Showing posts with label Jason Lang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jason Lang. Show all posts

Monday, March 20, 2023

Saturday Morning with Mike Regenstreif – CKCU – Saturday March, 2023


Saturday Morning is an eclectic roots-oriented program on CKCU in Ottawa heard on Saturday mornings from 7 until 10 am (Eastern time) and available for on-demand streaming anytime. I am one of the four rotating hosts of Saturday Morning and base my programming on the Folk Roots/Folk Branches format I developed at CKUT in Montreal.

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

This episode of Saturday Morning was recorded and can already be streamed on-demand at … https://cod.ckcufm.com/programs/128/59865.html

The Brothers & Sisters- Mr. Tambourine Man 
Dylan’s Gospel (Columbia)

Three songs in memory of Dane Lanken. Dane, an old friend and colleague in both music and journalism, died on March 3rd, at age 77.

Kate & Anna McGarrigle- Jigsaw Puzzle of Life
Tell My Sister: Kate & Anna McGarrigle (Nonesuch)
Kate & Anna McGarrigle with Dane Lanken- No Biscuit Blues
Tell My Sister: Dancer with Bruised Knees (Nonesuch)
Kate & Anna McGarrigle, Mike Regenstreif, Chaim Tannenbaum & Dane Lanken (1976) photo: Felicity Fanjoy

Kate McGarrigle, Martha Wainwright & Lily Lanken with Anna McGarrigle, Rufus & Loudon Wainwright, Chaim Tannenbaum, Dane & Sylvan Lanken
- Johnny’s Gone to Hilo
The McGarrigle Hour (Hannibal)

Rob Corcoran & The Necessary Evils- Over in Verona
Grand Declarations (Rob Corcoran)Er
Steve Lundquist- I’m Not Your Romeo
Acting a Fool (Steve Lundquist)
Lynne Hanson- Seeking Juliet
Eleven Months (Lynne Hanson)

Eric Bibb- 500 Miles
Ridin’ (Stony Plain)
Just Us Lillys- In the Hills of Tennessee
Not Far from the Tree (Just Us Lillys)
Kerri Powers- Speed of the Sound of Loneliness
Words on the Wind (Must Have Music)
Tim Grimm- The Leaving
The Little In-Between (Vault)

Chaim Tannenbaum- Ain’t No More Cane on the Brazos
Chaim Tannenbaum (StorySound)
Mary Gauthier- Sugar Cane
Live at Blue Rock (In the Black)
Geoff Bartley- Joshua Gone Barbados
The Ballad of Billy Bridger (Magic Crow)

Bunny Barnes- Hallelujah
It Goes Like It Goes (Bunny Barnes)

Mike Regenstreif & Connie Kaldor (2015)

Connie Kaldor
- The Woman Who Pays
The Woman Who Pays – single (Connie Kaldor)

Mary Beth Carty- Voilà le Printemps
Crossing the Causeway (Mary Beth Carty)
Amelia Hogan- Red-Winged Blackbird
Taking Flight (Amelia Hogan)
Vinta- The Heron’s Rookery
Beacons (Vinta)
Natalie MacMaster & Donnell Leahy featuring Rhiannon Giddens- Woman of the House
Canvas (Linus)
Karan Casey- I Thank My Lucky Stars
Nine Apples of Gold (Crow Valley Music)

Jason Lang- Happiness Is
Handled with Care (Famgroup/Genison Music)
Penny Lang- Diamonds on the Water
Stone + Sand + Sea + Sky (Borealis)
Ball & Chain & The Wreckers- My Time is Gonna Come
Satisfied (Ball & Chain)

Rebecca Folsom- New Way Home
Sanctuary (Sunshine Productions)
Ben & Dom- Children of Darkness
His Head Lies Heavy (Ben & Dom)
Doug Cox & Linda McRae- Beyond the Great Pause
Beyond the Great Pause (42 RPM)
Eric Erickson- Slow and Steady
The Shadow of the Moon (Ardith Recordings)
Annie Capps- How Can I Say This
How Can I Say This? (Yellow Room)
Eric Kilburn- She Do
Reckonings (Wellspring)

Dakota Dave Hull- Big Bad Bill is Sweet William Now
Better Late Than Never: The Classic American Guitar-Banjo (Arabica)

