Goodman, Steve, 1948-1984

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<p>Steven Benjamin Goodman (July 25, 1948 – September 20, 1984) was an American folk music singer-songwriter from Chicago. He wrote the song "City of New Orleans," which was recorded by Arlo Guthrie and many others including Joan Baez, John Denver, The Highwaymen, and Judy Collins; in 1985, it received a Grammy award for best country song, as performed by Willie Nelson. Goodman had a small but dedicated group of fans for his albums and concerts during his lifetime, and is generally considered a musician's musician. His most frequently sung song is the Chicago Cubs anthem, "Go Cubs Go". Goodman died of leukemia in September 1984.</p>

<p>Born on Chicago's North Side to a middle-class Jewish family, Goodman began writing and performing songs as a teenager, after his family had moved to the near north suburbs. He graduated from Maine East High School in Park Ridge, Illinois, in 1965, where he was a classmate of Hillary Clinton. Before that, however, he began his public singing career by leading the junior choir at Temple Beth Israel in Albany Park. In the fall of 1965, he entered the University of Illinois and pledged the Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity, where he, Ron Banyon, and Steve Hartmann formed a popular rock cover band, "The Juicy Fruits". He left college after one year to pursue his musical career. In the early spring of 1967, Goodman went to New York, staying for a month in a Greenwich Village brownstone across the street from the Cafe Wha?, where Goodman performed regularly during his brief stay there. Returning to Chicago, he intended to restart his education but he dropped out again to pursue his musical dream full-time after discovering the cause of his continuous fatigue was actually leukemia, the disease that was present during the entirety of his recording career, until his death in 1984. In 1968 Goodman began performing at the Earl of Old Town and The Dangling Conversation coffeehouse in Chicago and attracted a following.</p>

<p>By 1969, Goodman was a regular performer in Chicago, while attending Lake Forest College. During this time Goodman supported himself by singing advertising jingles.</p>

<p>In September 1969 he met Nancy Pruter (sister of R&B writer Robert Pruter), who was attending college while supporting herself as a waitress. They were married in February 1970. Though he experienced periods of remission, Goodman never felt that he was living on anything other than borrowed time, and some critics, listeners and friends have said that his music reflects this sentiment.</p>

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<p>A celebrated singer and songwriter whose critical acclaim and reputation among his peers far outstripped his popularity with mainstream listeners, Steve Goodman was a Chicago-based tunesmith with a gift for clever but unpretentious wit, compassionate character studies, and a sharp eye for the details of Midwestern life. (His songbook included numbers about parking problems in downtown Chicago, the career of Mayor Richard J. Daley, and Goodman's beloved but hapless Chicago Cubs.) Several of his songs enjoyed chart success when covered by other artists (most notably "The City of New Orleans," which was a Top 20 hit for Arlo Guthrie, and "You Never Even Called My by My Name," which David Allan Coe took to the Country Top Ten), and his admirers included Bob Dylan, John Prine, Kris Kristofferson, and Bonnie Raitt. His first two albums, <i>Steve Goodman</i> (1972) and <i>Somebody Else's Troubles</i> (1973), were the basis of his initial reputation and featured several of his most enduring songs, while <i>Jessie's Jig & Other Favorites</i> (1975) and <i>Words We Can Dance To</i> (1976) added a bit of production polish and were his most commercially successful LPs. In the '80s, Goodman started his own company when his major-label contract ran out, and 1983's <i>Artistic Hair</i> and 1984's <i>Affordable Art</i> were two of his most eclectic and personal collections, though they were also among his last, with the great songwriter passing in September 1984.</p>

