logo
Burton Cummings is proud to be surviving the Taylor Swift era

Burton Cummings is proud to be surviving the Taylor Swift era

Ottawa Citizen10-07-2025
Article content
Reviews and recommendations are unbiased and products are independently selected. Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through links on this page.
Article content
With some turbulence facing the country these days, the Canadian music environment remains strong. It's an outlet to help carry the load.
Article content
Enter musician and walking music encyclopedia, Burton Cummings, on the phone line. With decades filled with hit songs and historical Canadian firsts, Cummings, 77, has seen it all.
Article content
In the midst of another leg of his A Few Good Moments tour, the proud Winnipeg native has a brief break after recently headlining the all-Canadian lineup for Line Spike Frontenac, north of Kingston, Ont. Keeping Canadiana spirit in full force, performing Runnin' Back To Saskatoon (co-written with Kurt Winter), was a perfect inclusion.
Article content
Article content
Off the stage, one of his biggest achievements is his ever-growing MP3 collection, staggering in scope.
Article content
'The minute CDs were invented, I was a happy guy and I went and got a whole half a dozen iPods and loaded them with all my favourite stuff because I fly all the time … so I've worked on my library now for 40 years and I can say this very honestly, I have way more documented music than any radio station in the world — anywhere.
Article content
'I was never a vinyl fan because back in the hippie days we would party for days — and drink beers and play the records and they got scratched all the time — and then I would go and buy another copy of the white Beatles album … I never liked vinyl because there was always so much noise.'
Article content
Article content
But he remains faithful to his era.
Article content
'I don't listen to that much modern stuff anymore, but I have to take my hat off to Taylor Swift. She broke all the records that I ever knew about in the industry. I kind of joke on stage now that I've survived into the Taylor Swift era and it makes me very proud.'
Article content
'To have a new album out at this age in my life and have the tremendous reviews that I've gotten — it's like people, and the critics, have been very kind to this album. I'm very happy about this at my age.'
Article content
Article content
A Few Good Moments also reveals a bookend to his life. Cummings shot the cover photo.
Article content
'It was 1970. The big clock you see I bought on tour in the Maritimes, I think Halifax. The small clock was my mother's alarm clock through her whole entire adult life. The watch in the middle — I got for being on The Dating Game and not getting picked — so there you go.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Vancouver creative community reacts to the passing of Ozzy Osbourne
Vancouver creative community reacts to the passing of Ozzy Osbourne

Vancouver Sun

timean hour ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Vancouver creative community reacts to the passing of Ozzy Osbourne

