World
Canada’s folk singer-songwriter Gordon Lightfoot dies aged 84
Gordon Lightfoot, the folks singer-songwriter recognized for If You May Learn My Thoughts and Sunset in addition to for songs that instructed tales of Canadian identification, has died. He was 84.
His publicist Victoria Lord mentioned the musician died on Monday at a Toronto hospital. His explanation for demise was not instantly accessible.
Lightfoot was thought-about one of the vital famend voices to emerge from Toronto’s Yorkville people membership scene within the Sixties. He recorded 20 studio albums and wrote a whole lot of songs, together with Carefree Freeway, Early Morning Rain and The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald.
Within the Nineteen Seventies, Lightfoot earned 5 Grammy nominations, three platinum information and 9 gold information for albums and singles. He carried out in additional than 1,500 live shows and recorded 500 songs.
He toured late into his life. Simply final month, he cancelled upcoming US and Canadian reveals, citing well being points.
“We’ve misplaced certainly one of our biggest singer-songwriters,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted. “Gordon Lightfoot captured our nation’s spirit in his music – and in doing so he helped form Canada’s soundscape. Could his music proceed to encourage future generations, and should his legacy stay on ceaselessly.”
Lightfoot was known as a “uncommon expertise” by Bob Dylan, and his songs have been coated by dozens of artists, together with Elvis Presley, Barbra Streisand, Harry Belafonte, Johnny Money, Anne Murray, Jane’s Dependancy and Sarah McLachlan.
Most of his songs are deeply autobiographical with lyrics that probe his personal experiences in a frank method and discover points surrounding the Canadian nationwide identification. Canadian Railroad Trilogy depicted the development of the railway.
“I merely write the songs about the place I’m and the place I’m from,” he mentioned. “I take conditions and write poems about them.”
Lightfoot’s music had a mode all its personal. “It’s not nation, not people, not rock,” he mentioned in a 2000 interview. But it has strains of all three.
The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald, for example, is a haunting tribute to the 29 males who died within the 1975 sinking of the ship in Lake Superior throughout a storm.
The Hula Hoop Tune
Whereas Lightfoot’s dad and mom recognised his musical abilities early, he didn’t got down to turn into a balladeer.
He started singing in his church choir and dreamed of turning into a jazz musician. At age 13, the then-soprano gained a expertise contest on the Kiwanis Music Competition, held at Toronto’s Massey Corridor.
“I bear in mind the fun of being in entrance of the group,” Lightfoot mentioned in a 2018 interview. “It was a stepping stone for me.”
The attraction of these early days caught, and in highschool, his barbershop quartet, The Collegiate 4, gained a CBC expertise competitors. He strummed his first guitar in 1956 and commenced to dabble in songwriting within the months that adopted. Maybe distracted by his style for music, he flunked algebra the primary time. After taking the category once more, he graduated in 1957.
By then, Lightfoot had already penned his first severe composition, The Hula Hoop Tune, impressed by the toy that created a craze all over the world. Makes an attempt to promote the tune went nowhere, so at 18, he headed to the USA to check music for a yr. The journey was funded partly by cash saved from a job delivering linens to resorts round his hometown.
Life in Hollywood was not a superb match, nonetheless, and it wasn’t lengthy earlier than Lightfoot returned to Canada. He moved to Toronto to pursue his musical ambitions, taking any job accessible, together with a place at a financial institution earlier than touchdown a job as a sq. dancer on CBC’s Nation Hoedown programme.
His first gig was at Fran’s Restaurant, a downtown family-owned diner that warmed to his people sensibilities. It was there he met fellow musician Ronnie Hawkins.
The singer was dwelling with a couple of associates in a condemned constructing in Yorkville, then a bohemian space the place future stars, together with Neil Younger and Joni Mitchell, would be taught their commerce at smoke-filled golf equipment.
Folks music increase
Lightfoot made his in style radio debut with the one (Keep in mind Me) I’m the One in 1962, which led to numerous hit songs and partnerships with different native musicians. When he began taking part in the Mariposa Folks Competition in his hometown of Orillia, Ontario, that very same yr, Lightfoot cast a relationship that made him the competition’s most loyal returning performer.
By 1964, he was performing in entrance of bigger and bigger audiences. By the subsequent yr, Lightfoot’s tune I’m Not Sayin’ was a success in Canada, which helped unfold his identify within the US.
