'Randall Stuart "Randy" Newman' (born
November 28,
1943) is an
Academy Award- winning
American songwriter,
arranger,
singer and
pianist who is notable for his (and often
satirical)
pop songs and for his many
film scores.
Newman is noted for his practice of writing lyrics from the perspective of a "character" far removed from Newman's own biography, often utilizing the literary device of an
unreliable narrator. For example, the 1972 song "
Sail Away" is written as slave trader's sales pitch to attract slaves, while the narrator of "Political Science" is a U.S. nationalist who complains of worldwide ingratitude toward America and proposes a brutally ironic final solution ("Let's drop the big one").
Since the 1980s, Newman has worked mostly as a film composer. His
film scores include ''
Ragtime'', ''
The Natural'', ''
Toy Story'', ''
Meet the Parents'' and ''
Seabiscuit''. He also scored four other
Pixar films. ''
A Bugs Life'', ''
Toy Story 2'', ''
Monsters, Inc.'', and ''
Cars''.
He has also been singled out for a number of awards by his colleagues, including an
Academy Award, two
Emmy Awards, four
Grammy Awards, and the Governor's Award of the recording academy.
[1] Randy Newman was inducted into the
Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2002.
Biography
Born in
Los Angeles, California, as an infant Newman moved with his
Jewish-American family to
New Orleans, Louisiana, where his mother's family lived. He lived in New Orleans as a small child and spent summers there until he was eleven years old, his family having by then returned to Los Angeles. The paternal side of his family includes three uncles who were noted
Hollywood film-score composers:
Alfred Newman,
Lionel Newman and
Emil Newman. Newman's cousins
Thomas,
David, and
Joey are also composers for motion pictures. Graduated from University High, Los Angeles. Newman attended the
University of California, Los Angeles.
Songwriter
Newman became a professional songwriter by the time he was seventeen; his first single as a performer was 1961's "Golden Gridiron Boy", released when he was eighteen. However, the single flopped and Newman chose to concentrate on songwriting and arranging for the next several years. His early songs were recorded by
Gene Pitney,
Jerry Butler,
The O'Jays and
Irma Thomas, among others.
In the mid-1960s, Newman was briefly a member of the band The Tikis, who later became
Harpers Bizarre, best known for their 1967 hit version of the
Paul Simon composition "Feelin' Groovy." Newman kept a close musical relationship with Harpers Bizarre, offering them some of his own compositions, including "Simon Smith and the Amazing Dancing Bear" (later covered by Alan Price, formerly of
The Animals, and also performed by
Scooter and
Fozzie Bear on the very first episode of ''
The Muppet Show''), and "Happyland". Alan Price, who had left
The Animals and formed
Alan Price Set in England was one of Newman's earliest champions. Besides the aforementioned hit "
Simon Smith and His Amazing Dancing Bear", he featured 7 Randy Newman songs on his 1967 "
A Price On His Head" album. (7 out of 14 tracks!)
His 1968 debut album, ''
Randy Newman'', was a critical success but never dented the ''
Billboard'' Top 200. Its ambitious arrangements didn't necessarily match with Newman's embryonic vocal style, but his strengths as a songwriter were already evident. The acidic but painfully sad 'Davy The Fat Boy' and the moving 'Cowboy' (written for but rejected from 'Midnight Cowboy') were standouts. Many artists, including
Alan Price,
Judy Collins,
the Everly Brothers,
Dusty Springfield,
Pat Boone and
Peggy Lee,
covered his songs and 'I Think It's Going To Rain Today' became an early standard. In 1970,
Harry Nilsson recorded an entire album of Newman compositions called ''
Nilsson Sings Newman.'' That album was a success, and it paved the way for Newman's 1970 release, ''
12 Songs'', which abandoned the elaborate arrangements of his first album for a more stripped-down sound that showcased Newman's piano. Ry Cooder's slide guitar and contributions from Byrds members Gene Parsons and Clarence White helped to give the album a much rootsier feel. ''12 Songs'' was also critically acclaimed (6th best album of the seventies according to Rolling Stone critic Robert Christgau), but again found little commercial success, though
Three Dog Night made a huge hit of his "
Mama Told Me Not to Come". The following year, ''
Randy Newman Live'' cemented his cult following and became his first LP to appear in the ''Billboard'' charts, at #191.
