Retro Redux: Mysterious Musical Occurrences

Retro Redux: Mysterious Musical Occurrences
It started innocently enough. I was reading a magazine and I noticed a print ad featuring John Travolta. I think he was selling watches, but the gist of it seemed to be that he was proud to be a pilot — maybe even more so than he was to be an actor. I won't comment on that, but I remember thinking that whenever I see Travolta I always think of Tony Manero strutting down the sidewalk to the sound of the Bee Gees singing "Stayin' Alive." But here's what was odd. A short time later I was driving to the store, listening to my favorite oldies station, and that very song began playing on the radio. OK, no big deal, but that was just the beginning. The next day I wrote a piece about Hoyt Axton, and one of the key points I made was that he'd written a song called "Greenback Dollar" and it not only established him as a composer, but later become a big hit for the Kingston Trio. Once I'd finished writing the piece and saved it for publication the next day, I settled down in front of the TV to watch a DVD we'd rented, a movie called Thank You For Smoking. After watching the film – which was, by the way, very good – I was amazed to hear the Kingston Trio singing "Greenback Dollar" over the ending credits. I guess you could say that it was just another coincidence, but there was more to come. The next day I was reading a novel and the TV was tuned to one of those cable music channels. You know the ones I mean — a different channel for every genre and sub-genre, and sometimes they have some pretty good stuff but they also feature a lot of lesser-known musicians. One of those -  a female singer – began warbling "Walkin' After Midnight," and I put down my book for a moment and listened. Not bad, I thought, but she's no Patsy Cline. I continued reading while the song played, and as I read I discovered that one of the characters in the book was walking into a room where a depressed girl was listening to music. The song she was listening to? Patsy Cline singing "Walkin' After Midnight." I am not making any of this up. (A phrase that's often used by one of my favorite humor writers, Dave Barry.) I can only think of two possible explanations. Either I'm going crazy – a distinct possibility – or a musical gremlin has inhabited my world. I can hardly wait for Halloween.

Retro Redux: Hoyt Axton – Modern Renaissance Man

Retro Redux: Hoyt Axton – Modern Renaissance Man
The dictionary defines Renaissance Man as "a person who has wide interests and is expert in several areas," but it might be easier to just show a picture of Hoyt Axton. For four decades the multi-talented performer was a genre-crossing composer and singer as well as a busy TV and movie actor, and he did it all very, very well. Axton grew up in Oklahoma with music very much a part of his life — his mother co-wrote "Heartbreak Hotel," and young Hoyt studied classical piano and guitar. But as he approached adulthood he actually leaned more toward athletics, attending college with the help of a football scholarship. Unfortunately that didn't work out too well, and after some time in the Navy the young man again took up music, relocating to San Francisco and immersing himself in the folk-music world of the early 1960s. Hoyt worked hard and began making a few appearances as a singer, but his first solid success came as a songwriter. His own early performances of "Greenback Dollar" didn't really get a lot of attention, but when he sold the song to the well-established Kingston Trio, it became a top-ten hit for the group and kick-started his career too. He was able to record his first album as a singer and also found another outlet for his talent — as an actor. He had a natural warmth and charisma, and his Oklahoma twang made him a natural for Westerns. He began making guest appearances on Bonanza and other TV shows, followed by spots in movies. It was the beginning of a successful parallel career, one that found him eventually playing all kinds of roles and co-starring in many movies, but it was his music that was still the core of his performing life. Through the late 1960s and early 1970s he continued to be disappointed in his own record sales, but as a songwriter he was much in demand. The death of a friend from a drug overdose inspired him to write "The Pusher," which achieved hit status for Steppenwolf. Hoyt's own struggles with addiction helped shape some of his other songs through the years, including "Snowblind Friend," and a decade later, "The No No Song," which struck gold for Ringo Starr. One of his biggest breaks as a composer occurred when he was the opening act for Three Dog Night and they heard his "Joy To The World." It soon became the group's first number-one, and they later successfully recorded his "Never Been To Spain." Eventually Hoyt's own singing efforts began to pay dividends, allowing him to hit the charts with several songs, among them 1974's "Boney Fingers," and 1979's "Della and the Dealer." His record sales were up and down over the last two decades of his life, but he continued recording and acting too. Unfortunately, a 1995 stroke began a period of ill health and he died in 1999 at age 61, leaving behind a rich legacy of unforgettable music.