It's actually a very nice little album -- very much in the 70s soft-rock style of her sister Carly -- and the songs were fun to play on stage. It's never been on CD, but if you're nice to me I'll burn you a copy I had transferred from vinyl. Here's my favorite track.
In any case, Lucy is a lovely person, despite the fact that she is also -- as they used to say -- Ms. Gotbucks. She had family money, obviously (Simon as in Simon and Schuster) but she was also married to a Park Avenue shrink who obviously was never going to go hungry. And they had the most amazing apartment opposite Central Park. It was the first one I ever saw that occupied its own floor; I mean, when you got out of the elevator at their stop there was no doorbell to ring or a door to knock on -- you were IN their home.
I will finish by sharing a Lucy anecdote I've never told publicly, but I think she won't mind because, well, as I said she's the female equivalent of a mensch.
The short version: a few months after our "tour" she invited me out to lunch in her neighborhood. I was delighted, and not solely because I was jonesing for a really good meal at some ritzy boite that was out of my price range, but also because I was looking forward to seeing her again. Anyway, we had a terrific time and as I was leaving with her, she asked if I was taking a cab. I replied that no, the subway stop a block away would get me home just fine. The following conversation ensued.
Lucy: "You're taking the subway?"
Me: "Sure."
Lucy: "Do you have a subway token?"
Me: "Of course."
Lucy: "Could you show it to me? I've never actually seen one."
Thats a true story, BTW.
7 comments:
Sounds nicer than her sister, whose music I never cottoned to.
Some enterprising music company - if not in the U.S., then in the U.K. or Europe - should reissue her RCA albums (from 1975 and '77) on a two-fer CD. More obscure stuff than hers has already been done.
Lucy: "Could you show it to me? I've never actually seen one."
I don't know if that merits an "Oy" or a "Heh."
Probably both.
That's money for ya!
Did Lucy Simon do the music for the Broadway Musical "Secret Garden"?
Captain Al
Yes she did.
Around the same time I saw both "Secret Garden" and "Nine" on Broadway. I thought "Nine" which was based on Fellini's "8 1/2" boring with unmemorable music though the critics loved it and thought "Secret Garden" which the critics were lukewarm to was wonderful.The music was charming and well composed. I was totally engrossed by the performance.
I guess I'll never be hip.
Captain Al
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