American Reacts - Stomping Tom Connors, The Hockey Song

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024

Комментарии • 221

  • @onelove1968
    @onelove1968 Год назад +68

    Stompin' Tom was like Canada's "Johnny Cash". A deeply beloved Canadian icon. Thanks for this!

    • @marieclaudeb.2366
      @marieclaudeb.2366 Год назад

      He’s famous in English Canada then…

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +3

      Yes, I can see the Johnny Cash comparison. This song was just toe tapping folksy fun.

    • @coldlakealta4043
      @coldlakealta4043 Год назад

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 ruclips.net/video/wiTeNS7Ds3U/видео.html

    • @bobrussell1957
      @bobrussell1957 Год назад +3

      I think you meant Johnny Cash was America's Stompin' Tom. 😉

    • @coldlakealta4043
      @coldlakealta4043 Год назад

      @@bobrussell1957 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @eastcoastlockdownbullies
    @eastcoastlockdownbullies Год назад +8

    Stomping Tom Connors's song 'Mary in Sussex' was written about my parents. My Dad was traveling and met Tom in a bar. They discussed how my dad missed his new wife and kids in Norton New Brunswick. Tom didn't know where the tiny village was so my dad told him it was close to Sussex the bigger town nearby. Tom would write songs about places and people he met as he traveled (mostly Hitch hiked) across Canada. My parents being an inspiration for a Stompin' Tom song has been one of many reasons to smile whenever someone new finds him.

  • @wocookie2277
    @wocookie2277 Год назад +12

    This song played while artillery rounds fell in Kigali, Rwanda. General Delair knew how to keep up Canadian morale, play some stomping Tom! I always wondered what the locals thought.

  • @philpaine3068
    @philpaine3068 Год назад +22

    When Stompin' Tom wrote that song, 96% of all NHL players were Canadians, so Canadians were always on the winning side.
    Connors was always "the genuine article". He ran away from a troubled home at age thirteen, then spent the next 13 years hitching back and forth across the country, as I did myself. I know exactly what his experiences were, from having seen the same places from the same vantage point. He wrote a song for half the towns in the country. I first saw him playing for quarters on a street corner. His professional career began after that, when a bartender in a northern mining town (the bar was a block away from where I was born) offered him a beer if he would play a few songs, and it turned into a long gig and appearances on local radio. Tom and the bartender remained friends for life. Though maybe not a Mozart or even a Dylan, Connors was completely genuine. A newspaper obituary wrote: "The proper venue for Mr. Connors was a smoky bar room where people connected by slamming their beer mugs together, hopefully obliterating whatever differences existed between them."

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +6

      I thought this song was just toe tape folksy fun. I will def look at more of his stuff. Thanks for this great info. Yeah, about hockey, even when I was a kid and the iron curtain was still up, most hockey players were Canadian with a smattering of Swedes and Americans. It’s more international now with a lot of Eastern Europeans. Still, your game and your gift to us. A hockey is big here in NY. We actually support 3 NHL teams if you count the NJ Devils which play just across the Hudson River from Manhattan. But nothing beats the local Rangers, Isles rivalry. My wife is a Rangers fan and I’m an Isles fan. My kids are with me. Lol.

    • @philpaine3068
      @philpaine3068 Год назад +4

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287
      The first Stompin' Tom song I was really aware of was "Sudbury Saturday Night" which was a piece of musical social realism worthy of Ring Lardner, and funny as hell. Someday, I'll tell the story of the fabulous 1970s Franco-Ontarian rock band Cano, from Sudbury Ontario, a town which somehow combines a blue-collar history as a rough mining town with major contributions to the arts. The lead vocalist of the band was also a brilliant playwright, determined to make the hick dialect of Northern Ontario French a vehicle for serious literature. If you can find their album "Au Nord de Notre Vie", you'll enjoy it, I'm sure.
      Canadians think of Hockey as "their game", but they never doubted the cred of fans in the snow-bound states. I still remember the painful transition of league expansion. In our Canadian heads, there were the "real" hockey teams and "real" American hockey cities, like Detroit, New York, Chicago and Boston (bless'em, the most noisy and riotous of all hockey fans were in Beantown). All of a sudden there were NHL teams in places with cactus, and it just didn't seem right. American network TV started broadcasting NHL games. At first it was hilarious --- their cameramen couldn't follow the puck, and their announcers didn't know what they were talking about. They thought you just sat back and rattled off statistics like in baseball. The new audience complained that they couldn't see the puck on the screen, and the networks tried to super-impose a big blob on the image to show where it was. All of this infuriated viewers in Canada and the American Northeast. The CBC, which had broadcast NHL games since 1931 (!) issued a press release announcing that they received millions of letters from fans in the hockey homeland, complaining about everything imaginable, but that they had never once gotten a complaint from a viewer who couldn't see the puck. Eventually the Americans hired old CBC vets or found people who knew the game. There was also a problem with "goon hockey" for awhile. The new audience couldn't appreciate good plays, a brilliant assist, or any of the finer points of the game, so they wanted to see fights. Not that Canadians and Northeasterners didn't appreciate a good hockey punchup, but nobody raised as serious hockey fans wanted to see a bunch of drooling goons who couldn't skate. The man responsible for changing it all was Wayne Gretsky. With his gentlemanly style, his willingness to set up a goal for his mates and let them have their chance, and just plain class act, made a special effort to teach the new audience how to appreciate the game.
      Interesting trivia: in Vancouver, they broadcast live game play-by-play in Punjabi. In the Canadian West, Punjabi-speaking cowboys go back a century and a half, and Punjabi-Canadian hockey fans almost as long.
      More trivia: The first Canadian Olympic hockey victory was in 1920. The team was the Winnipeg Falcons. The Falcons were unusual in that the team was almost exclusively composed of Icelandic-Canadians. Icelanders had founded "New Iceland" in the 19th century, a community with it's own Althing parliament, northwest of Winnipeg. Icelandic is still spoken there, in the town of Gimli, and Icelanders are sort of like the Irish of Boston for Winnipeg. The whole team enlisted in World War I and fought together in the trenches, with two of their best players killed in action. When they came back, they re-established the team and went on a rampage of wins that brought them to the Olympics in Brussels.

