This moment in history! Vocal ANALYSIS of Gordon Lightfoot's "Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 23 жов 2023
  • I'm a major history buff, but never knew the story of the "Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" until my patrons got this on my list. I'm so glad to return back to Gordon Lightfoot, especially considering his passing this year. This song has so much meaning, I can only hope to glean!
    Join professional opera singer Elizabeth Zharoff, as she listens to Gordon Lightfoot performing "Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" for the first time.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Written and Performed by Gordon Lightfoot
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    I definitely recommend watching the original video without interruptions. Here's the link: • Gordon Lightfoot - Wre...
    Show Gordon Lightfoot some love: / @gordonlightfootofficial
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    WE HAVE MERCH! Check-out the full line-up here: thecharismaticmerch.com
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    🎧 Elizabeth’s favorite headphones 🎧 : imp.i114863.net/zayoEM
    Music Gear Questions? 🎤 See my list of recommendations: imp.i114863.net/yRyGoV
    WANT MY CHAIR? I don’t blame you…and here’s a link to make it even sweeter:
    secretlab.co/?rfsn=4692958.b2...
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    🎙️Podcast: thecharismaticvoice.com/podcast/
    🌐Website: thecharismaticvoice.com
    📸Instagram: / thecharismaticvoice
    🧑‍🤝‍🧑Patreon: / thecharismaticvoice
    📺Twitch: / thecharismaticvoice
    📰Our FREE Newsletter: eepurl.com/gz7Z_z
    -------------------------------------COURSES------------------------------------------
    🎵MUSIC APPRECIATION COURSE🎵
    Want to understand how to listen to and appreciate music more? My Music Appreciation course is now live. Take a look at thecharismaticvoice.com
    🎶DEMYSTIFYING SINGING🎶
    My intensive 7-week course on vocal foundations includes weekly group sessions and private lessons. Learn more at thecharismaticvoice.com.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Elizabeth Zharoff is an international opera singer and voice coach, with 3 degrees in voice, opera, and music production. She's performed in 18 languages throughout major venues in Europe, America, and Asia. Currently based somewhere between Los Angeles and Tucson, Arizona, Elizabeth spends her days researching voice, singing, teaching, writing music, and recording TONS. She also plays Diablo and Dungeons & Dragons.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    We have a sister channel: THE SINGING HOLE. Join us there to examine how ordinary creatures create extraordinary sounds. / @thesinginghole
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
    Non-profit, educational, or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    #gordonlightfoot #Reaction #TheCharismaticVoice
    -------------
  • Ігри

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,1 тис.

  • @michaelmaltzer5426
    @michaelmaltzer5426 6 місяців тому +3674

    Fun fact, every year the Mariner’s Church of Detroit rings the bell one time for each sailor who died. But this past year, they rang the bell one extra time… in honor of this man and his contribution to honoring that tragic day

    • @duckylove3930
      @duckylove3930 6 місяців тому +138

      Didn’t know that, very touching!

    • @lydibugmuzik
      @lydibugmuzik 6 місяців тому +70

      Oh no! I’m only finding out that he died because of your comment. How did I miss the news? 😢

    • @RussMullins
      @RussMullins 6 місяців тому +60

      how beautiful.

    • @martinedwards2004
      @martinedwards2004 6 місяців тому +62

      @@lydibugmuzikHe died last May 1st.

    • @STRAKAZulu
      @STRAKAZulu 6 місяців тому +34

      Didn’t know that. Thank you.🥲

  • @Gerhardium
    @Gerhardium 6 місяців тому +1133

    My Dad was a naval officer during WW2. When this song was first on the radio we were in the car and shortly after the line "Does anyone know where the love of god goes" Dad pulled over and was quiet for a moment then he said "the weather was worse than the fighting: I never felt helpless in combat but when you see those big waves coming at your little ship it feels like a helpless eternity."

    • @mattstarkey2152
      @mattstarkey2152 6 місяців тому +71

      One of the greatest lines ever written!

    • @user-gl5dq2dg1j
      @user-gl5dq2dg1j 6 місяців тому +13

      Did he sail with Halsey through a couple of typhoons or was he in either the Aleutians or North Atlantic?

    • @kennyl9419
      @kennyl9419 6 місяців тому +43

      I was in the Navy also. Weather was my biggest concern too.

    • @davidbordonaro1631
      @davidbordonaro1631 6 місяців тому +41

      I was navy too - thought the ship was going down a few times . have not been on a boat since !

    • @torgothegrey3567
      @torgothegrey3567 6 місяців тому +12

      Was he in Typhoon Cobra and/or Viper with Halsey?

  • @njaco08
    @njaco08 6 місяців тому +488

    "Does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the minutes to hours?" One of the greatest lines ever written in music. This is a prime and perfect example of songwriting. Tell a story, evoke an emotion and make it understandable. Love this song. When Gordon passed, the Detroit church bell rang 29 times then rang a 30th for Gord.

    • @MrRdh567
      @MrRdh567 6 місяців тому +22

      @jnaco08--- " I can see her lying there in her satin dress in a room where you do won't you won't confess" Love this line from Sundown. Gordon Lightfoot is a legend.

    • @deniswilliams2212
      @deniswilliams2212 5 місяців тому +4

      Having almost drowned 2x let me tell you how true that is 💔

    • @farmerryan182
      @farmerryan182 5 місяців тому +1

      It was taken from a news paper article

    • @justincase9056
      @justincase9056 5 місяців тому +4

      This line strikes the heart of every one of us who has ever worked the sea in rough weather

    • @michaelgallagher3640
      @michaelgallagher3640 4 місяці тому +2

      ​@@farmerryan182...That was how people got there news back then.🤓

  • @othgmark1
    @othgmark1 2 місяці тому +141

    Lightfoot didn't just tell the story he painted the whole damn picture. Nobody tells a story better in a song. Simply an incredible song by an amazing artist.

    • @BradSimsCPT
      @BradSimsCPT Місяць тому +4

      Amen. Perhaps a close second is Harry Chapin.

    • @vaderv
      @vaderv 3 дні тому

      Exactly.

    • @flon57
      @flon57 2 дні тому

      🇨🇦 GOAT imo.

  • @chriso6719
    @chriso6719 6 місяців тому +936

    Gordon donated all proceeds from this song to the families of the 29 men lost on the Edmund Fitzgerald.

    • @joergojschaefer3521
      @joergojschaefer3521 6 місяців тому +18

      Unfortunate ship, had a total of five collisions before its last voyage! Not the best ship to get on board I think... 😟🙏

    • @MikeBarnett1776
      @MikeBarnett1776 6 місяців тому +24

      @@joergojschaefer3521 the Fitz had a rather unlucky history, especially ironic considering she was commissioned by a life insurance company.

    • @joergojschaefer3521
      @joergojschaefer3521 6 місяців тому +11

      😳

    • @thing_under_the_stairs
      @thing_under_the_stairs 6 місяців тому +66

      @@MikeBarnett1776 She was actually considered one of the best ships to work on by most of the people who had sailed on her. She had better cabins and food than most lake freighters, and her senior crews were usually the most experienced sailors available. Only in her last couple of seasons, when she was in need of some major repairs (which were scheduled right after her last, fatal trip across the Lakes!) and the company had increased the amount of ore she was carrying past what she was designed for, did anyone mention any concerns about her safety. Yes, she'd had a few minor mishaps, but believe me, every ship on the Lakes has had a scrape or two, and they're built to withstand them.

    • @dcchiasson5991
      @dcchiasson5991 6 місяців тому +62

      It was also reported that scholarships were established for the children of the victims, and that the donation was included in his will so any future proceeds will also go to the families.

  • @JeffOfTheMountains
    @JeffOfTheMountains 6 місяців тому +571

    Fun Fact: Gordon Lightfoot struggled with writing this song, wanting to avoid inaccuracies. Eventually his guitarist Terry Clements told him to "just tell a story". Gordon heeded his advice, and in ONE TAKE in a darkened studio, the lyrics were produced. The actual song took at least two takes.

    • @mikevandenboom5958
      @mikevandenboom5958 6 місяців тому +22

      Yeh struggling for 2 weeks I Think that was all it took him to write this gem. (I could be wrong)
      I know he wrote the Railroad Trilogy in a hurry for the CBC. That also is an amazing piece of songwriting.

    • @campingalan
      @campingalan 6 місяців тому +14

      Wow. What a fun anecdote!! It is amazing how many times I hear some version of these expkanations to write the world's iconic songs. It is very common that it took a song write like 10-15 minutes to write these songs that lived on for 50 years.

    • @JeffOfTheMountains
      @JeffOfTheMountains 6 місяців тому +10

      ​@@campingalanHere's another one for you: Céline Dion's song "Immortality" was written by Barry and Maurice Gibb (of the Bee Gees) in three minutes.

    • @fostercathead
      @fostercathead 6 місяців тому +11

      We are holding our own...

    • @royalbleu7406
      @royalbleu7406 6 місяців тому +9

      @@JeffOfTheMountains And here's another one. Handel wrote "The Messiah" in 24 days. Full orchestration, everything.

  • @chrishunter8114
    @chrishunter8114 Місяць тому +32

    The song gives me chills every time I hear it! As a 62 year old Canadian I appreciate you covering this song. Thank you!

