What Makes Jim Croce’s Operator So Unique

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2022
  • In this episode my friend and fellow RUclipsr Mary Spender and I analyze and react to Jim Croce's classic hit "Operator (That's Not the Way It Feels)".
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Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @peggymuehleisenstahlin8106
    @peggymuehleisenstahlin8106 Год назад +2924

    Tears streaming as I listen to your commentary. Knowing that you have recognized our brother Maury’s musical talent is heartwarming. It’s 49 years now and the memories are like an unbelievable yesterday. Thank you for remembering and honoring their lives.

    • @lee.suabedissen2156
      @lee.suabedissen2156 Год назад +72

      Well said! This is a wonderful video and tribute. This is one of my favorites.

    • @dell5gibson
      @dell5gibson Год назад +144

      I am so sorry for yours, and all of our loss with your brother’s passing. He has been an influence to many. I recall being enthralled as a kid watching him play with Jim on a Midnight Special. God Bless.

    • @63002
      @63002 Год назад +44

      @@lw216316 practice extreme skill talent and a touch of magic...

    • @jerroldshelton9367
      @jerroldshelton9367 Год назад +164

      I'm sure I'm just one of billions on the planet who feel this way, but here it goes.......
      Your brother is the reason I took up the guitar in 1980 and have been playing it ever since.
      I saw him play an Ovation Balladeer guitar on T.V. when I was a boy and so, when I was 15, I was beyond happy when there was a guitar just like the one your brother played on that program under the Christmas Tree.
      He was, is, and ALWAYS will be my personal "guitar hero."
      I could say he was an "inspiration" and still is, but "inspiration" seems so inadequate in describing what your brother's music meant to me, still means to me, and will always mean to me.
      I listen to "Gingerbreadd" and it sounds just as awesome and just as fresh fifty years on as it did when I first heard it as a seven year old kid.

    • @pattihawks353
      @pattihawks353 Год назад +39

      God bless you and the families of these artists! They gave voice to our emotions and helped form our youth!
      Still brings back pain of years gone by, but there was euphoria in the mix, as well! 💞💕💖

  • @JalopyTechnology
    @JalopyTechnology Год назад +1093

    I have been a trucker for 50 years. The day Croce died I was delivering a load of beef in LaSalle St in downtown Chicago. I was a big fan of his music. While tuning to WLS one of Croce's songs had just ended when the DJ announced that he had died. Then Operator came on... I was so sad. I had sung along with his songs, played on my 8 track, for 100,000 miles or more. The world is always a little better when I hear his music. Thank you Rick. Thank you ( and I love you) Mary.

    • @DanielinLaTuna
      @DanielinLaTuna Год назад +18

      What’s an eight track

    • @philhofland5501
      @philhofland5501 Год назад +31

      @@DanielinLaTuna Its the venue where real music met real cars. If you were not present to see it in person there is no way to explain it. I was very young but the shift that occurred when 8 track went into the muscle cars is like no other phenomenon known to man.
      The synergism present when that occurred is what put the word synergism into the dictionary..... And lexicon.

    • @WeTubule
      @WeTubule Год назад +32

      Croce's lyrics and his untimely death are both sad. But the reminder of the horrific 8-track format is what's bringing tears to my eyes now.

    • @CedricSatterfield
      @CedricSatterfield Год назад +12

      WLS!! Love it! I grew up in Aurora in the realty 80s and WLS was one of the only stations I could get on my battery powered radio that hung on my bedpost.

    • @nevaladder
      @nevaladder Год назад +8

      I bet you loved his trucker songs. 💜

  • @BlueSun4886
    @BlueSun4886 9 месяцев назад +178

    I too was crying through the entire commentary. Before Jim Croce ever recorded, I was a friend of his and his wife, Ingrid's. I was 5 or so years younger, a folk guitar accompanist (I still play at 75) and part of a group who used to meet at Jim's old white farmhouse near Lindell (IIRC), in the western exurbs of Philadelphia around 1970. We'd sit around on the lawn drinking beer, playing guitars, singing traditional songs & some of Jim & Ingrid's earliest works (see his album "Jim & Ingrid Croce" from the late '60s for these) & having the time of our lives. Everybody could see that, if he ever got his break, Jim was going to be something extra special in the folk world. The songs that he had already written were among the best I've ever heard with "Operator (That's Not the Way it Feels)" in the #1 position ("Operator" was officially listed as written in 1972, but Jim recorded it on singles as early as the mid-60s). I have always loved the way Jim & Maury blended their guitar styles to the point where 1 + 1 was so much greater than 2. They combined to blend all of the best of Martin guitars' low & high ranges. I'd love to see you analyze "Time in a Bottle" (which reached #1 on the charts posthumously), another song I simply can't listen to without crying. Play it all the way through before you start to dissect it for its full effect. The thought of all that Jim and Maury missed in life that should have been their time to shine to the world is tragic. It is always crushing to lose a friend, but to see Jim & his brilliance, along with Maury's, which sadly passed almost unnoticed outside of the musician world) resurrected 5 decades later is a remarkable synthesis of Joy and Sadness. Thank you for rediscovering Jim's "Operator," one of the all-time most moving songs I've ever heard. Perhaps the perfect song.
    BTW, not only did Ingrid perform herself for a number of years before opening her restaurant in California, but Jim's son, A. J. does remarkable covers of his father's songs.

    • @dlbstl
      @dlbstl 3 месяца назад +8

      Wow! Thank you for this remembrance. He was a blessing, and I bet you were a blessing and light in his life too.

    • @Sabe53
      @Sabe53 3 месяца назад +5

      This song hits home with me so hard. Had same experience when I was in my teens, twenties. I'm 70 now and still miss her SO MUCH!

    • @robertocosta7736
      @robertocosta7736 3 месяца назад +6

      Que privilégio ter sido amigo dele ! Naquela época não existia internet, por isso demorei anos para conhecer o rosto do cantor que com sua música embalou o meu e milhares de corações no mundo. Tenho essa música no pendrive do meu carro. Ouço sempre. Brasil !

    • @kevintaal4616
      @kevintaal4616 2 месяца назад +5

      What a privilege to have been their friend! ❤

    • @nharry9763
      @nharry9763 Месяц назад +2

      I love the Jim and Ingrid album…’Age’ is my favorite

  • @chrisazar9545
    @chrisazar9545 10 месяцев назад +257

    There was no Jim without Maury. Great song writer, great guitar backing. Outstanding time to grow up.

    • @shldnfr
      @shldnfr 8 месяцев назад +9

      What a great team they made.

    • @sharongaskell
      @sharongaskell 8 месяцев назад +4

      We were so lucky

    • @whiplash_pants
      @whiplash_pants 7 месяцев назад +8

      Im so envious of those who experienced this magnificent team while it was happening.
      Tears, chills, laughs …all the emotions come through on their songs

    • @Jalleur14325
      @Jalleur14325 5 месяцев назад +3

      Yes indeed, I think magic with music almost always happens with the chemistry of two souls connecting

    • @The1rockerman
      @The1rockerman 3 месяца назад +2

      I respectfully disagree....Jim actually used to back up Maury in his band when he first started out, and although they were a team, Jim was the star. I've often said if that plane had not gone down, people today would be saying "Simon and WHO?" God speed my friend.

