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The Worst Songwriter of All Time
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Bob
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Merrill wrote one of the most recognizable, most parodied, and (for
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non-Streisand fans) most irritating lyrics of all time:
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PeoplePeople who need
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peopleAre the luckiest people in the world.
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I don't
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know whether Merrill was a person who needed people and, if he did, whether he
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considered himself lucky for so doing. But the other week he went out to the
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driveway of his Los Angeles home and shot himself. He was 76. When the elderly
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kill themselves, we gloss over that fact: It isn't really a tragedy, not like a
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teen-ager's suicide, or a young mother's. But, for the record, aside from
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self-destructing rockers such as Kurt Cobain, I can't think of another hit
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songwriter who's taken his life. I only had a very slight acquaintance with
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Merrill, but it seems a sad end for someone who wrote more determinedly happy
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songs than anyone in history.
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In a century of pop music, Bob Merrill pretty much has a
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hammerlock on the first half of the 1950s. Even then, he wasn't exactly a
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household name--and, if you beg to differ, chances are your household's mixing
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him up with Robert Merrill, the great Metropolitan Opera baritone who appeared
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around the same time. Merrill (Bob) chose the diminutive deliberately to avoid
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confusion with Merrill (Robert), though it's hard to see why anyone would think
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a fellow who makes his living singing Mozart and Verdi would go home at night
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and write "If I Knew You Were Comin', I'd've Baked a Cake." That was Bob's
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first hit. He'd been head writer at NBC and dialogue director at Columbia
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Pictures, but when he tried to break into Tin Pan Alley, they kept telling him
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his stuff was too complex. He took their advice to heart--and how:
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If I knew you were comin',
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I'd've baked a cakeBaked a cakeBaked a cakeIf I knew you were comin', I'd've
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baked a cakeHowdja do?Howdja do?Howdja do?
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Not
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exactly Lorenz Hart. But it sold a million. And Merrill followed it with an
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even bigger song, "(How Much Is) That Doggie in the Window?" a hit for Patti
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Page--or, to give her her formal title, "The Singing Rage Miss Patti Page."
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Posterity hasn't been that kind to Patti and her four-legged friend. "It would
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be unfair to call this a nursery rhyme; it was childish rather than childlike,"
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writes Donald Clarke in The Rise and Fall of Popular Music . "Nobody
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knows how many music fans stopped listening to the radio after hearing 'Doggie
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In The Window' too many times." Clarke's being a little harsh. The early '50s,
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don't forget, were the heyday of the dog song, and rare was the pop star who
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managed to avoid having one inflicted on him: Half a century later, Frank
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Sinatra will sock you on the jaw if you so much as mention "Mama Will Bark,"
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his canine love duet with the big-breasted faux-Scandinavian "actress" Dagmar.
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The Singing Dogs, who barked their way through "Oh, Susanna," are more relaxed
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about it, but then, of course, they are dogs. By these standards,
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Merrill's song was, as they say at Westminster Kennel Club, Best in Show.
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Novelty songs, they used to call them. But, in
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the early '50s, novelties weren't so much a novelty as terrifyingly ubiquitous.
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If you want the entire history of pop music on one single--the tug between its
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highest aspirations and its basest instincts--Sinatra wrapped it up in 1951: on
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the B side, "I'm a Fool to Want You," an almost painfully exposed ballad that
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today ranks as one of his greatest recordings; but, on the A side ... yes,
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"Mama Will Bark." Mitch Miller, top dog at Columbia Records, insisted Sinatra
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do it. Frank wound up leaving Columbia, but he never forgave Miller. Years
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later, they happened to be crossing a Vegas lobby from opposite ends. Miller
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extended his hand in friendship; Sinatra snarled, "Fuck you! Keep walking!"
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But so what? In those days,
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Sinatra was a loser. The smart money was on Miller's new discovery, Guy
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Mitchell--nice kid, pleasant voice, no trouble. Frank didn't want "Sparrow in
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the Treetop," so Miller gave it to Mitchell, along with "My Truly, Truly Fair,"
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"Belle, Belle, My Liberty Belle," "Feet Up (Pat Him on the Po-Po)," "She Wears
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Red Feathers (And a Hula-Hula Skirt)" and "There's a Pawnshop on the Corner in
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Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania"--the biggest hit ever written about Pittsburgh.
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All six
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songs were by Bob Merrill, all were arranged with Miller's unrelenting
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jolliness (whooping French horns throughout), and all were smashes. If Merrill
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had a yen to write boy-meets-girl, it didn't show: boy-meets-cake,
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girl-meets-dog, sparrow-meets-treetop ... Pop songs are supposed to be
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universal--"I Will Always Love You"--but Merrill was specific with a vengeance:
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Even if you were minded to write a song about a gal who wears red feathers and
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a huley-huley skirt and lives on jes' cokeynuts, why would you open with the
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line "I work in a London bank"? It remains, incidentally, the biggest hit ever
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written about a London banker who meets a hula-hula girl.
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He composed, in case you hadn't guessed, on a child's toy
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xylophone. Between 1950 and 1955, it also cranked out "Where Will the Baby's
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Dimple Be?" "Mambo Italiano," and my personal favorite, "Oooh, Bang, Jiggily
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Jang." Even the singers don't like these songs. Rosemary Clooney, revisiting
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"Mambo Italiano" for a recent autobiographical album, explains in the liner
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notes how much she loathes all her early hits--"Come On-a My House" (Armenian
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novelty song), "Who Don Mon Man" (calypso novelty song), "Botch-a Me" (botched
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novelty song). But you have to admire Merrill's resourcefulness: Any old Alley
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opportunist can write a novelty Italian song ("That's Amore") or a novelty
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mambo song ("Papa Loves Mambo"), but to write a novelty song about Italians
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doing the mambo--that takes guts:
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Hey, Mambo!Mambo Italiano
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...Go, go, Joe!You mixed-up Siciliano
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The guy
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who wrote that gets hammered from both ends. To those who love the great
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American standards, Merrill is the man who single-handedly produced the worst
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songs of the decade and so debauched the currency of mainstream Tin Pan Alley
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that it had no moral authority to resist rock 'n' roll. And, for baby-boom
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rockers, when all other musical, lyrical, and sociopolitical claims for the
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rock 'n' roll revolution have collapsed, the memory of growing up with the Bob
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Merrill songbook will always be justification enough.
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Merrill moved on to Broadway and Hollywood.
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Having been told he was too complex for pop music, he was now regarded as too
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simple-minded to write show scores. But, 33 years after he gave Barbra
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Streisand "People," she's still singing it. These days, over the instrumental
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break, she's prone to toss in a homily about world peace and how, whether we're
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in America, Bosnia, Rwanda, the Middle East; are young, old, black, white, gay,
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straight, or transsexual, we're all still people, people who need people. When
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she first sang the song, in the musical biography of Fanny Brice, Funny
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Girl , it was about precisely the opposite: Fanny was so obsessed with her
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public identity that she'd neglected the personal; she could love audiences but
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not individuals. Only James Brolin and the more assiduous tabloid reporters
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know whether that's true of Barbra in private, but it's increasingly the case
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professionally: She declaims her love songs as if addressing an audience of
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millions rather than "one very special person." Ostensibly Bob Merrill's most
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general lyric, it is, in fact, the most specific of all.
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