Showing posts with label Reach Out of the Darkness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reach Out of the Darkness. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 19, 2022

Friend and Lover – "Reach Out of the Darkness" (1968)


I think it's wonderful and how

That people are finally getting together


[NOTE: Did you know that Ray Stevens – best known for his comedy/novelty records, which included “Gitarzan,” “Ahab the Arab,” and “The Streak” – started out as a studio musician and arranger?  In fact, that’s him playing keyboards on today’s featured song, which is the newest member of the 2 OR 3 LINES “GOLDEN DECADE” HIT SINGLES HALL OF FAME.  He also arranged the strings for that recording, which was produced by Joe South of “Games People Play” fame.  I wasn’t aware of any that on June 2, 2015, when I originally featured “Reach Out of the Darkness” on 2 or 3 lines.  What appears below is a  slightly edited version of that post.]  


*     *     *     *     *


Usually, the phrase "and how" is used to express one's emphatic agreement with a statement made by someone else – not to emphasize the speaker's own sentiments, which is how it is used in the lines quoted above.

Here's something else odd about this song.  The title of the song (and the title of the album it was subsequently released on) is "Reach Out of the Darkness," as this photo of my rental car's SiriusXM display plainly shows:


But the song's lyrics never say "Reach out of the darkness."  Instead, the lyrics say "Reach out in the darkness."  In fact, that line is repeated no fewer than nine times.  (I'm guessing the discrepancy may have been accidental – a mistake.)

*     *     *     *     *

I heard "Reach Out of the Darkness" on a recent visit to Cape Cod.  I was on my way to rent a bike to ride on the Cape Cod Rail Trail when the song popped up on my satellite radio.

My route to the bike rental place took me past the Brewster home of someone who sells tie-dyed T-shirts and other garments:


The tie-dyer trusts his or her customers to be honorable people and drop the appropriate amount of cash for their purchases through a slot in a wooden box:


Surely karma would severely punish anyone who purloined a tie-dyed shirt without paying for it.

*     *     *     *     *

Later that day, I saw a tie-dyed ukulele at The Sparrow Store in Orleans:


That store had ukuleles of all descriptions:


It even had ukuleles that can stand up by themselves:


Ukuleles are fine as long as you hang them on the wall for decorative purposes rather than actually playing them.  Like children, ukuleles should be seen and not heard.

*     *     *     *     *

The Sparrow Store had a lot of other interesting gift items for sale, including a nice selection of hip flasks:


Here's a closeup of a couple of those flasks:


The store also had this dish towel, which would be a perfect gift for any new mom:


*     *     *     *     *

"Reach Out of the Darkness" first appeared on the Billboard "Hot 100" on June 1, 1968 – just a few days before the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy.  One of the producers or writers of Mad Men must have figured that out because they played the song during an episode of that show that depicted people watching television when news of the Kennedy assassination was breaking.

I love "Reach Out of the Darkness."  I can't make a convincing intellectual case that it's a good song, but I've always had a soft spot for it.


Friend and Lover was comprised of Jim Post (who wrote the song) and his wife Cathy.  The couple eventually split up, but at the time they recorded the song, each presumably viewed the other as a friend and a lover.

I think most people would like to have a partner who is both a friend and a lover.  But a friend and a lover are two very different things.


A friend may eventually become a lover, but there's no guarantee that will work out in the long run.  Someone who is a wonderful friend is not necessarily the right person to be your lover.  (Take my word for it, boys and girls.)

Click here to listen to "Reach Out of the Darkness."

Click below to buy the record from Amazon:

Friday, June 25, 2021

Friend and Lover – "Reach Out of the Darkness" (1968)


Reach out in the darkness

And you may find a friend


On Father’s Day, the Washington Post ran a story about Annie Lazor, a swimmer who had qualified for the U.S. Olympic team two days earlier – some seven weeks after the death of her father, Dave Lazor, who was only 61.  (You can click here to read his obituary.)

The late Dave Lazor

Lazor was his daughter’s biggest fan.  It’s probably redundant to say that – I don’t know any female athlete whose father isn’t her biggest fan.


My late father was certainly my sister’s biggest fan.  She was a star basketball and softball player – she was inducted into her college’s athletic hall of fame based on her prowess in both sports – but he would have been just as big a fan if she had been just average.


And I was my twin daughters’ biggest fan – I saw hundreds of their soccer and basketball games over the years, and bitterly regretted the few that I did miss.  (It so pissed me off whenever one of their games was cancelled due to rain or snow – I took it as a personal affront when the weather prevented me from seeing them play.)


