NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) 
“Me and Bobby McGee” is one of Kris 
Kristofferson’s most famous and widely covered songs, with everyone from
 Janis Joplin to Pink putting their own spin on it since 1969.
It’s often misinterpreted as Kristofferson’s love song to Joplin, 
because her bluesy rendition has overshadowed all other versions. She 
recorded the song right before her death in 1970 and it topped the U.S. 
singles chart in 1971.
But
 the real inspiration for the song came from producer and co-writer Fred
 Foster, who will be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame on 
Sunday along with Charlie Daniels and Randy Travis, and a young 
secretary named Barbara McKee.
                
                
Foster
 helped launch the careers of artists like Kristofferson, Roy Orbison, 
Willie Nelson and Dolly Parton. In the 1960s, Foster moved his record 
label Monument Records from Washington, D.C., to Tennessee in a building
 owned by his friend and songwriter Boudleaux Bryant.
 McKee, whose last name is now Eden, was a 29-year-old working as Bryant’s secretary and went by the nickname Bobbie.
“So I ran down about the fourth or fifth time this particular day and
 Boudleaux says, ‘I don’t think you’re coming to see me at all. I think 
you’re coming to see Bobbie,'” Foster said.
“It seemed like he liked to tease me a little bit and one day he 
said, ‘I am going to write a song about me and Bobbie McKee,” Eden said...   READ MORE
No comments:
Post a Comment