  • @deang8017
    @deang8017 Год назад +599

    I'm 33, and have never used a payphone and this song is still more relatable than 99% of what gets written these days.

    • @butlerdawgs78
      @butlerdawgs78 Год назад +15

      @@A.L.75 I'm 32 and we were definitely born at an interesting time. Had some exposure to the "pre tech" era when I was younger, didn't have my first cell phone until I was 15 either. There was a pay phone at the bowling alley, etc. We pranked some poor guy named Frank Moscow we found in the phone book relentlessly lol. Another song I'll throw into the ring is "Callin Baton Rouge" by Garth Brooks... also payphone related haha

    • @FlashCadallic
      @FlashCadallic Год назад +21

      I can still hear the cling cling sound when you drop a dime in.

    • @TedBilk
      @TedBilk Год назад +3

      music is relatable its just not relateable to you anymore

    • @savvymegs675
      @savvymegs675 Год назад +1

      Damn. 33 also haven't?? 37 and I guess I really was born on a cusp!

    • @420Gold
      @420Gold Год назад +14

      I’m 32 and remember using a pay phone a few times as a kid. I think it was quarters by that time though, not dimes.
      There’s actually an old, completely broken and disconnected pay phone right next to my apartment lol

  • @Souzawrites
    @Souzawrites Год назад +878

    I saw his son in concert last year and he explained where this song came from. His father was in the army stationed at Fort Dix, and when the soldiers had free time, they'd line up at the only pay phone on base to wait their turn to call home to talk to their girls. While he waited for his turn, he heard one side of tragedies playing out before his eyes as soldier's girls moved on while they were away. As a song writer, he realized it was pure gold.

    • @hatdrummer
      @hatdrummer Год назад +16

      I believe his son became a jazz pianist and he and his mom, Jim's widow had a Jazz Club in the gas light district of San Diego.. I want there once.. I just stopped in.. But when you saw his son, did he play his dad's version, his own? A jazz version? Was he at the piano?

    • @katjayurschak7039
      @katjayurschak7039 Год назад +30

      I think that story also appeared in VH1's "Behind the Music" episode on Jim back in the 90s. The other things I remember being mentioned there was that the "You can keep the dime" comment was a little bit of dark humor being thrown in - after all, the operator doesn't personally get the dime nor is the phone going to return it after the connection was made!

    • @TimTheMusicMan
      @TimTheMusicMan Год назад +3

      What make guitar is Rick playing ?

    • @392HEMI32
      @392HEMI32 Год назад +21

      Yep … I saw AJ Croce last month … and he told the same story about the origin of his father’s “Operator”

    • @cyc4usa706
      @cyc4usa706 Год назад +7

      @@TimTheMusicMan Gibson

  • @kevingreen6939
    @kevingreen6939 9 месяцев назад +85

    This song has always murdered me. Croce was able to communicate what the rest of us can only feel. Brilliant.

  • @snausages43
    @snausages43 6 месяцев назад +26

    I've listened to this song hundreds of times, but still every single time the "you can keep the dime..." line gives me the feels.

    • @mrmojorisin8752
      @mrmojorisin8752 6 дней назад

      It’s the one time, the only time, his voice sorta breaks. Very powerful.

  • @marksc1929
    @marksc1929 Год назад +695

    Rick I hate to admit it … but every single time this masterpiece of a tune comes on … someone starts chopping onions 🥲

    • @snap403
      @snap403 Год назад +28

      They’re chopping in my house also.

    • @marksc1929
      @marksc1929 Год назад +8

      @@snap403 😰

    • @thomastimlin1724
      @thomastimlin1724 Год назад +39

      HAHA...great way to put that. that goes for any tear jerker Croce wrote, like Time in a Bottle, Photographs and Memories...they take you to a different place and time, like when my parents and younger brother and I were altogether and alive. I am the last one left of that family. Croce's music transcends just the lost lover routine....

    • @snap403
      @snap403 Год назад +20

      @@thomastimlin1724 Agreed, his songs remind me of family, trips in old cars in northern Michigan and both good and sad times. Love his music.

    • @marksc1929
      @marksc1929 Год назад +15

      @@snap403 that’s great .. My homes in the south.. but it seems we all have the same things going on , ultimately .

  • @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture
    @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture Год назад +220

    I played this song for a 19 year old co-worker (I’m 63) and he was just amazed at the lyrics. He said not only was Jim Croce a great storyteller, he transported you into the role of the person in the song, that you were living the experience and feeling the emotions. I knew he truly got it.

    • @robertbetz8461
      @robertbetz8461 Год назад +8

      Memphis by Chuck Berry is another great operator story song.

    • @Thomas-pq4ys
      @Thomas-pq4ys Год назад +9

      Most good music has story lyrics... a lost craft....

  • @ferdiremo
    @ferdiremo 7 месяцев назад +75

    Jim is just like a shooting star. A short burst of amazing that left us wanting for more.

  • @mikedkc
    @mikedkc 10 месяцев назад +67

    I’m 68 and you two have helped me appreciate this song even more than I have for the last 50 years. Your analysis took it to another level. Thank you.

  • @mhsewbiz
    @mhsewbiz Год назад +457

    I'm 78 years old, and a former telephone and directory assistance operator, mostly all-night shift. Loved it! Every time I hear this song, he is singing to me! I can so relate to this! ♥ Such a classic and clever song!

    • @helmutsecke3529
      @helmutsecke3529 10 месяцев назад +8

      Mum were an old school Lily Tomlin type telephone operator ... 😢

    • @mhsewbiz
      @mhsewbiz 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@helmutsecke3529 I started out on cord board, loved it!

    • @aliciawilson9799
      @aliciawilson9799 10 месяцев назад +5

      Great video of a great song of maybe the best singer/songwriter the Bossman, Jim Croce. I really like "I Got A Name" but I don't think Croce wrote that one. Although he certainly made it his when he sang it. TY so much for this video

    • @rickyrudd28texacohavolinef2
      @rickyrudd28texacohavolinef2 10 месяцев назад +12

      My mom is 75 & was a long distance operator back in the late sixties. She said dudes would ask her out on dates. She always turned them down. She was already married to my dad at the time. Lol

    • @brianeastman3547
      @brianeastman3547 9 месяцев назад +4

      Keep up the good spirits ✨ man, Rest in Peace Jim Croce

  • @pentaholicproductions5468
    @pentaholicproductions5468 Год назад +308

    i’m a 17 year old girl and i’ve had a strong emotional connection to Jim Croce’s music ever since last year. he’s gotten me through hard times 🤍 young people can totally connect to older music although the lyrics may describe a world we can’t fully relate to, the emotions held in the music transcends the barriers :)

    • @theghosttourmusic7156
      @theghosttourmusic7156 Год назад +27

      Your post gives me hope for the future!

    • @RowlandGosling
      @RowlandGosling Год назад +15

      So glad you posted this! Yes! It doesn't matter what age you are, pain is pain and his music is timeless.

    • @leonardodalongisland
      @leonardodalongisland Год назад +12

      GREAT to know someone your age knows about and likes anything from times before you arrived on this planet. Keep up the good work.

