Posts Tagged ‘Jim Novak songwriter’

“The Mastodon Conversation”

Saturday, February 24th, 2024

 “The Mastodon Conversation” concerns climate change and environmental stewardship, and it takes the form of a discussion between me and an animal that went extinct about 14,000 years ago.  Here’s a link:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T4iqeF3Jw2I

Two enormous skeletons of Mastodons greet you at the entrance to the Natural History Museum in Ann Arbor.  I’m a fan.  I got a nice selfie on a recent visit.  

At the Natural History Museum
at the Natural History Museum in Ann Arbor

I wrote the song in the spirit of the wonderful British duo of the 1950s-1960s, Michael Flanders and Donald Swann, particularly their collection of songs called The Bestiary.  The best known is “The Hippopotamus” with its stirring chorus, “Mud, mud, glorious mud”, and they also wrote about such beasts as the gnu, the rhino, the warthog, the armadillo and the sloth.  

Flanders and Swann
Playing “Mastodon Conversation” on the 12 string in my studio in Virginia

3 Songs written by Ray Whitley

Thursday, September 21st, 2023

To mark the decade since he passed, I played 3 songs written by Ray Whitley at Songwriters Open Mic this week.  I did some research about Ray, searching online plus checking in by email with Chuck Mitchell, an old friend of his and a fellow performer at celebrated Southern folk music venues of the 1960s-1970s, such as The Bistro on West Peachtree Street in Atlanta.  Ray Whitley was a Georgia native who started writing songs as a staff professional shortly after high school.  At one time, Chuck regularly performed Ray’s song “Making Music Momma,” and I heard it often enough (in Detroit) to learn to play it myself, after a fashion, perhaps 40 years ago.  

Ray Whitley performing

 I remember from my teenage years a hit song by The Tams, the R&B group, called “What Kind of Fool Do You Think I Am,” and the other day I found that Ray had written that one for them, and they had a Billboard and R&B chart hit with it in 1963.  That’s a pretty good range of styles for the first two Ray Whitley songs I was aware of:  a  sweet and slow folk-pop ballad, and a doo-wop song that rocked not only for the Tams but later for Del Shannon.

By now my hunt for Ray’s songs was on in earnest.  I saw numerous mentions of another of Ray’s hits, also done by The Tams, and others, called “Be Young, Be Foolish (But) Be Happy.”  As wonderful as that song is, what grabbed my attention was one called “Think I Feel A Hitchhike Comin’ On.”  With my history of transcontinental hitching in the US and Europe, I wanted to focus on learning that one.  Larry Jon Wilson, another Georgian like Ray,  has a version of it on Youtube, done with his impressive vocal and guitar prowess.  It’s a country song that I feel has a lot in common with songs like Gentle on My Mind, with its wistful wanderlust and straightforward chord changes.  

So those were the three Ray Whitley songs I put together that night:  Making Music Momma, What Kind of Fool, and Hitchhike Comin’ On.  Here’s the link to the video from the open mic:  https://youtu.be/EdEh0lcEHMM

Here’s some sidebar material about Ray.  First, he’s not the only songwriter named Ray Whitley.  There was another Georgian named Ray Whitley, born in 1901, forty-plus years before “our” Ray Whitley, and he was a real-life cowboy who became a popular cowboy actor, and wrote cowboy songs, including one that Gene Autry really liked, the famous “Back in the Saddle Again.”  That Ray has a fairly long wikipedia entry and other online stories, and there are several places online where the two songwriters are totally confused and cowboy Ray is mistakenly given credit for things like working with The Tams.  

Next,  The Bistro is an interesting aspect of the career successes of Ray Whitley.  In the late 1960s and into the 1970s, The Bistro was a major stop on the singer-songwriter circuit, and it wasn’t uncommon for performers to be booked for a full week of shows.  Ray was just the right age to join that bunch of singer-songwriters that played there and/or the Flick, down in Miami.  At those places and others like them, the stages were graced by the likes of the young Jimmy Buffett, Jerry Jeff Walker, Kenny Rogers, Gamble Rogers, Guy Clark, Steve Martin, Joni Mitchell, Gordon Lightfoot, Steve Goodman, and two guys I got to know pretty well in Michigan years later, Michael Smith, and of course, Chuck Mitchell. I have a picture of a poster advertising Ray at The Bistro.

