Although I have written recently about the Carpenters,
I have no hesitation in posting the piece below today, on the 30th anniversary of the passing of the twentieth century's greatest and most
interesting female vocalist -- the unforgettable Karen Carpenter. The Drummer Girl from Downey, California, continues to provide a musical beacon of
innocence and light in a darker world.
* * * *
In the summer of 1970, pop radio's relentless cacophony
of hard rock, acid rock, and Motown was interrupted by something delightfully
offbeat and original. It was the pure
and mellifluous contralto of a guileless young girl, accompanied by a seamless
arrangement of instrumental harmonies and multi-layered voice-overs that
sounded like nothing anyone had heard before, this side of Les Paul and Mary
Ford. And if this intriguing group's
multi-tracked vocals were not enough of a novelty, the ingénue with the angelic
voice turned out to be a prodigious drummer as well, who could riff the Ludwigs
with infectious verve and authority – the first female drummer in history to
achieve any significant prominence and recognition.
The breakthrough song was "Close to You," the
drummer-girl was Karen Carpenter, and the captivating new sound was the
brainchild of Karen's creative big brother, Richard. "Close to You" quickly soared to #1
on the Billboard Chart and the Carpenters were off to the races. Between 1970 and 1975, hit after Carpenters
hit rose to the top of the charts in dizzying succession. "We've Only Just Begun," "For
All We Know," "Top of the World," "Superstar,"
"Rainy Days and Mondays," "Yesterday Once More," and
countless other classics made the likeable, clean-cut siblings from Downey,
California, instant international superstars.
Their popularity reached phenomenal heights in countries as varied as
England, Holland, and Japan (and years later, even China ) where their
concerts drew record-setting crowds, they were sometimes mobbed like the
Beatles, and their records achieved international sales that ultimately
exceeded their success in the U.S. And
many thousands of 1970's newlyweds chose the dawn-like romantic optimism of
"We've Only Just Begun" as their wedding song.
In the annals of underappreciated heroines, few can
surpass the painful experience of Miss Carpenter. The extraordinary success she and her brother
achieved on the record charts and concert stages of the world was rivaled only
by the harsh and mean-spirited vituperation that was inflicted on them at home
by the fashionable music critics and cultural cognoscenti of that disjointed
era.
The condescending criticism had little to do with the
Carpenters' music itself, which was indisputably superior both in Karen's
vocals and Richard's arrangements. But
in what can only be described as a bizarre twist of cultural judgment, the
Carpenters were mocked and belittled by the critics for the very qualities that
attracted the affection of the many millions who bought their records – they
were civil, good-natured, sincere, modest, and romantic. In an era when tout le monde was embracing free love and egotistical
exhibitionism, a demure suburban chick from unfashionable Downey who wore pinafores,
cameo lockets, and lace collars up to her neck offered an easy object of
ridicule. Even worse, the Carpenters'
songs were devoid of "attitude," raunchiness, or rebellion, and they
never made the slightest effort to deny what they were or where they came from
– middle-class white kids from suburban SoCal.
But rather than receiving due credit for their authenticity and
willingness to sail against the winds of the times, the Carpenters were smugly
castigated as too vanilla and "too white."
While the stinging critical dismissal of their work
failed to undercut their overwhelming popularity in the first half of the
1970's – when they were probably the most successful recording artists in the
world – it eventually took its toll when it achieved the status of a kind of
received truth among the arbiters of hip culture in America. Karen's descent into anorexia and Richard's
difficulties with prescription sleeping pills soon followed, and the Carpenters
never recovered the productive heights they had maintained from 1970 to 1975.
To this day, the scornful seed planted by the critics and
hipsters of the post-Woodstock culture has undermined the Carpenters' musical
legacy in the United States, even while that legacy has grown and prospered
internationally (see my previous posts below).
Among other things, the liberals who dominate American musical orthodoxy
could never forgive the Carpenters for graciously accepting an invitation from
President Nixon to perform at the White House during the height of the
Watergate scandal. Under the incredible
tension of that moment, exacerbated by the confining space of the small White
House stage, Karen performed with extraordinary grace, poise, and good cheer. Yet the Carpenters' classy performance at the
White House (which is viewable on a YouTube video) has always been considered a
strike against them by the left-oriented musical establishment. The perverse bias built up against the
Carpenters over the years for their association with white, middle-class values
has not only greatly reduced their playtime on so-called Classic Rock radio
stations, but is undoubtedly responsible for their continued exclusion from the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, despite credentials which dwarf most inductees into
that Philistine institution.
Whatever the verdict of the nameless Woodstock-era critics, Karen Carpenter's place among the great pop vocalists of the 20th Century is firmly recognized in a far more telling and credible quarter – the enduring admiration of her performing peers of past and present. Musical giants from Henry Mancini to Paul McCartney to Burt Bacharach have acknowledged her stature among the great ladies of song. When the Carpenters happily agreed to record a song Mancini's daughter had written ("Sometimes"), the maestro remarked: "It was like having Sinatra do your song." Carpenters biographer Ray Coleman records that McCartney and his brother Michael described Karen as "the best female voice in the world, melodic, tuneful, distinctive." And Elton John has praised her as "one of the greatest voices of our lifetime." Experiencing one of her live performances in concert, such as her BBC Concert in 1971 (see above link to YouTube), is to understand the appreciation these giants had for Miss Carpenter.
Karen's admirers run the gamut, crossing both musical and
cultural divides. Shania Twain called
her "my favorite singer of all time . . . . She has the voice of perfection." Madonna, whom one might consider the
antithesis of the very modest Miss Carpenter, is actually a great admirer, and
acknowledged that "I'm completely influenced by her harmonic
sensibility." Even Barbra Streisand
has extolled Carpenter's voice as a "marvelous instrument."
Indeed, some of Karen's strongest admirers are found in
the most unexpected quarters. After
revealing that he listened to the Carpenters on his iPod, the inimitable Alice
Cooper was asked why. He tersely
responded, "They're the best."
Actor Nicholas Cage made the motorcycle tough guy he played in the film
"Ghost Rider" a dedicated Karen Carpenter fan, and the film's
soundtrack includes not only the haunting "Superstar," but an
original instrumental piece called "A Thing for Karen Carpenter." And more recently, the eccentric Tim Burton
featured a video of Karen singing "Top of the World" in his film
"Dark Shadows," moving the Johnny Depp vampire character to exclaim,
"Reveal thyself, tiny songstress!"
Interestingly and somewhat ironically, large elements of the gay community are especially fond of Miss Carpenter's music and persona, possibly because they identify with the self-image struggles that led to her anorexia.
Thankfully, 30 years after her death, the Drummer Girl's
mellifluous voice, and the bright and rosy face of her first television appearances,
are still accessible in a forum Karen never lived to see. Unlike commercial radio, the Internet is an unfiltered
democratic medium, and tens of millions of her fans log onto YouTube to
resurrect the timeless images of Karen Carpenter in her golden years. The raunchy caravan of today's musical mayhem
moves on, but the Drummer Girl's incomparable voice endures as a welcoming refuge
for those who crave a gentler song.
Great words !!!! All of us missing Karen... Sydney Junior From Brazil
ReplyDeleteGood to hear from Brazil. I understand Karen and the Carpenters were very popular in Brazil. The country that produced Astrud Gilberto surely knows great singers.
DeleteLoved reading this! Love Karen!
ReplyDeleteThose who dismiss their beautiful music are really missing out.
ReplyDeleteALWAYS ADMIRE AND MISSED HER!! THANK YOU, FROM ARGENTINA
ReplyDelete