Information/Write-up
Lynne McNeil was one of those rare artists whose voice could move seamlessly between the intimacy of jazz phrasing and the clarity of pop melody, a singer whose warmth, discipline, and effortless sense of musicality made her a beloved figure across Canada’s jazz and studio scene. Based for most of her life in Vancouver, she first rose to national prominence as one of the two vocalists in Hagood Hardy & The Montage, sharing the spotlight with Stephanie Taylor. Together they embodied the refined, quietly radiant sound of Canadian soft jazz at the dawn of the 1970s — a sound that merged urban sophistication with emotional understatement.
Her first recording with the group, Hagood Hardy & The Montage (CBC Radio Canada LM-81, 1970), remains one of the rarest and most exquisite records ever pressed under the CBC LM series. Hardy’s crystalline vibraphone glided above supple rhythm work by Gary White and Dave Lewis, while McNeil’s silvery alto intertwined with Taylor’s harmonies on “Scarborough Fair,” “Hideaway,” and “You.” The result was as luminous as it was understated, a Canadian counterpart to the polished light-jazz fusion emerging in Los Angeles — but years ahead of its time. McNeil’s presence gave Hardy’s arrangements a human warmth: elegant, articulate, yet deeply felt.
When Hardy reassembled the group for their 1972 follow-up Montage (GRT 9230-1012), McNeil returned, this time contributing one of her own compositions, “My Love.” Surrounded by guitarist Bill Bridges, bassist Rick Homme, drummer Dave Lewis, and Taylor on co-lead vocals, McNeil helped to expand the group’s reach beyond jazz circles and into the realm of smooth pop sophistication. The album, with its delicate covers of “Baby I’m a Want You,” “How Insensitive,” and “Cast Your Fate to the Wind,” epitomized the polished, cosmopolitan Toronto sound of the early ’70s — a confluence of jazz technique, studio precision, and pop accessibility that Hardy and his collaborators had perfected.
Following her tenure with Hardy, McNeil continued her recording career as a solo artist. In 1974, she released the single “Guilty” b/w “If I Give My Heart to You” on United Artists (UAXW 577X) — a finely crafted pop ballad praised by RPM Weekly for its lush production and smooth vocal delivery. The single marked her debut under her own name and showcased her ability to bridge jazz sophistication with radio-friendly accessibility.
By the mid-1970s, McNeil was also working regularly in Toronto’s studio circuit, contributing background and lead vocals to recording sessions across genres. In 1977, she appeared on Vic Franklyn’s album Friends (Quality 2058-097), recorded at Phase One Studios in Toronto. There she performed alongside Tom Szczesniak, Doug Mallory, Steve Kennedy, Bob Mann, Dennis Pendrith, and Al Wold — a lineup that underscored her standing among Canada’s top session musicians.
Beyond her studio work, McNeil’s live career flourished. She performed with The Johnny Burt Society, recorded for the CBC, and became the featured vocalist with Dal Richards’s orchestra, a role she held for an astonishing 48 years until her retirement. Known for her professionalism and unfailing good humor, she was a fixture of Vancouver’s club and concert scene, her presence as natural onstage as it was behind a microphone in the studio.
McNeil’s studio experience extended well beyond jazz and pop: she recorded commercial jingles, radio spots, and promotional material during the heyday of Canadian advertising’s “golden sound.” One such session, an impromptu visit to Hagood Hardy’s studio, led to her singing a Bell Canada commercial that became a national classic. “It took me five minutes,” she recalled, “and they ran it for fifteen years.” Her rendition of Are You Lonesome Tonight for that campaign would later become a staple of her live sets, which she introduced with characteristic wit: “Ladies and gentlemen, I had a bigger hit on this tune than Elvis.”
In 1973, she appeared on Easy Songs With Guitar (CBC LM-160), recorded in Vancouver — a refined vocal jazz session that revealed her natural phrasing, tonal control, and relaxed sense of mood. The recording captured McNeil’s ability to make even the most straightforward material glow with sophistication and warmth, her voice framed by understated guitar accompaniment and spacious CBC production. More than a decade later, she released I Did It!... My Way (Hollyberry Records HR-1001, 1985), a showcase of both her interpretive depth and instrumental sensitivity. The album paired her smooth vocals and guitar with a collection of jazz and pop standards — from “Ragtime Annie” and “Ode to Billy Joe” to “Lover Man” and “Lush Life” — delivered with an unaffected honesty that made the record feel both timeless and deeply personal.
In later years, McNeil became affectionately known as “The Christmas Lady,” a title that grew out of her first seasonal album — a monumental personal project that took seven years to complete. She recorded five hours every Friday, layering more than a thousand vocal tracks, writing, arranging, and performing every part herself. Her engineer, Ron Czar, began greeting her studio arrivals, sleigh bells in hand, with “Here comes the Christmas Lady,” and the nickname stayed. Among her recordings, her heartfelt version of Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas was especially dear to her; the song’s composer, Hugh Martin, wrote to tell her he was “glad he’d lived long enough to hear someone do his tune the way I had done it.”
Lynne McNeil’s artistry was defined by her authenticity — a performer equally at home in a jazz club, a broadcast studio, or the quiet intimacy of her own recordings. Her long collaboration with Hagood Hardy & The Montage placed her at the center of a creative moment that blended jazz sophistication with Canadian lyricism, and her later work carried that same grace into every genre she touched. From the luminous harmonies of Montage to her final role as “The Christmas Lady,” McNeil’s voice remains an enduring presence: poised, generous, and full of light — the sound of a lifetime spent making music with heart.
-Robert Williston
No Comments