Poster from The Bistro

Ray Whitley died at age 69 in 2013.  Ray had fallen in alcoholism and suffered from depression, and his last address was a homeless shelter in Gainesville, Georgia.  But his youthful energy was strong, his output was impressive, and many friends recall him with fondness. In my version of the Hitchhike Comin’ On song, I use the key change near the end which Larry Jon Wilson’s version has, and what I’ve done is use the key change as an opportunity to write a few new verses, just to show my admiration for this wonderful songwriter as I try to channel a little piece of the appealing charm of his songs, with their eager longing and dreamy yearning.

Jim Novak, September 2023

MAKING MUSIC MOMMA RAY WHITLEY

Hear the rain on the roof, tap-tapping loud and clear,

Don’t it sound soft and sweet, music to your ear.

It’s making music momma, making music momma,

Me and you, we make music too.

Take a bass and a drum, add a tambourine,

Take a bird, add spring, you can hear it sing.

It’s making music momma, making music momma,

Me and you, we make music too.

Just say you love me, bells ring, birds sing

and when I hold you, it feels so good, I knew it would.

Hear the wind through the cracks in the wall, sounding lonely in the night.

Hear the blue bird when it calls, everything’s all right.

It’s making music momma, making music momma,

Me and you, we make music too.

WHAT KIND OF FOOL DO YOU THINK I AM.    RAY WHITLEY

What kind of fool what kind of fool

What kind of fool do you think I am

You think you can go seeing him

Darling, after we had made our plans

 You said I’d be your number one man

 What kind of fool do you think I am?   What kind of fool, do you think I am ?

What kind of fool did you think I’d be

 You said you really really loved me

 Darling you run around all over town

 You build me up then you let me down

 What kind of fool do you think I am?    What do you think I am??

 I won’t be your second choice call

 I’ve got to be your number one,     Or I ain’t gonna love you at all

Darling you run around all over town

You build me up then you let me down…

I FEEL A HITCH-HIKE COMIN’ ON RAY WHITLEY

There’s a mountain over there I’ve got to climb

There’s a sea over there I’ve got to sail

Think Ill be goin’ away at the break of dawn

Think I feel a hitch-hike comin’ on.

Bummed  around in this old town much too long

All the friends I thought I had are mostly gone

Think I’m gonna pack my bags at the break of dawn

Think I feel a hitch-hike comin’ on.

Thought I found the girl that I’ve been waiting for, right here in this town

Pretty girl with ribbons in her hair, the girl she let me down, way down

There’s a voice out there somewhere callin’ me

A few more places left I gotta be

Think I’m gonna pack my bags at the break of dawn

Think I feel a hitch-hike comin’ on.

Thought I found the girl that I’ve been waiting for, right here in this town

Pretty girl with ribbons in her hair, that girl she let me down, way down

There’s a voice out there somewhere callin’ me

A few more places left I gotta be

Think I’ll be on my way at the break of dawn

Think I feel a hitch-hike comin’ on.

(Song by Ray Whitley; additional words below by Jim Novak)

There’s a moon that’s risin’ on a meadow dim

There’s a sunset fallin’ ‘neath Lake Michigan

Think I’ll grab my backpack at the break of dawn

Think I feel a hitchhike comin’ on.

There’s some songs I this guitar I gotta play

There’s some changes and some shapes I’ve yet to learn

Think I’ll grab my backpack at the break of dawn

Think I feel a hitchhike comin’ on.

There’s a cabin by a lake that calls to me

There’s a city with a downtown gallery 

Think I’ll grab my backpack at the break of dawn

Think I feel a hitchhike comin’ on.

Thought I found the girl that I’ve been waiting for, right here in this town

Pretty girl who helped me find my way, that girl she let me down, way down

All my friends are working jobs and digging in

Producing and connecting and a-gettin’ ahead

Think I’ll grab my backpack at the break of dawn

Think I feel a hitchhike comin’ on.

SONGWRITERS OPEN MIC started as a monthly event in Ann Arbor in 1996, and since 2020 has evolved into a weekly event on Zoom, involving songwriters from a couple dozen states and several countries.  Songwriters receive an mp4 video of the songs and conversation. For INFO on participating in Songwriters Open Mic as a performer or audience member, write JimNovakMusic(at)gmail(dot)com

Archive of over 200 half-hour excerpts from Songwriters Open Mic:

https://www.youtube.com/@songwritersopenmicannarbor7761/videos

Link to the recording of Songwriters Open Mic with the 3 songs written by Ray Ripley (Making Music Momma, What Kind of Fool, and Hitchhike Comin’ On), performed by Jim Novak:   https://youtu.be/EdEh0lcEHMM

Songwriters Open Mic On Zoom, 9/13/2023

Back to the FARM

Friday, March 31st, 2023

Performance Lane, offered by Folk Alliance Region Midwest (FARM), provides an opportunity for songwriters to do “two songs or ten minutes” at their online open mic.  The February show is archived at https://www.facebook.com/FolkAllianceRegionMidwestFARM/videos/1619410058508390.     I did an oldie, Maple Sugar Snow (at approximately 1:11, and a rather new one, A River Nearby (at 1:17). 

Note the Michigan State University sweatshirt, worn in recognition of the mass shooting that had happened on campus only 10 days early, in which 3 students were killed and 5 others were injured.  The Spartan Strong Fund has been created to provide a variety of supports to students and staff:  https://givingto.msu.edu/spartan-strong.cfm

Jim Novak on Zoom with host Caroline Barlow

FARM is one of 5 regional affiliates of the Folk Alliance International.  FARM serves 15 states and provinces, and includes Michigan.  The Southeast region, SERFA, covers 12 states including most of Virginia.  The Northeast region (NERFA) serves northern Virginia, including Prince William County, where I now live, and 16 states and provinces of Canada.  

Folk Alliance International, maps of regions of North America

February’s virtual Performance Lane for FARM totaled a dozen stellar performers including Host Caroline Barlow, Carla Ulbrich, Bryce Taylor, The Rough and Tumble, Karyn Oliver, Digawolf, Megan Bee, Aleksi Campagne, Sarah King, Carole Wise and Beth Padgett.

Northern Virginia

Friday, March 31st, 2023

FOLKING AROUND NORTHERN VIRGINIA

The Folk Club of Reston Herndon has been for nearly 40 years “dedicated to the appreciation of music and the preservation of folk traditions.”  Along with their weekly in-person sessions, the Folk Club has a virtual open mic on alternating Mondays.  The virtual open mic’s are archived on Youtube.  I participated on several Mondays this Fall after I moved to Virginia.  For example:

On March 6, 2023, I stopped by (virtually) to play four songs, with the times noted below https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ziJi1iG4aM

Don’t Postpone Joy ( at about 1 minute into the recording), followed by

Center of the Universe (and the Brecht poem Pleasures); later,  

Anyone Who Had a Heart (Burt Bacharach) (at about 1 hour into the recording) and

River Nearby (at 1:38:00)

FCRH’s virtual open mic is organized and hosted bi-weekly by Al Hobson, the group Treasurer; Al also has opened a house concert venue, info at https://artsbarnmusic.org/.  Regulars at the FCRH virtual open mic during my first 6 months or so include talented and entertaining fellow Virginians such as Ron Goad, Jim Nagle, John Druitt, Dan Grove, Bob Boden, Isabella Perelman, among others.

Links for my performances from the FCRH virtual open mic’s in Fall:

September 5, 2022 (my first visit) CCC Boys, First Class View, Greene County Coal. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8A_mAZpKqQ

September 19, 2022. Blue Star in the Window, Mastodon Conversation, Old Strings, Orange Moon https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzddxV6DU1M 

October 3, 2022. How Much Time Have I Got, Green Barracuda, Fake It Til You Make it https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C0ysvcGs0po

October 17, 2022 It’s My Party (Wiener, Gould and Gluck); See You Later Traitor; Ballad of the Old Hitchhiker https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMY1x-dV_Qw 

November 28, 2022 Barmaids and Waitresses, Maple Sugar Snow, Shine When Trouble Shakes You https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HX03C2azBkY 

December 26, 2022 Good King Wenceslaus (trad.), The Day after Christmas, The Magi (Michael Smith), A Wanderer Am I (Michael Smith) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gmlZ8iMUPMs 

Performing over Zoom for the Folk Club of Reston Herndon
Folk Club of Reston Herndon (Virginia)