1972's
''Sail Away'' reached #163 on ''Billboard'', with the title track making its way into the repertoire of
Ray Charles and
Linda Ronstadt. "You Can Leave Your Hat On," written from the point of view of an ineffectual sexual fetishist, was covered by
Joe Cocker and later, by
Keb Mo,
Tom Jones,
Three Dog Night and
Etta James. The album also featured "Burn On": an ode to that infamous night in Cleveland when the heavily polluted
Cuyahoga River literally caught fire. In 1989, "Burn On" was used as the opening theme to the film ''
Major League'', whose focus was the hapless
Cleveland Indians.
Two of the songs on ''Sail Away'', "
Political Science" and "
God's Song" are as caustic as anything Newman has ever written. The former lampoons American arrogance and states that since the US is hated the world over, it might as well "drop the big one," incinerating every other nation (with the exception of
Australia). In the latter song, also covered by Etta James, Newman takes on religion by assuming the voice of God: "I burn down your cities - how blind you must be/I take from you your children and you say 'How blessed are we'/You must all be crazy to put your faith in me/That's why I love mankind."
His 1974 release ''
Good Old Boys'' was a set of songs about the American South; "
Rednecks" began with a description of segregationist
Lester Maddox pitted against a "smart-ass New York Jew" on a TV show, in a song that seems to criticize both southern racism and the complacent bigotry of American northeasterners who stereotype all southerners as racist. This ambiguity was also apparent on "Kingfish" and "
Every Man a King", the former a paean to
Huey Long (the assassinated former
Governor of, and
United States Senator for, the State of
Louisiana), the other a campaign song written by Long himself. An album that received lavish critical praise, ''
Good Old Boys'' also became a commercial breakthrough for Newman, peaking at #36 on Billboard and spending 21 weeks in the Top 200.
''
Little Criminals'' (1977) contained the surprise hit "
Short People", which also became a subject of controversy, as Newman's ironic depiction of bigotry aimed at the short was taken literally by some listeners. Both the album and the single stand as the best-selling of his career. In 1978, legislation was introduced to make playing the song on the radio illegal in Maryland, though the bill failed to pass. Newman often pokes fun at the misinterpretation of his song during concerts, sarcastically announcing, "I hate short people, it's true. The reason I don't say anything is because the record label's afraid I'll tell people what I really think." 1979's ''Born Again'' was a prescient commentary on the money-worship of the coming era of
Reaganomics, which also featured a song satirically mythologizing the
Electric Light Orchestra (and their arranging style) entitled "The Story of a Rock and Roll Band". The album failed to capitalize on the commercial success of "
Short People" but did include some of his strongest and most underrated material - most notably "Ghosts", an achingly sad 'apology' from a lonely old man and "Girls In My Life Part One", a dubious catalogue of amorous boasts from a naive young man.
His 1983 album ''
Trouble in Paradise'' included the hit single "
I Love L.A.," a song that has been interpreted as both praising and critiquing its subject, in this case, Los Angeles. This ambivalence is borne out by Newman's own comments on the song. As he explained in a 2001 interview, "There's some kind of ignorance L.A. has that I'm proud of. The open car and the redhead, the Beach Boys... that sounds 'really' good to me." The
ABC network and
Frank Gari Productions transformed "I Love L.A." into an extremely popular '80s TV promotional campaign, retooling the lyrics and title to "You'll Love It! (on ABC)". The album featured some of his strongest material - "Real Emotional Girl" was a disturbingly frank portrait of a relationship, sung from the male point of view while "Same Girl" told of the love affair between two junkies, and its inevitable and desperate final days.
In the years following ''Trouble in Paradise'', Randy focussed more on film work, but his personal life entered a difficult period. He split from his wife of nearly twenty years, Roswitha, and was diagnosed with the physically debilitating
Epstein-Barr virus. He has released two albums of new material as a singer-songwriter since that time: ''
Land of Dreams'' (1988) and ''
Bad Love'' (1999). The former featured Newman's first stab at autobiography with "Dixie Flyer" and "Four Eyes", while the latter included "I Miss You", a moving tribute to his ex-wife. He has also re-recorded a number of his earlier songs, accompanying himself on piano, as ''
The Randy Newman Songbook Vol. 1'' (2003), and continues to perform his songs before live audiences as a touring concert artist.
In the aftermath of the
Hurricane Katrina catastrophe of 2005, Newman's "
Louisiana 1927," about the inadequate government response to an earlier flood in the American south, spontaneously became an anthem, played heavily on a wide range of American radio and television stations, in both Newman's 1974 original, as well as
Aaron Neville's cover version of the song.
