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NAME:Central Arkansas Library System (CALS)
X-WR-CALNAME:Central Arkansas Library System (CALS)
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:d5815b68-b84e-45c8-9362-9b305efea8bd
SEQUENCE:0
DTSTAMP:20260716T001419Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20240727T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20240727T220000
SUMMARY:Arkansas Sounds Presents: Randy Goodrum - The Stories Behind the S
 ongs
LOCATION:Ron Robinson Theater\nRon Robinson Theater
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Ron Robinson Theater;X-APP
 LE-RADIUS=10;X-TITLE=Ron Robinson Theater:geo:34.7473393,-92.2656713
GEO:34.7473393;-92.2656713
DESCRIPTION:We're celebrating 10 years of the CALS Ron Robinson Theater in
  downtown Little Rock with a special return performance of one of our most
  requested artists - the legendary songwriter\, pianist\, producer\, perfo
 rmer\, and Arkansas native\, Randy Goodrum!.\nhttps://centralarkansaslibra
 rysystemcals.libnet.info/event/11007219
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Join us Saturday\, July 27th at 8:00pm for
  Arkansas Sounds Presents: &ldquo\;Randy Goodrum - The Stories Behind the 
 Songs&rdquo\;\, an intimate conversation and performance with this acclaim
 ed songwriter on the inspirations behind his almost 50 years of chart-topp
 ing songs.</p>\n<p>Tickets are $15 each with general admission seating on 
 a first come\, first served basis. Doors open at 7:00pm and the show start
 s at 8:00pm.</p>\n<p>Randy Goodrum might be best known for putting words i
 n other people&rsquo\;s mouths. And for good measure\, he&rsquo\;s also eq
 ually adept at providing an accompanying melody.</p>\n<p>"I try to keep it
  simple and cover a lot of ground with a few words. I am motivated to find
  that sliver of a story that hasn&rsquo\;t been told before.&rdquo\; - Ran
 dy Goodrum</p>\n<p>Like many professional songwriters\, Goodrum may not be
  a household name\, but ask George Benson\, Toto\, Chicago\, Steve Perry o
 r Anne Murray about this hall of fame songwriter's career chops and Randy&
 rsquo\;s marquee shines plenty bright. Add to that musician credits like p
 laying keyboards for Perry Como\, Jerry Reed\, Chet Atkins\, Les Paul\, Ke
 nny Rogers and Olivia Newton-John&mdash\;alongside countless industry acco
 lades&mdash\;and it&rsquo\;s clear there are precious few musical scribes 
 with as polished a pedigree. &ldquo\;I realized from an early age that I h
 ad a natural ability not only to play music\, but also to create melodies 
 pretty quickly and add words as a way of venting or putting down emotions 
 that fit the rhythms\,&rdquo\; Goodrum says. &ldquo\;From the beginning of
  my journey as a jazz musician\, I applied the ethic to songwriting of bei
 ng 100% original and 0% derivative.&rdquo\; And thus: songs. From there\, 
 he says the innate ability to create music &ldquo\;morphed into something.
  I began to feel like a method actor. I find the passion to write about th
 ings that haven&rsquo\;t necessarily happened to me\, I create characters 
 for my songs.&rdquo\; Goodrum&rsquo\;s &ldquo\;method&rdquo\; has left its
  mark.</p>\n<p>The Arkansas native\, who has also lived and worked in Nash
 ville\, coastal Connecticut and Los Angeles and now again resides in his h
 ome state\, has the extraordinary distinction of scoring top 10 hits acros
 s four consecutive decades. Among his roster of chart-toppers\, in the 197
 0s\, Goodrum penned Anne Murray&rsquo\;s &ldquo\;You Needed Me&rdquo\; and
  "Broken Hearted Me\,&rdquo\; Michael Johnson&rsquo\;s &ldquo\;Bluer Than 
 Blue&rdquo\; and England Dan &amp\; John Ford Coley&rsquo\;s "It&rsquo\;s 
 Sad to Belong.&rdquo\;In the 1980s\, he helped forge the mammoth success o
 f Steve Perry&rsquo\;s &ldquo\;Oh Sherrie&rdquo\; and "Foolish Heart\,&rdq
 uo\; DeBarge&rsquo\;s &ldquo\;Who&rsquo\;s Holding Donna Now\,&rdquo\; Tot
 o&rsquo\;s "I&rsquo\;ll Be Over You&rdquo\; and Chicago&rsquo\;s &ldquo\;I
 f She Would Have Been Faithful&hellip\;&rdquo\; The 1990s brought more cou
 ntry kudos\, with John Berry&rsquo\;s &ldquo\;I Will\, If You Will&rdquo\;
