Growing up Canadian, to Ian Tyson’s music
Canadian singer/songwriter was an icon who knew “The Land of Shining Mountains” intimately. Photo: Mike Murchison
I bought the boots at the UFA when I came out to Alberta. I was going to be a cowboy, learn to rope and ride.
Never could figure out how to keep a hat on my head with the wind blowing the way it always did. It blew from the north; the south; the east and the west. Yup. Four strong winds. Now I understood what the song meant.
Damn, the skies were big. The mountains; the foothills; the farms and the ranches. I was right in the heart of the cowboy capital of Canada.
It was an eye-opening experience for an 18 year old boy from the big city of Toronto, to say the least.
So naturally, I embraced the music of Ian Tyson. Iโd heard a few of his songs playing on the radio living in Toronto. And when youโre learning to play the guitar, well, learning โFour Strong Windsโ is a must.
โHalf A Mile of Hellโ
โFour Strong Windsโ
โSomeday Soonโ
โSummer Wagesโ
โThe Great Canadian Tourโ
About the the time I was settling in Alberta, reinventing myself, Tyson was doing the same. Neil Young was having success with his remake of โFour Strong Windsโ and Tyson was earning some royalties.
Bought himself a little spread out by Longview (southwest of Calgary). Nose-dived hard into the cowboy way of life and started ranching and working with cutting horses.
He recorded an album of mostly original songs entitled โCowboyography.โ
Bang! He was front and centre again, and away he went. More albums. More strong songs and a new bigger audience.
I never met him; I saw him in concert once, at the Jack Singer Concert Hall in Calgary when it first opened. I went alone; I couldnโt find anyone to go with with me. Their loss.
A simple, five-piece band standing on the stage. They were tight. Fantastic sound. His voice was great. Rich.
The stage had a few Navaho rugs tossed here and there. It made you feel like you were in somebodyโs living room.
Ah! But the songs and the stories: some transported you back to a time when there werenโt so many highways or barbed wire fences. Some made you realize that there are still cowboys and their way of life is alive and well. You just donโt see them. Theyโre there, just a few miles down the gravel road, far from the Walmart, the collector lanes and that โnewโ country music that floods the airwaves.
There’s a big difference between โCountry Musicโ’ and โWestern Music.โ Kind of like fresh ground coffee and something from a Drive-thru.
You get the point.
Ian Tyson was 89 when he passed away December 29th. He will be missed by those who knew him, loved him and those who absorbed his music. Ian Tyson was a phenomenal songwriter and a great singer up until a medical issue took his voice. But even then, he kept singing, playing and recording.
What did he do for me? His music and his words helped a young kid from a big city settle his nerves and showed him, little by little, that he could make a new home. A fresh start in this โLand of Shining Mountainsโ under that big Alberta sky.
I put a lot of miles under me, tapping my foot to his music. For many years, and sometimes I found myself in a bit of a tug of war.
You see, I was born in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. Right there by the sea. How I ended up in Alberta is another story for a bigger pot of coffee.
But just as those big endless skies and wind caressed ocean waves get imprinted into your heart, so too do those big skies and wind caressed fields of wheat and barley grown under the shadows of the eastern slope. I blame Tyson for that.
I recorded one of his songs, which hopefully will make my CD project โHighway. โIt has nothing to do with Alberta; its about loneliness, regret, hope, weather and possible maybes. Itโs entitled โBlue Mountains of Mexico.โ
โHighwayโ is just one example of Tyson’s ability to inspire, to write, to paint a picture with words and music.
โNavaho Rugโ
โLand of Shining Mountainsโ
โAlberta’s Childโ
โI Outgrew The Wagonโ
โLost Herdโ
….we’re just touching the iceberg of the many songs Tyson wrote in his time. So many songs that most people have never heard.
I suggest you give his music a good listen. You may find yourself taking a turn off the asphalt and heading down some gravel road out towards the back of beyond . Out there, far past where the new, wanna-be cowboys and cowgirls who are fans of โYellowstoneโ reside.
But drive a little further along, where barbed wire fences will cut your fingers, and the wind will slap you when it feels like it. Go to where weather, money, drought, firearm regulations and urbanization all help grey your hair, put lines on your face, and make you wonder โWhatโs the use?โ
Thatโs what Tyson wrote and sang about, what he lived and what he knew. For that, he has my respect.
Surely, we lost a good โun.
Ride easy
Be blessed
MLM