A song and an artist with layers makes a blog entry more interesting. I spent the day while cleaning and house hunting getting to know a fascinating artist and listening to his genre-bending works; however, it all hinged on one song, his first hit, the song of the day. These days, I spend much more time talking about what I found out about the song, and link my readers to articles and podcasts for further information. Today, though, what initially struck me about this song was my memory with it, and I think that is the topic that is worth the majority of the discussion. But I will give my reader some homework, podcasts that tell the story of the artist, the songwriters, and the legacy of today’s song. I’ll throw a few factoids in along the way.
THE RADIO REMINDS ME OF MY HOME FAR AWAY. On certain occasions songwriter Bill Danoff listened to a bluegrass radio station based out of West Virginia. When he needed a state to name in his breakthrough hit,his home state of Massachusetts didn’t fit the song. Only co-writer, and eventual wife, Taffy Nivert Danoff had been to West Virginia, contributing what she saw in her drives from her home of Washington, DC to her college in Ohio.. The the songwriters hoped somehow that Johnny Cash would sing their song, but up-and-coming singer-songwriter Henry John Deutschendorf, Jr., known better by his stage name John Denver, raised in New Mexico to a father in the Air Force sang the song and took it to #2 on the Hot 100 in 1971. Listeners would think that Denver or at least the songwriters grew up or had some intimidate knowledge of the beautiful gorge on what is now Interstate 64. Maybe somebody on the writing team would have a family member working in the coal towns. After all, the song “Take Me Home, Country Roads,” became the fourth official state song of West Virginia. But Denver, Nivert, and Danoff were just as fake West Virginians as West Virginian senator Joe Manchin is a fake Democrat. That jab was just to reference and SNL skit only because we’re on the subject of West Virginia.
Read “Take Me Home, Country Roads” by John Denver on Genius.
Toots and the Maytals:
Further listening: