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Stompin' Tom Connors

Charles Thomas "Stompin' Tom" Connors, OC (February 9, 1936 – March 6, 2013) was a Canadian country and folk singer-songwriter. Focusing his career exclusively on his native Canada, he is credited with writing more than 300 songs and has released four dozen albums, with total sales of nearly four million copies.[1]

Stompin' Tom Connors
Connors in 2002
Background information
Birth nameCharles Thomas Connors
Also known asTommy Messer, Stompin' Tom Connors
Born(1936-02-09)February 9, 1936
Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada
OriginSkinners Pond, Prince Edward Island, Canada
DiedMarch 6, 2013(2013-03-06) (aged 77)
Ballinafad, Ontario, Canada
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • songwriter
Instrument(s)
  • Vocals
  • guitar
Years active
  • 1964–1978
  • 1988–2013
Labels
Websitewww.stompintom.com

Connors' songs have become part of the Canadian cultural landscape. Among his best-known songs are "Sudbury Saturday Night", "Bud the Spud" and "The Hockey Song"; the last is played at various games throughout the National Hockey League, including at every Toronto Maple Leafs home game.[2][3] In 2018, the song was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in a ceremony at a Leafs game.[4]

Early life edit

Charles Thomas Connors was born on February 9, 1936, at the General Hospital in Saint John, New Brunswick, to Isabel Connors and Thomas Joseph Sullivan.[5]

Isabel's family were Irish Protestants, and his maternal grandfather, John Connors, was a sea captain from Boston, Massachusetts, who had died before Charles was born. His father was a Catholic of Irish ancestry, and "may have been Métis or ... Micmac." Isabel Connors and Thomas Joseph Sullivan did not marry until 30 years later, as Sullivan's family were devout Catholics and did not want him marrying a Protestant; they later divorced.[6] Sullivan's mother gave him $10, and he was told to leave home.[7] Connors was also a cousin of New Brunswick fiddling sensation, Ned Landry.

Connors' first home was on St. Patrick Street, in the "poorest and most rundown part of Saint John". He lived there with his mother, his maternal grandmother Lucy Scribner, and his maternal stepgrandfather Joe Scribner[8] When Connors was three, Lucy and Joe died within weeks of each other. This forced Isabel to move to a two-bedroom apartment.[9] Around this time Isabel got pregnant again by Tom's father when he briefly returned,[10] and Tom got a taste of hitchhiking when he and Isabel went to visit relatives in Tusket Falls, Nova Scotia. This trip was the first time he saw his mother steal to feed them, when she stole food from a Chinese restaurant in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. When they returned to Saint John, they moved in with friends of Isabel[11] and she gave birth to Tom's sister Marie, who had to stay in hospital to have a birthmark removed. Later, Isabel and Tom moved in with her new boyfriend Terrence Messer at the corner of Clarence and Erin Streets. While they did not marry, the family would take on his surname. Terrence and Isabel did pretend to be married to find a place to live, due to the moral standards of the time.[12] The family was quite poor, and Terrence was a neglectful stepfather, who spent most of the family's money on wine. When they missed paying rent, the family was evicted and moved to a house on St. Patrick Street.[13] Marie finally came home from the hospital then,[14] but she died when Tom was four, following more surgery to remove another birthmark.[15] To make ends meet, Isabel got a job scrubbing floors and Terrence did odd jobs.[16] The family was evicted again after a spat with the landlord when Tom started a fire in their apartment.[17] Their next home was a basement apartment on King Street.[18]

Connors spent a short time living with his mother in a low-security women's penitentiary before he was seized by Children's Aid Society and later adopted by Cora and Russell Aylward[19] in Skinners Pond, Prince Edward Island.

At 13 he ran away from his adoptive family to hitchhike across Canada. He got his first guitar at 14, and at 15 he wrote his first song called "Reversing Falls Darling". His hitchhiking journey consumed the next 13 years of his life as he travelled among various part-time jobs while writing songs on his guitar, singing for his supper. He worked in mines and rode in boxcars,[20] and in the coldest part of winter he welcomed vagrancy arrests for the warm place to sleep.[2] At his last stop in Timmins, Ontario, he found himself a nickel short of a 35-cent beer at the city's Maple Leaf Hotel. Tom told the bartender to put the cap back on the bottle and he'd head for the Sally Ann, but the bartender, Gaëtan Lepine, accepted the 30 cents and offered him a second beer if he would open his guitar case and play a few songs.[21] These few songs turned into a 14-month run at the hotel, a weekly spot on CKGB in Timmins, eight 45-RPM recordings, and the end of the beginning for Tom Connors.

Musical career edit

Connors was never part of the Canadian musical establishment, and his style was quite different from other Canadian icons such as Leonard Cohen or Gordon Lightfoot.[19] He could, however, be characterized as a passionist poet within Canadian culture, similar to Milton Acorn and Stan Rogers.[22] As the National Post characterized him:

He sang of a nation without politics, to its proud history, and to its better angels. His songs remind us that Canada matters—that we've built something amazing here, and must not take it for granted.[23]

Typically writing about Canadian lore and history, some of Connors' better-known songs include "Bud the Spud", "Big Joe Mufferaw", "The Black Donnellys", "The Martin Hartwell Story", "Reesor Crossing Tragedy", "Sudbury Saturday Night", and "The Hockey Song". This last, often incorrectly called "The Good Old Hockey Game," is frequently played over sound systems at National Hockey League (NHL) games.

Throughout the years, Tom never lost touch with Gaëtan Lepine, the bartender he befriended in Timmins; in fact, the two wrote many songs together. These songs are featured in 250 Songs by Stompin' Tom: Including All the Words and Chords.

In 1968, he composed and sang a radio jingle for a Sudbury-area tire store, Duhamel & Dewar, in exchange for a set of winter tires:

"When your tires are old and worn

and you think they should be newer,

drive on down to the Tire Town

and see Duhamel and Dewar."[24]

During the mid-1970s Connors wrote and recorded The Consumer, an ode to bill-paying that became the theme song for the popular Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) consumer affairs program Marketplace. For the first few seasons, Connors appeared in the program's opening credits, before "The Consumer" was replaced as the theme—initially by an instrumental background version and ultimately by a different piece of music.

In 1974 Tom had a series running on CBC Television in which he met and exchanged with folks from all across Canada. Stompin' Tom's Canada was co-produced with the CBC, and consisted of 26 half-hour episodes.

The song that Tom wrote in the least time was "Maritime Waltz", which was completed in 12 minutes.[25]

His character was rough but genuine. As the National Post noted:

[T]hat persona wasn't shtick. Stompin' Tom was one of the great Canadian story-tellers, and a uniquely collegial one as well. The proper venue for a Gordon Lightfoot performance is a concert hall, where the audience connects silently and contemplatively. The proper venue for Mr. Connors was a smoky bar room where people connected by slamming their beer mugs together, hopefully obliterating whatever differences existed between them.[23]

In 1999, after completing a 38-city tour,[26] Connors received the National Achievement Award at the annual SOCAN Awards held in Toronto.[27]

In 2009, Connors was the recipient of the prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award at the annual SOCAN Awards in Toronto.[28]

Nickname edit

Connors' habit of stomping the heel of his left boot to keep rhythm earned him the nickname "that stompin' guy", or "Stomper". It wasn't until Canada's 100th birthday, July 1, 1967, that the name "Stompin" Tom Connors was first used, when Boyd MacDonald, a waiter at the King George Tavern in Peterborough, Ontario, introduced Tom on stage.[29] Based on an enthused audience reaction to it, Tom had it officially registered in Ontario as Stompin' Tom Ltd. the following week. Various stories have circulated about the origin of the foot stomping, but it's generally accepted that he did this to keep a strong tempo for his guitar playing—especially in the noisy bars and beer joints where he frequently performed. After numerous complaints about damaged stage floors, Tom began to carry a piece of plywood that he stomped even more vigorously than before. The "stompin'" board became one of his trademarks. After stomping a hole in the wood, he would pick it up and show it to the audience (accompanied by a joke about the quality of the local lumber) before calling for a new one. It was reported that when asked about his "stompin' board", Tom replied, "it's just a stage I'm going through". Connors periodically auctioned off his "stompin' boards" for charity, with one board selling for $15,000 in July 2011.[30]

Favourite guitar edit

Tom's favourite guitar was a Gibson Southern Jumbo acoustic that he purchased in 1956 while on his way through Ohio to Nashville, Tennessee, and Mexico. He discovered it in a furniture store, hidden in a case on top of a shelf and, after some haggling, purchased it for $80 (he had $90 with him). The guitar was used to audition in 1964 at the Maple Leaf Hotel in Timmins, as well as for writing Bud the Spud four years later. Although retired in 1972, it remained in his possession. It has subsequently been refurbished, a birthday gift from his wife Lena. The serial number inside the guitar reads 2222 in red stamped numbers and the actual age of the guitar is still unknown.[31]

Releases edit

Connors released music on seven different labels. His earliest foray into recording was on the CKGB Timmins radio station label. These 45 RPM singles were pressed by Quality Records in Toronto, and distributed (and paid for) primarily by Tom. His first two albums (and two subsequent 45 RPM singles) were released on the Rebel Records bluegrass label, under the name "Tom Connors". These two albums were subsequently re-released on Dominion Records under the Stompin' Tom moniker and had to be totally re-recorded due to a dispute with Rebel Records owner John Irvine.

