Garnet Rogers
Best known as the brother of Canadian folk singer
Stan Rogers, Garnet Rogers has
enjoyed a substantial musical career of his own. He began experimenting
with various musical instruments at the age of five, starting off with
the guitar and graduating to the fiddle and flute. In the early 1970s,
he and his brother joined Cedar Lake, but only lasted a year; together
with that band's bassist, the two brothers broke away to form a trio.
Involvement with two documentaries for the Canadian Broadcasting
Company led to the material that went into Garnet and Stan's first
album Fogarty's Cove. The Rogers' songs dealt with the lore and life of
Canadian working folk and struck a chord across that nation. Several
albums followed, including Turnaround and Northwest Passage. In 1983,
Stan died in a tragic plane accident, leaving Garnet to carry the torch
alone. His first album, entitled, simply Garnet Rogers appeared in 1984
and was followed by a successive album every two years into the 1990s.
In 2002 Red House Records released a collection of Rogers best
material, All That Is. Despite the fact the Rogers has a large American
following among folk fans, the record was his first to be released by
an American company.