    • @SterlingJames
      @SterlingJames Год назад +13

      I’m a Gen Xr and it’s refreshing to hear such a young person enjoy a timeless classic. And, thank you Rick/Mary.

    • @SyntagmaStation
      @SyntagmaStation Год назад +2

  • @AnthonyL0401
    @AnthonyL0401 6 месяцев назад +20

    "There's something in my eye... you know it happens every time I think about the love that I thought would save me" What a sad yet relatable line. Great analysis, Mary and Rick.

  • @karlzuelke426
    @karlzuelke426 11 месяцев назад +31

    Love this. The guy has lost his girlfriend and his best old ex-friend, and he's lonely. The only person available to talk to is the operator. So this song is about heartbreak, but it's also about the loneliness that follows from that. A beautiful song.

  • @JH-fz3hc
    @JH-fz3hc Год назад +120

    'Operator' is one of the greatest examples of storytelling in a song.

    • @rocconorth
      @rocconorth Год назад +3

      JIm Croce and Harry Chapin as well. Two great story-teller songwriters who died tragically in violent, accidental ways.

    • @jostauffer6637
      @jostauffer6637 Год назад +1

      @@rocconorthAnd John Denver, although his body of work was more complete

    • @thewalkermuseum
      @thewalkermuseum Месяц назад

      @@jostauffer6637 Love Denver, but many years ago, when I found out he didn't write "Country Roads," my perspective on him changed. Supposedly he had a hand in the bridge but the main song was already written.

  • @BillDyszel
    @BillDyszel Год назад +274

    The genius of this song is the way the character reveals his feelings by the manner in which he denies those feelings. Croce isn't telling the listener how the guy feels, he's leaving the listener to figure it out, which is much more powerful. It's like overhearing someone else's heartbreaking phone call when you're not a party to the call.

    • @JSees
      @JSees Год назад +8

      Well said.

    • @kevjtx1
      @kevjtx1 Год назад +3

      Great take on this...his vocal melody with the guitar parts n then the lyrics....omg

    • @fredandersen9873
      @fredandersen9873 Год назад +10

      Which is what it is. It's based on a phone call, he overheard, while he was in the Army Reserve.

    • @mos6507
      @mos6507 Год назад +1

      Which is the opposite of our reality-show tell don't show culture.

    • @elizabethparson3616
      @elizabethparson3616 Год назад +1

      Great insights!

  • @sethcollins4940
    @sethcollins4940 10 месяцев назад +91

    Croce is one of my all time favorite song writers and he died 5 years before I was born. I grew up listening to him and Lightfoot and all these greats from that era. Just an amazing writer.

    • @rossmacdonald3880
      @rossmacdonald3880 9 месяцев назад +4

      So glad you enjoy them both brilliant, Lightfoot just passed as you know buried not far from where I live. Croce just too young when he left is.

    • @rjszrama
      @rjszrama 7 месяцев назад +2

      And then there is Chapin

    • @mytahiti1004
      @mytahiti1004 6 месяцев назад +3

      They told great stories in their songs.

    • @BarrackObamna
      @BarrackObamna 5 месяцев назад

      Nah dude hes not dead he’s in Cuba with Tupac and Epstein.

  • @creynolds0216
    @creynolds0216 10 месяцев назад +20

    Rick, even to this day when I hear the line, "I've overcome the blow, I've learned to take it well...," I get the chills! That line is sooo good!

  • @Fnipernackle
    @Fnipernackle Год назад +152

    The fact that Croce could play this complicated song but sing it in such a way shows just how great of a musician he truly was.

    • @milamba
      @milamba Год назад +14

      He couldnt't play them - that was Maury.

    • @jp022x
      @jp022x Год назад +12

      ​@@milambaJim played all the rhythm parts. Maury's lead parts are fantastic but Jim's rhythm playing is great and can be complicated, especially in this song. Singing on top of it is impressive.

    • @zingzangspillip1
      @zingzangspillip1 Год назад +5

      @@milamba There is a really good live recording on RUclips of Jim & Maury performing this song together. Jim is playing rhythm.

    • @deadpan80
      @deadpan80 Год назад +6

      Jim was a pretty good player, but Maury does all the heavy lifting

    • @tommack9395
      @tommack9395 Год назад +6

      It's actually the duo between him and Maury which fills out the song... many people don't realize when you have multiple instruments they're layering to create the entire piece of what a listener is hearing. That's not to take away from Jim but what you're listening to are two guys playing really well in-sync but different parts.
      You may write a good or even just a decent song... but how it's presented and performed may make it a great song.
      i.e. Paul McCartney once said George Harrison's fills, licks and solos were the icing on the cake in most all the early Beatle songs they'd recorded... iow when they went in with an idea - for a song - they're not really written down most are winged in off the cuff - just made up on the spot and fit in well.
      Like any conversation with someone you know really well, when playing with someone long enough and mesh well it's like you know where each other are going.
      In a nut-shell, To be a good musician it takes playing with good musicians to become good at it.

  • @cdub9416
    @cdub9416 Год назад +160

    This is probably one of the most underrated songs in history. The guitar parts are unbelievable and the story is so well told.

    • @J__C__
      @J__C__ 10 месяцев назад +1

      And underrated is one of the most overused words in the music community. You can find people who think ANYONE is underrated. Doesn't matter who it is. Someone thinks they're underrated.
      You see it nonstop in the comments. They look just like yours. "so & so is sooo underrated" even though they're in the R&R Hall of Fame, they're on every Top 100 list, etc...
      For example, Dickey Betts of the Allman Brothers Band. People constantly say he's underrated yet he's consistently considered one of the greatest guitarists that ever lived and even Duane Allman said Dickey was better than he was.
      Maybe in the 80s he was underrated but today, Dickey gets all of recognition he rightly deserves.

    • @cdub9416
      @cdub9416 10 месяцев назад

      @@J__C__ Both are underrated

    • @ChristianSmith-zf9tv
      @ChristianSmith-zf9tv 9 месяцев назад

      @@J__C__dicky was for sure not better than Duane, especially before he died. That was just him being humble

    • @michaelgorenflo5022
      @michaelgorenflo5022 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@J__C__I get your point but objectively, Maury Muehleisen IS legitimately under-rated. In fact he's virtually unremembered and little known considering he was one of the smoothest guitarists ever to play in that style.
      He likely would be legendary today but for that tragedy.

    • @kathywolf3575
      @kathywolf3575 2 месяца назад

      I was a 22 year old Jim Croce fan, knew all the lyrics, sang the songs all the time. I don't think the song "Operator" was underrated. But I'm sure Maury was underrated by the vast majority of those singing along. I didn't even know who he was. Now I do. @@michaelgorenflo5022

  • @andykase
    @andykase 7 месяцев назад +16

    I would immediately purchase these two doing a complete studio remake of this song.

  • @georgeperillo6421
    @georgeperillo6421 10 месяцев назад +29

    I absolutely love this song and Maury's guitar fills are so well done, it's timeless magic.

  • @wesplybon9510
    @wesplybon9510 Год назад +476

    Croce, in his very short career, set himself up next to the other great lyricists of the era like Gordon Lightfoot and Simon and Garfunkel. His ability to craft an environment and emotion succinctly and creatively was truly masterful.

