Legend says he is ‘proud to be Canadian’
Young, Cockburn touch on politics as they join Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame
TORONTO — Legendary artists Neil Young and Bruce Cockburn were ushered into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame on Saturday with a celebration that carried a few political undertones.
While the concert and induction ceremony at Toronto’s Massey Hall generally steered away from overt social statements, it seemed almost impossible for two of protest music’s most influential Canadian songwriters to ignore the current state of global politics.
“I’m terribly proud to be Canadian,” Young told the crowd as he was inducted. “I know I’ve travelled a lot ... but I’ve always been a Canadian citizen.”
“I love the U.S.A. — by the way,” he added before leaning into Donald Trump’s “Make America Great Again” campaign slogan.
“My message is: They’re already great.”
That’s about as close as the 71-year-old singer got to his activist side.
A tribute performance of his song Ohio by rock band Whitehorse inched a little closer. Originally written about the 1970 Kent State shootings, Whitehorse played their cover in front of a projection screen with the names of young men killed by police, including Freddie Gray, Eric Garner, Walter Scott and Canadian Greg Matters.
“We’d like to say so much has changed, but we’re not sure if it has,” guitarist Luke Doucet said as he introduced the song.
A performance of Cockburn’s If I Had a Rocket Launcher by Blackie and the Rodeo Kings added another notch to the political tone of the event.
It was followed by Buffy SainteMarie who offered her perspective on the songwriter’s career as she introduced him onto the stage.
“Bruce is an agitator, an activist, a protester,” she said.
He writes “words that move the needle of public opinion” and that “shine the light on injustices,” Sainte-Marie added.
But Cockburn left audiences to read between the lines as he thanked his long-time manager Bernie Finkelstein.
“In a world increasingly defined its by fakery, we together have pulled off the greatest trick ever — we spread truth,” the 72-year-old said to Finkelstein.
The remarks were some of the most poignant moments in a ceremony that was otherwise spent celebrating the good times.
It marks the first hall of fame induction in five years, after the organization was acquired by the Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada (SOCAN), which began rebuilding its operations. Previous songwriters who received the honour include Leonard Cohen, Robbie Robertson, Joni Mitchell and Gilles Vigneault.
Among the other highlights of the night was singer k.d. lang who brought down the house with a heart-wrenching take on Young’s Helpless, which earned her a standing ovation.