PICKERING, Ont
Jim Borowski  |  by www.canada.com. All rights reserved. 7.12 | 9:21

PICKERING, Ont. (CP) - An emotional yet uplifting funeral for Cape Breton musician John Allan Cameron began with the mournful strains of a bagpipe but ended with the spirited cheer of a fiddle - with friends, family and fans clapping their hands and shouting aloud to Cameron's beloved Celtic tunes. The lively outburst followed a traditional Roman Catholic ceremony Monday in which moments of grief overcame Cameron's widow Angela, who wept as she followed his casket into the church, and son Stuart, who fought back tears as he neared the end of a brief eulogy.

Rev. Leo Campbell told more than 500 people gathered for the ceremony that he will most remember his talented friend for his charm rather than his musicianship. "It was the personality, it was the joy, it was the life and the vitality," said Campbell, who first got to know Cameron in their home of Cape Breton.

"For me, my favourite characteristic of John Allan was the humour. He could see the humour of things and if it wasn't there, he would invent it and put it there," he said to laughter. Cameron, who moved to Pickering several years ago, was known as the godfather of Celtic music for taking the beloved reels and jigs of his home in Mabou, N.

S., to the international stage. He died last week after a lengthy battle with bone marrow cancer and leukemia.

He was 67. Among the notable personalities who came to pay their respects were rocker Tom Cochrane, Blue Rodeo's Greg Keelor and Walter Gretzky. Campbell noted that Cameron suffered greatly over the past year with an "insidious disease that wracked his body.

" Cameron was in hospital for more than a year before finally succumbing to his illness. Cameron's wife Angela, who he affectionately called "Lala", was by his side every day. Stuart, who was with his father when he passed away in the early hours last Wednesday, read aloud parts of a journal Cameron kept to record his beliefs and principles.

"Mom, you know how much he loved you," Stuart added, his voice cracking slightly. The sombre mood turned around with Campbell's lighthearted homily and transformed into a rousing celebration by the end, when all rose to sing and clap along with Cameron's signature song, "Lord of the Dance." After the ceremony, mourners were full of kind words for the gifted guitarist and storyteller.

"He used to always come to the Wayne Gretzky golf tournaments, tennis tournaments, baseball games that we had," said Walter Gretzky. "All we ever had to do was phone and say John we need you..

. and he would say 'What time and where?' " "He was just a real inspiration, as much for his acumen and his decency as a human being as his music," said Cochrane.

Read more on by www.canada.com. All rights reserved.
Keywords: John Allan, Allan Cameron, John Allan Cameron, Cape Breton, Walter Gretzky
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