Last Articles - 2006 (July-December) update on January 13, 2008


08/17/06 - From Mabou...with love

08/17/06 - Raising Awareness

10/9/06 - Rankin file full of history

10/11/06 - Folk singer Raylene Rankin concert Tuesday

10/13/06 - Rankins to reunite

10/13/06 - Reunion for Rankin Family

10/14/06 - Rankins plan comeback

10/17/06 - Rankin, Plaskett, Mays, Lamond, Cormier among artists performing at Nova Scotia Music Week 2006

10/18/06 - You can take the Rankin out of the family Saturday in Duncan

10/20/06 - Rankin Revival

10/25/06 - Rankin ranking among east's treats

11/02/06 - The Rankins Reunite

11/02/06 - Cape Breton's Rankin Family reunites for new album, cross-Canada tour

11/02/06 - Rankin Family plans comeback tour

11/02/06 - Rankins reunite for tour

11/03/06 - Rankins reunite for album, cross-Canada tour

11/03/06 - Rankins bypass Cape Breton on reunion tour

11/07/06 - Reunited Rankins coming

11/10/06 - Rankin Family adds Cape Breton date to tour

11/12/06 - James, Rankins make their way to Vernon

11/13/06 - In-Flight Safety, Cormier win big

11/14/06 - Rankins add Sydney show

11/14/06 - Rankin Family date confirmed

11/22/06 - Celtic music icon John Allan Cameron dies at 67

11/22/06 - John Allan Cameron: Celtic "Godfather" dies

12/9/06 - Bittersweet Christmas

12/20/06 - Bittersweet Reunion

12/30/06 - John Allan's Celtic Soul

12/31/06 - Rankins reunite, Pritchett performs in January

12/31/06 - Remembering John Allan


From Mabou...with love
'Shocking' visit to Nicaragua an education for Jimmy Rankin

August 17, 2006 - Halifax Herald

By Kristen Lipscombe - Staff Reporter

Photo: Singer-songwriter Jimmy Rankin performs Wednesday evening at Cunard Centre in Halifax during a World Vision event held for child sponsors. (Christian Laforce / Staff)For Jimmy Rankin, the reality of devastating poverty around the world sank in when he looked into the innocent, bright-eyed faces and learned the beautiful names of the children he met in Nicaragua.

Those names and faces are now etched into his memory forever.

The singer-songwriter from Mabou recently spoke candidly about travelling to the developing country in June for a two-day eye-opener with representatives from World Vision, Canada’s largest relief and development group.

During his brief but unforgettable visit, he met struggling families living in destitute villages in a country that has faced its share of natural disasters and political corruption.

"It’s pretty intense — we saw just extreme poverty in these places," Mr. Rankin said of his first trip with the group during a July interview in Halifax.

"Really, it’s shocking to see."

But in the ramshackle villages where poor families live in small plastic huts, Mr. Rankin said he learned that while they may have few possessions, many have a profound sense of hope.

"It’s really good to see that someone actually cares and they’re doing something," Mr. Rankin said of the World Vision projects he observed in two small villages outside of Managua, the nation’s capital. "The money is helping people — I saw it first-hand."

Mr. Rankin, who scribbled his thoughts in a journal during his trip, said his initial impressions of Nicaragua were of a beautiful country with "open fields, mountains and volcanoes." But when he took a closer look at the conditions many Nicaraguans face, the country told a different story.

"You see these little lean-tos out in the field," he said. "I was thinking, ‘Wow, that’s interesting, the farmers put up a little thing for themselves to get in and out of the sun or rain.’

"And then you realize that these things are all over the place and that people are living in them."

Most of the makeshift huts were empty and leaking, as it was the rainy season. "They had mud floors, maybe a bed if they’re lucky, and nothing else," Mr. Rankin said.

"Seeing a woman with no money (and) a little girl . . . then you go in and meet their baby and . . . the baby’s sick and if the baby doesn’t get help then it’s going to be dead in a couple months. . . " he said, his voice trailing off as he recalled a heartbreaking scene in one home he visited.

Seeing how people live there — the sheer reality of it — hit Mr. Rankin hard. He said that’s when he realized just how dire the situation truly is in Nicaragua and in other developing countries.

"It kind of dawned on me that people are living in these places with no electricity, no running water (and they’re) probably malnourished." he said.

"That’s just the reality there with those people. They don’t know any better. . . . They don’t have access to education."

But despite the discouraging conditions in Nicaragua, Mr. Rankin said he’s very encouraged by the way World Vision is helping small villages take small steps forward.

"I know people are skeptical and you know, I was a skeptic myself," Mr. Rankin admitted of his initial impression of child sponsorship groups such as World Vision, a non-profit Christian agency.

"But you actually see that they go into these communities and they help."

He said some of the group’s work includes setting up schools, drilling wells and hooking up electricity.

"It’s the simple things," he said. "Like buying seed for a farmer and maybe helping him rent a plot of land to plant that seed — when you see that stuff trickle down . . . it’s pretty amazing."

Mr. Rankin said he was also impressed with the organization’s ongoing commitment to the communities. "You have an organization that’s not just a Band-Aid," he said. "They go in and they stay with a project for years until they feel that it’s up and running and self-sufficient."

Helping out World Vision isn’t a new venture for the well-known Nova Scotia musician — he’s been sponsoring a seven-year-old Rwandan girl named Magdalene through the organization for the past few years. In fact, he has been known to dedicate the touching song Lighthouse Heart, from his first solo album, to the young AIDS orphan during some of his shows.

World Vision also recruited Mr. Rankin to join its Artist Associates program, which gives musicians the chance to take the group’s "message of hope to the stage," the website says.

During his concerts, Mr. Rankin speaks briefly about World Vision and suggests his fans sign up at a booth set up in the venues so they can become sponsors. Although he doesn’t want to force his agenda on his audiences, he doesn’t mind doing what he can to help through his "little bit of celebrity."

"Why not?" he asked. "It’s a very worthy cause."

In return, World Vision provides some financial support for Canadians musicians on the road.

"It’s a situation that’s worldwide, and it’s a hell of a lot bigger than I am (but) I think it’s a great program for World Vision," he said of the Artist Associates program. "They’re accessing people they normally wouldn’t access by working with people like Jann Arden, myself, Tom Cochrane, Sarah McLachlan and whoever else."

Pictou County native George Canyon, who was the winner of the hit TV show Nashville Star, has also worked with World Vision during his tours.

"At the end of each show, I’d explain my involvement and how we’re trying to make a difference," Mr. Canyon said in a story posted on the SOCAN website. "I’d just talk about little children who are orphaned and with no hope for the future and how World Vision is doing so much to help them and is giving them a chance."

Last year, 3,000 sponsors signed up while attending concerts. Nearly 50 musicians teamed up with the group to make it happen, the World Vision website says.

"They want their artists who are promoting the program to go and see these areas," Mr. Rankin said of why World Vision asked him to come to Nicaragua. "They want people to realize that their money is actually being used effectively."

Mr. Rankin said despite his previous involvement with World Vision, the people he encountered in Nicaragua have touched his life in a whole new way.

"It makes you realize that it actually does exist. . ." he said, again seeming to lose his train of thought as he remembered the people he met during his time there.

"As they say, poverty has a name and a face — it really hits home."

Photo: Singer-songwriter Jimmy Rankin performs Wednesday evening at Cunard Centre in Halifax during a World Vision event held for child sponsors. (Christian Laforce / Staff)


Raising Awareness

August 17, 2006 - Halifax Herald

By Kristen Lipscombe - Staff Reporter
 
Nova Scotia native Jimmy Rankin, country musician Michelle Wright of Ontario and P.E.I.-born actress Megan Follows hosted a special event for World Vision child sponsors Wednesday night at the Cunard Centre in Halifax.

Child sponsors from across the province were invited to enjoy live performances by both Mr. Rankin and Ms. Wright. They also heard from World Vision spokeswoman Ms. Follows, who shared stories about her recent experience in Rwanda working with the Christian relief and development group.

