these many years.

I think it’s also important to acknowledge the important contributions of Garnet Rogers, Stan’s younger brother, and Valerie Rogers, his mother.

Garnet’s playing and/or singing can be heard on almost every track of all five of the albums – as it was at almost every gig Stan played in the last 10 years of his life. On more than one occasion, over a late-night beer, Stan told me that Garnet was his biggest musical influence.

And Valerie, who passed away this past summer, was the driving force behind getting most of these records made and into the hands of his growing legion of fans during his touring years. Stan expressed his tremendous appreciation for his mother’s efforts at virtually every concert I saw him do – at least since Turnaround came out in 1978.

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--Mike Regenstreif

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Stan Rogers – Turnaround; Between the Breaks… Live! reissues


STAN ROGERS
Turnaround
Fogarty’s Cove/Borealis

STAN ROGERS
Between the Breaks… Live!
Fogarty’s Cove/Borealis

With Turnaround, first released on LP in 1978, and Between the Breaks… Live, from 1979, Stan Rogers’ second and third albums, Borealis Records continues its project of releasing remastered versions of the original albums from the tragically too-short career of the artist I’ve long thought to be Canada’s greatest folksinger and songwriter.

In the liner notes to the new version of Turnaround – which sounds incredible, much better than the LP or the first CD release – Ariel Rogers mentions that Stan “struggled with people not liking the album as much as the first,” Fogarty’s Cove, which had been released to great acclaim.

As I recall, I was one of those who didn’t like Turnaround as much as Fogarty’s Cove – at least initially. Fogarty’s Cove was a beautifully executed concept album whose songs captured the spirit of the people of Eastern Canada with seeming authenticity from the first track to the last. And there was an acoustic consistency to the production and arrangements which flowed throughout the album. Turnaround, on the other hand, was much more eclectic. Thematically, a few of the songs could have been on Fogarty’s Cove, others reflected more urban, big city settings, and a couple of others were more inner-directed. The production and arrangements were also more eclectic drawing on a variety of influences including folk, country and rock ‘n’ roll. But, as I listened repeatedly to Turnaround back in the day, it very quickly grew on me.

Even if I was initially resistant to some of the “Steeleye Stan” arrangements, there was never any doubt in my mind about the quality of the songwriting. Several songs have always been favourites. Among them is “Second Effort.” As I recall, Stan wrote the song  from the perspective of an Olympian dreading coming home without the gold (how appropriate to be writing about the song this week), but it could just as easily be about anyone who has reached for a dream and come up short. Another is “Song of the Candle,” an ambitious song of philosophical examination.

But, perhaps, my very favourite is “Turnaround,” the title track, a quiet song contemplating life and choices made which ends the album. (In 1979, I was helping folksinger Priscilla Herdman choose songs for her album Forgotten Dreams and “Turnaround” was one I encouraged her to do. She did a magnificent version.)

As mentioned, there were some songs which continued with themes introduced on Fogarty’s Cove, including “The Jeannie C,” a heartbreakingly poignant song about a fisherman whose spirit was broken when his boat – which had been built by his father and named for his mother – was lost.

As well as being a gifted singer and brilliant songwriter, Stan was an incredibly dynamic live performer and his third album was recorded live at a late-‘70s folk club in Toronto called the Groaning Board. Between the Breaks… Live was a nine-song set which included five of Stan’s songs recorded for the first time, a live version of one song from Fogarty’s Cove, a traditional song and two drawn from other writers.

Although the stage patter was edited out, it’s a great live album that captures much of the excitement of a Stan Rogers concert in those days. His regular touring musicians at the time, brother Garnet Rogers on violin and flute and bassist David Alan Eadie, were augmented by Grit Laskin on long-necked mandolin, concertina and Northumbian small pipes, and guitarist Curly Boy Stubbs (producer Paul Mills). All of the musicians also sang (as did the audience) on several songs. Like the remastered version of  Turanaround, this great-sounding reissue sounds much better than the LP or the first CD release.

Among the standout tracks is the live version of “Barrett’s Privateers,” which I referred to as “a song that seems so real and authentic you’d swear it was a time-tested traditional sea chantey” in my review of Fogarty’s Cove. Tempered by hundreds of performances, this rendition is much more exciting and dynamic than the studio rendition from a couple of years earlier.

Other standouts include “The Flowers of Bermuda,” a cinematically vivid stomper about a sea captain who went down with his ship just a few hours away from his destination, “Rolling Down to Old Maui,” a traditional chantey that Stan loved to sing, and “Harris and the Mare,” a narrative ballad about a peaceful man driven to violence.

The absolute highlight, though, is “The Mary Ellen Carter,” a fictional account of some sailors from a sunken boat determined to raise and restore it. As I’ve written before, it is one of the most inspiring and most infectious songs in the contemporary folk canon. It remains, to this day, my favourite of all of Stan’s songs.

As I noted in my review of The Very Best of Stan Rogers, Stan was a friend and colleague. Although I know these albums backward and forward, it is so exciting to hear them again in the glory of these remasterings,

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--Mike Regenstreif

Monday, February 14, 2011

Stan Rogers -- The Very Best of Stan Rogers

STAN ROGERS
The Very Best of Stan Rogers
Fogarty’s Cove/Borealis
borealisrecords.com/artists/stan-rogers/

Stan Rogers and I were friends for the last eight years of his life. We first met and began to form our friendship at the Mariposa Folk Festival in June 1975. He was still relatively unknown – it was more than a year before he would record his first album – but I was blown away by his songs, his singing and by the performances I saw him do that year at Mariposa. I invited him to come and play at the Golem, the folk club that I ran in Montreal in the 1970s and ‘80s, and he made his Montreal debut at the Golem in February of 1976.

