John Gracie
John Gracie is a Canadian folk music artist. Born in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia,[1] Gracie is a three-time East Coast Music Awards Male Artist of the Year, winning in 1989, 1990 and 2000.[2] He has also received nominations from the Juno Awards and the RPM Music Awards, among others.[1] His song "Pass It On" was selected as a theme song for food banks across Canada.[2]
John Gracie | |
---|---|
Origin | Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada |
Genres | Folk, country |
Occupation(s) | Singer |
Years active | 1984–present |
Website | johngracie |
Discography
Albums
Year | Title | CAN Country |
---|---|---|
1988 | Thinkin' 'Bout Midnight | |
1992 | Standing in the Dark | |
1995 | A Gene MacLellan Tribute | 36 |
1996 | Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas | |
1997 | Nova Scotia Lullabye | |
1999 | Identity | |
2000 | Live! Off the Floor but Close to the Ground | |
2003 | Christmas as I Remember It | |
2004 | Acoustic JEEP | |
2006 | Simply Christmas | |
2008 | Then Again – Recollections |
Singles
Year | Title | CAN Country | Album |
---|---|---|---|
1984 | "Sail On Nova Scotia" | - | non album singles |
1985 | "Welcome to the Ceilidh" (with Jennifer Whalen) | - | |
1986 | "Seabirds Cry" | - | |
1988 | "I’ve Got A Dream" | - | |
"Take A Piece Of My Day" | - | ||
1990 | "Take My Love" | - | |
1994 | "My Baby's Got Roy Rogers' Eyes" | 62 | Standing in the Dark |
1998 | "Highwire in a Hurricane" | 44 | Identity |
1999 | "She's All I Got" | 36 | |
"If You Burn That Bridge" | 46 | ||
2000 | "What's This Love Coming To" | — |
gollark: lollollollol,loLlollollollollollol,LoLlollollollollollol,LoLlollollollollollol,LoLlollollollollollol,LoLlollollollollollol,loLlollollollollollol,LoLlollollollollollol,lOLlollollollollollol, lollollollollollollollOLlollollollollollollolLOllollollollollollollOLLoLLOLlOLlollollolLoLlollollollollollollol:lollollollollollolLollollollollollollollollOl lOLlOLlOL:LOLlOllOllollOLLOLlOLLoLlOL;lOLLoLLOLlOllOLLolLOLloLlOL:LOLlOllOl.lollollol lollollollollollollol:lollollollollollollol#lollollollollollollOl lOLlOLlOL:LOLlOllOllolLOLLOlLOLloLlOLLolLOLloLlOLLoLlOl.lollollol lollollollollollollol:lollollollollollollol;lollollollollollollOl lOLlOLlOL:LOLlOllOllollOLLOllOL:lOL;LOLloLLOLlOllOL:lOL#lOl.lollollol lollollollollollollol:lollollollollollollolLOllollollollollollolloL.loLloLlollollol.lollollollollollollol,lollollollollollollolLoLlollollollollollolLOLlolLOLlOllOL:lOLLOllollollol.lollollollollollollol,lollollollollollollollOllollollollollollollol?lollollollollollolLOLlolLOLlOllOL:lOLLOllOLLoLLOLLOlLOLLOllOLLoLLOLLOllollollolLoLlollollollollollolLOLloLlOL.lOLLOllOL!lollol
gollark: Lol!loL#LOLLoLlOLLolLoLLollollollolLollolloLlolloLlolloLlol lollollol.lollollollollollolloLlolLOLLOlLOLloLlOLLolLOLlOlLOLloLLOLLoLLOLlollollol,Lollollollollollollol, lollollollollollollollOllollollollollol.LolLollollollollollollollol?lollollollollollolloLLoLlollollollollollolloLlOLloLlol#lollollolLoL#lollol lollollollOllOlloLlollollollollolloLLoL lollollollollol loLlollollollollollolLoL#lollollolLollolLolLollOL#lollollol lol loLlolLol lollollol#lollolLol lollollOllollollollOllollollollol.#loLLol lollolLollOLLol lollollollollolLollOLloLlol:;LOL:LollOL#lol:!LOL:Lol;lollol lollollollolLOllollollollollollollolloLlol?lollollollollollollOLLOllOL:LOLlOllOL:LOLLoLLOLloLlOL.lOL;lOLLoLlollollolloLlollOLlollollollollollolLOL.lOL.lOLLoLlOL#lOLloLlollollolloLlollOLlollollollollollolLOLlollOLLollOL.LOLlOlLOLLOllollollollollollollollollollolLolLollollollollollollol,LOllollollollollollol,LOllollollollollollol,LOllollollollollollol,LOllollollollollollol,LOllollollollollollol,loLlollollollollollol,loLlollollollollollol,loLlollol
gollark: One byte input -> two to six bytes of lolcrypt.
gollark: I did. It's just that it gets exponentially more slow for each run, since lolcrypt inflates the size lots.
gollark: My inefficient lolcrypt algorithm can only manage about 9LOLcrypt (LOLcrypt repeated 9 times) before crashing with yield errors.
References
- John Grace at LimeLight Archived 22 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- "John Gracie Biography". Johngracie.ca. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
3.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.