Canadian music legend Stompin’ Tom Connors has died at the age of 77, a release on his official website confirms.
Connors died of natural causes at his home in Ontario, surrounded by family.
“He’s such a national treasure,” said 680News entertainment reporter, Rudy Blair. “All his music was about one thing that was important to him and that was this nation, Canada. He’s sorely going to be missed.”
Connors is survived by his wife Lena, two sons, two daughters and several grandchildren.
A public celebration of his life featuring speakers and music will be held next Wednesday in Peterborough, Ont., the city where the musician got the name “Stompin’ Tom.”
He became a Canadian icon with songs like The Hockey Song, Sudbury Saturday Night, and Bud The Spud.
His family posted the following message on his website, saying it was the colourful musician’s final note to fans.
“Hello friends, I want all my fans, past, present, or future, to know that without you, there would have not been any Stompin’ Tom.”
“It was a long hard bumpy road, but this great country kept me inspired with its beauty, character, and spirit, driving me to keep marching on and devoted to sing about its people and places that make Canada the greatest country in the world.”
“I must now pass the torch, to all of you, to help keep the Maple Leaf flying high, and be the Patriot Canada needs now and in the future.”
“I humbly thank you all, one last time, for allowing me in your homes, I hope I continue to bring a little bit of cheer into your lives from the work I have done.”
Dubbed Stompin’ Tom for his propensity to pound the floor with his left foot during performances, Connors garnered a devoted following through straight-ahead country-folk tunes that drew inspiration from his extensive travels and focused on the everyman.
Although wide commercial appeal escaped Connors for much of his four-decade career, his heritage-soaked songs like Canada Day, Up Canada Way, The Hockey Song, Bud the Spud, and Sudbury Saturday Night, have come to be regarded as veritable national anthems thanks to their unabashed embrace of all things Canadiana.
As word spread of his death, Canucks from across the country began mourning his loss.
On Twitter, Prime Minister Stephen Harper gave his condolences.
We have lost a true Canadian original. R.I.P. Stompin’ Tom Connors. You played the best game that could be played.
— Stephen Harper (@pmharper) March 7, 2013
The National Hockey League also tweeted about the loss.
Sad to hear that legendary Canadian Stompin’ Tom Connors has passed. His legacy lives on in arenas every time “The Hockey Song” is played.
— NHL (@NHL) March 7, 2013
That iconic song was played at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, where many fans took to their feet as Connors’ death was announced during a game between the Maple Leafs and the Ottawa Senators. “Stompin’ Tom, you’ll be missed. Thanks for all the memories and the greatest hockey song ever,” said PA announcer Andy Frost. Musician Raffi Cavoukian called Connors’ “an original” on Twitter, while actor Mike Smith who played the character Bubbles on The Trailer Park Boys called the singer “a true Canadian legend.” Dave Bidini, a former singer for the Rheostatics whose account of Connors’ 50th birthday party helped revive the singer’s career for a time tweeted that the musician changed his life.
stompin tom conners changed my life. i owe him a great great debt. we all do, as proud canadians. we won’t see his like again. #StompinTom — dave bidini (@hockeyesque) March 7, 2013
Despite his status as a Canadian musical icon, Connors often complained that not enough songs were being written about his homeland. “I don’t know why I seem to be the only one, or almost the only one, writing about this country,” Connors said in a rare one-on-one interview at his home in Halton Hills, Ont., in 2008. “It just amazes me that I’ve been going so long I would think that somebody else (would have) picked up the torch a long time ago and started writing tons of songs about this country. This country is the most underwritten country in the world as far as songs are concerned. We starve, the people in this country are starving for songs about their homeland.”
Connors’ fervent patriotism brought controversy when his principles put him at loggerheads with the Canadian music industry. In 1978, he famously returned a handful of Juno Awards he had amassed in previous years, complaining that some artists were being awarded in categories outside their genre while other winners had conducted most of their work outside of the country. He derided artists that moved to the United States as “border jumpers.”
“I feel that the Junos should be for people who are living in Canada, whose main base of business operations is in Canada, who are working toward the recognition of Canadian talent in this country and who are trying to further the export of such talent from this country to the world with a view to proudly showing off what this country can contribute to the world market,” he said in a statement at the time.
The declaration marked the beginning of a 10-year self-imposed exile from the spotlight. From Connors’ earliest days, life was a battle.
