Book Review - "Steve Goodman: Facing The Music"
If you are younger than 35 or so, then most likely all you know of Steve Goodman is his anthemic "Go Cubs Go", which was originally written for WGN radio (more on this later), and is now played over the PA system at Wrigley Field every time the Cubs win.
Every single one of you (no matter what your age) should read this book, and then go out and buy some Steve Goodman music, because this man was so much more -- although his Cub fandom was a very big part of what made him the man he was.
Where do I begin to review a 729-page biography? Clay Eals, a writer from Seattle (who comes by his Chicago chops honestly; his daughter lives in Chicago), has lovingly and comprehensively written the story of a man who many of us who came of age in the 70's and 80's loved for his music and his frenetic performing style and his love of the Cubs and the fact that he just seemed, well, so "Chicago".
The book takes him, in great detail, from his childhood in Albany Park to the move made by his family, as so many did in the early 1960's, to the suburbs. There his life intersected with a blonde-haired female classmate at Maine East High School who went on to become fairly well-known herself -- Hillary Rodham. We also find out about his first tentative moves to become a musician (to the horror of his parents, who wanted him to be a doctor at first -- how common a story is that? -- but later they became his biggest fans, and one of Goodman's most hauntingly beautiful songs, "My Old Man", is written in tribute to his dad), to his becoming well-known through Arlo Guthrie's iconic recording of Steve's "City of New Orleans" (and also, how John Denver nearly became famous for this song and why it's good that he didn't), to his 15-year battle with leukemia that finally took him, sadly, four days before the Cubs clinched the NL East in 1984.
I was also reminded, often, how those of us who grew up in the Chicago area in the 60's and 70's had so many shared common experiences, and how my life nearly intersected with Steve's on a number of occasions -- his first Chicago apartment was two blocks from where I now live; his father, after a divorce, married a woman whose son I attended high school with; and Steve worked on several occasions with people in the TV business with whom I worked years ago, and at least one who works with me now. The places he played at most -- the Earl of Old Town and Somebody Else's Troubles (named after another one of Steve's songs) -- were places I frequented in the 70's and early 80's.
Steve moved to Los Angeles in 1980 to try to revive a recording career that had flagged (during his life, none of his albums ever sold more than 50,000 copies; his popularity soared after his death, when his family cheerfully accepted three Grammys given for his songs), but even then, kept his Chicago connection. It was then that he wrote "A Dying Cub Fan's Last Request", a song that got him briefly banned from Wrigley Field by Dallas Green, who felt that the song glorified the "lovable loser" image that Green was trying to shed. Green was right about that, but wrong about the song: it didn't glorify lovable losing, but lamented it. Goodman got back into the good graces of Green and the Cubs thanks to WGN program director Dan Fabian, who in early 1984 was looking for an intro song to replace the then-dated "It's A Beautiful Day For A Ballgame". After hearing Steve interviewed by Roy Leonard (one of Goodman's longtime champions on local radio), he asked him to write a song... and "Go Cubs Go" (which Lou Piniella charmingly called "Go Cubs Win" last year) was the result. Tribune columnist Eric Zorn wrote this blog entry last September that tells more of this part of the story. From the book, here's a quote from John McDonough that shows how he knew Steve's "A Dying Cub Fan's Last Request" spoke to the soul of the Cubs fan:
This passage -- not even from the main body of the book; it was a sidenote (Eals helpfully puts footnotes on the margins of each page), I think sums up who and what Steve Goodman was (and you'll pardon the profanity, but that, too, was part of him):
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33 comments
Comments
Steve Goodman
Thanks for the heads up on the book Al. I'm going to go out and get it.
Like most Cubs and Steve Goodman fans I picked up his CDs because i loved Go Cubs Go and A Dying Cub Fans Last Request and discovered some great songs.
My favorites besides the 2 Cub ones
Lincoln Park Pirates (a song about tow trucks in Chicago)
You Never Even Call Me By My Name (takeoff on Country Western Songs)
If Your Life Was on Videotape (He seemed to predict Reality TV 20 years before ithappened)
He also wrote the City of New Orleans.
by cubstoseriesby100 on Jan 5, 2008 11:41 AM CST reply actions 0 recs
On another note
And it better be the first song when they win it all if they're home.
