Whispering Pines is the first comprehensive history of Canada’s songwriting legacy, from Gordon Lightfoot to Joni Mitchell.
Canadian songwriters have always struggled to create work that reflects their specific environment, while simultaneously connecting with a mass audience. For most of the 20th century, that audience lay outside Canada, making the challenge that much greater. While nearly every songwriter who successfully crossed this divide did so by immersing themselves in the American and British forms of blues, folk, country, and their bastard offspring, rock and roll, traces of Canadian sensibilities were never far beneath the surface of the eventual end product.
What were these sensibilities, and why did they translate so well outside Canada? With each passing decade, a clear picture eventually emerged of what Canadian songwriters were contributing to popular music, and subsequently passing on to fellow artists, both within Canada and around the world. Just as Hank Snow became a giant in country music, Ian & Sylvia and Gordon Lightfoot became crucial components of the folk revival. In the folk-rock boom that followed in the late ’60s, songs by The Band and Leonard Cohen became instant standards, and, during the ’70s singer-songwriter movement, few artists were more revered than Neil Young and Joni Mitchell.
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Jason Schneider is the co-author of Have Not Been The Same: The CanRock Renaissance, and author of the novel 3,000 Miles. His work appears regularly in Exclaim! Magazine and he is one of Canada’s most respected music journalists. He lives in Waterloo, Ontario.
Published: July 2009
ISBN: 9781550228748
Dimensions: 6 x 9 in.
Pages: 360
“In Whispering Pines, Schneider has done a masterful job showcasing how Canadian songs and songwriters have impacted North American music, and how American artists, from Jimmie Rodgers to Janis Joplin, fit into the fabric of Canada’s musical tradition.” — Quill & Quire
“Whispering Pines works not just as approachable one-stop-shopping for those with a passing interest in the subject(s), but as a long overdue contextual framework for the tenants in this country’s tower of song.” — Michael Barclay
“Schneider's collection of stories puts a fresh spin on Canadian artists whose lives and accomplishments haven’t lacked for media coverage and analysis.” — Edmonton Journal
“a smart, absorbing read … Whispering Pines is a busy, striving survey, a latticework of cultural history, microbiography and music journalism … Schneider’s delivery is that kind of chatty, energetic rock journalism of the old-time variety.” — Globe and Mail
“Schneider presents a thoughtfully researched history and analysis of Canadian songwriters, their geographical and social origins and their career paths.” — Canadian Geographic