Margo Timmins Explained

Margo Timmins
Background:solo_singer
Birth Date:27 January 1961
Birth Place:Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Origin:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Instrument:Vocals
Years Active:1985 - present
Label:Latent Recordings
Current Member Of:Cowboy Junkies

Margo Timmins (born January 27, 1961)[1] is the lead vocalist of Canadian alternative country and folk rock band Cowboy Junkies. Her brothers Michael Timmins and Peter Timmins are (respectively) the band's lead guitarist and drummer.

Childhood

Margo Timmins was born (and spent most of her childhood) in Montreal as one of six children of Barbara and John Timmins. She described her mother Barbara as "a very honest person, and very confident in who she was and her emotions and her place in the world. And I think if she gave anything, that's what she gave us: the sense that you do what you do, and not to worry about it too much. A confidence. Not a confidence that we're necessarily right, but even if we're wrong, well, too bad".[2]

Although her father John Timmins did not have a professional career in music, having worked in the sales and marketing divisions of several aviation companies, he was a lover of music (particularly jazz)[3] who passed on his passion for music to his children, including Margot.

As a young girl, she remembered going through her brother Michael's extensive record collection.[4] Some of her early favourites that influence her to this day include: Highway 61 Revisited (1965), Blonde on Blonde (1966), and Nashville Skyline (1969), by Bob Dylan, Nebraska (1982) by Bruce Springsteen, Harvest (1972) by Neil Young, and Townes Van Zandt's Flyin' Shoes (1978).[''[[Wikipedia:Citation needed|citation needed]]]

In 1977, the Timmins family moved from Montreal to Toronto. They lived in Etobicoke in the west-end of the city[5] and Margo attended Richview Collegiate Institute in her high school years.

Young adult

After graduating from high school, Timmins spent her evenings along with her brother Michael exploring the punk music scene in Toronto that was happening on Queen Street West. When Michael started his first band, the Hunger Project, she would hang out with the band, take the tickets, and carry the equipment.[6]

Timmins supported herself by doing clerical work for her father and performing chores around the house.[5]

But by her mid-20s, Timmins had left the night life behind and was studying social work at university.[4] It was also during this time that Timmins developed her signature mane of long hair. As she tells it, "As a kid I was always mistaken for a boy. I didn't get long hair until my early 20s. That's when I discovered hair was important."[7]

Cowboy Junkies

Michael Timmins, Margo's brother, formed the band Cowboy Junkies, with Margot's voice as a distinctive feature.[8] Her ethereal vocals, paired with the band's spare and low-key instrumentation played at a relaxed pace, lend the band its unique atmospheric sound.[9] In 1985, her brother Michael recruited Margo as the lead vocalist for Cowboy Junkies even though she had never sung publicly before.[9] Initially Margo would not sing in front of the other band members, she would only sing in front of Michael. Eventually, Michael convinced Margo to sing in front of the other band members and they liked her performance.[10]

Margo Timmins has said about that time, "So when he asked me I was freaked out, but I said 'Okay, so long as if I don't do a good job, you fire me.' I didn't want to hurt his music, because his music is so important to him."[11] It took a long time for her to get comfortable singing in front of an audience. In fact, many of the early shows had Margo singing with her back to the audience.[12]

Timmins has stated that it took her ten years to get comfortable singing in front of an audience, and she suffers from stage fright.[12] [13]

Present

She lives in Toronto with her husband Graham Henderson and their son Ed.[14] However, she likes to spend most of her time at their 100-year-old farmhouse in Grey County, Ontario.[15]

She married Graham Henderson in 1988. She met her husband, an entertainment lawyer, in the mid-1980s after he heard the band's demo tapes and went to see them at Toronto's bar, restaurant and performance space The Rivoli. Shortly thereafter he was not only working to get the Junkies their recording contract with BMG in the U.S., but he and Margo started dating.[5] Graham Henderson has been a partner at the law firm of McCarthy Tétrault and served as vice-president of business affairs and e-commerce at Universal Music Canada until 2000 when he was named president of the Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA).[16]

While Timmins celebrated her 20th year of marriage she admitted to having a crush on Bruce Springsteen. She said, "When I got married, I told my husband that if Bruce ever wanted me, that I would be his. And my husband said, OK".[17]

She loves animals and she and Graham have had two Rhodesian Ridgeback dogs, Achilles and Drusilla, as well as Spartacus the cat.[15] [18] In 2002, Margo and Graham suffered a significant loss in the death of their dog Gaius. Graham described the loss this way, "On August 20, 2002 our dog Gaius was diagnosed with pneumonia. Margo and I had just finished a three week vacation. I left to come home for work on the Sunday evening. Margo noticed trouble almost right away. Though he was in hospital almost immediately, the disease ravaged him and his great, loving heart gave out in the early hours of August 25, 2002. For those of us without children, our animals often become our children".[19]

It was after the death of this beloved pet, that Margo and Graham started exploring the possibility of adopting a child. The adoption process took a year, during the recording in 2004 of the Cowboy Junkies studio album One Soul Now. Margo and Graham eventually adopted Edward.[15]

When Timmins is not on the road touring with Cowboy Junkies, she is home on the farm with her son Ed. Ed travels with the band on longer tours, but for shorter tours stays in Canada with his grandparents.[20]

In 2009, she released a solo album of covers, Margo's Corner: Ty Tyrfu Sessions, Volume 1.

