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Quiz about Chicago Shorty  The Music of Steve Goodman
Quiz about Chicago Shorty  The Music of Steve Goodman

"Chicago Shorty" - The Music of Steve Goodman Quiz


Steve Goodman is one of those artists who never became that famous but had a tremendous influence. Lots of people knew and loved Steve, and the odds are that you know his most famous song (more, if you live near Chicago).

A multiple-choice quiz by Correspondguy. Estimated time: 7 mins.
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Time
7 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
316,727
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
15
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
10 / 15
Plays
156
Awards
Top 35% Quiz
- -
Question 1 of 15
1. Steve Goodman is probably most famous for writing a song, not performing it. In fact, his most famous song won a posthumous Grammy award for Best Country Song. It's been covered numerous times, but the version you still hear on the radio is the one performed by Arlo Guthrie. It's about a train. What's the song that was a huge hit for Arlo in 1972 and probably got a lot of airplay in 2005? Hint


Question 2 of 15
2. Steve Goodman also wrote another song which became associated with a different artist. The version that hit it big was David Allan Coe's (in which Steve Goodman is mentioned). The story about the song is that Steve tried to include everything that had ever been in every country song he'd ever heard. What's the name of the song? Hint


Question 3 of 15
3. Steve Goodman was well known for his support of the Chicago Cubs. In the song "A Dying Cub Fan's Last Request," released in 1981, he comments on how frustrating it is to be a Cub fan. One of the things he mentions is the fact that at the time, "The last time the Cubs won the National League Pennant was the year we dropped the bomb on Japan." When was that? Hint


Question 4 of 15
4. Steve Goodman was, as you might have guessed, a Chicago native. He wrote songs about Chicago baseball, a famous mayor of Chicago, and an infamous tow-truck company. Which of these songs is NOT on one of those topics? Hint


Question 5 of 15
5. Steve Goodman was a man of many nicknames. His lack of height gave him the nickname of "Chicago Shorty," which I used as the title for this quiz. Another nickname was "The Little Prince," which Steve earned for both his diminutive stature and his generosity of soul. However, Steve is on record as preferring a nickname that related to the disease that killed him. What was that nickname? Hint


Question 6 of 15
6. Steve Goodman wrote a lot of funny songs, but he wrote a lot of sweet ones, too. One of the most touching was about his father, Bud Goodman. Interestingly, his daughter covered the song in 2006, using the title of the song as the name of the album. What's the name of this two-generation song? Hint


Question 7 of 15
7. Steve Goodman often performed other people's songs, some of which he'd co-written. One of the ones that he'd worked on was "What Have You Done for Me Lately?" where he'd come up with the chorus, but needed help writing the verses. The person who wrote the rest of the song was an accomplished songwriter who also wrote "A Boy Named Sue," as well as writing two books of poetry for children and writing and illustrating a classic of children's literature. Who was this multi-talented individual? Hint


Question 8 of 15
8. Time for some more difficult questions. Steve Goodman and John Prine were good friends. Steve played and sang on John's debut album and they co-wrote some songs together. What song did they often sing as a duet? Hint


Question 9 of 15
9. One of the things that I admire about Steve Goodman was that he openly admired and appreciated other musicians with whom he worked. He frequently mentioned his appreciation in his songs and performances. Which one of Steve's songs is expressly about his admiration and relationship with one of his collaborators? Hint


Question 10 of 15
10. Several of Steve Goodman's songs relate to life on the road, either directly or indirectly. As anyone who's been alone and up late can tell you, late-night advertising can start looking pretty attractive. "Vegematic" is about a man who falls asleep with the television on and orders everything advertised. What is not a product mentioned in the song? Hint


Question 11 of 15
11. Some of Steve Goodman's songs haven't weathered so well. It's not because they're not that good, it's because they're fairly topical. The one that leaps most readily to my mind is about a family who survived a nuclear war. What's the title of this pretty dated song? Hint


Question 12 of 15
12. Steve Goodman not only wrote a song for his father, he wrote several specifically for his wife, Nancy Goodman. (Although, I'd argue that most of his love songs are about Nancy, as well.) Which of the songs listed below is the love letter to Nancy? Hint