    • @flon57
      @flon57 2 дні тому

      I remember this, I was 16, this seemed to really put him out there to the 🌎🌏🌍, as 🇨🇦, we knew of his genius all along

  • @StevenRitchey
    @StevenRitchey 6 місяців тому +182

    That line, "Does anyone know where the love fo God goes when the waves turn the minutes to hours, " for me is pure songwriting genius.

    • @davidcox8945
      @davidcox8945 5 місяців тому +1

      Facing the God delusion before death comes to us all

    • @idalily3810
      @idalily3810 4 місяці тому +5

      Another great line: And all that remains is the faces and the names of the wives and the sons and the daughters.

    • @Gerhardium
      @Gerhardium 3 місяці тому +1

      @@davidcox8945 "Delusion" is believing you know the answer to an unanswerable question regardless which side one takes.

    • @davidcox8945
      @davidcox8945 3 місяці тому

      @@Gerhardium the answer to the poet’s question is no

    • @davidcox8945
      @davidcox8945 3 місяці тому +1

      To the question ‘is there an immortal, omnipresent, omniscient Leprechaun?’, the answer is also no

  • @Mrburninbiomass
    @Mrburninbiomass 6 місяців тому +558

    To me the line “does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the minutes to hours” is one of the most haunting in music. Shivers EVERY time.

    • @johnandrews3568
      @johnandrews3568 6 місяців тому +33

      100 percent! IMO the most chilling lyric ever sung - particularly if you've spent any time around the Great Lakes in November.

    • @markgallagher1376
      @markgallagher1376 6 місяців тому +16

      Me too. I have always thought that was such a powerful line.

    • @charlesbennett6242
      @charlesbennett6242 6 місяців тому +5

      How one feels if you have gone overboard in such a storm and awaiting rescue. 😥

    • @lantose
      @lantose 6 місяців тому +8

      The story of how Gordon came up with the idea to cover the story in a song is very interesting too! It started after he read the newspaper article. It should come up quickly on a google search.

    • @jeanettegirosky7735
      @jeanettegirosky7735 6 місяців тому +25

      Got caught in a bad thunderstorm out in the trenches of Lake Erie...engine trouble.....18ft boot. We got it going but I learned what that line means. That was a LONG white knuckle ride back.

  • @PhasedTM
    @PhasedTM 6 місяців тому +292

    Rest In Peace Gordon - he passed away May 1, 2023. This song really tugs the heart strings. Every time.

    • @vaderv
      @vaderv 3 дні тому

      Since I was a kid too.

  • @wengere
    @wengere 3 місяці тому +68

    I grew up, and still live and work in the Cleveland area. About a year ago, one of my co-workers retired. I remember him telling us a story about when he graduated high school. He and his friend applied to Cleveland Cliffs to work on the freighters. He was rejected, but his friend was accepted. His friend was Bruce Hudson who went down on the Edmund Fitzgerald. He still has the rejection letter, and brought it in to show us. On a separate note, before my current job I worked at steel mill. One of my co-workers there also had a connection to the ship. His wife's uncle was on it when it went down. I have always loved this song, and Lightfoot's ability to tell such wonderful stories through his songs. Lightfoot became friends with Bruce's mother because of this song, and would visit her every time he was in the area until she passed.

    • @BarryHart-xo1oy
      @BarryHart-xo1oy Місяць тому +4

      That’s really amazing and wonderful-Lightfoot was a truly profound man.

    • @wolfranger5526
      @wolfranger5526 Місяць тому +2

      I also grew up in the Cleveland area so much history I still remember when I went to day camp at the science center and toured the William G Mather.

    • @gonepostal9101
      @gonepostal9101 6 днів тому +1

      One of our good family friends was Ernie Mell. Ernie was the Chief Porter on the Anderson. Ernie never talked much about that night, but when he did, you could see his eyes stare off to nowhere, like every moment had just happened.

  • @kevinL5425
    @kevinL5425 Місяць тому +3

    What gets me in this song is the wailing guitars. Not as in a shredding rock solo, but the constant eerie wailing of the rising and falling wind in a storm, with the drums providing the occasional thunder. It sets the perfect mood to accompany the lyrics.

  • @normanpearce7392
    @normanpearce7392 6 місяців тому +499

    This song resonates with me on a very personal level because I have my own Lake Superior sea story, from only five years after the Edmund Fitzgerald sank. I was in the US Coast Guard serving aboard the USCGC Sundew, a buoy tender and icebreaker much smaller than the Fitz, when we were called out on a search and rescue mission to try to find a man missing on Lake Superior during a similar storm in December of 1980. I was up all night navigating the ship from the Keweenaw Peninsula across the lake to Grand Marais, MN, through 20 to 25 foot seas to get to the area we were to search. This was long before GPS was invented, and our radar didn't help much that far from land in those seas, so my initial estimates of our position were not too accurate, landing me in hot water with my captain. Once I finally got a break in the morning and could leave the bridge, I couldn't sleep as I was woken up twice to go out on deck and help chip off the ice which had accumulated overnight. We had gained 4 inches of ice on the buoy deck and 8 inches on the forecastle which had to be removed by sledge hammer and axe handle to keep the ship from becoming unstable. To our surprise, we found the victim but, to no one's surprise, he was dead from hypothermia and probably had died before we made it out into the big lake from the upper entry of the Keweenaw Waterway near Houghton, MI. My seven years in the Coast Guard included three and a half years of sea duty on three different ships and this was probably the roughest night at sea I ever experienced.

    • @ginger7044
      @ginger7044 6 місяців тому +8

      ❤😢

    • @GreenJeepAdventures
      @GreenJeepAdventures 6 місяців тому +44

      Thank for your service. The Coast Guard deserves much more respect than you get, for you are in effect active duty non stop, not just times of war.
      Sorry you had to experience that.

    • @lydibugmuzik
      @lydibugmuzik 6 місяців тому +19

      That sounds terrifying! I’m thinking of all the ice that splashes up and freezes on lighthouses in the winter… to be out on a small ship is a whole other level. What was someone doing in the Lake that late it in the season? We’re they washed in from the shore? How tragic. Thank you for your service in the Coast Guard! I feel like members of the USCG don’t get enough recognition for all the work you do keeping people safe on our Great Lakes.

    • @snorelacks7069
      @snorelacks7069 6 місяців тому +16

      The Sundew is homeported in Duluth now.

    • @thing_under_the_stairs
      @thing_under_the_stairs 6 місяців тому +21

      Thank you for your good work and service. I've only sailed Superior on a freighter, and in bad weather, I wouldn't want to be in anything smaller! Imho, the Coast Guard are unsung heroes just for going out and doing what you do, when nobody else can or will.

  • @scrotube
    @scrotube 6 місяців тому +121

    Minnesota boy here - this song is one of the few that can make me cry. It doesn't matter how cheery, or serious I am, it instantly sucks my soul in and I empathise with the people involved. "Fellas it's been good to know ya" usually gets the first sob. One of the best story songs I've ever heard

    • @rolandgunslinger37
      @rolandgunslinger37 2 місяці тому +4

      When I see the choppy waters of Lake Michigan during a winter storm this song ALWAYS pops into my head. I've been to the Wisconsin Maritime Museum in my hometown numerous times and it always hits me how MANY WRECKS are on the Great Lakes. Most dangerous waters in the world.

    • @docshelley1969
      @docshelley1969 Місяць тому +3

      I served on a submarine, and this phrase still chillls me to the bone as I pictured the water pouring thru the hatch

  • @HeliRy
    @HeliRy 6 місяців тому +43

    Canada has blessed the world with three of the greatest musician poets in history. Two Gordons, and one Leonard.
    All leaving us with broken hearts in their passing.

    • @xyz-bz1fc
      @xyz-bz1fc 2 місяці тому +9

      the other 2 being Gord Downie and Leonard Cohen??

    • @haroldbrown6630
      @haroldbrown6630 Місяць тому +3

      Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, I think.

    • @MrCanadave
      @MrCanadave Місяць тому

      Don't forget Justin Bieber. @@haroldbrown6630

    • @wildwillie5408
      @wildwillie5408 26 днів тому +1

      ​​@@haroldbrown6630amen. Along with Rush they are Canada's best artists. No disrespect to GL but Neil is Canada's best in that category. It is worth mentioning too the the greatest musical poet period, BOB DYLAN, while not Canadian northern Minnesota isn't fat off

  • @frankw7266
    @frankw7266 6 місяців тому +114

    This song has/had a huge impact on many, but if you live, work, or play on the Great Lakes, it is on a whole different level.

    • @BailyC295
      @BailyC295 5 місяців тому +6

      🎶Lake Huron rolls, Superior sings In the rooms of her ice-water mansion🎶
      🎶Old Michigan steams like a young man’s dreams, the islands and bays are for sportsman🎶
      🎶And farther below, Lake Ontario takes in what Lake Erie can send her🎶

    • @ronnie_5150
      @ronnie_5150 5 місяців тому +6

      @frankw - So true. I grew up in the Southern Ontario great lakes area. People that are not familiar with the area don't realize the size of these lakes. They get storms that rival the kinds of storms seen on the open ocean.