Honours

In 2016, she was made a member of the Order of Ontario.[21]

Additional information

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rose . Mike . January 27, 2020. Today's famous birthdays list for January 27, 2020 includes celebrities Alan Cumming, James Cromwell. January 27, 2023 . Cleveland.com.
  2. Web site: Q and A: Margo Timmins . https://web.archive.org/web/20121104194009/http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/story.html?id=b0f56113-6369-4303-beb8-7b9e724789cb . Canada.com . June 29, 2007 . November 4, 2012 . July 4, 2015.
  3. Web site: Tady . Scott . Cowboy Junkies lyricist talks tour, new songs & alt-country/folk band's legacy . 2024-07-09 . Beaver County Times . en-US.
  4. Web site: Cowboy Junkies The Sunday Chronicle . JoyZine . June 12, 1981 . July 4, 2015 . Lanham, Tom.
  5. Web site: The Agony and the Ecstasy Network Feb/March 1990 . Junkiesfan.com . July 4, 2015 . Stoute, Lenny . March 3, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303173731/http://www.junkiesfan.com/articles/sams_network1990.htm . dead .
  6. Web site: Brother Son, Sister Moon Impact January 1994 . Junkiesfan.com . July 4, 2015 . Doole, Kerry . March 3, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303232423/http://www.junkiesfan.com/articles/impact_94.html . dead .
  7. Web site: Margo Timmins . People . July 4, 2015.
  8. Web site: Cowboy Junkies’ Margo Timmins: ‘My style has always been organic. I just keep it simple’ . 2024-07-09 . The Irish Times . en.
  9. Web site: Huey, Steve . Cowboy Junkies Biography . April 26, 2017 . AllMusic.
  10. Web site: Cowboy Junkies Biography . Sing365.com . April 26, 2007 . July 4, 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150704235403/http://www.sing365.com/music/lyric.nsf/Cowboy-Junkies-Biography/A91327299F7FA23C48256A850010FA6A . July 4, 2015 .
  11. The Slow, Sad Waltzes of Margo Timmins . Carù, Paolo . Buscadero . 207 . November 1999 . https://web.archive.org/web/20020201043640/http://www.geocities.com/SunsetStrip/Palms/7573/cjbusca2b.html . February 1, 2002.
  12. Web site: Cowboy Junkies ...Still Hookied. Hybrid magazine . July 4, 2015 . Engelhart, Tony.
  13. Web site: Like a Rhinestone Cowboys Venue Summer 1996 . Junkiesfan.com . July 4, 2015 . Press, Kevin . March 3, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303205641/http://www.junkiesfan.com/articles/venue.htm . dead .
  14. Web site: Biography: Graham Henderson . https://web.archive.org/web/20050219115909/http://www.cria.ca/news/210904gh_n.php . CRIA News . February 19, 2005 . September 21, 2004 . April 26, 2017.
  15. Web site: Mystery Is a Farce . Paste . June 1, 2004 . May 22, 2014 . Sweety, Jay.
  16. Web site: Cowboy Junkies . https://web.archive.org/web/20110608090547/http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=U1SEC834505 . The Canadian Encyclopedia . June 8, 2011 . April 26, 2017.
  17. Web site: Music Addicted To Cowboy Tunes . https://web.archive.org/web/20051014184411/http://www.hippopress.com/music/cowboyjunkies05609.html . Hippo Press . October 14, 2005 . July 4, 2015 . Greene, Robert.
  18. Web site: Cowboy Junkies' Margo Timmins can do without social media . San Francisco Examiner . June 17, 2014 . April 26, 2017 . Lanham, Tom.
  19. Web site: Profile for Graham Henderson . Amazon.com . July 4, 2015.
  20. Web site: Attached to Songs . Tucson Weekly . February 16, 2006 . July 4, 2015 . Armstrong, Gene.
  21. Web site: The 2016 Appointees to the Order of Ontario . December 14, 2016.
  22. https://www.cbc.ca/music/junos/how-signing-with-a-label-meant-new-battles-for-cowboy-junkies-and-new-pressure-for-singer-margo-timmins-1.5463189