Sunday, November 6, 2016

For What Its Worth




Decisions, decisions. We’re faced with them every day. What to eat for dinner.  Who to vote for. Red or white wine. Should I stay or should I go?
    
Many years ago, I was faced with a very difficult career decision. I had the choice of staying in a safe, comfortable writing job or taking a more challenging position where I’d either make a name for myself or be out on my ear very quickly.
          
That weekend, I couldn’t muster the confidence to make a final decision. Then, driving to work Monday morning, I happened to hear “Wasted On The Way”  by Crosby, Stills and Nash. The lyrics gave me the mental shove I needed.
                  Oh, when you were young
                  Did you question all the answers
                  Did you envy all the dancers
                  Who had all the nerve?
                  Look around you now                 
                  You must go for what you wanted
                  Look at all my friends who did
                  And got what they deserved. 
        
Unfortunately, the oldies don’t contain the answers to all of life’s mysteries. But if you listen closely, you might discover food for thought. There’s advice, social commentary, observations about life and living. Proverbs and truisms. Bright little gems you may have missed before.

So next time you’re looking for a little inspiration, common sense or unbiased guidance, don’t consult a shrink, Plato or tarot cards.
          
Just turn on the radio.





Nobody’s right if everybody’s wrong.
                 
                  “For What It’s Worth”
                  Buffalo Springfield

  
You can’t please everyone
so you’ve got to please yourself.

“Garden Party”
 Rick Nelson


         










           No lover’s promise ever came with a maybe.
        
             “Stars”
                        Simply Red

           I took off my watch and found I had all the time in the world.

                  “Time for Living”
                  The Association

         Wake up and get your education
         So you can keep your family alive.
        Get away from negative situations.
        They will only bring you a lot of frustration.

                  “Only the Strong Survive”
                    Jerry Butler

       Why in the world are we here?
       Surely not to live in pain and fear.

                “Instant Karma”
                 John Lennon


       People say believe half of what you see,
       and none of what you hear.

         “I Heard It Through The Grapevine”
         Marvin Gaye

      A man hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest.

          “The Boxer”
          Simon and Garfunkel

       God grant me the serenity to remember who I am.

        “Games People Play”
         Joe South


When I’m 33, I’ll quit. That’s the time when a man has to do something else. I can’t say what it will definitely be. I couldn’t bear to end up as an Elvis Presley and sing in Las Vegas with all those housewives and old ladies coming in with their handbags. It’s really sick.

              -Mick Jagger, 1972


     What a drag it is getting old.

     “Mother’s Little Helper”
      The Rolling Stones


     Don’t hang on. Nothing lasts forever but the earth and sky.
     It slips away. And all your money won’t another minute buy.

    “Dust In The Wind” 
     Kansas


Young and beautiful,
someday your looks will be gone.

“Love Will Keep Us Together”    
         The Captain and Tennille


Lighten up while you still can.

         “Take It Easy”
         The Eagles



 Well it seems to me that you have seen
too much in too few years.

         “19th Nervous Breakdown”
         The Rolling Stones



 Old Cody, Junior took me over
Said “You’re gonna find the world is smoulderin.”
If you get lost come on home to Green River.

         “Green River”
         Creedence Clearwater Revival     


You can spend all your time making money,
you can spend all your love making time.

         “Take It To The Limit”
         The Eagles


And you, of the tender years
Can’t know the fears
That your elders grew by.

         “Teach Your Children”
         Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young



For you know that it’s a fool
who plays it cool
By making his world a little colder.

         “Hey Jude”
                  The Beatles



“There’s no time to lose,” I heard her say.
Catch your dreams before they slip away.

         “Ruby Tuesday”
         The Rolling Stones

They while away the hours
In their ivory towers
To be covered up with flowers
In the back of a black limosene.
          
       “Games People Play”
         Joe South


Don’t trust your soul
to no backwoods Southern lawyer.

         “The Night The Lights Went Out In Georgia”
         Vicki Lawrence



All work and no play
has just cost me a wife.

         “Take A Letter Maria”
         R.B. Greaves

You shouldn’t let other people get your kicks for you.

        "Like a Rolling Stone"
          Bob Dylan
 

 We are but a moment’s sunlight
fading in the grass.

         “Get Together”
         The Youngbloods







No matter what you do,
You’ll never get away from you.

         “Kicks”
          Paul Revere and the Raiders



Where life’s river flows
No one really knows
‘Til someone’s there to show the way
To lasting love.

         “Everlasting Love”
         Carl Carlton




Without love, where would you be now?

