Carole Klein, 9 February
1942, Brooklyn, New York, USA. A proficient pianist from the age of
four, King was a prolific songwriter by her early teens.
When friend and neighbor
Neil Sedaka embarked on his recording career, she followed him into
the New York milieu, recording demos, singing back-up and even
helping arrange occasional sessions. As a student at Queen's
College, New York, she met future partner and husband Gerry Goffin
whose lyrical gifts matched King's grasp of melody. She completed a
handful of singles, including "The Right Girl" (1958), "Baby Sittin'",
"Queen Of The Beach" (1959), prior to recording "Oh Neil" (1960), a
riposte to Sedaka's "Oh Carol". Although not a hit, her record
impressed publishing magnate
Don Kirshner, who signed the Goffin/King
team to his Aldon Music empire. They scored notable early success
with the Shirelles ("Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow"), Bobby Vee
("Take Good Care Of My Baby") and the Drifters ("Up On The Roof")
and were later responsible for much of the early output on
Dimension Records, the company's in-house
label. The duo wrote, arranged and produced hits for Little Eva
("The Loco-Motion") and the Cookies ("Chains" and "Don't Say Nothin'
Bad (About My Baby)") while a song written with Bobby Vee in mind,
"It Might As Well Rain Until September", provided King with a solo
hit in 1962. Although this memorable and highly evocative song
barely reached the US Top 30, it climbed to number 3 in the UK.
However, two follow-up singles fared less well. The Goffin/King
oeuvre matured as the 60s progressed, resulting in several
sophisticated, personalized compositions, including "(You Make Me
Feel Like) A Natural Woman" (Aretha Franklin), "Goin' Back" (Dusty
Springfield and the Byrds) and "Pleasant Valley Sunday" (the Monkees).
The couple also established the short-lived Tomorrow label, but
their disintegrating marriage was chronicled on King's 1967 single,
"The Road To Nowhere", the year they dissolved their partnership.
King then moved to Los Angeles and having
signed to
Lou Adler's Ode label, formed the City
with ex-Fugs duo
Danny Kortchmar (guitar) and Charles
Larkey (bass). (The latter became King's second husband.) The trio's
lone album,
Now That Everything's Been Said, included the
artist's versions of "I Wasn't Born To Follow" and "That Old Sweet
Roll (Hi De Ho)", covered, respectively, by the Byrds and Blood,
Sweat And Tears. King began a solo career in 1970 with
Writer, before fully asserting her
independence with
Tapestry. This radiant selection
contained several of the singer's most incisive compositions,
notably "You've Got A Friend", a US number 1 for James Taylor, "It's
Too Late", a US chart-topper for King, and "So Far Away". Unlike
many of her former production-line contemporaries, King was able to
shrug off teen preoccupations and use her skills to address adult
doubts and emotions.
Tapestry has now sold in excess of
15 million copies worldwide and established its creator as a major
figure in the singer-songwriter movement. However, the delicate
balance it struck between perception and self-delusion became
blurred on
Music and
Rhymes And Reasons, which were
regarded as relative disappointments.
Each set nonetheless achieved gold disc status,
as did
Fantasy,
Wrap Around Joy (which contained her
second US number 1, "Jazzman") and
Thoroughbred. The last marked the
end of King's tenure at Ode and she has since failed to reap the
same commercial success. Her first release of the 80s,
Pearls, comprised "classic" Goffin/King
songs, a release which many interpreted as an artistic impasse.
Certainly King subsequently pursued a less frenetic professional
life, largely restricting her live appearances to fund-raising
concerns. In the early 90s she had relocated to Ireland. Her
recordings also became more measured and if
Speeding Time,
Colour Of Your Dreams or
City Streets lacked the cultural
synchronization
Tapestry enjoyed with the
post-Woodstock audience, her songwriting skills were still in
evidence. In the USA,
Tapestry exceeded 10 million copies
sold in July 1995. After a number of years keeping a relatively low
profile, King released
Love Makes The World on her own
Rockingale label. This album, probably her finest collection of
songs since
Tapestry, proves King now has the
experience of age and a voice that has grown stronger.