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For five years
John Wort
Hannam
taught grade 9
language arts on
the largest
reserve in
Canada – The
Kainai Nation,
part of the
Blackfoot
Confederacy. But
in 1997 he heard
a Loudon
Wainwright III
record and was
hooked by the
music and the
stories. In 1998
he bought a
guitar and
learnt some
chords. In 2002
he quit teaching
and began to
pursue the dream
of being a
working
musician.
John Wort Hannam
comes from a
long line of
people who make
a living using
their hands. His
great-great
grandfather
drove horse and
buggy for the
village doctor.
His
great-grandfather
was a stevedore,
his grandfather,
a farmer and his
father still
works as a
master
carpenter. Wort
Hannam now
carries on the
tradition making
his living
writing songs
and playing
music. He
independently
released his
debut CD “pocket
full of holes”
in 2002 and his
2nd CD “Dynamite
and Dozers” in
2004. His third
CD “Two-Bit
Suit” was
released by
Black Hen Music
in the spring of
2007.
“Queen’s Hotel”
is Wort Hannam's
fourth
full-length
recording. Once
again Juno award
winning Steve
Dawson takes the
helm producing
11 tracks of
authentic
Canadiana
folk/roots
music. The
writing,
although true to
John's narrative
story-telling
style, is
tighter,
smarter, more
personal, and
with a breadth
of subject
matter not seen
on previous
recordings. The
upbeat
“With The
Grain”
(a song for
which Wort
Hannam won Grand
Prize at the
2009 Calgary
Folk Music
Festival
Songwriting
Competition)
recalls the
conversation
where John tells
his father he
would quit
teaching to
attempt a shot
at performing
music.
“Worth A
Damn”,
a timeless
sounding duet
performed with
multi-Juno award
winner Jenny
Whiteley is
reminiscent of a
John Prine/Iris
Dement
collaboration.
Despite the
title,
“Requiem
For A Small
Town”
is a rollicking
3 and a
half-minute look
at the town that
just never quite
made it. The
poignant but
catchy
“Lucky
Strikes”
was written
after a visit to
Fort Macleod's
infamous Queen's
Hotel.
Wort Hannam also
revisits two
songs from
previous
independent
releases:
“Church of
the Long Grass”
which has been
called by some
“the unofficial
anthem of
southern
Alberta” and
“Pier 21”
which recounts
the immigration
of Wort Hannam's
family from the
island of Jersey
in the Channel
Islands,UK to
Canada in the
late 70's.
“Queen’s Hotel”
was recorded
live off the
floor at
Vancouver's The
Factory.
Musicians sat in
one room facing
each other in a
circle and
played the songs
– no bed tracks,
no click, and no
overdubs except
for a few
harmonies. It
captures a
realness that
sounds less like
musicians making
a record and
more like
musicians making
music that just
happened to be
recorded.With
many of the same
players: John
Wort Hannam on
guitar and tenor
guitar, Steve
Dawson on dobro,
national, and
weissenborn,
John Reischman
on mandolin and
mandola, Rob
Becker on
upright bass,
Geoff Hicks on
percussion, and
Jeanne
Tolmie,Tyler
Bird, and Jenny
Whiteley on
backing vocals,
“Queen’s
Hotel”
has a pared down
and subtler
sound compared
to Wort Hannam's
previous
recordings and
leans more on
the folkier side
of the
folk/roots
spectrum.
Thriving on live
performance,
John Wort Hannam
is truly happy
when he is on
the road playing
and connecting
personally with
an audience. He
tours
extensively in
Canada and the
US. Recently he
returned home
from a highly
successful
mainstage set at
the prestigious
Kerrville Folk
Festival in
Texas and will
now spend the
summer
traveling,
playing and
gearing up for a
fall release of
“Queen's Hotel”
that will take
him across the
country and into
the US.
2009 Grand Prize
Winner - Calgary
Folk Music
Festival
Songwriting
Competition
2008 North
American Folk
Alliance Award
Nominee
2007 Double
Western Canadian
Music Award
Nominee
2007 New Folk
Winner -
Kerrville Texas
New Folk
Songwriting
Competition
2007 Grand Prize
Winner - Calgary
Folk Music
Festival
Songwriting
Competition
2005 Double
Canadian Folk
Music Award
Nominee
2005 Western
Canadian Music
Award Nominee
2004 Grand Prize
Winner - Calgary
Folk Music
Festival
Songwriting
Competition
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