    • @fornostios8970
      @fornostios8970 Год назад +9

      Don't forget Bob Dylan!

    • @bwat9365
      @bwat9365 Год назад +10

      Wonderful description, your last sentence 👏🏿

    • @safal4823
      @safal4823 Год назад +3

      Try where do you go to my lovely by peter sarstedt.Its in my playlist just after this song and also same level of songwriting with mindblowing verse at last

    • @TimTim3000
      @TimTim3000 Год назад +5

      I would put J.D. Souther up there as well.

    • @kodykindhart5644
      @kodykindhart5644 Год назад +4

      That’s why they all call big Jim boss

  • @garrett2980
    @garrett2980 Год назад +336

    Jim Croce was such a phenomenal songwriter because he could make meaningful and deep emotional connections with the listener with conversational diction while being musically fluid yet deceptively complicated. I always recommend him to others in my generation (Millennials), hoping they will take the time to truly listen and appreciate his music.

    • @thesisypheanjournal1271
      @thesisypheanjournal1271 Год назад +9

      Yeah, my daughter's like, "Check this song out, Mom!" She plays "Sweet But Psycho." I sigh and cue up Billy Joel's "Stiletto" and mutter, "The crap you kids listen to nowadays."

    • @Darkkfated
      @Darkkfated Год назад +15

      This song and "I've Got a Name" give me goosebumps every time, no matter how much I listen to them. Just phenomenal lyricism.

    • @robertsmith4019
      @robertsmith4019 Год назад +12

      The other thing about Croce's lyrics, is that the story they tell unfolds in such a way that the lyrics are easy to remember.

    • @mikegillettify
      @mikegillettify Год назад +16

      I had a group of great friends in High School (graduated in 2005) and we all listened to 70s folk like Croce, Taylor, King, Cat Steven’s, Joni Mitchell, etc. The lyrics were just so… fantastic. Timeless even.

    • @matthewtayloryowieresearch1912
      @matthewtayloryowieresearch1912 Год назад +5

      Millennials & the current generation will neglect this 'old school'
      music at their peril, theoretical musical ignorance & no small emotional cost. Much of the greatest blues is from the 1920-30's, rock & R&B from 1955-2000 is at it's artistic apogee - the vast majority of work is superior to that of most music post 2000-2022. Just my 2cents; u rock Rick🤘& you're a livin' doll Miss Mary❣.
      Curmudgeonly guitarcheopteryx & guitarcheologist since '79. Oz.🪃

  • @mickeyneal6374
    @mickeyneal6374 8 месяцев назад +7

    66 years old and been listening to this song for years. It still gets me. Goosebumps and tears. What a song. Great respect for your analysis and the respect you show the music.

  • @4absentfriends
    @4absentfriends 10 месяцев назад +13

    The 'live' version of "Operator" is stunning, so well played and sung. You must check out all his songs, they're brilliant.

  • @sarradet
    @sarradet Год назад +76

    There is more to this story. Jim's inspiration came from this time in the army in the 1960s. I served in the 80s and it was the same. There were pay phones near the barracks and soldiers would line up for their turn calling home to talk to their parents, wives, and girlfriends. That "old friend" Ray had the universal name of "Jody" among soldiers and he was the guy who would steal your girl while you were away. We even had cadences we sang while running and marching about what we would do to "Jody" when we got back home. Many times, the soldier found out during one of these not so private phone calls and the other soldiers in the line could hear enough to know that Jody has struck again. Any soldier who served before cell phones can identify with this part of military service. I recall an interview Croce gave where he explained all this as his inspiration for Operator.

  • @rickpaul4216
    @rickpaul4216 Год назад +35

    Jim could have won an academy award for his vocal performance on this song. His delivery is upbeat but no one is buying it, and that’s intentional. “I only wish my words could convince myself.” Is the theme here. He’s incredibly sad and acting upbeat. It is absolutely perfect. His “I’m okay” act gets less and less convincing as the song goes on. His voice takes on more agitation, and then finally sadness. I’ve never heard a more perfect lyrical interpretation and he made it sound effortless. Breathtaking.

  • @worldtrav72
    @worldtrav72 10 месяцев назад +12

    This is such an awesome ‘story song’ from the ‘70’s. Love how concise and pointed and dense the lyrics are.

  • @ricklerch5339
    @ricklerch5339 6 месяцев назад +12

    Rick Beato and Mary Spender, a songwriting tour de force. Rick discussing song structure and style, and Mary discussing the emotion invoked by lyrics and vocalization. They could teach a class… Outstanding content!

  • @alanclayton9277
    @alanclayton9277 Год назад +170

    I love the way Mary slips in the vocal, in a seemingly casual way...and it's heaven.

    • @ralfklonowski3740
      @ralfklonowski3740 Год назад +6

      So it is🥰

    • @davidanderson4091
      @davidanderson4091 Год назад +10

      My goodness, I know its only tube quality audio, but I can really hear how smooth Mary's voice is.

    • @ralfklonowski3740
      @ralfklonowski3740 Год назад +3

      @@davidanderson4091 Like warm almond oil.

    • @Inequities
      @Inequities Год назад +3

      who does she sound like? her voice is magical

    • @alanclayton9277
      @alanclayton9277 Год назад +2

      @@Inequities Good question, I don't know but she's a game changer.

  • @milesfrommission
    @milesfrommission Год назад +161

    The really poetic thing about this song is how the "operator" is the only one who hears his struggle between sadness and acceptance. In the face of the operator's absolute stoicism he forgoes his effort to reach out, his tenuous acceptance yields to his profound sadness. It's as if he's speaking to the Oracle at Delphi, to whom he leaves his dime offering. Maury's upper register embellishments make the melody.

    • @marieroberts5458
      @marieroberts5458 Год назад +8

      Ok, I just have to hand it to you. ... "Oracle at Delphi" is just brilliant! A perfect summation.

    • @brunojaysutter
      @brunojaysutter Год назад +15

      Miles if I work for a Rolling Stone magazine, and needed a reviewer, I’d say you’re hired

    • @l.alexander4696
      @l.alexander4696 Год назад +7

      Spot on

    • @imout671
      @imout671 Год назад +5

      Dang, going all mike row on us

    • @jamie49868
      @jamie49868 Год назад +13

      Yeah, it's sad that we can openly and expressively tell our feeling to strangers yet find it impossible to tell them to who they are meant for. Rejection is a bitch.

  • @888Longball
    @888Longball 10 месяцев назад +9

    Such a brilliant song. Jim didn't live long enough to see how loved he was.

  • @user-xd7bo1nh8g
    @user-xd7bo1nh8g 9 месяцев назад +12

    I was in high school in the 70s and used up many a dime on a pay phone trying to get hold of my old crush who lived several miles away. For anyone who has gone through a relationship that went south, you can FEEL the emotion Jim Croce was able to put into song in such a great way!

  • @DanEdelen
    @DanEdelen Год назад +168

    Few musicians who died tragically left as big a hole in music of an era as Croce. He was just getting started, just attracting fame, snd then he was gone. The loss is bigger than most of us realize. He was a quiet superstar and we were just beginning to come to grips with his genius. We were all enriched by his music, and all impoverished by his premature passing.

