It was a
beautiful day, the sun beat down
I had the radio on, I was drivin'
Trees went by, me and Del were singin' little Runaway
I was flyin'
Yeah, runnin' down a dream that never would come to me
Workin' on a mystery, goin' wherever it leads
Runnin' down a dream
I had the radio on, I was drivin'
Trees went by, me and Del were singin' little Runaway
I was flyin'
Yeah, runnin' down a dream that never would come to me
Workin' on a mystery, goin' wherever it leads
Runnin' down a dream
“Runnin'
Down a Dream” by Tom Petty
Why did rock and roll
innovator Del Shannon commit suicide? He didn't leave a note, so no
one really knows what prompted the pop star to shoot himself on Feb.
8, 1990. The question has plagued family, friends and fans,
Shannon's wife, Bonnie,
who had been out shopping, returned to their home in the Santa
Clarita Valley, north of Los Angeles, to find the singer slumped in a
chair, a bullet wound in his right temple and a .22 caliber rifle at
his feet. There was no suicide note, leaving others to wonder over
what dark impulse had taken hold of him. Mike Crowley of the L.A.
County Sheriffs Department …
“Del had gone through
bouts of depression. We’re pretty sure it’s a straight suicide.”
Over the last few weeks of
his life, Shannon had appeared increasingly lethargic. He’d lost
weight and his zest for playing music. He canceled an upcoming tour
in England. Shannon reportedly had visited a psychologist two days
before his death, was said to be worried about an upcoming IRS audit.
He also was suffering from a stubborn sinus infection.
Shannon's longtime manager
Dan Bourgoise, said that the singer had been depressed lately, that
he was concerned about his new home, and that he had been suffering
from the flu for several weeks. Bourgoise insisted
Shannon had no financial worries. He says that royalties and concert
fees brought the former pop idol well into six figures annually.
Bourgoise said …
“Over the years, I
think he privately became, in a sense, the morose character in his
songs.”
At the same time, Del
Shannon's career was on the up after a decade-long slump. He'd been
working with Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne and was rumored to be replacing
Roy Orbison, who had died, in the Traveling Wilburys supergroup.
Also, he'd recently played
a sell-out show on February 3 at a Buddy Holly tribute concert in
Clear Lake, Iowa, before heading back to his new house in California.
Dale Hannasch of Watertown, South Dakota, who helped promote the
concert, said he could tell something was off. He said Shannon looked
sunken and thin. In the middle of the show, Shannon went backstage to
tell Hannasch he was too sick to continue, but Hannasch urged him to
finish. Shannon did, starting his encore with, of course, “Runaway.”
Later, there were rumors
that Shannon had found out that he would not, as he had hoped, be
invited to replace the late Roy Orbison in the Traveling Wilburys.
(The group later recorded a version of his iconic song “Runaway”
in his honor and Petty finished a new album Rock On he and
Lynn had been producing for Shannon.)
(Richard
Bak. “Del Shannon’s ‘Runaway’ Success Led to His Downfall
Hour.” Detroit Magazine. June 30, 2011.)
Around 6:30 P.M. on Feb.
8, Shannon had called his onetime manager and close friend of more
than 30 years, Wayne Carter. Carter relates …
“He was depressed,
but I’d heard him sound that way many times. I told him we ought to
get together for breakfast and rap about what was troubling him.”
The autopsy revealed no
alcohol or illegal drugs in Shannon's system. It was said he had
procured a prescription for Prozac. In 1991, Shannon’s ex-wife,
LeAnne, sued the makers of Prozac, the antidepressant that Shannon
was taking, claiming that it was the drug that contributed to his
death. That suit was eventually dropped, but the case brought early
attention to the still-unresolved question of the possible connection
between suicidal ideation and SSRIs, the class of drugs to which
Prozac belongs. LeAnne said …
“I watched him turn
into somebody who was agitated, pacing, had trembling hands,
insomnia, and couldn’t function.”
Bonnie, 36, Shannon's
second wife of just two years at the time of his death believed her
husband’s death was an accident. She said …
“Del was too loving,
too considerate a person to do something like this. He would never do
it, knowing it would hurt those who loved him.”
It was no secret Del
Shannon had an alcohol problem. Various attempts to repackage himself
as an artist failed, and a nascent drinking problem got out of
control. “When I was 20, I was drinking,” Shannon told the Los
Angeles Times. “When I was 30, I was drinking more, and at 40, way
too much.”
In 1978 Shannon stopped
drinking and began work on "Sea of Love", released in 1982
on his album Drop Down and Get Me, produced by Tom Petty. And,
in 1986 Shannon rewrote the lyrics to “Runaway” for the TV series
Crime Story. He frequently played oldies shows and was in the process
of recording another album.
Del Shannon was not just
another washed up and forgotten teen idol. First and foremost, he was
a rocker. He was one of the few artists to bridge the gap between the
early days of rock and roll and the newer styles ushered in by the
Beatles and the British Invasion.