Aaron Nathans & Michael G. Ronstadt- Dr. Joelson’s Bag
Hello World (Crooked Cyclone)
Bonnie Dobson- Peter Amberley
At Folk City (Prestige)
The Clancy Brothers & Robbie O'Connell- Those Were the Days
Older But No Wiser (Vanguard)

Lynn Miles- Hwy 105
tumbleWeedyWorld (True North)
Tom Russell- T-Bone Steak and Spanish Wine
October in the Railroad Earth (Frontera)

Keith Glass Band- Come Along
Different World (Stump)
Rick Scott & Nico Rhodes- Hurt So Long
Roots & Grooves (Grand PooBah Music)
Shari Ulrich & Mike Regenstreif (2019)

Shari Ulrich- Free Fall
Everywhere I Go (Borealis)
Derek Vanderhorst- Hanging on Your Door
Wildflower (Derek Vanderhorst)
Scarlet Rivera- Before Everything Changed
Tribute to a Song Poet: Songs of Eric Andersen (Y&T Music)

My Politic- Cursing at the Night & at the Morning
Missouri Folklore: Songs & Stories from Home (My Politic)
Marilyn Jordan- Calico Curtains
Both Things are True (Marilyn Jordan)

The Klezmorim- Firen Di Mekhutonim Aheym
First Recordings (Arhoolie)

I’ll be hosting Saturday Morning next on April 22. I also host Stranger Songs on CKCU every Tuesday from 3:30-5 pm. 

Find me on Facebook. facebook.com/mikeregenstreif

--Mike Regenstreif

Monday, February 20, 2023

Saturday Morning with Mike Regenstreif – CKCU – Saturday February 25, 2023


Saturday Morning is an eclectic roots-oriented program on CKCU in Ottawa heard on Saturday mornings from 7 until 10 am (Eastern time) and available for on-demand streaming anytime. I am one of the four rotating hosts of Saturday Morning and base my programming on the Folk Roots/Folk Branches format I developed at CKUT in Montreal.

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

This episode of Saturday Morning was recorded and can already be streamed on-demand at … https://cod.ckcufm.com/programs/128/59512.html

Odetta- Mr. Tambourine Man
Odetta Sings Dylan (RCA)

Ben Sures- Cry Like a Flood
The Story That Lived Here (Ben Sures)
Kat Goldman- Gypsy Girl
Gypsy Girl (Kat Goldman)

Jason Lang- Firewater
Handled with Care (Famgroup/Genison Music)
Ken Pearson, Penny Lang & Mike Regenstreif (1976) photo: Felicity Fanjoy

Penny Lang- It’s Not Easy
Stone + Sand + Sea + Sky (Borealis)
Jason Lang- Senses of Your Leave
Handled with Care (Famgroup/Genison Music)

Ramblin' Jack Elliott & Mike Regenstreif (2006)

Ramblin' Jack Elliott- South Coast
South Coast (Red House)
Hoyt Axton- Evangelina
The A&M Years (A&M)
Mark Rubin – Jew of Oklahoma- Good Shabbes
The Triumph of Assimilation (Rubinchik)

Bonnie Raitt- Just Like That
Just Like That (Redwing)
Mike Regenstreif & Jesse Winchester (2006)

Jesse Winchester- That’s What Makes You Strong
Gentleman of Leisure (Sugar Hill)
Emily White- Stone in Your Pocket
Songs You Didn’t Know I Wrote About You (Squeezed Fresh Productions)

Benny Bleu- Lost Goose
March of the Mollusk (Benny Bleu Haravitch)

Taivi- Ukraiyna
Ukraiyna – single (Taivi)
John McCutcheon- Ukrainian Now
Ukrainian Now – single (Appalsongs)
Artists for Action- Which Side Are You On? *
Which Side Are You On? – single (Figs D Music)
Mike Regenstreif & Eric Bibb (2005)

Eric Bibb
- Masters of War
Migration Blues (Stony Plain)

*The Artists for Action singers and musicians are, in alphabetical order, Black Umfolosi, Ray Bonneville, Bruce Cockburn, Chris Corrigan, Guy Davis, Ani DiFranco, Maria Dunn, Adam Hill, Bob Jensen, James Keelaghan, Richard Knox, Lucy MacNeil, Tony McManus, Moulettes, Oysterband, Richard Perso, Heather Rankin, Martin Simpson, and Jon Weaver.