  and Jo Dee Messina&rsquo\;s &ldquo\;Lesson In Leaving\,&rdquo\; followed 
 by 2006&rsquo\;s global top 5 and U.K. No. 6 smash &ldquo\;All Over Again&
 rdquo\; from Irish pop singer Ronan Keating. Add to Goodrum&rsquo\;s four-
 decade coup a full breadth of music genres:</p>\n<p>It is almost unimagina
 ble that one songwriter has done time at top 40\, adult contemporary\, cou
 ntry\, rock\, jazz and R&amp\;B radio.</p>\n<p>And while Goodrum&rsquo\;s 
 hits are appreciable\, so is his legacy. In addition to the chart-busters\
 , his songs have been recorded by more than 100 brand-name acts: Kenny Rog
 ers\, Barry Manilow\, Natalie Cole\, Olivia Newton-John\, Tammy Wynette\, 
 Ray Charles\, Dusty Springfield\, Gladys Knight\, Patti Austin\, Dave Grus
 in\, Judy Collins\, Isaac Hayes\, Michael McDonald and Dottie West (includ
 ing\, for the latter\, writing and co-production of three career-defining 
 albums in the &lsquo\;70s).</p>\n<p>"People can be quite profound in every
 day conversation. Pretty language trying to be impressive looks good on pa
 per\, but it&rsquo\;s not as moving as an everyday expression." - Randy Go
 odrum</p>\n<p>Asked to impart his mojo\, Goodrum explains: &ldquo\;I admir
 ed the writing of Hal David\, Johnny Mercer\, Sammy Cahn and Irving Berlin
 . I tried to follow their example to keep it simple and cover a lot of gro
 und with a few words. I am motivated to find that sliver of a story that h
 asn&rsquo\;t been told before.&rdquo\; He adds that songwriting is convers
 ational at its best\, &ldquo\;not poetry"\, because people can be quite pr
 ofound in everyday conversation. Pretty language trying to be impressive l
 ooks good on paper\, but it&rsquo\;s not as moving as an everyday expressi
 on.&rdquo\;Goodrum&rsquo\;s dictum comes with plenty of career kudos to ba
 ck his talent. He left hometown Hot Springs\, AR\, in the mid &lsquo\;60s 
 to major in piano at Hendrix College in Conway\, AR. He also attended Bost
 on&rsquo\;s acclaimed Berklee School of Music on a Down Beat Magazine scho
 larship.</p>\n<p>Inherently a talented jazz player\, Goodrum reeled in his
  improvisational style and developed into a lyricist known for conjuring u
 p memorable melodies. Randy started his professional career as a studio mu
 sician in Nashville\, while also finding gigs on the road playing with Roy
  Orbison\, Chet Atkins\, and Jerry Reed. As a burgeoning Music City musici
 an\, solo writing and collaborating with other talented scribes came organ
 ically\, and Goodrum&rsquo\;s business card title soon led with &ldquo\;so
 ngwriter.&rdquo\; His first major hit: England Dan &amp\; John Ford Coley&
 rsquo\;s 1977 "It&rsquo\;s Sad to Belong\,&rdquo\; which spent five weeks 
 at No. 1 at AC and reached top 40&rsquo\;s top 15. Next came Michael Johns
 on&rsquo\;s &ldquo\;Bluer Than Blue\,&rdquo\; another AC chart-topper and 
 top 15 pop hit\, and in 1978\, Gene Cotton&rsquo\;s biggest career hit\, &
 ldquo\;Before My Heart Finds Out\,&rdquo\; No. 3 at AC and No. 23 on the B
 illboard Hot 100.The best was yet to come\, as they say. As the writer of 
 Anne Murray&rsquo\;s &ldquo\;You Needed Me\,&rdquo\;Goodrum emerged in 197
 8 as royalty within the AC\, pop and country pantheon. His ballad\, produc
 ed by Jim Ed Norman\, not only resuscitated the singer&rsquo\;s career\, b
 ut it hit No. 1 on the Hot 100\, top 5 at country and AC\; earned the Best
  Female Pop Vocal Grammy\; and was named the Academy of Country Music Song
  of the Year.</p>\n<p>From there\, Goodrum&rsquo\;s chart stats are a matt
 er of record&mdash\;as is his recognition. He was named 1981&rsquo\;s ASCA
 P Country Writer of the Year\, with a cover story in Songwriter Magazine a
 nd generous ink in The Hollywood Reporter\, People and Country Music magaz
 ines. He served as president of the Nashville Songwriters Association Inte
 rnational\, was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Association Hall o
 f Fame&mdash\;and for fun\, with buddy and jazz legend Dave Grusin\, he wr
 ote the theme to soap &ldquo\;One Life To Live.&rdquo\; Oh\, and Clive Dav