    • @CharCanuck14
      @CharCanuck14 Год назад +1

      @@philpaine3068 I bought "Au Nord de Notre Vie" shortly after it was released. Loved it then and still do. Just a few weeks ago I came across a live video of "Chez Zeebe" which was wonderful to hear & watch. Cano was a beautiful gift to my ears! Greetings from Peterborough.

    • @philpaine3068
      @philpaine3068 Год назад +2

      @@CharCanuck14 Delighted to find another Cano fan. I had the privilege, decades ago, of spending a lot of time with every one of the surviving band members. Each was a totally different personality. They gave me hilarious tales of playing in northern mining towns where half the audience was passed out under their tables, along with much more serious and tragic stories. The build-up of overlapping instrumental layers in "Au Nord" still gives me shivers of delight. That wasn't studio manipulation --- they played ALL those varied instruments themselves, and could do live anything you heard on record. Peterborough may be a Southern Ontario town, but its strong Anishnabe connection makes it an honourary Northern place in my eyes! A very pretty town, too.

    • @CharCanuck14
      @CharCanuck14 Год назад +2

      @@philpaine3068 I'm envious of your Cano connection Phil! I haven't met a lot of fans, but the ones I have, as with myself are passionate about their beautiful music. Rachel's voice was incredible and all the members played such an important role in bringing us that whole unique package. I remember being in shock learning about Andre's death.
      Yes, we do have a strong Anishnabe presence in Peterborough and for making us an honourary Northerner I say "miigwech".
      I've really enjoyed hearing about your connection with the band.
      Thank you for sharing Phil.
      -Char

  • @lucforand8527
    @lucforand8527 Год назад +11

    You have to see one where he performs; then you will know why he was called Stompin Tom Connors!!

  • @somebodykares1
    @somebodykares1 Год назад +5

    The song is one that is interchangeable depending on where its being sung, so the part where he says "The Canadiens win" is when its sung in Montreal, in Edmonton it be "The Oilers win"
    Also the part with "Bobby Scores" also tends to be swapped out with whoever is the most known for said team.
    Stomping Tom Connors is a great singer, another of his songs is Tillsonburg and Stompin Grounds.

  • @rosolenn
    @rosolenn Год назад +3

    I watched Stompin' Tom at the Horseshoe Tavern on Queen near Spadina in 1968 Toronto. I was there with my wife on a Saturday afternoon after seeing him a week earlier on TV when we fell in love with him. Between sets he went to a booth along the back wall and quenched his thirst with 6 or so guys who were Leafs players. Now, at 80, I just remember Davey Keon in the group. I'm sad to say I never saw him in another live performance, but I loved his albums and the occasional RUclips viewing.

  • @lucforand8527
    @lucforand8527 Год назад +14

    A true Canadian icon. You need to listen to Bud the Spud, about PEI.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +3

      Sounds good. I don’t think PEI gets a lot of attention as far as I can see so far. Maybe I’m wrong.

  • @markastoforoff7838
    @markastoforoff7838 Год назад +6

    It's not about hockey but a great Canadian folk song is Log Drivers Waltz, it was a Canadian Vignette.

    • @444dkm
      @444dkm Год назад +1

      Yes! Kate and Ann McGarrigle!

    • @Lavolanges
      @Lavolanges Год назад +2

      Oh yes, that one and "Black Fly", both written by Wade Hemsworth, are great Canadian folk songs. The McGarrigles do a great job with "Log Driver's Waltz".

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +2

      Been getting a lot of requests for that and someone sent me a link. I watched the first 20 seconds and then stopped because I want to do a genuine reaction. It’s on the list.

  • @MrGG1959
    @MrGG1959 Год назад +5

    Not sure Stompin' |Tom was even a Maple Leafs fan, but as far as I know the video was added after the song was released which may speak to the vintage Leafs footage.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +1

      Yeah, I get that. It was cool either way. It went with the feel of the song. Made me happy. Lol.

  • @bl_leafkid4322
    @bl_leafkid4322 Год назад +8

    We all love Gordie Howe, Bobby Orr, Dave Keon The Great One and a few other Great players

  • @meagankelly8755
    @meagankelly8755 Год назад +6

    I got to see him live at a local fair once, he was nearing the end of his life but could still put on a show. One song for you to check out is Sudbury Saturday Night. Its my absolute favorite...and its a pretty good drinking song lol

    • @Kidneygirl303
      @Kidneygirl303 Год назад +1

      I lived in Sudbury for 25 years. You weren’t a Sudburian if you didn’t know the words! I loved when he’d bring out the plywood and perform. There’s a great statue of Stomping Tom downtown by the Sudbury Arena, near a dive bar called the Townehouse.

