Timoon, Adam
Websites:
No
Origin:
Toronto, Ontario, 🇨🇦
Biography:
Adam Timoon is the best one-man show in town.” With that line from the Toronto Star in June 1963, critic Dave Caplan captured the warm-toned voice and quick-witted personality that made Timoon a favourite of Toronto club audiences for nearly a decade. A full-bodied singer with clear interpretive inflections, Timoon blended humour, spontaneous remarks, and a soul-inflected delivery that gave even familiar material a fresh impact. His long-running residency at the Seaway Hotel’s Las Vegas Room — affectionately rebranded “Adam’s Inn” — showcased his ability to build an entire evening of entertainment around a single performer.
Instrumentally, Timoon was equally impressive. A highly accomplished player of both twelve-string acoustic and electric guitar, he brought surprising agility to repertory ranging from Ernesto Lecuona to Mikis Theodorakis. His technique is highlighted on album centrepieces such as ‘Flight of the Bumblebee,’ ‘Forbidden Games,’ ‘Zorba the Greek,’ and ‘Malaguena.’ Humour also played a central role: ‘The Cars,’ written with his wife Carol, became his most requested comedic song, while his Russian retelling of ‘Red Riding Hood’ earned nightly laughs.
The album captures Timoon’s trademark audience rapport — spontaneous, unscripted, and rooted in topical humour. Crowd participation was welcomed, provided listeners could handle the unpredictable turns of a Timoon show. As Caplan noted, the LP is the kind of record played repeatedly “with renewed anticipation of every listening,” representing a performer whose complete entertainer status was recognized well beyond Toronto's club circuit.