He was born in Saint John, N.B., on Feb. 9, 1936 to an unwed teenage mother. According to his autobiography, Before the Fame, he often lived hand-to-mouth as a youngster, hitchhiking with his mother from the age of three, begging on the street by the age of four. At age eight, he was placed in the care of Children’s Aid and adopted a year later by a family in Skinner’s Pond, P.E.I. He ran away four years later to hitchhike across the country.
Connors bought his first guitar at age 14 and picked up odd jobs as he wandered from town to town, at times working on fishing boats, as a grave digger, tobacco picker and fry cook. Legend has it that Connors began his musical career when he found himself a nickel short of a beer at the Maple Leaf Hotel in Timmins, in 1964 at age 28. The bartender agreed to give him a drink if he would play a few songs but that turned into a 14-month contract to play at the hotel. Three years later, Connors made his first album and garnered his first hit in 1970 with Bud The Spud. Hundreds more songs followed, many based on actual events, people, and towns he had visited.
“I’m a man of the land, I go out into the country and I talk to people and I know the jobs they do and how they feel about their jobs,” Connors has said. “And I’ve been doing that all my life so I know Canada like the palm of my hand. I don’t need a map to go anywhere in Canada, I know it all.”
In 1988, Connors emerged from his decade-long protest with the album Fiddle and Song, featuring a new fiddle style and the songs Canada Day, Up Canada Way, Lady kd lang, and I Am the Wind. It was followed in 1990 by a 70-city Canadian tour that established him as one of the country’s best loved troubadours. But his strong convictions about the music industry remained.
Connors declined induction into the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame in 1993. Accolades he did embrace included an appointment to the Order of Canada in 1996, and his own postage stamp. “Whatever I do, in my writing, I do it for others,” Connors said in the 2008 interview. “I do it for my country and I do it for my countrymen and that’s the only value that I really have. If there was no money in this, I’d be doing it anyway. I’ve always been that way. Because it’s what I am.”
With files from The Canadian Press

My condolences go out to Stompin’ Tom Connors and his family and he sure will be missed as he was an original Canadian Singer and loved Canada and showed his loyalty towards Canada too. He was one of a kind and I really loved his singing and him as a person too. He surely will be missed by both me and my Mom as we had seen him when we lived in Parkdale area many years back. Stompin’ Tom was really down to earth person and friendly too. Rest In Peace Stompin’ Tom Connors. Now you will be singing with Elvis Presley and the others too and looking down upon us. Sure will miss you a lot. You will always be remembered in our hearts too.
Goodbye TTC Skidaddler.
dont say loved by all,,, i dont like him..im sure many more people dont..we most of us no what he did rong..okay..dont say all…in court if u say all..judge no ur a dirty lier…ur words will never count as a statements..okay…lier..
R.I.P. Tom. Thanks for the music and the memories.
This comment is for JAMES!!! I can’t believe you would post something like that!!!! I bet you had to ride a bus to the public library and post that on a computer you don’t even own I bet you collect welfare and try and take advantage of this country, you sir James are truly an asshole!! The only rat here is you and I wish we ( contributing members of society) could stop working hard to support scum like you!! Hope you choke on your Kraft dinner dirt bag!!!!!
Steve cliche Erin Ontario. ” bring it James”
how are u contributin member of society,,,u no we stole canada from natives? u no we used blacks to build it? …..not too long ago..u can still take responabilty for all those crimes aginest humanity …accordin to internation criminal court,,,u will be executed those charges..loolll…people like u are stupid and ignorant
I doubt this will make it to Tom jr but I hope it does, I just wanted to say my thoughts are with you and your mom and family, your dad Tom let me into your house on a few occasions and for that opportunity I’m greatful, he showed me all around the house and even let me help build a hockey stick holder for all your sticks in the garage, he gave me a one on one concert and even a moose head off tap, he wrote a letter to the opp commissioner to save me from being charged for something I didn’t do and that letter stopped me from being charged!!!!. He gave me a couple CDs and even his books, walked me around his record room and explained to me why he returned the juno’s, showed me all his maple leaf door frames and his collection of guitars, his juke box and we played hank snow just like the picture in the bar room!!! He was my favorite musician and still will be! But the laid back Tom I got to see will never leave my heart!!! I knew I was a lucky boy to be in your house and I thank you from the bottom of my heart Tom and Lena !!!!! These memories will stay with me forever and ever and I just want to play his music louder now!!! Until we meet again!!! Steve cliche Erin Ontario
who? who is this guy, never heard of him. Sounds like a wannabe Texan.
