CONTENTS
Foreword by HP Newquist
Introduction
1 — Memories in San Marco
2 — Guitar Woes
3 — Divorce
4 — My Beautiful Miami
5 — Srdjan
6 — Con Artists, Miami Style
7 — Love Songs in New Canaan
8 — Seven Journeys
9 — Spiritual Searchings
10 — My Father’s Passing
11 — The Return … To Canada with Love
12 — Canada, My Canada
13 — Tea with a Prince
14 — On the Road Again
15 — Christmas Carols in Palm Beach
16 — A Winter Fantasy
17 — A Canadian Romance
18 — California Revisited
19 — No Remedy for Love
20 — Accidental Dramas
21 — From Royalty to Rockabilly
22 — On Tour with Andrew
23 — Worlds in Flux
24 — Return to England
25 — Coda
Acknowledgements
Selected Lyrics
Album Titles and Song Listings: A Selection of the Latest Releases
Dedication
To my family and all my wonderful friends and fans around the world who have supported my career for so many years, bought my albums, and attended my concerts. This book was written for you.
Epigraph
Wanderer, your footsteps are the road, and nothing more; wanderer, there is no road, the road is made by walking. Walking makes the road, and on glancing back one sees the road that never will be trod again.
— Antonio Machado, “Proverbios y Cantares,” Campos de Castilla, 1912
Foreword
Liona Boyd is an uncommonly unique woman.
Most of the world knows her as a guitarist. She was one of the first women — if not the very first — to be recognized widely as a virtuoso in the male-dominated world of the classical guitar.
Without having heard any of her recordings, in 1977 I saw an ad for a Liona Boyd concert in Gammage Auditorium, Frank Lloyd Wright’s shrine to musical performance in the middle of the scorching Arizona desert. Curious, but not able to convince any of my rock guitar friends to join me, I grabbed the last remaining single seat, which happened to be in the front row.
I sat rock-concert fashion, with my feet propped up on the stage, and watched as the lights dimmed. Ms. Boyd appeared, striding into the hall in a floor-length dress to a small seat at centre stage.
In only a few moments, her playing had transfixed the crowd … and me. Here was a beautiful woman playing stunning guitar. She was warm and enchanting, and she had an alluring smile that danced around the edges of her playing. She was also charming, her voice lilting when she addressed the audience. Although she was focused on every superbly played note, she also looked like she was enjoying herself. Against all preconceived notions, I had a splendid time.
That concert changed my idea of not only what classical guitar could be, but also what the guitar itself could be. Every musician has several points in their life when they realize there is much more to their instrument than they ever realized, and that day, sitting in front of Liona’s stage, was one of mine.
In the ensuing years, I became a magazine editor and watched Liona take her classical pedigree into other realms, playing with musicians in wildly disparate genres. This was something few other classical guitarists dared do. Indeed, she became a personality as grand as her guitar playing. With her subsequent recordings and collaborations with everyone from Eric Clapton and Chet Atkins to Yo-Yo Ma, it readily became apparent to the universe of guitar players that Liona was personally and professionally intent on pushing the boundaries of the instrument. No other classical guitarists had ever made multiple appearances with Johnny Carson.
Yet Liona is actually a woman of many talents: guitar playing just happens to be the one for which she is most famous. In the following pages her other talents come to the fore. Her talent for self-discovery, her talent for reinvention, and her incredible perseverance emerge in this book as brightly as her musicianship. Above and beyond these talents, though, her ability to craft an engaging story that brings readers along for the ride is perhaps her most unexpected talent. Because, it turns out, she is a wonderful storyteller.
Liona has always been a writer — of original classical music, of songs, of poetry, of a previous autobiography — and she has found a beautiful voice through the words she puts on a page. The years that have shaped her life into something remarkable have also shaped her into an artist who writes as lyrically when discussing her friendships, relationships, and adventures as when depicting heartbreak and meretricious business associates.
Her writing skills are all the more appealing because her colourful memoir is not the clichéd tome of an artist’s rise to stardom — with the accompanying trappings of success. Instead, it is a very real and very human story. Liona’s life is one of marvellous extremes. In the course of her lifetime she has attracted and encountered an extraordinary universe of personalities and situations. There have been celebrities, parties, and encounters with people as diverse as Ozzy Osbourne, Tom Cruise, Fidel Castro, and Ronald Reagan, and travels to exotic cities around the world. And there are even long-term friendships out of the public eye, notably with Prince Philip, a confidant and adviser who has been a constant in Liona’s life for three decades, pen in hand.
Yet the most endearing element of Liona’s story is not the performances she’s given, the places she’s been, or the famous people with whom she has worked and spent time. Rather, it is the fact that so many of the things she experiences are the things that everyone else experiences, day in and day out: the uncertainties of love, the need and desire to keep working in spite of setbacks and obstacles, the concerns over ageing parents, the logistics of moving one’s life from one city to another — even waiting hours on end for the cable guy. Like all of us, she has friends who remain with her through thick and thin. And like many of us, she encounters her share of less-than-honourable humans, who are only interested in taking her money or using her talents and connections for themselves. The charm of this book is that readers can live vicariously through her adventures while nodding at the similarities to their own lives.
There is also much insight into the world of a working artist in these pages, as Liona details the songwriting and recording process, the promotion and performances, the accompanying spotlights … and even the solitude. She pulls back the curtain and shows the incredible thrill we imagine goes along with being a performer, while revealing the shadowy side of an industry that too often treats its best talent with scant regard. Her story takes a detour from her predictable trajectory when she faces every musician’s worst nightmare and in the process discovers not only her own expressive singing voice, but a world of new musical vistas. Through it all, she emerges as a determined, committed