The Vanier Playboys- Reach Out and Touch a Hand
Deux (The Vanier Playboys)
Ball & Chain & The Wreckers- More
Satisfied (Ball & Chain)
Mike Regenstreif & Lynn Miles (2013)

Lynn Miles- Hockey Night in Canada
Black Flowers Vol. 3 (Lynn Miles)

Moore & McGregor- Don’t Let Us Get Sick
Dream with Me (Ivernia)
Eric Kilburn- Waiting at Your Door
Reckonings (Wellspring)
Shelley Posen- Long, Long Tunnel
Old Loves (Well Done Music)
Doug Cox & Linda McRae- Ready for the Times to Get Better
Beyond the Great Pause (42 RPM)

Annie Capps- Two Different Things
How Can I Say This? (Yellow Room)
Jaimee Harris- Love is Gonna Come Again
Boomerang Town (Thirty Tigers)
Danny Britt- Friends and Memories
All Over the Map (Red Dawg Music)

Taraf Syriana- Abdul Karim’s Tango
Taraf Syriana (Lulaworld)

Reggie Garrett- Stagecoach Mary
York’s Lament & other stories (WonderDog)
Dom Flemons- Steel Pony Blues
Dom Flemons Presents Black Cowboys (Smithsonian Folkways)
Odetta- Rock Island Line
Lookin’ for a Home: Thanks to Leadbelly (M.C.)
Preservation Hall Jazz Band & Ani DiFranco- Freight Train
Preservation (Preservation Hall)
Julian Taylor- 100 Proof
Beyond the Reservoir (Howling Turtle)

Mavis Staples & Lucky Peterson- Wade in the Water
Spirituals & Gospel (Gitanes)
Dave Rudolf- Mary Don’t You Weep
Traditional (MoneyTree)
Reggie Harris- Sheep, Sheep/Little David
Ready to Go (Reggie Harris Music)
The Klezmatics & Joshua Nelson- Didn’t It Rain
Brother Moses Smote the Water (Piranha)

Last Forever with John Cohen- Dillard Chandler
No Place Like Home/Last Forever (2nd Story Sound)
John Cohen- The Story That the Crow Told Me
Stories the Crow Told Me (Acoustic Disc)
Grateful Dead- Uncle John’s Band
Workingman’s Dead (Warner Bros./Rhino)
The Dumptrucks- Friend of the Devil
Selections (Laughing Cactus)
The Persuasions- Ripple
Might as Well: The Persuasions Sing Grateful Dead (Grateful Dead)

CornMaiz Stringband- Jubilee
Fresh-Picked Kentucky Music (CornMaiz Stringband)

I’ll be hosting Saturday Morning next on March 25. I also host Stranger Songs on CKCU every Tuesday from 3:30-5 pm. 

Find me on Facebook. facebook.com/mikeregenstreif

--Mike Regenstreif

Monday, August 1, 2016

Penny Lang 1942-2016



I woke up this morning to the sad news that Penny Lang passed away peacefully yesterday at her home on the Sunshine Coast of BC (where she moved some years ago with Nancy Howell, her partner these past 29 years). She had celebrated her 74th birthday on July 15 during a visit with her son, Jason Lang.

Penny was the first of Montreal’s folk artists that I met soon after moving there in 1968 when I was 14 and she and her band played at Sir Winston Churchill High School. I would go on to know her well, seeing her at Montreal folk clubs like the Back Door, the Yellow Door and the Montreal Folk Workshop – and producing concerts with her at Dawson College and the Golem, the Montreal folk club I took over in 1974. In the 1990s and 2000s, Penny was my frequent guest on the Folk Roots/Folk Branches radio program and I wrote about her for the Montreal Gazette and Sing Out! magazine. In 2004, I did an oral history session with Penny for a Folquébec event in Montreal and in 2009 I hosted a “Montreal Folk Reunion” at the Apple Hollow Folk Festival with Penny, Willie Dunn, Ron Bankley, Bruce Murdoch and Marc Nerenberg.

Montreal Folk Reunion, Apple Hollow Folk Festival (2009)
As a performer, Penny was spontaneous, often improvising lyrics on stage that equaled the originals, open and friendly. Nothing was ever held back and her stage was almost always like a kitchen table or back porch session.