         “Long Train Running”
         The Doobie Brothers



When you believe in things
that you don’t understand
then you suffer.
Superstition ain’t the way.

         “Superstition”
         Stevie Wonder


Oz never did give nothing to the Tinman that he didn’t already have.

         “Tinman”
         America


Love has a nasty habit of
disappearing overnight.

         “I’m Looking Through You”
         The Beatles


Your ever-lastin summer, you can see it fadin’ fast,
So you grab a piece of something that you think is gonna last.

         “Reelin’ In The Years”
         Steely Dan


You, always contemplating happiness,
in case it should find you—
Can’t you see that it’s all around you?

         “Pied Piper” 
         Crispian St. Peter


 A friend will always be there
if you’re wrong, or if you’re right.

         “I Wonder What She’s Doing Tonight?”
         Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart



But there never seems to be enough time
to do the things you want to do
once you find them.

         “Time In A Bottle”
         Jim Croce


Hey farmer, farmer,
put away the D.D.T now,
Give me spots on my apples
But leave me the birds and bees.

         “Big Yellow Taxi”
         Joni Mitchell

• The more I see, the less I know for sure. - John Lennon


When I was younger, so much younger than today
I never needed anybody’s help in anyway.
But now these days are gone, I’m not so self-assured.
Now I find I’ve changed my mind,
I’ve opened up the doors.

         “Help”
                  The Beatles


         Do you only care about the bleeding crowd,
         how about a needy friend?

                  “Easy To Be Hard”
                  Three Dog Night
        
        

         It’s a long, long road
         from which there is no return.
         While we’re on the way to there
         why not share?

                  “He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother”
                  The Hollies


        
         Life is too short to have sorrow.
         We may be here today and gone tomorrow.

                  “Tell It Like It Is”
                  Aaron Neville

        
        
         You see, war is not the answer
         for only love can conquer hate.

                  “What’s Going On”
                  Marvin Gaye


        
         It’s so easy to hurt others
         when you can’t feel pain.

                  “Rich Girl”
                  Hall and Oates

 Q. What’s the smartest thing you ever heard anybody in rock & roll say?
  A. Be-bop-a-lula, she’s my baby. - Paul Simon
        
         If I’d never loved
         I never would have cried.

                  “I Am A Rock”
                  Simon and Garfunkle
        

        
          

         Life is very short and there’s no time
         for fussing and fighting, my friend.

                  “We Can Work It Out”
                  The Beatles

        
         No one can tell what the future knows.

                  “This Is It”
                  Kenny Loggins


         You may say that I’m a dreamer.
         But I’m not the only one.

                  “Imagine”
                  John Lennon

        
        
         Now I’m not the kind
         to live in the past.
         The years run too short,
         and the days too fast.

                  “Time Passages”
                  Al Stewart



         You gotta make your own kind of music,
         sing your own special song.
         Even if nobody else sings along.

                  “Make Your Own Kind Of Music”
                  Mama Cass



        Yeah, city folk drivin in a black limousine,
        A lotta sad people thinkin' that's mighty keen.


                  Thank God I’m A Country Boy
                  John Denver

        
        
        
         And in the end,
         The love you take
         Is equal to
         The love you make.

                  “The End”
                  The Beatles










Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Shedding new light on "He Ain't Heavy"





Well, it appears I stand corrected.

While driving down to Florida before Christmas I was listing to the Sixties Satellite Survey on Sirius XM Radio. The program was counting down the Top 40 hits from that week in December 1969.

Host Lou Simon introduced the Hollies song “He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother” and explained how the title had originally come from a 1926 Mary Pickford silent film.

Say what?

Like many people, I’d always believed the title came from the 1938 movie Boys Town starring and Spencer Tracy as Father Flannigan. (Actually, the phrase was spoken in Men of Boys Town.)

So I decided Wisdom of the Oldies needed to take a closer look.

In his 1884 book The Parables of Jesus, James Wells related the story of a tiny Scottish girl who was seen carrying a large baby boy. After watching the girl struggle, a bystander asked if she was tired. Surprisingly, the child replied “ No, he’s not heavy; he’s my brother.”

The story of the little Scottish girl was also mentioned in a 1918 publication by Ralph Waldo Trine titled The Higher Powers of Mind and Spirit. This time, after someone noted how heavy the child must be, the girl answered 'He's na heavy. He's mi brither.’

