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Bruce Cockburn: Kicking at the Darkness
For 40 years, this Canadian musical legend has been capturing in song the essence of human experience – while fiercely striving to make it better.
by Nicholas Jennings
One of Canada’s finest artists, Bruce Cockburn has enjoyed an illustrious career shaped by politics, spirituality, and musical diversity. His remarkable journey has seen him embrace folk, jazz, rock, and worldbeat styles while travelling to such far-flung places as Guatemala, Mali, Mozambique, and Nepal, and writing memorable songs about his ever-expanding world of wonders. “My job,” he explains, “is to try and trap the spirit of things in the scratches of pen on paper and the pulling of notes out of metal.”
That scratching and pulling has earned Cockburn high praise as an exceptional songwriter and a revered guitarist. His songs of romance, protest, and spiritual discovery are among the best to have emerged from Canada over the last 40 years. His guitar playing, both acoustic and electric, has placed him in the company of the world’s top instrumentalists. And he remains deeply respected for his activism on issues from native rights and land mines to the environment and Third World debt, working for organizations such as Oxfam, Amnesty International, Doctors Without Borders, and Friends of the Earth.
Throughout his career, Cockburn has deftly captured the joy, pain, fear, and faith of human experience in song. Whether singing about retreating to the country or going up against chaos, tackling imperialist lies or embracing ecclesiastical truths, he has always expressed a tough yet hopeful stance: to kick at the darkness till it bleeds daylight. “We can’t settle for things as they are,” he once warned. “If you don’t tackle the problems, they’re going to get worse.”
For his many achievements, the Ottawa-born artist has been honoured with 12 Juno Awards, an induction into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, and a Governor General’s Performing Arts Award, and has been made an Officer of the Order of Canada. But he never rests on his laurels. “I’d rather think about what I’m going to do next,” says Cockburn. “My models for graceful aging are guys like John Lee Hooker and Mississippi John Hurt, who never stop working till they drop, as I fully expect to be doing, and just getting better as musicians and as human beings.”
His commitment to growth has made Bruce Cockburn both an exemplary citizen and a legendary artist whose prized songbook will be celebrated for many years to come.
Music journalist and historian Nicholas Jennings is the author of the national best-seller Before the Gold Rush: Flashbacks to the Dawn of the Canadian Sound.
Few recording artists are as creative and prolific as Bruce Cockburn. Since his self-titled debut in 1970, the Canadian singer-songwriter has issued a steady stream of acclaimed albums every couple of years. But that output suddenly ran dry in 2011 following the release of Small Source of Comfort. There were good reasons for the drought. For one thing, Cockburn became a father again with the birth of his daughter Iona. Then there was the publication of his 2014 memoir Rumours of Glory.
“I didn’t write any songs until after the book was published because all my creative energy had gone into three years of writing it,” Cockburn explains, from his home in San Francisco. “There was simply nothing left to write songs with. As soon as the book was put to bed, I started asking myself whether I was ever going to be a songwriter again.”
Such doubt was new to the man who’s rarely been at a loss for words as he’s distilled political views, spiritual revelations and personal experiences into some of popular music’s most compelling songs. What spurred Cockburn back into songwriting was an invitation to contribute a song to a documentary film about the late, seminal Canadian poet Al Purdy and he was off to the races.
Bone On Bone, Cockburn’s 33rd album, arrives with 11 new songs, including “3 Al Purdys,” a brilliant, six-minute epic that pays tribute to Purdy’s poetry. Cockburn explains its genesis: “I went out and got Purdy’s collected works, which is an incredible book. Then I had this vision of a homeless guy who is obsessed with Purdy’s poetry, and he’s ranting it on the street. The song is written in the voice of that character. The chorus goes, ‘I’ll give you three Al Purdys for a twenty dollar bill.’ Here’s this grey-haired dude, coat tails flapping in the wind, being mistaken for the sort of addled ranters you run into on the street—except he’s not really ranting, he’s reciting Al Purdy. The spoken word parts of the track are excerpts from Purdy’s poems. After that, once the ice was broken, the songs just started coming.”
Cockburn’s rugged fingerpicking style on the Dobro perfectly matches Purdy’s plainspoken words and the grizzled voice of his street character. A similar guitar style can be heard on two of the next songs Cockburn wrote, the gospel-like “Jesus Train,” and “Café Society,” a bluesy number about people who gather at his local coffee shop to sip their java and talk about the state of the world.