The evening was part of World Vision’s six-week campaign in the Maritimes to raise awareness of the need to support children in developing countries and find sponsors for 1,500 children in Asia, Africa and Latin America.


Rankin file full of history

October 9, 2006 - Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows Times

She may have separated from her family to go solo, but Raylene Rankin hasn't forsaken the work she completed during the past decade with the Rankin Family.

Rankin's live shows are a mix of new material, Rankin Family favourites, and traditional Celtic music, including some of the Gaelic songs she is so fond of. It's all backed up by a crack band, consisting of top Celtic musicians whose credits include performing with Natalie McMaster and enfant terrible Ashley MacIsaac.

This taste of the East Coast is coming to the ACT on Oct. 20 for a concert at 8 p.m.

For more than 10 years, Rankin's sweet, pure voice joined those of her brothers and sisters as part of the internationally acclaimed Canadian recording act, the Rankin Family, which toured the world and sold more than two million albums.

She is the voice of the Rankin Family's hit song"Rise Again, and the author of Gillis Mountain, a song that achieved top-five status on radio in Canada, and became a hit in the United Kingdom.

As a solo artist she toured Atlantic Canada in the fall of 2004 and Western Canada in spring 2005 with guest artist Archie Fisher. Lambs in Spring, Rankin's first solo recording, follows more than a decade of impressive musical collaboration.

In the fall of 1999, pop superstar Carly Simon invited Raylene and her sisters to her home studio in Martha's Vineyard to add their special harmonies to her CD Bedroom Tapes. The trio appears on five tracks of the album, released by Arista Records.

Tickets: $25 for adults, $22.50 for seniors and students, and $18 for youth (under 14). Call 476-2787 or visit www.theactmapleridge.org for more information.


Folk singer Raylene Rankin concert Tuesday

October 11, 2006 - Golden Star

By Lorene Keitch - Star Reporter

Canadian folk singer Raylene Rankin comes to Golden Tuesday, Oct. 17.

Rankin, most famous for her 10 years as one of the Rankin Family singers, will be singing selections of Canadian folk music, some of her own songs and a few of the classic Rankin Family tunes such as Rise Again, the hit song featuring her voice.

The Rankin Family was a household name in Canada for more than 10 years. The Rankin Family released 10 albums and won 15 East Coast Music Awards and six Juno awards, among many others. Their most successful album, Fare Thee Well Love, released in 1992, went quadruple platinum, selling more than 500,000 copies. The title track was one of the year’s biggest Canadian Top 40 hit singles.

Rankin left the band in 1998 to devote her time to raising her son. Following her departure, her five brothers and sisters remained a group until 1999 when the Rankins issued a press release saying they would no longer perform as a group in order to pursue independent interests and careers.

Since leaving, Rankin has toured on her own several times and with small ensembles. She also released a solo recording, Lambs in Spring in 2003.

“My objective with a lot of performing I do is to just try different things,” Rankin says. “This time around when I do my tour I’m travelling with a bit more of a band. I have Mairi Rankin on fiddle and Mac Morin on piano. They’re both wonderful, traditional musicians.”

Although Rankin calls herself a part-time performer now, she says she will always be a singer.

“I’ve been doing it since I was a little girl and I think it’s a really nice way to give to people,” Rankin says. Although she says obviously she is not performing as much as in the Rankin Family days, she thoroughly enjoys it when she does get out on the road now and then for tour dates.

“When I perform it’s always a lot of fun. The last couple years, I’ve had the opportunity to perform with different musicians and performers and that’s a lot of fun, too,” Rankin says. “That’s part of the inspiration for me - working with people who have different ideas, and experiencing different types of music.”

Rankin plays at the Civic Centre Tuesday, Oct. 17 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $20 but there are discounts if you buy a Kicking Horse Culture membership. Membership and advance tickets can be bought at Moon River Gift Gallery, East Kootenay Electronics and the Golden Dollar Store. And don’t forget this Sunday, Oct. 15, the Symphonie of the Kootenays comes to Golden and will play a baroque concert at 2 p.m. at the Civic Centre.


Rankins to reunite

October 13, 2006 - Halifax Herald

By Stephen Cooke - Entertainment Reporter
 
Some familiar Nova Scotia harmonies will soon be ringing out again on record and in concert halls.

Sources close to Cape Breton’s Rankin family say that Jimmy Rankin and sisters Raylene, Cookie and Heather Rankin will perform again as a group for the first time since they initially disbanded in 1999 to pursue other musical endeavours.

Jimmy and Raylene continued with solo musical careers, while all three sisters have collaborated on a Christmas album and still occasionally perform as a trio. Reportedly, the siblings had been working on new material at home in Mabou, before heading to Nashville to record songs with Cookie Rankin’s husband, noted producer/engineer George Massenburg (Dixie Chicks, Lyle Lovett). A new album and concert tour will follow in the near future.

An official announcement of the reunion is expected to be made next week.

The death of brother John Morris Rankin in 2000 means the original lineup can never be reassembled, but reportedly his daughter Molly Rankin will have music featured in this new lineup of the group.

In the Rankins’ initial decade-long career, the group racked up a string of platinum selling albums with their unique blend of Celtic, pop and country, including 1990’s quadruple platinum Fare Thee Well Love. They also earned numerous awards, including 15 East Coast Music Awards, six Juno Awards, four SOCAN Awards and three Canadian Country Music Awards.


Reunion for Rankin Family

October 13, 2006 - Toronto Star

By Canadian Press
 
HALIFAX — The popular Cape Breton musical group the Rankin Family are reuniting to record and perform for the first time since they disbanded in 1999, the Halifax Chronicle-Herald reports.

Jimmy Rankin and sisters Raylene, Cookie and Heather are expected to announce the reunion next week, sources close to the family told the newspaper.

Jimmy and Raylene have pursued solo music careers, while all three sisters have collaborated on a Christmas album and still occasionally perform as a trio.

The siblings apparently worked on new material at their home in Mabou before heading to Nashville to record songs with Cookie Rankin's husband, well-known producer-engineer George Massenburg.

A new album and concert tour will follow in the near future.

However, it won't be an exact reincarnation — brother John Morris Rankin died in 2000 when his vehicle plunged into the ocean near Margaree Harbour, N.S.

His daughter, Molly Rankin, will reportedly have music featured in the reunited line-up.

In the Rankins' initial decade-long career, the group racked up a string of platinum selling albums with their unique blend of Celtic, pop and country, including 1990's quadruple platinum Fare Thee Well Love.

They also earned numerous awards, including 15 East Coast Music Awards, six Juno Awards, four SOCAN Awards and three Canadian Country Music Awards.


Rankins plan comeback

October 14, 2006 - Victoria Times Colonist

By Canadian Press

HALIFAX (CP) -- The popular Cape Breton musical group the Rankin Family is reuniting to record and perform for the first time since it disbanded in 1999, the Halifax Chronicle-Herald reports.

Jimmy Rankin and sisters Raylene, Cookie and Heather are expected to announce the reunion next week.

Jimmy and Raylene have pursued solo music careers, while all three sisters have collaborated on a Christmas album and still occasionally perform as a trio.

It won't be an exact reincarnation -- brother John Morris Rankin died in 2000 when his vehicle plunged into the ocean near Margaree Harbour, N.S. His daughter, Molly Rankin, will reportedly have music featured in the reunited lineup.

In the Rankins' initial decade-long career, the group racked up a string of platinum-selling albums with their unique blend of Celtic, pop and country, including 1990's quadruple platinum Fare Thee Well Love.