He was called the Prince of Darkness. But many in the Vancouver creative community think Prince of Kindness was a better nickname for the late Ozzy Osbourne. Drew Pautler, CEO of local ad agency Good Fortune Collective, worked on a Best Buy ad for the 2011 SuperBSuper BowlOzzy and Sharon Osbourne, and a then-rising Canadian pop star named Justin Bieber. The humorous spot juxtaposes Ozzy as the embodiment of old 5G technology and Bieber as the coming future of 6G. The ad featured Sharon, as well. As art director on the set, Pautler said the team was on script number 70 without an approved version with only three weeks before game day. When they finally got approval, two versions of the spot had to be filmed quickly at Warner Brothers Burbank studios, and he expected it to be challenging. Instead, he recalls, it was a shoot for the history books. 'Previous celebrity shots had all been similar with stand-standoff-maintenance personalities. But Ozzy was completely different, giving take after take, riffing with us, working hard to give us what we wanted,' Pautler says. 'Yes, you had to talk loudly to him as his hearing wasn't great, but that character you saw on The Osbournes was an act. Instead, you had someone who understood nuance, parody and bringing out the best in the moment. Get top headlines and gossip from the world of celebrity and entertainment. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sun Spots will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. 'I wouldn't call him the Prince of Darkness, as my experience was he was the Prince of Kindness.' Taking that kindness even further, Ozzy invited the whole ad team to come see his show at the Hollywood Bowl the following week where he met them backstage, was engaging and a perfect host. Onstage, he was the heavy metal god. 'Working in the creative industry, anyone who has created a new style or genre has made the ultimate accomplishment,' said Pautler. 'He did that with heavy metal. Seeing him perform War Pigs from the side stage was absolutely electric.' B.C. resident Johnny Morgan was a keyboardist for Ozzy's opening act Fear Factory at Ozzfest 1997. The American industrial group performed on four different years of the tour, which was key in building its global reputation. The musician noted that Osbourne's music touched a generation. 'Sharon was like a mom to the entire tour, she was very accessible, but ran a very tight ship,' Morgan said in an email. 'Ozzy was not really around much due to his health, which didn't seem great even back then. And he didn't really integrate with the rest of the tour and bands very often. He would get a vitamin B shot before going on each night and just come alive on stage like a totally different person.' Morgan recalled being able to watch Osbourne and Black Sabbath perform at least 20 times during the tour. 'And it was incredible, every night, how many people knew and identified with his music,' Morgan says. Chilliwack's Shane Ward was a member of the indie band Mystery Machine. Signed to Nettwerk Records, the group were well-ensconced in the club scene and mining different musical terrain than Ozzy when they were asked, at the last minute, to open for him at Rogers Arena in 1996. Ward recalls opening for Osbourne was a sort of teenage fantasy, and that he never stopped loving the music of Black Sabbath. But the reality of the gig left him with a different vision of the iconic rocker. 'This was before The Osbournes show, so nobody really knew how f—d up he was at the time. But when I saw him after our set it was a very decrepit, hurting old man who only ended up making it through three songs before he called it a night and rescheduled,' said Ward. 'The band determined he was 51, but that night he didn't look a day over 80.' To this day, whenever anyone ever inquires about Mystery Machine's biggest concert ever, it's an easy answer for the local musician. 'I always say Ozzy, hands down,' he said. Ward offers up the following advice to listeners everywhere when asked the question of what you can listen to after Black Sabbath. 'More Black Sabbath,' he advised. 'Ozzy was bigger than life, an absolutely legendary human.' sderdeyn@ Love concerts, but can't make it to the venue? Stream live shows and events from your couch with VEEPS, a music-first streaming service now operating in Canada. Click here for an introductory offer of 30% off. Explore upcoming concerts and the extensive archive of past performances.

Quebec City latest to deny venue to MAGA-aligned singer Sean Feucht
Quebec City latest to deny venue to MAGA-aligned singer Sean Feucht

