The Recorder & Times (Brockville)

A SENTIMENTA­L JOURNEY

An evening dedicated to Linda Ronstadt is sure to bring back some good memories

- LIANE FAULDER Life in the 60s liane.rae@gmail.com

Recently, I joined about 1,500 people in a cultural experience that reflected our age — a concert devoted to songs by Linda Ronstadt.

When I bought the tickets, I didn't think of it as a sentimenta­l journey — the concert wasn't delivered by an impression­ist, à la Elvis, or a tribute band such as Bohemian Queen. But once inside the lobby at the 2,500-seat Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium in Edmonton, it became apparent that nostalgia was a key component of the evening, which was attended not exclusivel­y, but largely, by people with wrinkles.

At first, I felt a bit cringey at the thought of joining a cohort of folks looking backward. But the evening — a careful curation of Ronstadt's life and music performed by top-shelf artists — was so amazing that I couldn't help but be overtaken by the sheer joy of the experience.

“When somebody sings a song, I immediatel­y have memories of where I was during that song, good, bad or otherwise,” says co-producer Graham Neil of

GNR Entertainm­ent in an interview about The Story of Linda Ronstadt. “Music just turns a light switch on. It triggers emotions and all of a sudden you're transporte­d.”

The Ronstadt production is just one in a stable of musical biographie­s that Neil, a digital media instructor and former CTV entertainm­ent reporter, and his partner Rob Shapiro, an award-winning musician with the country music group Hey Romeo, have been crafting for the past seven years. At first, the shows were geared toward a small-town audience. But now, demand has led to gigs in big cities from Vancouver to Halifax.

All of the shows — including evenings with Creedence Clearwater Revival, Johnny Cash and Tom Petty — feature memorable music of the past performed by excellent musicians of the present. There's always a lead performer from Alberta who not only sings but tells stories about the profiled artist — stories that

are often moving and not that well-known.

Audience members at The Story of Linda Ronstadt heard about the artist's early efforts to take control of her career in an industry known for eating its young. We learned about her political passion projects, her big-name romances, as well as her love for her family (she adopted two children as a single woman in her 40s). There were stories about the star's time on Broadway in the Pirates of Penzance, her recordings with bandleader Nelson Riddle and the unusual decision to make an album of mariachi music. The show ends with moving insights into Ronstadt's insecuriti­es about her place in the music world and how she coped with grace and dignity when a neurologic­al disease robbed the now-77-year-old of her voice.

“It's about putting the music into context,” says Neil, 58.

“What does this star's career and body of work mean to me? And can I connect? That was my whole thing (with the musical biography series). Can we connect to the audience through a bigger story?”

The Story of Linda Ronstadt was fronted by Edmonton's Andrea House — who not only has a voice that moves easily from country to rock to soul, and in Spanish, but is also an actor. The combinatio­n of talent helps deliver a fully rounded portrayal of Ronstadt, whose vocal range and flexibilit­y, physically and among genres, makes her one of the standout singers of her generation. House isn't imitating Ronstadt, but she has the musical chops to create a powerful emotional link to the singer's work.

“Our crowd is not young and we are proud of that,” says Neil. “We are bringing some great entertainm­ent to an audience that wants to remember, and

wants to see those artists in a different way.”

I tell you all this by way of justifying my own dip into the past. I felt sheepish about that when I surveyed the auditorium during the Ronstadt concert. It's a competitiv­e business, getting older.

There is pressure to keep up with new things and not turn into someone who is always casting back. I make an effort (thank you, Spotify!) if not to keep up with contempora­ry music then at least to cultivate a surface knowledge of the big names.

But still, while I can appreciate their talent and their impact — I'm thinking of you, Taylor Swift — some of the work doesn't resonate with me.

But when it comes to Ronstadt, my heart melts and I'm not sure exactly why. I was never as lonesome as the narrator in Blue Bayou and I never had a boyfriend who prompted me to wail “baby, you're no good.” Still, Ronstadt's voice enters my chest cavity like a thundersto­rm. It shakes me to my toes.

Neil puts that deep emotional resonance down, in part, to the tendency as we age to think of the past and its touchstone­s with wistful affection.

“Nostalgia is about a happier time, a simpler time, a less complicate­d time,” says Neil. “Even if it's mixed with heartbreak, you feel that, too ... In the way that you trigger those core memories back to people, it's super powerful.”

It's human nature to think that the era now gone for good was somehow better. Music connected to that time takes us there again, however briefly. Linda Ronstadt might be my idol, but she's also (give or take a decade or so) my contempora­ry. How could I not love her and want to be with her again? We've been through so much together.

 ?? KEVIN MARTIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? The one and only Linda Ronstadt performs at the Newport Folk Festival in Rhode Island back in 2007.
KEVIN MARTIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES The one and only Linda Ronstadt performs at the Newport Folk Festival in Rhode Island back in 2007.
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