The Day

Documentar­y looks at Gordon Lightfoot

- By KEVIN CRUST

For our neighbors to the north, the documentar­y “Gordon Lightfoot: If You Could Read My Mind” reaffirms the Canadian singer-songwriter’s position as a national treasure. U.S. audiences will be reminded of the power of an artist who was once a radio staple and regularly sold out shows at the Hollywood Bowl, the Greek Theatre and Universal Ampitheatr­e whenever he was in L.A.

Written and directed by Martha Kehoe and Joan Tosoni,

the film is smartly structured around notable songs in the Gordon Lightfoot catalog, charting his journey from small-town, post-World War II Ontario to the coffee houses of 1960s Toronto and his chart-topping run of hits in the 1970s, as the gifted musician found success across the folk, country, rock and pop realms.

Known for his distinctiv­e baritone and emotion-rich songs about heartbreak and betrayal (“If You Could Read My Mind,” “Sundown”), isolation (“Early Morning Rain,” “Song for a Winter’s Night”) and trains and ships (“Canadian Railroad Trilogy,” “The

Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald”), Lightfoot connected to Canada’s roots in a way that holds few analogs.

Canadian musicians, including Ronnie Hawkins, Ian and Sylvia Tyson (the former folk duo, now divorced), Anne Murray, Randy Bachman, Burton Cummings, Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson of Rush, Tom Cochrane and Sarah McLachlan, attest to that connection in the documentar­y, along with observatio­ns from Americans Steve Earle, Greg Graffin of Bad Religion and (somewhat inexplicab­ly) Alec Baldwin. Bandmates and Lightfoot’s contempora­ry, Murray McLauchlan, offer insights into his creative process, but it is the man himself who reveals the most about his work ethic and the price he paid for that devotion.

The five-time Grammy nominee and 2012 inductee into the Songwriter­s Hall of Fame, who studied and learned to write music at an early age, earned perhaps his strongest endorsemen­t from the peers who have covered his songs. Attracted by the poetic lyrics and strong craftsmans­hip, Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Elvis Presley, Barbra Streisand, Bob Dylan, Neil Young and Peter, Paul and Mary are among the many who have recorded Lightfoot compositio­ns.

The thrice-married Lightfoot is an affable, introspect­ive and frank subject, acknowledg­ing mistakes made along the way in both art and love, and the intertwine­d nature of the two pursuits. In the film’s opening scene, after watching a vintage television performanc­e of the 1965 confession­al “For Lovin’ Me,” he declares, “I hate that (expletive) song,” dismayed not by the quality of his writing but the revealing content about his first marriage.

Kehoe and Tosoni weave together a bounty of archival footage and photograph­s to visually capture Lighfoot’s performanc­es across his almost six-decade career. Any detail lost in the documentar­y’s nontraditi­onal narrative is more than made up for by the powerful emotions it churns up, particular­ly during a 2018 concert at Toronto’s venerable Massey Hall just before it closed for renovation­s (nicely establishe­d with ghostly imagery during a striking opening titles sequence).

“Gordon Lightfoot: If You Could Read My Mind” is a thoroughly engaging retrospect­ive of a hard-working, hard-living performer who survived to tell the tale. Overcoming alcoholism in his 40s and a near-death experience in 2002, Lightfoot learned to embrace life, accept regret and at age 81, is ready to get back out on the road.

 ?? GEOFF GEORGE/GREENWICH ENTERTAINM­ENT/TNS ?? Gordon Lightfoot in the documentar­y “Gordon Lightfoot: If You Could Read My Mind.”
GEOFF GEORGE/GREENWICH ENTERTAINM­ENT/TNS Gordon Lightfoot in the documentar­y “Gordon Lightfoot: If You Could Read My Mind.”

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