Carol King wrote numerous Rock 'n Roll
hits and had her own success with the hit single
It might as well rain until September.
Her most famous album was Tapestry, a superb classic.
Best Track: It's Too Late Baby.
15 year-old Carol Klein from Sheepshead Brooklyn, pestered the music
industry offices (Brill Building
and others) after she finished school by calling at their offices day after
day. At sixteen she released her first 45s - Oh, Neil (Alpine) in answer to Neil Sedaka's
hit Oh Carol, Short Mort (RCA Victor),
The Right Girl and Baby Sittin' (ABC-Paramount).
In
1960 She joined forces with Gerry Goffin and made the hit single Will You
Still Love
Me Tomorrow? by The Shirelles
on the Sceptre label it made number one.
1960 - 1964
Will You Love Me Tomorrow? The
Shirelles 1960, Number 1 Hit
I'm Into Something Good, Earl Jean / Herman And The Hermits
1961 Oh No Not My Baby, Maxine Brown,
24 USA Chart
Every Breath You Take, Gene Pitney,
Halfway to Paradise, Billy Fury
I'd Never Find Another You
Just Once In My Life, The Righteous Brothers, #9
Take Good Care of My Baby, Bobby Vee, Number 1 hit
Some of Your Lovin', Dusty
Springfield, (UK)
1962 - 1966
Chains, The Cookies, USA
17
Keep Your Hands Off My Baby, Little Eva,
USA 12
The Loco-Motion, Little Eva, USA number 1
Crying in the Rain, Everly
Bros. USA 6
Go Away Little Girl, The Happenings, USA12
Don't Ever Change, The Crickets,
Goin' Back, Dusty Springfield, #10 [UK]
Go Away Little Girl, Steve Lawrence, Number 11967
Her Royal Majesty, James Darren, 6
You Make Me Feel Like a Natural Woman,
Aretha Franklin, USA 8
It Might as Well Rain Until September, Carole King,
Pleasant Valley Sunday, The Monkees, USA 3
Sharing You, Bobby Vee,
Up on the Roof,
The Drifters,
Hi-De-Ho Blood, Sweat, & Tears
Excerpts from a previously published
interview with Gerry Goffin published by LA Daily News, September 1996.
OF ALL the songwriting teams that churned out hits during the
Brill Building
era, Gerry Goffin and Carole King were among the most prolific and
successful. Goffin wrote lyrics and King wrote music, and from 1960 to '65
the married couple achieved more than 100 substantial hit records, including
'Up on the Roof,' 'Some Kind of Wonderful,' 'One Fine Day,' 'Take Good Care
of My Baby' and 'Will You Love Me Tomorrow?'
After their marriage ended, they continued to work together professionally,
and Goffin contributed some of the lyrics to King's 1971 solo album,
'Tapestry.'
His songwriting career continued with hits like 'Do You Know Where You're
Going To?' (the theme from 'Mahogany') for Diana Ross, and 'Tonight I
Celebrate My Love' for Roberta Flack and Peabo Bryson, and he has been
inducted into the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Goffin, 57, has just released a rock and blues album of politically oriented
songs called 'Back Room Blood' on Adelphi Records.
For the new movie 'Grace of My Heart,' filmmaker Allison Anders commissioned
Goffin to contribute several new songs that recalled the Brill Building
sound. That led to the following question-and-answer interview.
Q: How did you and Carole King get together?
A: I was introduced to her in the lounge at Queens College,
New York, where she was
studying to be a teacher and I was studying to be a chemist. She had a piano
in her house, and we wrote our first song together, a novelty song called
'Kid Brother' that - beginner's luck - was recorded by
Mickey and Sylvia
as a B side on one of their singles. We made about $150 apiece. Her parents
were very proud. We got married about six months later, and we kept on
writing together.
Q. Did success come easily?
A. Not at first. Of the next 50 songs we wrote, none got recorded. They all
sounded contrived and phoney. Then this song 'Will You Love Me Tomorrow?'
came out of nowhere. Carole wrote a beautiful melody, and I wrote a good
lyric, and it worked together. Donny (music publisher Don Kirshner) had told
us he needed a song for the Shirelles, and that's what we came up with.
