Sunday Spin: Jim Croce

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OUR WEEKLY SERIES MARKS
35th ANNIVERSARY OF '70S SONGWRITER'S PASSING

In many ways, Jim Croce was a transitional figure that bridged the straight up '60s folk scene and the '70s personal folk-pop artists that emerged (often to great success) in his wake. Croce was killed in a plane crash in Natchitoches, Louisiana on September 20, 1973. He had just finished recording his third major label album, I Got A Name, one week before the crash. Though he would not live to see its release, it confirmed the suspicion that Croce was on the edge of major stardom. Sometimes slighted in critical circles in the intervening years, Croce's gifts included abounding charisma, a knack for characters, facility with universal melancholy AND humor and real skill at crafting hooks. Coming up in the same pack with Loudon Wainwright III, John Prine and other scruffy notables that crawled out of the coffeehouse, Croce was perhaps the most winning of the bunch, and it's often only dumb jealousy that devalues his ability to connect across broad lines. He might not have possessed the sorrowful depth of Prine or the inspired nastiness of Wainwright but he made music, especially on I Got A Name, that made people smile and sigh in enormous numbers.

Released posthumously, Name garnered three Top 10 hits on the Adult Contemporary chart (a category his music helped give birth to) with "I'll Have To Say I Love You In A Song" reaching Number One. The album is dotted with strong performances from studio legends like Steve Gadd (Paul Simon) and Rick Marotta (Peter Gabriel) and flows with heartfelt grace. Since his passing, there have been more than two dozen anthologies of his meager catalog. Not bad for a guy who bowed out at the age of just 30. For anyone who grew up in or simply lived through the 1970s, Jim Croce was marbled into the radio tapestry of that decade. Long after his death he remained a radio staple, dueling with fresh waves of emotive singer-songwriters who'd likely picked up a trick or three from his tunes. His memory remains and we happily light a candle in his honor tonight.

I Got A Name Track List:

"I Got a Name"
"Lover's Cross"
"Five Short Minutes"
"Age"
"Workin' at the Car Wash Blues"
"I'll Have To Say I Love You In A Song"
"Salon and Saloon"
"Thursday"
"Top Hat Bar and Grille"
"Recently"
"The Hard Way Every Time"

Here's Croce laying out the full title and thinking behind "Workin' at the Car Wash Blues" before a nifty acoustic duo performance.


Perhaps one of the most brightly wistful tunes to ever hit the airwaves, Croce performs "I Got A Name" on television in 1973.


We close with one of the last filmed performances by Croce and his band, where they offer up a bittersweet "Lover's Cross" and a jumpin' "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown" for your enjoyment And in the end, that urge to please and delight, rests at the bottom of Croce's undying appeal.

http://www.jimcroce.com/

[Published on: 9/21/08]


 

Comments

Souljive starstarstarstar Sun 9/21/2008 08:38PM
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Souljive

Still in our thoughts... Jim Croce makes for good listening. With all due respect to John Prine & Loudon.

HoodooVoodoo starstarstarstarstar Sun 9/21/2008 08:55PM
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HoodooVoodoo

"If I could save time in a bottle" bitches...Croce actually owned a restauarant here in SD called (surprisingly) "Croce's." It's an overpriced restaurant with pseudo jazz bands (think Kenny G). His kid is named AJ (which stands for "awesome joint") and apparently plays a little music as well. I never done seen him though.

tron420 starstarstarstarstar Sun 9/21/2008 10:21PM
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tron420

I have a boot of a '70 show where he covered the entire sound track from the wizard of oz playing only a pan flute. What a legend! He is missed everyday by many croceheads.

benjaminsochko Mon 9/22/2008 12:01AM
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benjaminsochko

im way after his time......but i love jim croce

stinkd starstarstarstarstar Mon 9/22/2008 12:38AM
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I've never known his history and I didn't even know he was dead. I've been listening to his "I've Got a Name" album since 1992. I can sing along to all of the songs on that album, To me Jim Croce is as outstanding a songwriter as The Animals or Queen or The Grateful Dead or The Rolling Stones. Sad to know he died so long ago but obviously he still lives on, in a song...

Bowlegged Texan Mon 9/22/2008 07:16AM
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Bowlegged Texan

I was raised on "I got a name." Amazing album, amazing songwriter, wish he could have made more music before he passed.

GammaJamma Mon 9/22/2008 07:59AM
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GammaJamma

One of my introductions to music as i was a little one. Jim Croce, Creedence clearewater, and stevie miller band. The rest is history...

gamecat starstarstarstar Mon 9/22/2008 08:29AM
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gamecat

I wish there were more artists like Croce still playing.

Now everyone is to busy trying to be cool instead of playing from their heart.

DrFunkinstein Mon 9/22/2008 12:25PM
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DrFunkinstein

You don't tug on superman's cape, you don't spit into the wind, you don't pull the mask off the old lone ranger, and you don't mess around with jim

ndant703 Mon 9/22/2008 06:39PM
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ndant703

It's a damn shame he died waaayyyyy to early.

crowesfan Tue 9/23/2008 09:08AM
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crowesfan

Extremely talented songwriter and hugely underrated artist.

sunnbear starstarstarstarstar Tue 9/23/2008 01:24PM
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sunnbear

If I could save time in a bottle

The first thing that I'd like to do

Is to save every day

Till Eternity passes away

Just to spend them with you

futhepharmer Tue 9/23/2008 08:01PM
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futhepharmer

I have a bootleg from 1972 where he plays the entire "Annie Get Your Gun" soundtrack with nothing but a piece of paper and a comb!