Most of Connors' well-known albums were released on Dominion Records (1969–70), and after 1971 on the Boot Records label that he co-founded with Jury Krytiuk and Mark Altman. His releases on Dominion (and all subsequent releases) were done under the name "Stompin' Tom Connors". Most of the Rebel and Dominion albums would be reissued (and in some cases, re-recorded) under the Boot label, and would represent the bulk of his recorded material. It was released on 3313 RPM record albums, 45 RPM record singles, 8-tracks, and cassette tapes.

After his retreat from the music business in the late 1970s, he started the A-C-T (Assisting Canadian Talent) label in 1986, and released two albums: Stompin' Tom is Back to Assist Canadian Talent and his comeback album, Fiddle and Songs in 1988. A-C-T also re-released Tom's back catalogue on cassette tapes only.

All of his subsequent releases (and re-releases) have been through Capitol Records / EMI. Most of this work is now available on Compact Disc. In recent years, many of his album releases have included at least one re-recording of one of his earlier songs.

Promoting Canadian artists edit

Connors founded three record labels, which promoted not just his own work, but that of other Canadian artists:

  • Boot Records, together with its budget label Cynda, which were active in the 1970s and 1980s
  • A-C-T, active from the late 1980s

Among artists who were featured on these labels were Liona Boyd,[32] Rita MacNeil, The Canadian Brass, Dixie Flyers, Charlie Panigoniak, among others. Liona Boyd recalled in 2013 about the time Connors signed Boyd to Boot for her first record, 1974's The Guitar, and two more:

It was Tom's vision obviously. And as I understood it, he wasn't really a fan of classical music but he had heard Canada had no classical label, which was absolutely true. So bless him, he went and decided he'd be the first one. And he signed myself and the Canadian Brass. It's like me deciding, "Well listen, maybe I don't know much about rap, but hey Canada's doesn't have a rap label, I'll go and do it." So he was a bit of a pioneer with classical music.[32]

Cultural and historical references edit

In the book Shake Hands with the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda, Romeo Dallaire, the Canadian general who led the UNAMIR peacekeeping force in Rwanda during that country's 1994 genocide reported that he played a recording of Tom's song "The Blue Berets" (about United Nations peacekeeping forces) to keep up his troops' morale while their headquarters was under bombardment.

The Les Claypool Frog Brigade mentions Connors in the song "Long in the Tooth" on the album Purple Onion, while Corb Lund references him in the song "Long Gone to Saskatchewan" and Dean Brody references him in the song "Canadian Girls".

Tim Hus also wrote a song titled "Man with the Black Hat" about Connors.

Songs referencing Canadian historical events edit

The following is a list of events in the history of Canada which have been the subject of a song by Connors, who is widely renowned for singing about both well-known and little-known episodes in the country's past.

Song Summary
"Reesor Crossing Tragedy" 1969 song about the Reesor Siding Strike of 1963 which saw three union workers murdered.
"Tillsonburg" When Stompin' Tom worked in the tobacco fields of Tillsonburg, Ontario.
"Wop May" About the Canadian pilot Wilfrid R. "Wop" May.
"The Bridge Came Tumblin' Down" 1972 song about the 19 men killed in the collapse of the Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Crossing.
"The Curse of the Marc Guylaine" 1973 song about the fishing trawler Marc Guylaine which saw two sister-ships and two identical ships all sink under inexplicable circumstances.
"Big Joe Mufferaw" About the French-Canadian logging legend Joseph Montferrand.
"The Martin Hartwell Story" About the bush pilot Martin Hartwell who survived 31 days in the Northwest Territories, after resorting to cannibalism (Connors' song does not reference this last fact, instead focusing on the efforts of David Pisurayak Kootook in helping keep Hartwell alive at the cost of his own life).
"Algoma Central 69" About the historical Algoma Central Railway.
"The Black Donnellys' Massacre" and "Jenny Donnelly" Both about the Black Donnellys
"The Last Fatal Duel" 1973 song about Robert Lyon.
"Fire in the Mine" About the Hollinger Mines fire that killed 39 miners in Timmins, Ontario.

Personal life edit

Connors married Lena Welsh on November 2, 1973. The ceremony was broadcast live on Elwood Glover's Luncheon Date on CBC Television.[33] During an interview on the show, he said they had chosen to get married on television to share this happy moment with his fans across the country whose support had rescued him from a difficult pre-showbusiness life.[34] Connors had a son, Taw Connors.[35] He also had another son, Tom Jr.[36]

Connors was a heavy smoker—estimated to consume 100 cigarettes a day[20]—and an equally heavy drinker. On tour, he had to drive the lead truck, and could never be the last person to go to bed, and that often meant that his fellow musicians had to keep up with his pace.[20]

Connors always wore his black Stetson in public, and refused to remove it for any reason, even when meeting Queen Elizabeth II at a dinner in Ottawa in October 2002. Buckingham Palace smoothed the way by likening Mr. Connors's hat to a religious headdress such as a nun's habit or a Sikh's turban.[19] However, Connors did go hatless during his nationally-televised wedding on CBC-TV to Lena Welsh.

Retirement and nationalist protest edit

As the 1970s progressed, he retired to his farm at Ballinafad,[37] near Erin, Ontario, to protest the lack of support given to Canadian stories by the policies of the Federal government, particularly the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC).[38] He also boycotted the Juno Awards in protest of the qualification guidelines set by the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (CARAS) for possible nominees who were being consistently nominated and awarded outside of their musical genre. He strongly opposed artists who conducted most of their business in the United States being nominated for Junos in Canada. Connors, who referred to these particular artists as "turncoat Canadians", felt that in view of the fact that they had chosen to live and work in the U.S., it was only fair that they competed with Americans for Grammy Awards, and left the Juno competition to those who lived and conducted business in Canada.

His protest caught national attention when he sent back his six Junos accompanied by a letter to the board of directors.

Gentlemen:

I am returning herewith the six Juno awards that I once felt honoured to have received and which, I am no longer proud to have in my possession. As far as I am concerned you can give them to the border jumpers who didn't receive an award this year and maybe you can have them presented by Charley Pride. I feel that the Junos should be for people who are living in Canada, whose main base of business operations is in Canada, who are working toward the recognition of Canadian talent in this country and who are trying to further the export of such talent from this country to the world with a view to proudly showing off what this country can contribute to the world market.

Until the academy appears to comply more closely with aspirations of this kind, I will no longer stand for any nominations, nor will I accept any award given.

Yours very truly, Stompin' Tom Connors[39]

He remained in retirement for 12 years, only returning to the studio in 1986 to produce a new album to promote Canadian artists.[40] That year, Tim Vesely and Dave Bidini of Rheostatics crashed his 50th birthday party and published an article about it in a Toronto newspaper,[41] initiating a resurgence of public and record label interest in his work which resulted in the release in 1988 of Fiddle and Song, his first new album since 1977.

Guest of honour on Late Night edit

Connors' music is rarely heard outside Canada, with the possible exception of his anthemic "The Hockey Song" which has been recorded by many artists and played regularly within the arenas of the National Hockey League. It has been suggested that Connors refused to allow foreign release of his material, although a more likely reason is that the very Canadian-specific subject matter of many of his folk songs has resulted in limited demand in foreign markets. When Late Night with Conan O'Brien taped a week's worth of shows in Canada in 2004, Connors was one of the guests of honour, leading the Toronto audience in a rendition of "The Hockey Song"; this was one of the few times Connors performed on American television. Another Canadian-taped installment of Late Night featured a segment in which Triumph the Insult Comic Dog visited Quebec; a parody of Connors' "Canada Day, Up Canada Way" is heard during the segment.

