ASCAP – AcousticMusicScene.com https://acousticmusicscene.com Sat, 07 Jan 2023 17:03:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Remembering Ian Tyson, 1933-2022 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2023/01/07/remembering-ian-tyson-1933-2022/ Sat, 07 Jan 2023 16:48:05 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=12440
Ian Tyson
Ian Tyson
Ian Tyson, an influential Canadian troubadour best known for having penned the hit songs “Four Strong Winds” and “Someday Soon” as half of the internationally acclaimed folk duo Ian & Sylvia, died on December 29, 2022 at his ranch in southern Alberta at age 89. Folk DJ Charlie Backfish will pay tribute to him and his music during a special edition of his long-running weekly radio show Sunday Street that airs January 8 from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. ET on WUSB 90.1 FM on Long Island, NY and online at wusb.fm or https://tunein.com/radio/WUSB-901-s2324/.

Born to British immigrants in Victoria, British Columbia on September 25, 1933, Tyson grew up in Duncan, BC. He was a rough-stock rodeo rider in his late teens and early 20s and took up the guitar as “the means by which to pass the time” during a two-week hospital stay while recovering from a shattered ankle — an injury he sustained in a bad fall while competing in the Dog Pound Rodeo in Alberta.

Tyson hitchhiked from Vancouver to Toronto in 1958 after graduating from the Vancouver School of Art and became part of the city’s nascent folk scene centered around the coffee houses of its bohemian Yorkville neighborhood. There he met a young singer named Sylvia Fricker, who would become his musical and life partner for a while. They moved to New York, where noted manager Albert Grossman (Bob Dylan, Peter, Paul & Mary, Pozo Seco Singers, etc.) signed Ian & Sylvia to Vanguard Records and they became an important part of the early 1960s folk revival.

Ian & Sylvia - Four Strong WindsThe duo released its eponymously titled debut album in 1962 before getting hitched two years later. They would go on to record and release nearly a dozen albums. Although Ian and Sylvia’s 1964 sophomore release, Four Strong Winds, featured primarily covers of songs by others, its original title track became one of Canada’s best-loved songs and, along with “Someday Soon” and Sylvia’s “You Were on My Mind,” has been covered by numerous other artists — a number of whom will be featured on Sunday Street.

Here’s a link to view a video of Ian and Sylvia performing Four Strong Winds for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3m7ckGhnsc

As the folk boom began to wane later in the 1960s, spurred in part by the British Invasion, Ian & Sylvia moved to Nashville and began incorporating elements of country and rock into their music. They formed the band Great Speckled Bird in 1969 and becoming pioneers of country-rock, along with the Byrds and others.

After hosting a national Canadian television music show from 1970 to 1975, Tyson realized his dream of returning to the Canadian West. His marriage to Sylvia had ended in divorce in 1975 and Tyson, disillusioned with the Canadian country music scene, opted to return to his first love – training horses in the ranch country of southern Alberta.

Tyson Turns to Cowboy Songs and Western Music

His songwriting was greatly affected by his change in lifestyle – most notably on his third solo album, 1983’s Old Corrals & Sagebrush, comprised solely of traditional and new cowboy songs that he recorded after spending three idyllic years cowboying in the Rockies at Pincher Creek. Although Tyson didn’t know it at the time, a cowboy renaissance was about to find expression at the first Elko Cowboy Poetry Gathering that year in a small cow town in northern Nevada. Invited to perform his ‘new western music” at it, Tyson was a regular attendee at the gatherings for more than 30 years. Tyson’s 1987 album Cowboyography also helped to re-launch his touring career across Canada and the U.S.

Tyson seriously damaged his voice following a particularly tough performance at an outdoor country music festival in 2006. “I fought the sound system and I lost,” he said afterwards. With a virus that took months to pass, his smooth voice was now hoarse, grainy, and had lost much of its resonant bottom end. After briefly entertaining thoughts that he would never sing again, he began relearning and reworking his songs to accommodate his ‘new voice.’ To his surprise, audiences now paid rapt attention as he half-spoke, half-sung familiar words, which seemed to reveal new depths for his listeners, according to publicist Eric Alper. Although a heart attack, followed by open heart surgery in 2015, further damaged his voice, Tyson continued to release music well into his senior years – including the 2015 album Carnero Vaquero and his last single, “You Should Have Known.” Released in September 2017 on Stony Plains Records, the Canadian label on which he released 15 albums since the 1980s, that song unapologetically celebrates the hard living, hard drinking, hard loving cowboy life.

