Taxi (song)

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"Taxi"
Taxi - Harry Chapin.jpg
Single by Harry Chapin
from the album Heads & Tales
B-side"Empty"
ReleasedMarch 1972
Recorded1972
GenreFolk rock
Length6:44
LabelElektra
Songwriter(s)Harry Chapin
Producer(s)Jac Holzman
Harry Chapin singles chronology
"Taxi"
(1972)
"Could You Put Your Light On, Please"
(1972)

"Taxi" is a song written by Harry Chapin, released as a single in early 1972 to coincide with the release of its parent album Heads & Tales. Chapin debuted the song on NBC's The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, which prompted calls and telegrams from viewers requesting that Chapin return to the show. It was the first time in the show's history that host Johnny Carson brought a performer back the very next night for an encore performance.[citation needed] "Taxi" helped to establish Chapin's musical style and emerged as the singer-songwriter's early signature song, with Chapin often associated with taxi-related imagery. Jim Connors, music director and disc jockey at Boston AM radio station WMEX, is credited with discovering Chapin. The single charted on both Boston stations WMEX and WRKO in late February, reached number one on both stations in April and ranked 4 for the year on both stations. The single's early Boston success helped "Taxi" to hit big on Billboard's Hot 100, where in June 1972 it reached no. 24 during a then-lengthy 16-week chart run. Billboard ranked it 85 in its year-end singles list.[1] In Canada the single reached no. 5.[2]

Content[]

The song tells the story of Harry, a cab driver, on a rainy night in San Francisco. He picks up a woman wearing an expensive gown, his last fare for the night, and she asks to be taken to her home at 16 Parkside Lane, an address in an affluent section of town. Harry finds the woman familiar at first, but she seems not to recognize him until after she looks at him in the rear-view mirror and glances at his taxi license. It is then revealed that she is Sue, an old flame from Harry's youth.

In flashback, Harry remembers how he "used to take her home in [his] car" and also how they "learned about love in the back of a Dodge," adding, "The lesson hadn't gone too far." Sue had wanted to be an actress, while Harry was going to learn to fly (hinting at Chapin's earlier real-life experience at the United States Air Force Academy). Their relationship ended when Sue "took off to find the footlights" and Harry "took off to find the sky."

The middle section of the song features the bass player, John Wallace, in falsetto, singing the following lines:

Baby's so high, that she's skying
Yes she's flying, afraid to fall
I'll tell you why baby's crying
Cause she's dying, aren't we all...

The above lyrics were spoken by Harry over John's falsetto vocal on an early mix of the song released only to radio stations.

The taxi arrives at Sue's lavish home. As she prepares to exit the cab, she vaguely offers to get together with him sometime, with Harry knowing "it'd never be arranged." Sue pays him a $20 bill for "a $2.50 fare" and says: "Harry, keep the change." The tip amount of $17.50 in 1972 would be equivalent to $108 in 2020.

Harry has mixed feelings:

Well, another man might have been angry
And another man might have been hurt
But another man never would have let her go;
I stashed the bill in my shirt.

As Sue walks into her "handsome home," Harry finally realizes that "[they'd] both gotten what [they'd] asked for, such a long, long time ago": Sue is now "acting" happy in a loveless marriage and sterile artificial affluence, while Harry's "flying" by driving a taxi, "taking tips", and "getting stoned." Asked about the reference to "stoned", Chapin stated in a 1972 interview that he'd never been high or drunk, but "the song becomes a reality away from your own experience."[3] A censored radio version of the single replaced "stoned" with "stalled".[citation needed]

Chapin said, "there's not a single line that tells how the guy or the girl felt. It's a very cinematic technique. But it's also a very uneconomical technique. That's why my songs are so long. I literally put you in that cab and let you experience. It's a more involving form of music than sitting and hearing somebody sing 'I'm lonely'."[4]

Chart performance[]

"Sequel"[]

"Sequel"
Single by Harry Chapin
from the album Sequel
B-side"I Finally Found It Sandy"
Released1980
Recorded1980
GenrePop rock; Folk rock
Length6:36
LabelBoardwalk
Songwriter(s)Harry Chapin
Producer(s)Howard Albert
Harry Chapin singles chronology
"Flowers Are Red"
(1978)
"Sequel"
(1980)
"Remember When the Music"
(1980)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Billboard(unrated)[10]

In 1980, after nearly a decade listening to fans ask about what he imagined happening to Harry and Sue later in their lives, Chapin wrote and composed "Sequel", which he released on the album of the same name. Written in the same style as "Taxi", it continues the story of Harry and Sue with them meeting again ten years later. Released as a single, "Sequel" peaked one position higher, but lasted two weeks fewer, on the Hot 100 than "Taxi". It also remains his latest appearance on the Hot 100 chart, though his last single "Story of a Life" would reach No. 5 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100. Chapin joked that, if he wrote a third act to the song, it would be called "Hearse" so he could kill off the characters. Chapin died seven months after "Sequel" peaked.