  • @Sharon-bo2se
    @Sharon-bo2se Год назад +16

    Next suggestion on your exploration is the National Film Board of Canada. They have just had their 77th Academy Award nomination for the Flying Sailor, an animated film about the true story of a British sailor who survived the Halifax Explosion.
    Many wonderful things to see and a glimpse into what makes us.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +2

      Thanks for the suggestion. I am really trying to do that exactly - see what makes you all. This has been a very rewarding journey so far.

    • @Dimcle
      @Dimcle Год назад +2

      Best ever NFB short film is The Log Driver's Waltz. You must watch it.

    • @CharCanuck14
      @CharCanuck14 Год назад +1

      @@Dimcle Yes! Yes! Yes! Kate & Anna McGarrigle are national treasures.

  • @OldHolden
    @OldHolden 9 месяцев назад +3

    I appreciate you man for supporting Canada 🍁🇨🇦

  • @cindykoehn7680
    @cindykoehn7680 Год назад +13

    Thanks for this video! I had the pleasure of seeing Stompin Tom at Lulu’s in Kitchener Ontario 🇨🇦 Hearing him sing it live! Bucket list worthy!! 🥰❤️🇨🇦

  • @debrubach9399
    @debrubach9399 Год назад +11

    I'm so glad you are highlighting Stompin' Tom! Great Canadian folk musician! For Canada Day you should check out his song "Canada Day Up Canada Way"

  • @Fish-nt5wb
    @Fish-nt5wb Год назад +12

    FUN FACT: Tom met Queen Elizabeth II, and he did not, nor was he asked to, remove his hat.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +2

      😂. Wow, that’s cool. The Queen of the UK, Canada and the commonwealth and the man kept true to himself. That’s the North American in him. 😉

    • @Fish-nt5wb
      @Fish-nt5wb Год назад +2

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 Story from Adrienne Clarkson, who was the Governor General at the time: ruclips.net/video/ALO-ykAKqjM/видео.html

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +2

      @@Fish-nt5wb just watched part of it and will finish it. Very cool. I think maybe I’ll include this in the next reaction I do of him. the Governor General at the time was such an eloquent speaker and did such a wonderful job with this.

  • @Sharon-bo2se
    @Sharon-bo2se Год назад +22

    You found him! One of our national treasures a real delight. Am singing along with him as always and stomping my foot.
    He has a lot of real songs about real Canada. He did the theme song for the show Marketplace; some very true phrases in that one. Of course, Bud the Spud has to be included.
    Tom played at so many places, big and small, and was always loved. Thank you for doing this.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +4

      I’m glad you enjoyed it. I’ll definitely revisit him again. I really did enjoy it.

  • @echobeefpv8530
    @echobeefpv8530 Год назад +1

    Canadian GOLD !! Stompin' Tom . Love it !! Canadian as they come !!

  • @mimicotom
    @mimicotom Год назад +2

    I visited Stompin' Tom's grave. He is buried in Erin, Ontario. Also went to his last concert in Toronto at Massey Hall. A true Canadian patriot.

  • @lianneburwell4763
    @lianneburwell4763 Год назад +9

    If you like Stomping’ Tom, you need check out The Log Driver’s Waltz! Also a Canadian classic, and a piece of history.

    • @CharCanuck14
      @CharCanuck14 Год назад

      I just commented on the McGarrigle sisters........national treasures!

  • @adoptgdx651
    @adoptgdx651 Год назад +2

    You really need to watch Stompin Tom stomp on his board. It was a sight to see !

  • @dianafancy6634
    @dianafancy6634 Год назад +1

    Stomping Tom was played all the time my dad loved his songs. As well as Hank snow who is also Canadian. The first time I seen my dad cry was when stomping Tom passed away

  • @lizturner267
    @lizturner267 Год назад +9

    Yay! You’ve found our Tom! The “Stompin'” comes from the first bar he gigged at, he was putting a hole in the stage boards so they gave him an extra piece of wood and he never performed without it after that. You have to watch a video of him performing.
    While some are fun like Bud the Spud, Big Joe Mufferaw, Ketchup Loves Potatoes, Tom can also break your heart with incredible story telling, “The Bridge Came Tumbling Down” is sad but my fav will always be the “Martin Hartwell Story”, the true experience of a bush plane crash and how an injured Inuit boy Davey TukTuk saved the pilot.
    I got to see Tom Connors live and every person knew every word to every song. Another giggle is a video of him singing his song “kd Lange” to her, great video.

    • @444dkm
      @444dkm Год назад +2

      Luke’s Guitar makes me laugh too.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +2

      I flubbed it by calling him Stomping To, Connor instead of Stompin Tom Connors. Sorry about that. But yes, that song was very fun. Made me feel happy.