A few covers by different artists didn’t damage both. Marty Robbins’s 1965 recording of Ribbon of Darkness reached primary on US nation charts whereas Peter, Paul and Mary took Lightfoot’s composition For Lovin’ Me into the US High 30. The tune, which Dylan as soon as mentioned he wished he had recorded, has since been coated by a whole lot of different musicians.
That summer season, Lightfoot carried out on the Newport Folks Competition, the identical yr Dylan rattled audiences when he shed his folkie persona by taking part in an electrical guitar.
As the folks music increase got here to an finish within the late Sixties, Lightfoot was already making his transition to pop music with ease.
In 1971, he made his first look on the Billboard chart with If You May Learn My Thoughts. It reached quantity 5 and has since spawned scores of covers.
Lightfoot’s reputation peaked within the mid-Nineteen Seventies when each his single and album Sunset topped the Billboard charts, his first and solely time doing so.
In 1986, he was inducted into the Canadian Recording Business Corridor of Fame, now the Canadian Music Corridor of Fame. He obtained the governor common’s award in 1997 and was ushered into the Canadian Nation Music Corridor Of Fame in 2001.
World
Saudi executions rose sharply in 2024
World
Israel launches strikes in Yemen on Houthi military targets, IDF says
The Israeli military claimed responsibility for a series of airstrikes in Yemen on Thursday that hit Sana’a International Airport and other targets in the Houthi-controlled capital.
The Israel Defense Forces said the strikes targeted military infrastructure used by the Houthis to conduct acts of terrorism.
“The Houthi terrorist regime has repeatedly attacked the State of Israel and its citizens, including in UAV and surface-to-surface missile attacks on Israeli territory,” the IDF said in a statement.
“The targets that were struck by the IDF include military infrastructure used by the Houthi terrorist regime for its military activities in both the Sana’a International Airport and the Hezyaz and Ras Kanatib power stations. In addition, the IDF struck military infrastructure in the Al-Hudaydah, Salif, and Ras Kanatib ports on the western coast.”
PROJECTILE FROM YEMEN STRIKES NEAR TEL AVIV, INJURING MORE THAN A DOZEN: OFFICIALS
The strikes come days after Israel’s defense minister promised retaliation against Houthi leaders for missile strikes launched at Israel from Yemen.
Houthi rebels, who control most of northern Yemen, have fired upon Israel for more than a year to support Hamas terrorists at war with the Jewish State. The Houthis have attempted to enforce an embargo on Israel by launching missiles and drones at cargo vessels crossing the Red Sea – a major shipping lane for international trade.
US NAVY SHIPS REPEL ATTACK FROM HOUTHIS IN GULF OF ADEN
Overall, the Houthis have launched over 200 missiles and 170 drones at Israel since Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, massacre of 1,200 people. Since then, the Houthis have also attacked more than six dozen commercial vessels – particularly in the Bab-el-Mandeb, the southern maritime gateway to Egypt’s Suez Canal.
On Saturday, a projectile launched into Israel from Yemen struck Tel Aviv and caused mild injuries to 16 people, Israeli officials said. The incident was a rare occasion where Israeli defense systems failed to intercept an attack.
NETANYAHU WARNS HOUTHIS AMID CALLS FOR ISREAL TO WIPE OUT TERROR LEADERSHIP AS IT DID WITH NASRALLAH, SINWAR
Israel retaliated by striking multiple targets in areas of Yemen under Houthi control, including power plants in Sana’a.
Israeli leaders have vowed to eliminate Houthi leadership if the missile and drone attacks do not cease.
On Monday, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said, “We will strike their strategic infrastructure and decapitate their leaders. Just as we did to [former Hamas chief Ismail] Haniyeh, Sinwar and Nasrallah, in Tehran, Gaza and Lebanon – we will do in Hodeidah and Sanaa.”
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has also urged Israelis to be “patient” and suggested that soon the military will ramp up its campaign against the Houthis.
“We will take forceful, determined and sophisticated action. Even if it takes time, the result will be the same,” he said. “Just as we have acted forcefully against the terror arms of Iran’s axis of evil, so too will we act against the Houthis.”
Fox News Digital’s Amelie Botbol contributed to this report.
