February 19, 2021 —– Chart #79
Hello Musical Friends,
Welcome to Thaw Out Friday (TOF). Today let’s go to 1979 and an artist that has had a long career, but only one hit that I can remember. “Romeo’s Tune” is a song recorded by Steve Forbert, released in 1979. It was the lead single from his album Jackrabbit Slim. The song became an international hit during the winter of 1980. “Romeo’s Tune” did best in Canada, where it became a Top 10 hit. It was Forbert’s only major charting single.
Samuel Stephen “Steve” Forbert (born December 13, 1954) is an American pop music singer-songwriter. Bob Harris of BBC Radio 2 said Forbert has “One of the most distinctive voices anywhere.” His 1979 song “Romeo’s Tune” reached No. 11 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and No. 13 on Billboard’s Adult Contemporary Chart. It also spent two weeks at No. 8 in Canada. Forbert’s first four albums all charted on the Billboard 200 chart, with Jack Rabbit Slim certified gold. In 2003, his Any Old Time album was nominated for a Grammy Award in the Best Traditional Folk category. Forbert has released nineteen studio and three live albums.
Forbert’s songs have been recorded by several artists, including Rosanne Cash, Keith Urban, Marty Stuart and Webb Wilder. In 2017, a tribute album, An American Troubadour: The Songs of Steve Forbert, was released, with covers of his songs by twenty-one artists. In September 2018, he released his self-penned memoir, Big City Cat: My Life In Folk Rock, with editor Therese Boyd. It accompanied the release of his 19th studio album The Magic Tree on Blue Rose Music.
Forbert was born in Meridian, Mississippi. As a child, he fell in love with music, even playing air guitar in a pretend band he called The Mosquitos. Due to a fascination with Top 40 radio, he proclaimed himself a “music junkie.” At 17, he started writing songs, and soon moved to New York City in 1976, to experience the punk rock scene of the 1970s. There he performed on the street to passersby in Greenwich Village, and had early shows as a singer with a guitar and harmonica at punk club CBGB before moving on to folk venues Kenny’s Castaways and Folk City.
Forbert signed a recording contract with Nemperor in 1978, and they released his debut album Alive on Arrival that year. While some, like Village Voice, called him “the new Dylan,” of any comparison to Bob Dylan, he said, “You can’t pay any attention to that. It was just a cliché back then, and it’s nothing I take seriously. I’m off the hook – I don’t have to be smarter than everybody else and know all the answers like Bob Dylan.”
Even though the sleeve of his second album Jackrabbit Slim stated that “Romeo’s Tune” is “dedicated to the memory of Florence Ballard”, the song is not really about the Supremes singer who died in 1976. The song, which went to No. 11, was actually written about a girl from Forbert’s hometown of Meridian, Mississippi, but was dedicated to Ballard because, as Forbert explained, “that seemed like such bad news to me and such sad news. She wasn’t really taken care of by the music business, which is not a new story.” The piano part on “Romeo’s Tune” was played by former Elvis Presley pianist Bobby Ogdin.
Jackrabbit Slim was recorded completely live at Quadrophonic Studio in Nashville, Tennessee, and record producer by John Simon, who had worked with the Band. Jackrabbit Slim peaked at No. 54 in the UK Albums Chart. The album reached No. 20 on the Billboard Top 200 album chart.
Forbert also had a cameo appearance in Cyndi Lauper’s “Girls Just Want To Have Fun” video, playing her boyfriend.
In 1984, Forbert had a disagreement with his record company Nemperor and contractual issues prevented him from recording for a number of years afterwards. His 1988 album, Streets of This Town, and the 1992 followup The American in Me, were released by Geffen Records. They received significant airplay.
In the years following, Forbert recorded more albums of songs he wrote and sang, accompanied by his guitar. He maintained a constant touring presence as well.
By 1985, Forbert sought out new inspiration and relocated to Nashville. His tribute album to Jimmie Rodgers, Any Old Time, was nominated for a 2004 Grammy Award in the Best Traditional Folk category. In 2006, he was inducted into the Mississippi Music Hall of Fame, and in 2007, Keith Urban covered his hit “Romeo’s Tune.” The same year, Forbert’s music was featured in the film Margot at the Wedding starring Nicole Kidman.
Forbert wrote new music in support of the Occupy Wall St. movement. He also began doing photography using an old LG phone. An exhibit of his cell phone photographs opened at the Tinney Contemporary Art Gallery in Nashville in September 2011.
In 2012, he joined Blue Corn Music, and they released Over With You, produced by Chris Goldsmith (the Blind Boys of Alabama), that same year. Musical backing on the record included Ben Sollee on cello and bass, with Ben Harper guesting on guitar on several tracks. American Songwriter stated “it’s all lovely, melancholy, lyrically moving and beautifully performed” and “Like Warren Zevon, Gram Parsons, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, and Bruce Springsteen, Steve Forbert has left his unmistakable imprint on the landscape of American music.”
After the destruction caused by Hurricane Sandy in 2012, Forbert released a music video, “Sandy,” to raise awareness about the storm and its aftermath.
In 2013, Blue Corn Music re-released Forbert’s first two albums, Alive on Arrival and its gold-certified follow-up by Jackrabbit Slim. That year marked the 35th anniversary of the release of Alive on Arrival, and Forbert played that album in its entirety at a number of shows. Alive on Arrival was profiled as one of the greatest debut albums ever in the book Please Allow Me To Introduce Myself.
In 2017 Forbert received a cancer diagnosis. As a result, he had one kidney removed, received chemotherapy and today is cancer free.[29]
And here he is performing Romeo’s Tune in 2019: https://youtu.be/ypHQBgact6E
Keep rockin’ my friends,
Stan