  • @caralynne2809
    @caralynne2809 Год назад +1

    Now, you need to learn the biography of Stompin Tom...he was an amazing man and extremely generous...his personal backstory is truly epic. He was also an extremely proud Canadian...giving up his Juno awards when artists who had made a career in the USA rather than staying in Canada started receiving them.
    On a personal side note, in 2008 I visited Vegas for a friend's wedding...I stayed an extra week and took a helicopter tour over the Grand Canyon landing in Arizona where a a grizzled old singing cowboy picked us up and took us to the ranch house for breakfast. On the trip to the house he sang a song for every country represented in the wagon...when he discovered we were from Canada he sang "Sudbury Saturday Night" without any prompting...he then explained that in his youth he had been playing a little bar outside Vancouver where Stompin Tom found him and invited him to travel with him playing shows...and to that day he still received a Christmas card and birthday card from Tom on a yearly basis.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад

      Wow, I love this story of your personal experience. I love that my fellow American was able to play Stompin Tom for you. That makes me feel very gratified.

  • @theresalayton9286
    @theresalayton9286 Год назад +7

    BIG THANKS FOR THIS VIDEO ❤️ I sang along 😊👍🇨🇦

  • @robertpearson8798
    @robertpearson8798 Год назад +2

    The Father of a good friend of ours passed away recently. After the church funeral service and another graveside service the last thing that was done at the request of the deceased was the playing of the hockey song on a portable speaker placed on the casket.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад

      wow, that must have been a smile and cry fest at the same time. Thanks for sharing.

    • @robertpearson8798
      @robertpearson8798 Год назад

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 He was a Montreal fan so one of his granddaughters wore a Habs jersey.

  • @JC-cu4ek
    @JC-cu4ek Год назад +1

    I loved watching your facial expressions and seeing the joy. Thanks for that!

  • @jschap712
    @jschap712 Год назад

    Nobody loved Canada more than Stomping Tom. He loved Canada to the point that he even refused to tour in other countries. And to his delight he was embraced by even young people for his infectious love of the country (maybe some listened to him with some sense of irony, but always with affection). Most people in Canada knew songs of his that took place in nearby towns and cities. One that comes to mind is "Tillsonburg". When he sings "Tillsonburg / My back still aches when I hear that word" he's referring to working on tobacco farms specifically, but for me it always brings to mind my days as a student doing hard labour work as a temp during summer breaks, often in factories that happened to be in Tillsonburg.

  • @jeannierenton7542
    @jeannierenton7542 Год назад +1

    I always loved listening to him & the way he stomped his foot. He always put a smile on my face😁❤️ Thanks for doing this👍

  • @jerkyd499
    @jerkyd499 Год назад +3

    Was waiting for a video thank you friend👍

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад

      Sorry it took so long. 🤷‍♂️🇨🇦🇺🇸

    • @jerkyd499
      @jerkyd499 Год назад

      We Canadians do no not say sorry so much lol no need my friend I’m sure you were busy like we all are👍 as always love and respect friend

  • @badplay156
    @badplay156 Год назад +1

    Not Tom Connors but there was a Canadian group doing comedy songs called the Arrogant Worms. They did songs like We Are Beaver, Canada Is Really Big, The Mounty Song, and Carrot Juice Is Murder

  • @Bigal3031
    @Bigal3031 Год назад +2

    Many people argue Canada has 2 national anthems. Ocanada and the Good ol' Hockey game

  • @jamiemay6065
    @jamiemay6065 Год назад +4

    Thanks for making that video John. I love Stompin Tom Conners. Now see what ya did?... now I gotta have a beer. 🍻 God keep our land glorious and free 🇨🇦 and God bless America 🇺🇸

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +2

      Thanks so much. I really appreciate it more than you can know. The comments are my favorite part of doing this. What a wonderful community here. Also, 🍻 my friend.

  • @reneedevry4361
    @reneedevry4361 Год назад

    WOW🎶💜🎶 Had forgotten this ole Canadian Classic. Not sure how, as everyone used to sing along. Sure was interesting seeing all the old footage without helmets too. Thanks. 🥰🇨🇦

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk Год назад +3

    This comment will clue you into my age; I remember watching Boston playing Toronto when Bobby Orr (a good Ontario boy) played for Boston alongside Phil Esposito.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +1

      Hey, that’s not age, that’s experience. Sounds amazing.

    • @catherinemelnyk
      @catherinemelnyk Год назад

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 Thank you for that comment! Not age, but experience....love it!

  • @Lakeshore14
    @Lakeshore14 Год назад

    Love that. Thanks for continuing on your path of recognizing Canadian “culture”. Loving your channel John. 👏👏🇨🇦

  • @pepepepert
    @pepepepert Год назад +1

    Margo's Cargo is a great song of his as well. A true islander he was.

  • @potts7976
    @potts7976 Год назад +1

    That footage was amazing. Reminds me of that joke, "I went to a fight and a hockey game broke out.

  • @ManitoulinGirl537
    @ManitoulinGirl537 Год назад +1

    John… did you know that when Stomping Tom did his appearances in bars when he was just starting out he would wear out spots on the stage. He then he to bring his own piece of wood to stomp. It became almost a,trademark with him so,even when he became famous (in Canada) he kept on bringing that piece of wood to ‘stomp’ on. I believe that’s how he got the ‘Stomping’ I. His name.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +1

      I did not know that, but now I do thanks to you my friend. Very cool.

