Saturday, May 15, 2010

Bobby Darin - Simple Song of Freedom




Booby Darin would have turned seventy-four years of age today, exactly one-half of the span he had on Earth. As a hit-maker of the 50's and 60's, he at first glance belongs to the style of lounge singing finger-snapping white guys like Dean Martin, Andy Williams, Frank Sinatra, et al, who made up the last front of show-biz entertainers who reached out to a largely formal, conservative and adult audience. His work in films seems very "square" indeed.

It would not be long before the youth quake and the turmoil of war and civil rights rocked the popular culture of America and Europe and profound changes came to pass.

Darin was one performer who was profoundly influenced by this political turmoil of his times. After the assassination of John Kennedy, he stopped being an entertainer for a three years to assess his life and where the nation was headed. Unlike most of his peers, who stuck to their personas as genial romantics, he spoke out to reach a new generation with his musical compositions and messages. Although his newer music didn't reach as many as his more "safe" hits like "Beyond the Sea" and a cleaned up version of "Mack the Knife", this song speaks to the tenor of the times in the same vein as the group Buffalo Springfield, Donovan or Johnny Cash.

SIMPLE SONG OF FREEDOM


Come and sing a simple song of freedom
Sing it like you've never sung before
Let it fill the air
Tell the people everywhere
We, the people here, don't want a war

Hey there, Mister Black Man can you hear me?
I don't want your diamonds or your game
I do want to be someone known to you as me
and I will bet my life you want the same

Come and sing a simple song of freedom
Sing it like you've never sung before
Let it fill the air
Tell the people everywhere
We, the people here, don't want a war

Seven hundred million are enlisted
Most of what you read, most of what you read, is made of lies
But speaking one to one, ain't it everybody's sun
To wake to in the morning when we rise?

Come and sing a simple song of freedom
Sing it like you've never sung, never sung, before
Let it fill the air
Tell the people everywhere
We, the people here, don't want a war

No doubt some folks enjoy doin' battle
Like presidents, prime ministers and kings
So let's all build them shelves so they can fight among themselves
and leave us be those who want to sing

Come and sing a simple song of freedom
Sing it like you've never, ever, sung before
Let it fill the air
Tell the people everywhere
We, the people here, don't want a war

Come and sing a simple song of freedom
Sing it like you've never, ever, sung before
Speaking one to one
Ain't it everybody's sun
To wake to in the morning when we rise
Speaking one to one
Ain't it everybody's sun
To wake to in the morning when we rise



This summation of Mr. Darin's career comes from the Rock and Roll Piano Man website on youtube:
http://www.youtube.com/user/opurkert


"Bobby Darin cramped everything into the mere 37 years he lived. He was a multi-talented man who played the drums, piano, harmonica, guitar and what not. He was a successful actor, energetic entertainer, and a superb singer. Of course he is known mostly for his interpretations of "Mack The Knife", "Beyond The Sea", his early hits "Splish-Splash" and "Dream Lover". But among the many songs he wrote, arranged and produced, he also wrote and recorded great folk songs. He did a great version of Tim Hardin's "If I Was A Carpenter", his last real hit. After the assasinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy, who's campaign he promoted, he wrote more politically motivated songs. They wouldn't become hits, but they are still great songs.
"Simple Song of Freedom" is just that and unfortunately has lost none of it's topicality. Seems like politicians haven't learned much since the 1960s. This is taken from a 1970's TV Special "A Night With Bobby Darin" and can be found on the DVD of the same name (Umbrella Entertainment), which also has a nice 43 min. biography."

15 comments:

  1. To bad we don't gt thee kind of songs anymore sad--
    he was good

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  2. That he was Heidi. And there doesn't seem to be too many songs today that come up to the caliber of this anti-war ballad. And yet we need them.

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  3. Thanks for posting that Bobby Darin song which I d never heard before,. There is something existential and ultimately hip about Bobby Darin I think. My elder brother played 'Dream Lover' repeatedly during my formative years (so maybe I have been brainwashed?).. but it was his versions of the Brecht/Weill classic 'Mack The Knife' (which I agree was toned down) and the great Leadbelly song 'The Rock Island Line' that gave him his cool credentials and they were well deserved I think. This is a great song in the white American progressive tradition that began with Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger and continued through Darin into the Byrds whose frontman "Jim" Roger McGuinn was his protege in the mid 60s.

