Showing posts with label Corb Lund. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corb Lund. Show all posts

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Corb Lund on tour



I’m looking forward to seeing Corb Lund and his band, The Hurtin’ Albertans, when their current tour brings them to the National Arts Centre Theatre in Ottawa next Friday, February 19 at 7:30 pm as part of tour that also sees them doing concerts in a bunch of Ontario locations and in Montreal over the next week or so. The complete itinerary is available at Corb’s website.

By now, I’ve been listening to Corb’s records, seeing him in concert and writing about him for nearly 15 years. The most recent articles on the Folk Roots/Folk Branches blog have been a review of his joint concert with Ian Tyson at the National Arts Centre a little over two years ago, and a review of his album, Losin’ Lately Gambler in 2009.

Here are some earlier articles I wrote over the years for the Montreal Gazette:

CD review of Horse Soldier! Horse Soldier from December 6, 2007

Corb Lund’s attention is on war stories on his most ambitious, and most powerful, album yet. He leads with "I Wanna Be in the Cavalry," a snappy rhythmic piece propelled by military snare drum and rousing banjo that suggests a young, eager Civil War-era recruit anxious to serve his country while riding the horses he loves. Later, as the CD ends, Lund reprises the song, this time singing it slowly and mournfully as if his narrator’s been to hell and back. Perhaps the most interesting and insightful song is "Student Visas," the tale of a mercenary who fought Reagan’s covert war against the Sandinistas. Lund occasionally steps back from the intense war stories with horse songs and clever tunes about tools and family parties.

Concert review from September 16, 2006

Packed to standing-room capacity on Thursday night, Petit Campus felt like an Alberta dance hall as Corb Lund led his crackerjack quartet – rooted in classic country, rockabilly and western swing – through a two-hour set that had the crowd still screaming for more after three encores.

Lund, looking resplendent in western wedding wear, grabbed the audience from the get-go with Hair in My Eyes Like a Highland Steer, the title track from his recent Juno and CCMA award-winning CD, and never let go.

Despite the high energy party atmosphere, it was obvious to anyone paying attention that Lund has become one of this country’s best songwriters and that his descriptions of ranch life and rodeos, oil riggers, truck drivers and musicians, all rang with authenticity.

Interview from September 12, 2006

Corb Lund’s latest CD, Hair in My Eyes Like a Highland Steer, was released in Canada a year ago. This summer, that album and Five Dollar Bill, Lund’s 2002 release, were certified as Canadian gold records, signifying sales of more than 50,000 copies each.

Yesterday, just days before Lund’s Montreal show at Petit Campus Thursday night, he took home awards for album of the year and roots artist of the year from the Canadian Country Music Association. Hair in My Eyes Like a Highland Steer already got Lund the Juno for best roots and traditional album by a solo artist. “We’ve been tracking the sales, so the gold records weren’t a total surprise,” Lund said when reached this week on his cellphone. “But I wouldn’t have predicted them a couple of years ago.”

Although Lund does get airplay on country radio (particularly small-town country radio in Western Canada) and has had videos on rotation on CMT, most of his following has been built one show at a time via the relentless touring that Lund and his band, the Hurtin’ Albertans, have been doing in the four years since Five Dollar Bill was released. They spend much of the year criss-crossing the country: playing clubs, festivals and, increasingly, concert halls. They’ve also made regular forays into the U.S. and have recently toured Europe and Australia.

Lund considers himself somewhat of a “black sheep” on the country music scene. “When you hear us in comparison to what’s currently out there in country music, we sound a little strange. But if you actually listen to us, our stuff has more elements of traditional country music in it and our lyrics have much more rural content than the modern stuff you hear on the radio. We’re kind of a throwback to what country music was at one time.”
It’s to the rural orientation of his lyrics that Lund attributes his popularity with “people who live their lives agriculturally, the kind of people who listen to country music.” When asked how big-city people who come to 9 p.m. (or later) shows in places like Montreal or Toronto respond to the rural nature of his songs, Lund said the songs are playing well there, too. “I think to the urban people we’re raw enough and hip enough that the same kind of people who are digging Johnny Cash are picking up on us.”

Two of the songs on Hair in My Eyes Like a Highland Steer feature Lund, 37, in duets with country and folk legends Ian Tyson and Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, both of whom have close to four decades on him. One reviewer likened their participation on the CD to the passing of a torch.

“I’ll leave that to the music writers of the world to determine, but it was pretty cool getting to work with those guys,” Lund said. “I’ve known Ian (Tyson) for quite a while now.”

“He was a hero of mine when I was younger and he’s become a real mentor and friend,” Lund said. The duet with Tyson, “The Rodeo’s Over,” is a nostalgic piece that Lund says “takes on a generational feel.” And like all of Lund’s cowboy-themed material, the song rings with authenticity.

Lund comes from a ranching family with generations of rodeo experience. His grandparents and parents were rodeo champions and he rode and wrestled steers in rodeos until he was about 15 and got sidetracked into music.