    • @onelove1968
      @onelove1968 Год назад +1

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 Whenever Stompin Tom' hit the stage, the 'plywood chips' would begin to fly!!

  • @paulmaudsley2219
    @paulmaudsley2219 Год назад

    A great Canadian who wrote songs about small towns and quirky people. His funeral was like a State Funeral.

  • @northsource7215
    @northsource7215 Год назад +3

    video idea - Leo Major - unique Canadian war hero. if he were american there would already be a dozen movies about him.

  • @cjseckinger8796
    @cjseckinger8796 Год назад

    Another iconic song from Stompin’ Tom is “Bud the Spud”, a song about a potato’s journey from its’ farm in Prince Edward Island to the big city (Toronto, in this case). There is an animated video on RUclips, but we had the book that I read to my kids throughout their childhood. Stompin’ Tom was quirky and a proud Islander, but his art was basically poetry about Canada set to music. May he rest in peace.

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk Год назад

    John I just wanted to add that as a Canadian I have travelled through the United States many times; first as a young woman driving her little Volkswagen Beetle across the border to Buffalo to buy bargain clothing in my mid-twenties when I was size 6 Canadian which was probably size 2 American. We didn't need a passport back in those days. It was pre 9/11
    In 1999 I left Lethbridge, Alberta and went on a major tour through America. I had a bit of an itinerary but not much. As a lover of Twain I wanted to see where he grew up in Hannibal, Missouri. I also wanted to see The Cove in Charleston, NC. I don't know what you have seen of your country John, but I yell you I was truly captivated when I drove along a biway from Chattanooga, Tennessee to Asheville, North Carolina. When I stopped in a General Store in Valle Crusis, North Carolina I truly felt like I was in heaven.. i had never witnessed such natural beauty. I don't knoe why I am sharing so much of myself with you. It's a God thing why I am so drawn to you. I'm not crazy. My apologies if my comments are unwanted.
    While I was in Asheville, NC Billy Graham's Cove was closed for the weekend so I asked the desk staff what other attractions that I might see in the area. They had a paper placemat and the man at the front pointed out Biltmore Estate! OMG! I've been through Casa Loma here im Toronto but I had NEVER experienced ANYTHING on this majestic scale

  • @kimlockhart7727
    @kimlockhart7727 Год назад

    Great Stompin Tom song, I had the pleasure of seeing Tom in concert 3 times, stompin on a piece of plywood and drinking his "screetch", if you are interested, please listen to his song about Tillsonburg, the town we now live in, it concerns his period of picking tobacco, after hearing it your back will ache like the song says.

  • @DarrylCross
    @DarrylCross Год назад

    Great reaction. Stompin' Tom Connors is always great.
    One of my favorites of his (though seemingly one of his lesser known ones) is Luke's Guitar.

  • @gregkral4467
    @gregkral4467 Год назад

    sir, look up when Canada sang star spangled banner when there was a mic fail and then listen to us sing ours as well, just cause i heard ya mention once if we show patriotism, and next game the favour was returned, was so beautiful. Thank you neighbours.

  • @charisselinnell-morton4137
    @charisselinnell-morton4137 Год назад

    My Late Grandpa Loved Stomping Tom and hey played his music to watch me spaz out as a teen !

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk Год назад

    Oops, on this majestic scale in my I think ot was 46 years on this planet. Over 250 rooms with a gymnasium and and a swimming pool in the basement along with a MASSIVE kitchen and pantry. BUT AS AN AVID READER I was enthralled by the library...20,000 volumes in 8 languages! The Vanderbilts had a full-time librarian to categorize the books. How I wish my husband, John had been with me because it was truly a fairytale setting. Most of the land that the original owners now belongs to the Pisgah Nationsl Forest. But even back in 1999 you could get a horse and buggy and a picnic basket filled with EVERYTHING GROWN AND PRODUCED on their remaining 8000 acres of land including the grapes grown on the last remaining major private esrate in the US. I am STILL in awe of this man who HAD A VISION of what SUSTAINABILITY SHOULD BE.

  • @vaudreelavallee3757
    @vaudreelavallee3757 Год назад

    Stompin Tom does "How Do You Like it Now" which is the only song in existence about the Canada-USA Free Trade agreement, which became Nafta after the addition of Mexico, Fire in the Mine, and The Consumer (someone put the song to Black Friday footage.
    Ron Hynes did Sawchuck (about a goalie) and Home From the USA, and No Change in Me - but is famous in the USA for Sonny's Dream.
    Fred Eaglesmith does Cumberland County (about the man who drives the snow plow) and How's Ernie (about a man who lost his best friend when the man's daughter dumped him)
    Corin Raymond, Ol' Fort Mac - about working in Fort MacMurray oil sands / tar sands

  • @bobcload8943
    @bobcload8943 6 месяцев назад

    I just took my kids to a Hawks game about a week and half ago. It was their first, except for my oldest (she’s a rabid fan) and I played this song several times before our trip to Chicago. Lo and behold, they played this at the United Center and my kids were able to sing along! ❤️🇺🇸🇨🇦🥅🏒

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  6 месяцев назад +1

      Love it. Last time I was at an Islanders game with my kids we heard it being played by the organist. Don’t know if I ever would have realized it had I not done this reaction.

  • @debbie541
    @debbie541 Год назад +1

    stompin tom connors song "sudbury saturday night" .....INCO was the mine company at the time ....quite the story about the stomping part of his name .......sudbury the nickel capital of the world,..... this one not tom but was a popular one also "Log Drivers Waltz", logging history, another canada heritage minutes

  • @Lala61669
    @Lala61669 Год назад

    Love this song, one of my fav songs growing up. Another great one by him is "The Man On The Moon Is A Newfie", it's a great song, very funny.

  • @donnaogorman4935
    @donnaogorman4935 Год назад

    Play that song around anyone who grew up when that song came out and we know all the words.... 😁🇨🇦

  • @connienevans4807
    @connienevans4807 Год назад

    Stompin Tom Connors so canadian. You like Gordon Lightfoot, Stompin Tom was years ahead of him. Love both these men they loved our country. ❤

  • @nickgooderham2389
    @nickgooderham2389 Год назад +1

    My favourite is Sudbury Saturday Night!

  • @stonertrailoftears7692
    @stonertrailoftears7692 2 месяца назад

    As a Canadian I love your stuff. Keep it up please

  • @MrBonners
    @MrBonners Год назад +1

    Surprised you found Tom. Quite the character

  • @brendastajkowski502
    @brendastajkowski502 Год назад

    When I was growing up Hockey Night In Canada was on every Saturday night and the whole family would gather to watch. Not much else to do back then. What we enjoyed most of all were the fights even though back then there was very little protective gear.

  • @BelleDede01
    @BelleDede01 Год назад

    I'm not sure if you realize it, but the main reason why he was called 'Stompin' was because he'd use his heel of his cowboy boot to keep rhythm of his song. Here's a live shot of him in concert singing the same song. A truly patriotic Canadian icon. ruclips.net/video/wiTeNS7Ds3U/видео.html

  • @CanadianPunker62
    @CanadianPunker62 6 месяцев назад

    I believe this was a live performance so he switched it up and said Canadiens win, possibly in Montreal or maybe to tease some Toronto fans lol but on the recording of the song before the 3rd verse he says "Third period... last game of the playoffs too..." and then says "the puck is in, the home team wins"

  • @brucebannerman6848
    @brucebannerman6848 Год назад

    It is the Ieafs playing an American team. Tom meant no harm ,I saw him several times in bars and lounges in PE I when he was getting started and I was vacationing there.

  • @London_J
    @London_J Год назад

    Another Canadian-American thing I think you would enjoy is the show due south. It's about a Canadian Mountie looking for his fathers killer and he ends up in Chicago via transfer. they make some light hearted jokes and stuff.

  • @stevenlaurin6059
    @stevenlaurin6059 Год назад +1

    Tom had to bring his own plank of wood to all his concerts because he stomped his foot so hard he would wear holes in the stage

  • @royeyk
    @royeyk Год назад

    You have to see a video of a live performance. Stompin and yodeling occasionally. Songs about local heroes and of course the great classic, Bud the Spud.

  • @bobrussell1957
    @bobrussell1957 Год назад +2

    Went to the fights and a hockey game broke out!

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk Год назад +1

    I think I've mentioned another cultural treasure named Murray McLaughlin. I parricularly love his song Out Past the Timberline.

    • @jameslatimer3600
      @jameslatimer3600 Год назад

      We saw him live in a free show at Ontario Place. A real pleasant surprise and a great memory. We rated him right up there with Anne Murray, Stomping Tom and Gordon Lightfoot.

    • @jameslatimer3600
      @jameslatimer3600 Год назад

      I liked his song A straw Hat and an Old Dirty Hanky best. But my wife and I really enjoyed all of his work. We saw him live once at Ontario Place, by the CNE.

  • @pneumanaut1
    @pneumanaut1 Год назад

    I'd suggest you check out a Canadian folk group called The Arrogant Worms. They also have a hockey song called ... Me Like Hockey ... which is a delightful song as well. I also recommend any of theirs, particularly War of 1812 or I Am Not American for a bit of your Americana mixed in with our Canadiana.

  • @Taeolas
    @Taeolas Год назад

    Your video on the Hip drew me to your channel and you're clearly interested in Canadian music. There are a lot of great groups and singers up here that have never really gotten out of the country, or even the region.
    For every Bryan, Celine and BNL, there are dozens of other acts just as good (or better). I'm looking forward to you discovering them.
    Some of my favorites include:
    * Great Big Sea
    * Blue Rodeo
    * 54-40
    * Joel Plaskett
    * Glorious Sons
    * Matt Minglewood (check out "Kandahar", a song he did for the forces during Canada's Afghanistan mission )
    * The Trews (especially their song "Highway of Heroes" )
    * Our Lady Peace
    * Spirit of the West
    * The Rankin Family
    * Rita MacNeil
    * Ann Murray (she actually had some popularity in the States, but as a Maritimer I have to mention her; especially since my mom went to Teachers College with her. :) )

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk Год назад +1

    Just a small but important detail, his "signature" name is Stompin' not stomping Tom Conners.

  • @bl_leafkid4322
    @bl_leafkid4322 Год назад +2

    He said Canadians because there are a lot of them on the ice.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад

      See I wasn’t sure if he said Canadians or Canadiens, meaning the Habs. I took it as the latter. But I see your point.

