Bruce Cockburn

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Because there's no thread.

Always happens: the more exemplary the song on YouTube, the dopier the accompanying homemade video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=13KUZ53NWq0

a modest crowd, not jammed (Eazy), Monday, 12 April 2010 13:54 (fourteen years ago) link

one of those dudes i only know from guitar magazines.

call all destroyer, Monday, 12 April 2010 14:00 (fourteen years ago) link

lol canada

velko, Monday, 12 April 2010 14:48 (fourteen years ago) link

"If I Had A Rocket Launcher" was all over MTV way back when.

Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Monday, 12 April 2010 14:49 (fourteen years ago) link

Been getting into him a little over the past year. Albums I've heard are impressive but uneven; wish a lot of times that his music was as tough as his politics and his religion -- I want him to sound more like Warren Zevon or somebody, I guess. But he's good, and seems to be a really really smart guy. Favorite album I've got is Inner City Front (1981), then either Dancing In The Dragon's Jaw (1979, with his U.S. hit "Wondering Where The Lions Are) or World Of Wonders (1986); Anything Anytime Anywhere from 2002 is a definitive CD comp. Don't have Stealing Fire from 1984, which has his almost-hit (and probably his most famous song) "If I Had A Rocket Launcher."

Christgau's reviewed a bunch of his albums:

http://robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?name=bruce+cockburn

http://robertchristgau.com/xg/recyc/cockburn-04.php

xhuxk, Monday, 12 April 2010 14:50 (fourteen years ago) link

silent "ck" - classic or dud?

velko, Monday, 12 April 2010 16:14 (fourteen years ago) link

There's a tremendous album of Cockburn songs as clarinet jazz by Michael Occhipinti.

Well, because whatever happened changed him. (Dr. Superman), Monday, 12 April 2010 16:18 (fourteen years ago) link

!!!

i like "lovers in a dangerous time"

Tracer Hand, Monday, 12 April 2010 16:19 (fourteen years ago) link

and "rocket launcher", obv - i don't really know anything else though

Tracer Hand, Monday, 12 April 2010 16:20 (fourteen years ago) link

it must be hard to tell people you love the latest Cockburn album.

Ervin "Death Grip" Michaels (res), Monday, 12 April 2010 16:36 (fourteen years ago) link

I think it's pronounced co-burn.

Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Wednesday, 14 April 2010 01:53 (fourteen years ago) link

Saw him live a long time ago - around when "If A Tree Falls" had some moderate radio airplay. Heck of a guitar player, and still to this day the only tasteful use of a Chapman Stick I've heard.

Liked his droll introduction to a cover of Python's "Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life" - "whenever I'm at a party, people ask me to play a song. None of my songs are real party songs, so I learned this instead."

Elvis Telecom, Wednesday, 14 April 2010 02:15 (fourteen years ago) link

I've written about this more than once: he does the soundtrack for Goin' Down the Road, generally considered the best Canadian film ever made (it's definitely my own favourite). I think there are three different Cockburn songs, also a busker covering Merle Haggard's "Sing Me Back Home" and (I think) a bit of Stompin' Tom Connors playing a club. Anyway, Cockburn's title song is great. Unfortunately, no soundtrack exists.

clemenza, Wednesday, 14 April 2010 02:18 (fourteen years ago) link

And the Barenaked Ladies, who are sort of silly most of the time, did a fantastic cover (and video) of "Lovers in a Dangerous Time."

clemenza, Wednesday, 14 April 2010 02:20 (fourteen years ago) link

So I just finished listening again to World of Wonders; relevant word in the title is clearly "world," given both that the notes indicate Cockburn wrote its songs while in all sorts of hot spots around the planet and that at least half of them seem to take on global injustice bred by imperialism. Loudest and angriest and most powerful track by far, and clearly the intended centerpiece given that it's the only song where he boxes the lyrics separately on the back cover, is the opener "Call It Democracy," where he calls out the IMF (rhymes with "dirty MF"), I think years before doing so became so predictable for tin-foil-hat conspiracy theorists way to his right. Second side tries to work in all sorts of global rhythms or at least instruments, most of which I can't pinpoint, though he's clearly going for South African guitars (same year as Graceland fwiw) in "See How I Miss You." "Santiago Dawn" is a sort of rousing death march, and then there's a long subdued spoken rant written and seemingly about Jamaica called "Dancing In Paradise" ("The Prime Minister sucks ice cream in the company of a happy band of children while a naked man, sores on his neck, lies for days in Washington Blvd. gnawing chicken bones and the Chamber of Commerce thinks there's too much crime" etc. etc.); I like it, but Christgau (who calls it a "Wasp dub poem") is right that its sound ("vaguely Andean fretboards," Xgau says, instead of reggae) is fairly incongruous. Other songs were written in Tobago, "two Germanies" ("Berlin Tonight," about the wall that's yet to come down), Boulder, and Toronto, where he recorded it. I have to strain to hear most of the quieter ones, and I'm not sure I'm getting yet why he's considered such a great guitar player, and in the decade of Sting and Peter Gabriel there's something corny about all the worldbeat. But I definitely get the idea that there's more at stake for Cockburn than for those guys.