In the song, Harry, now a successful musician, returns to San Francisco to play a concert, and has "eight hours to kill before the show," and thinks of his old lover. He decides to visit the upper-crust address of "16 Parkside Lane" where he last saw Sue a decade before. After considering options of "a limousine, or at least a fancy car," to impress Sue, he takes a taxi to the reunion, this time sitting in the back as the paying customer. The taxi turns into the driveway "past the gate and the fine-trimmed lawn." Harry is informed by a butler answering the door that Sue no longer lives there. The butler gives Harry a forwarding address. Harry tells his cabbie, "I got one more fare for you." The address proves to be that of a modest brownstone urban apartment. At the door:

And she said, “How are you, Harry?
“Haven't we played this scene before?”
I said, “It's so good to see you, Sue
“Had to play it out just once more...
“Play it out just once more.”

Far from an affluent suburban trophy wife, Sue is now a working-class woman—but is happy with her life, no longer the cold and cloistered socialite, she is now warmer and wiser. She tells Harry of hearing him on the radio; he shrugs off the hype of stardom, and invites her to see his show that night. She declines, saying only, "I work at night." Harry provides few other details on the reunion, urging listeners not to dig deeper: "If I answered at all, I'd lie." This time, it's Harry who offers money as they part; he doesn't say whether she accepts.

Harry reflects on the circle of their lives. When they were young, she had wanted to be an actress and he a flight pilot. Ten years ago she was acting happy in her high-end life while he was flying high, stoned in his taxi. Today he "act[s] as I'm facing the footlights, And now she's flying with both feet on the ground."

The song ends with:

So I guess it's the sequel to our story
From the journey between heaven and hell
With half the time, thinking of what might have been
And half thinkin' just as well.
I guess only time will tell.

Chart performance[]

Chart (1980–81) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Adult Contemporary 37
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[7] 23
U.S. Cash Box Top 100 34

Origins[]

According to the liner notes in The Essentials: Harry Chapin, Chapin was inspired to write the song when he happened upon an old lover, as the cabbie in the song does. Chapin was merely on his way to a taxi license examination in New York City, not San Francisco. Chapin also stated that "Taxi" is only "about sixty-percent true".

However, according to Chapin's biography Taxi: The Harry Chapin Story, by Peter M. Coan, this song was based on a relationship that Chapin had with a Bennett Junior College student named Clare MacIntyre, the inspiration for Sue. They met when they were both camp counselors at neighboring summer camps during their college years. Clare MacIntryre-Ross died in March 2016.[11]

On the contrary, when asked by John Denver about the song, Chapin stated that he read a newspaper article about his ex-girlfriend who had married a rich man, the same week that his taxi license was supposed to go through. He said that he had a dream that he would be driving the cab in a big city and he'd stop and pick up a lady, and they would look at each other and know that they both sold out their dreams. According to Chapin, he wrote the song then. However, the week the license was supposed to come through, he got a big film job and didn't have to drive the cab.

Covers[]

  • William Shatner performed "Taxi" on the daytime TV variety talk show Dinah!.
  • During Chapin's later concerts, Big John Wallace would sing the song's first verse in the form of a disco-style as the third alternate ending to "30,000 Pounds of Bananas."
  • The song is covered by Mandy Patinkin on his album, Experiment.
  • The song is covered by Lee Hazlewood on his album, I'll Be Your Baby Tonight.

References[]

  1. ^ Billboard Year-End Hot 100 singles of 1972
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "Top Singles". RPM. Library and Archives Canada. 27 May 1972. Archived from the original on 14 March 2016. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  3. ^ Campbell, Mary (May 28, 1972). "'For the First Time in My Life I Believed in Capitalism'". Great Falls Tribune. Great Falls, Montana. AP. p. 55. Retrieved March 14, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  4. ^ Bruce Pollock. "Harry Chapin". Rock's Backpages.(Subscription required.)
  5. ^ http://www.poparchives.com.au/gosetcharts/1972/19720902.html Go-Set National Top 40, 2 September 1972
  6. ^ "flavour of new zealand - search listener". Flavourofnz.co.nz. Retrieved 2016-10-07.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles 1955-1990 - ISBN 0-89820-089-X
  8. ^ "Top 100 Singles". Cash Box. 20 May 1972. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  9. ^ "Top 100 Hits of 1972/Top 100 Songs of 1972". MusicOutfitters.com. 1973. Retrieved 12 October 2015. Billboard Year-End Hot 100 chart for 1972
  10. ^ "Review: Harry Chapin – Sequel" (PDF). Billboard. 85 (43). 25 October 1980. p. 85. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved 30 May 2020 – via American Radio History.
  11. ^ "Va. woman who inspired Chapin's hit 'Taxi' dies at 73, reports say". Wtop.com. 2016-03-23. Retrieved 2016-10-07.
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