"Four Strong Winds".

OK, girls and boys, more 60s folk: Canadian folkie Ian Tyson penned this classic in '61 inspired by "the seasonal movement of workers around the country from one harvest to the next and its effects upon love affairs". A sad musing on a failing romance, hoping for a reunion but coming to terms with the fact that it's over. Published and first recorded by The Brothers Four in '63, then by Ian and Sylvia later on that same year. Named by CBC Radio One "The Greatest Canadian Song Of All Time". A folk and country standard, it has been covered over 50 times, charting by Bobby Bare in '64 and by Neil Young in '79. Answer: "Four Strong Winds". Ian and Sylvia are way up there among my all-time folkie faves. They opened the doors for many other Canadian singers/songwriters like Joni Mitchell and Gordon Lightfoot to the American and world audiences. I've had so many Canadians ask me how the heck did a kid from P.R. learn so much about Canadian folk in the 60s! The secret was that my Dad had a big ol' shortwave radio in our basement and I would listen to Canadian and East Coast stations. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3m7ckGhnsc https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WtR7mp21yeU

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