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âIf you could read my mindâ and âEdmund Fitzgeraldâ are my favorites. I loved him and Anne Murray, both from Canada. And Celine Dion, who doesnât love âMy Heart Will Go Onâ? Itâs one of my favorite songs of all time.
âEdmund Fitzgeraldâ is the only piece of music I know of with just one musical phraseâit just repeats, over and over, ending in a single high note or a single low noteâeven the instrumental bridge . .
Our favorite Gordon Lightfoot song by far. After weâd been dating a while it hit me that THAT was âour songâ, LOL since I thought of him every time I heard it and I still do. We even have a print of the Fitz in our living room.
Iâve seen a few articles since Gordonâs death about his best songs, and âBeautifulâ was notably (for me) absent from all of them. Iâm with Janis in loving that song. But I like âEdmund Fitzgeraldâ as well.
Arlo should visit the Shipwreck Museum in Paradise, Michigan. âThe Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgeraldâ is on a continuous loop. I donât know how the employees stand it.
Gordon Lightfoot will definitely be missed, along with Leonard Cohen who passed a while back. I think Iâll play âThe Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgeraldâ and âHallelujahâ later on today.
We saw Gordon in concert just a few months before his passing. Time had taken a toll on his voice, but it couldnât touch his spirit. For my money, one of his greatest songs is also one of his least noticed: âWherefores and Whys.â You can check it out on YouTube, but be careful: they get the title slightly wrong.
Canadian Railroad Trilogy! Song for a Winters Night! Softly She Comes!The list just goes on and on. The song Beautiful was the inspiration for my decades long love affair with the acoustic guitar. He was a treasure for sure!Bob Dylan said of Gordonâs music, âI canât think of any Gordon Lightfoot song I donât like, Every song of his, itâs like I wish it would go on forever.â RIP
He was such a masterful storyteller there are too many songs to choose as a favorite.  I find it hard to choose but I guess one does stand out to me among all the others⊠Affair on 8th Avenue.  The lyrics could be made into a movie.
The perfume that she wore was from some little store
On the down side of town
But it lingered on long after sheâd gone
I remember it well
And our fingers entwined like ribbons of light
And we came through a doorway somewhere in the night
Donât forget Paul Anka. He had a few hits as they say.
I loved Gordon Lightfoot but I couldnât stand Edmund Fitzgerald. They kept playing it over and over and over and over and over I got so sick of it. I donât know how he kept playing it in concert. I donât know how any artist keeps playing songs over and over. I guess they just think of pleasing their audience.
I saw him in concert in the early 1970s at what is now called David Geffen Hall at Lincoln Center in Manhattan. My âhouse planâ (sort of sorority) at college would have a monthly contest and I tended to win a lot of them (so many, I stopped saying I won when I had all the questions answered) and I won tickets to his concert. Since I had not yet started dating my husband I went with my younger sister (by 5 years) â she has no memory of going to the concert.
It was our first concert without our parents -it was a wonderful concert.
Da'Dad almost 2 years ago
I did like the Edmund Fitzgerald but I think the wife didnât care for the way he sang Detroit.
C almost 2 years ago
When the gales of November came early
seismic-2 Premium Member almost 2 years ago
âSpeaking of Canadian singer-songwritersâ? Were they? Thatâs sort of a weird conversation they somehow started up.
SpacedInvader Premium Member almost 2 years ago
âSundownâ and âEarly Morning Rainâ are two I particularly like. But, then he was a very prolific writer.
Dirty Dragon almost 2 years ago
No place for one maritime disaster?
Thereâs got to be a morning after, and my heart will go on.
Odin almost 2 years ago
Saw him a few years ago. A fairly small room, we were seated right next to the stage. Sat my beer on the stage.
Macushlalondra almost 2 years ago
âIf you could read my mindâ and âEdmund Fitzgeraldâ are my favorites. I loved him and Anne Murray, both from Canada. And Celine Dion, who doesnât love âMy Heart Will Go Onâ? Itâs one of my favorite songs of all time.
mischugenah almost 2 years ago
My favorite is Song for a Winterâs Night.
Sephten almost 2 years ago
Canadian Railroad Trilogy. I first heard it in a folk club in England nearly fifty years ago.
P-B almost 2 years ago
âDoes anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the minutes to hours?â
The Orange Mailman almost 2 years ago
Janis seems miffed that Arlo changed the subject from romance to wreck so perhaps Arlo could follow up with:
Sheâs been looking like a queen in a sailorâs dream
And she donât always say what she really means
snailgate almost 2 years ago
I easily recall my own recent conversations about Listen to the Hummingbird, Hallelujah, and Leonard Cohen.
ScullyUFO almost 2 years ago
Are the Great Lakes âmaritimeâ?
ddjg almost 2 years ago
âEdmund Fitzgeraldâ is the only piece of music I know of with just one musical phraseâit just repeats, over and over, ending in a single high note or a single low noteâeven the instrumental bridge . .
maxiesmom2 Premium Member almost 2 years ago
Our favorite Gordon Lightfoot song by far. After weâd been dating a while it hit me that THAT was âour songâ, LOL since I thought of him every time I heard it and I still do. We even have a print of the Fitz in our living room.
DawnQuinn1 almost 2 years ago
TWO maritine disasters Arlo. On the âSunday Concertâ live album, he sings of the Ballad Of The Yarmouth Castle"
[Traveler] Premium Member almost 2 years ago
When itâs time to break up a party, put on The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald. Works great.