 is signed him as a solo artist at Arista\, followed by a contract with Pol
 ydor\, where Goodrum released his first solo album\, &ldquo\;Fool&rsquo\;s
  Paradise.&rdquo\;Moving into the next decade\, in 1983\, Steve Perry call
 ed upon Goodrum to re-craft the Journey lead singer&rsquo\;s sonic persona
  for debut solo album &ldquo\;Street Talk.&rdquo\; &ldquo\;I figured we&rs
 quo\;d meet\, have a cup of coffee and have a very brief writing session\;
  however\, I played for him what became the intro to &lsquo\;Foolish Heart
 &rsquo\; and by 11 that night we had a demo. I was able to help Steve find
  that musical space that separated him from Journey.&rdquo\; Over the next
  four days\, they wrote four songs. In all\, Goodrum co-wrote eight songs 
 on the album\, including &ldquo\;Oh Sherrie\,&rdquo\; a No. 1 rock single 
 that reached No. 3 at pop\; while &ldquo\;Foolish Heart&rdquo\; peaked at 
 No. 2 at AC and top 20 on the Hot 100.</p>\n<p>&ldquo\;To know that my son
 gs live on in people&rsquo\;s lives&hellip\; that&rsquo\;s what feels like
  success as a songwriter.&rdquo\; - Randy Goodrum</p>\n<p>Away from the ch
 arts\, Goodrum was invited to write songs for the &lsquo\;92 and &rsquo\;9
 6 Bill Clinton/Al Gore presidential campaigns\, including the closing them
 e of the &rsquo\;92 Democratic Convention\; and the theme for President Bi
 ll Clinton&rsquo\;s First Inaugural Gala\, which aired on CBS. The connect
 ion was personal: Goodrum and Clinton were classmates&mdash\;and bandmates
 &mdash\;at Hot Springs High School in Arkansas. Lofty credits\, right? Goo
 drum chuckles\, &ldquo\;Sure I&rsquo\;m proud of the songs I&rsquo\;ve bee
 n involved with that have held rank on the charts\, but what matters more 
 is hearing my songs in a supermarket or on an elevator or while getting my
  teeth cleaned. To know they live on in people&rsquo\;s lives&hellip\; tha
 t&rsquo\;s what feels like success as a songwriter.&rdquo\; Hearing those 
 hits on the radio now is among the most gratifying&mdash\;and tangible&mda
 sh\;triumphs of Goodrum&rsquo\;s acclaimed career. He adds\, &ldquo\;It&rs
 quo\;s the most satisfying thing you can imagine when a song still sounds 
 relevant and not dated. That brings me a sense of achievement you can&rsqu
 o\;t put into words.&rdquo\; Case in point: &ldquo\;Who&rsquo\;s Holding D
 onna Now\,&rdquo\; a No. 1 AC\, No. 2 R&amp\;B and No. 6 pop hit in 1985 f
 or DeBarge\, which he wrote with David Foster and the song&rsquo\;s produc
 er Jay Graydon: &ldquo\;I regard that as one of the most perfect records I
 &rsquo\;ve been involved with: the vocal performance\, the track and the p
 roduction. I love it when it all turns out just right\, like a fine recipe
 . It still sounds great on the radio. But you never know in the moment how
  it&rsquo\;s going to work out.&rdquo\;</p>\n<p>Goodrum continues to cook 
 up new work&mdash\;and his next mission is personal. Following solo single
 s and albums released by Arista in the late 70s\, Polydor in 1980 and an L
 P &ldquo\;Solitary Nights&rdquo\; on GRP in 1985\, he issued a collaborati
 on in 2008 as JaR with longtime collaborator Jay Graydon (a.k.a. Jay and R
 andy). In 2016\, the pair is working on a follow-up JaR project\, due next
  year. Chances are\, those songs will fulfill the same missive that has gu
 ided Goodrum&rsquo\;s successes since 1977. He notes\, &ldquo\;When I move
 d to Nashville as a pianist\, I was this abstract jazz guy&mdash\;struck b
 y the power of these folks coming from small towns and remote places who w
 eren&rsquo\;t terribly musically sophisticated\, but their lyrics were sim
 ple and economical and said so much with so little. I still try to deliver
  that in every song. When I hear "You Needed Me" or "I&rsquo\;ll Be Over Y
 ou"\, I feel like I got it right. Those are two songs I&rsquo\;ll listen t
 o all the way through on the radio. Both the lyric and the melody must mat
 ter.&rdquo\;</p>\nhttps://centralarkansaslibrarysystemcals.libnet.info/eve
 nt/11007219
URL;VALUE=URI:https://centralarkansaslibrarysystemcals.libnet.info/event/1
 1007219
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