Rankin, Plaskett, Mays, Lamond, Cormier Among Artists Performing At Nova Scotia Music Week 2006

October 17, 2006 - Music Nova Scotia

For Immediate Release –October 17th 2006 – Music Nova Scotia announced their event line-up for Nova Scotia Music Week 2006 today and it is chalk full of events for music enthusiasts of all ages. Artists joining Music Nova Scotia in Liverpool in November are -

 Matt Mays & El Torpedo, The Joel Plaskett Emergency, Classified, JP Cormier, The Barra MacNeils, Jimmy Rankin, Mary Jane Lamond, Scott Macmillan & Brian Doyle, Dave Gunning, El Viento Flamenco, Charlie A’Court, RyLee Madison, Steven Bowers, Jill Barber, John Gracie, JD Clarke, Jenn Grant, Cheryl Gaudet, Tanya Davis, The Museum Pieces, Down With The Butterfly, Alert the Medic, Trobiz, Carmen Townsend, Tom Fun Orchestra, Dammien Alexander, Afro Musica, Andrea Curry & Go Time, The Contact, Shobha, Rebekah Higgs, Air Traffic Control, Spesh K, Tanya Davis, Kevin Corbett, David Myles, Christina Martin, Mary Knickle, Chelsea Nisbett, Joyce Sanders, The Darren Arsenault Trio, Mike Trask and Mudhill, Flat Fifth, Ryan McGrath& Wooden House, October Game, Norma MacDonald

Nova Scotia has a long legacy of producing great musical talent.” Keith Publicover, Chair of Nova Scotia Music Week 2006, proudly proclaims. "This line-up is a poignant example of why our music is hailed around the world and will continue to be for decades to come."

Join us in Liverpool, Nova Scotia as we launch the 10th Annual Music Nova Scotia Awards and Conference taking place November 9 -12th. With all of this talent in one town within blocks of each other, you know that this event can only become one thing -UNFORGETTABLE

The Songwriter’s Circle

Hosted by Jimmy Rankin 

With songs and stories by,

JP Cormier, Dave Gunning, RyLee Madison, Steven Bowers, Jill Barber,

The concept is simple: songwriters in the spotlight, sharing their songs in an intimate, unplugged format. The results are jaw dropping. UNMISSABLE! 

Saturday, November 11th | The Astor Theatre | 7:30pm

 $20.00 plus $1.00 ticket service charge.

Tickets on sale at The Astor Theatre Box Office 902.354.5250


You can take the Rankin out of the family Saturday in Duncan

Raylene Rankin and her band visit the Cowichan Theatre Saturday as the East Coast performer and her singing family prepare to announce a reunion album.

October 18, 2006 - Cowichan News Leader

By Peter Rusland

If the whole Rankin family can’t visit Cowichan, Raylene Rankin will certainly suffice.

The Halifax singer and member of the famed East Coast family that’s grabbed global acclaim while selling two million albums imports songs from her own recent CD to the Cowichan Theatre Oct. 21.

Rankin will be joined by fiddler Mairi Rankin, pianist Mac Morin and guitarist Clarence Deveau who will help perform tunes from Rankin’s fresh recording Lambs In Spring.

“She has a beautiful, beautiful voice; just exquisite,” says Brent Hutchinson of the hosting Cowichan Folk Guild.

The past decade has seen Rankin blend her honeyed vocals with her brothers and sisters, her voice prominent on the Rankin Family’s hit Rise Again.

She also sings lead during the Rankins’ Loving Arms, Lament of the Irish Immigrant, Padstow, and O Tha Mo Dhuil Ruit (Oh How I Love Thee).

Rankin authored the family’s Gillis Mountain, a song that reached top-five status on Canada radio and became a hit in the U.K.

Rankin left her family’s band in 1998 to devote time to raising her son but never really stopped performing.

As a solo artist she toured Atlantic Canada in fall 2004 and Western Canada in spring 2005 with guest artist Archie Fisher (who visited Cowichan last week).

Rankin was featured at the prestigious Festival D’Ete in Quebec City, plus Cape Breton’s famed Celtic Colours festival.

Lambs In Spring is Rankin’s first solo recording. It follows more than a decade of impressive musical collaboration.

In fall 1999, pop superstar Carly Simon invited Rankin and sisters Cookie and Heather to her home studio in Massachusetts’ Martha’s Vineyard to add special harmonies to five tracks on Simon’s CD Bedroom Tapes.

From 1999 to 2001, Rankin and her sisters embarked on a Christmas tour with a symphony orchestra coast to coast.

Her Christmas performances with her sisters continued in 2002 featuring their own band.

The three sisters have made their Christmas show a yearly tradition with tours in 2003, 2004 and 2005. In the fall of 2005 they completed a Christmas special for Bravo television filmed on location in Mabou, Cape Breton.

Rankin began singing at concerts and festivals at age four. During university, she spent summers performing in Cape Breton and with the Newfoundland Stephenville Festival.

She followed her Bachelor of Arts degree with a law degree from Dalhousie.


Rankin Revival

October 20, 2006 - Peace Arch News

Raylene Rankin, of Maritime legends the Rankin Family, is the featured artist of White Rock Arts Council’s next Up Close and Intimate Roots series, Sunday, Oct. 22 at 8 p.m. at Royal Canadian Legion Crescent Branch 240, 2643 128 St.

For more than 10 years, Rankin’s sweet, pure vocal sound was a hallmark of the Rankin Family in such numbers as Rise Again and the popular Gillis Mountain (which she also wrote), an airplay hit in both Canada and Britain.

Rankin left the family band in 1998 so she could devote time to raising her son (when not on the road, she and her family live in Halifax).

But she’s never been too far from music, touring Atlantic Canada in the fall of 2004 and Western Canada in spring 2005, and continuing to collaborate with her sisters Cookie and Heather.

For the Up Close and Intimate concert Rankin and her current band will perform both old favourites and new original material by herself, her sisters and brother Jimmy.

Tickets, info, 604-536-8333 or visit www.whiterockartscouncil.com.


Rankin ranking among east's treats

October 25, 2006 - Cowichan News Leader

By Peter Rusland

Locals were reminded just how good East Coast music is during Saturday’s cheerfully primo show by singer Raylene Rankin and her trio in the Cowichan Theatre.

The Cape Bretoner from Nova Scotia’s famous musical family used her colossal pipes to lift the roof for about 250 fans during a string of Gaelic folk songs and lullabies between interludes showcasing her trio’s talent.

Humble pianist and step dancer Mac Morin used his monster, understated ivory skills on the Gaelic air Alas For Me (”Not ‘A Lass For Me’”); a clog called The Mathematician; and reel The Devil and The Dirk.

He also accompanied Rankin’s fiddling cousin, Mairi, during a traditional reel plus Paddington’s Waltz.

The band was crowned by Clarence Deveau ‘s choice guitar work.

But it was diminutive dynamo Rankin who impressed the crowd with her sonorous abilities complemented by the theatre’s acoustics.

Following a tasty bagpipe opening by guest Rene Cusson, Rankin and crew were in full swing during a merry Gaelic tune about the rigours of meeting the morning, David Francey’s tune In My Dreams, lovely Singing Bird, plus rousing numbers Life of a Country Boy, and Gillis Mountain.

Rankin’s aural majesty was perhaps at its best during lullabies Lambs In Spring, and Sparrow, which seemed like delicate snowflakes melting all too fast.

Those songs contrasted well with songwriter Francey’s rollicking hangover lament Sunday Morning, ended in classy style with Celtic footwork from guest Heather Currie.

Friday’s show left some folks wondering if Rankin’s show is this good; imagine how a concert with her whole family would sound.

East Coast folk-music show rating: 8.5 reels out of 10.

Photo: Cape Bretoner Raylene Rankin and her terrific trio gave locals a vocal lesson during Saturday’s Cowichan Theatre stop. Photo by Andrew Leong


The Rankins Reunite

Mabou's most famous family together again for upcoming tour, new CD, with John Morris's daughter helping out

November 2, 2006 - Halifax Herald

By Stephen Cooke, Entertainment Reporter

IN 1999 IT was "Fare thee well love," as Cape Breton group The Rankins announced they would be calling it a day. After a full decade of touring and recording, the five siblings cited the desire to focus on their families and pursue other creative interests as their reasons to disband while still at the top of their musical game.