Dispute with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation edit

According to Connors' promoter, Brian Edwards, the CBC had expressed interest for Connors to do a music special since 1990.[42] Connors shot and edited a live concert presentation at Hamilton Place at a cost of over $200,000 of his own money in September 2005. Edwards said that a copy was presented to the CBC's head of TV variety and that he received a reply the next day telling him that a decision would be reached within a few weeks. After 10 weeks, another email was then sent to the newly appointed programming VP, and a prompt reply came back that said that the broadcaster was moving away from music and variety programming and that the Connors special did not fit with its strategy.

Edwards said that he received another letter from the CBC that reinforced its lack of interest in the concert special but said that Connors would have been a great guest to perform a song on the network's Hockeyville series or an excellent subject for a Life and Times project. In response, Connors said:

As far as I'm concerned, if the CBC, our own public network, will not reconsider their refusal to air a Stompin' Tom special, they can take their wonderful offer of letting me sing a song as a guest on some other program and shove it.[42]

In 2014, the soundtrack to the unbroadcast special was released posthumously on CD by Universal Music Canada.

Autobiography edit

Stompin' Tom: Before the Fame is an autobiography detailing Connors' childhood years in an orphanage, and as a farm labourer. It was a runner-up for the Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction in 1996[43] and became a bestseller in 1997. It details his life before becoming famous. In 2000 Connors wrote his second autobiography The Connors Tone.

Death and memorial service edit

Connors died of kidney failure on March 6, 2013, at his home in Ballinafad.[19][44][45] He refused to seek medical treatment, as he was skeptical of the benefits of medical technology.[19] On March 7, flags were lowered to half-mast at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa,[46][47] and also in Tillsonburg, to mark his death.[48] On March 9, that following Saturday night, Hockey Night in Canada broadcast a special tribute to Connors at the opening of its broadcast.[49]

Immediately after his death, The Globe and Mail noted:

These days, Canada isn't scared to be a little loud and proud. Politicians push patriotic buttons and endlessly recite their devotion to "hard-working Canadians." Advertisers shamelessly (and successfully) plug our country and its natural beauty, and play up Canadians' adventuresome and ribald sides. But Stompin' Tom was doing that a long time ago, celebrating the end of a hard week's work with famous lyrics like,

The girls are out to bingo and the boys are getting' stinko
And we'll think no more of Inco on a Sudbury Saturday night.[50]

In a 1995 interview, Mr. Connors offered the opinion that nobody should die happy:

I think people should die without their dreams being fulfilled, so maybe they can have an excuse for coming around again.[2]

On March 7, several members of the federal New Democratic Party caucus, led by former musicians Charlie Angus and Andrew Cash, performed a group rendition of Connors' signature song "Bud the Spud" in the foyer of the House of Commons of Canada in tribute.[51]

In addition to reports and obituaries published in the Canadian media, his death was also reported by The New York Times,[2] BBC News[3] and the Xinhua News Agency.[47]

A memorial was held on March 13, 2013, at the Peterborough Memorial Centre in Peterborough, Ontario. Tommy Hunter attended, and the celebration included speeches by former governor general Adrienne Clarkson and Ken Dryden.[52] Testimonials were given or read from others, including Roméo Dallaire, Rita MacNeil and Liona Boyd. Before his death, Connors had personally selected the artists who would perform:[53]

Tribute Artists
Peterborough Postman, The Blue Berets, The Ballad of Stompin' Tom and The Hockey Song (videos) Stompin' Tom Connors
Fiddle medley of traditional music (The Maritime Waltz) Billy Macinnis
Man in the Black Hat Tim Hus
Little Wawa and Gumboot Cloggeroo (medley) J.P. Cormier and Dave Gunning
Farewell to Nova Scotia Sylvia Tyson and Cindy Church
The Bridge Came Tumbling Down Dave Bidini
Coal Boat Song Damhnait Doyle
So Long Stompin' Tom Mike Plume
I am the Wind Mark Laforme

At the end of the service, before Sudbury Saturday Night was played, Tom Connors, Jr., spoke about his father, and looked to the future:

I heard some people comment at the funeral, saying there'll never be another Stompin' Tom. Well, I got news for you. We still have a Canada, and we still have the roads, towns, people, jobs – and that's what Tom wrote about. So never say never.... He never liked anyone copying him, but anyone who wants to sing about Canada, keep 'er on going.

It's nice to travel south. It might be warmer on the skin, but if you go east and west, it'll be warmer on your hearts.[52]

He was subsequently buried at Erin Union Cemetery in Erin, Ontario.[54] The headstone contains these words:

The body has returned to sod,
The spirit has returned to God.
So on this spot, no need for grief,
Here only lies a fallen leaf.
Until new blossoms form in time,
The tree is where I now reside.
But with this poem, as you can see,
They haven't heard the last of me.[54]

Connors was also the subject of a video tribute at the 2013 East Coast Music Awards on March 10.[55]

Honours edit

 
The 2015 bronze statue of Stompin' Tom, with Connors' left hand positioned for chord of C-, one of the major chords in the song Sudbury Saturday Night[56]

The following honours were conferred on him:

In 1993, he declined to be inducted into the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame.[58]

In The Greatest Canadian list, he ranked thirteenth, the highest placing for any artist on the list. Connors was one of four musicians pictured on the second series of the Canadian Recording Artist Series issued by Canada Post stamps on July 2, 2009.[67]

Discography edit

Albums edit

From 1991, Connors recorded his albums at Escarpment Sound Studio in Acton, Ontario.[68]

Year Album Chart Positions CRIA
CAN Country CAN
1967 The Northlands' Own Tom ConnorsA
1968 On Tragedy Trail
1969 Bud the Spud and Other Favourites Gold
1970 Stompin' Tom Meets Big Joe Mufferaw
Merry Christmas Everybody
1971 Live at the Horseshoe
My Stompin' Grounds 71
Love & LaughterB
1972 Stompin' Tom and the Hockey Song
1973 To It and at It
Northlands Zone
1974 Stompin' Tom Meets Muk Tuk Annie
1975 The North Atlantic Squadron
1976 The Unpopular Stompin' Tom Connors
1977 Stompin' Tom at the Gumboot Cloggeroo
1986 Stompin' Tom Is Back to Assist Canadian TalentC
1988 Fiddle and Song
1991 More of the Stompin' Tom Phenomenon
1992 Believe in Your Country 9
1993 Dr. Stompin' Tom Eh? 28
1995 Long Gone to the Yukon 5
1999 Move Along with Stompin' Tom
2000 The Confederation BridgeD
2002 An Ode for the Road
2004 Stompin' Tom and the Hockey Mom Tribute
2008 The Ballad of Stompin Tom
2012 Stompin' Tom and the Road's Of Life
2014 Unreleased Songs From The Vault Collection-Vol. 1
Live Concert Soundtrack
2017 Stompin' Tom Connors
2018 Unreleased Songs From The Vault Collection (Vol. 3)
2021 Unreleased Songs From The Vault Collection Volume. 4: Let's Smile Again
Notes
  • ARe-released on A-C-T Records in the mid-1980s as "Northland Zone" due to a printing error
  • BLater released as "Stompin' Tom and the Moon-Man Newfie" in 1973
  • CContains four Stompin' Tom songs plus an intro and final message to support Canadian talent. Otherwise, this is an album which also features other Canadian country musicians: Wayne Chapman, Cliff Evans, Donna Lambert, Bruce Caves, Art Hawes, Kent Brockwell
  • DA five-song EP containing The Confederation Bridge, My Home Cradled Out In The Waves, Bud the Spud, Skinner's Pond Teapot, J.R.'s Bar – basically PEI songs.

