(YouTube link)
The Edmund Fitzgerald {wiki} was a lake freighter that sank on Lake Superior on November 10, 1975. Gordon Lightfoot immortalized the incident in a song in 1976. Here is the song in tribute to those who died on the Edmund Fitzgerald 32 years ago today. ~via Viral Video Chart
The studio version of Gordon Lightfoot's hit is an absolutely brilliant piece of folk-pop. The guitar/keyboard riff comes crashing in again and again like the icy lake waves. Lightfoot's lyrics are taut and are delivered with great respect for all watermen, the waters on which they work and for those 29 souls lost not so many Novembers ago.
I join Mr. Fulton in tribute, thank Mr. Lightfoot for his compelling and enduring memorial and pray for the wives and the sons and the daughters.
I would point you in the direction of 3 modern folk songs.
The BAnd Played Waltzing Matilda (Pogues Version is best)
The Green Fields of France (The Fureys version)
Both written by Scottish Australian Eric Bogle.
And "I was only 19" by Redgum.
Most people don't realize how treacherous the Great Lakes (essentially inland seas) are, and it was pretty routine for the ships to go down in that era. If the Lakes weren't so cold, deep, and dark, it would be a wreck diver's paradise today. The sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald proved that even with fairly modern meterology and radios, a stormy Great Lake is a dangerous place to be. The weather forecasting is a little better today and there are GPSs, but it's still not someplace you want to be in a bad storm even on a large ship.