Stan, his younger brother Garnet Rogers, who mostly played fiddle and a bit of flute in those days (and who would always remain Stan’s constant and most-valued musical companion), and bassist Jim Ogilvie came to Montreal on what turned out to be the coldest weekend of that winter. Stan was still unknown and they played to about 15 or 20 people over the three nights. By the time of his last gig at the Golem, about six months before he died in a fire on an Air Canada plane on June 2, 1983, Stan was selling out two shows a night there (and was scheduled to return in September 1983).

Stan was a complicated and intense man. He loved to argue and be the centre of attention. But, those of us who knew him privately also knew of his capacity for great generosity and the loyalty of his friendship. I remember with great fondness that many nights I spent in Stan’s audiences, and the many late night beers, long conversations and all-night song swaps we shared in Montreal, London (Ontario), Toronto, Philadelphia, Winnipeg and other places on the great folk road of the 1970s and early-‘80s.

Stan was, in my opinion, the finest folk-rooted songwriter that Canada has yet produced. When he died at the so-very-young age of 33, he left behind a formidable body of work, but, who knows what he would have gone on to achieve in the decades since, and, to come. From that formidable collection of songs, Ariel Rogers – Stan’s widow – and Paul Mills – the producer of all but one of his albums – have selected 16 songs they consider to be The Very Best of Stan Rogers and present them on this set of re-mastered tracks.

There are, to be sure, a bunch of these 16 songs that absolutely had to be included. Among them are “Forty-five Years,” the gorgeous love song he wrote for Ariel before they were married; “Barrett’s Privateers,” the classic sea chantey he allegedly knocked off in a few minutes so that he’d have a song to sing lead on when hanging out with the Friends of Fiddler’s Green; “Northwest Passage,” a song that incomparably captures the essence of this country’s heart and history; and, of course, “The Mary Ellen Carter,” one of the most inspiring and infectious songs in the contemporary folk canon.

Although there are several songs not in this collection that I would have probably chosen – “Second Effort,” “Song of the Candle” and “Turnaround” come to mind – it’s hard to argue with Ariel and Paul’s choices.

Stan’s parents were both from Nova Scotia and no songwriter has captured the life of the Maritime fisher so authentically. Among those songs included here are “Fogarty’s Cove,” “Make and Break Harbour” and “The Jeannie C.”

There are also a couple of songs, “Free in the Harbour” and “The Idiot,” about Maritimers out of place in the Alberta oil fields after the fisheries played out.

Stan spent most of his own life living not so far from the Great Lakes and several pieces from his eloquent song-cycle about the Lakes and its fishers and boatmen are here including “White Squall,” “The Last Watch,” “Tiny Fish for Japan” and “Lock-keeper.”

Other songs include “The Flowers of the Bermuda,” Stan’s stomper about a captain who went down with his ship in a storm just five hours sailing distance from his destination, and “The Field Behind the Plow” and “Lies,” in which he masterfully captures the lives of a prairie farmer and a ranch wife.

I mentioned that Stan wrote authentically about the Maritime fisher. The fact is, though, all these other songs were just as authentic. Very few of his songs were ostensibly about himself. His research was impeccable and he wrote genuinely about real people – even when writing fictional songs.

The re-mastering job on these recordings is great. These recordings never sounded as aurally good as LPs or first-generation CDs. Kudos to Richard Hess, who restored the old tapes, and mastering engineer João Carvahlo. And, of course, to Paul Mills, who produced the original albums and played on many of the songs as Curly Boy Stubbs, Garnet Rogers, whose presence is felt on almost every song, as well as the many other fine musicians.

--Mike Regenstreif

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

This week in Folk Roots/Folk Branches history (April 20-26)

Folk Roots/Folk Branches with Mike Regenstreif was a Thursday tradition on CKUT in Montreal for nearly 14 years from February 3, 1994 until August 30, 2007. Folk Roots/Folk Branches continued as occasional features on CKUT and is now a blog. Here’s the 34th instalment of “This week in Folk Roots/Folk Branches,” a weekly look back continuing through next August at some of the most notable guests, features and moments in Folk Roots/Folk Branches history.

April 21, 1994: Extended feature- The Montreal folk scene.
April 20, 1995: Extended feature- Environmental songs.
April 22, 1999: Guest- Noel Paul Stookey of Peter, Paul & Mary.
April 20, 2000: Guest- James Talley.
April 25, 2002: Guests- Scott Cameron Smith, Ariel Rogers and David Rogers.
April 22, 2003: Guest- Maria Dunn.
April 21, 2005: Guest- John Prine.
April 20, 2006: Guest- Gerry Goodfriend.
April 26, 2007: Guest- Garnet Rogers.
April 24, 2008 (Folk Roots/Folk Branches feature): A tribute to the late Sam Gesser.
April 23, 2009 (Folk Roots/Folk Branches feature): Guest- Tom Paxton.

Pictured: Mike Regenstreif and Garnet Rogers on April 29, 2006.

--Mike Regenstreif