Condolences to Nancy, Jason, her brother Pat Lang, and all who loved her.

Mike Regenstreif & Penny Lang (2005)
The obituary I prepared for the Montreal Gazette is available at this link and here is a spotlight article I wrote about Penny for the Spring 2002 issue of Sing Out! magazine. The article was adapted and expanded from a feature I wrote for the November 17, 2001 issue of the Montreal Gazette.

Penny Lang

By Mike Regenstreif

Penny Lang, the much-beloved doyenne of the Montreal folk music scene, was in St. John’s, Newfoundland and about to start a concert tour when she suffered a stroke on April 17, 2000. “It was a strange feeling,” she recalled in a conversation last November, “it was like I no longer had any control.”

The concert tour was cancelled and Penny spent a week in hospital in Newfoundland before returning to recover at home in Montreal. It would be more than a year before she performed again. Talking with Penny, there’s no obvious sign that she’s been through a stroke and the subsequent speech and physiotherapy.

And in November 2001, Penny began relaunching a career put on hold by the stroke. Gather Honey, a new CD of previously unreleased recordings made between 1963 and 1978, has been issued and she’s begun performing concerts again, often on split bills with multi-instrumentalist Michael Jerome Browne who backs her after performing his own set.

Penny, who is now 59 and a grandmother herself, comes from a line of music makers. “Both of my grandmothers sang and I was very influenced by them,” she said. “One sang hymns and the other, who came from Scotland, was a drinking and smoking woman. She had a good time singing funny, goofy songs.” At home, both of her parents played guitar and sang old-time country music, Carter Family songs and the like, around the kitchen table. By the age of 10, young Penny was playing guitar and would soon be accompanying her dad when he sang at local Legion halls.

In her late-teens, working as a secretary at the Montreal’s YMCA, Penny discovered the folk music revival that was breaking out all over North America. At the Y, Penny met a woman named Maureen McBride, who proved very influential in the development of Penny’s performing style. McBride sang traditional folk songs, especially sing along songs, and used them to teach music at a summer camp for inner city kids. Penny worked with McBride at the camp, picking up songs and learning how to involve people in music.

A couple of years later, Penny happened onto a performance by the Mountain City Four, a now-legendary Montreal folk group that included Jack Nissenson, Peter Weldon and the teenaged McGarrigle sisters, Kate and Anna. “They were playing in a little coffeehouse called the Seven Steps and they just knocked me out,” Penny recalled. Penny became friendly with the group, and through them she was introduced the music of Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, Odetta and many of the other popular folk artists.

Inspired by the folk music scene, Penny decided to take her shot at performing for a living. She’d worked day jobs, she’d tried university, and felt they weren’t for her. So in 1963, at the age of 21, she auditioned for her first paying gig at Café André, a bar near McGill University that featured folk music.

Penny passed the audition and worked at Café André for the next three years.  It was a grueling schedule. “I did five or six sets a night, six nights a week for three weeks of each month.” The long running gig made Penny a star in her hometown. She started there as an unknown but was soon filling the club every night with crowds drawn by her stark but effective guitar-playing, her throaty voice, and most of all by her astonishing ability to connect with audiences.

But three years into the Café André gig, Penny had had enough of the heavy grind. “I was ready to quit and look for another way to earn a living,” she said. But on her last night at the club, Penny was approached by an agent for the Bitter End, a club in Greenwich Village, New York City’s folk music Mecca.

Working with side musicians like guitarist Roma Baran, harmonica player Don Audet and, briefly, pianist Kate McGarrigle, Penny became a touring musician. “I played in New York about four times a year for about three years,” she said, “at the Bitter End, but mostly at Gerde’s Folk City.” She also played at fabled coffee houses like the Caffé Lena in Saratoga Springs, New York and  Le Hibou in Ottawa, Ontario and at all of the gigs, big and small, that had sprung up in Montreal in the late 1960s like the New Penelope, the Yellow Door, the Back Door. Penny also played at folk festivals and was in demand for bookings at high schools and universities. My own first encounter with her was in 1968 or ’69 when she played a memorable afternoon concert at my Montreal high school.