    • @Scott_fonz81
      @Scott_fonz81 5 місяців тому +9

      Lake Erie almost took my life...don't underestimate its power 🙏

    • @Brighid45
      @Brighid45 5 місяців тому +7

      Yes, well said. Many people in the Great Lakes have family or friends who work on the freighters as well, and know the dangers of the Lakes. This was such a profound tragedy. The weather had been strange that week, warm and humid--completely out of character for Halloween, when most of the time the kids are wearing winter coats over their costumes and walking in the first snows. A big front pushed through with high winds, we felt it all the way down by the Ohio border. When the news came in about the Eddy Fitz, people were in shock for days. Gordon created a masterpiece in honor of 'that good ship and true' and her crew.

    • @ronnie_5150
      @ronnie_5150 5 місяців тому +3

      @@Brighid45 💯 Such a beautiful, yet haunting song.

  • @tigioma3761
    @tigioma3761 6 місяців тому +142

    Anyone listening to the radio in the mid-1970's heard this song no matter if you were on the pop, country, or adult contemporary station. It was played on all of them. I was 9 when the Edmund Fitzgerald sank and 10 when Lightfoot released his tribute. It's not until I was much older that I realized the significance of the song to memorialize the loss to the wider public. What a wonderful tribute to Gordon Lightfoot when the Maritime Cathedral in Detroit MI rang its bells 29 times to once again, honor those sailors lost...plus 1 more to honor Lightfoot.
    This song is a masterpiece. RIP G.L.

    • @juditrotter5176
      @juditrotter5176 Місяць тому +3

      I was a young wife and mother, so mainly heard this song on the radio. I had no idea that the tragedy was so current. I had mistakenly thought the ship was lost in the WW1 era. So sad. So many jobs are tough and dangerous. I’m glad Joe Biden is working to get unions going again. That’s who fights the billionaires for regular men. The Union.

  • @todd55ftr
    @todd55ftr 6 місяців тому +192

    Michigander here. This song hits me in the heart everytime i hear it. My cousin was on the Grand Haven Pier (Lake Michigan) with 4 other friends during this storm. 3 of them were washed off the pier and 2 drown. The 3rd one was saved. 1 that drowned and 1 that was saved were brothers. I work with their sister & every November 10th when this plays on the radio i see her stop what she is doing and listen to the song (and remember).

    • @equinnox70
      @equinnox70 6 місяців тому +9

      Wow. I had no idea this happened. I am from Holland, MI just down the coast, where Big Red stands tall and proud. Very sorry for your loss. Thank you for sharing this.

    • @bigpoppa6059
      @bigpoppa6059 6 місяців тому +13

      I remember hearing about that happening when i was younger. This song just hits people from michigan differently i feel

    • @ricardosaenz569
      @ricardosaenz569 6 місяців тому +3

      Wow that's touching Todd. I feel the same way as a native mitten man, though i do not have the personal connection that is in anyway comparable to yours, i still feel an odd sense of ownership or pride in it. The history of shipwrecks on the lakes is long and storied, over 1500 just in Michigan's waters alone (6000 estimate total). Most people just don't understand how big our lakes are and how much shipping goes on.

    • @BNezzy
      @BNezzy 6 місяців тому +1

      damn, Nov 10th today watching this video and reading your comment. prays to the sister today if you are still working with her pass a hug along.

    • @lukefortune1976
      @lukefortune1976 6 місяців тому

      I'm originally from Michigan and a lover history and ships. I have heard and read sories of those boats and the Lakes and of course "The Fitz" . This song is perfect imp.

  • @nancyfolk29
    @nancyfolk29 3 місяці тому +26

    My husband sailed for 25+ years. He said the comment by the cook "its been a pleasure knowin you" carries the note we all know we are doomed.

    • @vaderv
      @vaderv 3 дні тому

      Sigh. Crying here. Thanks lady.

  • @nrkeye
    @nrkeye 27 днів тому +5

    The repetitive melody is based on the style of a sea shanty. A style of folk song sung by sailors as they performed repetitive, rhythmic labor aboard their vessels. From the French “chanter”, to sing.
    Born in Detroit. I would occasionally see this ship coming up or down the river. Impressive because it was larger than most freighters as mentioned in the song. My father took me to the maritime cathedral to hear the bells toll. I’m 64 now and I still can’t listen to this song without getting choked up. Beautiful and sad, the best kind of poetry. Thank you for highlighting this incredible song.

  • @RyanDraga
    @RyanDraga 6 місяців тому +299

    Gordon Lightfoot was a national treasure. One of the greatest Canadian entertainers ever.

    • @rothgartheviking858
      @rothgartheviking858 6 місяців тому +1

      I am glad I was able to see him on his last tour. He did a great job.

    • @cajunoutdoors9994
      @cajunoutdoors9994 5 місяців тому

      One of the few likable Canadians

    • @saskrugbydad2227
      @saskrugbydad2227 5 місяців тому +8

      @@cajunoutdoors9994there’s a reason we kicked you people out of Acadia

    • @cajunoutdoors9994
      @cajunoutdoors9994 5 місяців тому

      @@saskrugbydad2227 couldn’t be more happier that y’all did

    • @vlcccapt
      @vlcccapt 5 місяців тому +3

      His work will always be treasured, especially in Canada.

  • @BigTexan59
    @BigTexan59 6 місяців тому +194

    As an old Coast Guard sailor who has been through a few "gales of November", this song gets me a bit teary eyed every time I hear it. Even surrounded by shipmates, a sailor's life can be a lonely one, and the haunting lyrics and music of this tune makes me imagine how the men of the Edmund Fitzgerald must have felt during their last hours - courageous, but alone.

    • @BigTexan59
      @BigTexan59 6 місяців тому +7

      @@JohnnyRep-hz5qh Yeah, it's damned cold!

    • @ralphyboy3636
      @ralphyboy3636 6 місяців тому +8

      I believe the water temperature in Duluth topped out at 55 degrees this summer.

    • @melodyszadkowski5256
      @melodyszadkowski5256 Місяць тому +2

      My salute to you, shipmate. I was career Navy, and everything you expressed is true. When I went topside in the middle of the night once on a break, I watched the bioluminescence around the bow breaking up the pitch darkness, and wondered for the thousanth time if I would see my husband again after this deployment. Why I don't know. But in hindsight it was an omen of sorts, since two months before I retired I lost him to leukemia. He was career Navy, too.

  • @sisterdecadence
    @sisterdecadence 3 місяці тому +27

    "...waves turn the minutes to hours..." and "...rooms of her ice water mansion..." have ALWAYS struck me as potent and beautiful. I was in Sault Ste Marie last summer and there is a freighter docked which is now a maritime museum. There is a large display for the Edmund Fitzgerald, including two small boats (1.5, really) and part of a life ring, as well as photographs and descriptions of the men aboard. It was powerful.

  • @rickj6348
    @rickj6348 6 місяців тому +71

    Probably the most amazing eulogy ever written. So many powerful emotions are brought forth listening to Gordon's soulful voice

    • @vaderv
      @vaderv 3 дні тому

      Yes it is.

  • @SteveEdwardCooper
    @SteveEdwardCooper 6 місяців тому +197

    Everyone in Michigan from my generation knows every word of this song by heart. This was a huge story in our state and this song got a ton of airplay on the radio for a couple of decades.

    • @mikemaricle9941
      @mikemaricle9941 6 місяців тому +6

      Minnesota too.

    • @johnwilson2414
      @johnwilson2414 6 місяців тому +9

      I'm not sure what generation you are referring to but, yes this song is very special to all of us michaganders.

    • @ajkennedy3978
      @ajkennedy3978 6 місяців тому +8

      Us yoopers learn the words to this song in music class extremely early on, like 2nd or 3rd grade

    • @equinnox70
      @equinnox70 6 місяців тому +7

      Proud Michigander here; the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum up on Whitefish Point near Paradise, MI is a very special and haunting place. This song plays in the museum every day. A true testament to the fateful events on that terrible day. They were almost to the point when the ship went down. 😢

    • @weefek
      @weefek 6 місяців тому +4

      Michigan is way more connected to any part of Canada than any other part of the US. You're north of us , FFS.

  • @joedella-mattia2234
    @joedella-mattia2234 6 місяців тому +173

    Growing up in Thunder Bay, on the shores of Lake Superior, this song sure hits home. So many ship wrecks and lives lost on the big lake. This is probably the most haunting song you will ever hear. Gordon is a song writing genius ❤❤🇨🇦

    • @objectiveobserver4278
      @objectiveobserver4278 6 місяців тому +5

      It was during the NTSB's inspection of the wreck that prompted several changes to safety measures still used today. Those stricter safety standards and updated instruments and life saving equipment have made a difference. There are still boats that have sunk since the Fitz went down, but not nearly as many commercial freighters. Laws were also put into place to keep people away from any wreck where bodies have not been recovered. Both America and Canada consider these wreck sites to be underwater graves and protect them from photos, salvage and recreation diving.

  • @Wishes890
    @Wishes890 3 місяці тому +14

    The line "Ice water mansion" is a perfect description of Lake Superior, huge, like a mansion compared to a normal house, and the water in the lake is cold!