Roe Fulkerson, the first editor of Kiwanis magazine published a column in September 1924 carrying the title "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother".   The article talks about Fulkerson's sighting of "a spindly and physically weak lad" carrying a baby and "staggering towards a neighboring park".

"'Pretty big load for such a small kid,' I said as I met him." "'Why, mister,' he smiled, 'he ain't heavy, he's my brother.' "

This was the first time the phrase was spoken as it would be written years later in the song.

According to the Boys Town publication Teachable Moments,  Father Flanagan was paging through a copy of Ideal magazine in 1943 when he saw an image of an older boy carrying a younger boy on his back. The caption read, “He ain’t heavy, mister… he’s my brother.”


Immediately, the priest was reminded of a similar scene at a Boys Town picnic many years before. Father Flanagan wrote to the magazine and requested permission to use the image and quote. The magazine agreed, and Boys Town adopted them both as its new brand.

Mary Pickford
So what about America’s Sweetheart? Supposedly in a 1926 silent film drama, Mary Pickford portrayed a “plucky heroine” carrying a child on her back. When a stranger offered to assist, Mary’s reply was shown on screen on a title card: “Thanks Mister, but I don’t need any help. He ain’t heavy, he’s my brother.”

So there you go. Maybe too much information for some about the title origins of that 1969 Hollies smash hit.

I find it fascinating.

 Here are more interesting tidbits about the song:

It was written by veteran songwriters Bobby Scott (who also wrote “A Taste of Honey”) and Bob Russell. Russell was fighting cancer at the time and died not long after the song was released.

The song hit Number 1 in the UK and Number 7 in the US.
Joe Cocker turned it down. 

A young Reg Dwight (later known as Elton John) played piano and was paid 12 pounds for his work.

Just a few things to contemplate next time you hear the song on the radio.









Thursday, November 5, 2015

The Rock and Roll Hall of Shame





The 2016 Nominees for the Hall of Fame have been announced and include some of my all time favorites! The J.B.s, Yes, Nine Inch Nails and N.W.A.

Say what?

Well they did stoop to include Chicago and The Spinners. How in the world did two great groups like that make the list? 



Chicago has sold over 40 million albums with 23 gold albums and 21 Top Ten singles. “If You Leave Me Now” and Make Me Smile” are two of my all time favorite songs.

The Spinners first hit “I’ll Be Around” sold over a million copies alone.

On the other hand, one of the 2015 inductees, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band had what has been described as a “brief existence and produced little in the way of commercial success.”

Say what?

So now you know who may get in in 2016. Let’s take a look at artists and groups who are NOT in and probably never will be:

Neil Sedaka, Connie Francis, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Sonny and Cher, Barry White, ELO, the Doobie Brothers, Steppenwolf, Harry Nilsson and the Turtles.

Outraged yet?

How about Johnny Rivers, the Moody Blues, Jan & Dean, Grand Funk Railroad, Joan Baez, Bon Jovi, Joe Cocker, Jim Croce, the Bee Gees, Leslie Gore, Mary Wells and the Ventures.

There are many more deserving artists out in the cold, but my head is about to explode, so I will stop there.

Perhaps one of the most infuriating omissions, in my opinion, is Neil Sedaka.

I have been fortunate enough to interview Neil twice. Once when I was Star Reporter for my junior high school newspaper. Then again a couple of years ago. Neil has always been most gracious with his time, which is another reason why he is so beloved in the business.

Neil's career started in 1957 and took off in 1959 when Connie Francis recorded hiss tune, “Stupid Cupid.” He and Howard Greenfield’s composition of “Where the Boys Are” was Connie’s biggest hit.

Naturally, I don’t have to remind you about all the great songs he wrote and recorded himself. “Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen” will be in our brains when we’re in our 70’s. By the way, he’d sold over 25 million records by 1963.

The British Invasion put an end to many male singer’s careers, but Neil continued working as a songsmith and produced hit records for Frank Sinatra, Tom Jones and the Fifth Dimension.

Of course, everyone knows Sedaka was Back in the 70’s. “Love Will Keep Us Together”  was a number one hit for the Captain and Tennille as well as a Grammy winner as Record of the Year.

I asked Neil which song he thought was his finest.  He replied he hasn’t written it yet.

I also wondered if he truly missed “The Hungry Years.” He told me he didn’t write that song about himself, he wrote it for Sonny & Cher.

So there you have it, the fabulously talented Sedaka, and  60’s superstars Sonny & Cher, all snubbed by the Hall.

Who do you think should be in?

Maybe Neil will write another smash at age 76 and someone on the nominating committee will sit up and take notice.