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FEATURE
8 steps to better marketing
By Maggie Van Camp
What do successful farmers do that gives them the marketing edge? Marketing decisions
are much like production decisions -- doing many little things right improves yields.
But there's no denying the hard facts -- some farmers are just better at it. Even
so, they don't think they do anything other farmers can't do too.
On the surface, it seems Ian Lepp markets his crops very differently than Ken Motiuk
does. In part, that's personal preference, but a large part of the reason is because
their farms are so different. However, in this feature from the October 2009 edition
of Country Guide, associate editor Maggie Van Camp finds two farmers whose
strategic approaches to the markets are remarkably similar. Click here for the full
feature.
OUT IN THE COUNTRY
Must-have albums
By Gord Gilmour
Associate editor Gord Gilmour's quick rundown of essential listening from artists
who broke out of the country stereotype. Canadian artists whose music won't be pigeonholed
are profiled in the January 2008 issue of Country Guide ("Break Down Barriers,"
page 54).
At Folsom Prison and At San Quentin
Johnny Cash
The Man In Black may be gone, but his musical legacy lives on. A true original,
Cash's distinctive deep voice and the "boom-chick-a-boom" sound of his backing band
the Tennessee Three brought a whole new sound to country music in the '50s and
'60s. Cash quickly earned a reputation as a hard-living outlaw who made his own
rules.
Fittingly, his two best known albums are live recordings from the infamous Folsom
and San Quentin prisons made during the late 1960s. While Cash may have sang a lot
about prisons and outlaws and sown a lot of wild oats during his wayward youth,
any talk of his own prison time is a myth: the Man in Black himself always kept
more or less out of trouble.
Redheaded Stranger
Willie
Nelson
Nelson's breakthrough mid-'70s album, that earned him a reputation as more than
one of the best songwriters to ever hit the music business.
He's known for having one of the most diverse fan bases in music -- a tent that's
big enough to take in bikers, farmers and ranchers and even a few hippies.
Cowboyography
Ian Tyson
This member of the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame may be best known for
his work with ex-wife Sylvia Tyson, but he's also one of Canada's greatest songwriters
and a serious supporter of authentic western music.
He started playing guitar and singing in his 20s when he was on the rodeo circuit
and was recovering from a bad fall. He eventually built a following in urban coffee
shops as a folk singer in the 1960s as one half of Ian & Sylvia.
Copperhead Road and Exit 0
Steve
Earle
Earle may have become a political activist and solo singer-songwriter these days,
but his second and third albums still stand as some of the best music ever put to tape.
His rocking country sounds were internationally popular for a time, but recently
Earle has found audiences on this side of the border more receptive to his work.