The Glam Slam is now momentarily interrupted by this
mysterious piece of music; mysterious, famously, because Simon has never
actually said directly, to the public,
who it is about. Oh, it’s about “men” in
general she says at one time; then at another, it’s about one man, or three…but
who it’s about doesn’t really concern me.
What interests me more than who it is? Why was it such an absolute hit in the first
place (here because of good old Radio Luxembourg yet again)? A woman who was born into cultured wealth
gets dumped by a man who moves in the same circles is not exactly hit song
material, but if that was all the song was really about, then…but of course, it
isn’t. This song
is riding the crest of a mighty wave of feminism, particularly of the
consciousness-raising variety, the kind that asks participants to speak out –
to say what they have never said
before, couldn’t even contemplate saying, that they have kept to themselves. To look at the bigger picture, and the small;
the public and private intersecting – how men are, as well as how their
relationships with men they know are.
The focus here is on the man and his vanity, as a symbol for
men in general; the anger at this solipsism particularly comes in Simon’s growling of “sevv--veral
years ago” and “blew your living up
to Nova Scotia.” She was “quite naïve”,
she was trusting; but now she is out there on the curb with whatever else he
feels he doesn’t need anymore, her lovely dreams of his being loyal and their
happy future adventures going up, vanishing like steam. The whole thing is a sham, because he is in
love with himself. Why, even this song
is about him, not her; even in her
misery, her anger, he can only see himself reflected, and what a flattering
reflection it is – to him*. He knows how
to dance a gavotte! His horse won at
Saratoga! All the girls dream about him,
man. He is the man of mystery, hanging
out with spies and friends’ wives. He is
the stuff of gossip columns**, racy romance novels, you name it.
Simon could have
kept this to herself, but something else was happening alongside feminism at
this point, and that was the singer-songwriter movement, wherein women
(primarily) could have their voices heard and express themselves – make the
private public, and the public, private.
Even if a woman didn’t know where the local consciousness-raising group
was, if she had the latest albums by Joni Mitchell, Carole King, Laura Nyro,
Dory Previn and Carly Simon – then she could hear something of her own life
reflected in them. Ultimately who this
song is about isn’t as important as the fact that it came hot on the heels of
Helen Reddy’s “I Am Woman” (not a hit at all in the UK, but a US #1) and
reflects that time, when women were stepping into rock, so to speak, with their
own voices, their own views, their own experiences. (It didn’t hurt the song to have Mick Jagger
appear on it either, and goodness knows it’s a better than anything on Goats Head Soup.)
This is a song for all women, and for that matter anyone who
has been dumped (men like this song too, after all); there are few songs as righteously
angry as this one, which has been covered and discussed and which still retains that mystery,
which at its heart isn’t such a mystery, after all.
Next up: till the day
you die? Really?
*Warren Beatty actually phoned Carly Simon to thank her for
writing this song about him. I think
this is, in its own way, proof that the song is indeed about him, whether it actually is or not. If he has realized the stupidity of this call
yet, we may never know.
**Though not directly related to this song, I have to say that while gossip columns existed before the 70s, the 70s saw the rise of People magazine and celebrity-obsessed journalism, and this song reminds me of that Rona Barrett-dominated time, when the comings and goings of the famous became standard news, more or less.
2 comments:
It's "flew your Lear Jet up to Nova Scotia" :)
Thanks for the correction - I'm sure this is why Beatty made that phone call - "Damn, I've got a Lear jet too, I'm one cool dude!"
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