World
Retraction of US-backed Gaza famine report draws anger, scrutiny
United States President Joe Biden’s administration is facing criticism after a US-backed report on famine in the Gaza Strip was retracted this week, drawing accusations of political interference and pro-Israel bias.
The report by the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET), which provides information about global food insecurity, had warned that a “famine scenario” was unfolding in northern Gaza during Israel’s war on the territory.
A note on the FEWS NET website, viewed by Al Jazeera on Thursday, said the group’s “December 23 Alert is under further review and is expected to be re-released with updated data and analysis in January”.
The Associated Press news agency, quoting unnamed American officials, said the US asked for the report to be retracted. FEWS NET is funded by the US Agency for International Development (USAID).
USAID did not immediately respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment on Thursday afternoon.
Israel’s war in Gaza has killed more than 45,300 Palestinians since early October 2023 and plunged the coastal enclave into a dire humanitarian crisis as access to food, water, medicine and other supplies is severely curtailed.
An Israeli military offensive in the northern part of the territory has drawn particular concern in recent months with experts warning in November of a “strong likelihood” that famine was imminent in the area.
“Starvation, malnutrition, and excess mortality due to malnutrition and disease, are rapidly increasing” in northern Gaza, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification said in an alert on November 8.
“Famine thresholds may have already been crossed or else will be in the near future,” it said.
The report
The FEWS NET report dated December 23 noted that Israel has maintained a “near-total blockade of humanitarian and commercial food supplies to besieged areas” of northern Gaza for nearly 80 days.
That includes the Jabalia, Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoon areas, where rights groups have estimated thousands of Palestinians are trapped.
“Based on the collapse of the food system and worsening access to water, sanitation, and health services in these areas … it is highly likely that the food consumption and acute malnutrition thresholds for Famine (IPC Phase 5) have now been surpassed in North Gaza Governorate,” the FEWS NET report had said.
The network added that without a change to Israeli policy on food supplies entering the area, it expected that two to 15 people would die per day from January to March at least, which would surpass the “famine threshold”.
The report had spurred public criticism from the US ambassador to Israel, Jack Lew, who in a statement on Tuesday said FEWS NET had relied on “outdated and inaccurate” data.
Lew disputed the number of civilians believed to be living in northern Gaza, saying the civilian population was “in the range of 7,000-15,000, not 65,000-75,000 which is the basis of this report”.
“At a time when inaccurate information is causing confusion and accusations, it is irresponsible to issue a report like this,” he said.
— Ambassador Jack Lew (@USAmbIsrael) December 24, 2024
‘Bullying’
But Palestinian rights advocates condemned the ambassador’s remarks. Some accused Lew of appearing to welcome the forced displacement of Palestinians in Gaza.
“To reject a report on starvation in northern Gaza by appearing to boast about the fact that it has been successfully ethnically cleansed of its native population is just the latest example of Biden administration officials supporting, enabling and excusing Israel’s clear and open campaign of genocide in Gaza,” the Council on American-Islamic Relations said in a statement.
The group urged FEWS NET “not to submit to the bullying of genocide supporters”.
Huwaida Arraf, a prominent Palestinian American human rights lawyer, also criticised Lew for “relying on Israeli sources instead of your own experts”.
“Do you work for Israel or the American people, the overwhelming majority of whom disapprove of US support for this genocide?” she wrote on X.
Polls over the past year have shown a high percentage of Americans are opposed to Israel’s offensive in Gaza and want an end to the war.
A March survey by Gallup found that 55 percent of people in the US disapproved of Israel’s actions in Gaza while a more recent poll by the Pew Research Center, released in October, suggested about three in 10 Americans believed Israel’s military offensive is “going too far”.
While the Biden administration has said it is pushing for a ceasefire in Gaza, it has rebuffed calls to condition US assistance to Israel as a way to bring the war to an end.
Washington gives its ally at least $3.8bn in military assistance annually, and researchers at Brown University recently estimated that the Biden administration provided an additional $17.9bn to Israel since the start of the Gaza war.
The US is required under its own laws to suspend military assistance to a country if that country restricts the delivery of American-backed humanitarian aid, but Biden’s administration has so far refused to apply that rule to Israel.
“We, at this time, have not made an assessment that the Israelis are in violation of US law,” Department of State spokesperson Vedant Patel told reporters in November despite the reports of “imminent” famine in northern Gaza.
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