  • @astroteech
    @astroteech 6 місяців тому +57

    This was and is an unparalleled sea shanty that tells the heartbreaking story of the Edmund Fitzgerald. Their fate was not unique in the history of mariners, but Gordon Lightfoot put it into such personal terms, that no one with a heart or any sense of empathy is not soul struck by this song. I have seen so many "reaction" videos to this song where the listener was driven to tears by the end, which is truly fitting!

    • @colinmacaoidh9583
      @colinmacaoidh9583 2 місяці тому +1

      I've aways appreciated that he arraigned it as a fairly simple shanty, to let the story take the fore

    • @theodoreritola7641
      @theodoreritola7641 2 місяці тому +1

      The 70s are known for all there great story telling songs this is from 1975

  • @dancarter8389
    @dancarter8389 6 місяців тому +104

    If you're a Canadian of a certain age, this song (and Lightfoot more generally)is just part of your life growing up. Thanks for your very thoughtful analysis.

    • @gingw7333
      @gingw7333 6 місяців тому +2

      True also for those of us growing up during GL's time of musical genius.

    • @SportsKnowItAll11
      @SportsKnowItAll11 6 місяців тому +5

      We that live on the one of the Great Lakes (Lake Michigan in my case) understand that the melody goes up and down like the “rollers” we see each time we look out over the water. Loved GL❤.

    • @kengaroo67
      @kengaroo67 6 місяців тому +2

      I grew up on Lake Erie, between Cleveland and Buffalo. P&C Dock Company is a huge part of my town. I grew up watching the Ore Boats. This song was a cautionary tale for anyone who had friends or family on the Boats.

    • @SportsKnowItAll11
      @SportsKnowItAll11 6 місяців тому +5

      @@kengaroo67 that’s true. My dad sailed on the Great Lakes on a ship named the Myron C Taylor during the 40s and early 50s. His job was deemed essential and for that reason was never sent to war. After starting a new family in Wisconsin, he left sailing and went home to find a new career in law enforcement. We have some amazing photos of him on the deck during some “off time” with his shirt off. I never saw him in that kind of physical condition as I was born many years later. He passed away 6 years ago at 99.5 y/o. He always loved the lake and fished almost daily during the late spring, summer and early fall on it until he physically couldn’t get in/out of his small boat.
      One thing he always had was a very keen respect for weather, especially wind and wind direction before we went out trolling 5 miles off shore in an 18’ boat. He was up early in the morning after retirement checking the tree tops for the wind. I don’t know if anything gave him more pleasure than being on the water. It was in his blood.
      We grew up in a shipbuilding town where many of today’s major bulk carriers were built and get repaired for the winter.

    • @tdpic86
      @tdpic86 6 місяців тому +1

      I'm from Southern Canada (Minnesota) and feel as you about GL and Superior.

  • @AJfanboy1
    @AJfanboy1 6 місяців тому +64

    I'm 69 years old. Every time I listen to this song I wipe tears from my eyes. This song gives a better understanding of what happened that day than any history book or newscast could.

    • @stevenmeyer9674
      @stevenmeyer9674 3 місяці тому +3

      There were some liberties taken in the lyrics of the original recording. In respect to the surviving families, Lightfoot changed some of the lyrics for his live performances.

    • @macbirt56
      @macbirt56 2 місяці тому +1

      I'm 68 and I was in the Navy as were my father and two uncles. Even when it only involves seasickness, the waves can turn the minutes to hours. And to know your life is in danger, and knowing there's nothing you can do but wait it out, must be terrifying. I don't think anyone who has ever been at sea, can say that they can't relate to that phrase.

  • @stevegans3517
    @stevegans3517 4 місяці тому +8

    I was nine years old when this was in the news. Living in Chicagoland, the Great Lakes were always in the news. Superior's water is so cold all year round that cadavers don't float up, they sink and stay preserved at the bottom of the lake. She truly "never gives up her dead". Those men are still there in that "icewater mansion". Superior is so large its storms can reach hurricane levels of intensity. Mr. Lightfoot's dirge is a fitting tribute. Sadly, those men were on their last run of the season before Christmas break, and one of them was on his very first voyage.

  • @shaynelachance8828
    @shaynelachance8828 6 місяців тому +11

    According to Barry Keane, Gord's drummer for 46 years, Gord and his band did this epic song in one take. They recorded the song on a Thursday and went back to the studio on Friday to record it 'properly' and found out that the Thursday version was better. Amazing!

  • @sheldondyck8631
    @sheldondyck8631 6 місяців тому +71

    Sundown is another great Gordon Lightfoot song that’s worth a listen.

    • @anneahlefeld1989
      @anneahlefeld1989 6 місяців тому +2

      Yeah , that " her in her satin dress" was not a very nice person. However I do love the song.

    • @Beethoven5th
      @Beethoven5th 6 місяців тому +5

      ​@@anneahlefeld1989She is the same woman who was with John Belushi the night he died.

    • @lydibugmuzik
      @lydibugmuzik 6 місяців тому +3

      I was also going to suggest this!

    • @Tardisntimbits
      @Tardisntimbits 6 місяців тому +1

      Same here, lol.

    • @anneahlefeld1989
      @anneahlefeld1989 6 місяців тому

      @@Beethoven5th
      Yup

  • @Ooofaa-Maa
    @Ooofaa-Maa 6 місяців тому +240

    I cannot wait. For some reason the line “Fellas it’s been good to know you” gets me every time. 😢

    • @anneahlefeld1989
      @anneahlefeld1989 6 місяців тому +13

      Me too! Every. Time.

    • @surfpsych
      @surfpsych 6 місяців тому +5

    • @kinexkid
      @kinexkid 6 місяців тому +9

      Same. Especially with the haunting arpeggios in the background

    • @meeseification
      @meeseification 6 місяців тому +2

      Every. Single. Time.

    • @teemusid
      @teemusid 6 місяців тому +13

      "All that remains are the faces and the names of the wives and the sons and the daughters."

  • @JDignum
    @JDignum 2 місяці тому +7

    Gordon Lightfoot is one of my all time favorites. ❤❤❤

  • @CaptOrbit
    @CaptOrbit Місяць тому +1

    I remember seeing an interview with Gordon Lightfoot where he spoke about that he had over the years reorchestrated many of his songs for live performance to reflect the fact that he no longer possessed the vocal range that he once did.
    He still wanted the songs to sound right to the audience and was actually able to rearrange them to compensate for that.
    What an absolute professional.
    Gordon Lightfoot was also the first concert I ever went to.

  • @lesleyannedurant2202
    @lesleyannedurant2202 6 місяців тому +98

    With no chorus or bridge, the haunting melody sways you like ship, with the crying steel guitar creating the variation, mood, and tension to pull you along, all designed to sit in the background of the story. As a Michigander, this is our state’s unofficial anthem and one of the most haunting songs ever recorded.

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 3 місяці тому +5

      Even the opening guitar twang is haunting

    • @kozzy18
      @kozzy18 3 місяці тому +3

      The melody is from a sea shanty called “Back Home in Derry.” So that feeling makes a lot of sense.

  • @joiedevivre2005
    @joiedevivre2005 6 місяців тому +90

    I think the part where he "rushed" it, he was portraying the fear & frantic experienced by the crew. This song never fails to give me chills. Godon Lightfoot's voice & accompanying music almost makes the listener almost feel they are on the Fitz with her crew. For some reason, the fact that the storm was so vicious, that the crew couldn't even take time to eat, makes it more sad & human.

    • @laurahardgrove955
      @laurahardgrove955 18 днів тому

      You can't cook when the kitchen won't stay horizontal. Everything would spill or fall constantly.
      If they had sandwiches or something similar already made- the guys would have still not been able to eat while trying to survive.

  • @mikehopkins4546
    @mikehopkins4546 6 місяців тому +34

    RIP Gordon. You were a good dude and created one of the most haunting ballads of all time.

  • @randallnixon3456
    @randallnixon3456 6 місяців тому +29

    I am not a musical genius but the gap at the beginning of the song is the storm brewing, then it’s skips the gap as the storm hits, then the gap comes back as we grieve the loss. Great song writer and song. Thanks for doing this one

  • @howardsmith3758
    @howardsmith3758 6 місяців тому +105

    When I first encountered the idea of the Homeric poems, I was incredulous that people could remember so many words without writing them down. I was in high school when this song came out, and I've never had any difficulty remembering every word. Lightfoot was the archetypical bard, the storyteller whose stories pulled you in with lyrics and music, and etched an indelible pattern in your mind.

    • @equinnox70
      @equinnox70 6 місяців тому +4

      Very well said.

    • @alwenke212
      @alwenke212 Місяць тому +1

      My singing voice is similar to mr. lightfoot ,,,20 years ago, my wife and I and two other couples went to a karaoke night.
      Where they insisted I sing, the Edmond Fitzgerald. Didn't look at the prompter once, didn't realize it till it was over !

    • @alwenke212
      @alwenke212 Місяць тому +1

      Mr. Lightfoot

  • @todderickson2435
    @todderickson2435 6 місяців тому +147

    I was hiking this past spring along Minnesota's North Shore, along Lake Superior, on a very blustery day, when I heard the news that Gordon Lightfoot had passed away. It was almost surreal to be where I was when that happened, and immediately this song popped into my head, so I pulled it up on my phone as I hiked. An iconic song from a legendary songwriter. RIP Gordon Lightfoot....and thank you.