During a European tour in the
summer of 2006, Newman premiered three new songs: "Potholes in Memory Lane" (a straight
blues song about losing your memory when you get older), "Missing You" (a love
ballad), and the politically controversial "A Few Words in Defense of Our Country". The latter was released as an mp3 single in February 2007. It favorably compares the leaders of the
United States to those of previous
empires, although it criticizes the
War on Terror and the
Supreme Court, and posits that "this empire is ending like all the rest." The song is available through his website
[1]. Some other new songs that Newman has been working on include "Easy Street", "Fat and Angry", and a song about the 20th century.
Film composer
Newman's work as a film composer began in 1971, with his work on the
Norman Lear satire ''
Cold Turkey''. He returned to film work with 1981's ''
Ragtime'', for which he was nominated for two
Academy Awards. Newman co-wrote the 1986 film ''
¡Three Amigos!'' with
Steve Martin and
Lorne Michaels, wrote three songs for the film, and provided the voice for the singing bush.
Newman scored the first four
Disney/
Pixar feature films; ''
Toy Story'', ''
A Bug's Life'', ''
Toy Story 2'', and ''
Monsters, Inc.'' In these scores he achieved an individual style that makes his music immediately recognizable as his own. He also scored the 1996 film ''
James and the Giant Peach'' and the 2006 Disney/Pixar film ''
Cars''. Additional scores by Newman include ''
Avalon'', ''
Parenthood'', ''
Seabiscuit'', ''
Awakenings'', ''
The Paper'', ''
Overboard'', ''
Meet the Parents'', and its sequel, ''
Meet the Fockers''. His score for ''
Pleasantville'' was an
Academy Award nominee. He also wrote the songs for Turner's
Cats Don't Dance.
One of Newman's most iconic and recognizable works is the central theme to ''
The Natural'', a dramatic and Oscar-nominated score, which was described by at least one complimentary critic as "
Coplandesque."
Newman had the dubious distinction of receiving the most
Oscar nominations (fifteen) without a single win. His streak was broken when he received the
Oscar for Best Song in 2001, for the ''
Monsters Inc.'' song "
If I Didn't Have You", beating the likes of
Enya and
Paul McCartney. After receiving an enthusiastic standing ovation, a bemused but emotional Newman began
his acceptance speech with "I don't want your pity!"
Besides writing songs for films, he also writes songs for television series such as the Emmy-Award winning current theme song of
Monk, "
It's a Jungle out There"
In October 2006 it was revealed that Randy Newman will be writing the music to an upcoming
Walt Disney movie called ''
The Frog Princess'', which is scheduled for release in 2009. During the Walt Disney Company's annual shareholder meeting in March 2007, Randy Newman performed a new song written for the movie. He was accompanied by the
Dirty Dozen Brass Band.
Musical theater
In the 1990s, Newman adapted Goethe's ''
Faust'' into a concept album and musical, ''
Randy Newman's Faust''. After a 1995 staging at the
La Jolla Playhouse, he retained
David Mamet to help rework the book before its relaunch on the
Chicago Goodman Theatre mainstage in 1996. Newman's ''Faust'' project had been many years in the making, and it suffered for it; a central joke was Newman's depiction of Faust as a shallow
heavy metal music fan in thrall to Satan, and this had to be modified to accommodate the less-than-devil obsessed age of
grunge rock that was in fashion by 1995.
In 2000
South Coast Repertory produced ''The Education of Randy Newman'', a musical theater piece which recreates the life of a songwriter who bears some resemblance to the actual Newman. Set in
New Orleans and
Los Angeles, it was modeled on the celebrated American autobiography, ''
The Education of Henry Adams''. Newman, together with Jerry Patch and Michael Roth, surveyed Newman's songs to find those which, taken together, depict the life of an American artist in the last half of the 20th century. After its premiere at
SCR, it was reworked with additional songs written specifically for the show by Newman and presented in
Seattle by ACT.
