Monday, February 22, 2010

Monday Karaoke: Sing Along With Sam Shepard

Okay, here's another obviously self-indulgent installment of the on-going Project to Digitize Every Loud Noise I Ever Made in the Time Remaining Before My Death.

And this is the short version, BTW.

In June of 1970 I was getting some extra credits toward my B.A. in a summer theater program at what I usually refer to as An Unidentified College on Long Island. One of the pieces we were doing that month was a tragically avant-garde 1967 one-act called Melodrama Play by the then not-a-household-word Sam Shepard. The work itself, which I barely remember at this point (many drugs were being consumed that summer) concerned a Jaggeresque rock star, his twin brother, an unscrupulous manager and (I think) a murder of some sort. I got cast as the rock star, which is funny on any number of levels, especially considering that I looked like this; Jaggeresque really isn't the word that comes to mind.


Anyway, a song by the show's fictional rock star, entitled "Prisoners Get Out of Your Homemade Beds," figured prominently in the script; Shepard had provided shall we say idiosyncratic lyrics, but the music was apparently up to whoever decided to mount a production. The day we started rehearsals, the director (one of my profs) took me aside and said "Come up with a tune for for this. I've got two hours booked in the college radio station on Thursday, and you'll record it then." Considering I had never written a song in my life (nor have I since) this was rather a daunting challenge, as you can well imagine.

Fortunately, The Who's Live at Leeds album had come out a few weeks earlier, and I had been listening to it obsessively; using that as a template, it turned out to be surprisingly easy to come up with a stupid riff and a moronic three chord instrumental track that sort of fit Shepard's somewhat wayward words. Two of my musician friends from my garage band at home -- including my old pal Allan Weissman, who you may recall from this installment -- happened to be available, and so, with me doing a woefully inadequate imitation of Pete Townshend on guitar, we eventually found ourselves at the recording facilities of WCWP-FM, bashing out the tune in about as much time as it took to rehearse it once. As I recall, the engineer simply hung a single microphone in the vicinity of the band; there was no overdubbing, obviously. The finished product, however, met with the director's approval, and I wound up yowling to it on stage when we did the show a week or two later.

Cut to: sometime last January. I was reminiscing about all this with another old pal, and he let it drop that years back I had entrusted the original reel-to-reel tape of the song (the only one that ever existed) to him, and that against all the odds he still had it. And still playable, apparently.

So -- at great personal expense (actually, fifty bucks to a good engineer I know), here it is these four decades later, in mp3 form for all to hear. I also found Shepard's lyrics, which I have appended; feel free to sing them in the privacy of your own home, preferably while playing air guitar. You'll notice three strategically placed screams throughout the clip -- those are your cues for the beginning of each verse.

I should add that a version of this track with a vocal by yours truly has survived as well, but it will be available for public audition at approximately the same time that frozen yogurt goes on sale in Hell.


"Prisoners, Get Out of Your Homemade Beds"

Well early one day you got out of bed
And then you decided to go to sleep instead
So early one day you got back in the sack
And you fell fast asleep in your homemade rack
You don't know how you decided this
And all that you know is there's something you missed
But you don't know what and you don't know where
So you just stay put and go nowhere

Oh prisoners get out of your homemade beds
Oh prisoners get out of your homemade beds

Well early one night you got so very uptight
And you said this sleeping it just ain't right
But you couldn't at all decide what to do
But your eyes stayed shut with their homemade glue
But you couldn't hear your own voice speak
And you couldn't walk 'cause your legs were too weak
So you lay in bed crying to yourself
And your life's just out there hanging on the shelf

Oh prisoners get out of your homemade beds
Oh prisoners get out of your homemade beds

And now the night and the day are just the same
And now the light and the dark have no name
And you just lay in bed without no game
You just lay there sleeping without no fame
But when you awaken from your deep deep sleep
That bed will disappear and you won't even weep
You'll walk right outside without no name
You'll walk right outside from where you came

Oh prisoners get of your homemade beds
Oh prisoners get out of your homemade...heads

I must confess, cheesy as the track is, I still kind of dig the blatant steal from The Kinks at the end.

12 comments:

FD13NYC said...

Pretty cool Steve, was that a Les Paul you're playing in the picture? The song has a little Won't Get Fooled Again feel to it. Couldn't hear the vocals though, just the screams. Maybe I have to turn it up, don't wanna wake the wife, it's 1:am.

steve simels said...

Frank -- Yeah, a gorgeous 1959 Les Paul goldtop with ceramic pickups which I foolishly had painted black because I thought it looked cooler.

Don't even get me started on what it would be worth today if I hadn't sold it for rent money in 1976,,,,

Billy B said...

stevie - that Paul is cool.

Was that a Creem t-shirt you had on?

steve simels said...

Yes, that was a Creem shirt, and if memory serves that was probably the last time I felt thin enough to wear a white T-shirt tucked into my jeans.
:-)

Anonymous said...

Whoa, Steve - you look just like Allen Bloom! Cooking with HEAT, young man! :) - bill buckner

NYMary said...

Okay, I'm just gonna say this: I love this riff. There, it's out there, and I'm not sorry. I was humming it all the way into work this morning.

And steve, is this what you looked like when you were necking with that girl and the guy came into the dorm all excited because he'd seen two chicks making out?

Wendy said...

Big hands.

Yeah, I know, big gloves.

Wendy said...

And it is a cool riff.

TMink said...

The song is going somewhere with a good forward momentum. It is a toe tapper for certain. I had in my mind that you were a bassist, but that was some good guitar. It is easy to bang away a guitar with friends, but a recording has a way of exhibiting all the problems that enthusiasm will hide.

But now, what genre do I put this under in my iPod?

Trey

steve simels said...

NYMary:

Pretty much, yeah. I'm not sure about the mustache, though...

Unknown said...

With the gangster lean....

Anonymous said...

I'm sworn to secrecy but oh the stories I could tell!

I witnessed Steve in the play back in 1970. It was fun!
He was fun, and the song rocks!!!!!

ROTP(lumber)