Q. Were you working for Don at the Brill Building then?
A. We never actually worked at the Brill Building. His office was at 1650
Broadway, which was right around the corner, but it was all considered part
of the same music publishing scene. There were about 20 music companies in
the Brill Building and about 10 companies in ours. In the early days, we
lived in this little basement
apartment - I was working as a chemist and Carole had a job as a secretary -
and we used to come in and write songs in Donny's office. The little rooms
weren't soundproof, so you could always hear what was going on next door. It
was a cacophony of sound. Sometimes another team would finish the song you
had started.
Q. How much was Don paying you then?
A. He gave us the grand figure of $1,000 a year - $500 apiece - but it was
understandable, because Donny didn't have any money either when he started.
Fortunately for us, because Carole was seven months' pregnant with our
daughter, Louise, 'Will You Love Me Tomorrow?' became a gigantic hit. It was
No. 1 for 13 weeks.
Q. How did you get the news?
A. I was still working at the chemistry lab, because with that $75 a we ek,
and the money from Donny, we were able to get by. Then one day Donny drove
up in a limousine with Carole, and they walked in, both holding their noses
from the smell, and Carole said, 'Gerry, Donny's gonna give us a $10,000
advance on our song - you don't have to work anymore.' I took off my lab
coat and walked out for good.
Q. Is it true that the only person who made money on all this was Don
Kirshner?
A. Well, the songwriter makes very little money compared to the artist and
the record company. In those days, the rate was 2 cents for every record
sold, and out of that, Don kept 1 cent. So if a record sold a million, he
made $10,000, and Carole and I would make $5,000 apiece. In the '80s, the
rate went up from 2 cents to 6 1/4 cents, so I make more money today on
those songs than I did back then. Of course, we didn't get any of the
publishing, because we didn't know anything about it. Most of us were glad
to get any deal we could. But I think we were treated fairly by Don
Kirshner. I don't begrudge him anything.
Q. Some people say you wrote songs like 'Up on the Roof' to appeal to black
street kids. Is that who you were writing for?
A. I never tried to write for black street kids. I wrote for an urban
audience because I grew up in New York,
and it would have been phony for me to pretend otherwise. 'Up on the Roof'
was a bigger hit in New York than anyplace else, because they have rows and
rows of tall buildings, and people used to go up on the roof to get away
from it all or to make out. That would appeal to an urban kid. I'm sure it
sold just as much to white kids as black kids.
Q. What brought that Brill Building songwriting era to an end?
A. The Beatles,
Bob Dylan, the
Rolling Stones, the
British invasion. All of a sudden, artists were writing their own music, and
it was different. After Carole and I first went to see Bob Dylan at Carnegie
Hall in '61, we took all our old demos and broke them in half. We said, 'We
have to grow up.' But Donny didn't like the new style because he said it w
asn't commercial. It wasn't until the late '60s that we started writing more
adult songs like 'Natural Woman.'
A. How much do the characters in the movie 'Grace of My Heart' resemble you
and Carole?
Q. I haven't seen the movie, and I think it's changed a lot from the script
I read. The character called Howard seemed to care a lot about the people in
Harlem, and I've written songs about social issues all my life. But Carole
was very content to write songs for other people, and it wasn't until later
that she thought of performing.
Q. Was she a success right away as a recording artist, or did she have an
initial disappointment like the character in the movie?
A. 'The City' was Carole's first record after we split up. She felt she'd do
better performing with a group, so she used all these musicians. Then she
did a record that I produced called 'Writer,' which bombed. I used a full
band on that, too. Then (record producer) Lou Adler
realized that these records were hiding Carole's best quality, which was
just playing piano. That's when 'Tapestry' came off, and it was a gigantic
hit. I thought it was great. It was completely original, and Carole really
showed me up as a lyricist. When we were together, she never contributed one
line, so I had no indication that she could do it.
Song Lyrics: It Might As Well Rain Until September - Carole King
What should I write?
What can I say?
How can I tell you how much I miss you?
The weather here has been as nice as it can be
Although it really doesn't matter much to me.
For all the fun I'll have while you're so far away
It might as well rain until September
I don't need sunny skies for things I have to do
'Cause I stay home the whole day long and think of you
As far as I'm concerned each day's a rainy day
So it might as well rain until September
It doesn't matter whether skies are grey or blue
It's raining in my heart 'cause I can't be with you
I'm only livin' for the day you're home to stay
So it might as well rain until September
My friends look forward to their picnics on the beach
Yes, everybody loves the summer time.
But you know, darling, while your arms are out of reach
The summer isn't any friend of mine.