  • @canadiangirl5159
    @canadiangirl5159 Год назад +1

    This is Canadian Culture

  • @BigBadBernatzki
    @BigBadBernatzki Год назад

    Played in every rink for every hockey game in Canada!

  • @brandonb9978
    @brandonb9978 Год назад +1

    This is our “Take Me Out to the Ballgame”.

  • @bruce8321
    @bruce8321 6 месяцев назад

    Stomping because his right foot always stomped on a piece of plywood. He never played without it as that was his signature. We have a local French guy Stomping Pierre who dressed the same and only plays on the plywood and only sings Stomping Tom songs of which there are many.

  • @HappyGirl4666
    @HappyGirl4666 Год назад

    Good ole Stompin Tom. ❤

  • @bexanne99
    @bexanne99 Год назад

    Bobby Orr is a legend!! 🇨🇦❤️

  • @michelleikoma2953
    @michelleikoma2953 Год назад

    His songs are great!

  • @Migmaw
    @Migmaw Год назад +1

    Saw stompin Tom many many times, Tilsonburg will always be my favorite Tom song. All about picking tobacco, not far from where I live now. Tom had to have a board to stomp cause he's wear out floors in bars 🤣

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +1

      That’s great. Lol. He really earned that nickname it seems.

    • @Migmaw
      @Migmaw Год назад

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 a RUclips video of him performing Sudbury Saturday Night with the scuffed up board he had to bring everywhere with him 🤣
      There is a full show the video comes from
      ruclips.net/video/mCSEUWGcr2s/видео.html

    • @Migmaw
      @Migmaw Год назад

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 retro 80s scenes and vibes, the only movie/video show Stompin Tom did that I can recall. I remember when he was touring and it came on tv here. Maybe one day when ya have time to kill, He is the epitome of Maritime Canada Culture. Stay blessed
      ruclips.net/video/uSHnwiUn9Xw/видео.html

  • @toriamansfield2999
    @toriamansfield2999 Год назад +1

    You need to listen to Stan Rogers "Blue Nose" and "Northwest Passage" as well

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk 10 месяцев назад

    What a great memory for this old gal! Before players wore helmets and mouth guards! I LOVED HOCKEY when there were only 6 teams and they rode on busses around the great lakes and knowing hockey was Canadian sport invented here in Nova Scotia.
    Not to mention that the device known as the basket used in basketball was ALSO invented up here in Canada! Everything good or funny or clever came from Canada. All you have to do is read the AMERICAN author Ralph Nader who wrote Canada Firsts to know what I mean. 😅

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  10 месяцев назад +1

      Hey Carol, you don’t have to sell me on the virtues of old time hockey. I’m with you and we have always appreciated here in the northeastern US that this sport is a gift from our friends to north. We like the Candidness of the sport because all our hockey heroes growing up were Canadian. They came to our elementary schools on sports night and were part of the fabric of our community. Some still are.

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk Год назад

    As strange as this may sound this senior Canadian lady has never heard this song...and I grew up watching hockey! Thanks for sharing this.

  • @user-hk5wh3xf1h
    @user-hk5wh3xf1h 11 месяцев назад

    The vintage footage, probably from original 6 era, shows the difference in the way that spectators dressed to attend public events, men ties and jackets, women dresses and neckless, nobody wearing jeans and tee shirts.
    Players, including goalies and referees, without helmets.
    Different era

  • @JackRabbitInnovation
    @JackRabbitInnovation Год назад +2

    This is a movie about Tommy Douglas, the father of universal healthcare in Canada. A few years ago he was voted "The Greatest Canadian". What I find remarkable is how much the man reminds me of Bernie Sanders. ruclips.net/video/OgIhMczSYV0/видео.html

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +1

      You get me. 😂

    • @JackRabbitInnovation
      @JackRabbitInnovation Год назад

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 Well thank you John. When a person starts tracking on something like this, one thing leads to the next. I really got into that movie myself. The thing about Tommy Douglas, is how he used his relatively narrow base as the balance of power. Pierre is the Liberal PM and Tommy is going to force the agenda. It's one way to make 15% as good as 53%. He embarrassed Trudeau into adopting large chunks of the NDP platform. The real Tommy Douglas is very, very impressive to watch. BTW, their daughter, Shirley Douglas became an actress and married Donald Sutherland. So Keifer Sutherland is Tommys' grandson. Anyway, this is the federal election debate from 1968. ruclips.net/video/N8ssqU9qOEo/видео.html

  • @caralynne2809
    @caralynne2809 Год назад +1

    So, the original line goes "the puck is in/the home team wins...the good ole hockey game "

  • @fluttergirl75
    @fluttergirl75 Год назад

    Thank you!

  • @christopherrobin6955
    @christopherrobin6955 Год назад

    So weird hearing him called Tom Conners lol, never heard it without stompin'

  • @realtruth716
    @realtruth716 Год назад +2

    I love you reactions. i'm being selfish but ..."Bud the Spud".."The snowmobile song",and the" Ketchup song" are pretty good

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад

      Be selfish. Lo. Keep ‘‘em coming. I literally have a list on ,my iPhone notes that is getting long. But I’m not going anywhere.