    • @terminallumbago6465
      @terminallumbago6465 6 місяців тому +11

      It’s very fitting that he passed away on a dark and stormy night.

  • @bhackett444
    @bhackett444 6 місяців тому +42

    We’re coming up on the first anniversary of the sinking of the “Mighty Fitz” without Gordon. As a lifelong Michigander (with some Canadian ancestry), this one evokes straight chills every time I hear it. There’s a video on UA-cam with some of the radio chatter built in that is particularly haunting.

  • @djd2819
    @djd2819 6 місяців тому +18

    This was definitely Lightfoot's greatest work - and that's saying something. He cared very much about the people in this song and donated much of what this song earned to their families. To this day, there is still a Gordon Lightfoot scholarship at Northwest Michigan College which I've read he originally created for the children of the sailors who perished on the Edmund Fitzgerald.
    Great analysis of the finest work of a very talented man. And I agree with you about the line "does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the minutes to hours". That is not only pure poetry, it also helps listeners understand what it must have been like to be there during that storm. While he did achieved that feeling throughout the song, that line pulls you in and puts you on the deck of the ship.
    RIP Gord

  • @BryanAlaspa
    @BryanAlaspa 6 місяців тому +184

    The story of the Edmund Fitzgerald is fascinating. You have to understand how massive this ship was. It was 728 feet long. If you stood it on end against the St. Louis Gateway Arch it would be roughly 100 feet taller. And it vanished in seconds. Other ships were in the area and in contact with the Fitz, which had lost its radars, and had a severe list. And it just vanished. Also, the Love of God go line is my favorite in this song, too.

    • @ostlandr
      @ostlandr 6 місяців тому +11

      From a documentary I saw, when that one monster wave hit, she was in shallow water. She was already down by the bow, and they think the wave drove her bow under, her bow hit bottom, and that's what broke her back.

    • @lazurusknight2724
      @lazurusknight2724 6 місяців тому +7

      Fun fact, the depth of the water where the Edmund sank is shallower than the length of the ship.

    • @evilpenguinmas
      @evilpenguinmas 6 місяців тому +17

      The freakiest thing I remember reading about this was an account from a mariner on a similar ship in the same storm who talked about something that never occurred to a landlubber like me: He described being on corridor/catwalk below deck but over the hold that runs the length of the ship and watching the hatchway at the far end rise out of sight, reappear, then fall out of sight over and over as the ship flexed in the huge lake's waves. That freaky image has stuck in my head ever since.

    • @andyyoung6660
      @andyyoung6660 6 місяців тому

      Yes that is correct. She is lying in 450ft of water@@lazurusknight2724

    • @heliumphoenix
      @heliumphoenix 6 місяців тому +7

      @@ostlandr - Unfortunately, given the wreckage (which has been very well surveyed) the distance between the bow and the stern pieces (and the debris field between them) is too far for that scenario. The Edmund Fitzgerald shipwreck was one of the most thoroughly documented and investigated maritime disasters in history. The experts believe the ship broke up on or very close to the surface of the water. The records of the comms between the Fitz and the Avafors (another freighter that was about 15 knots ahead of her, hence the line about "if they'd put 15 more miles behind her") indicate that the Fitz had two pumps running, they were running low in the water but felt the two pumps were handling it.....and in a matter of about 10 minutes the Avafors lost sight of the lights from the Fitz. Given the storm conditions, it's likely the Fitz didn't realize just how low in the water they were running, and therefore didn't know that the two pumps weren't enough. They likely broke up due to being capsized from a front port wave, which shifted the cargo and caused the ship to break in half (roughly) and both sections sank very quickly, already being low in the water and with the holds considerably flooded. It would have been VERY fast, which explains why there was never any emergency signal from the Fitz, as no-one had time to get to the radio and send it.

  • @paulschwartz2114
    @paulschwartz2114 6 місяців тому +73

    Im not really a Gordon Lightfoot fan, but I think this song might be the greatest song of the last 100 years. Nobody ever painted a picture with words and sound like GL did here. I can see the ice on the deck and hear the wind in my mind every time I listen to the song.

    • @stevendavid5370
      @stevendavid5370 6 місяців тому +10

      Not only did GL paint a picture with words and sound, but he sung the song in a way that anybody could get the story or meaning. Nobody did music, lyrics and delivery of both like GL. Rest in Peace Gordon Lightfoot the peacemaker.

    • @mikeegli4441
      @mikeegli4441 6 місяців тому

      Agreed. Another amazing song is Cold Missouri Waters by Cry Cry Cry, based on the book Young Men and Fire. Worth a listen.

  • @Infrared01
    @Infrared01 5 місяців тому +12

    As someone who lives in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, sandwiched between Lake Superior, Lake Michigan, and Lake Huron, this song has always held a special place in my heart. Just driving westward on M28 along Superior on my way to Marquette on a snowy November night is enough for me. Couldn't imagine how those 29 men felt ON the lake.

  • @mikekraan823
    @mikekraan823 Місяць тому +2

    I grew up surrounded by Lightfoot's music and unfortunately not appreciating it and actually have an uncle who worked the freighters on the Great Lakes and became friends with some of the crew on the Fitzgerald. Fast forward many years later I had the opportunity to meet him before one of his concerts. I was blown away by how down to earth and welcoming he was. To this day I consider meeting this great man, shaking his hand and having a genuine conversation with him one of the most memorable parts of my life. He performed this masterpiece at each and every one of his concerts in the later years of his career in honour of those 29 men who lost their lives that night.

  • @brianvance9048
    @brianvance9048 6 місяців тому +312

    For whatever reason I cry uncontrollably every time I hear this song. No other song has this emotional impact and I can’t explain it. It is a sadness that bubbles up from somewhere deep. RIP Gordon ❤

    • @AndrewJones-cx6kl
      @AndrewJones-cx6kl 6 місяців тому +9

      Me too. 😢

    • @HOECAKES143
      @HOECAKES143 6 місяців тому +8

      Same here.

    • @rickj6348
      @rickj6348 6 місяців тому +14

      Always have myself. Gordon's voice is so perfect for this eulogy.

    • @SIXSTRING63
      @SIXSTRING63 6 місяців тому +9

      Me too! has since the first time I heard it as a kid when it first came out.

    • @petetobey3933
      @petetobey3933 6 місяців тому +14

      Me too. I heard it on the radio as a kid, 6 or 7 years old, my parents told me it had just happened like the year before. Hits me even harder now. Most haunting song ever to me.

  • @lmm5892
    @lmm5892 6 місяців тому +133

    Can't listen to it without crying. Epic tribute for those men and their families

    • @_evildoer
      @_evildoer 6 місяців тому +8

      As I wipe away some tears here, I agree

    • @PTRMAN
      @PTRMAN 6 місяців тому +5

      @@_evildoer Same

    • @charlieghostwolf6161
      @charlieghostwolf6161 6 місяців тому +6

      Every single time

    • @Dremin2009
      @Dremin2009 6 місяців тому +3

      @@charlieghostwolf6161 yep

    • @martymiller9802
      @martymiller9802 6 місяців тому +2

      Got me again this time.

  • @1teamski
    @1teamski 6 місяців тому +17

    One of the finest folk songs ever written. Just as haunting today as the day it was written.

  • @benr8153
    @benr8153 2 місяці тому +1

    The emotional connection I have to this event is entirely existent through this song. And the song is so profound, Gordon's passing inspired me to write only the second poem I've made in my entire life. RIP GL.

  • @nevar23
    @nevar23 6 місяців тому +35

    I didn't plan on having a cry this early, but here we go. This song gets me every time.

  • @gregsteele806
    @gregsteele806 6 місяців тому +91

    I love the guitar tone in this song. It just runs right up the spine like that cold wind blowing over the ship.

    • @auntiegravity7713
      @auntiegravity7713 6 місяців тому +3

      THIS.

    • @Beehashe
      @Beehashe 6 місяців тому +4

      It mimics the wind in the wires as well!

    • @henryporter6659
      @henryporter6659 6 місяців тому +1

      I don't know if the guitar is supposed to feel like the wind or the waves. Having been in some big seas it feels like the waves to me.

    • @patrickconnor1676
      @patrickconnor1676 6 місяців тому +5

      The slides on the pedal steel guitar gives me the chills.

  • @janispayne5570
    @janispayne5570 Місяць тому +2

    The way Gordon sings brings to mind the movement of waves, peaks and valleys. I can almost feel the rocking of the big ship. Beautifully done, great song.

  • @Judymoe
    @Judymoe 6 місяців тому +11

    I was a kid when this song was released and played on the radio, and the minute I could gather my allowance, I ran out and bought Summertime Dream.
    The entire song was haunting and beautiful, but from the first time I heard it, the line "Does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the minutes to hours?" haunted me. To this day, that line makes me catch my breath and get teary-eyed.

