Showing posts with label Cindy Church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cindy Church. Show all posts

Friday, October 21, 2022

Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif – CKCU – Tuesday October 25, 2022: Songs of Yip Harburg & Hoagy Carmichael


Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif finds connections and develops themes in various genres. The show is broadcast on CKCU in Ottawa on Tuesdays from 3:30 until 5 pm (Eastern time) and is also available 24/7 for on-demand streaming.

CKCU can be heard live at 93.1 FM in Ottawa and https://www.ckcufm.com/ on the web.

This episode of Stranger Songs was prerecorded and can already be streamed on-demand by clicking on “Listen Now” at … https://cod.ckcufm.com/programs/595/58052.html

Theme: Songs of Yip Harburg (1896-1981) and Hoagy Carmichael (1899-1981).

Part 1 – Songs of Yip Harburg. E.Y. “Yip” Harburg – who died in 1981 at age 84 – was a lyricist who collaborated with several composers. This show includes some of Harburg’s collaborations with Jay Gorney, Harold Arlen, Earl Robinson and Burton Lane.

Yip Harburg (circa 1950)

Deborah Holland- Brother, Can You Spare a Dime
The Panic is On: Songs from the Great Depression (Gadfly)

Ella Fitzgerald- Ding Dong! The Wicked Witch is Dead
Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Harold Arlen Songbook (Verve)
Stephen Mendel- If I Only had a Brain
Sing Me a Story (Stephen Mendel)
Ian Tyson- Somewhere Over the Rainbow
All the Good ’Uns Vol. 2 (Stony Plain)

The Juggernauts- Lydia, the Tattooed Lady
Live Lunch (The Juggernauts)
Chaim Tannenbaum- It’s Only a Paper Moon
Chaim Tannenbaum (StorySound)
Josh White- Free and Equal Blues
From New York to London: The Classic Recordings (Jasmine)

Happy Traum- How are Things in Glocca Morra?
There’s a Bright Side Somewhere (Lark’s Nest Music)

Part 2 – Songs of Hoagy Carmichael. Hoagland Howard “Hoagy” Carmichael – who died in 1981 at age 82 – was among the most successful songwriters of the Tin Pan Alley era.

Hoagy Carmichael (1947)

Ray Charles- Georgia on My Mind
Singular Genius: The Complete ABC Singles (Concord)
Jane Voss & Hoyle Osborne- Bread and Gravy
Beyond the Boundaries (Ripple)
Amos Garrett- New Orleans
Amosbehavin’ (Stony Plain)
Maria Muldaur with Hoagy Carmichael- Rockin’ Chair
Sweet Harmony (Reprise)

David Clayton-Thomas- Stardust
Combo (Antionette)
Dave Van Ronk & Christine Lavin- Two Sleepy People
Hummin’ to Myself (Gazell)
Martha Seyler & Robert Resnik- Skylark
Martha Sings & Robert Plays (Martha Seyler & Robert Resnik)
Cindy Church, George Koller & Joe Sealy- I Get Along Without You Very Well
The Nearness of You: A Tribute to the Music of Hoagy Carmichael (Seajam)

Judy Henske- Baltimore Oriole
The Elektra Albums (Ace)
Loudon Wainwright III with Vince Giordano & The Nighthawks- Heart and Soul
I’d Rather Lead a Band (Search Party) 
Jeff Healey- Hong Kong Blues
The Best of the Stony Plain Years: Vintage Jazz, Swing and Blues (Stony Plain)
Junior Brown- Riverboat Shuffle
Mixed Bag (Curb)

Hoagy Carmichael- Lazybones
Stardust Melody (Bluebird)
Leon Redbone- Lazy River
Up a Lazy River (Rounder)
Geoff Muldaur & Amos Garrett- Washboard Blues
Geoff Muldaur & Amos Garrett (Flying Fish)
Cindy Church, George Koller & Joe Sealy- In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening
The Nearness of You: A Tribute to the Music of Hoagy Carmichael (Seajam)

Next week: Radio.

Find me on Facebook. facebook.com/mikeregenstreif

--Mike Regenstreif

Saturday, May 6, 2017

Tom Russell – Play One More: The Songs of Ian & Sylvia



TOM RUSSELL
Play One More: The Songs of Ian & Sylvia
True North Records

I got into record collecting as a kid in the 1960s and Ian & Sylvia’s LPs had a huge impact on me. They were a big part of my introduction to traditional folk music and to original, folk-based songwriting. By 1966, I owned all of their early LPs and kept on buying the new ones as they came out later in the ‘60s and early-‘70s. And I got to see them play live a couple of times. I still return to their music often – particularly the first five albums.

As a music journalist, I’ve written about the CD reissues of the Ian & Sylvia LPs and about both Ian Tyson’s and Sylvia Tyson’s solo albums. I've seen both of them live on many occasions and, in the 1990s, I produced a couple of shows in Montreal with Sylvia (a stage setting of Timothy Findlays The Pianoman's Daughter and a concert with Quartette, her group with three other great women singers). And I’ve done long (and separate) radio interviews with both Ian and Sylvia that have included extensive looks back at their Ian & Sylvia years.

