The “Golden Hits Of The 70s” 

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RANDY NEWMAN

“SHORT PEOPLE”

(RANDY NEWMAN)

Warner Bros. 8492

No. 2   January 28, 1978

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He received a death threat during a tour stop near the site where Martin Luther King, Jr. was

assassinated.  Not all individuals came to appreciate Randy Newman’s “Short People” as a “joke,” or as “a

humorous statement against prejudice.”

 

“‘Short People’ was the worst kind of hit anyone could have,” Randy Newman (b. Nov. 28, 1943, Los

Angeles) told Joe Smith in Off the Record.  “It was like having [SHEB WOOLEYs’] ‘Purple People Eater.’

I’d try to watch a ball game and the band would play the song and the announcers would make jokes

about it.”

 

As a recording artist, Newman is a cult figure; as a writer, he has achieved substantial success.  His early

songs were recorded by a number of artists, including Ray Charles, Joe Cocker, Judy Collins, Art

Garfunkel, Harry Nilsson, Peggy Lee, the Animals’ Alan Price, Linda Ronstadt, NINA SIMONE, Ringo

Starr, Barbra Streisand, and Three Dog Night.

 

“My music has a high irritation factor,” Randy told Rolling Stone’s Timothy White.  “I’ve always tried to

say something.  Eccentric lyrics about eccentric people.  Often it was a joke.  But I would plead guilty on

the grounds that I prefer eccentricity to the bland.”

 

Newman recalled to Keyboards’ Gil Podolinsky, “I started taking piano lessons when I was six or seven.

At 11 or 12, I got into studying theory, harmony, and counterpoint.  I wanted to be a film composer,

because I was influenced by what my uncles [Lionel (conductor of Fox Orchestra), Emil (scored John

Wayne flicks), and the late Alfred Newman (winner of nine Academy Awards for scores such as

Anastasia, Airport, Camelot, and The King and I )] were doing.  So I studied with Mario Castelnuovo-

Tedesco for about four years, and then went to UCLA and studied with George Trem­ble-a good man;…  I

started writing songs at 16, and I took them to a publisher [Metric Music, then a subdivision of Liberty

Records], and they signed me up.  I did that for about eight years before I recorded myself in ’67 or ’68.”

 

The reaction to Newman’s first album, a self-titled effort for Warner Bros., was what one might call

under­ whelming.  His second LP–12 Songs (1970)–brought a little more notice; it contained “Mama Told

Me Not to Come,” a major hit for Three Dog Night.

 

Album number three–Randy Newman: Live (1971)–was the first to reach the top pop albums chart.  To

this day, Randy continues to issue critically acclaimed records; his best-selling LPs include Sail Away

(1972), Good Old Boys (1974), Little Criminals ( 1977), Trouble in Paradise (1983), and Land of Dreams

(1988).  He has also written evocative film scores such as the Oscar-nominated Ragtime (1981), The

Natural (1984), and Parenthood (1989).

 

Randy’s “I Love Los Angeles” became something of an area anthem, thanks largely to a video created by

cousin Tim Newman, the man responsible for catchy ZZ Top video vehicles.

 

Newman co-wrote the script and several songs for the film Three Amigos (1986).  His guest appearance as

“the Singing Bush” went largely unnoticed.  In the mid ’90s, Randy’s updating of Goethe’s Faust, “Randy

New­man’s Faust.” toured the circuit to mixed reviews.