Tyson was a Much-Honored Artist During His Lifetime

Tyson earned numerous awards and accolades over the years. A Juno Award recipient for country male vocalist of the year in 1987 and a Canadian Country Music Hall of Famer since 1989, Tyson was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame – along with his former wife and singing partner, Sylvia, three years later. He became a member of the Order of Canada in 1994, received a Governor General’s Performing Arts Award in 2003, and was inducted into the Alberta Order of Excellence in 2006. ASCAP paid tribute to him during the 20th annual Folk Alliance International Conference in 2008, while he was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2019.

January 7 Sunday Street Tribute to Ian Tyson will Feature Music, Stories and Reflections

On the January 7 edition of Sunday Street, Backfish will explore Tyson’s wide-ranging career. He’ll share some recently-recorded reflections from Tom Russell, a widely acclaimed folk and Americana singer-songwriter, painter and essayist who co-wrote may songs with Tyson and recorded Play One More: The Songs of Ian and Sylvia (2017), featuring some of the duo’s lesser-known songs.

A Tom Russell painting of his longtime friend, mentor and musical collaborator Ian Tyson.
A Tom Russell painting of his longtime friend, mentor and musical collaborator Ian Tyson.
“It’s hard to come forth with words about the passing of Ian Tyson, wrote Russell in a Facebook post shortly after he died. “My friend and mentor for so many years. He was the best man at our wedding in Elko. We co-wrote at least 10 songs including Navajo Rug [the 1986 Canadian country song of the year], Claude Dallas, Rose of San Joaquin, When The Wolves No Longer Sing, and Ross Knox. We had a good talk a little while ago. My thoughts go back to many great memories of co-writing songs in a cabin in the Rockies. It’s a sad day. He’ll be with me forever.”

Here are links to view videos of Russell and Tyson performing Tyson’s classic “Summer Wages” and their co-write “Navajo Rug” in Calgary in 2019:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4Rk-E_spoI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGlbCQ_DjdE

The three-hour radio show will also feature stories and observations from Tyson himself, Sylvia Tyson, and Ramblin’ Jack Elliot, interspersed with music. “Many of Tyson’s songs, as well as his vocals on the songs of others will be part of the three-hour program, according to Backfish. Besides Tyson himself, Ian and Sylvia, The Great Speckled Bird, and Tom Russell, listeners will hear from Neil Young (who covered “Four Strong Winds” on his 1978 album Comes A Time), Gordon Lightfoot (who Ian and Sylvia mentored and whose song “Early Morning Rain” was the title track of their 1965 release), Greg Brown and Bill Morrissey, Lucy Kaplansky, Fourtold, Gretchen Peters, James Keelaghan and Jez Lowe, Marianne Faithfull, Cindy Church, Corb Lund (an Alberta-based Canadian country artist with whom Tyson performed a series of concerts in 2018 and who told CBC News in a 2019 interview “He’s kind of our Willie Nelson or Johnny Cash or Leonard Cohen. He’s a guy who’s most embodied the region in art, musically at least.”), Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, The McDades, Michael Martin Murphey, and Bob Dylan (who recorded Tyson’s song “One Single River,” along with the Band, in Woodstock, New York, in 1967).

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Jesse Winchester, 1944-2014 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2014/04/12/jesse-winchester-1944-2014/ Sat, 12 Apr 2014 16:37:32 +0000 http://acousticmusicscene.com/?p=7561 Singer-songwriter Jesse Winchester lost his battle with cancer on April 11, 2014, just over a month shy of his 70th birthday. He died at his home in Charlottesville, Virginia. A songwriter’s songwriter, Jesse Winchester was revered and widely covered by other artists. “You can’t talk about the best songwriters and not include him,” Bob Dylan once said.