I have also performed this song a couple of times at funerals and it's in my Dad's wishes to be performed at his when he passes.
There used to be a Steve Goodman tribute concert. I lost touch with the organizers a few years ago I wonder if it still goes on.
by cubstoseriesby100 on Jan 5, 2008 11:44 AM CST reply actions 0 recs
Also
I was born in 68 so you're a bit older but we probably share some common experiences.
Then there's the degrees of seperation game where almost any 2 Chicagoans can talk and find someone they know in common outside their connection.
by cubstoseriesby100 on Jan 5, 2008 11:48 AM CST reply actions 0 recs
Not to brag...
Kasey
by kaseyi on Jan 5, 2008 12:01 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Go ahead and brag.
by Al on Jan 5, 2008 1:04 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Thanks to his requests for help here
Kasey
by kaseyi on Jan 5, 2008 3:25 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
(and by his requests..I mean)
by kaseyi on Jan 5, 2008 3:26 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Hard to believe...
by Mike Vails Evil Twin on Jan 5, 2008 12:10 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Triad freeform radio
It's got a thin crack in the top, and just a bit of a warp to the neck now (most likely due to its age, even strung with XL .009's), but it still has good tone.
by MN exile on Jan 5, 2008 1:10 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
MN exile - Saul's webpage
If you want to catch up on what Saul's doing these days, he has a site at http://pages.ripco.net/~saxmania/triad.html
He's also broadcasting on the net, and there's a link to his Live365 station on the site.
That's cool that you have his guitar! I got in touch with him several years ago and got him to sell me copies of a couple of Triad shows. I also still have a bunch of the old Cosmozodiacs that I occasionally break out when I'm feeling nostalgic. Those were the days!
by Mike Vails Evil Twin on Jan 5, 2008 2:09 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Ahh, memories...
Still have my last edition of the old Daily News, though. Used to walk through the Sun-Times/Daily News building as a lunchtime shortcut when I worked downtown years ago, the glassed walkway past the presses, if you recall.
I still play the old box a few times a year, got a couple of electrics as well, none of the old ones I had and loved from back then though. Some of them I could kick myself for selling...
by MN exile on Jan 5, 2008 2:27 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
And I forgot...
Jeebus, I'm getting old...
by MN exile on Jan 5, 2008 2:28 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
No, you're not.
by Al on Jan 5, 2008 2:41 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
That's when they were good
by BigJohnAZ on Jan 6, 2008 12:23 AM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Great book,
by moldyfolky on Jan 5, 2008 12:16 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
thanks Al
by wccubfan on Jan 5, 2008 12:42 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Tears in my eyes...
But he's with us any time the Cubs win, cuz I hear him sing every time.
God bless you, Steve!
by Cubfansince1957 on Jan 5, 2008 12:45 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Hey, you and me both.
by Al on Jan 5, 2008 1:15 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
My two Steve Goodman memories
I remember a buzz going through the audience at Gaspar's one night (Belmont & Southport, became Schuba's, don't know what it is now) when Goodman was there, and I don't even recall who was performing. I do believe he went up and did a couple guest numbers on their tiny stage.
And I remember a long ago "Chicago artists night" at Ravinia, where the bill was Bonnie Koloc (great voice, whatever became of her?), Steve Goodman, Wilderness Road - easily one of my favorite bands of that era, and a pity they never really went beyond a regional act, and John Prine at the top of the bill. Quite a night.
by MN exile on Jan 5, 2008 1:15 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Oh, yeah, and one more thing
(I found a couple of nitpicks, including the misidentification of WBBM-Channel 2 as Chicago's "ABC" affiliate)
Picking just one more nit, I do believe they're both O&Os, are they not?
by MN exile on Jan 5, 2008 1:19 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
True.
