Ask The A.V. Club: March 9, 2007


by The A.V. Club staff
March 9th, 2007

Every week, Ask The A.V. Club tackles readers' questions about pop culture. Sometimes we go straight to the source:

Lowercase N Isn't Lonely Any More

Lowercase N

I've been promised a kiss on the cheek from the object of my affection if I can procure the name of the musicians behind the Sesame Street animated sequences "Capital I" and "Lowercase N." Please help!

Dustin

 

Tasha Robinson would like to live in a capital I too:

I'm betting I'm not the object of your affection, Dustin, since we've never met, but I wanted to give you a kiss myself for reminding me about those two lovely little ditties. Hunting around a bit online, I learned two things: A lot of other people also want the answer to this question, and a few people seemed to think that the name of the performer was Steve Zuckerman, but no one seemed to have any concrete proof. So I found his website, which indicated he was a composer who'd worked on Sesame Street during the right era. But that didn't entirely answer the question, so I went a step further and contacted him for confirmation, letting him know exactly how much I loved those two songs, and asking him for the lowdown on their history. With his kind permission, I here reproduce the email he sent me:

Thanks so much for the praise. I was the writer-performer on both of those animated segments. It was just me doing the harmony and the melody—I think it was using a 4-track and bouncing tracks back and forth. That's pretty much how I did all of them.

I remember recording them around 1970 at Valentine Recording Studios (in the San Fernando Valley) for Fred Calvert Productions. I was just starting out (I had just turned 20) in my musical career as the studio's music director, and along with various other submitters, we proposed segments to CTW based on their rather detailed and voluminous source and research materials. In each of these segments, the songs were created first. The first segment (which I also performed and wrote) is still my personal favorite—"Imagination Rain," which ran for about 15 or 20 years.

I'm still very active in music production as a composer, producer, and orchestrator. In addition, I am president of a creative agency/production company (CreativeCombustion.tv) that specializes in product development, strategy, and execution for youth-related products and services.

Again, thanks. With your help, maybe I've finally made the transition from total obscurity to partial obscurity. What more could a guy ask for?

So there you have it. Steve Zuckerman, "Capital I" and "Lowercase N" composer-performer and all-around nice guy. Dustin, I highly recommend that the object of your affection check out his website, and particularly his lengthy credits list. Chances are, you've heard a lot more of his music in ads, cartoons, video games, TV shows, and films, without realizing it.

 

 

 

The Menace Of The Phantom Menace

My wife is pregnant with our first child. I'm very much looking forward to hanging out with the little scamp. Question: When the time comes, should I present the Star Wars movies to my child in sequential order (I-VI), or in the order our generation first saw them? Or should I hide the prequels upstairs alongside Daddy's "other" videos and pretend they don't exist? Hiding them seems like a good option for two reasons: 1) it eliminates the threat that the movies will make my kid dumber; 2) it eliminates any potential heartbreak that would result if—for some reason—the kid preferred the prequels. On the other hand, it would be kind of cool to tap the perspective of someone who watched them sequentially. Plus, if anybody could enjoy the prequels, it would be a kid, right?

Ben McCanna

 

Father-of-two Noel Murray responds:

As one of the only critics willing to admit to liking all three prequels, I'm probably the wrong guy to ask whether you should chuck 'em into a trunk. But I think you're on the right track when you say that seeing the movies again through your child's eyes might make them seem not so "bad." Trust me, you're going to watch a lot of crap with your children, to the point where you'll become a connoisseur. (Barney? Hateful. The Wiggles? Tolerable. The Backyardigans? Sublime.) Don't be surprised if Episode I looks like Gunga Din by the time you've digested enough Dora The Explorer.

So I say, let your child watch them all. In which order? Well, the major problem with the prequels is that to some extent, they make no sense if you haven't seen the original trilogy. Revenge Of The Sith in particular is chockfull of moments that only resonate if you know how they play out later in the story. In that sense, you're probably better off starting with A New Hope (or, as it should be called, Star Wars). On the other hand, if your childhood was anything like mine, you read series fiction in whatever order the public library had the novels available, and collected runs of old comics with gaps between issues. Kids don't really care much about continuity, so why not start with Return Of The Jedi and work backward? It'll really blow your kid's mind, and aside from the cute pictures, messing with heads is the best part of having children.

 

 

 

Think For Yourself, 'Cause We Won't Be There With You

A couple years ago, there was a song that was mildly popular on the local indie-rock station. The music was very sparse, if I remember, and there was a male and a female singer. All I really remember about the content is a line about being "indie-famous" and the chorus was something like "Just so you know, I can't allow myself to fall for you." Help?

Alex

 

Lately, we've been getting a handful of these every week—"What song is this?" questions that include lyrics. Most of the time, these can be solved immediately by putting those lyrics into a search engine. That was the case here, Alex; the day we got your question, a quick Yahoo search for "indie famous lyrics" called up the song "Fall 4 U" by Tullycraft. We were prepared to chew you out—and to warn people that we're done addressing questions that can be instantly solved with the most rudimentary search. But your question got back-burnered for a few weeks, and when we put together this column and ran the search again just to make sure, the song no longer instantly popped up. In fact, we couldn't find a reliable source for the lyrics. (Though the song sample on iTunes makes it clear that it's exactly what you were looking for.) So here's the deal, guys—we'll promise not to make fun of you for sending us questions that can be answered easily via Google or Yahoo if you promise to run searches on your own lyrics, film titles, etc. before emailing us with questions. Sound fair?

 

 

 

STUMPED NO MORE!

Last week, we asked you to answer some more questions on our behalf. And as usual, you did us proud:

Okay, there was a movie I loved as a kid. The main characters were, I think, three criminals. At the very end of the movie, they'd just evaded the cops, and were elated that they'd gotten away. The last line is when one character says, while driving a fast car, "Nothing can stop us now!" Then they accidentally hit a train and explode. The end. Any idea what that movie was? I'm pretty sure it was made in the '70s.

Lee

 

Dirty Mary Crazy Larry

Sure enough, Lee, many people wrote in to identify this as 1974's Dirty Mary Crazy Larry, starring Peter Fonda and Susan George as the titular Larry and Mary. (The third person in the car is Larry's buddy Deke, played by Adam Roarke.) You can see the actual scene here; turns out the exact line is "Ain't nothing gonna stop us!", which may have hindered your web searches a bit.

In tipping us off to the title, respondent Matt Carson summed it up like this: "It's one of those existential car-chase movies from the '70s, kinda like Vanishing Point or the original Gone In 60 Seconds, where they just drive and drive and drive, because they're drivers, man." Tom Collins, who also wrote in with the correct answer, explains that he first saw that climactic crash in the opening credits of Lee Majors' TV series The Fall Guy. Those credits,