Calgary's official song called Neighbours of the World is 30 years old - Action News
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Calgary

Calgary's official song called Neighbours of the World is 30 years old

For 30 years, our official song has gathered dust and there's only one vinyl copy in the Calgary Public Library.

Tune won 1986 songwriting contest but never got much airplay

A Song for Calgary

9 years ago
Duration 1:04
In 1986, the city launched a national "A Song for Calgary" contest in search of an official tune to capture the spirit of the city leading into the '88 Winter Olympics.

Right now our city is all aflutter with theCalgary Songs Project a playlistcelebrating 30 years of Calgary music heritageand the 30th anniversary of the High Performance Rodeo.

A nifty bit of symbolic identity stuff that we can all rally around. Yay us!

But wait!

We were trolling through the official Calgary handbook from city halland discovered we have an "official" song thatis also 30 years old. It'salittle tune written by a pair of songwriters from gaspVictoria, B.C., that's been collecting dust since 1986.

Now I know what you're thinking you know this song!

But that's not it.

Catchy, far better known, but nope not "official."

This is our city's anthem:

  • Is it time to update Calgary's official song? If so, what should the city's new anthem be? Leave your suggestions in the comments sectionbelow

The contest

According to the city's municipal handbook, Neighbours of the World became the official song of Calgary in 1986.

In the run-up to the 1988 Calgary Winter Olympics (that gift that just keeps on giving), the good folks at city hall decided we needed a tune to capture the spirit of the city.

So theyran a national contest, called A Song For Calgary. They received921 entries spanning the musical spectrum.

Did you know Calgary has an official song? We'll play it for you and tell you about it's strange backstory.

"One guy was playing the Hammond organ,probably drinking some scotch singing, 'I love you Calgary.'And there was an East Indian guy chanting," says Denis Grady, who worked for special events and public relations for the city in 1986.

"It just resonated with people," Gradyadded. "People expressing their sentiments about how much they loved the city."

Even people who didn't live here like veteran radio announcer Barry Bowmanandcity planner, songwriter and actor, Tom Loney of Victoria, B.C.

Tom Loney and Barry Bowman in 1987 at the Jack Singer Concert Hall after winning A Song for Calgary contest. (Tom Loney)

"When we started to think about writing a lyric for Calgarywe agreed that one thing we had to stay away from were stereotypical images like oilfields or waving fields of wheat or cattle," said Loney.

"We wanted to get across the idea that what Calgary was doing was saying, "Hey world, we're hosting the Olympic games here and everybody should come and we will be your neighbours to everybody in the world."

So, whya couple of B.C. guys?

Well, Loney was born inCalgary in 1938and lived here until afterhigh school when he took off towork as a bush pilot. Sohe was pretty darn Calgarian and even had a newspaper route through Mount Royal.

Back to the contest...

After listening to a mountain of cassettes, a group of people involved in the local Calgary music industrychose Loney and Bowman's cut.

Given star treatment

Before their winning song was publicly announced, Loney and Bowman were flown to Calgary and given the startreatment by then-mayor Ralph Klein.

"He was part of the whole entourage. We were taken to a hockey game and we were presented with the white Stetson between periods," said Bowman.

Calgary's official song is performed after the city announced the winner of A Song For Calgary contest in 1987. (CBC Archives)

The songwriters gota $5,000 prize, a grand piano donated by Irene Besseand an Air Canada flight anywhere in the world. Not too shabby.

"They showed us a great timeWe loved the time that we were there and we loved the city of Calgary itself."

And then, the controversy.

A Song For Calgary

On Mar. 4, 1987, the city unveiled the top five tunes for A Song For Calgary contest to a full house at the Centre for Performing Arts, which is known today asthe Jack Singer Concert Hall.

Bowman and Loney werethereand knew they'd already won but the other finalists didn't.

One was a group of about 100 students in grades 5and 6from Colonel J. Fred Scott elementary in northeast Calgary.

"Everybody thoughtthat night that we had won," said Paul Finkleman, who helped the students write the song.

Audience members clapping along to 'Neighbours of the World' at the Jack Singer Concert Hall in Calgary in 1987. (CBC Archives)

"And then they brought on the final song and they said 'This is the winner.'Nobody really knew of them because they weren't Calgarians. I don't want to come across as sour grapes. I and many other people were upset. Nobody liked the song," he said.

Well, perhaps.

CBC archive footage from the night of the concert shows the audience clappingand singing along to the winning tune.

  • Watch part of the performance in the video above

"Neighbours of the World was played just three times, but that was enough for many folks in the audience to learn all the words of the rousing chorus," wrote Patrick Tivy in his Mar. 6, 1987, column for the Calgary Herald.

In that same article, Tivy also predicted the fate of the tune that it would quickly fizzle.

"Despite its officialstatus, the song is doomed to be dropped from pop radio playlists within a very few weeks," wrote Tivy.

Bingo.

Song 'tanked'

Ten-thousand singles of Neighbours of the World were pressed and CBS records, now Sony Music, donated them all to the city which distributed them to schools and radio stations.

"The song tanked after about three to four weeks," said Denis Grady. "It got a little bit of airplay but it didn't catch onin terms of people saying, 'Yeah, that's a great song.'"

The jacket cover for Calgary's official song, Neighbours of the World. (Tom Loney)

Even the songwriters say the tune went nowhere.

"We were very surprisedthat a few months after this initial weekend,which was just a fabulous time we had in Calgary, the song kind of went somewhere and it's never really been exposed again," said Bowman.

So what went wrong?

Well, Gradysaysrather than apanel of judges, Calgary's anthemshould have gone to a public vote. He saysthe last time he remembers the song being performed in public was at the closing ceremonies of the '88 games.

And thus, the great unheard hymn of our city.

Vinyl record hard to come by

While Bowman has several hundred vinyl copies of thesong "somewhere in his attic" the Calgary Public Library has just one.

In 1987 CBS Records, now Sony Music, pressed 10,000 copies of the record. (Marie Kuzik)

It lives in the local history section of the Central Library.

But guess what?You can't even listen to it.

There's no record player at the downtown location. The 45is part of the reference collection, meaning the CPL will loan it to you for a few hours but won't let you take it out of the library.

And now you knowthe rest of the story.


Calgary at a Crossroads is CBC Calgary's special focus on life in our city during the downturn. A look at Calgary's culture, identity and what it means to be Calgarian. Read more stories from the series at Calgary at a Crossroads.