Selected discography
Main articles: Randy Newman discography
★ ''
Randy Newman'' (1968)
★ ''
12 Songs'' (1970)
★ ''
Randy Newman Live'' (1971)
★
''Sail Away'' (1972)
★ ''
Good Old Boys'' (1974)
★ ''
Little Criminals'' (1977)
★ ''
Born Again'' (1979)
★ ''
Trouble in Paradise'' (1983)
★ ''
Land of Dreams'' (1988)
★ ''
Bad Love'' (1999)
★ ''
The Randy Newman Songbook Vol. 1'' (2003)
Notable recordings of Randy Newman compositions
★ "Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)" -
Irma Thomas
★ "Baltimore" -
Nina Simone
★ "Biggest Night Of Her Life" - The
Alan Price Set
★ "Come And Dance With Me" - The
Alan Price Set
★ "Friday Night" - The
O'Jays
★ "God's Song (That's Why I Love Mankind)" -
Etta James
★ "Happy Land" - The
Alan Price Set
★ "I Don't Wanna Hear It Anymore" -
Jerry Butler,
Dusty Springfield
★ "I'll Be Home" -
Cass Elliot,
Mina,
Harry Nilsson, Scott Walker
★ "I Think It's Going To Rain Today" -
Judy Collins,
Rick Nelson,
Bobby Darin,
Walter Jackson,
Nina Simone,
Dusty Springfield,
Joe Cocker,
UB40
★ "I Wonder Why" -
Ella Fitzgerald
★ "I've Been Wrong Before" -
Cilla Black, Dusty Springfield
★ "Just One Smile" -
Gene Pitney,
Dusty Springfield
★ "Let's Burn Down The Cornfield" -
Lou Rawls,
Etta James
★ "Living Without You" - The
Alan Price Set,
Harry Nilsson
★ "Louisiana 1927" -
Aaron Neville(Asleep at the Wheel)
★ "Love Story" -
Alan Price,
Harry Nilsson
★ "Mama Told Me Not To Come" -
Three Dog Night
★ "My Old Kentucky Home" -
Alan Price
★ "Naked Man" -
Keith Moon
★ "No One Ever Hurt So Bad" - The
Alan Price Set
★ "Nobody Needs Your Love" -
Jerry Butler,
Gene Pitney
★ "Sail Away" -
Etta James,
Gladys Knight,
Linda Ronstadt
★ "Simon Smith and His Amazing Dancing Bear" - The
Alan Price Set,
Harry Nilsson
★ "Tickle Me" - The
Alan Price Set
★ "Yellow Man" -
Ella Fitzgerald,
Harry Nilsson
★ "(You Can) Leave Your Hat On" -
Etta James,
Joe Cocker,
Tom Jones
Awards and nominations
★
Academy Award
★
★ 2007: Nominee - Original Song - "
Our Town" - ''
Cars''
★
★ 2002: Winner - Original Song - "
If I Didn't Have You" - ''
Monsters, Inc.''
★
★ 2002: Nominee - Original Score - ''
Monsters, Inc.''
★
★ 2001: Nominee - Original Song - "A Fool In Love" - ''
Meet The Parents''
★
★ 2000: Nominee - Original Song - "When She Loved Me" - ''
Toy Story 2''
★
★ 1999: Nominee - Original Dramatic Score - ''
Pleasantville''
★
★ 1999: Nominee - Original Musical or Comedy Score - ''
A Bug's Life''
★
★ 1999: Nominee - Original Song - "That'll Do" - ''
★
★ 1997: Nominee - Original Musical or Comedy Score - ''
James and the Giant Peach''
★
★ 1996: Nominee - Original Song - "You've Got a Friend" - ''
Toy Story''
★
★ 1996: Nominee - Original Musical or Comedy Score - ''
Toy Story''
★
★ 1995: Nominee - Original Song - "Make Up Your Mind" - ''
The Paper''
★
★ 1991: Nominee - Original Score - ''
Avalon''
★
★ 1990: Nominee - Original Song - "I Love to See You Smile" - ''
Parenthood''
★
★ 1985: Nominee - Original Score - ''
The Natural''
★
★ 1982: Nominee - Original Score - ''
Ragtime''
★
★ 1982: Nominee - Original Song - "One More Hour" - ''
Ragtime''
★
Golden Globe
★
★ 2000: Nominee - Original Song - "When She Loved Me" - ''
Toy Story 2''
★
★ 1999: Nominee - Original Score - ''
A Bug's Life''
★
★ 1996: Nominee - Original Song - "You've Got a Friend" - ''
Toy Story''
★
★ 1991: Nominee - Original Score - ''
Avalon''
★
★ 1990: Nominee - Original Song - "I Love to See You Smile" - ''
Parenthood''
★
★ 1982: Nominee - Original Song - "One More Hour" - ''
Ragtime''
★
Grammy
★
★ 2007: Winner - Song Written for Motion Picture or Television - "
Our Town" - ''
Cars''
★
★ 2004: Nominee - Score Soundtrack Album for Motion Picture or Television - ''
Seabiscuit''
★
★ 2003: Winner - Song Written for Motion Picture or Television - "
If I Didn't Have You" - ''
Monsters, Inc.'
