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With his deep knowledge of Canadian music history, Nicholas has been commissioned by record labels to write extensive liner notes for many of the country’s top artists, including Ian & Sylvia, Bruce Cockburn and Stompin’ Tom Connors. He penned an 8,000-word biography of Gordon Lightfoot for Songbook, the popular four-CD Lightfoot box set issued in 1999 by Rhino Records.
Here is a collection of some of Nicholas’ liner note work. This archive will be continually updated with additional liner notes and graphics.
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Kensington Market - Avenue Road |
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Written by Nicholas Jennings
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Tags: Kensington Market | Liner Notes The Summer of Love gave the world the Monterey Pop Festival and The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper. Ultimately, those precious months in 1967 produced something far greater: the full flowering of the hippie movement and a sense of cultural, social and political barricades coming down. Change was in the air. The seeds were sown at the Human Be-In in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park and quickly spread to most major cities in the western world. In Toronto, the May Love-In at Queen’s Park attracted a crowd of barefooted flower children who danced to Buffy Sainte-Marie and Leonard Cohen under a thick cloud of marijuana smoke.
That same month, three musicians from Yorkville, Toronto’s hippie village, gathered in a dusty downtown warehouse with a plan to forge a brave new rock sound for these high times. Keith McKie, Gene Martynec and Alex Darou had been brought together by Bernie Finkelstein, Yorkville’s pioneering band manager, who’d previously tasted rock success with The Paupers. Now Finkelstein had visions of a building a band around McKie’s lyrical psych-pop songs and produce a Yorkville group to rival Haight-Ashbury’s Jefferson Airplane.
McKie had previously fronted The Vendettas, a rock band from Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. that migrated to Toronto. Together with Darou, a jazz-trained bassist buddy from the Soo, and Martynec, who’d played guitar with Bobby Kris & the Imperials, they had the makings of a group. But they needed
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Gryphon Trio with Patricia O'Callaghan-Broken Hearts & Madmen |
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Written by Nicholas Jennings
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The most adventurous sounds are those that defy restrictive labels and easy categorization. Eclecticism has long been a mainstay of the jazz and pop worlds, where experimentation is encouraged and celebrated. But chamber music, with its roots in specific classical repertoire, has often been limited by advocates intent on simply keeping old traditions alive. Canada’s Gryphon Trio, one of North America’s top chamber ensembles, is committed to changing that.
Formed in 1993, the Trio—cellist Roman Borys, pianist Jamie Parker and violinist Annalee Patipatanakoon—began pushing the boundaries for chamber music by commissioning and performing new works from both established and emerging composers. Its multimedia production of Christos Hatzis’s Constantinople, took the Gryphons deep into cross-cultural terrain. Set at the crossroads of East and West, Constantinople brought the Trio together with Arabic singer Maryem Hassan Tollar and soprano Patricia O’Callaghan in acclaimed performances across North America and at London’s Royal Opera
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Paul Quarrington - Paul Quarrington: The Songs |
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Written by Nicholas Jennings
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Tags: 2010 | Earl and the Pearls | Gordon Lightfoot | Liner Notes | Murrary McLauchlan | Paul Quarrington | Quarrington Worthy | The Songs | Willie P. Bennett It’s the inevitable fate of a multi-faceted artist as ridiculously talented as Paul Quarrington that one creative field should overshadow the others. In Paul’s case, his musical career was rudely hijacked by his literary success. Long before the awards for fiction, humour and screenplays, Paul was a musician—and an extremely good one. He played bass and sang in the eccentric cult-rock band Joe Hall & the Continental Drift, a band his guitarist brother Tony once described as “an acquired taste that no one acquired.” He wrote songs, played guitar and sang with lifelong friend Martin Worthy in the underrated folk duo Quarrington Worthy—even scoring a number one hit in 1980 with “Baby and the Blues.” Most recently, he fronted Porkbelly Futures, a thinking-person’s bar band that plays a rootsy mix of country-blues, or what Paul liked to call “red-eyed soul.” Paul wrote some memorable material with the Porkbellies, songs like “Gladstone Hotel,” “Sweet Daddy,” “You Gotta Love a Train” and “Sad Old Love Affair,” all literate, hilarious and touching tales about life, boyhood heroes and the workings of the human heart. Music gave Paul a forum that was direct, succinct and visceral, and he loved the rush of performing and the immediate connection with his audience. |
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The Ugly Ducklings – Too Much Too Soon |
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Written by Nicholas Jennings
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Tags: 1960s | Liner Notes | The Ugly Ducklings | Too Much Too Soon | Yorkville On a spring night in 1965, a warm breeze blew along Toronto’s Yorkville Avenue, carrying with it a strange mixture of scents: rich coffee, pungent marijuana and noxious automobile exhaust. Cars crawled along the one-way street between Bay and Avenue Road, past sidewalks filled with teenagers in Beatlecuts and miniskirts. Some sat on café patios, others strolled along the tree-lined boulevard or hung out on doorsteps. Boys watching girls watching boys.
Like flowers in a hothouse, the musicians in Yorkville thrived on the responses of those who flocked to hear them. There was literally something for everyone: the traditional jazz of Jim McHarg & his Metro Stompers at the Penny Farthing, the delicate ballads of Joni Mitchell at the New Gate of Cleve, the blues folk of John Kay at the Half Beat and the stirring songs of Gordon Lightfoot at the Riverboat.
Meanwhile, the new pop sound had infiltrated the village, with British-influenced bands everywhere: Jack London & the Sparrows at the Café El Patio, Dee & the Yeomen up at the Night Owl and the hard-rocking Ugly Ducklings
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Adrian Miller – Rude Boy on the Bus |
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Written by Nicholas Jennings
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Tags: 20th Century Rebels | Adrian Miller | Desmond Dekker | Devon Martin | Don Drummond | Elvis Costello | Jackie Mittoo | Jamaican music | Jerry Brown | Johnny Osbourne | Leroy Sibbles | Liner Notes | Malton | Prince Buster | Roscoe Christie | Rude Boy on the Bus | ska music | Stranger Cole | Summer Records | The Clash | The English Beat | The Specials | Toots Hibbert | Toronto | U-Roy | Willie Williams For some people, ska music died with the passing of Britain’s two-tone movement in the 1980s. But they only knew it as a post-punk dance craze anyway. As Jamaica’s peppy precursor to reggae, pioneered by legends like Jackie Mittoo, Don Drummond and Prince Buster, ska has a long and vibrant history whose influence still reverberates today.
In England, the ska banner was first held high by Desmond Dekker, a Jamaican singer whose songs “007 (Shanty Town)” and the classic “The Israelites” sent syncopated shock waves across radioland in the 1970s. By the end of the decade, ska was bubbling up big time in Old Blighty, with two-toners The Specials and The English Beat opening for the likes of Elvis Costello and The Clash.
Into those heady days stepped Adrian Miller, Mr. Rude Boy himself, a young Jamaican
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