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Authors: Carole King

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Testifying in DC for Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act (NREPA)
MCT/McClatchy-Tribune/Getty Images

The Living Room Tour, 2004
Photo by Elissa Kline

*
Joel subsequently achieved success in TV, theater, and film as the director of
Laverne and Shirley, George Gershwin Alone
, and
My Big Fat Greek Wedding
.

*
Reefer Madness
was intended to alert young people and their parents to the deadly dangers of smoking “marihuana.” Among the unintended consequences were the laughter of audiences in succeeding decades and the inclusion of the film’s later title (it was originally called
Tell Your Children
) in the lexicon of the twentieth century as a synonym for greatly exaggerated antidrug propaganda.

*
Renamed John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) in December 1963.

*
Upon accepting his Grammy in 1972 for the Biggest Domestic Cat Ever to Appear on an Album Cover, Telemachus was so overcome with emotion that he could only say, “Meow.” What he meant to say was, “I want to thank my tom, my tabby, and all the fat cats who oversaw the investment of my kitty. I couldn’t have done it without you.”

*
James wrote, “Sweet dreams and flying machines in pieces on the ground” two years later in his song “Fire and Rain.”

*
The name “Apple Corps” was created by the Beatles, thereby proving that I’m not the only songwriter unable to resist the appeal of a truly bad pun.

*
Lee Sklar did not play on
Sweet Baby James
.


Randy Meisner was a founding member of Eagles. N.B.: Many people say “the Eagles,” but their friend Steve Martin reports that Glenn Frey has always insisted that the band’s name is Eagles without “the.” Official Eagles material released by the band supports Martin’s story.

*
Sel-Sync (Selective Synchronous) recording was developed at Ampex in the mid-fifties primarily by Ross Snyder, Mort Fujii, and Les Paul. Les Paul brought the concept of multilayered sound-on-sound performances to public popularity in 1951 with the voice of his wife, Mary Ford, on
“How High the Moon”
and
“The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise.”

*
Auratone speakers were used in the seventies by many studios for what is now called “nearfield monitoring.” In the eighties, Yamaha NS10s replaced Auratones as the industry standard for nearfield monitoring. Yamaha has since discontinued the NS10s, reportedly because they can’t get that kind of wood any more.

*
David Campbell and Bibbe Hansen are the parents of the composer, recording artist, and performer Beck.

*
The “yo’mama” ritual originated with black male slaves. Because they weren’t allowed to engage in physical violence, they traded verbal insults: “Yo’mama so ugly she…” “Yeah? Well, yo’mama so dumb she…” And so on.


A starring role in 1974–75 at the Roxy Theatre in West Hollywood as Janet in
The Rocky Horror Show
would add show tunes to Abigale’s list of genres.

*
Abigale sang and Charlie, Joel, and Ralph played in my set and Jo Mama’s. I played in James’s and my sets. Lee and Russ played in James’s set. Danny played in all three. After the 1971 tour, Craig Doerge would replace me in playing keyboards for James. Danny, Lee, Russ, and Craig would become known as the Section—so named because everyone wanted to use them as their rhythm section.

*
Nudie Cohn’s clothing store in North Hollywood was
the
place to go if you were a country singer, a cowboy, or a rock star wanting country credibility with pizzazz. Customers clothed by the “Rodeo Tailor” included Roy Rogers, Porter Wagoner, Gene Autry, and Elvis Presley. When I lived in California I often saw Nudie driving around in one of his “Nudie-mobiles”—big convertibles customized with western paraphernalia such as silver coins, horseshoes, pistols (presumably unloaded), and longhorns from an actual steer. Nudie died in 1984.

*
“Whiskey” was released in 1979 as the B side of the single “Move Lightly” from my album
Touch The Sky
. “Whiskey” did not appear on that album.

*
Founders Peter Morton and Isaac Tigrett reportedly named the Hard Rock Café in London after that same bar in downtown Los Angeles. That bar also appears in a Henry Diltz photo on the Doors’ 1970 album,
Morrison Hotel
.

*
Population numbers are approximate for 1981.

*
Paul’s band in Tokyo comprised Hamish Stuart on guitar and vocals, Robbie McIntosh on guitar, Chris Whitten on drums, percussion, and vocals, Paul Wickens on keyboards, and Linda McCartney on keyboards and vocals.

*
Carole King: Going Home
was subsequently released as a DVD.

*
I recorded two songs with Brian Wilson in 2006: Gerry’s and my song “I’m Into Something Good” and a composition of Brian’s called “Good Kind of Love.”

*
Some people drink. I make bad puns and leave them in warm paragraphs to ferment.

*
Carole King—In Concert
was subsequently released as a DVD.

*
There were three subway lines when I was growing up: BMT, for Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit; IRT, for Interborough Rapid Transit; and IND, short for the Independent Subway.

*
Michael Bublé, Michael Jackson, Michael McDonald; Kenny Rogers, Kenny Loggins, and Kenny G.