xhuxk, Wednesday, 14 April 2010 21:06 (fourteen years ago) link

Turns out Dancing In The Dragon's Jaws has lots of great guitar, but it's way more a groove record -- going for beauty and even jazziness more than concrete songs. Or at least that's how I hear it. And some of the tracks, like "Creation Dream" and "Badlands Flashback" on Side One, are really gorgeous, tapestries with subtle Afro-Carribean underpinning that's never telgrammed like the world stuff would be on World Of Wonders. Also get the idea that its lyrics are more biblical than political, so most of them go way over my head. Still not sure what "Wondering Where The Lions Are" is about -- an optimistic Revelations-based look forward to the Second Coming maybe? And maybe something genuine to do with awe at the wonders of nature. Might well be the only Top 25 hit ever to contain the word "petroglyphs," though.

xhuxk, Tuesday, 27 April 2010 01:51 (fourteen years ago) link

Listen to the earlier '70s albums - just before Dragon's Jaws I'd recommend Joy Will Find A Way, In The Falling Dark, and esp. Further Adventures Of.. from 1975-1976-1978. Really wonderful albums. The christian mystic gradually moving out into a broader world. Inner City Front is the end of this process, when he finally moved into Toronto on a full-time basis. He does this neat thing on his albums where he lists off where and when he wrote each song in the liner notes.

My favourite album is definitely The Charity of Night from 1996 - wonderful production and lots of Jonatha Brooke harmonies. I hardly ever listen to the last three albums. Or the 80's stuff, to be honest.

derrrick, Wednesday, 28 April 2010 07:28 (fourteen years ago) link

three years pass...

"If I Had a Rocket Launcher" is SUCH A BALEARIC JAM

Clarke B., Tuesday, 31 December 2013 05:32 (ten years ago) link

Not on YouTube, but recommended: "Mighty Trucks of Midnight" -- best NAFTA song this side of Tom Joad, with Booker T. on organ.

tbd (Eazy), Tuesday, 31 December 2013 06:02 (ten years ago) link

four years pass...

Saw him solo last weekend in a community-college theater outside Milwaukee, and both the guitar playing and the songwriting were so strong and dense.

... (Eazy), Monday, 29 October 2018 20:53 (five years ago) link

Also, had no idea he published a "spiritual memoir":

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/the-rumours-are-true-bruce-cockburn-on-his-new-memoir-51735/

... (Eazy), Monday, 29 October 2018 21:10 (five years ago) link

two years pass...

I've been listening to his music all afternoon. I'm surprised there's been no mention of Humans, from 1980, which has no weak songs and some of his best. He even gets away with "What About the Bond", a God-says-we-can't-get-divorced song.
At his best, he's both clear-eyed and poetical/mystical; but from album to album, he can seem to lose all those qualities and become stiff, polemical and dull (like on The Trouble With Normal from 1983). It's not that he loses the balance of personal, political and spiritual; whether the records are good or bad, those elements are all still there, but some essence is missing.

Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 31 August 2021 21:40 (two years ago) link

ten months pass...

Happy Canada Day! This guy is so Canadian. I also listened to Oscar Peterson ("Canadiana Suite") and Leonard Cohen today.

Hans Holbein (Chinchilla Volapük), Saturday, 2 July 2022 06:47 (one year ago) link

And Claude Vivier.

Hans Holbein (Chinchilla Volapük), Saturday, 2 July 2022 07:09 (one year ago) link

Saw him a bunch back in the day, always a good performer and a surprisingly gifted, if overwhelmingly Canadian, singer and musician.

Nothing but a Burning Light is a little-discussed classic.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Saturday, 2 July 2022 17:33 (one year ago) link

*singer/songwriter

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Saturday, 2 July 2022 17:33 (one year ago) link

Yeah, that and Dancing in the Dragon’s Jaws are my favorites of his.

deep luminous trombone (Eazy), Saturday, 2 July 2022 18:32 (one year ago) link

That's a great one. "Wondering Where the Lions Are" is all time.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Saturday, 2 July 2022 18:38 (one year ago) link

That's a great one. "Wondering Where the Lions Are" is all time.

immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Saturday, 2 July 2022 18:38 (one year ago) link

one year passes...

His first four records are honestly perfect.

ian, Thursday, 14 September 2023 23:26 (seven months ago) link


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