Monday, December 12, 2022

⭐Pump Up Your Book Virtual Book Tour Kick Off⭐I Sang That by Sally Stevens #Memoir @sallytwitshere

 

A personal story of growing up in a "his, hers and theirs" family in the forties and fifties, and how a shy little girl became a second-generation singer in the ever-evolving music business of Hollywood…

By Sally Stevens



Book Blurb

This book is a personal journey behind the scenes into the world of music-makers who created the film scores, television music, sound recordings, commercials and concert evenings over the last sixty years.

 It’s about a long singing career that began in 1960 with concert tours – Ray Conniff, Nat King Cole, and later, solo work in concert with Burt Bacharach – to thirty years of vocals and main titles for The Simpsons, vocals for Family Guy…vocals on hundreds of film & television scores & sound recordings, plus twenty-two years as Choral Director for the Oscars. It’s also the personal story of growing up in a “his, hers and theirs” family in the forties and fifties, and how a shy little girl became a second-generation singer in the ever-evolving music business of Hollywood.

Release Date: October 25, 2022

Publisher: Atmosphere Press

Soft Cover: 978-1639885510; 390 pages

Amazon: https://amzn.to/3GmcBJD

Book Excerpt  


INTRODUCTION 


One day, during the period of the coronavirus pandemic that hit the world early in 2020 and brought activities to a screeching halt, I came across a box of sheet music I’d stored away—scribbled lead sheets of songs I had written back in the late sixties and seventies. Some of them were completed and I had actually recorded demos of them. Some were almost complete, but had a few missing bars of lyrics, or the pencil scribblings were so faded that I couldn’t quite make them out. 


I’ve spent hours during this last year sitting at the piano playing through those songs, trying to remember what person or what heartbreak inspired each one. I’ve gotten mad at myself for not working harder at them, for not believing more in myself and my ability to do that. 

There’s a little framed art piece hanging on the entryway hall of my house next to my front door. In black letters, painted artistically on a background that looks like it’s made of sackcloth, are the words of its thought-provoking message: “I am lost. I have gone to look for myself. If I should return before I get back, please ask me to wait. Thanks.” 


I see that little sign every time I leave my house, and I ponder upon its meaning. Why did I feel that message was so clearly for me? Was it a moment of clarity? Did I somehow lose myself along the way? Did I end up on the path I had not intended to travel? I spotted that little sign maybe ten years ago, when I was shopping in a neighborhood gift shop. It struck home immediately but I wasn’t sure exactly why. I just knew I had to buy it. Maybe writing these pages will help me figure it all out. 


The songwriting began for me decades ago when I was still in junior high school. It was partly self-expression and partly a conscious creative endeavor. That was when I began to think seriously about wanting to make a living in the music business. Though I’d sung with a little band of guys from my high school who performed for dances at the Elks Lodge, my first real professional audition happened one day in 1957 during my last year in high school. It was through the kindness of a lighting man who had been on the road with my father when he was road manager for Holiday on Ice that I got a chance to audition for one of the afternoon TV talk shows produced in Los Angeles. The lighting man had remembered my father talking about his daughter who wanted to be a singer, and he was now working at CBS TV on the afternoon show. The band was looking for a singer, and my dad had successfully convinced the lighting man that I was pretty good, so he somehow managed to get me involved in the auditions. 


I couldn’t believe this really was happening. At that point I was still pretty shy, so I lived somewhere between adequate self-confidence and total fear and paranoia. Part of me must have thought that I might somehow, at seventeen years of age, be good enough to get hired on a network TV show. The other part of me was scared to death I wouldn’t be able to pull it off. 


I wish I could tell you the name of the show, but it has long escaped my memory, along with the name of the song I sang. I was terribly nervous, and on top of just being nervous about the singing, I had never driven into “the city” from the little town of Tujunga where we lived. 


CBS Studio was, and still is, at the corner of Fairfax Boulevard and Beverly Boulevard, sort of on the west edge of Hollywood. Tujunga is in the low hills at the far north end of the San Fernando Valley. There was no Siri in those days to tell you where to turn, nor any Google Maps on the dashboard. So my mother wrote out careful instructions for me, and I tried to follow them. I don’t think she was terribly happy about this audition that my father had helped arrange. Cautionary lights were blinking on and off in my mother’s mind. 


I pulled up to the guard gate at the CBS lot and told the guard I was there for an audition. He had my name on his list, and eventually I found my way through the hallways to the right studio. The musical director of the show was standing down at the front of the auditorium. I made my way through the empty aisles and he waved me over to the bandstand. “What are you singing for us?” he asked. I handed him my music. He handed the music to the piano player as I walked up onto the little stage into position in front of the standing mic. The piano player started the intro, and I sang my song, nervous but still persevering. 


When I finished, the musical director walked over to me, handed me back my sheet music, and said, “Honey, why don’t you find a nice boy and get married?” 


The drive home was painful in a different way than the drive into town had been. I was no longer nervous, just disappointed, depressed, and pretty discouraged. 


But here’s the thing. I did eventually find three “nice boys,” and I married them all, sequentially of course. And somehow along the way I stumbled into working successfully in the music business as a singer, vocal contractor, and lyricist for film and TV scoring, sound recordings, concerts, and commercials—with and for some of the best people in the business—for the next sixty years. I’ve been blessed to sing on so many projects over these years, as either soloist or as part of a choir or small vocal group. You’ve heard many of them, I suspect, but they were for the most part uncredited, which is the custom for us “session singers” here in Hollywood. I’ll share some of those specifics with you as we travel together through these pages. 


The journey through all those years, between the tragic events of that day at CBS and today, has been a fascinating and blessed one. Perhaps I should dedicate this book to those three sequential husbands I mentioned earlier, and to that unknown music director at CBS who unwittingly provided the initial challenge to do it all.

More...
 




About the Author

Sally Stevens is a singer/lyricist/choral director who has worked in film, television, concert, commercials and sound recording in Hollywood since 1960. She sings the main titles for The Simpsons and Family Guy and her voice can be heard on hundreds of film and television scores.  She has put together choirs for John Williams, Jerry Goldsmith, Elmer Bernstein, and many others for film scores, and was choral director for The Oscars for 22 years. In the earlier years she toured with Ray Conniff, Nat King Cole and Burt Bachrach, and she has also written lyrics for Burt Bacharach, Don Ellis, Dominic Frontiere, Dave Grusin, and others.

Her short fiction, poetry and essays have been included in Mockingheart Review, The OffBeat, Raven’s Perch, Hermeneutic Chaos Literary Journal, Los Angeles Press, The Voices Project, and Between the Lines Anthology: Fairy Tales & Folklore Re-imagined.

Along with singing and writing, her other passion is photography, and her black & white photographs of film composers have been included in exhibitions at the Association of Motion Picture & Television Producers headquarters in Los Angeles, and at Cite de la Musique in Paris, France.

Website:  https://www.sallystevenswriter.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/sallytwitshere

Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/sally.stevens.14


Sponsored By:

No comments:

Post a Comment