<p>Steven Benjamin Goodman was born in Chicago on July 25, 1948. Growing up in what he called "a Midwestern middle-class Jewish family," Goodman first performed in public as part of the junior choir at Temple Beth Israel in the suburb of Albany Park. Goodman began playing the guitar as a teenager, initially influenced by the folk revival of the early '60s and by country performers such as Jimmie Rodgers and Hank Williams. While attending the University of Illinois, Goodman played rock & roll tunes in a cover band before dropping out after two years to try his luck in New York City. He returned to Chicago after only a few months, and became a regular at several Windy City folk clubs, including the Earl of Old Town, the Dangling Conversation, and the Quiet Knight. In 1971, Goodman opened a show for Kris Kristofferson, who liked Steve's songs and introduced him to Paul Anka, who put up the money for Goodman to record a demo tape. The demos led to a contract with Buddah Records and the release of his first LP, 1972's <i>Steve Goodman</i>. The album featured the train song "The City of New Orleans," a Top 20 hit for Arlo Guthrie in 1972 and now a folk standard. (In 1984, Willie Nelson recorded the song, and his cover earned Goodman a Grammy for Country Song of the Year.) Goodman made a second album for Buddah, <i>Somebody Else's Troubles</i> (1973), which featured piano and backing vocals from one Robert Milkwood Thomas (better known as Bob Dylan). After <i>Somebody Else's Troubles</i> failed to chart, Goodman broke with the label, which went on to issue an outtakes record, <i>The Essential Steve Goodman</i> (1975).</p>

<p>Goodman moved to the singer/songwriter-oriented West Coast label Asylum Records for the album <i>Jessie's Jig & Other Favorites</i> in 1975, the same year that outlaw country singer David Allen Coe made the Top Ten of the country charts with a cover of his "You Never Even Called Me by My Name" (first recorded on the <i>Steve Goodman</i> album, and co-written by an uncredited John Prine). <i>Jessie's Jig & Other Favorites</i> was Goodman's first album to make the charts, and 1976's <i>Words We Can Dance To</i> enjoyed similar success. 1977's <i>Say It in Private</i> and 1979's <i>High and Outside</i> didn't fare as well commercially as his first two Asylum releases, even though the latter was released while Goodman was touring as Steve Martin's opening act during the "Wild and Crazy Guy" peak of his popularity as a standup comic. 1980's <i>Hot Spot</i> was a bid for greater commercial success that failed to win new fans, but by this time Goodman's amiable and charismatic performing style had earned him a loyal following at clubs and folk festivals around the country. Goodman was frequently touring in tandem with mandolin virtuoso Jethro Burns (of the country comedy duo Homer & Jethro), and he turned record producer in 1978, overseeing the sessions for <i>Bruised Orange</i> for his friend and sometimes collaborator John Prine.

Following the release of <i>Hot Spot</i>, Goodman left Asylum and launched his own label, Red Pajamas Records, with the release of 1983's <i>Artistic Hair</i>, a collection of archival live material. (This would inspire John Prine to found his own label, Oh Boy, the following year.) The title <i>Artistic Hair</i> was a typically witty reference by Goodman to a very serious matter; for years he had been struggling with leukemia, and at the time of the album's release his condition grew worse, with the cover photo showing him with most of his hair and his trademark beard gone following chemotherapy. <i>Artistic Hair</i> was a hit with critics and a modest commercial success, and a second Red Pajamas release, <i>Affordable Art</i>, a mix of live and studio recordings, was issued in 1984. The album included the tongue in cheek "A Dying Cub Fan's Last Request," which proved to be sadly prophetic; Goodman died a few months after the album arrived on September 20, 1984, and 11 days later, the Chicago Cubs made it into the playoffs for the first time since 1945. </i>

<p>Shortly after Goodman's passing, Red Pajamas brought out <i>Santa Ana Winds</i>, a country-flavored album he had been working on in his last months, and a 1987 collection of unreleased material, <i>Unfinished Business</i>, earned Goodman a posthumous Grammy for Best Contemporary Folk Recording. Through the '80s and '90s, Red Pajamas brought out a number of collections of rare material, several unissued live performances, and re-releases from his back catalog.</p>

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Name Entry: Goodman, Steve, 1948-1984

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Note: Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest

Name Entry: Goodman, Steve, 1948-1984

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Note: Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest

Name Entry: Goodman, Steve

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Note: Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest

Name Entry: Goodman, S. 1948-1984

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Note: Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest