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Summer Side of Life
Barnes and Noble
Summer Side of Life
Current price: $15.99


Barnes and Noble
Summer Side of Life
Current price: $15.99
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Gordon Lightfoot
's friendly
folk
sound grew even stronger on
Summer Side of Life
, an album that has him curling up with both his guitar and his kind, fragile voice. Even though the album that preceded it, 1970's
Sit Down Young Stranger
, fared better on the charts,
followed in its footsteps, proving that
Lightfoot
was going to be around for quite a while. His approachable, confiding sound is best heard within the earnestness of the title track, and on the
country
bumpkin fritter of
"Cotton Jenny,"
a song later covered by fellow Canadian
Anne Murray
.
's singing rests lightly on his acoustic guitar, a trait that would become even more recognizable in his future work, but here it is found in tracks like
"Same Old Loverman"
and
"Redwood Hill,"
and in the vagabond feel of
"Go My Way."
Not only do the songs begin to embrace his trademarked cottage
ambience on this album, but
begins to reveal his love of Canadiana on tracks like
"10 Degrees & Getting Colder,"
"Love & Maple Syrup,"
"Nous Vivons Ensemble,"
which translates into "we all live together." With
's honest, unhindered composure now becoming well-known in the U.S. and not just in Canada,
helped strengthen his songwriting and refine his delicate vocal style, which, in turn, made 1972's
Old Dan's Records
and 1973's
Don Quixote
two of his best albums. ~ Mike DeGagne
's friendly
folk
sound grew even stronger on
Summer Side of Life
, an album that has him curling up with both his guitar and his kind, fragile voice. Even though the album that preceded it, 1970's
Sit Down Young Stranger
, fared better on the charts,
followed in its footsteps, proving that
Lightfoot
was going to be around for quite a while. His approachable, confiding sound is best heard within the earnestness of the title track, and on the
country
bumpkin fritter of
"Cotton Jenny,"
a song later covered by fellow Canadian
Anne Murray
.
's singing rests lightly on his acoustic guitar, a trait that would become even more recognizable in his future work, but here it is found in tracks like
"Same Old Loverman"
and
"Redwood Hill,"
and in the vagabond feel of
"Go My Way."
Not only do the songs begin to embrace his trademarked cottage
ambience on this album, but
begins to reveal his love of Canadiana on tracks like
"10 Degrees & Getting Colder,"
"Love & Maple Syrup,"
"Nous Vivons Ensemble,"
which translates into "we all live together." With
's honest, unhindered composure now becoming well-known in the U.S. and not just in Canada,
helped strengthen his songwriting and refine his delicate vocal style, which, in turn, made 1972's
Old Dan's Records
and 1973's
Don Quixote
two of his best albums. ~ Mike DeGagne