Although Penny was in high demand as a performer in the late-‘60s, a recording contract never quite happened for her. Once, while performing at Gerde’s Folk City, she was approached by a couple of record executives who’d heard her sing “Suzanne,” a haunting song written by Montreal poet Leonard Cohen. “They knew it would be a hit, but they wanted me to record it with an electric band,” Penny recalled. “I told them ‘no thanks, I’m an acoustic musician.’” Not long after, “Suzanne” was a hit for both Noel Harrison and Judy Collins.

Looking back, Penny is glad now that she didn’t have that hit with Suzanne.

“I probably would not have lived,” she said. Penny didn’t yet understand that she was living in the grip of bipolar disease. “They called it manic-depression then. I’d go from being very high to crashing into severe depression.”

Luckily for Penny, her band mates Don Audet and Roma Baran realized something was very wrong. “In 1968, those two close friends dragged me kicking and screaming to the psych ward at the Vic (Montreal’s Royal Victoria Hospital). Later, I was hospitalized for four or five months.” More than 30 years later, Penny is grateful to Audet and Baran for their intervention and has remained under care for her bipolar condition. 

Penny also credits control of the condition with allowing her to find her muse as a songwriter, something she hadn’t had before. Her repertoire until then was all songs that she’d found from folk, country and blues sources or from the many contemporary songwriters of the day.

In 1970, Penny was pregnant with her son Jason, himself now a professional musician. She realized that her years as full-time performer were coming to an end, at least for a while. On a whim, she decided to do her last gig in grand style before giving birth. “I was driving with my band and we passed by Place des Arts,” Montreal’s high-end performing arts complex. “I had always wanted to play there, so we parked the car, went in and rented the hall.”

The concert, in the sold-out 700-seat Port Royal Theatre, was a triumphant success for Penny. “It was very exciting, it felt right to be doing it,” she said. Penny’s Montreal fans cheered her on and she remembers the night as a high point in her career. Two weeks later, Jason was born.

Life as a single mother was difficult for Penny. “I tried working as a performer in bars, leaving Jason with baby sitters, and it was terrible.” Over the next several years she played only occasionally in Montreal, in bars and coffeehouses and on the occasional concert bill [some of which, at Dawson College and the Golem Coffee House, I produced].

In the mid-1970s Penny and Jason moved to Morin Heights, a small village in the Laurentian Mountains north of Montreal. Occasionally, Penny gigged at Rose’s Cantina, a tiny coffeehouse there.

Penny eventually moved back to Montreal so that her son could have the advantages of city life as a teenager. But, she’d only rarely perform. In 1989, she reluctantly accepted an invitation to do a concert at the Golem, then Montreal’s prime folk music venue. She accepted the invitation with a condition.

Dave Clarke was booking the Golem then and it’s his fault I became a performer again,” Penny said with a laugh. “I didn’t want to come back and just do one show. So I told Dave if he found a manager who would see me perform and maybe work with me, I would do it.”

Clarke booked the show and arranged for an agent, Heidi Fleming, to come and hear her.  Soon after, Fleming and Penny were working together and Fleming remains Penny’s agent and manager to this day. Before long, Fleming had Penny touring regularly again and in 1990, 27 years after her first gig at Café André, Penny finally recorded Yes, her first album. By the end of the decade, she’d record five more CDs to much critical acclaim.

Penny’s first six albums were all released on the She-Wolf label, a boutique record company operated out of Fleming’s office. In 2000, she signed with Borealis Records, a Toronto-based label at the forefront of Canada’s folk music scene. However, Penny’s stroke brought her career to a halt.

Making a new album for Borealis would have to wait.  In the meantime, Fleming put out a call for old tapes of Penny’s performances from the 1960s and ‘70s. They quickly began to surface. A performance at the YMCA in 1963, a couple of songs from gigs at Expo ’67, a couple more from the Place des Arts concert, some coffeehouse recordings from Ottawa, some studio demos and CBC recordings. As Penny recovered from the stroke, Fleming compiled 18 of the songs onto Gather Honey. It became Penny’s first release on Borealis. The CD will bring back fond memories for Penny’s legions of fans from those years, and for the new fans she’s gathered more recently.

And since the release of the CD, Penny is performing again. “Performing is something I’ve always loved,” she said. “I have a big heart for the music and I love passing it on.”

-30-

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--Mike Regenstreif