Ian & Sylvia were also a huge influence on the young Tom Russell, who I’ve repeatedly referred to as the finest singer-songwriter of my generation. As a songwriter, Tom has collaborated with both Ian and Sylvia and on his new album, Play One More: The Songs of Ian & Sylvia, offers a remarkable tribute to Ian’s and Sylvia’s songwriting with eight songs from the Ian & Sylvia years and two more each from their solo years (including one of his co-writes with each of them).

The album opens with Ian’s “Wild Geese,” a gorgeous song from the 1967 LP So Much for Dreaming that vividly captures the Canadian countryside. It is one of many songs on the album to which Cindy Church, one of Sylvia’s partners in Quartette, lends her beautiful harmonies to.

Tom follows it with “Thrown to the Wolves,” a song he co-wrote with Sylvia and sang a duet with her on her 1994 album You Were On My Mind (not to be confused with the 1972 Ian & Sylvia LP of the same name). The ‘wolves’ motif comes up again at the end of the album on the astute western ballad “When the Wolves No Longer Sing,” a fairly recent song co-written by Tom and Ian that Ian recorded on Carnero Vaquero and that Gretchen Peters sang on Tom’s extraordinary folk opera The Rose of Roscrae: A Ballad of the West.

Three of my favorite songs on the album came from Ian & Sylvia’s 1966 LP Play One More: “These Friends of Mine” is one of my all-time favorite songs of Ian’s. I’ve always thought of it as a companion song to Bob Dylan’s “Bob Dylan’s Dream”; “Short Grass,” co-written by Ian and Sylvia, vividly captures what ranch life might have been like 60 or so years ago for a young cowboy like Ian; and “Play One More” describes a musician’s life on the road and a disintegrating relationship at home.

Each of the other songs is a highlight.

“Rio Grande,” from the 1970 album Great Speckled Bird (Ian and Sylvia’s band at that time, a pioneering country-rock band, was called Great Speckled Bird), co-written by Ian and Amos Garrett, is a cowboy’s lament set on the U.S.-Mexico border that seems predictive of the drug wars that would come to scar much of that border in later years.

“The Night the Chinese Restaurant Burned Down,” also from Sylvia’s 1994 album You Were On My Mind, is a beautiful song that may be based on Sylvia’s hometown of Chatham, Ontario. In the song, she recalls the night she and her best friend, young women ready to leave the town for the big city, hop on the last bus out of there.

Ian’s “Old Cheyenne,” first recorded on the Ian & Sylvia’s 1972 LP You Were On My Mind, is a sad one about a rodeo cowboy who can’t make a living at it, while “Sam Bonnifield’s Saloon,” first recorded on Ol’ Eon, Ian’s first solo LP from 1973, concisely captures a scene from a bar in the Yukon.

In Ian’s “Red Velvet,” from the 1965 LP Early Morning Rain, a prairie farmer laments how farm life just couldn’t hold the woman he loves, while “The Renegade,” a co-write by Ian and Sylvia from their 1968 album Nashville, relates the feelings of an indigenous man determined to return to the traditional way of life. Although written almost a half-century ago, the song seems particularly topical in view of what has become common knowledge in Canada about the residential school system which is referenced in the song and which was labelled “cultural genocide” a couple of years ago by the federal Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

Play One More: The Songs of Ian & Sylvia is a great tribute to Ian Tyson and Sylvia Tyson – to the remarkable songs they wrote and recorded as a duo in the decade between 1962 and 1972, and to the equally remarkable songs they’ve written (and co-written) in the decades since. The production is wisely kept minimalist with just Tom on vocals and guitar, Cindy on harmony vocals and Grant Siemens on lead guitar.

Mike Regenstreif & Tom Russell (2012)
The album is capped off by two bonus tracks: previously unreleased demos by Ian & Sylvia from the 1960s of “Grey Morning” and “The French Girl.”  

Play One More: The Songs of Ian & Sylvia will be released on May 19. 

I played five of the songs from Play One More: The Songs of Ian & Sylvia on the April 29, 2017 edition of the Saturday Morning show on CKCU. The show can be streamed on-demand at http://cod.ckcufm.com/programs/128/32143.html.

Find me on Twitter. twitter.com/@mikeregenstreif

And on Facebook. facebook.com/mikeregenstreif

--Mike Regenstreif

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

This week in Folk Roots/Folk Branches history (December 1-7)


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 also a blog. Here’s the 14th 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.

December 1, 1994: Guest- Penny Lang.
December 7, 1995: Guest- Connie Kaldor; Extended feature- The Songs of Utah Phillips.
December 4, 1997: Guest- Cindy Church.
December 3, 1998: Guest- David Massengill.
December 2, 1999: Show theme- A tribute to Lead Belly; Guest- Michael Jerome Browne.
December 7, 2000: Guest- David Francey.
December 1, 2005: Guest- Sylvia Tyson.
December 6, 2007 (Folk Roots/Folk Branches feature): Songs for Hanukkah.

Pictured: Me with Quartette at a Folk Roots/Folk Branches concert, December 6, 1997, at the Concordia Concert Hall. Left to right: Caitlin Hanford, Sylvia Tyson, Mike Regenstreif, Cindy Church, Gwen Swick.

--Mike Regenstreif