  • @smason6427
    @smason6427 Год назад

    Another Tom Connors song is the Blue Berets about Canadian Peace Keepers

  • @marklittle8805
    @marklittle8805 Год назад +1

    He had a few different verses. The Canadians win on this one but he does a verse about overtime and Bobby scores....I would like to think it was the 69 Cup when Orr scored in OT.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад

      That’s cool. I imagine he changed that frequently based on where he was or his audience. I think that the line is very mailable in that regard.

    • @williamdemerchant7295
      @williamdemerchant7295 Год назад

      A technicality. It was 1970 that Bobby Orr scored the flying goal to seal the Bruins Cup. He'll always be my favourite player.

    • @marklittle8805
      @marklittle8805 Год назад

      @@williamdemerchant7295 I was a wee little guy in short pants when it happened lol . Forgot the year

  • @rossmacintosh5652
    @rossmacintosh5652 Год назад

    When he said "The Canadians Win!" he's likely referring to the Montreal Canadiens team, officially le Club de hockey Canadien.
    When I was a kid my favourite Stompin' Tom songs were 'Lester The Lobster' and 'Bud The Spud'.

    • @Lavolanges
      @Lavolanges Год назад

      "Lester the Lobster" was not Stomping Tom's song, it was his good friend Stevedore Steve's (Steeve Foote) song.

    • @rossmacintosh5652
      @rossmacintosh5652 Год назад

      @@Lavolanges Thanks for correcting me Suzanne! Looks like I've been mistaken for more than 50 years!

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад

      Thanks friend. That’s how I took it, which is why I mentioned the video was all about the Leafs. Lol. Loved it though. It was very fun.

    • @rossmacintosh5652
      @rossmacintosh5652 Год назад

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 The Canadiens and the Leafs are the two classic rival teams of the NHL. Much like the Yankees vs. the Red Socks in baseball. Canadiens are Montreal's team while the Leafs are Toronto's.

  • @nedrasellayah9314
    @nedrasellayah9314 Год назад

    Lol. Love it.😂😂😂

  • @randallstackhouse5300
    @randallstackhouse5300 Год назад +1

    🇨🇦 Good one!

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk Год назад

    John I know this may silly or inconsequential but on a major trip through the US when I parked up a VERY LONG beautiful drivway to Biltmore Estate im Asheville, NC a little girl turned to her fathet and asked about my strange Alberta licence plate. I don't think they knew that this strwnge Albertan Canadian woman was walking behind them. I overheard her father saying that Alberta was in Canada. I can only surmise that her father taught hrr to look at license plates. My father loved knowledge even though he had to leave school with a grade 7 education yet was the knowledgrable man I've ever known.

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +1

      Not inconsequential at all. I love these anecdotes about peoples experiences. Thanks for sharing

    • @catherinemelnyk
      @catherinemelnyk Год назад

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 Thanks John. I drove about 10,000 miles on a trip through the US in 1999. I fell in love with North Carolina and Tennessee. There was a byway between Chattanooga, Tenn and Asheville NC that took my breath away.

  • @barrydimmock5771
    @barrydimmock5771 Год назад

    This footage is probably 5 years after the Leafs last won the cup, and we still wait, and wait, and wait

  • @pamelaross9930
    @pamelaross9930 Год назад

    Classic ❤

  • @Dee-JayW
    @Dee-JayW Год назад +2

    How about Rita McNeil from PEI singing “Working Man, with the men’s miner chorus.

    • @444dkm
      @444dkm Год назад +1

      The men were called Men of the Deeps. Excellent group.

    • @rhomacity
      @rhomacity Год назад +2

      I have seen the Men of the Deeps singing that song with Rita , by the way, Rita McNeil was a Cape Bretoner ( and Nova Scotian ).

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +1

      I’m on it. Or it’s now on long list. Lol.

  • @jeangodding6348
    @jeangodding6348 Год назад

    Still miss him .

  • @curtisbolen2076
    @curtisbolen2076 Год назад

    If you liked that,try out the log driver's waltz.

  • @lindagates9150
    @lindagates9150 Год назад

    I liked it too brave men wearing yellow on the ice .I remember my dad on the floor hitting the hardwood helping his team get a puck into the net. His mother’s doctor said she had to give up watching hockey night in Canada I was the child who came into the living room and asked what inning are they playing in the hopes that it soon would be over. I must have been a disappointment to the whole family. A few years later if I was wondering through the living room and football was on I would watch if the guys were in a huddle I appreciated the view but I didn’t stay long . The show I liked was Don Messers jubilee Dad liked it too I remember him saying you could tell the colour of the dancers panties if the TV had colour. Thanks for inspiring my walk down memory hill and along the lane

    • @johnf-americanreacts1287
      @johnf-americanreacts1287  Год назад +1

      Hey, thanks for this. What inning is it in? 😂 love it.

    • @lindagates9150
      @lindagates9150 Год назад

      @@johnf-americanreacts1287 true story dad on the floor Grammy doctor telling her to stop watching he was worried about it even the football appreciation a few years later though and the comment about the dancers plus my mother had been a manager of a girls baseball team perhaps that how I learned the term inning . dad did tell me they were in overtime I still am not sure perhaps four periods or quarters. Oh gosh I just checked with Alexa it’s three periods oh well I I am finding it hard to type as I am laughing 😂 so funny how can I claim to be Canadian eh