The “Golden Hits Of The 60s”
Main MenuConcept Refinement The Author..Wayne JancikGolden Age Of The 50sGolden Age Of The 60s1970s and There After
STEAM
NA NA HEY HEY KISS HIM GOODBYE
(Gary DeCarlo, Dale Frashuer, Paul Leka)
Fontana 1667
No. 1 December 6, 1969
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Steam came from Bridgeport, Connecticut. As the Chateaus, Gary DeCarlo (drums), Dale Frashuer, and
Paul Leka (piano) recorded some failed 45s in the early ’60s for Coral and Warner Bros. As time moved
on, they separated but kept in touch. Paul became a tunesmith with Circle Five Productions. In 1968,
Leka met Shelley Pinz; the couple wrote and produced THE LEMON PIPERs'”Green Tambourine” in
addition to other Pipers numbers.
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The following year, Leka was working at Mercury Records. Gary DeCarlo, his old Chateau buddy, had
convinced the label’s A & R man, Bob Reno, to let DeCarlo record some solo sides. With Paul producing,
four numbers were quickly canned. Reno liked the tracks, and thought that each would do well issued as
an “Pl.’side. To fill up the “B” side of the first single, Paul and Gary were sent back into the Mercury
Sound Studios to cut a throwaway flipside. Dale Frashuer stopped by the studios that night and
suggested using a 1961 ballad from the trio’s Chateau days called “Kiss Him Goodbye.” “I said we should
put a chorus to it, “Leka told Fred Bronson in The Billboard Book of Number One Hits. “I started writing
while I was sitting at the piano going ‘na, na, na, na, na, na, na, na .. : Everything was ‘na na’ when you
didn’t have a lyric.”
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To the great surprise of all involved, the powers that-be at the label decided to release “Na Na”-“… an
embarrassing record … an insult;’ in Leka’s opinion as the “X’ side on Fontana, a Mercury subsidiary.
Since no one wanted credit for creating the tune, a name for this nonexistent group had to be concocted.
Steam now there’s a name that sounds nebulous. Gary’s solo singles, which Leka and Reno had preferred
to “Na Na;’ were eventually issued as by Garrett Scott, but not one even charted. Steam’s “Na Na;’
however, sold more than a million copies, and has been for years the unofficial anthem for the Chicago
White Sox.
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Paul assembled a Steam band to tour in support of the studio creation: Jay Babins (guitar), Ray Corries
(drums), Mike Daniels (bass), Hank Schorz (key boards), Bill Steer (vocals), and Tom Zuke (guitar) were
all from the Bridgeport area. When an album was need ed, Gary was approached, but refused to return
to the studios. Before Steam went the way of all water vapor, more singles appeared, but only one made
the charts ‘Tve Gotta Make You Love Me” (#46, 1970).
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Sarah Dallin, Keren Woodward, and Siobhan Fahey-Bananarama-returned “Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him
Goodbye” to the U.K. Top 10 in 1983; Fahey, wife to DAVID A. STEWART, is 1/2 of SHAKESPEARE’S
SISTER. Four years later, THE NYLONS brought Leka’s “embar rassing” ditty back to the U.S. Top 20.