Compilations edit

Year Album CAN Country CRIA
1970 Stompin' Tom Connors Sings 60 Old Time FavouritesA
1971 Stompin' Tom Sings 60 More Old Time FavouritesB
The Best of Stompin' Tom Connors
Pistol Packin' Mama
Bringing Them Back
1973 Across This LandC
1980 Souvenirs
1990 A Proud Canadian Platinum
1991 Once Upon a Stompin' Tom
1993 K.I.C. Along with Stompin' Tom 26
1998 25 of the Best Stompin' Tom Souvenirs 12 Platinum
2001 Sings Canadian History
2006 Live Concert (DVD) 2× Platinum
2014 Unreleased Songs from the VaultD
Notes
  • AThis is a Five Record box set that has never been re-released
  • BThis is another Five Record box set that has never been re-released
  • COriginal Soundtrack recording (at the Horseshoe Tavern) for "Across This Land with Stompin' Tom". Also features Bobby Lalonde, Joey Tardif, Chris Scott, Kent Brockwell, Sharon Lowness and The Rovin' Cowboys plus a separately recorded "Tribute To Stompin' Tom" by Fred Dixon. This 'double-album' has never been re-released.
  • DFirst of four volumes (to date) compiling demos, unreleased studio recordings and (despite the title of the series) previously released tracks. Vol. 2 (2015); Vol. 3 (2018); Vol. 4: Let's Smile Again (2021).

Singles edit

Year Single Chart Positions Album
CAN Country CAN AC
1969 "Bud the Spud" 26 "Bud the Spud and Other Favourites"
1970 "Big Joe Mufferaw" 1 "Stompin' Tom Meets Big Joe Mufferaw"
"Ketchup Song" 1 "Bud the Spud and Other Favourites"
"Luke's Guitar" 2
1971 "Snowmobile Song" 40 "My Stompin' Grounds"
"The Bridge Came Tumbling Down" 2
"Tillsonburg" 12
"My Stompin' Grounds" 31
"Name the Capital" 34
1972 "Moon-Man Newfie" 1 "Love & Laughter"
"The Bug Song" 9 18
"Fire in the Mine" 24
1973 "The Consumer" 59 "Stompin' Tom and the Hockey Song"
"Martin Hartwell Story" 30 "To It and at It"
"Poor Poor Farmer" 68 "Stompin' Tom Meets Big Joe Mufferaw"
"Algoma Central No. 69" 67
"Don Messer Story" 40 "To It and at It"
1974 "To It and at It" 42
"Streaker's Dream" 34 "Stompin' Tom Meets Muk Tuk Annie"
1975 "Jack of Many Trades" 24 "The North Atlantic Squadron"
1989 "Canada Day, Up Canada Way" 29 "Fiddle and Song"
"I Am the Wind" 40
1997 "The Confederation Bridge" 79 "The Confederation Bridge"

Other charted songs edit

Year Single Chart Positions
CAN
2013 The Hockey Song 29

Music videos edit

Year Video
1989 "I Am the Wind"
1991 "Margo's Cargo"

Bibliography edit

  • Connors, Stompin' Tom (1992). My Stompin' Grounds. illustrations by Kurt Swinghammer. Toronto: Doubleday Canada. p. 32. ISBN 0-38525406-7.
  • Connors, Stompin' Tom (1994). Bud the Spud. illustrations by Brenda Jones. Charlottetown: Ragweed. p. 20. ISBN 0-92155643-8.
  • Connors, Tom (1995). Stompin' Tom – Before the Fame. Toronto: Viking Penguin. p. 560. ISBN 0-670-86487-0.
  • Connors, Tom (2000). Stompin' Tom and the Connors Tone. Toronto: Viking Penguin. p. 680. ISBN 0-670-86488-9.
  • Connors, Stompin' Tom (2005). 250 Songs by Stompin' Tom: Including All the Words and Chords. Georgetown: Crown-Vetch Music. p. 183. ISBN 0-97381710-0.
  • Connors, Stompin' Tom (2009). Hockey Night Tonight. illustrations by Brenda Jones. Halifax: Nimbus. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-55109733-6.

Filmography edit

  • North of Superior (1971) – includes a performance by Connors
  • This Is Stompin' Tom (1972) – includes a performance by Connors
  • Across This Land with Stompin' Tom Connors (1973)
  • Stompin' Tom's Canada (1974–1975) – TV series
  • Stompin' Tom in Live Concert (2006) – TV special

Other creations edit

In 1976, Connors created and sold a perpetual calendar that cross-references dates to days of the week, which is valid for all years from 1 to 3100 AD.[69] It was released to Harrowsmith's Truly Canadian Almanac in 2012.[70]

References edit

  1. ^ Chadbourne, Eugene. "Stompin' Tom Connors". AllMusic. Retrieved March 4, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d Douglas Martin (March 8, 2013). "Stompin' Tom Connors, Canadian Singer, Dies at 77". The New York Times. Retrieved March 8, 2013.
  3. ^ a b "Tom Connors, Canadian country-folk legend, dies at 77". BBC News. March 8, 2013. Retrieved March 8, 2013.
  4. ^ "Stompin' Tom's classic The Hockey Song to be inducted into Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame". CBC News. The Canadian Press. October 24, 2018. Retrieved October 28, 2018.
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  6. ^ Tom Connors CBC radio 1973
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  37. ^ Smith, Winifred (June 4, 1975). "Stompin' Tom Moves In". The Georgetown Herald. Retrieved March 8, 2013.
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  65. ^ "Legendary Canadian singer-songwriter Stompin' Tom Connors dead at 77". SOCAN. March 7, 2013. Retrieved March 8, 2013.
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External links edit

  • Official website
  • Giant mural design of Stompin' Tom Connors promoting his "A Proud Canadian" CD Release, 1990
  • Watch Moon Man, a National Film Board of Canada animated short featuring the song "Moon Man Newfie"
  • Stompin' Tom Connors at Find a Grave
  • Across This Land with Stompin' Tom Connors Fan Tribute
  • Stompin' Tom Connors at Library of Congress, with 5 library catalogue records
  • , at Back to the Sugar Camp
  • Stompin' Tom Connors discography at Discogs as "Tom Connors"
  • Stompin' Tom Connors discography at Discogs as "Stompin' Tom Connors"
  • Stompin' Tom Connors at IMDb
  • Article at canadianbands.com
  • Article at thecanadianencyclopedia.ca