Montreal Gazette

time3 hours ago

  • Montreal Gazette

Quebec City latest to deny venue to MAGA-aligned singer Sean Feucht

Quebec City is the latest Canadian municipality to pull the plug on a concert by Sean Feucht, an American Christian singer known for his opposition to abortion rights, support for Trump and anti-2SLGBTQ+ statements. Closely associated with the Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement, Feucht was scheduled to hold his 'Revive in 25 — Quebec City' concert on Friday at the city-owned and managed ExpoCité grounds. But a Quebec City spokesperson says the venue contract — signed on July 4 — was cancelled on Wednesday. 'The presence of a controversial artist was not mentioned when the contract was signed between ExpoCité and the promoter of the concert planned for the site this Friday,' said François Moisan, Quebec City's director of public relations. 'With the new elements that have been brought to its attention, ExpoCité has decided to cancel the contract and thus the holding of the event on its site.' Quebec City's move follows a similar decision in Halifax by Parks Canada. The federal agency revoked the permit for Feucht's concert, which had been scheduled for Wednesday at York Redoubt, a national historic site managed by Parks Canada just south of the city. In a statement issued Tuesday evening, Parks Canada said the concert permit had been reassessed and 'after careful review, and due to heightened public safety concerns, Parks Canada has notified the organizer that the permit has been revoked.' The City of Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island has also revoked the permit for a Feucht concert planned at a city-owned venue for Thursday. At first the city announced it would let the event go ahead, but issued a statement stressing the concert is 'not a city-sponsored event' and expressing support for the 2SLGBTQ+ community. Later Wednesday, the city announced that 'after consultation with Charlottetown Police Services, the City of Charlottetown has notified the organizer ... that their permit has been revoked due to evolving public safety and security concerns.' According to his social media feeds, Feucht has more concert dates planned across Canada in July and August, including: Ottawa (Saturday), Toronto (Sunday), Winnipeg (Aug. 20), Saskatoon (Aug. 21), Edmonton (Aug. 22), Kelowna, B.C. (Aug. 23) and Abbotsford, B.C. (Aug. 24). A former worship leader at Bethel Church — a non-denominational, neo-charismatic megachurch in Redding, Calif. — Feucht began hosting large outdoor gatherings in 2020 to protest stay-at-home orders during the COVID-19 pandemic under the banner 'Let Us Worship'. He is also the founder of Burn 24-7, a prayer and worship movement, and Hold the Line, a movement intended to get young people to oppose what he described as the 'progressive agenda being forced on America.' He ran unsuccessfully as a Republican in California's third congressional district in 2020, with a campaign that was critical of abortion rights and high taxes. He also supports greater parental rights to oppose mandatory vaccination and sex education. Media sources have quoted Feucht describing drag queens as 'demonic, sick, twisted' and accusing them of 'perverting the minds of children.' He has made multiple social media posts advocating an end to abortion rights. In a 2022 article, Rolling Stone magazine described Feucht as a 'MAGA preacher' and a 'far-right Jesus rocker who made a name for himself protesting COVID, praising Trump, and sticking it to the libs.' Feucht's agency did not immediately respond to The Gazette's emailed request for comment. On Facebook, Feucht posted a video in which he acknowledged the cancelling of some of his Canadian concerts, and announced he would be holding his Halifax concert in a farmer's field. 'I have never felt this level of resistance in a while, since 2020,' he said. 'But you know what? It's the Devil's same playbook. He wants the people of God to shut up, to go inside, to put their masks on, to be quiet. And we are not going to do that. Moses didn't do it. Daniel didn't do it. We didn't do it in 2020. And Canada's not going to do it.'

Taylor Swift gets lucky 13 Madame Tussauds statues
Taylor Swift gets lucky 13 Madame Tussauds statues

CTV News

time3 hours ago

  • CTV News

Taylor Swift gets lucky 13 Madame Tussauds statues

Taylor Swift arrives at the 67th annual Grammy Awards on Sunday, Feb. 2, 2025, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP) LONDON, United Kingdom — U.S. pop megastar Taylor Swift will be honoured with 13 waxworks of her at Madame Tussauds venues around the globe, the museum said on Wednesday. In honour of Swift's lucky number, 13 of the waxwork museum's 22 branches will each receive a statue of the 'Love Story' and 'Blank Space' singer, in what it called the 'most ambitious project' of its 250-year history. The statues were inspired by some of the 35-year-old songwriting sensation's looks from her record-shattering 'Eras Tour' from 2023 to 2024. With 149 shows across the world over nearly two years, the tour raked in US$2 billion, making it the most lucrative in music history to date. More than 40 artists worked for more than a year on the statues of Swift, one of the most acclaimed artists of her generation with 14 Grammy Awards. 'This is the most ambitious project in Madame Tussauds' 250-year history, which only feels right to reflect the stratospheric status of Taylor Swift,' said Danielle Cullen, the museum's senior figure stylist. U.K.-based Swifties are well served, with one waxwork slated for London and another for the northern seaside resort town of Blackpool. Another 10 will find a permanent home at the branches of Madame Tussauds in Amsterdam, Berlin, Budapest, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Las Vegas, Nashville, New York, Orlando and Sydney. The thirteenth statue, which will travel around the remaining museums, will begin its worldwide walkabout with a residency at Madame Tussauds Shanghai.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store