Artist / Band
Biography
A child of Maritime stock on both sides of his family, Stan Rogers was born in Hamilton, Ont. on November 29, 1949. He grew to be a big man-six feet four-built like a fire truck, and possessed of a voice that rumbled from his toes. He could bluff and bellow yet was at heart a poet and intellect who would, often as not, sneak away from a gathering to curl up with a book. He made friends and enemies easily, gaining the former for life and often, in time, converting the latter.
He became a songwriter too, working as a rock bassist while still a teenager and later embracing the folk idiom. After a few years as a more-or-less conventional folkie songwriter, he discovered his real gift. After some persuasion by his Aunt June in Canso Nova Scotia, he began to write songs about his familial home…his roots. Those early songs found their way on to Stan’s first album, Fogarty’s Cove, and he was on his way. From that point forward, Stan’s best writing was about the Canadian experience. His songs gave a new voice to ordinary folks who worked the fisheries, mines and farms of this vast country.
Stan was a passionate Canadian partisan, and much of his short creative life was taken up with song cycles that chronicled the East, the Plains, the West and finally the Great Lakes and Ontario. It was a natural progression for a wanderer…to scan a continent and finally return to write of the wonders of home. He was always on the road pursuing his dream of establishing a national identity for Canadian songwriting. It was a dream fulfilled; through his constant soaring, dynamic performances, and brilliant songs, he was known throughout most of the English-speaking folk music world.
Stan died in a fire on Air Canada flight 797 at Cincinnati, Ohio airport on June 2nd, 1983. He was returning from a folk festival in Kerrville, Texas. Memorials and honours were numerous in the months that followed and in May, 1984 he was posthumously awarded the Diplôme d’Honneur by the Canadian Conference of the Arts.
His music continues to amaze, amuse and inspire people from all walks of life. It has appeared in several poetry anthologies, been used in films, plays and musicals, and has been referred to as “one of the touchstones of modern Canadian history.”
-Emily Friedman
40 tracks
Seven Years Along
Fat Girl Rag
Three Pennies
Past Fifty
Guysborough Train
Showing 10 of 12 tracks
Watching The Apples Grow
Forty-Five Years
Fogarty's Cove
The Maid on the Shore
Barrett's Privateers
Fisherman's Warf
Rawdon Hills
Plenty of Hornpipe
The Wreck of the Athens Queen
Make and Break Harbour
10 tracks
Dark Eyed Molly (Archie Fisher)
Oh No, Not I
Second Effort
Bluenose
The Jeannie C.
So Blue
Front Runner
Song of the Candle
Try Like the Devil
Turnaround
10 tracks
Northwest Passage
The Field Behind the Plow
Night Guard
Working Joe
You Can't Stay Here
The Idiot
Lies
Canol Road
Free in the Harbour
California
Harris and the Mare by John Gavin Douglas
Harris and the Mare (Studio recording of the song)
The Sisters by Silver Donald Cameron
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