stompin, connors, charles, thomas, stompin, connors, february, 1936, march, 2013, canadian, country, folk, singer, songwriter, focusing, career, exclusively, native, canada, credited, with, writing, more, than, songs, released, four, dozen, albums, with, total. Charles Thomas Stompin Tom Connors OC February 9 1936 March 6 2013 was a Canadian country and folk singer songwriter Focusing his career exclusively on his native Canada he is credited with writing more than 300 songs and has released four dozen albums with total sales of nearly four million copies 1 Stompin Tom ConnorsConnors in 2002Background informationBirth nameCharles Thomas ConnorsAlso known asTommy Messer Stompin Tom ConnorsBorn 1936 02 09 February 9 1936Saint John New Brunswick CanadaOriginSkinners Pond Prince Edward Island CanadaDiedMarch 6 2013 2013 03 06 aged 77 Ballinafad Ontario CanadaGenresCanadianafolkcountryOccupation s MusiciansongwriterInstrument s VocalsguitarYears active1964 19781988 2013LabelsEMIBootRebelDominionCyndaACTWebsitewww wbr stompintom wbr com Connors songs have become part of the Canadian cultural landscape Among his best known songs are Sudbury Saturday Night Bud the Spud and The Hockey Song the last is played at various games throughout the National Hockey League including at every Toronto Maple Leafs home game 2 3 In 2018 the song was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in a ceremony at a Leafs game 4 Contents 1 Early life 2 Musical career 2 1 Nickname 2 2 Favourite guitar 2 3 Releases 2 4 Promoting Canadian artists 2 5 Cultural and historical references 2 6 Songs referencing Canadian historical events 3 Personal life 3 1 Retirement and nationalist protest 3 2 Guest of honour on Late Night 3 3 Dispute with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 3 4 Autobiography 3 5 Death and memorial service 4 Honours 5 Discography 5 1 Albums 5 2 Compilations 5 3 Singles 5 4 Other charted songs 5 5 Music videos 6 Bibliography 7 Filmography 8 Other creations 9 References 10 External linksEarly life editCharles Thomas Connors was born on February 9 1936 at the General Hospital in Saint John New Brunswick to Isabel Connors and Thomas Joseph Sullivan 5 Isabel s family were Irish Protestants and his maternal grandfather John Connors was a sea captain from Boston Massachusetts who had died before Charles was born His father was a Catholic of Irish ancestry and may have been Metis or Micmac Isabel Connors and Thomas Joseph Sullivan did not marry until 30 years later as Sullivan s family were devout Catholics and did not want him marrying a Protestant they later divorced 6 Sullivan s mother gave him 10 and he was told to leave home 7 Connors was also a cousin of New Brunswick fiddling sensation Ned Landry Connors first home was on St Patrick Street in the poorest and most rundown part of Saint John He lived there with his mother his maternal grandmother Lucy Scribner and his maternal stepgrandfather Joe Scribner 8 When Connors was three Lucy and Joe died within weeks of each other This forced Isabel to move to a two bedroom apartment 9 Around this time Isabel got pregnant again by Tom s father when he briefly returned 10 and Tom got a taste of hitchhiking when he and Isabel went to visit relatives in Tusket Falls Nova Scotia This trip was the first time he saw his mother steal to feed them when she stole food from a Chinese restaurant in Yarmouth Nova Scotia When they returned to Saint John they moved in with friends of Isabel 11 and she gave birth to Tom s sister Marie who had to stay in hospital to have a birthmark removed Later Isabel and Tom moved in with her new boyfriend Terrence Messer at the corner of Clarence and Erin Streets While they did not marry the family would take on his surname Terrence and Isabel did pretend to be married to find a place to live due to the moral standards of the time 12 The family was quite poor and Terrence was a neglectful stepfather who spent most of the family s money on wine When they missed paying rent the family was evicted and moved to a house on St Patrick Street 13 Marie finally came home from the hospital then 14 but she died when Tom was four following more surgery to remove another birthmark 15 To make ends meet Isabel got a job scrubbing floors and Terrence did odd jobs 16 The family was evicted again after a spat with the landlord when Tom started a fire in their apartment 17 Their next home was a basement apartment on King Street 18 Connors spent a short time living with his mother in a low security women s penitentiary before he was seized by Children s Aid Society and later adopted by Cora and Russell Aylward 19 in Skinners Pond Prince Edward Island At 13 he ran away from his adoptive family to hitchhike across Canada He got his first guitar at 14 and at 15 he wrote his first song called Reversing Falls Darling His hitchhiking journey consumed the next 13 years of his life as he travelled among various part time jobs while writing songs on his guitar singing for his supper He worked in mines and rode in boxcars 20 and in the coldest part of winter he welcomed vagrancy arrests for the warm place to sleep 2 At his last stop in Timmins Ontario he found himself a nickel short of a 35 cent beer at the city s Maple Leaf Hotel Tom told the bartender to put the cap back on the bottle and he d head for the Sally Ann but the bartender Gaetan Lepine accepted the 30 cents and offered him a second beer if he would open his guitar case and play a few songs 21 These few songs turned into a 14 month run at the hotel a weekly spot on CKGB in Timmins eight 45 RPM recordings and the end of the beginning for Tom Connors Musical career editConnors was never part of the Canadian musical establishment and his style was quite different from other Canadian icons such as Leonard Cohen or Gordon Lightfoot 19 He could however be characterized as a passionist poet within Canadian culture similar to Milton Acorn and Stan Rogers 22 As the National Post characterized him He sang of a nation without politics to its proud history and to its better angels His songs remind us that Canada matters that we ve built something amazing here and must not take it for granted 23 Typically writing about Canadian lore and history some of Connors better known songs include Bud the Spud Big Joe Mufferaw The Black Donnellys The Martin Hartwell Story Reesor Crossing Tragedy Sudbury Saturday Night and The Hockey Song This last often incorrectly called The Good Old Hockey Game is frequently played over sound systems at National Hockey League NHL games Throughout the years Tom never lost touch with Gaetan Lepine the bartender he befriended in Timmins in fact the two wrote many songs together These songs are featured in 250 Songs by Stompin Tom Including All the Words and Chords In 1968 he composed and sang a radio jingle for a Sudbury area tire store Duhamel amp Dewar in exchange for a set of winter tires When your tires are old and wornand you think they should be newer drive on down to the Tire Townand see Duhamel and Dewar 24 During the mid 1970s Connors wrote and recorded The Consumer an ode to bill paying that became the theme song for the popular Canadian Broadcasting Corporation CBC consumer affairs program Marketplace For the first few seasons Connors appeared in the program s opening credits before The Consumer was replaced as the theme initially by an instrumental background version and ultimately by a different piece of music In 1974 Tom had a series running on CBC Television in which he met and exchanged with folks from all across Canada Stompin Tom s Canada was co produced with the CBC and consisted of 26 half hour episodes The song that Tom wrote in the least time was Maritime Waltz which was completed in 12 minutes 25 His character was rough but genuine As the National Post noted T hat persona wasn t shtick Stompin Tom was one of the great Canadian story tellers and a uniquely collegial one as well The proper venue for a Gordon Lightfoot performance is a concert hall where the audience connects silently and contemplatively The proper venue for Mr Connors was a smoky bar room where people connected by slamming their beer mugs together hopefully obliterating whatever differences existed between them 23 In 1999 after completing a 38 city tour 26 Connors received the National Achievement Award at the annual SOCAN Awards held in Toronto 27 In 2009 Connors was the recipient of the prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award at the annual SOCAN Awards in Toronto 28 Nickname edit Connors habit of stomping the heel of his left boot to keep rhythm earned him the nickname that stompin guy or Stomper It wasn t until Canada s 100th birthday July 1 1967 that the name Stompin Tom Connors was first used when Boyd MacDonald a waiter at the King George Tavern in Peterborough Ontario introduced Tom on stage 29 Based on an enthused audience reaction to it Tom had it officially registered in Ontario as Stompin Tom Ltd the following week Various stories have circulated about the origin of the foot stomping but it s generally accepted that he did this to keep a strong tempo for his guitar playing especially in the noisy bars and beer joints where he frequently performed After numerous complaints about damaged stage floors Tom began to carry a piece of plywood that he stomped even more vigorously than before The stompin board became one of his trademarks After stomping a hole in the wood he would pick it up and show it to the audience accompanied by a joke about the quality of the local lumber before calling for a new one It was reported that when asked about his stompin board Tom replied it s just a stage I m going