Lögberg-Heimskringla - 11.04.2003, Blaðsíða 1

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 11.04.2003, Blaðsíða 1
Week at a glance Bragi Sæmundsson produces organic beef on his farm near Arborg, MB Page 4 Þorrablót in Wynyard a Welcome Harbinger of Spring with performers including The Generation Page 5 Friday, 11 April, 2003 • Number 13 / Númer 13 • Föstudagur, 11 Apríl, 2003 Lögberg Lögberg stofnað 14. janúar 1888 Heimskringla stofnað 9. september 1886 Sameinuð 20. ágúst 1959 Heimskringla The Icelandic Weekly www.logberg.com PAP Registration no. 08000 Agreement no. 1402161 117th year /117. Árgangur ISSN 0047-4967 Tom Cochrane Inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame Along and fascinating career characterized by creative adventurousness and musical and personal integrity make Tom Cochrane a highly deserv- ing inductee into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame. Tom was born in Lynn Lake, MB. He is the son of a bush pilot Thomas (Tuck) Cochrane, and Violet, who was an Einarson. When Tom was four, the family relocated to Acton, ON, finally settling in Etobicoke. Tom set the stage for his future when, at age eleven, he swapped a toy train set for his first guitar. “I’ve always thought of myself as a Canadian, a westem Canadian I suppose, although I feel all of Canada is my home,” Tom says. “Maybe that’s my mother’s influence. She would never let me forget where we came from. I married a Winnipeg woman, though we met in Vancouver, and Kathy has that same dry sense of humour, the toughness and open friendliness I ^associate with people from out there.” “I had a reporter’s eye and I love telling stories, and I was on my way to being a joumalist,” he says. “My parents definitely did not encourage my pursuit of a life in music. But I remember thinking back then that I could combine joumalism and song in the narrative style of the folk singers I admired.” “He (Bob Dylan) was an enormous influence on me,” Tom says. “I was writing poetry at thirteen or fourteen, which was kind of dangerous where I went to school. It was an activi- ty you couldn’t admit to, like playing golf. My first song, Why Can 't We Be Free? was a protest piece I owe to Dylan. I wrote it when I was thirteen, and that was when I first saw the possi- bility of a life in music.” By the early 1970s, he was performing folk-oriented mate- rial in coffeehouses in Yorkville. In 1973, a single on Daffodil Records, You’re Driving Me Crazv, marked his recording debut, followed by an album, Hang On To Your Resistance, issued under the name Cochrane. “... that’s his family back- ground: Scottish, Icelandic and South African. He’s true to those roots. He takes no quarter, no prisoners. And he doesn’t tolerate fools or slackers. He doesn’t give much of himself away, except in his music. And he has always worked incredi- bly hard, often against impossi- ble odds, and almost always contrary to other people’s advice and opinions,” a lifelong friend recalls. A few years of stmggle, travel, dues paid, and cab driv- Tom Cochrane recording ing followed, but a turning point came when Toronto band Red Rider took Tom on as lead singer/songwriter. From 1980- 1984, Red Rider released four acclaimed studio albums that married imaginative musician- ship and lyrical eloquence. Songs like Lunatic Fringe and White Hot are still relevant PHOTO COURTESY OF EMI MUSIC CANADA today, and they brought Red Rider significant sales and rock radio play in Canada and the U.S. Lunatic Fringe went on to become one of the most played songs in history on American rock radio. please see TOM COCHRANE on page 7 Her Ojibwa Name is White Cloud Woman Ruth Christie Attracts Good Crowds on her Visit to Iceland Kent Lárus Björnsson Reykjavík, ICELAND Ihave long admired Ruth Christie’s storytelling, so I did not pass up the chance to. see her in person. Her Friday session had a good turnout and today, Saturday the 29th of March; there were more than twenty-five in attendance. PHOTO COURTESY OF KENT BJÖRSSON Ruth Christie in her summer dress Ruth introduced herself, saying that she was happy to be in Iceland. She was excited to tell everyone that she had been swimming in the moming, out- side no less. “It must be sum- mer, because that is the only time I swim outside,” she said. “Since it is summer I wore a summer dress,” she went on, as she took off a couple layers of clothing until she was in a tra- ditional summer dress. She began her talk by describing her work at Lower Fort Garry. Then she took us on an interesting and insightful explanation of various native traditions and beliefs. She explained the creation of man, as they believe. She spoke about weather forecasting. For example, if the squirrels bury their nuts on the ground there will not be much snow, where- as if they put their winter sup- ply of nuts high in the tree, there will be lots snow. She even mentioned that after the Icelanders arrived, it was easy to tell when it was going to be a long cold winter, because the woodpile outside to the house was really big. Building and setting up a tepee was next on her list. She handed out diagrams and explained everything about the tepee from the thirteen poles, thirteen for the thirteen moons of the year, and what each is called and where it is located. She explained how the women set up the tepee. She described air conditioning and heating and the sleeping arrangements in the tepee. She pointed out that many marriages occurred in the winter because it was much warmer to sleep with someone than alone. Following the arrival of the Europeans, trading, new goods and technology were beneficial to the native peoples, but alco- hol and disease were the down- side to the invasion. In modem times, fast food, video games, television and transportation influence the old culture. She spoke briefly about hydro development and how it has forced people off their land. Ruth showed deep emotion when she spoke of fishers hav- ing a difficult time fishing above the graves of family members who lie below the water now as a result of hydro development. Her family history links her to individuals who were helpful to the Icelanders in their settle- ment in the new land. She spoke of her father and his importance to the community of Loon Straits. In speaking of Loon Straits, she explained how one boating accident changed a community please see HER OJIBWA on page 7 Creating Community • Sköpum Samfélag

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