William Hawkins (songwriter and poet)

William Hawkins

William Hawkins and his taxi, 2009
Born May 20, 1940
Ottawa, Ontario
Occupation Poet, Songwriter and Performer
Nationality Canadian
Years active 1963-1972; sporadically thereafter

William Alfred Hawkins (born May 20, 1940 in Ottawa, Canada) is a songwriter, poet, musician and journalist,[1] most notable for his contributions in the 1960s to Canadian folk rock music and to Canadian poetry. His best known song is "Gnostic Serenade", originally recorded by 3's a Crowd.

History

When I started writing songs, it was to put music to Bill Hawkins' lyrics.
Bruce Cockburn (2005), Preface to William Hawkins, Dancing Alone: Selected Poems
I just dropped out sometime in 1971, when I woke up in the Donwood Clinic, a rehab centre in Toronto, with no idea how I got there, weighing 128 lbs and looking like a ghost in my six-foot frame.
William Hawkins (2008), describing his withdrawal from popular music and publication.[2]

As A Poet

Hawkins' original interests were as a poet, which he addressed in the summer of 1963, through attending an intensive writing course for aspiring poets offered by the English department of the University of British Columbia. The course became known as the Vancouver 1963 Poetry Conference, which took place over three weeks in July and August, and involved approximately sixty attendees.[3] The course, designed by Warren Tallman and Robert Creeley,[3] involved a juried assessment of a student's work, with invited faculty members including Allen Ginsberg, Charles Olson and Robert Duncan.[1] Other attendees included Denise Levertov, Margaret Avison and Philip Whalen.[4]

Hawkins commenced publishing his poems in 1964, and enjoyed early success. Three of his poems were selected by A.J.M. Smith for inclusion in his prestigious 1967 anthology, Modern Canadian Verse. In addition, Hawkins became known for hosting and participating in poetry readings by major Canadian poets of the time, including Irving Layton, Leonard Cohen, Louis Dudek, Raymond Souster, Gwendolyn MacEwan, Jacques Godbout and John Robert Colombo.[2]

As A Songwriter and Musician

In 1965, Hawkins commenced his music career as a member of The Children, a seminal Canadian band, based out of Ottawa. In addition to Hawkins, band members included Sneezy Waters, Sandy Crawley and Neville Wells and, in later versions, Bruce Cockburn, David Wiffen and Richard Patterson. The group had been formed at the encouragement of local impresario Harvey Glatt, who also became their manager. It was Glatt who first encouraged Hawkins to set his poems to music.[2] The band developed a local prominence as resident performers at Le Hibou Coffee House, in which Glatt had an economic interest and which Hawkins and his then wife later managed. While they never released a record,[5] within months of their formation The Children were playing Maple Leaf Gardens, in Toronto, as an opening act for The Lovin' Spoonful.[6][7] It was this particular performance that caused Hawkins to decide to cease performing publicly.[8]

Hawkins' music has been described as being "timeless" and associated with "a beautiful melancholy".[9] He has been described as "a writer of supremely melodic songs, filled with stark despair and raw self-loathing, mixed with dark humour."[2]

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Hawkins' songs were popularized by David Wiffen, both as a member of 3's a Crowd and as a solo artist. His songs were also covered by other artists, such as Tom Rush, who recorded a version of "Gnostic Serenade" on his Wrong End of the Rainbow album (1970).[10]

Withdrawal From Songwriting and Published Poetry

Hawkins encountered increasing problems with substance abuse, particularly alcohol. After a period of time in the Donwood Institute in the early 1970s, for treatment for alcohol abuse, Hawkins largely withdrew from songwriting and published poetry. He opted instead to spend over thirty five years as a taxi driver in Ottawa.[11]

Return to Music and Poetry; Tribute Album

Hawkins gradually returned to music and poetry. In 1997, with the assistance of Ottawa musician Victor Nesrallah as producer/ musical accompanyist, Hawkins independently[12] released Dancing Alone. The album was a collection of Hawkins singing his own songs, plus versions of his songs as recorded by 3s a Crowd and The Esquires. The album was a precursor to the later tribute album to Hawkins, recorded and released in 2008.

Subsequent to the release of the 1997 Dancing Alone recording, Hawkins released a compendium of his poetry in 2005, as Dancing Alone: Selected Poems. In this publication, Hawkins collected poems contained in his five books published between 1964 and 1974, plus new poems. Shortly thereafter, in 2007, Hawkins published a small collection of new poems, the black prince of bank street.