Jesse Winchester
Jesse Winchester
For some four decades, Jesse Winchester wrote and performed what is now known as “Americana”—thoughtful, plain-spoken, evocative songs laden with poetic imagery about the American South where he grew up — vivid small-town vignettes and empathetic stories of everyday life and people, and of heartfelt love and love lost.

Born (ironically – see below) on a military base in Bossier City, Louisiana, Winchester grew up in rural northern Mississippi and Memphis, Tennessee. Although he took piano lessons for 10 years and played organ in church, Winchester began playing guitar in bands while in high school. A 1966 graduate of Williams College in Massachusetts, where he majored in German, he also spent a year studying overseas and toured around Germany with a rock band. As the Vietnam War raged in1967, he fled the U.S. and moved to Canada to avoid the draft. “Yankee Lady,” one of his best-known songs and his first hit in Canada, was inspired by that experience and has been covered by Brewer & Shipley, Tim Hardin and Matthews’ Southern Comfort. Although President Carter granted him and many other war resistors amnesty in 1977, Winchester spent 25 years based in Montreal before returning to the U.S. and settling in Charlottesville in 2002.

Robbie Robertson of the Band produced Winchester’s self-titled debut album in 1970. The album, also featuring fellow Band-mate Levon Helm on drums and mandolin (with Todd Rundgren as engineer), reached # 26 on the Canadian radio charts and sported songs that have since been covered by a wide array of recording artists.. Winchester released several more albums during the 1970s. However, unable to tour in the U.S., the self-imposed exile with a light, honey-voiced southern drawl became known primarily as a songwriter.

Joan Baez, The Everly Brothers and Anne Murray, among others, recorded his song “Brand New Tennessee Waltz,” while Jimmy Buffett and Tom Rush have recorded “Biloxi” and “Defying Gravity.” Wynona Judd, Nicolette Larson, Reba McEntire, Michael Martin Murphey, George Strait and Wilson Pickett are among the other artists who have recorded his songs.

In a recent Facebook post, Baez called Winchester “A man who held the audience in the palm of his hand without moving an inch. One of the best songwriters on earth.”
The American Society of Composers, Artists and Publishers (ASCAP) recognized him with a Lifetime Achievement Award in 2007.

Winchester released his tenth and final studio album, Love Filling Station, in 2009 and reportedly had recently completed another one called A Reasonable Amount of Trouble. He was diagnosed with cancer of the esophagus in 2011. In 2012, his friend Jimmy Buffett’s label released Quiet About It: A Tribute to Jesse Winchester. In a testament to how revered he was by his fellow artists, the album features Buffet, Rosanne Cash, Elvis Costello, Rodney Crowell, Vince Gill, Emmylou Harris, Little Feat, Lyle Lovett, Mac McAnally, James Taylor and Allen Toussaint covering some of his best known songs.

Here’s how Winchester announced the news of the tribute album on his own website: “When I was sick last year, fixing to die, some friends decided to make a CD of various artists performing my songs. Jimmy Buffett wrote me around Christmastime with the news. I struggled out of my chair and did a little boogaloo around the living room. I guess I wasn’t that sick.”

Besides his wife Cindy, Jesse Winchester leaves behind a daughter, two sons, a stepdaughter, three grandchildren, two step-grandchildren, a brother and a sister. He also leaves a pantheon of songs and an indelible mark on the world of music.

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ASCAP New York Sessions Set for March 10 https://acousticmusicscene.com/2009/02/27/ascap-new-york-sessions-set-for-march-10/ Fri, 27 Feb 2009 05:37:54 +0000 http://www.acousticmusicscene.com/?p=594 The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) hosts what it bills as a one-day career boost for songwriters and composers in New York City on Tuesday, March 10. ASCAP New York Sessions will feature panel discussions and speakers focusing on such topics as marketing, digital distribution, airplay, recording and publishing. Technology demonstrations and studio master classes round out the day. Attendees also will have opportunities to connect with other songwriters and composers.

Registration for the program is $55 for ASCAP members and $75 for non-members through March 3. The prices rise by $20 after then. For more information and to register online, visit www.ascap.com.

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