through Connors periodically auctioned off his stompin boards for charity with one board selling for 15 000 in July 2011 30 Favourite guitar edit Tom s favourite guitar was a Gibson Southern Jumbo acoustic that he purchased in 1956 while on his way through Ohio to Nashville Tennessee and Mexico He discovered it in a furniture store hidden in a case on top of a shelf and after some haggling purchased it for 80 he had 90 with him The guitar was used to audition in 1964 at the Maple Leaf Hotel in Timmins as well as for writing Bud the Spud four years later Although retired in 1972 it remained in his possession It has subsequently been refurbished a birthday gift from his wife Lena The serial number inside the guitar reads 2222 in red stamped numbers and the actual age of the guitar is still unknown 31 Releases edit Connors released music on seven different labels His earliest foray into recording was on the CKGB Timmins radio station label These 45 RPM singles were pressed by Quality Records in Toronto and distributed and paid for primarily by Tom His first two albums and two subsequent 45 RPM singles were released on the Rebel Records bluegrass label under the name Tom Connors These two albums were subsequently re released on Dominion Records under the Stompin Tom moniker and had to be totally re recorded due to a dispute with Rebel Records owner John Irvine Most of Connors well known albums were released on Dominion Records 1969 70 and after 1971 on the Boot Records label that he co founded with Jury Krytiuk and Mark Altman His releases on Dominion and all subsequent releases were done under the name Stompin Tom Connors Most of the Rebel and Dominion albums would be reissued and in some cases re recorded under the Boot label and would represent the bulk of his recorded material It was released on 331 3 RPM record albums 45 RPM record singles 8 tracks and cassette tapes After his retreat from the music business in the late 1970s he started the A C T Assisting Canadian Talent label in 1986 and released two albums Stompin Tom is Back to Assist Canadian Talent and his comeback album Fiddle and Songs in 1988 A C T also re released Tom s back catalogue on cassette tapes only All of his subsequent releases and re releases have been through Capitol Records EMI Most of this work is now available on Compact Disc In recent years many of his album releases have included at least one re recording of one of his earlier songs Promoting Canadian artists edit Connors founded three record labels which promoted not just his own work but that of other Canadian artists Boot Records together with its budget label Cynda which were active in the 1970s and 1980s A C T active from the late 1980sAmong artists who were featured on these labels were Liona Boyd 32 Rita MacNeil The Canadian Brass Dixie Flyers Charlie Panigoniak among others Liona Boyd recalled in 2013 about the time Connors signed Boyd to Boot for her first record 1974 s The Guitar and two more It was Tom s vision obviously And as I understood it he wasn t really a fan of classical music but he had heard Canada had no classical label which was absolutely true So bless him he went and decided he d be the first one And he signed myself and the Canadian Brass It s like me deciding Well listen maybe I don t know much about rap but hey Canada s doesn t have a rap label I ll go and do it So he was a bit of a pioneer with classical music 32 Cultural and historical references edit In the book Shake Hands with the Devil The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda Romeo Dallaire the Canadian general who led the UNAMIR peacekeeping force in Rwanda during that country s 1994 genocide reported that he played a recording of Tom s song The Blue Berets about United Nations peacekeeping forces to keep up his troops morale while their headquarters was under bombardment The Les Claypool Frog Brigade mentions Connors in the song Long in the Tooth on the album Purple Onion while Corb Lund references him in the song Long Gone to Saskatchewan and Dean Brody references him in the song Canadian Girls Tim Hus also wrote a song titled Man with the Black Hat about Connors Songs referencing Canadian historical events edit The following is a list of events in the history of Canada which have been the subject of a song by Connors who is widely renowned for singing about both well known and little known episodes in the country s past Song Summary Reesor Crossing Tragedy 1969 song about the Reesor Siding Strike of 1963 which saw three union workers murdered Tillsonburg When Stompin Tom worked in the tobacco fields of Tillsonburg Ontario Wop May About the Canadian pilot Wilfrid R Wop May The Bridge Came Tumblin Down 1972 song about the 19 men killed in the collapse of the Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Crossing The Curse of the Marc Guylaine 1973 song about the fishing trawler Marc Guylaine which saw two sister ships and two identical ships all sink under inexplicable circumstances Big Joe Mufferaw About the French Canadian logging legend Joseph Montferrand The Martin Hartwell Story About the bush pilot Martin Hartwell who survived 31 days in the Northwest Territories after resorting to cannibalism Connors song does not reference this last fact instead focusing on the efforts of David Pisurayak Kootook in helping keep Hartwell alive at the cost of his own life Algoma Central 69 About the historical Algoma Central Railway The Black Donnellys Massacre and Jenny Donnelly Both about the Black Donnellys The Last Fatal Duel 1973 song about Robert Lyon Fire in the Mine About the Hollinger Mines fire that killed 39 miners in Timmins Ontario Personal life editConnors married Lena Welsh on November 2 1973 The ceremony was broadcast live on Elwood Glover s Luncheon Date on CBC Television 33 During an interview on the show he said they had chosen to get married on television to share this happy moment with his fans across the country whose support had rescued him from a difficult pre showbusiness life 34 Connors had a son Taw Connors 35 He also had another son Tom Jr 36 Connors was a heavy smoker estimated to consume 100 cigarettes a day 20 and an equally heavy drinker On tour he had to drive the lead truck and could never be the last person to go to bed and that often meant that his fellow musicians had to keep up with his pace 20 Connors always wore his black Stetson in public and refused to remove it for any reason even when meeting Queen Elizabeth II at a dinner in Ottawa in October 2002 Buckingham Palace smoothed the way by likening Mr Connors s hat to a religious headdress such as a nun s habit or a Sikh s turban 19 However Connors did go hatless during his nationally televised wedding on CBC TV to Lena Welsh Retirement and nationalist protest edit As the 1970s progressed he retired to his farm at Ballinafad 37 near Erin Ontario to protest the lack of support given to Canadian stories by the policies of the Federal government particularly the Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC 38 He also boycotted the Juno Awards in protest of the qualification guidelines set by the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences CARAS for possible nominees who were being consistently nominated and awarded outside of their musical genre He strongly opposed artists who conducted most of their business in the United States being nominated for Junos in Canada Connors who referred to these particular artists as turncoat Canadians felt that in view of the fact that they had chosen to live and work in the U S it was only fair that they competed with Americans for Grammy Awards and left the Juno competition to those who lived and conducted business in Canada His protest caught national attention when he sent back his six Junos accompanied by a letter to the board of directors Gentlemen I am returning herewith the six Juno awards that I once felt honoured to have received and which I am no longer proud to have in my possession As far as I am concerned you can give them to the border jumpers who didn t receive an award this year and maybe you can have them presented by Charley Pride I feel that the Junos should be for people who are living in Canada whose main base of business operations is in Canada who are working toward the recognition of Canadian talent in this country and who are trying to further the export of such talent from this country to the world with a view to proudly showing off what this country can contribute to the world market Until the academy appears to comply more closely with aspirations of this kind I will no longer stand for any nominations nor will I accept any award given Yours very truly Stompin Tom Connors 39 He remained in retirement for 12 years only returning to the studio in 1986 to produce a new album to promote Canadian artists 40 That year Tim Vesely and Dave Bidini of Rheostatics crashed his 50th birthday party and published an article about it in a Toronto newspaper 41 initiating a resurgence of public and record label interest in his work which resulted in the release in 1988 of Fiddle and Song his first new album since 1977 Guest of honour on Late Night edit Connors music is rarely heard outside Canada with the possible exception of his anthemic The Hockey Song which has been recorded by many artists and played regularly within the arenas of the National Hockey League It has been suggested that Connors refused to allow foreign release of his material although a more likely reason is that the very Canadian specific subject matter of many of his folk songs has resulted in limited demand in foreign markets When Late Night with Conan O Brien taped a