Now, seven years later, when the topic of reviving the group for one more album and tour came up amongst them, the response was, "You feel the same way too?"

The Rankins reunion rumour was flying around Cape Breton during Celtic Colours last month, followed by an official release announcing that Jimmy Rankin and sisters Raylene, Cookie and Heather had been recording new music in Nashville, with an eye on going out on tour in the new year.

Unfortunately, it can never be the Rankin family as fans remember it, with the death of the band’s traditional music lynchpin John Morris Rankin in a winter highway accident in 2000, but there was always that question whether those familiar harmonies would be heard together again, eight years after their last public performance together and nearly 10 years since their final album, Uprooted.

"Where does the time go?" ponders Heather Rankin over coffee at the Lord Nelson’s Victory Arms. "I always privately hoped that some day we would get together again."

"But when John Morris was killed, that pretty much salted it, I think," adds Jimmy. "The truth is, that Celtic part is gone with John Morris, although there are a lot of great players now who can help preserve that feel. But we have a lot of songs that are pop that we can play in concert. And there’s no reason why we can’t play them if people want to hear them."

According to Jimmy, Calgary concert promoter Jeff Parry suggested a reunion tour to him last spring, but the singer-songwriter expressed his doubts, considering Raylene’s solo career, Heather’s business interests and Cookie’s busy life in Nashville where she lives with Grammy Award-winning producer/engineer George Massenburg.

"We’re pretty spread out," he says. "But I brought it to everyone to see what they thought, and we got on the phone with Jeff. He had a wish list of things, like getting some new songs together, so we got together in August to workshop some songs with Scott Macmillan, who was with us in the old days.

"Then (John Morris’s daughter) Molly came into the picture with a bunch of songs she’d been working on, and we ended up in Nashville working with George, and we wound up with enough material for an album."

While he also has his own new solo album coming out in January, Jimmy was able to come up with new songs for the project — which is still going through the mixing stage — and also rediscovered songs written during his time with the Rankins, like The Departing Song. Covers of tunes by John Hiatt, David Francey and Gordon Lightfoot will round out the track list.

Having Massenburg, known for working with the likes of Lyle Lovett and the Dixie Chicks, produce the new recordings was pretty much a no-brainer.

"I love the way we recorded at George’s new state-of-the-art studio. There’s nothing else like it in the world," says Jimmy. "I hate describing it, it looks like the inside of a sawmill.

"We were all crouched in a little room around our mics, no headphones, recording all the vocals live together."

"As a result, it sounds more laid back, more natural," says Heather.

"It was a very pleasant experience, very musical, very spontaneous," adds Jimmy. "But you really had to be on your toes. You screw up, and you’ve screwed up a whole track. But I loved recording there."

The four original Rankins found it refreshing to have their 19-year-old niece Molly on board for the sessions. Surrounded by music her whole life, she brings a love of both contemporary and traditional sounds to the group’s sonic palette.

"Right from the get-go, we knew we had to go forward without John Morris, but we still wanted him to be part of it," says Heather. "And having Molly involved maintains that connection. She’s a budding singer-songwriter, she plays guitar and fiddle, and I think all of us recognized her talent.

"It means a lot to us that she can participate and showcase what she has to offer."

For now, the Rankins are calling the upcoming record and tour a one-shot deal, a rare chance to bring their experiences of the past decade back into the musical family fold.

"We had gone pretty hard for 10 straight years," says Raylene. "I think everybody just needed a break.

"Personally, I was exhausted. And then I had a child while we were making that last record. So for the next couple of years, as a parent with an infant, it was really hard to be away. And taking a child along and subjecting him or her to life on the road is also difficult."

"And it’s not just the road," adds Jimmy, who became a parent himself for the first time last year. "It’s making records and dealing with the business and all the things that go along with it.

"Getting up on stage and doing a 90-minute set is the easiest thing you could do. Music is the fun part; everything else is where the work comes into play."

"I remember talking to Tracey Brown from Family Brown at one of the Canadian Country Music Awards," recalls Raylene, "and she said, ‘You can take a break from it, and you can come back to it.’ I don’t know if Family Brown ever got back together, but she did have a solo career after taking a break.

"But learning that you can go away from it and come back to it when you’re ready is a good realization to have."


Cape Breton's Rankin Family reunites for new album, cross-Canada tour

November 2, 2006 - Canadian Press

HALIFAX (CP) - The Rankin Family has reunited to record a new album and bring their Cape Breton-inspired music to cities across Canada.

The musical family disbanded in 1999, saying they wanted to focus on their own projects and solo careers.

Heather Rankin says at the time the family thought they'd eventually play again, but the death of brother John Morris in 2000 seemed to dash those hopes.

Now, Heather says she and her siblings have realized they can offer fans something meaningful even without John Morris, whose specialty was traditional instrumentation.

Heather says the new music focuses less on traditional Celtic sounds and doesn't feature any Gaelic songs.

The cross-Canada tour starts in January, with the new album expected to be released around at the same time.


Rankin Family plans comeback tour

November 2, 2006 - CBC News

Copyright: Janet Kimber 2006Mabou's most famous singing family will be back on stage early next year after an eight-year break.

The Rankin Family plans a 22-city tour of Canada starting in January on the West Coast. They are heading out to support their upcoming CD.

"It's a really great collection of music," said Jimmy Rankin. "I can't wait for people to hear it."

The five brothers and sisters began performing in Mabou, N.S., in 1989, rocketing to fame soon after with the release of their second recording, Fare Thee Well Love.

The band sold more than two million records and won six Juno Awards, including group of the year in 1994.

The Rankins decided to go their separate ways in 1999 to spend more time with their families and work on individual pursuits.

One year later, the eldest member of the group, John Morris, was killed in a car accident in Cape Breton.

His 19-year-old daughter, Molly, will join the band on tour. She plays a number of instruments and sings one of the songs on the new disc.

Jimmy Rankin said the new music, much of which they worked on in Nashville, still has that Celtic-influenced Rankin sound.

"It's the same kind of thing where we are all singing and then we have group songs. I think we've matured as performers and as people, and a lot of it sounds more relaxed to me," he said.

The CD is expected to be released in time for the tour.

Photo: Copyright Janet Kimber


Rankins reunite for tour

November 2, 2006 - Toronto Star

By The Canadian Press
 
HALIFAX — The Rankin Family has reunited to record a new album and bring their Cape Breton-inspired music to cities across Canada.

The musical family disbanded in 1999, saying they wanted to focus on their own projects and solo careers.

Heather Rankin says at the time the family thought they'd eventually play again, but the death of brother John Morris in 2000 seemed to dash those hopes.

Now, Heather says she and her siblings have realized they can offer fans something meaningful even without John Morris, whose specialty was traditional instrumentation.

Heather says the new music focuses less on traditional Celtic sounds and doesn't feature any Gaelic songs.

The cross-Canada tour starts in January, with the new album expected to be released around at the same time.


Rankins reunite for album, cross-Canada tour

November 3, 2006 - Halifax Daily News

By James Keller, The Canadian Press

Family: Heather Rankin (from left) sings with her sisters Cookie and Raylene. (Photo: Canadian Press)HALIFAX - When John Morris Rankin died in a Cape Breton highway accident six years ago, his sister Heather was sure any hopes of bringing their musical family together again were lost.

The Rankin Family had disbanded a year earlier, each wanting to focus on their own projects and solo careers, but Heather says at the time she and her siblings saw it as a temporary break.

"Things happened along the way that we could never have expected, and one of those things was losing John Morris," she says.

"Personally, to me, it felt like (a reunion) would never happen after that. He was such an intricate part."

Seven years after the split - and nearly a decade since their last album, Uprooted - Heather, Raylene, Cookie and Jimmy have recorded a new collection of their Cape Breton-inspired songs, and will start a cross-Canada tour in January.