  • @ViliRagnarok
    @ViliRagnarok 6 місяців тому +168

    As a Michigander, this song gives me chills. Played often on the radio in November. It is often said, that the great lakes are some of the most treacherous waters on earth. True, the waves of the sea can rival the great lakes, but it can not rival how brutal our waves can be when they so choose. It is what sunk her. The waves, called the three sisters, are likened to the rogue wave of the ocean. Except the three sisters are three very large, very tight together waves. Not just one random massive wave from nowhere. Both still an uncommon phenomena. Your ship has no time to prepare for the next wave before you are on the next, leaving the center of your ship unsupported, and you risk snapping in half. I have fished decades on Lake Michigan living close to shore, seen her turn nasty very quick. I have heard, not sure how true though, that some who sail the oceans, will not sail the likes of Lakes Michigan and Superior because of how fast they can turn, and how brutal they can be.

    • @mikkj1
      @mikkj1 6 місяців тому +17

      And the hulls of freshwater ships have to be lighter than salt water ships because fresh water doesn't provide as much buoyancy. That means that they're more likely to break up in rough seas.

    • @dantreadwell7421
      @dantreadwell7421 6 місяців тому +5

      Same here, Minnesotan here

    • @kristien2010
      @kristien2010 6 місяців тому +10

      Fellow Michigander here, but I frequent Huron since I've lived nearly my entire life just a short walk from the shores. I love the recognition for the wreck of the Fitz, and this song always gives me full chills every time. I need to see if I can find the song about the wreck of the Carl D Bradley. I grew up close to Rogers City where most of her crew was from.

    • @thing_under_the_stairs
      @thing_under_the_stairs 6 місяців тому +23

      I worked on lake freighters for a few seasons to help pay my way through school, as well as having lived most of my life on the north shore of the Great Lakes, and I can confirm that they can be absolutely brutal in ways that you don't see on the ocean. Ocean waves have a long roll to them; waves on the Lakes are shorter and choppier, making them more unpredictable and often more dangerous. The Lakes also have fast changing, unpredictable weather systems that can whip up a monster storm faster than anything you'll see on the ocean. And being shallower, there are hidden shoals and sandbars that can snag or damage a ship far too easily. Although shipping companies changed their policies after the Fitz was wrecked, so that in case of bad weather, captains are now urged to run for safe harbour rather than ride it out, the Lakes are still as unforgiving as ever. I love them, but I'll never trust them.

    • @markhamstra1083
      @markhamstra1083 6 місяців тому +3

      @@mikkj1No, the difference in buoyancy between fresh and salt water has minimal effect on ship design. To the extent that lakers are built to lower scantlings than ocean-going ships, it is primarily because those who operate these ships rightly believe that they will never be so far from a safe harbor that they can’t choose to avoid the worst weather and waves. As in the case of the _Edmund Fitzgerald,_ that doesn’t mean that profit motivation doesn’t push laker operators to skimp on maintenance or challenge the weather, making risky or bad choices, especially when weather predictions were much less good than they are now.

  • @MattHowellll
    @MattHowellll 6 місяців тому +61

    If You Could Read My Mind, Sundown, & Carefree Highway are 3 other really great songs by him. Thank you for choosing Gordon Lightfoot!!

    • @IncomitatusExcelsior
      @IncomitatusExcelsior 6 місяців тому

      She's analyzed If You Could Read My Mind previously.

    • @jeffwenberg4321
      @jeffwenberg4321 6 місяців тому +1

      Song for a Winters Night is a favorite of mine.
      Canadian Railroad Trilogy. It's a slog but just amazing storytelling!

  • @davesolarz3364
    @davesolarz3364 6 місяців тому +3

    One of the stations in Michigan once played the song and cut in the calls made to the Coast Guard during the instrumental parts. That was downright haunting!

  • @gonepostal9101
    @gonepostal9101 6 днів тому +1

    Lived on the North Shore of Lake Superior most of my 61 years. My family knew guys on the Fitz. I personally knew guys on the Anderson. They’re all gone now, but they will never be forgotten. Thank you, Gordon.

  • @shilohauraable
    @shilohauraable 6 місяців тому +39

    That repeated drone of the tune. makes the song more haunting than if it was more melodious. JMO. I remember this wreck. Lake Superior is well known for shipwrecks. But this one was unexpected. They did eventually find the ship & left it as a watery tomb. The only thing they brought up was its ship bell, as the song states. A very sad tragedy that will be remembered forever through Gordon's masterful story telling. ❤

  • @vermithax
    @vermithax 6 місяців тому +73

    The 6/8 time and the repeating melody work to evoke the feel of the waves going up and down. And the steel guitar is an absolute miracle of a performance. Ghostly and beautiful.

    • @anthonyfuchs9787
      @anthonyfuchs9787 6 місяців тому

      I'm hearing 4/4.

    • @vermithax
      @vermithax 6 місяців тому +4

      @@anthonyfuchs9787 Well, you can divide up the measure any way you want, but given the feel of the song, it is typically thought of as either 6/8 or 3/4. If it were 4/4, then the pulse of the song would be 8th note triplets, rather than just straightforward 8th notes. As a drummer, it's a lot easier to think of it as 6/8.

    • @warriyorcat
      @warriyorcat 6 місяців тому

      I think its in 6/8 or 3/4, bit if I was conducting it I'd probably conduct it in one (which feels more like 4/4)

    • @james-michaelrobson287
      @james-michaelrobson287 6 місяців тому

      Hearing it on nylon does make it feel completely different

  • @karenlackner192
    @karenlackner192 6 місяців тому +6

    I’ve been fortunate to see Gordon Lightfoot in concert 4 times.
    Got those of us who live in Minnesota we all clearly remember when Big Fitz went under.
    Lake Superior is a grand Lake but the gales are horrible.
    Gordo is a musical legend. A true artist and a gift to the universe.
    His lyrics are a golden thread woven through my life tapestry.

  • @jacobcolumbus8379
    @jacobcolumbus8379 6 місяців тому +9

    Fantastic song! We need some more Canadian Artists represented on this channel! Gordon Lightfoot, Tragically Hip, Big Wreck, The Band, RUSH, Tea Party, Great Big Sea, just to name a few!

  • @epistte
    @epistte 6 місяців тому +50

    I'm from the Cleveland area and as a child on a tourist boat we passed the Fitzgerald in the Cuyahoga as it was heading back out to the lake from the mills. I have 3 photos of the crew standing along the rail. I didn't realize it was the Edmund Fitzgerald until about a decade ago. Its spooky to know that most of them likely died that November night. The local radio stations always play this song that day and its earie at night, especially if it is raining to hear the music and words 45+ years later.

    • @tolkas42
      @tolkas42 6 місяців тому +8

      @epistte You should get in contact with the museum. It may be the last photos of them alive, which has value not just to their families, but historically.

    • @JeffOfTheMountains
      @JeffOfTheMountains 6 місяців тому +5

      I second what Tolkas said. Contact the museum, because those photos are potentially VERY historically valuable.

  • @ArcaneWolf9
    @ArcaneWolf9 6 місяців тому +133

    Love that line, 'when the waves turn the minutes to hours'. Captures the powerlessness. There's another earlier in the song that also gets me, "The good ship and true was a bone to be chewed when the gales of November came early." The contrast that this was a big lake ship with a seasoned crew, but still little more than a plaything against Nature's power. Coming so early in the song, it always leaves me with a pit in my stomach, knowing and dreading what is coming.

    • @objectiveobserver4278
      @objectiveobserver4278 6 місяців тому +4

      At some point, even if just for a moment, those men knew they were going to die. You are right, they were powerless when faced with the circumstances of the storm and the lake.

    • @sandman_says_runrunner4701
      @sandman_says_runrunner4701 6 місяців тому +3

      That is how deep Gordon's lyrics go as it also references the helplessness felt from the waves reducing progress of the Edmond as well as the rescue boats, turning "minutes to hours"... both in perception and reality.

    • @heinleinreader
      @heinleinreader 6 місяців тому +6

      ​@objectiveobserver4278 That reminds me of the story about the two colonels who watch as a boat loads up with soldiers to be transported down the river. Shortly, downriver the enemy opens fire and kills everyone aboard the transport. The first colonel says "Those are the bravest men I have ever seen." The second colonel points to another transport being loaded up as they speak. He says, "Those men saw what happened to the first transport colonel. I would say THEY are the bravest men I have ever seen."

    • @baneverything5580
      @baneverything5580 6 місяців тому +1

      I`ve had this feeling as tornadoes and Louisiana hurricanes approached. With both you really have no idea where the eye of the storm will hit and do the most damage until it`s too late to run or hide. The roar of a tornado missed me by less than a mile at 2 am last December and in 2020 two hurricanes hit my region knocking out power for over two weeks. Almost ripped the roof off and we could see light through the livingroom ceiling.

    • @marquette_houghton8694
      @marquette_houghton8694 5 місяців тому +2

      @@heinleinreaderThe same could be said of the crew of the Arthur M. Anderson, the freighter that was following behind the Fitz when it sank and that first reported her missing. She did make safe harbor, but the Coast Guard radioed the ship and asked her to turn around and go back out into the storm to look for any survivors from the Fitz. Captain Bernie Cooper, knowing that the storm had already taken out one ship, took the Anderson back out, along with another freighter, the William Clay Ford. The two ships spent the rest of the night searching for survivors in the teeth of the gale.

  • @christophertaylor9100
    @christophertaylor9100 6 місяців тому +13

    First time I heard this song was in grade school, when it first came out. I figured it was about an old, old event, from history. I didn't realize it was about an event the year it was written until decades later. Such a powerful, eerie, gripping, beautiful tribute. Gordon Lightfoot was a master of the art form, one of the greatest singer-songwriters in all of history.