    • @johnpjonesch
      @johnpjonesch Год назад +5

      Well said

    • @karinberryman2009
      @karinberryman2009 Год назад +1

      Our DJ’s were over-obsessed with their substance addicted music. They had no depth.

    • @kebby8251
      @kebby8251 Год назад +1

      I can't agree more. We lost a genius. Life isn't fair.

    • @WoefulMinion
      @WoefulMinion 8 месяцев назад +1

      It was even sadder than that. He had enough of traveling and was retiring from touring after a few more shows when he lost his life. He hoped to spend more time with his wife and son.

    • @willfrancescofini
      @willfrancescofini 7 месяцев назад

      how did Jim Croce die?

  • @steveturner7049
    @steveturner7049 Год назад +28

    I think Mary needs to record this tune. Her voice fits the song like a glove.

  • @chrisgirth7373
    @chrisgirth7373 8 месяцев назад +11

    One of my all time favorite songs. I have sat and contemplated the lyrics to this song. His cadence and conversation with himself is unparalleled songwriting. Unsung hero of this song is Maury. Could listen to this a million times and never get sick of it.

  • @mddell58
    @mddell58 8 месяцев назад +7

    I was 14 years old when this more-than-beautiful song came out.
    I couldn't help but see my sweet mother's eyes tear up, & some facial tension appeared, too. ❤
    In my naive youth, I remember thinking that the 'operator' and the man calling would actually get together, run off into the gorgeous sunset together, & live happily ever after. Yes. That is exactly what I had so hoped for. ❤

  • @bradwitt7190
    @bradwitt7190 Год назад +205

    I was at his last concert at Northwestern State University in Natchitoches, Louisiana. Such a solid performance that night, the singing, guitar playing, harmony... all of it. He did "I got A Name" which was released the next day. Such a full life, productively, in such a short time span. One of a kind.

    • @NathanBentleyDance
      @NathanBentleyDance Год назад +13

      What a treasure of a memory, bless you!

    • @DanEdelen
      @DanEdelen Год назад +16

      “I Got a Name” is one of those songs that can’t not make the listener feel better about life. It’s a pick-me-up when I’m down, because there is so much winsome joy in it. Sadly, it also reminds us of what we lost with Croce’s untimely death.

    • @john564holloway
      @john564holloway Год назад +2

      @@DanEdelen Said very well & precisely.

    • @thomastimlin1724
      @thomastimlin1724 Год назад +12

      @@DanEdelen Reminder....Jim Croce did not write I've Got a Name, but made it his own.

    • @billobrien5140
      @billobrien5140 Год назад +11

      I saw Jim Croce in Detroit in August [Pine Knob] and he died in October. I was young and saw him from the top of the hill.

  • @oscardiggs246
    @oscardiggs246 Год назад +142

    As a huge Croce fan, I need a cover album of his hits sung by Mary. Such a gorgeous voice for this material.

    • @ralex3697
      @ralex3697 Год назад +2

      @@A.L.75
      Go check him out, he was a brilliant talent. Died tragically in a plane crash.

    • @awboat
      @awboat Год назад

      @@A.L.75 There is a really good documentary about him floating around. Check it out. He is an amazing person.

    • @chrisbrown6544
      @chrisbrown6544 Год назад +2

      Agreed - Mary please think about doing a cover album of his songs 🙏

    • @markstandohar5977
      @markstandohar5977 10 дней назад

      The World hasn’t heard me sing this song yet, hopefully soon 🔜

  • @dylan7926
    @dylan7926 11 месяцев назад +15

    The line “a guy she says she knew well and sometimes hated”…I always took it to mean that the girl loved the other guy from the start, but she just told Jim she hated him to cover up the fling until they finally just ran off together.
    And the line “you can keep the dime” is one of my favorite lines ever written. It’s just a perfect way to end such a deep song with such a seemingly flippant comment. It’s like the narrator is so crushed and emotionally drained and ashamed of what just happened it’s all he has left to say.

    • @johnkeith2450
      @johnkeith2450 10 месяцев назад +1

      Well stated

    • @loubunk977
      @loubunk977 8 месяцев назад

      I believe the line is " a guy she knew well and sometimes dated ".. that would make more sense..

    • @loubunk977
      @loubunk977 8 месяцев назад +3

      OOPS! you are right. The word is "hated".. for 50 years I sang it "and sometimes dated"..
      Sorry, you can keep the dime... Lou

    • @brahmburgers
      @brahmburgers 11 дней назад

      He might have written a subsequent song called, Caller, ....where the operator lady responds with kind words - and maybe meets him at a cafe.

  • @michellemichon
    @michellemichon 5 месяцев назад +4

    I attended A.J. Croce's concert last night. What a wonderful storyteller & entertainer he is. We all laughed, cried & sang along to the songs. It was a magical night. Extra appreciation for your video. LOVE

  • @timpike1976
    @timpike1976 Год назад +240

    So there are at least two people who appreciate this exceptional song as much as I do! My take on the lyrics has always been that he never intended to complete the call in the first place; he just wanted to pour his heart out to a disinterested party - one who wouldn't tell him where he went wrong or how he was better off without her, but someone who would just listen. Been there.

    • @donh4330
      @donh4330 10 месяцев назад +10

      Well said!

    • @leonardkurtz1383
      @leonardkurtz1383 10 месяцев назад +10

      100% agree!

    • @rgc1961
      @rgc1961 9 месяцев назад +6

      A great take on a great song!

    • @Siskos-pn7nd
      @Siskos-pn7nd 9 месяцев назад +8

      I like your take, Jim Croce was unique among songwriters and great guitar player, his sidekick complimented him as only he could. Great duo. I guess you have to be old to appreciate it, and experience some familiar emotion. I am proud to be a 77yo songwriter who admires other musicians.

    • @timpike1976
      @timpike1976 9 месяцев назад +7

      @Siskos-pn7nd Yes sir. The music he left behind in his short career is a national treasure.

  • @ralex3697
    @ralex3697 Год назад +181

    This song still makes me teary eyed, especially when he says, there’s something in my eyes.
    It’s a masterpiece, they don’t write them like this anymore. Jim Croce was a legend, what a tragic ending to a beautiful soul. Gut wrenching.

    • @jazztime7186
      @jazztime7186 Год назад +3

      Mary Spender in this video is wonderful, but when she said it was revolutionary for a man to be singing about having tears in his eyes in the 1970s, I thought "she hasn't listened to much George Jones music". And the telescoping of a whole story into 2-3 lines of a verse is something that happens in the best Nashville songwriting (as Rick of all people should know, having been a Nashville songwriter for a time). All that said, this is an exceptional song by Nashville or any standards, and Croce married that older style of story song lyric writing with a very contemporary folk-pop sound that sets him apart from the world of country songwriting.

    • @ZoydWheeler
      @ZoydWheeler Год назад +3

      You know, it happens, every time

  • @davedechants2956
    @davedechants2956 7 месяцев назад +7

    The joy on her face when singing along is awesome! That’s exactly how this music makes me feel! ❤❤❤

  • @ManduRugas-oe4kv
    @ManduRugas-oe4kv 8 месяцев назад +7

    He was a very good story teller, thats the reason for the many quick changes in chords, talking in melodies😊

  • @kevinlurker1
    @kevinlurker1 Год назад +115

    Jim deserves incredible accolades for his gift of word. Storytellers always got to me. The complexity that comes out of a few well placed words, open up a canvas for your own mind to paint. That's a rare gift. Just look at how Rick and Mary react. They know!