Heather says it took the prodding of Calgary music promoter Jeff Parry earlier this year to finally bring the family back together.

"Sometimes it takes an objective perspective from somebody on the outside to point out that you do collectively have something to offer," she says. "He said, 'Yeah, people still want to hear you.'"

The siblings recently returned from Nashville, where they recorded the new music with the help of Cookie's husband, producer George Massenburg.

It won't be an exact reincarnation of the Celtic-infused folk songs that helped the Rankins hook fans across the country in the 1990s.

Gone are John Morris's fiddle and keyboard, and his strong focus on traditional music that shaped the group's sound.

Also absent from the new album, due out by the time the tour begins, are the Rankins' familiar Gaelic lyrics.

"But it's still the four of us, it's still the harmonies and Jimmy's writing and a contemporary, folky feel," says Heather.

And the album will still have a John Morris connection: his daughter Molly wrote a song for the new CD and will join the upcoming Rankin tour.

In the years since the breakup, Jimmy and Raylene have pursued solo music careers, while all three sisters perform as a trio every Christmas.

Last year, the sisters bought the Red Shoe Pub in their hometown of Mabou, N.S., which Heather spends much of her time managing.

"It's been really good for us to go our separate ways and grow as individuals and pursue different interests," says Heather.

"It's been healthy. You notice that in what we have to offer and how we're feeding off of one another."

Before walking away from their initial career, the Rankins released a number of platinum-selling albums, including the 1990 quadruple-platinum "Fare Thee Well Love."

They also won 15 East Coast Music Awards, six Junos, four SOCAN Awards and three Canadian Country Music Awards.

Even though the band has a different lineup and a new sound, Heather still thinks fans will welcome them back.

"It's hard to say until you really get out there, but from the feedback we've been getting, they're very enthusiastic that there's still a big fan base out there who's anticipating our visits to their cities," she says.

The Rankins are scheduled to appear at the Halifax Metro Centre at 8 p.m. on Feb. 10. Tickets cost $51 and go on sale Nov. 10.


Rankins bypass Cape Breton on reunion tour

November 3, 2006 - Cape Breton Post

By Laura Jean Grant

A reunited Rankin Family won't be making a hometown stop during their upcoming cross-Canada tour.

Details of the coast-to-coast reunion tour were released Thursday but no Cape Breton stops are included on the 22-city schedule, which begins Jan. 14 in Nanaimo, B.C., and ends Feb. 15 in St. John's, N.L.

"I think the closest we get to Cape Breton is probably Halifax at this point," said Jimmy Rankin, in an interview with the Cape Breton Post, Thursday. "It was probably a timing thing."

Jimmy noted the tour was organized by a promoter in a matter of months, a process which usually takes much longer.

Seven years after disbanding, the famous musical group from Mabou - Jimmy and sisters Raylene, Cookie and Heather - officially announced last month that they would be reuniting for a tour and a new CD, recorded earlier this fall in Nashville with Cookie's husband, renowned producer George Massenburg.

"Everywhere I go in the country people are always asking whether the Rankins will reunite and ever do anything again so finally it's happened," he said.

The fifth member of the original group, John Morris Rankin, died in a motor vehicle accident in 2000 but his 19-year-old daughter Molly will be featured on the new CD and will travel with her aunts and uncle in the nationwide tour.

"Obviously we're not ever going to be able to fill John Morris's shoes. He was sort of the musical centre of the group," said Jimmy. "One of the nice things is that Molly joined us in the recording process and she sings a song that she wrote and she's going to come out on the road with us and sing it on stage ... and probably play some fiddle. I'm thrilled for people to hear her."

Also joining the Rankins on the highly-anticipated tour will be well-known Cape Breton musicians Howie MacDonald and Mac Morin.

Jimmy said concert-goers can expect to hear many
Rankin Family standards.

"It was great material and it was just a lot of fun always performing those songs, doing stuff like Mull River Shuffle, North Country, and Fare Thee Well Love," he said. "I'm just looking forward to being on stage in that ensemble again and playing for people."

The Rankins will also perform new material from a CD set to be released in the New Year. A never-before-released DVD recorded in 1995 at the Orpheum in Vancouver is also set to hit stores Dec. 5.

On a personal note, Jimmy said he expects the next few months to be a hectic balancing act - performing with the
Rankin family while continuing his own solo career. In fact, he recently recorded his third solo album which is set to be released Jan. 23, right in the middle of the Rankins' tour.

And while fans of the Juno-winning group are hoping the band will stay together for years to come, Jimmy said that right now "there's just a plan to do this one tour."

Reunited Rankins coming

November 7, 2006 - London Free Press

By Canadian Press

When John Morris Rankin died in a Cape Breton highway accident six years ago, his sister, Heather, was sure any hopes of bringing their musical family together again were lost.

The Rankin Family had disbanded a year earlier, each wanting to focus on their own projects and solo careers, but Heather says at the time she and her siblings saw it as a temporary break.

"Things happened along the way that we could never have expected, and one of those things was losing John Morris," she says.

"Personally, to me, it felt like (a reunion) would never happen after that. He was such an intricate part."

Seven years after the split -- and nearly a decade since their last album, Uprooted -- Heather, Raylene, Cookie and Jimmy have recorded a new collection of their Cape Breton-inspired songs, and will start a cross-Canada tour in January. The tour reaches the RBC Theatre at the John Labatt Centre Feb. 4 at 7 p.m. Tickets are $51.25, plus applicable charges, and go on sale Saturday. (Call 1-866-455-2849 or check www.johnlabattcentre.com).

Heather says it took the prodding of Calgary music promoter Jeff Parry this year to finally bring the family back together.

"Sometimes it takes an objective perspective from somebody on the outside to point out you do collectively have something to offer," she says.

"He said, 'Yeah, people still want to hear you.' "


Rankin Family adds Cape Breton date to tour

November 10, 2006 - Cape Breton Post

SYDNEY — The Rankin Family will perform on a Cape Breton stage after all.

According to a release from the Rankin Family’s publicist, logistical problems have been worked out and a Sydney concert has been added to the widely-anticipated reunion tour. The show will take place in February but the exact date and location will be confirmed at a later date.

Last week, details of the Rankin Family’s 22-city, cross-Canada tour were released but no Cape Breton dates were included on the original schedule.

Jimmy, Raylene, Cookie and Heather Rankin announced last month they would be reuniting for a tour and would release a new CD. The fifth member of the original award-winning group, John Morris Rankin, died in a motor vehicle accident in 2000 but his daughter Molly will join her family on the upcoming tour.


James, Rankins make their way to Vernon

November 12, 2006 - Vernon Morning Star

By Morning Star Staff

Two of Canada's legendary acts are coming to the North Okanagan this winter.

Multi-award winner and platinum album recording star Colin James will be up close and personal and slightly unplugged at the Vernon Performing Arts Centre Dec. 9, while Nova Scotia's Rankin Family is returning to the concert stage on their first cross-Canada tour in more than eight years, and will be at the Vernon Multiplex Jan. 19

James is one of Canada's best known blues and rock guitarists and has sold more than one million records worldwide. He has won many industry awards and has received international recognition for his versatility as a guitarist and vocalist. His diverse catalogue of music includes the blues/rock that got his career going, big band, and his first musical love, Delta blues.

Joining James will be Craig Northey, a founding⠠ member and one of the principal⠠ singer/songwriters of Vancouver band The Odds, which spawned numerous top 10 hits. Northey's writing collaboration with James has led to an extended stint in James' band, which has spanned three albums including Fuse and Twister.

The Rankin Family will showcase their award winning harmonies and timeless music in their 22-city tour, the first since parting ways in 1999 to spend time with their families and pursue individual interests.

Siblings Raylene, Jimmy, Cookie and Heather recently got together in Nashville to workshop new material, and the results will make their way to a disc in the New Year along with a DVD of never before seen concert footage recorded in Vancouver in 1995, which is set for release Dec. 5.

Missing on tour will be the late John Morris, who died tragically in a car accident in 2000. His daughter Molly, who has lent her songwriting skills and considerable talent to the project, will join the group on the road.

Tickets to see Colin James, Dec. 9, 7:30 p.m., at the Vernon Performing Arts Centre are $36/person, available at the Ticket Seller box office. Call 549-7469 or order online at www.ticketseller.ca.

Tickets to see the Rankin Family at the Vernon Multiplex, Jan. 19 at 8 p.m., are $49.50, available at the Ticketmaster outlet in the Multiplex, or order by phone at 549-1480 or online at www.ticketmaster.ca.


In-Flight Safety, Cormier win big

November 13, 2006 - Halifax Herald

By Stephen Cooke - At N.S. Music Week

LIVERPOOL — Traditional folk and modern rock were held in equal regard at the 2006 Nova Scotia Music Week Awards on Sunday in Liverpool, as multi-talented Cheticamp musician J.P. Cormier and Halifax band In-Flight Safety picked up three awards each.

The prolific Cormier was honoured as the male artist and musician of the year and won folk/roots recording of the year for Looking Back Volume 2: The Songs.

In-Flight Safety picked up awards for group of the year, as well as album and alternative album of the year for its CD The Coast is Clear.

The awards ceremony was held at the historic Astor Theatre, marking the first time it was staged outside Halifax.

The gala presentation also included a tribute to the region’s pioneering country star, Hank Snow, and featured a performance by Dartmouth roots rocker Matt Mays and a show-closing blowout from the Joel Plaskett Emergency, which was named entertainer of the year, while Plaskett himself earned songwriter of the year honours.

The night’s other dual winner was earthy-toned singer-songwriter Jenn Grant, this year’s female artist of the year, as well as the Galaxie Rising Star new artist of the year.

A number of crystal cylinders were also handed out at an awards brunch at White Point Beach Resort outside Liverpool earlier on Sunday. J.D. Clarke earned the country music album award for his CD All That Matters, after performing the title track for the packed conference room.

"I’d like to thank my wife," said an appreciative Clarke, sporting a well-worn cowboy hat, "for letting me quit a paying job to perform country music."

The jazz/blues album award win was an emotional one for Derek Caine, a.k.a. Little Derek of the Haemo Blues Band, whose Red and White Album was released to raise money for leukemia patients at the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre in Halifax. Fighting his own battle with leukemia and about to resume chemo treatment, Caine told the crowd, "Support like this will help a great deal."

The Music Nova Scotia Industry Awards were also handed out at the brunch overlooking the pounding surf at White Point. There were a pair of triple winners, with Sonic Entertainment and Musicstop picking up a trio of crystal cylinders each. Sonic was honoured for its work as a promoter, under the Sonic Concerts branch, while the Halifax company’s Wendy Phillips was a repeat publicist of the year. Its Hollis Street facility Sonic Temple also won recording studio of the year.

Venerable East Coast instrument and equipment supplier Musicstop was named company and corporate sponsor of the year, while its partnership with ABI garnered production company of the year.

A surprised dual winner was Lynn Horne of Halifax, named manager of the year for her handling of clients like Ron Hynes and Steven Bowers, and industry professional of the year for her ongoing efforts as a scene promoter, publicist and volunteer.

"This award is dedicated to people like Sheri Jones, Louis Thomas, Bruce Morel and Brookes Diamond, who have all been so generous in helping me develop as a manager," said Horne, clearly touched.

"This has been my life’s dream since I was 16 or 17, and I’ve been blessed by working with great artists."

Stuart Jolliffe of Halifax also made two trips to the podium, to accept on behalf of the event of the year, the Halifax Play Hard 2006 Juno Awards celebration, and to pick up his own personal trophy as volunteer of the year. Also the regional vice-president for Delta Hotels, Jolliffe took his turn at the podium to ask brunch attendee Len Goucher, minister of tourism, culture and heritage, for more music industry support.

"Keep helping us do things that let us stretch out and try new things like this," said Jolliffe, referring to taking Music Week down the road to Liverpool. "Don’t let us down."

Goucher responded by noting the province has provided $1.1 million in funding for 319 projects over the past year, when Nova Scotia artists released nearly 150 CDs.

"It’s a start, anyway," said Goucher. "We can see that music is alive all over Nova Scotia. It’s fitting that Nova Scotia Music Week can reach out to all corners of the province."

Music Week fulfilled its promise to bring music to all corners of Liverpool the night before, as Saturday showcases covered everything from acoustic folk to high-powered rock.

The Astor Theatre was sold out for the third night in a row, as a songwriters circle hosted by Jimmy Rankin presented favourite composers like J.P. Cormier and Dave Gunning, while introducing many Liverpool listeners to the likes of Jill Barber and Old Man Luedecke.

The night was full of touching moments, like country singer-songwriter RyLee Madison describing her experiences with Red Cross and helping hurricane Katrina refugees, before performing When You View It From Here, which she sang at a wedding for two displaced Louisianans in the Astrodome.


Rankins add Sydney show

November 14, 2006 - Halifax Herald

The Rankins have added a show at home in Cape Breton for their upcoming national tour.

The Mabou family will play Sydney’s Centre 200 on Feb. 9. Tickets will go on sale Wednesday and are $48.50, all inclusive.

The Rankins Jimmy, Heather, Raylene and Cookie have regrouped for a 23-city tour for the first time since they disbanded in 1999. They will be joined on tour by Molly Rankin, daughter of the late John Morris Rankin.

They will play the Halifax Metro Centre on Feb. 10.

Tickets for the Halifax show are $51 and are available at the Ticket Atlantic box office, charge by phone at 451-1221 or at www.ticketatlantic.com.


Rankin Family date confirmed

November 14, 2006 - Cape Breton Post

It promises to be one big Friday night party.

The
Rankin family's publicist has confirmed the popular Cape Breton music group will perform Feb. 9 at Centre 200 in Sydney as part of their cross-country reunion tour.

Tickets go on sale Wednesday at 9 a.m. at Centre 200.

Celtic music icon John Allan Cameron dies at 67

November 22, 2006 - CTV.ca

By CTV.ca News Staff

John Allan Cameron, a Cape Bretoner who was known as the Godfather of Celtic music in Canada, died after a long struggle with cancer. He was 67.

His brother John Donald Cameron told media that the legendary singer, guitarist, and fiddler died Wednesday morning at a Toronto hospital, just weeks short of his 68th birthday.

A native of Mabou, N.S., Cameron was diagnosed five years ago with bone marrow cancer and leukemia, The Canadian Press reported.

Stuart Cameron told CP he was with his father when he died.

"It was his time and he was a fighter and he never wanted to give up. Everything he always did, he always, he did everything, lived life to the fullest in every regard.''

He said the family has received "countless'' calls from friends and fans.

"He never said he had fans, because 'fans' comes from the word fanatical. He always said that he had a lot of friends,'' Stuart Cameron said.

Born in Cape Breton in 1938 to a musical family, Cameron made his life's work the revival of Celtic music in Canada.

Cameron has released more than ten albums in a career that has spanned decades and seen him perform on stages such as the Royal Glasgow Concert Hall and the Grand Ole Opry.

He began playing the guitar for his brother at local dances at the age of 12.

But he didn't always think he would be one of Cape Breton's most prominent musical ambassadors nor that he would blaze a trial of success for other East Coast artists.

In 1957, at the age of 19, Cameron began studying for the priesthood with the Order of the Oblate Fathers in Ottawa.

"To me, when I was a kid, the two most important people in the world were the priest and the fiddler," the devout Catholic the Cape Breton Post in 2005.

Though he took his final vows, he would receive papal dispensation in 1964 to pursue studies in education and eventually a career in music.

"I knew that 10 years down the line, I would be unhappy. If you are unhappy in anything, leave and go do something else," he told the Post.

After studying education at St. Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia, he began teaching in London, Ont.

He returned to his music in 1968, playing traditional Scottish and Irish music at the Newport and Mariposa Folk Festivals and released his first album that same year.

In 1970, Cameron got a standing ovation at the Grand Ole Opry, with fellow Nova Scotian Hank Snow telling him offstage, "Whatever you're doing, boy, keep it up because it works.''

Cameron brought his region's musical heritage to new audiences with the Don Messer Show and Singalong Jubilee, then as the opening act for Anne Murray.

His first nationally broadcast show was the Montreal-produced "John Allan Cameron" on CTV from 1975 to 1976.

He returned to national television with the Halifax-produced "The John Allan Cameron Show" that was broadcast from 1979 to 1981 on CBC.

The kilt-clad performer became known for his repertoire of Cape Breton fiddle tunes when he began picking traditional Scottish bagpipe tunes on his twelve-string guitar.

Known as "Mabou's ministering minstrel,'' Cameron made Celtic cool long before the Rankins, Ashley MacIsaac and Natalie MacMaster brought their music to the masses.

"I was in on the ground floor, performing this stuff before it became sociologically acceptable,'' the charismatic performer said in a 1993 interview.

Murray, during a tribute last year to the then-ailing Cameron, said she remembers how people looked at him as a curiosity, especially in places like Las Vegas.

"He puts on a great show and he makes people laugh,'' Murray said. "You can't help but clap your hands and stomp your feet.''

Cameron's career and health took a turn for the worse in the late 1980s when Murray's management company dropped him and a tumour was removed from his thyroid gland.

For nearly two years he was unable to perform but eventually put his career back on track through conventions and staging shows for the military.

In 2003, Cameron received the Order of Canada for his lifetime contribution to the arts and his instrumental role in cultivating Celtic music in the country.

Cameron was living in Pickering, Ont., when he died.

With files from The Canadian Press


John Allan Cameron: Celtic "godfather" dies

November 22, 2006 - CBC.ca Arts

By CBC News

John Allan Cameron, one of Canada's music pioneers who was born in Cape Breton, died Wednesday morning in Toronto after a lengthy battle with bone cancer. He was 67.

The entertainer influenced a generation of artists, and fans say he was Celtic when the genre wasn't cool.

Cameron, who was diagnosed with thyroid cancer in the 1980s and didn't perform for two years, died Wednesday. 

People in the music business say they will continue to affectionately refer to Cameron as the "godfather" of Celtic music in Canada.

During the 1960s and '70s, Cameron led the charge for traditional Scottish music. Gradually, he won the loyalty of thousands of music lovers from coast to coast.

His ability to play Scottish pipe and fiddle tunes on the guitar was a surefire crowd pleaser everywhere, even at the Grand Old Opry in Nashville, where he appeared in 1972 as an unknown.

"I was more surprised than any of them," Cameron once said in an interview. "I knew the audience was with me, but I didn't expect the response, which was about two minutes of an ovation."

Born in Mabou, N.S., on Dec. 16, 1938, to a family of fiddlers, he started playing guitar in public at age 12.

He studied for the priesthood in Ottawa, but got a papal dispensation in 1964 and went on to study at St. Francis Xavier University.

Cameron began his career with the Don Messer Show and Singalong Jubilee on CBC, then became an opening act for Canadian songbird Anne Murray.

He made a name for himself playing reels and jigs on the guitar instead of the fiddle or bagpipe.

Cameron recognized by Canadians

The John Allan Cameron Show, which was on national television from 1975-76, made him a household name in Canada. The Montreal-based program also introduced Canadians to talented performers, including the legendary Stan Rogers.

On CBC, Cameron had his own half-hour show from Halifax in 1979-81.

He also sang at the Mariposa, Newport, Atlantic and Winnipeg folk festivals, and played in coffee shops across Canada.

Cameron also performed at and produced shows for Canadian military bases in Germany and the Middle East, and began his own Glencoe label, which recorded his Freeborn Man and Good Times albums.

Cameron was named to the Order of Canada in 2003.

His work is seen as the spark that lit the resurgence of the traditional art form in the past two decades. The Rankins, the Barra MacNeils, Natalie MacMaster and Ashley MacIsaac can all attribute some of their success to his trailblazing efforts.

Before entering politics, Nova Scotia Premier Rodney MacDonald often played fiddle in concerts with Cameron.

Cameron was always less concerned about the business of music than he was about entertaining his audience, MacDonald said.

"If he was on a stage, he loved it," he said. "He enjoyed playing for those who were there and he would play music that would be part of a bigger atmosphere and that was really engaging to people.

"I think people respected that and responded to it."


Bittersweet Christmas

December 9, 2006 - Globe and Mail

By Shawna Richer

Seven years after their brother's tragic plunge into the icy Atlantic Ocean, the famed Cape Breton siblings are preparing for a reunion and cross-country winter tour they thought would never happen. SHAWNA RICHER talks to the siblings about loss, family, healing and the band's newest member: the late John Morris Rankin's daughter

HALIFAX -- It has been a long and anguished decade since the Rankin Family -- the Cape Breton siblings who made fiddle music radio-trendy in the nineties, and became ubiquitous with their Canadian Celtic sound -- last made a record.

It's been eight years since they toured together, and seven since they made a mutual decision to break from stage and studio and pursue solo projects and family lives.

And it's been six years since their beloved brother and band mate, John Morris, died in a winter car wreck in Cape Breton.

And that may be exactly where the latest chapter of the Rankin story really begins.

Last month in Halifax, front man Jimmy, 42, and his sisters Heather, 39, Cookie, 41, and Raylene, 46, gathered over several weeks in the CBC Radio rehearsal hall, a plain, dumpy space marked by worn brown carpet and dull florescent lights, to practise 12 new songs they will soon be performing live.

For several visitors, they ran tightly through a pair of tracks -- a sweet-sounding cover of John Hiatt's Gone and a hauntingly mournful original by Jimmy Rankin, called Departing Song.

You could call it a comeback, and many likely will. But the Rankins prefer to describe this outing, which will be followed by a new record and 22-city tour, as a reunion. And so the new album is appropriately titled Rankin Family Reunion.

The gathering round of the Rankins coincides with the Christmas season, and although it was not planned that way, the timing is appropriate, as sweet and sentimental as a Gaelic hymn. A time for family and song, celebration and reflection: The album and the tour -- and the reunion itself -- embody all of that and more.

The Rankins have reunited at the urging of Calgary music promoter Jeff Parry, a long-time associate who last February was on his way to Calgary when he threw a Rankin collection on the car stereo.

"We were in the car, and I said to my wife, 'We have to get these guys back together,' " recalls Parry. "I felt very inspired hearing their music again. There's nothing like it in the world, and I felt the time was right. The harmonization of the girls and Jimmy is something no one else has out there. Also it's fun music. Aspects are dark, but in general it makes you feel good."

Parry called Jimmy, who in turn phoned his sisters. The Rankins were keen, but also not without reservations.

"My initial reaction was, 'Can we do it without John Morris?' " admits Heather. "He was such an instrumental part of what we did. When he died, I thought there was no chance we would ever be together again. But then, with outside encouragement, it happened. We knew it wouldn't be the same, but many of the elements are the same."

John Morris Rankin was just 40 when he died on Jan. 16, 2000. He was driving the old coastal road in Cape Breton when his truck hit a pile of road salt at Whale Cove and sailed over a 25-metre embankment into the icy, stormy Gulf of St. Lawrence. His son, Michael, and two other children survived the crash by crawling out a window and clamouring onto rocks at the foot of a cliff. They had been on their way to a hockey game.

John Morris's funeral, at St. Mary's, the country church near the family home in Mabou, N.S., where Cookie would later marry Nashville record producer George Massenburg on a happier day, saw nearly 100 fiddlers play and more than 1,000 people gather to mourn. No one was more devastated than his siblings, his band mates. That day, the band played Molly Rankin's Reel, which John Morris had written for his daughter, then 12, who has now emerged as a key and poignant piece of the reunion puzzle.