Alejandro Sanz and Alejandro Lerner.

*
Other Hole in the Wall Gang Camp locations can be found at
http://www.teamholeinthewall.org/
.

*
Monkey thoughts race through my mind in a lot less time than it takes to write or read.

*
(
http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/01/01/1995973/eugenia-gold-carole-kings-mother.html
)

*
(
http://www.caroleking.com/rudy/rudy.html
)

Contents

Welcome

Author’s Note

Showtime 2005

Part I

Chapter One: The Name of the Father

Chapter Two: Almost Perfect

Chapter Three: Over the Airwaves

Chapter Four: Them and Us

Chapter Five: The Planets Realign

Chapter Six: The Thee-a-tuh

Chapter Seven: The Big Beat

Chapter Eight: Rhythm and Blues

Chapter Nine: Salad Days

Chapter Ten: To Manhattan and Back

Chapter Eleven: Aspiring to Be Popular

Chapter Twelve: The Function of a Cosine

Chapter Thirteen: Atlantic and ABC-Paramount

Chapter Fourteen: Conducting an Orchestra

Chapter Fifteen: The Right Girl

Chapter Sixteen: Graduation

Chapter Seventeen: Goffin and King

Chapter Eighteen: Married, with Children

Chapter Nineteen: Cubicles

Chapter Twenty: Will You Love Me Tomorrow

Chapter Twenty-One: Daughter Momentum

Chapter Twenty-Two: The Loco-Motion

Chapter Twenty-Three: It Might as Well Rain Until September

Chapter Twenty-Four: Waddington Avenue

Chapter Twenty-Five: City of Angels

Chapter Twenty-Six: The British Invasion and Other Signs of the Times

Chapter Twenty-Seven: A Natural Woman

Chapter Twenty-Eight: Sold

Chapter Twenty-Nine: Aronowitz and the Myddle Class

Chapter Thirty: The Mid-Sixties

Chapter Thirty-One: Leaving New Jersey

Part II

Chapter One: Wonderland

Chapter Two: Where the Action Was

Chapter Three: Discovering California!

Chapter Four: New Friends

Chapter Five: The Night Owl

Chapter Six: Kootch

Chapter Seven: The City

Chapter Eight: Truth Is One, Paths Are Many

Chapter Nine: Three Really Excellent Things

Chapter Ten: Sweet Baby James

Chapter Eleven: Pre-Loved

Chapter Twelve: Musical Studios

Chapter Thirteen: Technology

Chapter Fourteen: Tapestry Snapshots

Chapter Fifteen: In Retrospect

Chapter Sixteen: The Troubadour

Chapter Seventeen: J Is for Jump

Chapter Eighteen: Herding Cats

Chapter Nineteen: Showtime 1971

Chapter Twenty: Addition, Family Style

Chapter Twenty-One: Mommy and Grammy

Chapter Twenty-Two: Divergence

Part III

Chapter One: Shepherd

Chapter Two: Mores Creek

Chapter Three: Taxi Driver

Chapter Four: John and Yoko

Chapter Five: A Different Kind of Hit

Chapter Six: Definition of a Friend

Chapter Seven: Tributaries

Chapter Eight: Inundated

Chapter Nine: The Final No

Chapter Ten: Not Bergdorf Goodman

Chapter Eleven: Teepee Rick

Chapter Twelve: Reading, ’Riting and ’Rithmetic

Chapter Thirteen: All-Weather Friends

Chapter Fourteen: Gretchen’s Piano

Chapter Fifteen: The Eighties

Chapter Sixteen: Moving Day

Chapter Seventeen: Bars and Benches

Chapter Eighteen: New Neighbors

Chapter Nineteen: Trials and Tribulations

Chapter Twenty: Criminal and Quiet Title

Chapter Twenty-One: One to One

Chapter Twenty-Two: Ronald Reagan’s Opponent

Chapter Twenty-Three: Prosecutorial Discretion

Part IV

Chapter One: All Over the Map

Chapter Two: City Streets

Chapter Three: McCartneys in Tokyo

Chapter Four: A Quiet Place to Live

Chapter Five: The Troubles

Chapter Six: Colour of Your Dreams

Chapter Seven: Lessons from Underground

Chapter Eight: Blood Brothers

Chapter Nine: Ireland, Again

Chapter Ten: They Say That Ev’ry Man Must Fall

Chapter Eleven: Ireland, Yet Again

Chapter Twelve: The Towers

Chapter Thirteen: Giving Back

Showtime 2005, continued

Afterword

Acknowledgments

Credits

Permissions

Photo Inserts

Copyright

Copyright

Copyright © 2012 by Eugenius, LLC

All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher is unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

Grand Central Publishing

Hachette Book Group

237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017

www.hachettebookgroup.com

www.twitter.com/grandcentralpub

First e-book edition: April 2012

Grand Central Publishing is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

The Grand Central Publishing name and logo is a trademark of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

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The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

ISBN 978-1-4555-1259-1

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