  • @ptrelc
    @ptrelc Год назад +137

    10:28 the depth of the singer’s tragedy is revealed in the line, “I think about a love that I thought would save me.” Thus, rather than overcoming the blow, he is interminably devastated by the loss of someone who was to be his savior.
    The upbeat melody aligns with the facade of recovery found in the lyric. This facade and its aligned melody make the listener’s discovery of the real meaning, all the more jolting.
    The song is a masterpiece.

    • @georgebeierberkeley
      @georgebeierberkeley 6 месяцев назад +6

      You took the thoughts right of my head. He’s still holding on, thinking of the life that could have been. A falsely cheery melody masking his pain.

    • @garyneilson3075
      @garyneilson3075 Месяц назад +1

      Yes!

    • @brahmburgers
      @brahmburgers 11 дней назад

      akin to Doobie Brother's; What A Fool Believes, another great song, ...or... You Don't Know Me.

  • @MikeJBlues
    @MikeJBlues 7 дней назад +1

    This song takes me back to my youth in the 60s and 70s. I don't think he ever wanted to call , was just pouring out his heart to the operator . Such a beautiful song. Rest in peace fellas. 🎸 🎸

  • @justingreer4001
    @justingreer4001 7 месяцев назад +3

    Mary singing in that low register sounds so good! Rick you are no hack at anything you’ve played ever! Talented and fun to watch as always.

  • @joelpanetta4449
    @joelpanetta4449 Год назад +135

    One of the GREATEST songs ever written. Jim's writing & Maury's guitar was just incredible.

    • @BenMJay
      @BenMJay Год назад +3

      I liked his voice.

  • @daveowens271
    @daveowens271 Год назад +123

    I think this quick chords changes are indicative of the narrator's feelings about the whole situation. Genius songwriting. Absolutely brilliant.

  • @batautomat
    @batautomat 8 месяцев назад +16

    Listening to the album “Don’t Mess Around With Jim,” I’m struck with the fact that all the songs are between 2 and 3 minutes long! To pull heart strings in such compressed little songs is a testament to his refined writing ability.
    There’s a new high quality upload of Jim and Maury hosting Midnight Special- don’t miss it! The live sound is very clean and revealing.

    • @worldissuesmatter1643
      @worldissuesmatter1643 7 месяцев назад +2

      In those days, you had to make it fit about 2:30 if you wanted radio play, so the writers were really good at making a really emotional story fit that time.

    • @coldlakealta4043
      @coldlakealta4043 5 месяцев назад

      there's a lot of dispute, but the Animals' House of the Rising Sun seems to be near the top of the list of 3-minute format breakers@@worldissuesmatter1643

  • @Valkonnen
    @Valkonnen 11 месяцев назад +6

    This is one of my favorite songs. It tells a story in such a concise and heartfelt way with resignation and a calm vibe. He left way too soon!

  • @stevewindisch7400
    @stevewindisch7400 Год назад +212

    Warning: Even after 30-40 years this song could make you cry... long after you have overcome the blow. Brilliant. A showcase example of what music can do to, and for us.

    • @bandbyoneMIDI
      @bandbyoneMIDI Год назад +7

      Yes Sir, it never fails to bring that familiar tear.

    • @patrickbell5086
      @patrickbell5086 Год назад +5

      Especially knowing Jim’s life was cut so tragically short…

    • @jjacoby1010
      @jjacoby1010 Год назад +6

      Yes, and I've Got a Name and Time in a Bottle make me cry often as well

    • @gitaaa7740
      @gitaaa7740 Год назад +18

      Do you think people 40 years from now will be lamenting over a Justin Bieber song? I don’t think so!

    • @vincentleone4021
      @vincentleone4021 Год назад +6

      Close to 50 years actually 1972 so 50 years. Trying to make people 10 years younger

  • @Opeckie
    @Opeckie Год назад +105

    In my opinion, this song should be the introduction to EVERY songwriting 101 class. Everything about it is just so perfect! Sorry I'm 3 months late to the party on this video, but I'm so glad you two did this! What a gift Jim gave us!

    • @wannenburgwannenburg3695
      @wannenburgwannenburg3695 Год назад +2

      Probably way over the head of anyone doing a 101 course. Might be more appropriate for a 301 course

  • @dangauldin6497
    @dangauldin6497 11 месяцев назад +6

    I was born in '78. I recognize every cultural reference in this song. But you're right, its dated but at the same time timeless. Croce is one of the finest storytellers ad pssionate artists of all time, and I mis the potential he could hav e given us.

  • @craigmurray1953
    @craigmurray1953 10 месяцев назад +4

    Just the words “my best old ex-friend Ray” sets up the mood and the story for the rest of the song.

  • @sesimie
    @sesimie Год назад +214

    This is a major reason i don't listen to newer music. I want to hear songs that take me on a journey...or tells a story. We are over saturated with Beats. The older I get (44) the less I'm impressed by technical brilliance and the more i'm into the lasting memories. Mary Spender is a Treasure!

    • @noelgonzalez9549
      @noelgonzalez9549 Год назад +16

      Nuff said. As a 49 yr old myself - 100,000% agree.

    • @pauldhoff
      @pauldhoff Год назад +1

      Grace VanderWaal.

    • @mwfmtnman
      @mwfmtnman Год назад +17

      Just like the rest of our society has become, all flash, no substance

    • @pauldhoff
      @pauldhoff Год назад

      @@mwfmtnman Grace VanderWaal

    • @lisaspikes4291
      @lisaspikes4291 Год назад +4

      Yes. And it’s something that practically everyone can relate to. We’ve all been dumped at one time or another. We know, deep down, that we’ll get over it eventually. But while it’s happening, it’s very devastating. It feels like nothing will ever be good again. Doesn’t it?

  • @12menos
    @12menos Год назад +68

    It’s almost like the guitar is the operator responding back through the melody. Amazing

    • @drewphelps1
      @drewphelps1 Год назад +8

      I have been imagining lyrics for the operator as responses in the guitar fills.

    • @jessejamesburnitt
      @jessejamesburnitt 10 месяцев назад +2

      I always kind of felt this as well!

  • @ZOT369
    @ZOT369 11 месяцев назад +6

    When I was a child I watched his award get accepted for him.
    Singer songwriters like Jim and Bread made the heart hurt.
    These masterpieces grip the soul out of everyone's experiences.
    Snapshots of the life in melancholy melodic strife.
    Anyone who has loved and been rejected is served in verse now reflected.
    This is Legend......
    My 2 cents, you can keep the 8

  • @JJL1342
    @JJL1342 11 месяцев назад +8

    One of my favorites. His son AJ is a fairly accomplished jazz musician and is definitely worth a listen.

  • @mattiefee
    @mattiefee Год назад +34

    Imagine 1992 and a bunch of 12-year-old punk skateboarder troublemakers sitting around in a basement listening to this song over and over! That was me and my friends. Our parents were jaw dropped that we all love this song so much.

