Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Gordon Lightfoot Statue Unveiled In His Hometown Of Orillia, Ont.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Oct, 2015 08:01 PM
    ORILLIA, Ont. — On a crisp autumn day with his hit "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" playing in the background, a humble Gordon Lightfoot reflected on his roots in Orillia, Ont., as a lakefront sculpture of the singer-songwriter was unveiled before hundreds of fans.
     
    "When I found out they were working on it, I thought, 'Why me? What have I done that is so great that I should deserve to have a statue, a very artistic work done?'" said Lightfoot, 76, in an interview shortly before the unveiling, which was also attended by his wife and daughter and the mayor.
     
    Figurative artist Timothy Schmalz of St. Jacobs, Ont., created the four-metre-high bronze work called "Golden Leaves - A Tribute to Gordon Lightfoot," which is at Barnfield Point, on the Gordon Lightfoot Trail.
     
    He said he designed it three years ago and got the funding for it — it cost about $500,000 to make — about a year and a half ago.
     
    The sculpture depicts a bearded Lightfoot in his 20s sitting on the ground and looking down contemplatively as he plays an acoustic guitar. A wreath of leaves in the shape of a giant maple leaf artistically frames him. Some of the leaves depict scenes from songs on his 1975 album "Gord's Gold."
     
    "I was raised singing in the choir and taking piano lessons, and my parents were good that way and they encouraged me," said Lightfoot.
     
    "I became a soloist and decided very early on that I wanted to be a performer, by the time I was perhaps eight or 10 years of age here in Orillia, and I'd already made that decision within myself.
     
    "I could feel it."
     
    The legendary troubadour said his parents loved Bing Crosby and would play his records, especially at Christmastime.
     
    "I sort of got hooked on that. I said to myself, 'I wonder, is it really possible to succeed as a vocalist or a singer?' I had never written any songs or anything like that, I was not particularly brilliant with my piano lessons.
     
    "But I learned some stuff that came back to me later on."
     
    Lightfoot eventually left Orillia to take a music course in the U.S., but he returned and worked as a truck driver before moving to Toronto, where his career began within the Yorkville folk scene with artists including Joni Mitchell.
     
    With hits including "If You Could Read My Mind" and "Sundown," Lightfoot went on to win 17 Juno Awards in his career and picked up five Grammy nominations.
     
    "Well, I still haven't won the Grammy Award either," he quipped with a laugh. "No, I'm just kidding. I don't care.
     
    "This is super special, to have a monument of this kind. And the location here, the Mariposa Folk Festival location, where I do the odd cameo still and performed here five times over the years.... It's very appropriate."
     
    Asked if he has plans to write or record again, he suggested he doesn't, noting his main focus is his family and touring.
     
    "In a funny kind of a way, I really don't want to, because the responsibilities that I have accumulated for myself and my lifestyle through the years has been quite complicated. I have quite an extensive family and they require a lot of attention. And I'm not really under contract right now, so I'm just sort of taking it easy.
     
    "I was under contract to record companies for 33 years."
     
    Schmalz, who has created large public monuments and religious sculptures for sites around the world, said he was thrilled to work on a Lightfoot piece.
     
    "I grew up loving Gordon Lightfoot. This was music that was omnipresent in my studio. I can't tell you how many sculptures I actually created with Gordon Lightfoot in the background. And now, Gordon Lightfoot's in the foreground," Schmalz said.
     
    The sculpture was gifted to the City of Orillia by the Rudolph P. Bratty Family Foundation.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Parties Try To Get Out The Vote As Longest Modern-Day Federal Campaign Ends

    Parties Try To Get Out The Vote As Longest Modern-Day Federal Campaign Ends
    All that remains for exhausted party workers is to get out the vote in what appears to be an epic battle fought over gut-level values as much as election platforms.

    Parties Try To Get Out The Vote As Longest Modern-Day Federal Campaign Ends

    Grieving Alberta Community Remembers Sisters Killed In Farm Accident

    Grieving Alberta Community Remembers Sisters Killed In Farm Accident
    Hundreds of people crowded into the Withrow Gospel Mission, west of Red Deer, on Sunday to honour the memories of Catie Bott, who was 13, and her twin 11-year-old siblings, Jana and Dara Bott.

    Grieving Alberta Community Remembers Sisters Killed In Farm Accident

    Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous

    Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous
    According to a new British survey done by smartphone maker HTC, almost everybody lies on their Facebook and Instagram profiles to look good.

    Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous

    Bail Hearing Postponed For Accused Drunk Driver Marco Muzzo In Crash That Killed Four

    Bail Hearing Postponed For Accused Drunk Driver Marco Muzzo In Crash That Killed Four
    Jennifer Neville-Lake says she is still struggling to process the loss but that she and her husband can now start to move forward.

    Bail Hearing Postponed For Accused Drunk Driver Marco Muzzo In Crash That Killed Four

    Parents Now Advised To Introduce Allergenic Foods Like Peanuts Earlier

    Parents Now Advised To Introduce Allergenic Foods Like Peanuts Earlier
    The review published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal states that babies at four to six months of age can begin eating these foods.

    Parents Now Advised To Introduce Allergenic Foods Like Peanuts Earlier

    Cost Of Funding IVF In Quebec A Cautionary Tale For Other Jurisdictions: Study

    Cost Of Funding IVF In Quebec A Cautionary Tale For Other Jurisdictions: Study
    And while no live births were recorded for women age 44, the mean cost of failed in-vitro fertilization among this age group hit almost $600,000.

    Cost Of Funding IVF In Quebec A Cautionary Tale For Other Jurisdictions: Study