Question 13 of 15
13. One of the great things about Steve Goodman is that he generally looked and sounded like he was having a great time. There's a song on "Jessie's Jig & Other Favorites" where that comes across loud and clear, even though he's in the studio with a bunch of other musicians. The particular thing about this song is that the words don't mean anything much - they're just intros to a solo by one member of the band. What's this song called? Hint


Question 14 of 15
14. I've decided to use one of Steve Goodman's songs as a lullaby for my daughter. The song, "Videotape," is about the advantages we'd have if our lives were on videotape, or if we all could see the future. Which one of these is NOT one of the advantages Steve lists? Hint


Question 15 of 15
15. Finally, one for the true fans. In 1994, Red Pajama Records released "No Big Surprise: The Steve Goodman Anthology." This was a two-CD set, one of which was composed of live performances. That CD captures the energy and fun of a Steve Goodman performance, but it also document's Steve's ability to improvise when he forgot the words or broke a string or otherwise ran into trouble. What song did he manage to get through without having to improvise? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Steve Goodman is probably most famous for writing a song, not performing it. In fact, his most famous song won a posthumous Grammy award for Best Country Song. It's been covered numerous times, but the version you still hear on the radio is the one performed by Arlo Guthrie. It's about a train. What's the song that was a huge hit for Arlo in 1972 and probably got a lot of airplay in 2005?

Answer: "City of New Orleans"

"City of New Orleans" is a real train, running from Chicago to New Orleans. I've never ridden it, but I'm sure it's a great ride. Anyway, the story is that Steve Goodman met up with Arlo Guthrie after Arlo had finished a concert at The Quiet Knight in Chicago and asked to play him a song. Arlo's version of the story, recounted on "A Tribute to Steve Goodman," is that he agreed to listen on the condition that Steve buy him a beer, and as long as the beer lasted, he'd listen. Arlo's judgment was "It turned out to be one of the finer beers of my life."
2. Steve Goodman also wrote another song which became associated with a different artist. The version that hit it big was David Allan Coe's (in which Steve Goodman is mentioned). The story about the song is that Steve tried to include everything that had ever been in every country song he'd ever heard. What's the name of the song?

Answer: "You Never Even Call Me By My Name"

Steve actually co-wrote the song with John Prine (with whom he was close friends), but John Prine refused to take a co-writing credit. When David Allan Coe's version hit it big, Steve bought John a jukebox with a share of the royalties. Steve and John did leave out a lot of things that should be in a country song, but managed to cram them into a verse they later added.

I have a personal anecdote about this song: when I lived in Alabama, I was in a crowded bar when this song came on the jukebox. EVERYONE stopped talking and sang along. It was amazing.
3. Steve Goodman was well known for his support of the Chicago Cubs. In the song "A Dying Cub Fan's Last Request," released in 1981, he comments on how frustrating it is to be a Cub fan. One of the things he mentions is the fact that at the time, "The last time the Cubs won the National League Pennant was the year we dropped the bomb on Japan." When was that?

Answer: 1945

Steve never saw the Cubs play in the post-season. He was born in 1948 and died in 1984, four days before the Cubs would play in the National League Playoffs for the first time in 39 years. Some good lines from the song:

"Its a beautiful day for a funeral, Hey Ernie lets play two!
Somebody go get Jack Brickhouse to come back,
and conduct just one more interview
Have the Cubbies run right out into the middle of the field,
Have Keith Moreland drop a routine fly.
Give everybody two bags of peanuts and a frosty malt
And I'll be ready to die."
4. Steve Goodman was, as you might have guessed, a Chicago native. He wrote songs about Chicago baseball, a famous mayor of Chicago, and an infamous tow-truck company. Which of these songs is NOT on one of those topics?

Answer: "Somebody Else's Troubles"

"Daley's Gone" is about Richard J. Daley, who was the Mayor of Chicago for 21 years. Wikipedia calls him "the last of the big city bosses." "Lincoln Park Pirates" is about the Lincoln Towing Service, which, according to Wikipedia, acquired a reputation for towing cars without authorization and then threatening people who tried to reclaim them. "Go, Cubs, Go" is often played at Wrigley Field. "Somebody Else's Troubles" has no specific relationship with Chicago.
5. Steve Goodman was a man of many nicknames. His lack of height gave him the nickname of "Chicago Shorty," which I used as the title for this quiz. Another nickname was "The Little Prince," which Steve earned for both his diminutive stature and his generosity of soul. However, Steve is on record as preferring a nickname that related to the disease that killed him. What was that nickname?

