Listen to “O Canada” from The Kingston Coffee House 1/13/26

By Mike Stevenson | January 13, 2026

Tonight on THE KINGSTON COFFEE HOUSE, we celebrate the music of our neighbor to the North, a nation whose vast landscapes mirror the depth of her musical artistry. We’ll hear songs from 60’s-era folk icons Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, and Leonard Cohen – as well as a few lesser-known Canucks (David Wiffin, Ron Sexsmith, Mary Margaret O’Hara) whom I expect will become favorites.

Listen to a full replay of “O Canada”, below

GLORIOUS AND FREE
– The Royal Canadian Mounties “O Canada”
– Neil Young “Ohio” (Young) 1970 CSNY So Far
– Dolly, Linda & Emmylou “After the Goldrush”(Young) Trio II, 1999
– Gordon Lightfoot “Canadian Railroad Trilogy” The Way I Feel, 1967

  • WHEN I WOKE UP THIS MORNIN’
    – Ian & Sylvia “Early Morning Rain” (Lightfoot)1965
    – Gordon Lightfoot “Steel Rail Blues” Lightfoot, 1966
    – Ian & Sylvia “Katie Dear” Newport Folk Festival 1964
    – Ian & Sylvia “Someday Soon” Newport Folk Festival 1964
    – We Five “You Were On My Mind” (Sylvia Fricker)You Were on My Mind, 1965
  • HEROES IN THE SEAWEED
    – Neil Young “Til the Morning Comes” After the Goldrush, 1970
    – Rick Danko “Twilight” (Robertson) The Best of Mountain Stage 1989
    – Joni Mitchell “Morningtown” Ladies of the Canyon,1970
    – Joni Mitchell “California” Blue,1971
    – Leonard Cohen “Suzanne”
  • RING THE BELLS THAT STILL CAN RING
    – Perla Batalla, Julie Christensen “Anthem” (Cohen) I’m Your Man
    – Jesse Winchester “Sham a Ling Dong Ding” Love Filling Station, 2009
    – Steve Barakatt “O Canada” (instrumental piano)
  • GAILGRAITH ST. GOODBYE
    – Kate & Anna McGarrigle “Kiss And Say Goodbye” Heart Like a Wheel, 1976
    – Ron Sexsmith “Gailbraith Street”, Ron Sexsmith 1995
    – Neil Young “Only Love Can Break Your Heart” After the Goldrush, 1970
    – David Wiffin “Skybound Station” Coast to Coast Fever, 1973
    – Jerry Jeff Walker “More Often Than Not” (Wiffin”)Bein’ Free, 1970
    – Joni Mitchell “You Turn Me On I’m a Radio”, For the Roses, 1972
Joni

“Cause who needs the static – it hurts the head”

  • WHISPERING PINES AND CALLING ANGELS
    – Lucinda Williams & Boz Scaggs “Whispering Pines” (Robertson/Manuel)
    – Cowboy Junkies “Mining for Gold” (trad) The Trinity Sessions, 1988
    – Jane Silberry & KD Lang “Calling All Angels” When I Was a Boy, 1993
  • STILL I WISH YOU’D CHANGE YOUR MIND
    Neil Young “Comes a Time” (1976) Comes a Time, 1976
    Neil Young “Four Strong Winds” (Tyson) Comes a Time, 1976
  • ALL THE PEOPLE WERE SINGIN’
    – Daniel Lanois “Jolie Louise” Acadie, 1989
    – Joan Baez “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down” (Robertson) Blessed Are, 1971
    – Gale Garnett “We’ll Sing in the Sunshine” (1964) • Grammy winner 1965 for Best Traditional Folk Recording
  • PROBABLY BE ROOM IN HEAVEN
    – Ocean “Put Your Hand in the Hand”, 1971
    – Cindy Walker “Blue Canadian Rockies” (C Walker) 1964
    – Judy Collins “Someday Soon” (Tyson) Who Knows Where the Time Goes? 1968
    – Ann Murray “Danny’s Song” (Loggins) 1972
  • BIGGER AS WE GO
    – Bruce Cockburn “You Get Bigger As You Go” Humans, 1980
    – Mary Margaret O’Hara “Dear Darling” Miss America, 1984
    – Jennifer Warnes “If It Be Your Will” (Cohen) Famous Blue Raincoat, 1986
    – Toronto Symphony Orchestra “O Canada” (en francaise)
  • GOODNIGHT / HARVEST A NEW DAY
    – Rufus Wainwright & Andrew Bird “Harvest” (Young) Folkocracy, 2023
    – The Band “It Makes No Difference” from The Last Waltz
    – Mary Margaret O’Hara “Anew Day” Miss America, 1982
Mary Margaret O'Hara

Toronto’s Mary Margaret O’Hara. One critic observed, “Her angelic voice seems to be almost a cross  between Doris Day and Bjork”

SHOW NOTES:

In the second hour of the show, I read a bit from public television’s popular travel guide Rick Steves’ open letter to Canada

Additionally, you can visit the Rick Steves Europe blog for an enlightening and (sometimes) encouraging interview with two prominent Canadian authors sharing their perspective on today’s strained political relationship between the US and its northern neighbor. [FREE]

Georgia On My Mind

By Dai Bando

In 1976, The Band recorded “Georgia On My Mind” to benefit Jimmy Carter’s presidential campaign. Mr. Carter was then governor of Georgia. “We released a single of ‘Georgia’ in Mr. Carter’s honor,” remembered Levon Helm, “Richard (Manuel) sang it with the ‘soul factor’ turned pretty high. We played ‘Georgia’ on Saturday Night Live, and a few days later Jimmy Carter was elected President of the United States.”