  • @chrisparmarter8442
    @chrisparmarter8442 6 місяців тому +5

    My dad used to listen to his extensive vinyl collection on Saturday nights. I was around 10 years old when I walked through the room and heard " does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the minutes to hours?". I stopped in my tracks listened to another 15 seconds then went and sat next to my dad, and listened to records with him. And a new tradition was born. Some of my best memories. He even let me choose some songs to introduce to him when I was a bit older. If I recall the first song I played for him was "Driver's Seat" by Sniff 'n' the Tears (still my favorite band name and my favorite one hit wonder to this day) and he LOVED it! Thanks for sharing and bringing up a wonderful memory for me!

  • @LisFayte
    @LisFayte 6 місяців тому +97

    My dad was in the Navy during the Korean War, one of his buddies was on the Edmond Fitzgerald, the song really meant a lot to him

  • @auckalukaum
    @auckalukaum 6 місяців тому +62

    This is such a haunting song. Being from Michigan, I've been hearing this song for almost 50 years and I still get goosebumps from it.

    • @lantose
      @lantose 6 місяців тому +1

      Growing up on Oklahoma, I believe we’ve heard it as many times and I’m sure that’s true for the whole country, as it was a horrific tragedy!

    • @laurabrevitz3944
      @laurabrevitz3944 6 місяців тому +1

      ❤ I think we had a special relationship to the Edmund Fitzgerald tragedy, and to this song, growing up in Michigan.

  • @randomhydrocarbons2322
    @randomhydrocarbons2322 3 місяці тому +5

    This song was used in the poetry section of my high school English course in a similar way to how "We didn't start the fire" was used in History class for future classes. I fell in love with it and shared it with my own daughter years later.

  • @steveg5933
    @steveg5933 6 місяців тому +4

    I grew up in Western New York on the southern shore of Lake Ontario. Fortunately I was able to hear both US & Canadian radio stations. Chilliwack, The Guess Who, Rush, The Tragically Hip and Gordon Lightfoot were all part of my listening experience. Gordon was without a doubt a Canadian National Treasure and is sorely missed. As for the Fitzgerald, I was 10 when the wreck happened. The great grandson of of a great lakes merchant sailor. Still to this day, I will stop and watch these ship glide by.

  • @djknox2
    @djknox2 6 місяців тому +199

    I've known this song intimately for nearly 50 years and always took note on how the time signatures added anxiety, suspense, and indeed reflection to the story. The Charismatic Voice picks up on this right away. Beyond the great story telling, it's this pacing that makes the song so effective, and no other reaction video I've watched of this song noticed that. Well done! The other thing about this song that is understandably missed by most, is that it really captures the spirit of the Canadian frontier very well. This is the reason why certain Canadian acts - The Tragically Hip being an obvious one - made a monumental impact in Canadian culture but did not resonate elsewhere. There is something uniquely Canadian about certain music that one can't quite nail down - one knows it when they hear it however. I would think most people around the world can't quite relate to the size and majesty of the Great Lakes, and Lake Superior is the Queen of the Great Lakes. It is so huge, deep and rugged that there really is no freshwater equal. It has very unique thermal properties that Gordon alludes to when he mentions that the lake doesn't give up her dead.

    • @jamescox4231
      @jamescox4231 6 місяців тому +13

      As usual, I feel like I'm in music theory class again, with a very empathetic yet charmingly goofy teacher. I'm surprised you didn't note his Canadian pronunciation of "Detroyit", or point out that there is no actual chorus, just the repeated hook at the end of each verse. Is there a technical term for that structure? I love what you do. I watch a lot of reactors and your channel makes my brain smarter.

    • @christophertaylor9100
      @christophertaylor9100 6 місяців тому +4

      Yeah one of the best parts of the song is how he takes his time to tell the story, to develop it over time, and let it naturally build. And the music behind it, so effective. I wonder just what its like to write something like this, you have to know you have done something truly amazing and wonderful.

    • @Whatisthisstupidfinghandle
      @Whatisthisstupidfinghandle 6 місяців тому +3

      Yes. Those thermal properties. The most frightening thing. They are all still down there. Superior must be one of the most haunted places on Earth

    • @nadjasunflower1387
      @nadjasunflower1387 6 місяців тому +1

      @@Whatisthisstupidfinghandle yup...there's a channel I've watched before ( believe it's " Ask a Mortician " ) where she analyzes and breaks down why Superior never gives up her dead. ( she's doing a video based on this song and the tragic incident that inspired it )

    • @theakh4238
      @theakh4238 5 місяців тому +2

      The thermocline of Superior creates a boundary layer deep in the lake. Anybody growing up in the upper Midwest that spent anytime swimming in the numerous lakes will attest to the influence of those boundary layers. The surface water is warm and a few feet down it's absolutely fridgid. In shallower bodies of water, what they call "turnover" occurs and the stratification breaks down and the deeper, colder waters mix with the warm surface waters. In a lake the depth and size of Superior at that latitude, the break down of the thermocline and stratification never occurs. Those that drown in those lakes are permanently entombed in the "ice water mansions" below the thermocline.

  • @Stormheart911
    @Stormheart911 6 місяців тому +28

    I'm 64 and I've bee listening to this song ever since it was released, and it still sends shivers down my spine every time I hear it!

  • @RobertBucknersailon
    @RobertBucknersailon 6 місяців тому +10

    I have listened to and have been a fan of the music of Gordon Lightfoot since I was a boy of twelve and was often teased, in fun, for being so. Attending a Gordon Lightfoot concert at the Northrup Memorial Auditorium at the University of Minnesota in 1976, he and his band played the Edmund Fitzgerald song for the first time for a general audience. That performance received a standing ovation. This is the first "The Charismatic Voice" video I have viewed. Looks like I have catching up to do. Well done!!! Thank You!

  • @the1andonlyknudsen
    @the1andonlyknudsen 6 місяців тому +15

    One of my all time favorite videos. It never fails to get to me. There is a music video that starts off with a news report about it and at the end, it shows a picture and name of each sailor that perished. I have wept a time or 2 watching that. What an awful tragedy and a beautiful tribute by Gordon Lightfoot. R.I.P.

  • @usagi2988
    @usagi2988 6 місяців тому +43

    I've always felt that the song form (repeated melody, chord progression, structure, etc.) for this is basically a modern-day sea shanty... which gives it that captivating & haunting feel.
    Great song, great pick, by the by...

    • @b05296
      @b05296 6 місяців тому +7

      I agree, the rhythm is much like a working song. Imagine a crew pulling on a line aboard ship.

    • @vicklen51
      @vicklen51 6 місяців тому +3

      Yes! That’s the term I was looking for-a sea shanty

    • @rudewalrus5636
      @rudewalrus5636 6 місяців тому

      I wonder if it also might have borrowed from the rhythms of "The Song of Hiawatha," Longfellow's epic set on the shores of Lake Superior - which itself borrowed from the Finnish national epic poem the Kalevala. The Kalevala was composed from a collection of oral stories that were traditionally sung. The repetitive pattern I believe assisted memory and was easy to maintain over a long story.

    • @lapdawg60
      @lapdawg60 6 місяців тому +1

      It's definitely written with that maritime feel, fittingly.

    • @robertlight2370
      @robertlight2370 6 місяців тому +1

      Also, the words that nearly rhyme, but don't quite, make it sound like an old sea shanty to me.

  • @frankprocup6042
    @frankprocup6042 6 місяців тому +98

    Born on the "big lake" and even sailed on it in my youth Gordon did this tribute justice to mother nature and the sailors that lost their lives. Thanks for your review, he was a legend, r.i.p. Mr. Lightfoot we thank you for your music.

    • @contumelious-8440
      @contumelious-8440 6 місяців тому

      The "company" upgraded the Fitzgerald to haul more ore by making minimal improvements, enough to get the certification a few months before the wreck. Sure, a storm, watch out. But watch out for money grubbing corporations skirting safety rules which is really what sunk the Fitzgerald.

    • @johntiggleman4686
      @johntiggleman4686 6 місяців тому +1

      I saw Superior only once, in the summer of 1966. But I've spent many days at Lake Michigan. Camping, or visiting wife's cousin who has two old cottages on the dunes above the water. I've seen storms at the lake, and they can get rough. One storm knocked down every tent and overturned some pop-up campers. This was about 1963 or so. Beautiful lake no matter the weather.

  • @tele789
    @tele789 2 місяці тому +2

    Bob Dylan once said, when Gordon Lightfoot sings a song you never want it to end.

  • @mightyV444
    @mightyV444 6 місяців тому +4

    I was pleasantly surprised when my 17-year-old Son told me at the start of this year that he loved this song, and he'd only just discovered it, too. I had not known up to that point that this actually was Gordon Lightfoot! Sad to hear of his passing, only several months later.

  • @joshdv4977
    @joshdv4977 6 місяців тому +73

    I was in the Safety Office in Duluth as Active Duty Coast Guard. Part of my job was boarding tankers and freighters such as the Arthur. M. Anderson and Mesabi Miner, cohorts in league with the Fitz. I treasure my time aboard those ships. Truly marvels of engineering, yet nothing compared to mother nature. Fall and winter on the water of Superior or even just near it was an endurance test.
    Thanks for covering this and for the memories.

