Dick Nolan (musician) explained

Dick Nolan
Birth Name:Richard Francis Nolan
Birth Date:4 February 1939
Birth Place:Corner Brook, Newfoundland
Death Place:Carbonear, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
Occupation:Singer, Musician, Songwriter
Instrument:Guitar

Richard Francis Nolan (February 4, 1939 – December 13, 2005)[1] was a Canadian musician, from Newfoundland. Nolan was known for performing Newfoundland folk music in Toronto night clubs. During his 50-year career he released more than 40 albums and recorded over 300 tracks. He is particularly known for his song "Aunt Martha's Sheep".

Early life

Nolan was born in Corner Brook.[2] As a teenager, he performed in a local band, the Blue Valley Boys, and sang on a Corner Brook radio show.[3] Priscilla Boutcher, the former Mayor of Corner Brook, was Nolan's sister.[1]

Career

In the 1950s, Nolan moved to Toronto, where he played with local bands and worked at several jobs. He began to record albums of the music of Johnny Cash and other country songs, earning him the nickname "The Johnny Cash of Newfoundland". His Blue Valley Boys, which included Corner Brook native Roy Penney, performed regularly at the Horseshoe Tavern, backing up visiting country singers.

In the 1960s, he switched his focus to traditional Newfoundland music and released many albums.[2] [4] One album, Fisherman's Boy, contained Nolan's signature song Aunt Martha's Sheep and went platinum in just three months. Another signature song of his was I's the B'y.

Two more gold albums followed; furthermore, he had a hit song in 1972 with "Home Again This Year".[5] That year, he was the editor for the folk song collection Newfoundland Songs, published by the Bennett Brewing Company.[6] He continued to release albums of country music and Newfoundland folk songs regularly for many years.[7]

Nolan appeared at the Grand Ole Opry and national television programs, was nominated for a Juno Award, and hosted his own television series. In November 2005, he was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Music Industry Association of Newfoundland and Labrador.

In 2009 Dick Nolan was posthumously awarded the Dr. Helen Creighton Lifetime Achievement Award by the East Coast Music Association.

Discography

Albums

YearAlbum
1962I Walk the Line
Home of the Blues
Dick Nolan Sings
On Stage at the Drake
Echoes of the Atlantic
Atlantic Lullaby
1964Truck Driving Man
1966I'se the B'y What Catches Da Fish
1967Atlantic Christmas
Moving Out
1968I Want to Live
Be True Newfoundlanders
Folsom Prison and Other Johnny Cash Songs
Lukey's Boat
Newfie Hits
1970Country
Duet
1972Fisherman's Boy
Home Again This Year
1973Happy Newfoundlanders
1974Happy Anniversary Newfoundland
Folk Songs of Newfoundland
1975Dick Nolan
1976A Country Song
1977Best of Dick Nolan
1980Side by Each
Dick Nolan's Greatest Hits of Newfoundland
1984Welcome Aboard

Singles

YearSingleCAN CountryAlbum
1965"Golden Rocket"2Truck Driving Man
1967"The Fool"5Moving Out
1972"Home Again This Year"9Home Again This Year
1973"Me and Brother Bill"88Happy Newfoundlanders

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20180714000852/https://www.cbncompass.ca/news/local/corner-brook-honours-dick-nolan-226091/ "Corner Brook honours Dick Nolan"
  2. Media Sense: The Folklore-popular Culture Continuum. Popular Press; 1986. . p. 77.
  3. https://www.downhomelife.com/article.php?id=408 "The Legendary Dick Nolan"
  4. Last Post. Vol. 5. Canadian Journalism Foundation.; 1975. p. 44–45.
  5. Glenn David Colton. Newfoundland Rhapsody: Frederick R. Emerson and the Musical Culture of the Island. MQUP; March 2014. . p. 162.
  6. Newfoundland songs and ballads in print, 1842-1974: a title and first-line index. Memorial University of Newfoundland; 1979. p. 41.
  7. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/singing-legend-nolan-dead-at-66-1.537677 "Singing legend Nolan dead at 66"