The Hamilton Spectator

Leafs video tugs at the playoff heartstrin­gs

- NEIL DAVIDSON

TORONTO — It’s a song that came effortless­ly to Ron Hawkins and quickly struck a chord with his audience.

“And it strikes a chord with me when I sing it,” said the veteran Toronto musician. “I still feel the same kind of hair-raising on the back of my neck that I felt when I wrote it.”

The musical accompanim­ent to a wonderfull­y poignant video montage by Tim Thompson, Hawkins’ “Peace and Quiet” also tugs at emotions before every Maple Leafs home game. The video, a wartsand-all homage to the NHL team, is shown on the big screen before the puck drops.

Hawkins’ song is a paean to his old Toronto neighbourh­ood of Kensington Market as well as an eloquent remembranc­e of departed friends. Thompson, however, has made it the perfect soundtrack to his 5 ½-minute video history of the Leafs.

“The Maple Leafs Forever” touches on Stanley Cup-winning moments and hockey heartbreak, showcasing players gone too soon and those who will never be forgotten. And it captures the many moods of Leaf Nation, from wideeyed kids to adults with bags on their heads.

Throughout, Thompson somehow links the visuals to Hawkins’ lyrics.

Hawkins sings “Is it funny how you seem just like a rumour now?” over visuals of past Leaf Cup wins, most in black and white.

The video montage captures perfectly the city’s love for a hockey franchise whose past greatness was followed by years of mediocrity. But the present is all about future promise and the video captures that too, ending with Hawkins’ line — “This time we’ll get it right.”

The montage, which starts with King Clancy promising the Maple Leafs “will be champions again,” is especially apropos today as the young Leafs turn heads in the playoffs in their 100th season.

Born in 1965, two years before Toronto’s last Stanley Cup win, Hawkins knows all about the Leafs’ ups and downs. A former goaltender and Mike Palmateer fan, he turned down a tryout as a teenager with the Marlboros junior club to pursue music.

He tells the story of how his parents, while dating, used to see the Leafs every weekend until his dad told his mother they just couldn’t afford to keep spending the $20 a game. Today that might buy you a cocktail at the Air Canada Centre.

But Hawkins says he is just a grateful passenger in Thompson’s video ride through the peaks and valleys of Toronto’s hockey heritage.

“And now luckily we’re in a peak,” he said.

Thompson’s montages won praise during his time at “Hockey Night in Canada” and he has continued to create videos for other teams. The Leafs’ one, however, was a labour of love that the club asked to use after seeing it.

It has been a staple — and fan favourite — since the start of the 201516 season.

Hawkins was not surprised at the reaction to the video, which seems to offer up something new with every viewing.

“He really has a poetic eye,” Hawkins said of Thompson.

“And Leafs fans are nothing if not romantic,” he added. “So the two things come together. But it’s just nice now that it’s not just romance, there’s actual gristle and sweat involved.”

Hawkins’ rich and varied musical career has included longtime band Lowest of the Low as well as solo work — his most recent album was titled “Spit Sputter and Sparkle” — and fronting his own band Ron Hawkins and the Do Good Assassins.

Hawkins says much of his artistic career has been writing about community, which is why Kensington Market found a way into his heart. He believes being part of something bigger than yourself, be it a band or hockey team, can help teach valuable lessons about “playing nicely with others.”

“It’s maintainin­g all of those personalit­ies and trying to corral them for a common goal,” he said. “It’s a very difficult thing to do.”

Hawkins became friends with Thompson some time ago while he was making a music documentar­y. He has long admired Thompson’s work and essentiall­y has given him carte blanche to use his music.

“I was very moved by it,” he said of the first time he saw the Leafs video.

“One thing I’m very appreciati­ve about Tim when he uses my music and he cuts stuff to it is that he’s got the rhythm of a musician in a way. He really knows how to edit to music.”

“Peace and Quiet” was originally released on Hawkins’ 2007 album “Chemical Sounds.” A more laidback version, the one Thompson uses, was featured on 2015’s “Garden Songs.”

Hawkins is currently working on a new Lowest of the Low album.

 ?? BOB CIOLFI, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Even Ron Hawkins gets a special feeling when the video montage plays before the start of a Maple Leaf game in Toronto.
BOB CIOLFI, THE CANADIAN PRESS Even Ron Hawkins gets a special feeling when the video montage plays before the start of a Maple Leaf game in Toronto.

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