FOG BLOG ENTERTAINMENT LOG: CANADIAN SINGER / SONGWRITER DIED OF CANCER , SHE WAS 67!
Award-winning singer-songwriter Shirley Eikhard dead at 67 Eikhard won 2 Junos in her own career and penned Something To Talk About — a major hit for Bonnie Raitt Singer-songwriter Shirley Eikhard, who won two Juno Awards and helped Bonnie Raitt to comeback success by penning one of her biggest hits, has died of cancer. She was 67.
Longtime friend Deborah Duggan says the musician died early Thursday at a hospital in Orangeville, Ont., surrounded by those closest to her.
In addition to Raitt, Eikhard's songs were covered by, or written for, the likes of Cher, Amy Grant, Rita Coolidge and Emmylou Harris.
For Eikhard, music was a lifelong passion and pursuit. Born in Sackville, N.B., to parents who both played musical instruments, she was residing in Oshawa, Ont., by the time of her debut 1969 appearance at the renowned Mariposa Folk Festival, just barely into her teens. At age 15, she penned It Takes Time, a No. 1 adult contemporary hit on the Canadian charts for Anne Murray in 1971. That resulted in television appearances on the Anne Murray Special and Tommy Hunter Show on CBC.
By 1972, Eikhard was telling a newspaper reporter of her shift from earlier folk material to "country pop." Releasing a self-titled debut album that year, she won Junos for best female country artist in 1973 and 1974.
The debut album mixed originals and covers, including a version of Sylvia Tyson's Smiling Wine, which garnered Canadian radio airplay.
Eikhard's cover of Fleetwood Mac's Say You Love Me, from 1976's Let Me Down Easy, did as well.
That same year, she talked with the Globe and Mail about the challenges of trying to establish a successful career while staying in Canada, describing performing as a refuge.
"Those few hours when I'm up on stage mean everything to me," she said.
Struggles in the 1980s, then a surprise
There was a 10-year gap in her recorded output, until 1987's Taking Charge, as Eikhard dealt with voice issues.
Years later, she would describe her life as near its "nadir" as that decade ended, though she co-wrote a song, Kick Start My Heart, that landed on Alannah Myles's self-titled 1989 album.
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