[Traveler] Premium Member almost 2 years ago
And a wave hit the ship and they all drown like rats and their lungs filled up with lake water..
mhlon Premium Member almost 2 years ago
Thereâs also Burton C. of the Guess Who.
ahnk_2000 almost 2 years ago
Iâve seen a few articles since Gordonâs death about his best songs, and âBeautifulâ was notably (for me) absent from all of them. Iâm with Janis in loving that song. But I like âEdmund Fitzgeraldâ as well.
mourdac Premium Member almost 2 years ago
At least no one has mentioned Rush, not my favorite rock band âŠ.
Enoi almost 2 years ago
Arlo should visit the Shipwreck Museum in Paradise, Michigan. âThe Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgeraldâ is on a continuous loop. I donât know how the employees stand it.
RonMcCalip almost 2 years ago
âBut my life, my love, and my lady⊠is the sea.â
KennethPrice almost 2 years ago
BTO
MuddyUSA Premium Member almost 2 years ago
Suddenly they have become boring!
ladykat Premium Member almost 2 years ago
Gordon Lightfoot will definitely be missed, along with Leonard Cohen who passed a while back. I think Iâll play âThe Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgeraldâ and âHallelujahâ later on today.
Milady Meg almost 2 years ago
My intro to Lightfoot was Black Day in July .
Saddenedby Premium Member almost 2 years ago
time and songs move ever on until both fade in the mist of yesterdayâs memories
jarvisloop almost 2 years ago
âIâm afraid itâs going to be like this from now on.â
Joseph Heller wrote âClosing Timeâ about the passing of the World War II generation. Now, we Boomers are facing our own closing time.
raybarb44 almost 2 years ago
Edmond Fitzgerald was always a favorite, along with SundownâŠ..
Dave Zimny Premium Member almost 2 years ago
We saw Gordon in concert just a few months before his passing. Time had taken a toll on his voice, but it couldnât touch his spirit. For my money, one of his greatest songs is also one of his least noticed: âWherefores and Whys.â You can check it out on YouTube, but be careful: they get the title slightly wrong.
Tetonbil almost 2 years ago
Canadian Railroad Trilogy! Song for a Winters Night! Softly She Comes!The list just goes on and on. The song Beautiful was the inspiration for my decades long love affair with the acoustic guitar. He was a treasure for sure!Bob Dylan said of Gordonâs music, âI canât think of any Gordon Lightfoot song I donât like, Every song of his, itâs like I wish it would go on forever.â RIP
paranormal almost 2 years ago
The bell rang thirty times for Gordon LightfootâŠ
poppacapsmokeblower almost 2 years ago
Donât forget the maritime disaster song from Gilliganâs Island.
KEA almost 2 years ago
I like Don Quixote. âŠand many others.
alexius23 almost 2 years ago
I saw Lightfoot in concert twiceâŠtruly enjoyed both times
alexius23 almost 2 years ago
The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald has haunted me from the first time I heard the song.
Wendy Emlinger almost 2 years ago
The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald is a memorial song to those men lost when the ship went down. I dearly love that one. So beautiful.
David Huie Green LikeNobody'sEverSeen almost 2 years ago
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=%23&ved=2ahUKEwjK2ZiL4ov_AhUHfDABHbgDDEcQ8TV6BAgWEAI&usg=AOvVaw0VTJzWxrN8ZFOD4xbU2nov
BBYMRLCCOTNYouTube·Jan 16, 2010
eced52 almost 2 years ago
Carefree Highway.
geneking7320 almost 2 years ago
I think the ship was discovered a year or two from the release date of the song.
tiomax almost 2 years ago
He was such a masterful storyteller there are too many songs to choose as a favorite.  I find it hard to choose but I guess one does stand out to me among all the others⊠Affair on 8th Avenue.  The lyrics could be made into a movie.
The perfume that she wore was from some little store
On the down side of town
But it lingered on long after sheâd gone
I remember it well
And our fingers entwined like ribbons of light
And we came through a doorway somewhere in the night
Her long flowing hair came softly undone
And it lay all around
And she brushed it down as I stood by her side
In the warmth of her loveâŠ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCCsk9BXGi0
rugeirn almost 2 years ago
âThe mother of a minerâs child/Waits for me beside the kitchen door.â For me, possibly the most perfect song ever written.
Tina Rhea Premium Member almost 2 years ago
Pussywillows, cattails, soft winds and rosesâŠ.
Ignatz Premium Member almost 2 years ago
Everybody knows the hits. But Don Quixote, The Watchmanâs Gone, The Patriotâs Dream, Beautiful, Carefree Highway, etc.etc.etc. Gord was terrific.
ericclayton423 almost 2 years ago
Get obscure and go Stan Rodgers with The Athens Queen.
Charliegirl Premium Member almost 2 years ago
I LOVE âFitzgeraldâ âŠ.. sooo haunting.
The Pro from Dover almost 2 years ago
Donât forget Paul Anka. He had a few hits as they say.
I loved Gordon Lightfoot but I couldnât stand Edmund Fitzgerald. They kept playing it over and over and over and over and over I got so sick of it. I donât know how he kept playing it in concert. I donât know how any artist keeps playing songs over and over. I guess they just think of pleasing their audience.
lindz.coop Premium Member almost 2 years ago
âThatâs What You Get For Loving MeâŠ.â
dmostroff over 1 year ago
Gordon Lightfoot was great. RIP.
mafastore over 1 year ago
I saw him in concert in the early 1970s at what is now called David Geffen Hall at Lincoln Center in Manhattan. My âhouse planâ (sort of sorority) at college would have a monthly contest and I tended to win a lot of them (so many, I stopped saying I won when I had all the questions answered) and I won tickets to his concert. Since I had not yet started dating my husband I went with my younger sister (by 5 years) â she has no memory of going to the concert.
It was our first concert without our parents -it was a wonderful concert.