  • @robincochran7369
    @robincochran7369 Год назад +56

    Jim and Maury were both very talented individually but together were magic. Such a loss, RIP.

  • @fishhuntadventure
    @fishhuntadventure 2 месяца назад +1

    The lyrics are so fantastic because they paint a picture and set the stage of a vast screenplay in the mind that is a half-hour longer and a few thousand words bigger than the song itself.

  • @gianfrancodefrancesco7117
    @gianfrancodefrancesco7117 7 месяцев назад +1

    Rick, haven't seen all your videos but many, but this one is so poetical and digging so profound in our loved memories. This is really a special gift. Thank you.

  • @rogerwales5374
    @rogerwales5374 Год назад +175

    Congratulations Mary and Rick, an absolutely outstanding and significant analysis of one of the greatest lyricists. I am a 77 year old guitarist, and I must say that the admiration and care you brought to this presentation put something in my eye. Please keep up the excellent work, you make a great team, we need more of this type of format. Thank you.

    • @schtepke
      @schtepke Год назад +2

      very well put. nothing to add ...

  • @rickwebermusic
    @rickwebermusic Год назад +218

    Jim Croce and Maury Muehleisen were the embodiment of the most exquisite expression of lyrical content and musical composition I've ever seen. Gone too soon.

    • @kvwebb777
      @kvwebb777 Год назад +4

      Indeed. Such a twist of fate. Hope they were both ready to meet God. -blessings, Keith

    • @ffggddss
      @ffggddss Год назад +1

      @@kvwebb777 Could it be that God was a little too anxious to see them?
      jk. He's not selfish like a lot of us are.
      Fred

    • @wolfhound2000
      @wolfhound2000 Год назад +6

      This song and Time in a Bottle are two of my most loved songs ever. Two wonderful and unique talents that were taken way too early. The world needs more geniuses like Jim and Maury.

    • @ffggddss
      @ffggddss Год назад +5

      @@wolfhound2000 Two excellent song choices, yes! Sometimes I find _I Got a Name_ also getting stuck in my brain.
      I, too, sorely miss all the songs Jim would have written, but never got the chance to.

  • @jimmyayub
    @jimmyayub 6 месяцев назад +1

    Found this video just now and I must thank you both guys for dissecting this song for us. This made me love the song more than ever 🙂

  • @lalamparaoculta
    @lalamparaoculta 9 месяцев назад

    Wow, I have goosebumps, tears in my eyes and absolutely touched by this video. This song’s been one of my lifetime favorite since I was a kid back then in the 70’s, but hearing you talking about it made me realize about obvious things in this gem. Thank you so much to both of you for sharing this.

  • @Hindsight04
    @Hindsight04 Год назад +48

    I’m 18 years old and he is my favorite artist by far. I love his whole discography from Facets to the home recordings album in 2003, a year i wasn’t even born in yet lol. My friends all poke fun because i listen to Jim Croce and Bread, but I couldn’t think of anything else I’d want to listen to more!

    • @jeffj318
      @jeffj318 Год назад +7

      What a wonderful comment. My friends laughed at me when I played Bob Dylan's first album. You have good taste in music.

    • @shaun374
      @shaun374 Год назад +3

      Thank you!

    • @brahmburgers
      @brahmburgers 11 дней назад

      Try Los Lobos, or Michael McDonald with the Doobie Brothers.

  • @nickbriard
    @nickbriard Год назад +39

    You can feel Jim’s emotion. He just needed someone to talk to about his pain and the operator was his listener 😢

    • @ordinaryman1904
      @ordinaryman1904 Год назад +1

      At least he got over it at the end.
      When he said ‘I don’t wanna talk to those F-ing people anyway, you can keep the dime’

  • @lindahill5890
    @lindahill5890 8 месяцев назад +1

    One of my very first albums, I listened to it over and over and over again. Such a great song, so beautiful brings tears to my eyes.

  • @fascistipresident9334
    @fascistipresident9334 3 месяца назад +1

    Jim Croce is one of the best songwriters who ever lived. And his singing is so great with breathy tones, connected tones, and getting to the vowels so beautifully. Love him and miss him.

  • @keithsparbanie2108
    @keithsparbanie2108 Год назад +105

    Jim Croce. Yes. I’m 63. We all had his three albums plus the hits package, “Photographs and Memories.” So talented. Brilliant. Even if we were rockers into the Stones, The Who, Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, and Black Sabbath… we were also fans of Croce.

    • @juliuswilliams4581
      @juliuswilliams4581 Год назад +1

      So true Keith.👍

    • @guywerry6614
      @guywerry6614 Год назад +7

      Agreed. I'm a rural Canadian guy whose soundtrack was heavily Beach Boys, BTO (Bachman Turner Overdrive), the Guess Who, the Stones ... but Croce and Gordon Lightfoot were also heavily in there, singing the "counterpoint", if you will, to the primary soundtrack.

    • @utbpersonal
      @utbpersonal Год назад +2

      You are so right, Keith.

    • @hubechen4982
      @hubechen4982 Год назад +1

      I love Jim croce songs..great songwriter and so many great songs which I do sing along and never tire .

    • @coldcoffeebear7459
      @coldcoffeebear7459 Год назад

      You said it all.

  • @gunnar1797
    @gunnar1797 Год назад +39

    29 years old and I get home to play walkin back to Georgia everyday. Jim is something else and one of a kind. Honestly tearing up seeing the respect in these comments for Jim and Maury

  • @jetobey5656
    @jetobey5656 11 месяцев назад

    Rick and Mary,you are both so generous and you understand what we need. Kindness is critical and it envelops all of your beings and sharing that.

  • @iamjackyo
    @iamjackyo 7 месяцев назад +4

    JC lived less than 30 yrs but so much impact he brought to us by his powerful songs. He can be more famous and legendary if he is alive until today. Long live JC

  • @LMacNeill
    @LMacNeill Год назад +222

    This is why I love this channel *SO MUCH!* You take apart songs that I've heard literally hundreds, if not thousands, of times, and make me see something new in them. Every. Single. Time. It's a gift, man. Really wonderful!

    • @WitchKing99
      @WitchKing99 Год назад +6

      And then there are people like me who love Rick's channel because we get introduced to awesome songs that we never heard before! :D

    • @fablenewsnetwork7223
      @fablenewsnetwork7223 Год назад +1

      Absolutely 🥁🥁🥁

  • @PeppieP
    @PeppieP Год назад +32

    I’m 58 years old and just want to express the lyrical and musical talent we lost when we lost Jim and Maury was immense. Let’s hope people still appreciate them in 2023.

  • @LorenGold
    @LorenGold 8 месяцев назад +1

    Love this so much. One of the most underrated artists of his generation. More Jim please!!

  • @raptormann
    @raptormann 11 месяцев назад

    I've always loved this song and Jim Croce's whole body of work but you two have somehow made me love and appreciate it even more. Thank you for this video, and all you both do.

  • @rickhanson8709
    @rickhanson8709 Год назад +47

    I was in Junior High when he died in that plane crash. I didn't know who he was at the time, but I can still see my teacher in tears on the ground just loosing it and remember wondering just who this person was that could cause such a reaction. Years later I learned just what a great artist he really was. 💔😭

  • @careyrowland
    @careyrowland Год назад +33

    I have always thought that "You can keep the dime" was one of the best lines ever written in a song.

  • @kylemueller4936
    @kylemueller4936 5 месяцев назад

    “Operator” has always been one of the best, and most emotional songs I’ve ever heard. There is a purely magical combination for lyrics and music that i don’t believe I’ve ever heard in another song. THANK YOU so much for bringing a light to this powerful amazing song.

  • @mikebaddeley
    @mikebaddeley 10 месяцев назад +5

    This lyric could be made into a two hour movie just on its own. It tells us so much in just a few verses and choruses.

  • @hinduismwithpremananddasbhagat
    @hinduismwithpremananddasbhagat Год назад +74

    He doesn't just sing songs, he sings songs about real people in real situations. That's a lost art.

  • @Jerry_England1
    @Jerry_England1 Год назад +155

    Great job guys! One of the first tunes I learned on guitar. Jim’s widow Ingrid said that when Jim was in the military the soldiers would line up to use the phone to call their wives and girlfriends and Jim took little tidbits that he overheard. Lots of dear John conversations. He took these bits and along with poetic license, he crafted a heartbreakingly beautiful song. Martin produced a Jim Croce signature guitar with a 1973 dime for the 3rd fret marker. Wonderful idea and tribute.

    • @robbchastain3036
      @robbchastain3036 Год назад +9

      The Army was an incredible gathering place, all those soldiers and all their lives and stories. And I like how Jim told his Army stories, it was like being in the barracks with everyone missing home and their ladies.

    • @stephenpeterson7940
      @stephenpeterson7940 Год назад +7

      One of the first songs I learned as well. Still love it.

    • @5roundsrapid263
      @5roundsrapid263 Год назад +3

      @@robbchastain3036 I never knew Jim was in the service. My father was also in the Army about that time. I can definitely see the similarities.

    • @robbchastain3036
      @robbchastain3036 Год назад +3

      @@5roundsrapid263 O for sure, check out here on RUclips a video of Jim on stage where he is telling the story about bad, bad Leroy Brown at Ft. Jackson in South Carolina.

    • @toddmcintosh83
      @toddmcintosh83 Год назад

      @@5roundsrapid263 Jim would often wear his long sleeved army fatigues shirt when performing.😉👌😎

  • @professorbugbear
    @professorbugbear Месяц назад +1

    Jim is one of the great "what ifs" of music. Imagine all of the amazing songs he could have blessed us with...
    This has been one of my favorite songs for decades.

  • @williamrittelmann8338
    @williamrittelmann8338 Год назад +160

    Such a great song. The upbeat melody is the musical equivalent of the exterior facade that he is conveying in the first verse. His true feelings are revealed more with each verse until we learn that he has tried to call on many occasions but can’t bring himself to accept what happened and he really just needs to tell someone how he is feeling.

  • @mikevanwyk485
    @mikevanwyk485 Год назад +77

    I went through a huge Jim Croce discovery period in high school, and I graduated in 1991, so his music was a little "before my time" so-to-speak. I have often described Croce's writing as that he had the ability to take 'War and Peace' and condense it into three verses and a chorus. A total and complete lyrical genius! Some of my favorite songs of his are ones that weren't even the biggest hits! He was taken from us way too soon.

    • @eyesolatedrock
      @eyesolatedrock Год назад +1

      Same, class of 93. At that point I had the Records, a cassette tape (Japanese export), a greatest hits CD and even an 8-track. Just recently bought them on iTunes.

    • @chrisd7047
      @chrisd7047 Год назад +1

      I graduated that same year, but I knew Croce from the time I was little because my parents played mostly folk music in the house. I grew up hearing Croce, the Mamas and the Papas, CSNY, Simon & Garfunkel, and the like. The only rock albums my folks had were a couple of Beatles albums. It put me behind in recognizing pop music, but I'm thankful for the musical education it gave me.

    • @eternallife9786
      @eternallife9786 Год назад +2

      All Die hard music fans should have a Jim Croce phase! he practically created his own genre!

    • @eternallife9786
      @eternallife9786 Год назад +1

      @@chrisd7047 sounds like your folks had great taste in music my mom and dad was really into stuff like bluegrass Jimmy Rogers Woody Guthrie ramblin Jack Elliott a lot of that old timey folk music

    • @chrisd7047
      @chrisd7047 Год назад +1

      @@eternallife9786 Mine split the difference. I got kind of pop-folk music topped off with classical training. Instead of Woodie Guthrie and Jack Elliott, I got Beethoven, Mozart, and Tchaikovsky. I could tell the difference between a bassoon and a bass clarinet, or the difference between The Nutcracker and The Marriage of Figaro by the time I was 8, but I had no idea who Michael Jackson was.

  • @thhall459
    @thhall459 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you two musically and socially brilliant and kind people for so wonderfully explaining to us ordinary people why we love this song so much. You two are wonderful together.

  • @jessetryon5108
    @jessetryon5108 8 месяцев назад

    Great video! That little walk down is priceless. You guys work really well together. I really enjoy this. Thank you!

  • @joelhaaland2639
    @joelhaaland2639 Год назад +17

    I was 15 when Jim Croce died. I was an Iowa farm boy and I loved him so much ! I remember buying all his albums. I went out and sat in our hay shed and struggled to hold back the tears. Never be another like him.

    • @ClarenceCochran-ne7du
      @ClarenceCochran-ne7du Месяц назад

      13 at the time, and I can relate. Didn't have a field to go cry in, but I went down to the basement, crawled into my closet and openly wept and grieved.
      51 years later, I still tear up when any Jim Croce song comes on the radio or overhead at a store.

  • @johnhayes1641
    @johnhayes1641 Год назад +38

    Mary's voice is such a great fit for that song. Beautifully done. Croce was a Philly guy, where I grew up, and still a local hero.

  • @terryminion7784
    @terryminion7784 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you for expanding the lyrics and music to a whole new level of one of my favorite songs. Your commentary was powerful in me.

  • @stevebailey7798
    @stevebailey7798 9 месяцев назад +1

    I tear up everytime I hear this song. What a talent. Heaven must have a wonderful band.

  • @atlantaguitar9689
    @atlantaguitar9689 Год назад +140

    Maury Muehleisen's licks were like mini-compositions on their own. They are also easy to transfer to other songs.

    • @Yngsatchvai
      @Yngsatchvai Год назад +18

      His accompaniment makes the song 100% more melodic.
      Skills for days, he has a solo LP

    • @michaellennon9427
      @michaellennon9427 Год назад +10

      Jim called him "my band".

    • @randymeyer6482
      @randymeyer6482 Год назад +6

      Him and Red Shea...the Duane Allmans of side men.

    • @jerroldshelton9367
      @jerroldshelton9367 Год назад +2

      @@randymeyer6482 Maury Muehleisen and Red Shea were the reasons why I wanted to learn to play the guitar. They, along with Tony Rice and Hank Snow, were my "guitar heroes" and remain so fifty years on. Maury and Red were masters who played to the songs masterfully and made them come to life.

    • @karinberryman2009
      @karinberryman2009 Год назад +2

      Just listening to these two acknowledging Maury’s brilliance. At last someone talks about him.