*     *     *     *     *


From the Post article:


Dave Lazor wasn’t like the other swim dads you may have come across, the ones with their marked-up heat sheets in one hand and a running list of their kid’s best times in the Notes app of their phone. Half the time, he left one of Annie’s meets not even remembering her times or what place she finished. . . .


He was, however, the first to raise his hand to accompany Annie to meets, especially the many in Indianapolis, 4½ hours from his house in Beverly Hills, Michigan. . . .


“He wasn’t a times guy,” Annie Lazor said Saturday. “He was an experience guy.  ‘I get to spend four days with my daughter in one of my favorite cities?   Hell yes, I’m going.’  That’s what it was about for him.  Because he was just so invested in being there with me.  He just didn’t care about how well I swam.  Not that he didn’t care about me having good results.  Of course he cared because I cared.  But that’s not why he was there.”


That’s exactly the way I felt about seeing my daughters’ games.  Of course, I wanted to see them make goals and score baskets.  But mostly I just wanted to see them playing hard and enjoying being part of a team – win or lose.


*     *     *     *     *


Annie Lazor did so badly at the 2016 Olympic trials that she decided to retire from competitive swimming.  But she changed her mind two years later and started training again, hoping to make the U.S. team for the 2020 Olympics – which were delayed a year due to covid-19.


Last Friday, she earned a trip to Tokyo by winning the 200-meter breaststroke finals at the Olympic trials in Omaha.


From the Post:


That would have been the moment when an athlete in Lazor’s position might be expected to dedicate her performance to her late father, to look into a camera and say she wanted to win it for him.  But it was the one thought, she said, that never crossed her mind.


That surprised me.  I was expecting a feel-good Father’s Day story along those lines, but that’s not what I got.  


*     *     *     *     *


Annie Lazor’s mother said she was praying that no one would come up to Annie and tell her to win it for her dad.  “I didn’t want her to come into this meet thinking, ‘I have to do this for my dad,’” Annie’s mother told the Post reporter.  “As if swimming well — or even if she swam badly — would be some sort of reflection about how much she loved her dad.”


I guarantee you that if her father had been alive to see her swim last week, he would have been just as proud of her even if she hadn’t qualified.  


Of course, he would have been overjoyed by her victory – as Annie said above, he cared about how well she did because she cared.  


But win or lose, he would have been immensely proud to see his daughter competing at the very highest level of her sport.  


*     *     *     *     *


Annie may not have been swimming for her father, but that doesn’t mean she wasn’t swimming for someone other than herself.  


She told the reporter that she wanted to win in part to give her mother and her two brothers something to be happy about after all the sadness that resulted from her father’s death:


“The thing I thought about the most this week was that I just really want to give them something to be happy about,” Annie Lazor said, tears streaming down her face . . . . “They’ve been through so much these last couple months. I just really wanted to give them something to be excited about.  That doesn’t mean it overrides the grief we’re feeling, that it makes everything okay.  It definitely doesn’t.  But I just wanted to do this for them, more than anything.”


*     *     *     *     *


In her post-event news conference, Lazor described eloquently the difficulty of “trying to achieve the greatest thing that's ever happened to me while going through the worst thing that's ever happened to me.”


She was able to do so thanks in part to the help she received from her teammate, Lilly King, who won two gold medals in the breaststroke in the 2016 Olympics.


Lilly King and Annie Lazor celebrate

When Lazor decided to come out of retirement, she asked King if she could join her training group.  To her surprise, King agreed to Lazor's request.


“I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for Lilly,” Lazor said in 2019.  “I was pretty surprised.  I would think if it were my competitor and she had this program that’s working really well for her, why would you want to share that with her other competitors?”


*     *     *     *     *


For the next three years, the two women trained together, becoming fast friends.  


But they also competed against each other in a number of international swimming competitions.


After the death of Dave Lazor, Lilly King told Annie Lazor and her mother that she would do everything she could to help Annie earn a spot on the Olympic team.  


That didn’t include letting up and allowing Annie to beat her in the trials – I want to be perfectly clear about that.  In fact, Lilly King won the 100-meter breaststroke finals last Tuesday, helping to prevent Annie from qualifying for the Olympics in that event.


And she pushed Lazor hard in the 200-meter finals, finishing less than three-quarters of a second behind her friend.  (Lazor’s time was 2:21.o7, while King’s was 2:21.75.)


*     *     *     *     *


I’m sure that Lilly King – like most other U.S. Olympians – doesn’t just want to do well individually, but wants her team to do as well as possible.


But swimming isn’t like soccer or basketball or other team sports, where every team member wins a medal if the team wins.  Most Olympic swimming events are individual events.  Only one woman can win gold in the 200-meter breaststroke in Tokyo. 


By agreeing to allow Lazor to join her training group, King not only helped a potential American teammate, but also someone who could very well take an Olympic medal away from her.   