Answer: "Cool Hand Leuk"

Confirmation for his preference is from "The Steve Goodman Preservation Society," as well as Wikipedia. Steve had been diagnosed with leukemia in 1969. For a hunk of his career, he was in remission, but the disease reappeared in 1982. Nancy Goodman, whom he married in 1970, said "Steve wanted to live as normal a life as possible, only he had to live it as fast as he could."
6. Steve Goodman wrote a lot of funny songs, but he wrote a lot of sweet ones, too. One of the most touching was about his father, Bud Goodman. Interestingly, his daughter covered the song in 2006, using the title of the song as the name of the album. What's the name of this two-generation song?

Answer: "My Old Man"

Steve's daughter, Rosanna, decided not to update the lyrics, preferring to record the song as Steve had done. I think the best lines in the song are the ones that remind us that we need to appreciate our Dads when we can:

"And oh the fights we had
When my brother and I got him mad;
He'd get all boiled up and he'd start to shout
And I knew what was coming so I tuned him out.
And now the old man's gone, and I'd give all I own
To hear what he said when I wasn't listening
To my old man"
7. Steve Goodman often performed other people's songs, some of which he'd co-written. One of the ones that he'd worked on was "What Have You Done for Me Lately?" where he'd come up with the chorus, but needed help writing the verses. The person who wrote the rest of the song was an accomplished songwriter who also wrote "A Boy Named Sue," as well as writing two books of poetry for children and writing and illustrating a classic of children's literature. Who was this multi-talented individual?

Answer: Shel Silverstein

The two books of poetry are "Where the Sidewalk Ends" and "A Light in the Attic," and the classic of children's literature is "The Giving Tree." My daughter owns two of the three.

Steve's own songs are similar in tone to Silverstein's. The part of "What Have You Done for Me Lately?" that I like the best is "Cast your bread on the water, and what do you get? Some hard-luck story and your bread gets wet." I'm not sure who came up with that.
8. Time for some more difficult questions. Steve Goodman and John Prine were good friends. Steve played and sang on John's debut album and they co-wrote some songs together. What song did they often sing as a duet?

Answer: "Souvenirs"

John Prine mentions that they often sang "Souvenirs" as a duet on "A Tribute to Steve Goodman." "Eight-ball Blues" is a Steve Goodman solo effort and "Illegal Smile" is one of Prine's. On "No Big Surprise," Steve sings "Turnpike Tom" with Jethro Burns.
9. One of the things that I admire about Steve Goodman was that he openly admired and appreciated other musicians with whom he worked. He frequently mentioned his appreciation in his songs and performances. Which one of Steve's songs is expressly about his admiration and relationship with one of his collaborators?

Answer: "You Better Get It While You Can (The Ballad of Carl Martin)"

This question took me FOREVER to write. Steve was a huge admirer of Jethro Burns and Carl Martin, both of whom worked with him. He wrote a song using both their names, so I had two artists with whom he worked and wrote songs for. After searching every album, I determined that there wasn't a third, which meant I couldn't write the "All of these BUT" question I wanted to write. Anyway, while both "You Better Get It While You Can (The Ballad of Carl Martin)" and "If Jethro Were Here" are about collaborators, "If Jethro Were Here" is an instrumental, so cannot really be "about" anyone. Steve never worked with Elvis, and if "You're the Girl I Love" is about anyone, it's about his beloved wife, Nancy. (And Steve never mentioned her as a musician. Believe me, he would have if he'd worked with her.)
10. Several of Steve Goodman's songs relate to life on the road, either directly or indirectly. As anyone who's been alone and up late can tell you, late-night advertising can start looking pretty attractive. "Vegematic" is about a man who falls asleep with the television on and orders everything advertised. What is not a product mentioned in the song?

Answer: the Shamwow

While the Shamwow is ubiquitous now, I don't think it was being advertised before Steve died in 1984. I say that because I think he'd have included it. If you're too young to remember the other products, the Ginsu knife was an incredibly sharp and durable knife that could cut a can and then slice a tomato.

The Egg Scrambler, if I remember properly, was a device to enable you to scramble eggs without breaking the shell. The Smokeless Ashtray was an ashtray with a fan underneath that did a halfway decent job of sucking up the smoke (I owned one at one point).
11. Some of Steve Goodman's songs haven't weathered so well. It's not because they're not that good, it's because they're fairly topical. The one that leaps most readily to my mind is about a family who survived a nuclear war. What's the title of this pretty dated song?

Answer: "Watching Joey Glow"

Back when Steve recorded "Watching Joey Glow," nuclear war was a far bigger concern than it is now - now, we worry about one bomb. Then, we worried about a lot of 'em. "Hot Tub Refugee," I think, has weathered a bit better, being about hot tubs, which are still around. 'Sides, how can you argue with a song that has the lyrics "As I watch all those sweet young tomatoes/Try to turn themselves to soup." "Banana Republics" has nothing to do with war of any kind, and "Subterranean Homesick Blues" is a Bob Dylan song.
12. Steve Goodman not only wrote a song for his father, he wrote several specifically for his wife, Nancy Goodman. (Although, I'd argue that most of his love songs are about Nancy, as well.) Which of the songs listed below is the love letter to Nancy?

Answer: "Hand it to You"

Steve says that "Hand it to You" was written for Nancy on "Live from the Earl of Old Town." It contains the line "And when I get my paycheck, I gotta hand it to you." "Jessie's Jig" is an instrumental, so it's difficult to say it's about anyone (although it was written specifically for his oldest daughter), and "Queen of the Road" is about a motorcycle-riding momma. "The Dutchman," although Steve's version is probably his best-known recording, is a song by Michael Smith.
13. One of the great things about Steve Goodman is that he generally looked and sounded like he was having a great time. There's a song on "Jessie's Jig & Other Favorites" where that comes across loud and clear, even though he's in the studio with a bunch of other musicians. The particular thing about this song is that the words don't mean anything much - they're just intros to a solo by one member of the band. What's this song called?

Answer: "Mama Don't Allow It"

The verses of "Mama Don't Allow It" follow this pattern:

"Mama don't allow no [instrument] playin' round here.
Mama don't allow no [instrument] playin' round here.
We don't care what Mama don't allow,
We're gonna play it anyhow,"

Which is then followed by a solo of the instrument mentioned in the verse. The song's basically just a means to have fun jamming. Steve also performed this song on Vin Scelsa's radio show, "Just so David Amram can play every damn thing in this room." Steve often ended shows with "Momma Don't Allow It," according to Clay Eals' excellent biography, "Steve Goodman: Facing the Music."

Honestly, I'm not sure if the other three songs work like that, but they're not on "Jessie's Jig" and "Yer Blues" and "I Got a Name" are Beatles and Jim Croce songs, respectively.
14. I've decided to use one of Steve Goodman's songs as a lullaby for my daughter. The song, "Videotape," is about the advantages we'd have if our lives were on videotape, or if we all could see the future. Which one of these is NOT one of the advantages Steve lists?

Answer: We'd all get to see to see the Cubs in the World Series.

I suppose that if you could keep dodging the Grim Reaper, you might eventually get to see the Cubs win the pennant. But, given that it's now 2009 and the Cubs still haven't made it, I think everyone would get tired of dodging. The actual lyrics are:

"When your head hurts the morning after
You could roll it back to late last night"

and

"When the grim reaper comes to call
We could arrange to be out of town"

and

"You could replay all the good parts
And cut out what you don't like"
15. Finally, one for the true fans. In 1994, Red Pajama Records released "No Big Surprise: The Steve Goodman Anthology." This was a two-CD set, one of which was composed of live performances. That CD captures the energy and fun of a Steve Goodman performance, but it also document's Steve's ability to improvise when he forgot the words or broke a string or otherwise ran into trouble. What song did he manage to get through without having to improvise?

Answer: "The Auctioneer"

Amazingly enough, he got through "The Auctioneer" word-perfectly. It's amazing because it's sung so quickly that in order to learn it, Steve had to slow it down (as he comments on both "No Big Surprise" and "Live at the Earl of Old Town). "The Broken String Song" is entirely improvised in response to a broken string as he was preparing to play the last song of his set.

In "Turnpike Tom," he almost sings "years of hitching" as "years of itching" and improvises a quick line to take advantage. In "The Wonderful World of Sex," he improvises a couple of lines about how he can't remember the last verse. I would also heartily endorse Steve's medley of "Born to Be Wild," "Teen Angel," "Tell Laura I Love Her," and "Strange Things Happen."
Source: Author Correspondguy

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