Lund said he has had a good time at his previous Montreal shows. He’s promising “some pretty good beer-drinking country music, with some dirt on it.”

CD review of Hair in My Eyes Like a Highland Steer from September 29, 2005

Three years after Five Dollar Bill put Alberta’s Corb Lund on the country music map, he’s back with an even better set of songs documenting the cowboy culture the one-time boy steer riding champion was born to. While Lund’s songs vividly describe timeless themes like broken down rodeo cowboys and trucks getting stuck in the mud, he also brings the genre into contemporary times with references to closed borders in the wake of mad cow disease, the effects of global warming on ranch country, and the toll of drug abuse on rodeo riders. There’s fun to be had in tunes about playing cards and playing big bass fiddles and cowboy music legends Ian Tyson and Ramblin’ Jack Elliott each show up for a duet.

Interview from November 18, 2002

Corb Lund’s parents were both rodeo champions. “My mom was the first barrel racing champion at the Calgary Stampede in 1959 and 1960.” As a boy, Lund was on track to follow in their footsteps. In 1981, when his father won the Stampede’s steer wrestling title, 12-year-old Corby was the boys steer riding champion.

The teenaged Lund switched his attention from rodoeoing to music. He played bass through the 1990s in the Smalls, an Edmonton-based alternative rock band. In the past couple of years, though, he’s found his voice as a singer and songwriter documenting cowboy culture in an economic country and rockabilly style. “I still ride for fun when I go home but I don’t rodeo anymore,” he said in an interview when the Corb Lund Band passed through Montreal for a couple of club dates in mid-October. The band returns to town Tuesday night for a final local stand at Petit Café Campus.

Lund’s family history, with more than a century of ranching and rodeo riding in southern Alberta, and an earlier history as Mormon settlers in Utah, provides fodder for some of his songs. “Both sides of my family came from Denmark in the 1830s, were converted to Mormonism and moved to Utah in the 1840s,” he explained.

After the Mormon Church outlawed polygamy in 1890, the Lunds, on his father’s side, and the Ivins family, on his mother’s side, were part of a Mormon migration to southern Alberta around the turn of the 20th century. “I’ve looked into it and apparently my family weren’t polygamists, but that’s when they homesteaded in Alberta.” However, when he gives a capsule account of his family’s migration, from Denmark to Utah to Alberta in “No Roads Here,” a song on Five Dollar Bill (Stony Plain), his latest CD, Lund does make a veiled reference to “hidden family history.”

Other highlights on Five Dollar Bill include “Buckin’ Horse Rider,” a tribute to Lund’s uncle Lynn “and all the other bronc riders I’m related to,” the title track, a tale of cross border booze smuggling between Alberta and Montana in the American Prohibition era, and the very pretty “Short Native Grasses.” Lund recorded part of the album in Edmonton with his working band and part of it in Nashville where they were augmented by producer-drummer Harry Stinson and fiddler Tammy Rogers of the Dead Reckoners.

Along with Ian Tyson, another former rodeo rider who he credits as a big influence, Lund is using his songs to document a dying Western culture. “Cowboying and ranching is based on cheap land,” he said, “and the land is worth too much for other purposes now. Ranching becomes less and less viable every year. It’s such a colorful culture, it’s sad that it’s dying.”

The songs, and Lund’s intense touring schedule, have been building him a solid fan base. After conquering Western Canada with three months of touring after the release of Five Dollar Bill, the Corb Lund Band has spent the fall doing one nighters back and forth across Ontario, Quebec, the Maritimes and the Northeastern United States. Before the end of the year, they’ll tour England and be back home for dates in Alberta. Texas and Nashville are on the agenda for early in the New Year.

“We get a pretty interesting mixed audience,” he said. “About half are post-rock’n’roll, alt-country punk people, and about half are sort of Fred Eaglesmith, folk festival, Wrangler-wearing cowboy hat people. It’s a lot of fun.”

-30-

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--Mike Regenstreif

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Ian Tyson and Corb Lund’s evening of cowboy stories and songs at the National Arts Centre



I was born in Calgary and spent about eight years – off and on – of my childhood there. Although I haven’t lived there since 1967 when I was 13, and have visited only briefly since (most recently about 25 years ago), there must be something about all those Calgary Stampedes I attended as a kid that became part of me because I’ve always had a deep appreciation for cowboy music and lore and have written extensively about cowboy music ever since Ian Tyson sparked its renaissance about 30 years ago with Old Corrals and Sagebrush, an album of traditional and new cowboy songs.

Last night, Ian, the 80-year-old master of cowboy songs, and Corb Lund, a couple of generations younger but whose authenticity is in both his jeans and his genes, brought their evening of cowboy stories and songs – a show they created to mark the centennial of the Calgary Stampede in 2012 – to the National Arts Centre’s Southam Hall in Ottawa. Judging by the reaction anytime Ian or Corb mentioned someplace in Alberta – from the Ranchman’s club in Calgary to the town of Dogpound – I was far from the only former Albertan among the 2,000 or so folk in the audience.