So, there you have it: Richard Manuel turned his soul factor to ‘high’ and Georgia’s Jimmy Carter was elected President. It’s science.

I saw The Band perform (with all but Robbie) with my pal Tony in Boston in 1983. I don’t remember Richard singing “Georgia,” that night, but he did sing another Ray Charles classic “You Don’t Know Me.” I’ll never forget Richard singing that song. “Afraid and shy, I let my chance go by…” I remember thinking, “me too, Richard.” (It was 1983 and I was finally getting my shit together. You don’t know me, indeed.)


Jimmy Carter became friends with not only with The Band, but also with Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson (“he’s my buddy,” said President Carter), and the Allman Brothers Band, who were the Kings of Southern Rock at the time.

In the fall of 1975, the Allmans played a fundraiser show for Carter’s campaign right here at the Providence Civic Center. I wasn’t there (Pu Pu platters needed to be bussed at The Great House that night) but my friend MV attended the show. MV later told me he missed Jimmy Carter appearing onstage because he was busy puking in a Civic Center bathroom due to drinking too much ‘Southern Comfort’ How’s that for 100 proof irony? [listen to that complete live show here, via the Internet Archive]


Jimmy Carter was the first “rock and Roll” president. He wore blue jeans and frequently quoted Bob Dylan. Paul Simon and Aretha Franklin, performed at his inauguration. Remember when “The Piano Guys” performed at Trump’s last inauguration? Me neither.

Carter’s achievements include the historic Camp David Peace Accord between Egypt and Israel. He created the Department of Education, bolstered the Social Security system, and appointed record numbers of women, blacks, and Hispanics to Government jobs. He was most proud of never having led his country into a war. “We never dropped a bomb. We never fired a bullet.”


He certainly had his failures; gasoline lines, historic unemployment and generally the worst economy of my lifetime. Mainly though, Carter had the misfortune of being president when Iran took American 70 hostages on November 4, 1979.

The hostage crisis ended with the hostages being released the day Carter left office and was replaced by Ronald Reagan. Before the presidential transition, Reagan’s campaign manager and future CIA director William Casey made a secret trip to meet with Ayatollah Khomeini’s posse to delay the release of the American hostages until after the election, preventing an “October Surprise” that could have resulted in Carter’s reelection. This ‘conspiracy theory’ was later confirmed by Abolhassan Banisadr, the former President of Iran. Reagan kept the hostages in their cells for a few extra months to ensure an election victory. As President George W. Bush would declare years later, “Mission accomplished!”

Of course, most Americans were elated that Reagan won the election regardless of any dirty tricks with the hostages. Reagan ended the Soviet Union (“Mr Gorbacev, tear down this wall”) and got the U.S. economy purring once again with deregulation. Deregulation works every time, until some deregulated train derails and spews cancer-causing fumes for a hundred miles.

Reagan illegally sold weapons and trained Osama bin Laden and the Afghan Mujahideen, whom he called “freedom fighters.” So, there’s that minor mistake in judgment. I can hear a Fox News talking head right now, “Sure Reagan trained Osama bin Laden, but at least he didn’t train Dr. Anthony Fauci!”


Reagan communicated simple ideas: “Government is bad. Our enemies are evil.” Carter was far more complex and often said the things we didn’t want to hear. He was the first president to warn about the dangers of oil dependence and climate change.

I agree with the NY Times editorial that read “Jimmy Carter was probably the most intelligent, hard-working and decent man to have occupied the Oval Office in the 20th century.”


Rest In peaceful dreams, President Jimmy Carter. Hoping the road leads back to you.

Jimmy Carter with his “buddy” Willie Nelson

Murder Most Foul-dehoy

Michael Stevenson | The Hobbledehoy

I’m crawling out of me skin during this Covid-19 lockdown, so to kill some time I’m adding lyrics to Dylan’s “Murder Most Foul.”
Feel free to join in:

Righteous brothers be right; Andrews sisters hold tight
Ever see Dallas from a DC-9 at night?

Rudy can’t fail, shorty on the wood
Is that the only law that Liberty understood?

Hand in hand to a barbecue stand
Emanuel chose Richard to leave The Band.

Diamond in the back, sunroof top,
She’s big at the little and bottom at the top

Ruby, Ruby how I want ya
Oliver Stone is a-gonna haunt ya

I Like Ike, tell me What’d I Say?
Chicken in every pot; Jockomo feena nay

Pay Allen Price, bare Eric Burden
Sew my ol blue jeans behind an iron curtain

Time’s gonna take it’s toll
Pay for the love that we stole
On the side of the street that’s sunny
That’s Just Montgomery Clift, honey!

Crash on the levee and a wreck on the highway
Our D-I-V-O-R-C-E
Becomes final today

Charlie Pride comes before The Fall
Kicker Conspiracy, b-de, b-de, b-de,
Folks, That’s all!