The Rankin Family

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The Rankin Family
Origin Flag of Canada Mabou, Nova Scotia
Genre(s) Country/Folk
Years active 1989Present
Label(s) Capitol/EMI
Website www.therankinfamily.com
Members
Jimmy Rankin
Cookie Rankin
Raylene Rankin
Heather Rankin
Former members
John Morris Rankin

The Rankin Family is a Canadian musical family group from Mabou, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia.

Contents

[edit] Members

  • Jimmy Rankin - vocals , guitar
  • John Morris Rankin - piano, fiddle (1959-2000)
  • Cookie Rankin - vocals
  • Raylene Rankin - vocals
  • Heather Rankin - vocals

[edit] History

The Rankins come from a family of 12, all of whom would entertain the neighbours musically every third weekend as part of a ceilidh.

The first Rankin Family band formed in the 1970s when siblings Geraldine, Genevieve, David, John Morris, and Raylene Rankin began performing at local weddings and dances in Cape Breton. As the older siblings went to college and university, the younger siblings Jimmy, Cookie and Heather took their places.[1]

These five siblings (Jimmy, John Morris, Cookie, Raylene and Heather) released their own independent cassettes The Rankin Family (1989) and Fare Thee Well Love (1990) featuring original songs and a combination of traditional jigs, reels and Celtic folk songs. Their television debut was on the CBC variety show On the Road Again in 1989.

Their most successful album was EMI's re-release of Fare Thee Well Love in 1992, which went quadruple platinum, selling over 500,000 copies; the title track was one of the year's biggest Top 40 hit singles in Canada.

The group has won many Canadian music awards, including 15 East Coast Music Awards, 6 Juno Awards, 4 SOCAN Awards, 3 Canadian Country Music Awards and 2 Big Country Music Awards.

On September 17, 1999, the group issued a press release stating that they would no longer perform as a group in order to pursue independent interests and careers.

John Morris Rankin was killed in a car accident in Cape Breton on January 16, 2000. His truck that he was driving to a hockey game plunged into the Gulf of St. Lawrence, as he swerved to avoid a pile of salt on the road.[2]

One of the original founders of the group, Geraldine Coyne (Rankin) died January 10, 2007, the result of a brain aneurysm, at her home in Calgary. Geraldine had not performed with the group since prior to the first recordings being released.[1]

Jimmy Rankin has continued to write songs and has released three solo albums: Song Dog (2001), Handmade (2003), and Edge of Day (2007).

In November 2006, it was announced that the four surviving Rankins -- along with John Morris's daughter Molly -- would be releasing a new album and reuniting for a cross-Canada concert tour. The tour was a great success, coast to coast.

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

Year Album Chart Positions CRIA Label
CAN Country CAN
1989 The Rankin Family Independent
1990 Fare Thee Well Love
1992 Fare Thee Well Love (re-issue) 1 5 5× Platinum Capitol
The Rankin Family (re-issue) Platinum
1993 North Country 1 7 4× Platinum EMI
1995 Endless Seasons 6 13 2× Platinum
Grey Dusk of Eve 29 Gold
1996 Collection 1 14 2× Platinum
1997 Do You Hear...Christmas
1998 Uprooted 30 Gold
2003 Souvenir: 1989-1998 Gold
2007 Reunion

[edit] Singles

Year Title Chart Positions Album
CAN Country CAN AC
1989 "Mo Run Geal Dileas (My Faithful Fair One)" - - The Rankin Family
1992 "Orangedale Whistle" 7 25 Fare Thee Well Love
"Fare Thee Well Love" 9 8
1993 "Gillis Mountain" 4 6
"Rise Again" 31 4 North Country
"North Country" 4 5
1994 "Borders and Time" 21 10
"Tramp Miner" 31 26
"Turn That Boat Around" - -
1995 "Grey Dusk of Eve" (with Liam Maonlai) - 31 Grey Dusk of Eve
"You Feel the Same Way Too" 14 14 Endless Seasons
1996 "The River" 36 12
"Forty Days and Nights" 18 -
"Roving Gypsy Boy" 9 - Collection
1998 "Movin' On" 7 - Uprooted
"Maybe You're Right" - 21
"Bells" - -
1999 "Let It Go" 40 16
2006 "Sunday Morning" - - Reunion

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Canadian Post, The Cape Breton Post, "Rankins Tour Postponed as Family Grieves", pg A2, Jan 13, 2007
  2. ^ CBC.ca http://www.cbc.ca/news/story/2000/01/16/Rankin000116.html
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