You sir, are an idiot
That’s because you’re 12. When you’re 12, you don’t really know much and you’re still learning. For this reason you get a pass.
I went to bed early last night and did not get the news till this morning that we lost Stompin Tom Conners last night. Such sad news I have very fond memories of seeing him perform at the “Horseshoe Tavern” here in Toronto. He was the best even my 30 year old son loves his music, and believe me he does not like any of my music from my years, except good ole Stompin Ton Conners A true Canadian Icon for sure and he will be missed. Those records I have of him will stay with me forever. RIP Stompin Ton Conners. My deepest condolences to the family. Wish I drove to go to the funeral. He will be missed.
Its a very sad time for all Canadians. This man was Canada. When you heard his music, you thought about Canada no matter where you were. We’re all going to miss this man. His music will live on and on. RIP Tom.
Well Tom the time has come to play the game in heaven. We will always miss you hear in good old Tillsonburg. You will always be in our toughts and in our hearts..RIP. My friend..
No need to thank us Tom, it is us that should thank you,you gave us so much in your songs, what a great entertainment, i will miss you. My deepest condolences family and friends.
soo happy this rat is gone,,, we need more peace and justice ..rip criminal..best u the best in new world..hope u stay out of troble,,,and hope that u dont steal other people money,,like u did here on earth..tahnk you for this..
James….can you explain your comments please? But wait till you come down off whatever you’ve been smoking.
this man is 1 of those who take our money and make our people go into poverty and increse child drug use, gangs and crime. ..we are starting live in peace ..tahnk you god. thank you tom…we are happy ur gone..thank you..rip..
Okay James, now I’m sure you don’t even know who Stompin” Tom Collins was. So stop making those trashy comments about him. He was a great Canadian singer/songwriter, respected and loved by all.
Hope you learn to spell one day. If you enunciate like your spell, I would be surprised if anyone has any clue what you are talking about.
RIP Tom.
Canada lost an icon today. The only solace for us is that he taught us that the
MAPLE LEAF IS FOREVER!
So many of his songs were sung by my father who could not carry a tune in a bucket but I loved it anyway. You will both be missed.
WE loved Stompin Tom Conners my hubby and i use to Dance to his Music He was a True Canadian God Bless Him RIP
God bless we can only imagine what this man was psssing forward
Canada has lost a great man
My dad just loved your music and all all your tapes!! we played one of your songs at my dad’s funeral a few months ago and everyone there thought it was wonderful!! rest in peace with my dad Stompin Tom!!
Today we lost a Canadian Musical Icon. R.I.P. Stompin’ Tom. You will be missed by many. Thoughts and prayers to the family.
There are not many ways to explain the Canadian way other that TOM
God bless
RIP Mr stompin Tom you are a true Canadian legend who stayed true to your home and native land…my sincere condolences to your family…….you will truly be missed.
My husband still holds me true to the lyrics of your consumer’s marketplace Song lyrics…. spending money to save money you ain’t got! But all being said…you are one heckuva Canadian icon and I am so glad to have appreciated you and your music all these years. God Bless you and God Bless your family. Your legend will live on.
R.I.P.
Such sad news, my condolenses to his family. He was a great man and will be missed by all. Thinking of you all.
You are the wind now Tom, RIP
Always was and will be one of my favorite Canadian entertainers…R.I.P.
RIP Tom, you’ve earned it. You will be missed. A true Canadian legend.
one of a kind .. great Canadian .. my idol when I was growing up .. RIP Tom
Your Canadian spirit will not be forgotten and will live on through generations of us. BUST THAT BOARD!
A true Canadian. RIP
Rest in peace thoughts and prayers to the family
You are a legand that people will never forget!!!!
R.I.P. Stompin Tom!!!!
Your music will live forever!!!!
RIP Tom, you were one of a kind and an inspiration! You will be missed! Glad I got to see you in concert!
great memories of seeing him with my dad….. R.I.P Stompin Tom (and dad)
RIP Tom, your songs will live forever!
RIP STOMPIN TOM – there was nobody like you
The end of an era.
Sad news, Stompin’ Tom was a true Canadian. An iconic songwriter who will be missed. Gonna put on Bud the Spud right now in tribute.
RIP TOM…you be miss big time i love your music…
A great Canadian. A great songwriter. A great loss. My thoughts and prayers go out to his family and friends.
it is so sad he is amazing.