Remembering the goodness of Harry Chapin
New book from 2006 alumnus looks back at the life of the singer/songwriter and activist
Seeing a New York City performer sing a lesser-known Harry Chapin song more than 10 years ago gave Ira Kantor 鈥06 the impetus to write a book about the late singer-songwriter and activist.
鈥淗e didn鈥檛 do 鈥楾axi鈥 or 鈥楥at鈥檚 in the Cradle鈥,鈥 Kantor says. 鈥淗e did a song called 鈥榃hat Made America Famous?鈥 It got to the underbelly of who Harry was as an artist. That night I said to my friend: 鈥榌Chapin] may make for an interesting book project.鈥 He was the type of artist who appealed to everybody.鈥
A decade later, Kantor released 鈥淗ello, Honey, It鈥檚 Me鈥: The Story of Harry Chapin. The book 鈥 an oral-biography that arrives almost 40 years after Chapin鈥檚 July 1981 death in a car accident on the Long Island Expressway 鈥 examines the life and legacy of the storytelling singer/songwriter who spent his final years advocating to end world hunger. (He also performed several times at 绿帽社 and at The Arena in downtown 绿帽社 during the mid- to late-1970s.)
Kantor, a public relations manager in the Boston area who has also worked as a reporter and music writer, spoke to nearly 70 people for the project, including Chapin鈥檚 widow, children, brother, band members, managers, philanthropy partners, politicians such as U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy, and music stars such as Gordon Lightfoot, Jackson Browne, and John Oates.
BINGHAMTON MAGAZINE: Why does Harry Chapin still matter today and why is it vital to keep his impact alive?
KANTOR: It鈥檚 two fronts. Nobody today is doing those major storytelling songs that Harry did. The song 鈥淐at鈥檚 in the Cradle鈥 alone will be around forever because of the connotations that people take from it about parental relationships. There were other singer-songwriters who told narratives, but didn鈥檛 do it with the filmmaker flair of Harry. To produce nine studio albums in less than a decade is impressive enough. 鈥 From the activist side, Harry was the troubadour who broke down the doors of Congress and also appealed to celebrities. If he knew Bruce Springsteen was staying in the same hotel, he would harangue him from the balcony and say: 鈥淗ey, Bruce, I need your help.鈥
BM: Just how ahead of his time was Harry as an activist? The Concert for Bangladesh took place in 1971, but Harry took lobbying for causes such as world hunger to the next level.
KANTOR: I think you could very well say that he set the precedent. Ken Kragen, who was Harry鈥檚 second manager, was behind We are the World and Hands Across America (in the 1980s). With Bill Ayres, Harry set about educating the powers that be on the topic of world hunger. Harry charmed and worked his way into the White House, all the way to President Carter, to make something happen. He led the American charge on world hunger, but I don鈥檛 think he went into it saying: 鈥淚 want to be the guy who is best known for this.鈥 I think he did it because he felt it was right. It wasn鈥檛 about him.
BM: Comments from U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, who worked with Harry to establish the President鈥檚 Commission on World Hunger, carry a lot of weight in the book. How did that interview happen?
KANTOR: When I first started [the book], I made repeated attempts to locate Senator Leahy and interview him, but was not successful. So I put my attempts aside and honed in on other former politicians who knew Harry 鈥 people like Thomas Downey and Bob Mrazek 鈥 who are also in the book. As I was finalizing the book, I went back to the sources I thought were unobtainable and said to myself: 鈥淚鈥檝e got to try one more time.鈥 I reached out to the senator鈥檚 [staff] and received an email saying he could do this particular date at this time. I dialed in when requested to. Senator Leahy came on the phone for 30 minutes and told me every Harry story he had. I didn鈥檛 even need to ask any questions. He was vivid and fantastic 鈥 and then he had to go. I鈥檓 floored that I was able to talk with him almost at the 11th hour. He truly does make a difference [being in the book]: Here is someone still in Congress and still influenced by Harry. He didn鈥檛 talk like a politician 鈥 he talked about their friendship and how Harry interacted with his kids. He talked about how he still gets choked up thinking about the day Harry died. Senator Leahy enabled me to finally put closure to the book because of the credibility he lends to the project.
BM: Was it hard to find the balance between discussing Harry鈥檚 music and discussing his activism, especially in his later years?
KANTOR: I had wondered if I should have gone into the same depth for Harry鈥檚 albums in the second half of the 1970s as I did for the first half. Then I realized that any fan of Harry鈥檚 will likely tell you that the later albums are good, but in some ways his activism [in the late 鈥70s] outweighs the music. When he did World Hunger Year, which became WhyHunger, that was his raison 诲鈥檈迟谤别. He wanted to perform, raise money, and go to Congress and appeal to politicians. In thinking of the scope of Harry鈥檚 life, I felt at least the first four albums should have added detail because that鈥檚 where these great songs and hits came from. 鈥 When we get to 1980 and Harry鈥檚 鈥淪equel鈥 album 鈥 his final hit 鈥 reflections from a couple of the album鈥檚 producers brought things full circle: the height of [musical] success, to the activism that never went away, to Harry trying to bring himself back and it鈥檚 well received. But he鈥檚 going full-throttle and we don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 going to happen next.
BM: For those readers who only know Harry from 鈥淐at鈥檚 in the Cradle鈥 and 鈥淭axi,鈥 what is a song and an album you would recommend as samplers to show what else he could do?
KANTOR: There鈥檚 a song called 鈥淪niper鈥 on Harry鈥檚 second album, 鈥淪niper and Other Love Songs.鈥 It鈥檚 a 10-minute song loosely based on a shooting at the University of Texas in 1966. In that 10 minutes, Harry does a psychoanalysis of the act as it happens 鈥 someone on a roof shooting at people 鈥 and the factors that drove the sniper to do this. It鈥檚 a tense, frightening song. It hits a nerve. It鈥檚 a fantastic, dark story, not designed for radio, that shows the depth of Harry鈥檚 songwriting, character building, and human emotion. 鈥 My favorite Harry Chapin album is 鈥淪hort Stories.鈥 It鈥檚 his third album and has 鈥淲鈥鈥鈥,鈥 one of his Top 40 hits, on it. There are some great songs on 鈥淪hort Stories鈥 like 鈥淥ld College Avenue鈥 and 鈥淭hey Call Her Easy.鈥 The album isn鈥檛 designed to be pop music: the songs are intimate. It comes at an interesting time because he鈥檚 about to hit [double platinum] with 鈥淰erities & Balderdash.鈥 鈥淪hort Stories鈥 is the album that indicates where he鈥檚 about to go 鈥 to the top.
BM: What has been the reaction to the book from Harry鈥檚 family?
KANTOR: They鈥檝e been supportive the entire time. I did a recent Facebook chat about the book with two of Harry鈥檚 sons. One of the best compliments I鈥檝e gotten was from Harry鈥檚 youngest son Josh, who said: 鈥淭hank you for sticking with [the project] all of these years. You never gave up, you got it done, and did it in an innovative way. It鈥檚 a very Harry thing to do.鈥 The fact that this book had a completion echoes what Harry would do when it came to his many projects. He wouldn鈥檛 take no for an answer. He would see things through all the way. That was very positive to me.
鈥淗ello, Honey, It鈥檚 Me鈥: The Story of Harry Chapin is available on Amazon.com and HarryChapinMusic.com. For more music writing from Kantor, visit