There’s a prevalent urgency and anxious tone to much of the album, which Cockburn attributes to living in America during the Trump era. But, more than anything, Bone on Bone amounts to the deepest expression of Cockburn’s spiritual concerns to date. The 12-time Juno winner and Canadian Music Hall of Fame inductee turned away from traditional Christianity in the mid-1970s toward a quest for the more all-inclusive mysticism he documents in his memoir. And it’s that kind of spirituality that figures prominently in “Jesus Train” and “Twelve Gates to the City.” In “Looking and Waiting,” Cockburn sings of “scanning the skies for a beacon” from the divine.
“It’s a song of faith and frustration,” says Cockburn of the latter. “…Tired of looking in from the outside. My MO has always been to be aware of the divine…that dimension…always dealing with being stuck in a kind of observer’s position with respect to all that. I know it’s there. I don’t really see as faith so much as knowledge. Others may have different ideas about those things, but for me, I don’t have to struggle to believe in God, or the notion that God cares what happens to me. But I do have to struggle with being in a conscious, intentional relationship. That underlies a lot of these songs.”
“Forty Years in the Wilderness” ranks alongside “Pacing the Cage” or “All the Diamonds” as one of Cockburn’s most starkly beautiful folk songs. “There have been so many times in my life when an invitation has come from somewhere…the cosmos…the divine…to step out of the familiar into something new. I’ve found it’s best to listen for, and follow these promptings. The song is really about that. You can stay with what you know or you can pack your bag and go where you’re called, even if it seems weird…even if you can’t see why or where you’ll end up.”
“Forty Years in the Wilderness” is one of several songs that feature a number of singers from the church Cockburn frequents, for the sake of convenience referred to in the album credits as the San Francisco Lighthouse “Chorus.” “The music was one of the enticements that drew me to SF Lighthouse. As I found myself becoming one of the regulars there, and got to know the people, I felt that I really wanted all these great singers, who were now becoming friends, to be on the album. They were kind enough to say yes!” Among other songs, they contribute call-and-response vocals to the stirring “Stab at Matter.” Other guests on the album include singer-songwriters Ruby Amanfu, Mary Gauthier, and Brandon Robert Young, along with bassist Roberto Occhipinti, and Julie Wolf, who plays accordion on “3 Al Purdys” and sings with the folks from Lighthouse, together with LA songwriter Tamara Silvera.
Produced by Colin Linden, Cockburn’s longtime collaborator, the album is built around the musicianship of Cockburn on guitar and the core accompaniment of bassist John Dymond and drummer Gary Craig. Also very much part of the sound is the accordion playing of Cockburn’s nephew John Aaron Cockburn and the solos of noted fluegelhorn player Ron Miles (check out his stunning work on the cascading “Mon Chemin,” for example).
Two other songs should be noted. The environmental warning “False River” came about at the invitation of Yvonne Bloomer, the poet laureate of Victoria, British Columbia. Bloomer was seeking a poem about the controversial Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline. “Pipelines have their own perils that we’re all aware of,” says Cockburn, “so I started writing what was meant to be a spoken-word piece with a rhythm to it. But it evolved very quickly into a song.”
“States I’m In,” which opens the album, conjures up feelings of mystery and dread. “It’s literally a ‘dark night of the soul’ kind of song,” Cockburn explains, “as it starts with sunset and ends with dawn. It passes through the night. The song is about illusion and self-delusion, looking at the tricks you play on yourself.” He adds: “Maybe it’s also a play on words about me living in the States.”
Cockburn, who won the inaugural People’s Voice Award at the Folk Alliance International conference in February and will be inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in September, continues to find inspiration in the world around him and channel those ideas into songs. “My job is to try and trap the spirits of things in the scratches of pen on paper and the pulling of notes out of metal,” he once noted. More than forty years after embarking on his singer-songwriting career, Cockburn keeps kicking at the darkness so that it might bleed daylight. ~ Nicholas Jennings, Bernie Finkelstein & Bruce Cockburn
237 tracks
Going to the Country
Thoughts on a Rainy Afternoon
Going to the Country
Thoughts on a Rainy Afternoon
Together Alone
The Bicycle Trip
The Thirteenth Mountain
Musical Friends
Change Your Mind
Man of a Thousand Faces
Spring Song
Keep It Open
10 tracks
Happy Good Morning Blues
Let Us Go Laughing
Love Song
One Day I Walk
Golden Serpent Blues
High Winds White Sky
You Point to the Sky
Life's Mistress
Ting the Cauldron
Shining Mountain
10 tracks
My Lady and My Lord
Feet Fall on the Road
Fall
Sunwheel Dance
Up On the Hillside
Life Will Open
It's Going Down Slow
When the Sun Falls
He Came from the Mountain
Dialogue With the Devil (or "Why Don't We Celebrate")
Up On the Hillside
Feet Fell On The Road
10 tracks
Foxglove
You Don’t Have to Play the Horses
The Blues got the World
Mama Just Wants to Barrelhouse all Night Long
Islands in a Black Sky
Clocks Don't Bring Tomorrow - Knives Don't Bring Good News
When the Sun Goes Nova
Déjà Vu
Lightstorm
God Bless the Children
Mama Just Wants to Barrelhouse All Night Long
When the Sun Goes Nova
9 tracks
All the Diamonds in the World
Salt, Sun and Time
Don't Have to Tell You Why
Stained Glass
Rouler Sa Bosse
Never So Free
Seeds on the Wind
It Won't be Long
Christmas Song
10 tracks
Hand-dancing
January in the Halifax Airport Lounge
Starwheel
Lament for the Last Days
Joy Will Find a Way
Burn
Skylarking
A Long-time-love song
A Life Story
Arrows of Light
10 tracks
Lord Of The Starfields
Vagabondage
In The Falling Dark
Little Seahorse
Water Into Wine
Silver Wheels
Giftbearer
Gavin's Woodpile
I'm Gonna Fly Some Day
Festival Of Friends
Showing 10 of 17 tracks
The Pipes, The Pipes
Starwheel
Never So Free
Deer Dancing Round a Broken Mirror
Homme Brûlant
Free to Be
Mama Just Wants to Barrelhouse All Night Long
Cader Idris
Arrows of Light
One Day I Walk
I'm Gonna Fly Someday
Giftbearer
10 tracks
Rainfall
A Montreal Song
Outside a Broken Phone Booth With Money in My Hand
Prenons La Mer
Red Ships Take Off in the Distance
Laughter
Bright Sky
Feast of Fools
Can I Go With You
Nanzen Ji
Creation Dream
Hills of Morning
Badlands Flasback
Northern Lights
After the Rain
Wondering Where the Lions Are
Incandescent Blue
No Footprints
Wondering Where the Lions Are
Rainfall
10 tracks
Grim Travellers
Rumours of Glory
More not More
You Get Bigger As You Go
What About the Bond
How I Spent My Fall Vacation
Guerilla Betrayed
Tokyo
Fascist Architecture
The Rose Above the Sky
Rumours of Glory
You Get Bigger As You Go
Tokyo
Incandescent Blue
9 tracks
You Pay Your Money and You Take Your Chance
The Strong One
All's Quiet on the Inner City Front
Radio Shoes
Wanna Go Walking
And We Dance
Justice
Broken Wheel
Loner
The Coldest Night of the Year
Joy Will Find a Way
9 tracks
The Trouble With Normal
Candy Man's Gone
Going Up Against Chaos
Hoop Dancer
Waiting for the Moon
Tropic Moon
Put Our Hearts Together
Civilization and its Discontents
Planet of the Clowns
If I Had a Rocket Launcher
Maybe the Poet
Lovers in a Dangerous Time
Sahara Gold
9 tracks
Lovers in a Dangerous Time
Maybe the Poet
Sahara Gold
Making Contact
Peggy's Kitchen Wall
To Raise the Morning Star
Nicaragua
If I Had a Rocket Launcher
Dust and Diesel
Call it Democracy
Dancing in Paradise
Showing 10 of 11 tracks
If a Tree Falls
Shipwrecked at the Stable Door
Gospel of Bondage
Don't Feel Your Touch
Tibetan Side of Town
Understanding Nothing
Where the Death Squad Lives
Radium Rain
Pangs of Love
The Gift
If a Tree Falls
The Gift
Don't Feel Your Touch
Understanding Nothing
Shipwrecked at the Stable Door
Anything Can Happen
Showing 10 of 15 tracks
Adeste Fidelis
Early On One Christmas Morn
O Little Town Of Bethlehem
Riu Riu Chiu
I Saw Three Ships
Down In Yon Forest
Les Anges Dans Nos Champagnes
Go Tell It On The Mountain
Shepherds
Silent Night
Showing 10 of 12 tracks
My Beat
Tokyo
The Coldest Night Of The Year
Call It Democracy
Waiting For A Miracle
If A Tree Falls
A Dream Like Mine
Listen
Night Train
Pacing The Cage
2 tracks
Bardo Rush
Easter
Showing 10 of 16 tracks
Juan Carlos Theme
Waterwalker Theme
Avalon, My Hometown
Wise Users
Going Down the Road
The Whole Night Sky (Alternate Version)
Grinning Moon
Song For Touring Around the Stars
Come Down Healing
Mystery Walk
Showing 10 of 12 tracks
On a Roll
Orders
Push Comes to Shove
Colin Went Down to the Water
Into the Now
Us All
To Keep the World We Know
King of the Bolero
When the Spirit Walks in the Room
Haiku (Instrumental)
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