★
★ 2003: Nominee - Score Soundtrack Album for Motion Picture or Television - ''
Monsters, Inc.''
★
★ 2001: Winner - Song Written for Motion Picture or Television - "When She Loved Me" - ''
Toy Story 2'
★
★ 2001: Nominee - Score Soundtrack Album for Motion Picture or Television - ''
Toy Story 2''
★
★ 2000: Winner - Instrumental Composition Written for Motion Picture or Television - ''
A Bug's Life''
★
★ 2000: Nominee - Song Written for Motion Picture or Television - "The Time Of Your Life" - ''
A Bug's Life'
★
★ 1992: Nominee - Instrumental Composition Written for Motion Picture or Television - ''
Avalon''
★
★ 1992: Nominee - Instrumental Composition Written for Motion Picture or Television - ''
Awakenings''
★
★ 1990: Nominee - Song Written for Motion Picture or Television - ''
Parenthood''
★
★ 1983: Nominee - Score Album for Motion Picture or Television - ''
Ragtime''
★
Emmy
★
★ 2004: Winner - Main Title Theme Music - ''
Monk''
★
★ 1991: Winner - Achievement in Music and Lyrics - ''
Cop Rock''
★
Annie Award
★
★ 2007: Winner - Music in an Animated Feature Production - ''
Cars''
★
★ 2003: Nominee - Music in an Animated Feature Production - ''
Monsters, Inc.''
★
★ 2000: Winner - Music in an Animated Feature Production - ''
Toy Story 2''
★
★ 1997: Winner - Music in an Animated Feature Production - ''
Cats Don't Dance''
★
★ 1996: Winner - Music in an Animated Feature Production - ''
Toy Story''
★
BAFTA Award
★
★ 1983: Nominee - Original Song - "One More Hour" - ''
Ragtime''
★
Chicago Film Critics Association Award
★
★ 1999: Nominee - Original Score - ''
A Bug's Life''
★
★ 1996: Winner - Original Score - ''
Toy Story''
★
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award
★
★ 1981: Winner - Music - ''
Ragtime''
★
Online Film Critics Society Award
★
★ 1999: Winner - Original Score - ''
Pleasantville''
Trivia
★ Randy Newman was parodied in the television show ''
Family Guy'' in the episode "
Da Boom", where he sits at a piano singing about everything he sees. Newman was voiced by
Will Sasso, who was reprising the character from a recurring ''
MADtv'' sketch. He reappeared in '' as he sings the theme song to a trailer of fictional film "The littlest Bunny".
★ Randy Newman appeared on ''
The Colbert Report'' on
October 9,
2006, performing "Political Science" after his interview. At the end of the performance
Stephen Colbert said "I hope they're listening in D.C." This appearance came days after North Korea conducted an underground test of a nuclear weapon.
★ Randy Newman appeared on the season two finale of the sitcom ''
3rd Rock from the Sun'', accompanying the character
Harry Solomon's performance of "Life Has Been Good To Me" on piano in a dream sequence.
★ Randy wrote "Lonely at The Top" for
Frank Sinatra. He claims that Sinatra turned it down on the grounds that people wouldn't see the irony.
★ Randy also wrote "Every Time it Rains" - a track from his 'Bad Love' album - for Michael Jackson, who was said to have declined.
★ Excerpts from Randy's original soundtrack for the 1984 Robert Redford film ''
The Natural'' were used in the memorable series finale of the hit 1988-93 ABC-TV series ''
The Wonder Years''. Portions of the same soundtrack were again used a decade later to close ABC's 50th Anniversary Special.
★
WWE Superstar
Rob Conway's Entrance Theme "Just Look At Me" is performed by Randy Newman.
★
Snoop Dog covered his song "It's a Jungle Out There" in an episode of Monk.
References
1. See his career chronology at randynewman.com
External links
★
RandyNewman.com
★
★
★ ''Randy Newman: American Dreams'', Kevin Courrier (2005) ISBN 1-55022-690-8
★
South Coast Repertory articles on ''The Education of Randy Newman''
★
Interview with Randy Newman on the Art of Songwriting