    Thanks for posting this excellent tribute to a great musician in a tradition that is not really lost, but is once again 'underground' in American music I think. This is where its creativity comes from but it will again emerge in the mainstream media..... as periodically it is wont to do of course. Interesting blog Doug

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  4. We do need them, and just as much as before, but you know, I think people just don't care so much anymore. Those of us unhappy with how things are going are ridiculed on TV and the net, even by our own government, which is supposed to uphold our freedom of speech.
    As a youngster, I saw Bobby Darin as an amazingly good looking and very romantic man. His "lounge singer" persona was wonderful, and his elopement with Sandra Dee was the most amazingly romantic thing my 12 and 13 year old mind could encompass. Whether it had an impact on my life later, well, I suppose it did, My husband's family tried everything to block our marriage, so we eloped! And spent over 30 years blissfully happy!
    I saw the movie of Mr. Darin's life, and I really enjoyed it. I guess not too many people did,but I did.
    He was a special man, in more ways than one, but like all people, he had his problems as well.
    Thanks for this Doug, I enjoyed listening to him and reading the words to this special song.

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  5. I agree--"hip" is hard to define, but a good general rule is that the performer posessing that quality doesn't fade with time. "Dream Lover" is a great tune, perhaps one with a subversive pro-American message concelaed subliminally in the album pressing. "Beyond the Sea" was one song I still play a lot, of course. Onet thing impressive about Darin was that he was not afraid to cut against the grain. I must admit somehow I'd never heard Darin's cover on that great Leadbelly song. Gotta look up that one for sure. And I totally forgot The Byrds, thanks for the remainder, even though I remember seeing a reunion version of that seminal band live in a San Francisco club on Columbus Street back on a hot April night in 1985.

    Here's hoping that the "indie" music of social awareness will emerge again soon. Thanks for your comments AA.

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  6. Yes, I don't think people do care as much about issues in general. We've been at war for nine years in No-Way-Out-Istan and there's no end in sight. Is this because there is no draft, or is if something more cynical?

    The media certainly does us no favors--even the left-leaning press was hot to invade Iraq in 2003 and now the post-haste regret of some commentators seem like more like guilty admissions than an angry feeling of betrayal at Washington.

    I remember seeing some of those Booby Darin--Sandra Dee musical comedies my parents took me to see at drive-ins (the films were quite safe from the rigors of bedroom passion kids get exposed to nowadays) and of course heard about their realtionship off-screen. That romantic innocence they and other romantic leads brought to the screen represented an era that left us for "good" reasons I suppose, but I personally cannot help but feel a bit wistful about their total loss.
    There was a more recent movie called "Down With Love" with Renee Zellweger and Ewan McGregor which captured the style of those films quite well.

    I haven't seen the Kevin Spacey film yet but I'm sure I will soon now. gather Miss Dee's mother was none too happy about the realtionship at first.

    So happy your own storybook elopement came off so well. Real happiness is so hard to find that sometimes a coulple just has to "seize the day" and leave others to go "tsk tsk".

    Here's a song from one of those Bobby Darin-Sandra Dee movies, taken from a documentary which includes footage of them as a real couple. Thanks Jacquie.

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  7. I do recognise this song but 'tis years since I heard it and I had no idea who wrote it or sang it even. You are right, it is still so very topical and relevant, sad that in the sixties and seventies so many people thought they could make a difference and somehow we find ourselves still fighting the same battles.

    Great song.

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  8. It is a great song. And, like you Iri Ani, it been a long time since I heard it.

    The times do seem to repeat themselves and you wonder why so many voters are so gullible in trusting powerful people. The dangers of corporate-sponsored revisionism are always working against those who remind people of the history of being too trustful.

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  9. I do not think our young people today are as in tune with the world as the generations before them were

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  10. a bit of a sweeping statement crabbyman innit?

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  11. My sister had a couple of his records. 45RPM which she played on her state of the art "Dansette" turntable

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  12. Indeed. A marvelous rendition, and the video itself has a lot of good background on that performance, in tandem with Elvis on that same show no less!

    Thanks for that AA!

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  13. I might not be the best judge of that, Fred, but I do think that the presures of affording higher education and just getting a job and out of the house make it harder for many kids to focus on social issues.

    Many young people volunteer for local causes and such, but perhpas the emphasis on career worries and the electronic gadgetry foisted on them as consumers have made some of them a bit more insular than generations before.

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  14. My firsty record turntable was just a box with a little speaker on it Jeff. Sound quality was not that great an issue--just having a .45 record you could play was enough.

    When I got my first stereo system at 13 years old, with two seperate speakers and an 8-trac tape slot I thought I had really arrived!

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