(O&O -- "owned and operated" -- stations are actually owned by the network. Affiliates are owned by other companies and sign agreements to carry network programming. In Chicago, all the network stations -- CBS, NBC, ABC, Fox -- are O&O.)
by Al on Jan 5, 2008 1:49 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Here, its CBS & Fox
Oddly enough, the FSN shop used to be part of WCCO when it was Midwest Sports Channel.
Now, they're stuck with Gopher sports being on Big Ten, which has no carriage on cable here, but its very formation put a lot of crew folks on the sidelines. No home & away feeds, just one, and on top of that, almost no one's actually seeing it.
Since I've kind of moved away from sports stuff, that's less of a growler than it would otherwise be, but I am not unsympathetic to those still in the game.
by MN exile on Jan 5, 2008 1:58 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
Steve's albums
Those albums on the-then Elektra-Asylum label were his best shot at big-time stardom. As a young radio guy music director at the adult-contemporary/oldies station in Aurora, I got those songs on the air as much as I could. (Much to the chagrin of the people who ran the station -- "Who's this guy?" -- was the usual refrain)
Goodman got the push that was available in that era from a big time record company, and got some airplay nationwide, and charted -- but still, the songs didn't fly. I'm still not sure why, because similar acoustic artists with were making a go of it in that time. Bewildering....because his material stood up to ANY other artist in the genre.
If you do come across any of his last albums, (or for that matter ANY of his albums) in used stores, or on EBay, snap 'em up -- you won't be sorry.
by San Diego Smooth Jazz Man on Jan 5, 2008 3:35 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
You can, of course...
by Al on Jan 5, 2008 4:16 PM CST up reply actions 0 recs
He was a good man
Like many singer songwriters, Goodman's best energy came across live. Studio albums rarely capture that magic and intimacy with the audience. I love the studio cuts, but the live performances are special. There's a collection of live stuff from the Earl available. Look for it. Between itunes, emusic and cds, you can get pretty much buy everything he ever recorded and I can't recommend him enough.
I ordered the Eals book while I listened to him being interviewed on NPR. What a shock to hear Goodman's name on the radio after all these years. I have taken to randomly skipping through the book, rather than read straight through. Eals' approach is way too detailed for my taste and it feels too dry and textbook-like at times. But there are gems and memories in it that are worth the read. It's a book that deserves support.
Go Cubs Go.
by RavenswoodRob on Jan 5, 2008 4:08 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Thanks Al
I was doing some writing today and trying to figure out who to listen to.
Popped in some Steve Goodman and my muse returned and I finished a story I've been working on since dinosaurs roamed the earth.
by cubstoseriesby100 on Jan 5, 2008 4:24 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Just got an email from Clay Eals...
So... that explains why someone who posted in the other thread today couldn't locate it. I suppose you could contact Rand Smith and see if he still has some available that you could buy. Or, wait a couple of months and get the second edition, which will have corrections in it.
by Al on Jan 5, 2008 4:24 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Recommended listening
http://www.amazon.com/Easter-Tapes-Steve-Goodman/dp/B000000DM8/
by ExNorthsider on Jan 5, 2008 5:17 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
I highly recomand the book
by stevegoodman on Jan 5, 2008 6:31 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
I'm a big Goodman fan.
Anyway - a couple of my Goodman favorites
Don't Go Looking For Trouble and Blue Umbrella (Blue Umbrella may have been written by Prine - it was recorded by both - the two's work always sort of blended together although Prine has a larger number of great songs to his credit)
by TR on Jan 6, 2008 10:09 AM CST reply actions 0 recs
Although Goodman was before my time....
In discussing his friendship with Goodman, he introduced "Banana Republics" by saying, "I always knew there was a connection from Chicago to the tropics." LOL!
by ctcoff99 on Jan 6, 2008 12:29 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
Alexandria VA and Steve
"A Dying Cub Fan's Last Request", accross the street from Wrigley Field gives me chils everytime I see it. I am looking forward to reading the biography when it is re-released.
by gdog on Jan 6, 2008 5:35 PM CST reply actions 0 recs
if you like goodman
by stevegoodman on Jan 6, 2008 9:11 PM CST reply actions 0 recs

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