After a background in barbershop quartets, and as a member of a duo, Lightfoot struck out on his own in the early 60s. He had written perhaps 75 songs, when he was caught up in the country music scene and folk revival of the time; Bob Dylan's music and a song by Merle Travis, Dark As A Dungeon, combined with his sensitivity, inventiveness and beautiful voice, resulted in his unique songwriting and singing style. In less than two years, between late '61 and some time in 1963, his sound and his life changed forever.
Lightfoot was already 27 at the time of his solo debut, which might have accounted in part for the unusually fully developed maturity and confidence on this recording, in both his songwriting and vocals. Contains some of his best compositions, including "Early Mornin' Rain," "I'm Not Sayin'," "The Way I Feel," "Lovin' Me," and "Ribbon of Darkness." At this point Lightfoot was still including some covers in his repertoire, and he handles numbers by Phil Ochs ("Changes"), Ewan McColl ("The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face"), and Hamilton Camp ("Pride of Man") well. The whole album is included on The United Artists Collection.
Lightfoot had used additional guitar and bass on his debut, but for his second LP he went for a fuller band sound, using a couple of the noted Nashville sessionmen (Charlie McCoy and Ken Buttrey) who had played on Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde. The result was a brighter and more accesible sound, with the country elements more to the fore. The songs weren't quite as impressive as his first batch, but they were still very good, highlighted by the epic "Canadian Railroad Trilogy" and an electrified remake of "The Way I Feel." The whole album is included on The United Artists Collection.
by Richie Unterberger
Tracks
1966 Lightfoot!
1. Rich Man's Spiritual - 2:44
2. Long River - 2:46
3. The Way I Feel - 3:43
4. For Lovin' Me - 2:25
5. The First Time Ever I saw Your Face (Ewan MacColl) - 3:10
6. Changes (Phil Ochs) - 2:30
7. Early Mornin' Rain - 3:04
8. Steel Rail Blues - 2:48
9. Sixteen Miles - 2:05
10.I'm Not Sayin' - 2:28
11.Pride Of Man (Hamilton Camp) - 2:41
12.Ribbon Of Darkness - 2:39
13.Oh, Linda - 3:09
14.Peaceful Waters - 2:01
1967 The Way I Feel
1. Walls - 2:53
2. If You Got It - 2:31
3. Softly - 3:26
4. Crossroads - 2:58
5. A Minor Ballad - 3:15
6. Go Go Round - 2:40
7. Rosanna - 2:42
8. Home From The Forest - 3:04
9. I'll Be Alright - 2:27
10.Song For A Winter's Night - 3:01
11.Canadian Railroad Trilogy - 6:22
12.The Way I Feel - 3:02
All songs written by Gordon Lightfoot except where indicated.
Musicians
1966 Lightfoot!
*Gordon Lightfoot - Guitar, Piano, Vocals
*David Rea or Bruce Langhorne - Second Guitar (Tracks 2 and 14)
*Bill Lee - Bass
1967 The Way I Feel
*Gordon Lightfoot - Guitar, Piano, Vocals
*Kenneth A. Buttrey - Drums
*Red Shea - Guitar
*John Stockfish - Bass
*Charlie McCoy - Harmonica, Celeste, Bells
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Thanks very much for these two great recordings...
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing this twofer, both of which I have never had the pleasure to hear. This is a real treat.
ReplyDeleteTrack 6 {06.Go-Go-Round} from the 2nd CD cannot open...Maybe it's my fault, but could you please check it. Thanks a lot...
ReplyDeleteMscmichael,
ReplyDeleteproblem fixed, see in Free Text.
Thank you.
Thanks a lot, much appreciated! :-)
ReplyDeleteGreat albums but track 06 of CD 2 even the reupload one doesn't work when I try to burn it. Where's the problem?
ReplyDeleteJust finished downloading this one. I had the Lightfoot, but not The Way I Feel... The more I hear of Lightfoot, the more I realized how much I missed, the man is a fantastic writer.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your contribution.
ReplyDeleteLets God bless you..
Hi there,
ReplyDeleteAny chance that you could re-post possibly? Been looking around for these, and to find them in Lossless is great.
Thanks!
......he is back.....
ReplyDeleteGreat to find working links. What a great way to begin a musical career! Many thanks.
ReplyDelete-Brian
Thank You
ReplyDeleteI keep getting an error when trying to unzip these files.
ReplyDeleteMarvellous is a bit strong.....More like 'ok-ish'.
ReplyDelete