In 2001, Jimmy was quoted as saying it was unlikely the band would ever work together again, because his older brother had been the nerve centre, both musically -- on both the fiddle and piano -- and spiritually.

"But it really is strange," Jimmy mused recently, "how things work out."

The Rankins went into the studio with the Grammy-winning Massenburg this fall with four songs, but came out with an album's worth, including a cover of Gordon Lightfoot's classic The Way I Feel and several traditional pieces from John Morris that were in the vault.

They also invited Molly to perform one of her songs on the album, and tour with them. Now 19, she dances and plays fiddle, and has been trying her hand at songwriting for the past four years. The Rankins wanted her to be a part of things, just as her father once was.

"She's her own entity, very different than what John Morris was, but she embodies part of his spirit," says Jimmy. "That's a very good thing. She's very quiet, like he was."

Was it difficult to come together without him?

"I really miss him," the girls chime in at once.

"Technically he was the guy who directed everything and finessed the details," says Raylene. "He was the perfectionist. And even though he's not here physically, I feel he's here emotionally."

Adds Jimmy: "Initially you think, 'How could you ever go on?' We've been playing in the same band in one form or another forever. No one could ever fill his shoes. But Molly is a wonderful addition."

For her part, John Morris's daughter, who studies music at Dalhousie University, says she isn't trying to take her father's place -- but she certainly seems to have his musical gifts. She describes her song, Sunset, as a "girlie folk-pop" tune, and working with her musical family as "emotional, but I think in a good way. It's a nice feeling to have everyone around, everyone that loved my father and loves performing music. It's emotional to hear him play, and hear things without him here, but you have to take something good out of it. As long as something positive comes out of it, that's what I care about."

The album, which is being mixed by master Bob Ludwig, sounds every bit a Rankin record, with one exception: It's Gaelic-free. "When we sing Gaelic, we want to make sure we have it correct, and this thing happened so quickly that we didn't seem to have the time to finesse a Gaelic song that we felt comfortable recording," says Cookie. "It was a time constraint, and we chose not to go there. But that's not to say we won't go there in the future."

Indeed, Parry thinks that what makes the new record special is the fact that it sounds more modern -- a little less Celtic -- but hasn't lost the lush, harmonious Rankin sound. "There is a hole in the market for this," suggests Parry. "They waited 10 years to make a record, and the result is a total departure. The harmonies are still there, but it sounds fresh."

There were a dozen Rankin children who grew up in small-town Mabou. Long before they ever borrowed money from an older sister to record their self-titled debut album in 1989, five of them -- Jimmy, Heather, Raylene, Cookie and John Morris -- performed at dances and entertained across Cape Breton. They grew up on music, with a huge record collection that spanned John Allan Cameron, Elton John and Led Zeppelin.

Not long after that first record, they released Fare Thee Well Love, which attracted the attention of officials at EMI Music Canada in Toronto. It was rereleased to international acclaim, helped along by the song's inclusion in the Gabriel Byrne film, Into the West.

Almost overnight, the Rankin Family tuned people's ears onto Celtic music and the Cape Breton music scene, which included Rita MacNeil and the Barra MacNeils. The Rankins went on to sell more than 2 million records. North Country, the 1993 follow-up to Fare Thee Well Love, went multiplatinum and racked up both Junos and East Coast Music awards. In 1999, with seven albums, including the sisters' Christmas record, under their belts, the Rankins decided it was time to take a break.

Cookie now lives near Nashville with Massenburg; the others reside in Halifax. Jimmy has worked steadily on his solo career; the girls reconvene each Christmas to perform live. They get to Mabou often, where the sisters own the Red Shoe Pub, which Heather spends much of her time managing.

And while the record industry has changed dramatically since the Rankins first hit the charts, in many ways, they say, they've come back to where they started -- with a small record deal, and a good old-fashioned tour to help spread the music. "The Rankins broke on adult contemporary radio, but all the formats have changed, the way they program music," notes Jimmy. "Back then, it was nothing to sell 100,000 records. Now it's something to sell [half that many].

"The way to get your music out has changed also . . . There's so many ways to get it out there. It's been a huge shift.

"It's going to be interesting to see who our audience is," he adds. "We thought, 'Without John Morris, will anyone come see us play?' But then the tickets went on sale, the buzz started happening, and the feedback we've heard has been pretty good. It wasn't just a flash in the pan when it happened. It was quality music and a great show and it had a lot of impact on our fans. People tell me they still listen to Rankin stuff and play it for their kids. There's something infectious about the Celtic fiddle."

The Rankin Family tour runs from coast to coast, starting in Nanaimo, B.C., on Jan. 14 and ending in St. John's on Feb. 15. Their new album hits stores Jan. 9. For more information, visit http://www.therankinfamily.com.


Bittersweet Reunion

December 20, 2006 - Halifax Daily News

By Marilyn Smulders

Dalhousie arts student Molly Rankin is taking her education on the road as the newest member of one of the Atlantic region's most successful bands.

Molly adds her voice, guitar and fiddle-playing to the reunion of The Rankin Family, seven years after the Rankin siblings decided to go their separate ways, and six years after the death of John Morris Rankin, Molly's father.

"It's not so much that I'm stepping into his shoes — I don't think anyone could — but I definitely would like to go in the direction he did," says Molly, 19, who is taking a hiatus from her studies in music and theatre to go on tour. The 22-city tour begins in Nanaimo, B.C. on Jan. 14 and ends in St. John's on Feb. 15. The stop at the Halifax Metro Centre is set for Feb. 10.

One of her songs, Sunset, has also been recorded on Rankin Family Reunion, due out Jan. 9.

Molly grew up in Mabou, Cape Breton, surrounded by her famous musical family. When she was a little kid, the Rankins rocketed to fame with their second CD, Fare Thee Well Love. Released independently in 1989, Fare Thee Well Love was re-released in 1992 after the band was signed to Capitol/EMI and went on to sell more than 500,000 copies.

With their radio-friendly, unique Celtic-country sound, the Rankins won 15 East Coast Music Awards, six Junos, four SOCAN Awards and three Canadian Country Music Awards. Their albums were all big sellers, including North Country (1993), Endless Seasons (1995), Grey Dusk of Eve (1995), Collection (1996) and Uprooted (1998).

But despite all that, "Dad was just Dad," says Molly, who was 12 at the time of John Morris's death. He died in a wintry car accident in Cape Breton while driving his son Michael to a hockey game.

"He was the most normal Dad ever," she adds, her fiddle case on her knees during an interview at the Dalhousie Arts Centre. "He chopped the wood and coached my brother's baseball team. You would have never known he was a very successful musician."

John Morris Rankin passed on his love of music to his only daughter, who picked up the fiddle when she was 10. She took lessons, "but my dad was pretty much my mentor." Molly also writes songs and plays guitar and piano.

Hanging out with Uncle Jimmy and "the girls" — that's Aunt Cookie, Aunt Raylene and Aunt Heather — to record the new CD and rehearse for the tour has been "very comfortable," says Molly.

"These are people I know and love. Gosh, these people changed my diapers."

There's a touch of sadness too, she acknowledges.

"It's a bittersweet thing, but I prefer to see it as a celebration. Celebrating the thing he loved so much — music — brings great happiness to me and my family."

Photo: Pearce Photo


John Allan's Celtic Soul

Documentary explores the life and music of the Godfather of Celtic Music

December 30, 2006 - Halifax Herald

By Tim Arsenault, Television Reporter

JOHN ALLAN CAMERON felt he had a calling at least a couple of times in his life.

One led him to undertake the extensive studies that lead to the priesthood.

The other took him on his lifelong quest to entertain.

Both instincts are celebrated in Celtic Soul: The Life & Music of John Allan Cameron, a documentary premiering Tuesday (January 2nd) at 10