Shannon was among the
relatively few self-reliant rock and rollers of his era. He wrote his
own material, played guitar and sang, and did not project a
manufactured image. He also turned out a solid run of hits during the
first half of the sixties, including one bonafide classic ("Runaway")
and seven more Top Forty singles.
In 1999, Del Shannon was
inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. This came from the
essay written by Michael Hill upon Shannon's induction …
“The characters that
populated Del Shannon’s songs often could be found, to paraphrase a
fellow inductee, in the darkness on the edge of town.
“His haunted heroes
were always either leaving or being left behind, in pursuit or
being pursued. For Shannon, there were no happy endings, even though
his protagonists already had the girl-in fact, that’s usually where
the trouble started.
“Love’s a deadly
game,” he sang in one of his later tunes. But if the subject matter
was dark, the music was some of the most uplifting rockin’ around.
Whatever the life and
legacy of Del Shannon, to his fans he remains immortal for writing
and performing “Runaway.” Among other honors, the recording was
enshrined in the Grammy Hall of Fame, and Rolling
Stone named it one of the greatest songs of
all time. Airplay and downloads of “Runaway” continue to generate
royalties in the low six-figure range each year, a haul that is
divided between his heirs and co-writer Max Crook.
Shannon once said he wrote
the words to “Runaway” about himself because he was forever
running away from relationships – the song told the story of a guy
whose girl leaves him, and he is left wondering why it went wrong. A
modest man who never claimed he was doing anything original with his
vocal, Shannon said the song borrowed from The Ink Spots’ “We
Three,” Jimmy Jones’ “Handy Man,” Bobby Darin’s “Dream
Lover,” and Dion & The Belmonts’ “I Wonder Why.”
Legend has it that while
on stage one night at the Hi-Lo Lounge in Battle Creek, Michigan, in
1960, the young and unknown Del Shannon stopped his band mid-song to
have his organ player repeat, over and over, an unusual chord
sequence he had just adlibbed: A-minor to G.
Note
– Charles Westover (Del Shannon) and keyboard player Max Crook
performed together as members of "Charlie Johnson and the Big
Little Show Band.”
Shannon went to work the
next day in his job as a carpet salesman with those chords stuck in
his mind, and by the time he took the stage that night, he’d
written a song called “Little Runaway” around them—(A-minor) As
I walk along I (G) wonder, what went wrong…”
It would be three more
months before Shannon and his band could make it to a New York
recording studio to record the song that Shannon now saw as his best,
and possibly last, shot at stardom.
Note – On January
21, 1961, they recorded "Runaway" at the Bell Sound
recording studios, with Harry Balk as producer, Fred Weinberg as
audio engineer and also session musician on several sections: session
musician Al Caiola on guitar, Moe Wechsler on piano, and Crook
playing the central, historical Musitron break. Other musicians on
the record included Al Casamenti and Bucky Pizzarelli on guitar, Milt
Hinton on bass, and Joe Marshall on drums. Bill Ramall, who was the
arranger for the session, also played baritone sax. After recording
in A minor, producer Balk sped up the recording to pitch just below a
B-flat minor.
As he told Billboard
magazine years later, “I just said to myself, if this record isn’t
a hit, I’m going back into the carpet business.” Del Shannon sold
his last carpet a few months later, as “Runaway” roared up the
pop charts on its way to #1 in April 1961.
"Runaway"
As
I walk along, I wonder
A-what went wrong with our love
A love that was so strong
And as I still walk on, I think of
The things we've done together
While our hearts were young
I'm a-walkin' in the rain
Tears are fallin' and I feel the pain
Wishin' you were here by me
To end this misery
I wonder
I wah-wah-wah-wah-wonder
Why
Why, why, why, why, why
She ran away
And I wonder
Where she will stay
My little runaway
A-run, run, run, run, runaway
I'm a-walkin' in the rain
Tears are fallin' and I feel the pain
Wishin' you were here by me
To end this misery
And I wonder
I wah-wah-wah-wah-wonder
Why
Why, why, why, why, why
She ran away
And I wonder
Where she will stay
My little runaway
A-run, run, run, run, runaway
A-run, run, run, run, runaway
A-run, run, run, run, runaway
A-what went wrong with our love
A love that was so strong
And as I still walk on, I think of
The things we've done together
While our hearts were young
I'm a-walkin' in the rain
Tears are fallin' and I feel the pain
Wishin' you were here by me
To end this misery
I wonder
I wah-wah-wah-wah-wonder
Why
Why, why, why, why, why
She ran away
And I wonder
Where she will stay
My little runaway
A-run, run, run, run, runaway
I'm a-walkin' in the rain
Tears are fallin' and I feel the pain
Wishin' you were here by me
To end this misery
And I wonder
I wah-wah-wah-wah-wonder
Why
Why, why, why, why, why
She ran away
And I wonder
Where she will stay
My little runaway
A-run, run, run, run, runaway
A-run, run, run, run, runaway
A-run, run, run, run, runaway
No comments:
Post a Comment