  • @Destiny07180
    @Destiny07180 6 місяців тому +50

    I’ve always loved this song. I am a lifelong Minnesotan and know the power of Lake Superior. You don’t mess with the power of the lake. I’ve lived in the port of Duluth for many years and this time of year is when we get strong storms that do lots of damage and are very treacherous.
    Also Gitche Gumee means “Big Sea” or “Huge Water” in Objiwe

    • @user-gj5nw9vn3d
      @user-gj5nw9vn3d 6 місяців тому +1

      Thank you for telling me that and providing the words and definition 👍.

  • @martincoons823
    @martincoons823 6 місяців тому +4

    Ive been blessed to have had good and great teachers in my musical journey as a guitarist. You, my dear are exceptional. I got my first guitar at 7 yrs old- I'm 58 now. And as always my journey is one of discovery. Thank you for bringing depth and range to areas previously taken for granted. I'm elated to say you can teach an old dog and you have ma'am thank you.

  • @brendanjones3816
    @brendanjones3816 2 місяці тому +1

    He took a Page 3 newspaper report and turned it into a legend. Pure genius.

  • @Ontariosound
    @Ontariosound 6 місяців тому +35

    Timeless Canadian Classic. Driving the North Shore of Lake Superior while listening to this is a gripping experience. Rest In Peace Gordon....

    • @mikelawson6456
      @mikelawson6456 6 місяців тому +2

      It's an international classic

    • @laabaaa2107
      @laabaaa2107 6 місяців тому +1

      @@mikelawson6456Gordon Lightfoot was Canadian.

  • @shahnasummers6703
    @shahnasummers6703 6 місяців тому +66

    I am a musician because of Gordon Lightfoot. I became a classical/fingerstyle guitarist because if him, and artists like him and Stan Rogers have always been huge in my heart. I always meant to send Gord a letter thanking him for his voice and his art, but he was gone before I got around to it. I was gutted. Thank you for this, I appreciate it so much.

    • @georgecourt898
      @georgecourt898 6 місяців тому +4

      Stan Rogers was the best. Barretts Privateers, the song about the Bluenose, the prairie farmer, etc. Amazing story telling, in my opinion.

    • @cyclops153
      @cyclops153 6 місяців тому +3

      And don't forget about Fred Small's Heart of the Appaloosa.

  • @Bryan921SS1
    @Bryan921SS1 6 місяців тому +17

    It is so strange that people don't know this song. I have known it all my life, listen to it a few times a year, especially today Nov 10th. I think all us Michiganders know this song in our souls.

    • @Frixworks
      @Frixworks 3 місяці тому +1

      It's a truly cross-national song. It's quite well-known and beloved here in Ontario, especially along the coast. Gordon Lightfoot himself grew up and lived close to Lake Huron.
      I think it's really special how we as Canadians and Americans can appreciate this work of art together, and mourn the loss of these brave sailors.

    • @davidg4288
      @davidg4288 3 місяці тому +1

      It's unsurprisingly a well known song in Cleveland, Ohio even though I believe the actual port on the ill fated voyage was Detroit. The song is otherwise pretty accurate.

  • @notmyrealname1730
    @notmyrealname1730 6 місяців тому +6

    This song is a masterpiece. Everything about it - the lyrics, the time signature, the music - is genius.
    For me, what stands out the most is the bass line. It is the epitome of perfection.

  • @pluck8913
    @pluck8913 6 місяців тому +49

    I love how he kept bringing in the instruments as the story got towards the danger/violent part of the song. It makes the song feel like you are experiencing the storm and the chaos of it. His timing gets more chaotic as the disturbance from the storm happens in the story.
    We lost a legend and the world is a little greyer because of it.

  • @mikkj1
    @mikkj1 6 місяців тому +41

    I've always seen this song as a throwback to our distant past when knowledge was passed down through teaching songs and chants. History is far more easily remembered that way and the realities of it more clearly understood through song.

    • @pipertt
      @pipertt 6 місяців тому +5

      This comment is great 👍

  • @Heathcoatman
    @Heathcoatman 5 місяців тому +2

    When I was a kid my parents absolutely loved Gordon. They used to play his stuff endlessly. I remember getting tired of it. "Aw, mom, not this again!"
    Cut to today, both parents passed and every time I hear Gordon it just brings me in the room with my parents. Wish I had appreciated him more back then.

  • @LiLiJo
    @LiLiJo 6 місяців тому +8

    Every time I’ve listen to this song over the years I feel like I’m honoring the men who died and their families.

  • @Amasaman
    @Amasaman 6 місяців тому +10

    Two things:
    I live near Lake Superior, and spend time fishing and boating her waters. My father died under mysterious circumstances at sea on the USS Scorpion SSN-589.
    Both of these fact make this song hit home really hard. I know personally the fury of Lake Superior and her Gales of November. I also understand what it is like to not know how the men perished as nobody knows what exactly happened to them.
    I also wrote a song, called Brandywine, to honor the 99 men and the families of those lost on the Scorpion.

  • @marksteverman1622
    @marksteverman1622 6 місяців тому +25

    As much as a death metal guy that I am, this song really hits home for me. I have a special connection to Michigan's Upper Peninsula and Lake Superior. This is a great song and story

    • @dionh70
      @dionh70 6 місяців тому +4

      Twins, brutha. I love death metal, but I would absolutely argue that this is a song and melody that would resonate with any human that's ever been on a boat of any size in any century of human existence.

    • @melodiek5282
      @melodiek5282 6 місяців тому +1

      There is a version by a group called Headstone that’s more punk influenced rock. It’s very different and surprisingly good, if you like the original.

    • @Amasaman
      @Amasaman 6 місяців тому

      Simon Barr Sinister does a good cover of it.

  • @barrybrideaux2919
    @barrybrideaux2919 6 місяців тому +1

    Grew up in Sault Ste Marie Ont., about 40 miles from the resting place of the Edmund Fitzgerald. I remember the night the Edmund sank, the storm was one of the strongest in my memory. Very familiar with the ship, my father worked the docks in the Sault. When i heard this song it was a great tribute.

  • @Freddie2598
    @Freddie2598 6 місяців тому +2

    There is a museum for the wreckage of the Edmund Fitzgerald up in Whitefish Pointe Michigan, which is in the upper peninsula It’s a great place to visit it’s right on Lake Superior 26 miles from where the Edmund Fitzgerald sank

  • @stpnwlf9
    @stpnwlf9 6 місяців тому +51

    I've heard this song a thousand times and at certain points in the lyrics, I still start to choke up. This was such an amazing song and performance.

    • @thndr02
      @thndr02 6 місяців тому +1

      Yup...same

    • @kellyhoward6941
      @kellyhoward6941 6 місяців тому +2

      Ditto. I was a teenager when the album came out & must've played it hundreds of times. I never got tired of it, but I'm guessing Mom did.

    • @auntiegravity7713
      @auntiegravity7713 6 місяців тому +1

      @@kellyhoward6941 I go through periods where I get obsessed with this song as well :)

    • @kellyhoward6941
      @kellyhoward6941 6 місяців тому

      @@auntiegravity7713 It's quite a story & song! I was really excited when I was 15 or 16 b/c my mom got 2 tickets to see him in concert. We were really looking forward to it. He got on stage & opened with one of his hit songs, don't remember which one. Everybody got all fired up & was clapping & singing along. He stopped dead in the middle of the song, glared around at the audience, then asked us whether we paid money for tickets to hear ourselves sing, or him. Then he said that if we wanted to hear him sing, he'd better not hear another person singing or clapping along with him or he'd just leave. I think the whole audience was as stunned as Mom & I were....the rest of the concert was him playing & singing to an absolutely silent audience. People were afraid to even cough or sneeze, I swear. There was a long period of silence after the last song, then some tentative clapping. It was an extremely bizarre concert, but certainly the quietest I ever went to! I've read since then that GL was a great person, really nice....I guess he was having on off day that time! Still, a great singer with utterly iconic songs.

  • @gwydion56
    @gwydion56 6 місяців тому +16

    Gordon Lightfoot was my mom's favorite musician and songwriter, and the only person I ever remember her going to hear in concert. Now she is 92 years old and remembers nothing save her childhood, but I will remember her love of his music until the day I, too, remember nothing. This song is one of the few that has the power to bring tears to my eyes. It is an absolute masterpiece of storytelling. You will find many other great songs by Gordon Lightfoot, but this will always be my favorite.

    • @maureencollins5177
      @maureencollins5177 6 місяців тому

      Have you played him for her? Music is one of the few things that may cut through the fog of memory. You may have tried, it doesn't always work. At the very least if she loved him before chances are she'd enjoy him again.

  • @blindeyedog01
    @blindeyedog01 3 місяці тому +3

    I was born in a small village (Ontonagon) in the U.P., Michigan in 1967, right on Lake Superior-- never lived there. But the story of this ship was talked about by my family, a lot, when I was a child. ❤❤❤

  • @OnlyOneLegend
    @OnlyOneLegend 6 місяців тому +4

    I grew up in Iron River, Wisconsin, where a few members of the crew were from and lived in Ashland, the last place she docked. I cry almost every time I hear this.