*     *     *     *     *


Lilly King lived up to her promises to do everything she could to help Annie Lazor make the Olympic team.  


Last Tuesday night, when King won the 100-meter breaststroke finals and Lazor was half a second too slow to earn an opportunity to compete in that event in Tokyo, King “tempered her own celebration out of concern for her friend and teammate,” according to the Post.


And on Friday, when the two swimmers were assigned adjacent lanes for the finals of the 200-meter event – which represented Lazor’s last chance to qualify for the Olympic team – King caught her eye and mouthed two sentences: “I love you,” and “We’ve got this.”


Lazor and King finished one-two in the qualifying finals, so both will get to swim that event – and maybe win a medal – in Tokyo.  But it didn’t have to turn out that way.


*     *     *     *     *


It comes as no surprise to read a story about a father putting his child first – that comes naturally for most fathers.  


But no one expects an athlete to bend over backwards to help one of her primary competitors be successful.  


Lilly King’s unselfishness seems truly remarkable to me.  I usually don’t pay much attention to the Olympics, but I’ll make sure I’m in front of the television when she and Annie Lazor are swimming in Tokyo later this summer.


It would be perfect if King wins gold in the 100-meter event and Lazor finishes first in the 200-meter race.


But even if neither of them wins a medal, they deserve as much respect and applause as any athlete at this year’s Olympics.


*     *     *     *     *


Today’s featured song, “Reach Out of the Darkness,” first appeared on the Billboard “Hot 100” on June 1, 1968 – just a few days before the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy.  


Maybe that’s why the song was played during an episode of Mad Men that depicted people watching television when news of the Kennedy assassination was breaking.


Click here to listen to “Reach Out of the Darkness.”  (Did you notice that the song title is “Reach Out of the Darkness” but the singer sings “Reach out in the darkness”?)


Click on the link below to buy the song from Amazon:


Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Friend and Lover – "Reach Out of the Darkness" (1968)


I think it's wonderful and how
That people are finally getting together

Usually, "and how" is used to express one's emphatic agreement with a statement made by someone else – not to emphasize the speaker's own sentiments, which is how it is used in the lines quoted above.

Here's something else odd about this song.  The title of the song (and the title of the album it was subsequently released on) is "Reach Out of the Darkness," as this photo of my rental car's SiriusXM display plainly shows:


But the song's lyrics never say "Reach out of the darkness."  Instead, the lyrics say "Reach out in the darkness."  In fact, that line is repeated no fewer than nine times.  (I'm guessing the discrepancy may have been accidental – a mistake.)

*     *     *     *     *

I heard "Reach Out of the Darkness" on a recent visit to Cape Cod.  I was on my way to rent a bike to ride on the Cape Cod Rail Trail when the song popped up on my satellite radio.

My route to the bike rental place took me past the Brewster home of someone who sells tie-dyed T-shirts and other garments:


The tie-dyer trusts his or her customers to be honorable people and drop the appropriate amount of cash for their purchases through a slot in a wooden box:


Surely karma would severely punish anyone who purloined a tie-dyed shirt without paying for it.

*     *     *     *     *

Later that day, I saw a tie-dyed ukulele at The Sparrow Store in Orleans:


That store had ukuleles of all descriptions:


It even had ukuleles that can stand up by themselves:


Ukuleles are fine as long as you hang them on the wall for decorative purposes rather than actually playing them.  Like children, ukuleles should be seen and not heard.

*     *     *     *     *

The Sparrow Store had a lot of other interesting gift items for sale, including a nice selection of hip flasks:


Here's a closeup of a couple of those flasks:


The store also had this dish towel, which would be a perfect gift for any new mom:


*     *     *     *     *

"Reach Out of the Darkness" first appeared on the Billboard "Hot 100" on June 1, 1968 – just a few days before the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy.  One of the producers or writers of Mad Men must have figured that out because they played the song during an episode of that show that depicted people watching television when news of the Kennedy assassination was breaking.

I love "Reach Out of the Darkness."  I can't make a convincing intellectual case that it's a good song, but I've always had a soft spot for it.


Friend and Lover was comprised of Jim Post (who wrote the song) and his wife Cathy.  The couple eventually split up, but at the time they recorded the song, each presumably viewed the other as a friend and a lover.

I think most people would like to have a partner who is both a friend and a lover.  But a friend and a lover are two very different things.


A friend may eventually become a lover, but there's no guarantee that will work out in the long run.  Someone who is a wonderful friend is not necessarily the right person to be your lover.  (Take my word for it, boys and girls.)

Click here to listen to "Reach Out of the Darkness."

Click below to buy the record from Amazon: