When listeners first heard Gordon Lightfoots heart-wrenching tale of the 29 brave souls who lost their lives aboard a ship in his 1976 hit, The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald, many assumed that he had chosen a subject from perhaps a century earlier.
The singer-songwriter had scored a handful of hits in his native Canada and had first come to the attention of worldwide audiences with his 1970 smash, If You Could Read My Mind.
After a series of mid-chart singles, Lightfoot scored what would be his biggest hit, 1974s Sundown, which reached #1 in the U.S. and Canada.
It was followed that same year by another big success, Carefree Highway.
When The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald was released as a single in August 1976, Top 40 audiences listened spellbound to Lightfoots tale no matter how many times they heard it.
The freighter with a crew and good captain well seasoned was traveling from Wisconsin to Detroit Lightfoot used artistic license to sub-in Cleveland as the destination with a load of twenty six thousand tons of iron ore. In the songs first verse, Lightfoot hints of danger when the skies of November turn gloomy.
Soon enough, the gales of November came slashin, when afternoon came it was freezing rain, in the face of a hurricane west wind.
As Lightfoot continues, the ships cook tells the men that the worsening weather is too rough to feed ya. And then, just two lines later, comes the kicker
Fellas, its been good to know ya. What?!? (That line never fails to elicit chills.)
Lightfoots lyrics continue: The Captain wired in he had water comin in, and the good ship and crew was in peril. And later that night when his lights went out of sight, came the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald.
Lightfoots tale is, indeed, based on a true story. The SS Edmund Fitzgerald sank on Lake Superior, or as the songwriter writes, Gitche Gumee, which the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow had also called it in his epic poem of 1855, The Song of Hiawatha.
But the ship was no 19th century freighter. The sinking of the SS Edmund Fitzgerald had taken place on November 10, 1975. Lightfoot read about it in Newsweek later that month and wrote the song just weeks later. In 2010, he told a Savannah, Ga. publication that he has been to the Maritime Sailors Cathedral in Detroit several times to sing the song and greet the local sea captains. (He describes it in the songs endingthe church bell chimed til it rang twenty-nine times.)
The Captain had never sent a distress signal. His last message was, We are holding our own.
Watch Lightfoot perform the song in 2000, from his Live in Reno DVD
The single debuted at #89 on August 28, 1976, ultimately reaching #2 that November, one year after that fateful day.
Lightfoot is the subject of a new 2-CD collection, The Complete Singles: 1970-1980, which features all of the A- and B-sides that he recorded for Warner Bros. Records, including the ones mentioned above. It arrives March 1 via Real Gone Music.
Lightfoot, born November 17, 1938, keeps a busy tour schedule. Tickets are available here and here.
Poster Comment:
The wind in the wires made a tattle-tale sound And a wave broke over the railing And every man knew, as the captain did too, T'was the witch of November come stealin'
Pure poetry, worthy of Poe or Longfellow.
Living near Lake Superior and remembering the day the ship went down, the song still gives me chills.
The songs "Carefree Highway", "Sundown" and "If You Could Read My Mind" are all reminiscent of the late Jim Croce's music.
Deck, thanks for posting. I had always liked Lightfoot. Before I actually heard the song Fitzgerald, a friend told me about it. He had told me that it was eerie because it was a true tale.
When I finally heard it, it put a chill in my spine, and still does to this day.