His first lyric talks about enjoying a ball game as an escape from a miserable job and a girlfriend who left him when he refused to subsidize her coke habit. The song's signature theme is the "Charge" fanfare, transposed to a minor key. Nobody buys it. His second draft asks the listener to glory in the antics on the field and not to worry about the fate of the Hatians in the baseball factory or about one player and all his pregnant mistresses in each American League city or about all the former players who wasted their best years between AA teams and injuries. His manager tells him to keep trying. He manages to mention the game a little more in his third lyric, where he wishes he could soar away like a home run instead of living the life of a ball at batting practice. Every record company turns it down, even Homestead. Finally, he comes up with a song mentioning nothing of his own job or his ex-wife. He creates a stunning, rousing melody line, playable by r&b bar bands and stadium organists alike. He comes up with a suitable title, "You'll See Me In the Stands." Fighting every impulse, every learned behavior, he succeeds in writing only positive statements about the fantasy world in the ballpark, the great sights, sounds, and smells, where winning is heaven and even losing isn't that bad. But his most sincere praise came for the images other baseball songwriters ignore: the spitting, the cup adjustments, the fights in the stands, the chance to lip-read managers' obscenities on the big scoreboard screen, the pleasant burps with each king-size hot dog, the chance to get drunk in the sunshine in a crowd, until even a White Sox-Indians double-header seems lively. At the pleadings of his aghast agent, he does one more rewrite, trying to be simple and heartfelt about grand slams, no-hitters and double plays. Yet even in this whitebread version, he ends up praising the underpublicized joys of ground rule doubles and pop-up flies to the shortstop. The guy's agent is in the process of signing the song over to a major record producer when the agent gets in trouble with his coke supplier and gets sold something that puts him out of commission for a long time. The song eventually does get recorded, by the songwriter himself, but does not go far.
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2001 COLUMNS 2000 COLUMNS 1999 COLUMNS 1999 COLUMNS 1998 COLUMNS 1997 COLUMNS 1996 COLUMNS 1995 COLUMNS 1986-94 COLUMNS ESSAYS FICTION X-WORDS 'THE BIG BOOK OF MISC.' THE BOOK 'LOSER' MISCmedia, THE MAGAZINE FUTURE PROJECTS CYBER STUFF THINGS I LIKE 'MISC. TALK' DISCUSSION FORUM CLARK'S CULTURE CORRAL: BOOKS, MUSIC, MOVIES REVIEWED AND SOLD (Support MISC. Media; make your Amazon.com purchases thru this link.) |
Copyright 2001 Clark Humphrey,
clark@speakeasy.org.
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