week s worth of shows in Canada in 2004 Connors was one of the guests of honour leading the Toronto audience in a rendition of The Hockey Song this was one of the few times Connors performed on American television Another Canadian taped installment of Late Night featured a segment in which Triumph the Insult Comic Dog visited Quebec a parody of Connors Canada Day Up Canada Way is heard during the segment Dispute with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation edit According to Connors promoter Brian Edwards the CBC had expressed interest for Connors to do a music special since 1990 42 Connors shot and edited a live concert presentation at Hamilton Place at a cost of over 200 000 of his own money in September 2005 Edwards said that a copy was presented to the CBC s head of TV variety and that he received a reply the next day telling him that a decision would be reached within a few weeks After 10 weeks another email was then sent to the newly appointed programming VP and a prompt reply came back that said that the broadcaster was moving away from music and variety programming and that the Connors special did not fit with its strategy Edwards said that he received another letter from the CBC that reinforced its lack of interest in the concert special but said that Connors would have been a great guest to perform a song on the network s Hockeyville series or an excellent subject for a Life and Times project In response Connors said As far as I m concerned if the CBC our own public network will not reconsider their refusal to air a Stompin Tom special they can take their wonderful offer of letting me sing a song as a guest on some other program and shove it 42 In 2014 the soundtrack to the unbroadcast special was released posthumously on CD by Universal Music Canada Autobiography edit Stompin Tom Before the Fame is an autobiography detailing Connors childhood years in an orphanage and as a farm labourer It was a runner up for the Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non Fiction in 1996 43 and became a bestseller in 1997 It details his life before becoming famous In 2000 Connors wrote his second autobiography The Connors Tone Death and memorial service edit Connors died of kidney failure on March 6 2013 at his home in Ballinafad 19 44 45 He refused to seek medical treatment as he was skeptical of the benefits of medical technology 19 On March 7 flags were lowered to half mast at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa 46 47 and also in Tillsonburg to mark his death 48 On March 9 that following Saturday night Hockey Night in Canada broadcast a special tribute to Connors at the opening of its broadcast 49 Immediately after his death The Globe and Mail noted These days Canada isn t scared to be a little loud and proud Politicians push patriotic buttons and endlessly recite their devotion to hard working Canadians Advertisers shamelessly and successfully plug our country and its natural beauty and play up Canadians adventuresome and ribald sides But Stompin Tom was doing that a long time ago celebrating the end of a hard week s work with famous lyrics like The girls are out to bingo and the boys are getting stinko And we ll think no more of Inco on a Sudbury Saturday night 50 In a 1995 interview Mr Connors offered the opinion that nobody should die happy I think people should die without their dreams being fulfilled so maybe they can have an excuse for coming around again 2 On March 7 several members of the federal New Democratic Party caucus led by former musicians Charlie Angus and Andrew Cash performed a group rendition of Connors signature song Bud the Spud in the foyer of the House of Commons of Canada in tribute 51 In addition to reports and obituaries published in the Canadian media his death was also reported by The New York Times 2 BBC News 3 and the Xinhua News Agency 47 A memorial was held on March 13 2013 at the Peterborough Memorial Centre in Peterborough Ontario Tommy Hunter attended and the celebration included speeches by former governor general Adrienne Clarkson and Ken Dryden 52 Testimonials were given or read from others including Romeo Dallaire Rita MacNeil and Liona Boyd Before his death Connors had personally selected the artists who would perform 53 Tribute ArtistsPeterborough Postman The Blue Berets The Ballad of Stompin Tom and The Hockey Song videos Stompin Tom ConnorsFiddle medley of traditional music The Maritime Waltz Billy MacinnisMan in the Black Hat Tim HusLittle Wawa and Gumboot Cloggeroo medley J P Cormier and Dave GunningFarewell to Nova Scotia Sylvia Tyson and Cindy ChurchThe Bridge Came Tumbling Down Dave BidiniCoal Boat Song Damhnait DoyleSo Long Stompin Tom Mike PlumeI am the Wind Mark LaformeAt the end of the service before Sudbury Saturday Night was played Tom Connors Jr spoke about his father and looked to the future I heard some people comment at the funeral saying there ll never be another Stompin Tom Well I got news for you We still have a Canada and we still have the roads towns people jobs and that s what Tom wrote about So never say never He never liked anyone copying him but anyone who wants to sing about Canada keep er on going It s nice to travel south It might be warmer on the skin but if you go east and west it ll be warmer on your hearts 52 He was subsequently buried at Erin Union Cemetery in Erin Ontario 54 The headstone contains these words The body has returned to sod The spirit has returned to God So on this spot no need for grief Here only lies a fallen leaf Until new blossoms form in time The tree is where I now reside But with this poem as you can see They haven t heard the last of me 54 Connors was also the subject of a video tribute at the 2013 East Coast Music Awards on March 10 55 Honours edit nbsp The 2015 bronze statue of Stompin Tom with Connors left hand positioned for chord of C one of the major chords in the song Sudbury Saturday Night 56 The following honours were conferred on him From the Juno Awards Country Male Vocalist of the Year 1971 1975 and Country Album of the Year 1974 for To It And at It 57 all subsequently returned in 1978 58 He left instructions that the Junos were not to celebrate him after his death 59 In 1993 a Doctor of Laws degree honoris causa from St Thomas University 60 which was the inspiration for his album titled Dr Stompin Tom Connors eh released the same year In 1996 Officer of the Order of Canada 61 In 2000 a Lifetime Artistic Achievement award for Popular Music from the Governor General s Performing Arts Awards 62 In 2000 an honorary LL D from the University of Toronto 63 In 2002 an honorary Litt D from the University of Prince Edward Island 64 In 2009 a SOCAN award for Lifetime Achievement 65 In 2014 it was announced that a commemorative statue would be located in downtown Sudbury ON 66 In 1993 he declined to be inducted into the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame 58 In The Greatest Canadian list he ranked thirteenth the highest placing for any artist on the list Connors was one of four musicians pictured on the second series of the Canadian Recording Artist Series issued by Canada Post stamps on July 2 2009 67 Discography editAlbums edit From 1991 Connors recorded his albums at Escarpment Sound Studio in Acton Ontario 68 Year Album Chart Positions CRIACAN Country CAN1967 The Northlands Own Tom ConnorsA 1968 On Tragedy Trail 1969 Bud the Spud and Other Favourites Gold1970 Stompin Tom Meets Big Joe Mufferaw Merry Christmas Everybody 1971 Live at the Horseshoe My Stompin Grounds 71 Love amp LaughterB 1972 Stompin Tom and the Hockey Song 1973 To It and at It Northlands Zone 1974 Stompin Tom Meets Muk Tuk Annie 1975 The North Atlantic Squadron 1976 The Unpopular Stompin Tom Connors 1977 Stompin Tom at the Gumboot Cloggeroo 1986 Stompin Tom Is Back to Assist Canadian TalentC 1988 Fiddle and Song 1991 More of the Stompin Tom Phenomenon 1992 Believe in Your Country 9 1993 Dr Stompin Tom Eh 28 1995 Long Gone to the Yukon 5 1999 Move Along with Stompin Tom 2000 The Confederation BridgeD 2002 An Ode for the Road 2004 Stompin Tom and the Hockey Mom Tribute 2008 The Ballad of Stompin Tom 2012 Stompin Tom and the Road s Of Life 2014 Unreleased Songs From The Vault Collection Vol 1 Live Concert Soundtrack 2017 Stompin Tom Connors 2018 Unreleased Songs From The Vault Collection Vol 3 2021 Unreleased Songs From The Vault Collection Volume 4 Let s Smile Again NotesARe released on A C T Records in the mid 1980s as Northland Zone due to a printing error BLater released as Stompin Tom and the Moon Man Newfie in 1973 CContains four Stompin Tom songs plus an intro and final message to support Canadian talent Otherwise this is an album which also features other Canadian country musicians Wayne Chapman Cliff Evans Donna Lambert Bruce Caves Art Hawes Kent Brockwell DA five song EP containing The Confederation Bridge My Home Cradled Out In The Waves Bud the Spud Skinner s Pond Teapot J R s Bar basically PEI songs Compilations edit Year Album CAN Country CRIA1970 Stompin Tom Connors Sings 60 Old Time FavouritesA 1971 Stompin Tom Sings 60 More Old Time FavouritesB The Best of Stompin Tom Connors Pistol Packin Mama Bringing Them Back 1973 Across This LandC 1980 Souvenirs 1990 A Proud Canadian Platinum1991 Once Upon a Stompin Tom 1993 K I C Along with Stompin Tom 26 1998 25 of the Best Stompin Tom Souvenirs 12 Platinum2001 Sings Canadian History 2006 Live Concert DVD 2 Platinum2014 Unreleased Songs from the VaultD NotesAThis is a Five Record box set that has never been re released BThis is another Five Record box set that has never been re released COriginal Soundtrack recording at the Horseshoe