The show began with Ian walking out to a standing ovation – the first of three for the evening – and settling on the edge of his stool for a solo rendition of “My Doney Girl,” the traditional cowboy song. It was immediately evident that the reports that Ian had his wonderful voice back were true. As I noted in this concert review from 2009, “a combination of vocal scarring and a bad virus took away the familiar smoothness and much of the range from the great tenor we’d known for 45 or so years.” Ian performed and recorded for about five years with what he called his “new voice” before undergoing vocal cord surgery late last year.

After that first song, Corb Lund and bassist Kurt Ciesla entered and settled in for a folk festival workshop-style evening in which Ian and Corb traded western songs, all but a couple written by one or the other, occasionally traded verses on each other’s songs, played backup guitar and sang harmonies for each other, and introduced almost every song with a story about it or about the person who may have inspired it. Kurt, whose playing was superb throughout the evening, was the sole sideman.

Among the many highlights of Ian’s songs were “M.C. Horses,” “Bob Fudge,” “Will James,” “Charlie Goodnight’s Grave," and  “The Gift," about legendary western artist Charlie Russell. Corb’s highlights included “Five Dollar Bill,” the hilarious “Cows Around” and the poignant closer, “The Rodeo’s Over.”

But the most special moments came when the entire audience joined in on singing the traditional “Leaving Cheyenne (I Ride an Old Paint)” and such classics of Ian’s as “Someday Soon,” “Navajo Rug,” a co-write with Tom Russell that was requested from the audience, and the encore-capper, “Four Strong Winds,” the song (justifiably) selected by CBC radio listeners in 2005 as the greatest Canadian song of all time.

A great night of cowboy music and a highlight in the fine NAC Presents series of Canadian music now in its third season.

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--Mike Regenstreif

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Ian Tyson – All the Good’ Uns Vol. 2



IAN TYSON
All the Good’ Uns Vol. 2
Stony Plain Records 
iantyson.com

The early Ian & Sylvia albums had a lot to do with getting me into folk music when I first started buying records as a kid in the 1960s. Together with Ian Tyson’s solo work from the 1970s to now, he is responsible for one of the most significant bodies of work bridging folk, country, and western music.

In 1996, Ian put together All the Good’ Uns, a best-of collection of songs drawn from the six albums he’d released since 1983 – albums that revitalized his career and essentially kick-started the revival of cowboy culture in the contemporary world. In my Montreal Gazette review, I gently took Ian to task for the album title. It would pretty much take a boxed set of all the earlier albums to get ALL the good uns,” I argued.

And that is pretty much the case with All the Good ‘Uns Vol. 2, a collection of 19 great songs drawn from five albums released between 1999 and 2012. But, I guess, choices have to be made in assembling such collections and it’s hard to argue with any of the choices: they are all good ‘uns.

Among the songs included from 1999’s Lost Herd is “La Primera, a ballad about the
history of horses in the Americas that Ian anthropomorphically tells from the point of
view of one of the first 16 horses brought to the New World in 1493. It’s an ambitious and potentially pretentious concept for a five minute song, but with it Ian proves he is a master of timeless and classic songwriting. A couple of other Lost Herd songs, including the title track and “Brahmas and Mustangs” lament the loss of the old west to modernity.

A three-song segment of then-new material from Live at Longview, a concert recording from 2002, is highlighted by “Bob Fudge,” the story of a disastrous 1882 cattle drive that Ian sings from the perspective of a cowboy who survived it.

Among the four songs included from 2005’s Songs from the Gravel Road are “Land of Shining Mountain,” the lead-off song on the CD, in which he describes the foothills of the Rocky Mountains where he lives and, in the third person, mentions that the only girl he wanted has left and is not coming back, and “This is My Sky,” in which he cynically wonders if anyone mates for life before speculating that perhaps it’s only the Canada goose that does.

Four songs are included from 2008’s Yellowhead to Yellowstone and Other Love Songs and two from 2012’s Raven Singer, the albums he recorded after vocal cord scarring and a virus combined to give Ian what he called his “new voice.” Although his singing was hoarser, grittier and even whispery at times, Ian remained a master at song communication. In the vivid “Yellowhead to Yellowstone,” Ian is again singing anthropomorphically, this time from a wolf'’s perspective, as he describes the territories he travels and in “Charles Goodnight’s Grave,” he sings about the legendary cattle rancher who forged the Goodnight-Loving cattle drive trail.

Ian ends All the Good ‘Uns Vol. 2 with his the only song on the CD he didn't write or co-write, a poignant version of Yip Harburg and Harold Arlen’s classic “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” from Lost Herd that he completely makes his own.

Ian is reporting that recent surgery and therapy have pretty much restored his voice to what it was and he’ll be back on the road this year including a concert with Corb Lund, November 30, at the National Arts Centre here in Ottawa that I’m highly anticipating.

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--Mike Regenstreif