In 2008, at the instigation of Harvey Glatt, who had first encouraged Hawkins over forty years earlier,[13] Dancing Alone: Songs of William Hawkins, a two CD tribute album, was released on True North Records, in which various artists interpreted twenty-two of Hawkins' songs. The artists contributing to the tribute album included Bruce Cockburn, Sandy Crawley, Mike Evin, Terry Gillespie, Murray McLauchlan, Lynn Miles, Ana Miura, Bill Stevenson, Ian Tamblyn, Brent Titcomb, Suzie Vinnick, Sneezy Waters, Anne Davison and Neville Wells. Many of these artists first worked with Hawkins in the 1960s.[14]

In 2010, Ottawa-based Apt. 9 Press published Sweet & Sour Nothings, Hawkins' sixth collection of poems. This was the first publication of the poems as a separate book; they had previously been included in a 1980 anthology edited by Patrick White, poet and founder of Anthos Press.[15][16] Also in 2010, Apt. 9 Press published The William Hawkins Folio, which included a descriptive bibliography of Hawkins' work, as well as reproductions of posters on which Hawkins' work had appeared, plus historical news clippings.

Bibliography

Sole or Joint Author

Collections

Periodical Inclusions

Anthology Inclusions

Folio

References

  1. 1 2 Profile of William Hawkins; www.wmhawkins.com.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Greg Quill, William Hawkins: Lost and Found Songwriters Magazine, Fall, 2008.
  3. 1 2 Description of the Vancouver 1963 Poetry Conference; www.slought.org.
  4. See Warren Tallman.
  5. Though one of Hawkins' songs, "It's A Dirty Shame", became a hit for another band, the Ottawa-based Esquires. In addition, several of Hawkins' songs, developed with The Children, were later recorded by 3s a Crowd.
  6. Profile of The Children; www.xtrememusician.com.
  7. Uncredited, Folk legends Cockburn, Tamblyn record tribute to Ottawa cabbie; www.cbc.ca.
  8. "...the house lights went up and I saw all these 14- and 15-year old kids screaming, and suddenly I felt out of place. I was twice their age. I turned to Bruce (Cockburn) as we walked off the stage and said, 'I'm finished'." William Hawkins (2008) as reported in Greg Quill, William Hawkins: Lost and Found Songwriters Magazine, Fall, 2008. The band also opened for The Beach Boys in Ottawa, while successor bands performed Hawkins' songs at the 1968 electoral victory party for Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, as well as in the movie soundtrack for Christopher's Movie Matinee; see William Hawkins - making music; www.wmhawkins.com.
  9. Ian Tamblyn, producer of and performer on Dancing Alone, as reported by Peter Langston, "Still Dancing after all these years"; Ottawa Citizen, October 2, 2008.
  10. Rush had also popularized Wiffen's song "Driving Wheel" on the Tom Rush album (1970).
  11. Where he was ultimately sufficiently successful to be able to purchase his own "plate", or taxi license, rather than renting plate rights from others.
  12. On "Railroad Bill" Records, being a moniker frequently used by Hawkins.
  13. Peter Langston, "Still Dancing after all these years"; Ottawa Citizen, October 2, 2008.
  14. Noticeably absent from the collaboration was David Wiffen, a major interpreter of several of Hawkins' earlier songs, both as a member of 3's a Crowd and otherwise. Wiffen, as a member of 3's a Crowd, sang the lead vocal on Hawkins' best known song, "Gnostic Serenade". Hawkins describes the "amazing instrument" of Wiffen's voice as being in his head when he wrote many of the songs to which Hawkins was paid tribute on Dancing Alone; see uncredited, Folk legends Cockburn, Tamblyn record tribute to Ottawa cabbie; www.cbc.ca. Wiffen's current circumstances are not publicly known. The significance of "Gnostic Serenade" was recognized on Dancing Alone through the inclusion of two versions, one by Titcomb and another by Stevenson.
  15. Cameron Anstee, "A Note on the Text". Sweet & Sour Nothings (Apt. 9 Press, 2010) Anstee founded Apt. 9 Press.
  16. Portrait of Patrick White; www.urbanmarket.com.
  17. A 56-page self-stapled paperback. See "poetry and words" at www.wmhawkins.com.
  18. One long poem by each author. Hawkins' contribution was a 36-page poem, "Louis Riel", influenced by the biography of Louis Riel by George F. G. Stanley. See "poetry and words" at www.wmhawkins.com.
  19. Being the poems contained in Hawkins's five books published between 1964 and 1974, plus new poems. Preface by Bruce Cockburn; introduction by Roy MacSkimming. See catalogue entry of Broken Jaw Press; www.brokenjaw.com.
  20. Chaudiere Books's page for "The Collected Poems of William Hawkins": http://www.chaudierebooks.com/books/hawkins.html
  21. Poetry magazine; three new poems by Hawkins included.
  22. Being a collection of significant Canadian poetry since the rise of modernism in the 1920s. Three of Hawkins' poems were included in the anthology. See "poetry and words" at www.wmhawkins.com.

External links

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