Tavern for Across This Land with Stompin Tom Also features Bobby Lalonde Joey Tardif Chris Scott Kent Brockwell Sharon Lowness and The Rovin Cowboys plus a separately recorded Tribute To Stompin Tom by Fred Dixon This double album has never been re released DFirst of four volumes to date compiling demos unreleased studio recordings and despite the title of the series previously released tracks Vol 2 2015 Vol 3 2018 Vol 4 Let s Smile Again 2021 Singles edit Year Single Chart Positions AlbumCAN Country CAN AC1969 Bud the Spud 26 Bud the Spud and Other Favourites 1970 Big Joe Mufferaw 1 Stompin Tom Meets Big Joe Mufferaw Ketchup Song 1 Bud the Spud and Other Favourites Luke s Guitar 2 1971 Snowmobile Song 40 My Stompin Grounds The Bridge Came Tumbling Down 2 Tillsonburg 12 My Stompin Grounds 31 Name the Capital 34 1972 Moon Man Newfie 1 Love amp Laughter The Bug Song 9 18 Fire in the Mine 24 1973 The Consumer 59 Stompin Tom and the Hockey Song Martin Hartwell Story 30 To It and at It Poor Poor Farmer 68 Stompin Tom Meets Big Joe Mufferaw Algoma Central No 69 67 Don Messer Story 40 To It and at It 1974 To It and at It 42 Streaker s Dream 34 Stompin Tom Meets Muk Tuk Annie 1975 Jack of Many Trades 24 The North Atlantic Squadron 1989 Canada Day Up Canada Way 29 Fiddle and Song I Am the Wind 40 1997 The Confederation Bridge 79 The Confederation Bridge Other charted songs edit Year Single Chart PositionsCAN2013 The Hockey Song 29Music videos edit Year Video1989 I Am the Wind 1991 Margo s Cargo Bibliography editConnors Stompin Tom 1992 My Stompin Grounds illustrations by Kurt Swinghammer Toronto Doubleday Canada p 32 ISBN 0 38525406 7 Connors Stompin Tom 1994 Bud the Spud illustrations by Brenda Jones Charlottetown Ragweed p 20 ISBN 0 92155643 8 Connors Tom 1995 Stompin Tom Before the Fame Toronto Viking Penguin p 560 ISBN 0 670 86487 0 Connors Tom 2000 Stompin Tom and the Connors Tone Toronto Viking Penguin p 680 ISBN 0 670 86488 9 Connors Stompin Tom 2005 250 Songs by Stompin Tom Including All the Words and Chords Georgetown Crown Vetch Music p 183 ISBN 0 97381710 0 Connors Stompin Tom 2009 Hockey Night Tonight illustrations by Brenda Jones Halifax Nimbus p 24 ISBN 978 1 55109733 6 Filmography editNorth of Superior 1971 includes a performance by Connors This Is Stompin Tom 1972 includes a performance by Connors Across This Land with Stompin Tom Connors 1973 Stompin Tom s Canada 1974 1975 TV series Stompin Tom in Live Concert 2006 TV specialOther creations editIn 1976 Connors created and sold a perpetual calendar that cross references dates to days of the week which is valid for all years from 1 to 3100 AD 69 It was released to Harrowsmith s Truly Canadian Almanac in 2012 70 References edit Chadbourne Eugene Stompin Tom Connors AllMusic Retrieved March 4 2012 a b c d Douglas Martin March 8 2013 Stompin Tom Connors Canadian Singer Dies at 77 The New York Times Retrieved March 8 2013 a b Tom Connors Canadian country folk legend dies at 77 BBC News March 8 2013 Retrieved March 8 2013 Stompin Tom s classic The Hockey Song to be inducted into Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame CBC News The Canadian Press October 24 2018 Retrieved October 28 2018 Stompin Tom Connors NBLE nble lib unb ca Retrieved September 28 2023 Tom Connors CBC radio 1973 Stompin Tom 1995 pp 6 7 Stompin Tom 1995 p 8 Stompin Tom 1995 p 21 Stompin Tom 1995 p 22 Stompin Tom 1995 p 24 Stompin Tom 1995 p 25 Stompin Tom 1995 p 26 Stompin Tom 1995 p 27 Stompin Tom 1995 p 28 Stompin Tom 1995 pp 26 29 Stompin Tom 1995 p 31 Stompin Tom 1995 p 32 a b c d e Sandra Martin March 9 2013 Canada s troubadour sang of everyday lives The Globe and Mail Toronto Retrieved March 9 2013 a b c Dave Bidini March 7 2013 The legend of Stompin Tom Dave Bidini bids farewell to a Canadian icon National Post Retrieved November 11 2017 Lepine Gaetan March 7 2013 The bartender who discovered Stompin Tom Connors Day 6 Interview Interviewed by Brent Bambury Rick Salutin March 8 2013 Stompin Tom Connors deserves a place in the ranks of Canada s poets Toronto Star Retrieved March 10 2013 a b Farewell Stompin Tom National Post March 13 2013 Retrieved November 11 2017 Stompin Tom Once Wrote a Radio Jingle for Duhamel amp Dewar southsidestory ca September 2016 Retrieved March 22 2018 Stompin Tom 1995 p 490 Bettsy Powell January 16 1999 There s no place like home Billboard Nielsen Business Media Inc p 58 ISSN 0006 2510 1 dead link 2009 Socan Awards Socan Archived from the original on August 10 2016 Retrieved August 24 2016 Stompin Tom 1995 p 509 Stompin Tom raises money for Orillia charity Toronto Sun February 7 2011 Retrieved March 7 2013 Stompin Tom 1995 pp 356 379 a b Jane Stevenson March 7 2013 Love for Stompin Tom Connors went beyond Canada s borders Toronto Sun Retrieved March 10 2013 Lena Welsh and Stompin Tom Connors November 2 1973 Toronto Life Archived from the original on August 4 2010 Retrieved March 7 2013 Michael Enright March 14 2013 Remembering Stompin Tom Connors Rewind Archived from the original on March 14 2013 a href Template Cite AV media html title Template Cite AV media cite AV media a CS1 maint unfit URL link Stompin Tom Connors son tours Ontario in tribute to father cbc ca September 5 2016 Retrieved June 6 2021 Jane Stevenson November 12 2017 Stompin Tom Connors stomps his way into CWOF with family s blessing torontosun com Retrieved June 6 2021 Smith Winifred June 4 1975 Stompin Tom Moves In The Georgetown Herald Retrieved March 8 2013 Jennifer Barr January 19 1977 Stompin Tom media critic champions Canadian talent Acton Free Press Retrieved March 7 2013 Stompin Tom discloses reasons for Juno nomination withdrawal RPM April 22 1978 Retrieved March 8 2013 Stompin Tom is back from 10 year exile The Georgetown Herald December 10 1986 Retrieved March 7 2013 Rheostatics Blame Canada Exclaim November 2001 a b Stompin Tom Snubbed by CBC TV press release by Brian Edwards Rocklands Entertainment Inc Peterborough Ontario 2006 Wilfrid Laurier University 1996 George G Blackburn Retrieved November 17 2012 Quill Greg March 7 2013 Erin area resident Stompin Tom Connors dead at 77 Orangeville Banner Stompin Tom Connors The Daily Telegraph London May 5 2013 The NAC mourns the loss of Stompin Tom Connors National Arts Centre March 7 2013 Retrieved March 9 2013 a b Christopher Guly March 8 2013 Canadian folk legend Stompin Tom Connors remembered Xinhua News Agency Archived from the original on April 12 2016 Retrieved March 8 2013 Town of Tillsonburg Honours Stompin Tom March 7 2013 Archived from the original on July 16 2013 Retrieved March 9 2013 Hockey Night in Canada pays tribute to late Stompin Tom Connors CBC Sports March 9 2013 Retrieved March 10 2013 Thank you Stompin Tom Connors We needed you The Globe and Mail Toronto March 7 2013 Retrieved March 10 2013 NDP to pay tribute to Stompin Tom by singing Bud the Spud Canada com March 7 2013 a b Nick Patch The Canadian Press March 13 2013 Stompin Tom fans friends family throw joyous memorial CTV News Retrieved March 14 2013 Memorial pays tribute to Stompin Tom Connors CBC News March 13 2013 Retrieved November 11 2017 a b Phil Gravelle June 11 2014 Paying tribute to Stompin Tom s philosophy Erin Advocate Folk singer Rose Cousins wins 3 East Coast Music Awards CBC News March 11 2013 Byrne Ryan July 3 2015 Stompin Tom s statue makes its Sudbury debut Sudbury Start Retrieved January 2 2019 Artist summary Stompin Tom Connors Juno Awards Archived from the original on May 26 2015 Retrieved March 7 2013 a b Kamila Hinkson March 7 2013 Stompin Tom Juno Awards mum on possible tribute Toronto Star Retrieved March 7 2013 Stompin Tom Connors Juno protest continues CBC News April 17 2013 Retrieved June 6 2013 Dr Stompin Tom Connors eh Remembering a Canadian Music Legend St Thomas University March 7 2013 Retrieved November 11 2017 Order of Canada citation June 11 2018 Stompin Tom Connors 1936 2013 Governor General s Performing Arts Awards Retrieved March 7 2013 Stacey Gibson Summer 2000 Honorary Degrees U of T Magazine UPEI mourns the passing of honorary degree recipient Stompin Tom Connors University of Prince Edward Island March 7 2013 Retrieved November 11 2017 Legendary Canadian singer songwriter Stompin Tom Connors dead at 77 SOCAN March 7 2013 Retrieved March 8 2013 Stompin Tom Connors bronze statue on its way to Sudbury Canadian Broadcasting Corporation February 12 2014 Retrieved February 12 2014 Canada Post Stamp Details July to September 2009 Volume XVIII No 3 p 6 Escarpment Sound Studio Album Credits Retrieved March 10 2013 Stompin Tom s 3000 Year Calendar advertisement The Acton Free Press September 3 1980 p 15 Retrieved March 8 2013 Stompin Tom Connors 3000 year Calendar Harrowsmith s Truly Canadian Almanac July 30 2012 Archived from the original on November 13 2013 Retrieved March 8 2013 External links editOfficial website Giant mural design of Stompin Tom Connors promoting his A Proud Canadian CD Release 1990 Watch Moon Man a National Film Board of Canada animated short featuring the song Moon Man Newfie Stompin Tom Connors at Find a Grave Across This Land with Stompin Tom Connors Fan Tribute Stompin Tom Connors at Library of Congress with 5 library catalogue records Stompin Tom Connors last interview December 2012 at Back to the Sugar Camp Stompin Tom Connors discography at Discogs as Tom Connors Stompin Tom Connors discography at Discogs as Stompin Tom Connors Stompin Tom Connors at IMDb Article at canadianbands com Article at thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stompin 27 Tom Connors amp oldid 1177841303, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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