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Quiz about The Harry Chapin Story Part 3  Sequel
Quiz about The Harry Chapin Story Part 3  Sequel

The Harry Chapin Story: Part 3 - Sequel Quiz


This is my third and concluding quiz about the life and music of the singer, songwriter and humanitarian, Harry Chapin. See how much you know about the man behind songs like "Taxi", "W*O*L*D" and "Cat's In The Cradle"

A multiple-choice quiz by darksplash. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Author
darksplash
Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
306,558
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
20
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
10 / 20
Plays
329
Awards
Top 5% quiz!
Question 1 of 20
1. "I got into town a little early..." In the Harry Chapin song "Sequel", what mode of transport did the storyteller use to go visit his former lover? Hint


Question 2 of 20
2. The singer/songwriter Harry Chapin was signed to the Elektra label in 1972 in the biggest cash deal in the company's history to that point. How much was it worth? Hint


Question 3 of 20
3. Which was the first album to be released by Harry Chapin on the Elektra label in 1972? Hint


Question 4 of 20
4. In 1975, the singer/songwriter Harry Chapin co-founded an organisation to raise awareness about world hunger. By what acronym was it known? Hint


Question 5 of 20
5. "Mail Order Annie, never mind your crying..." Where did the storyteller in Harry Chapin's song provide a home for a new wife from the city? Hint


Question 6 of 20
6. Throughout the ten years of his recording and performing career, Harry Chapin's band changed lineup several times. Who was the only constant member throughout? Hint


Question 7 of 20
7. As part of his campaign on hunger, Harry Chapin gave evidence to a US House committee in support of a law change on the production of a seemingly mundane commodity. Which of these was it? Hint


Question 8 of 20
8. For which of his children and stepchildren did Harry Chapin write "Tangled Up Puppet"? Hint


Question 9 of 20
9. Which late-night airline flight was immortalised in song by Harry Chapin? Hint


Question 10 of 20
10. Harry Chapin performed his first major concert as a recording artist in February 1972 opening for an established songstress. Who was she? Hint


Question 11 of 20
11. Harry Chapin's regular backing band contained an unusual instrument for a pop/rock group. What was it? Hint


Question 12 of 20
12. After relentless lobbying of politicians, the singer/songwriter Harry Chapin persuaded the US Congress and Senate to set up a Presidential Commission on world hunger. Which President signed up to the commission? Hint


Question 13 of 20
13. Which disaster gave Harry Chapin the title song for a 1977 album? Hint


Question 14 of 20
14. The Greyhound bus company used the Harry Chapin song "Greyhound" in a TV commercial.


Question 15 of 20
15. What was the name of the song that formed the basis of the 1975 Broadway show that Harry Chapin wrote and starred in? Hint


Question 16 of 20
16. Which was the only Harry Chapin song to reach number one in the US charts? Hint


Question 17 of 20
17. In 1980, the singer/songwriter Harry Chapin made his first - and only - appearance in a feature film called "Mother And Daughter - The Loving War". Who was the leading actress? Hint


Question 18 of 20
18. What was the name of the album that Harry Chapin was working on shortly before his death and which was released posthumously? Hint


Question 19 of 20
19. Which of these honours was awarded posthumously to the singer/songwriter and humanitarian activist Harry Chapin? Hint


Question 20 of 20
20. From which Harry Chapin song was the inscription on his gravestone taken? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. "I got into town a little early..." In the Harry Chapin song "Sequel", what mode of transport did the storyteller use to go visit his former lover?

Answer: Taxi

"I thought about taking a limousine
Or at least a fancy car
But I ended up taking a taxi
"Because that's how I got this far..."
The album "Sequel" was released on Boardwalk Records in October 1980.
The title song picked up and concluded the story of 'Harry' and 'Sue' that was begun in "Taxi". The single reached Number 23 on the Billboard charts.
2. The singer/songwriter Harry Chapin was signed to the Elektra label in 1972 in the biggest cash deal in the company's history to that point. How much was it worth?

Answer: $600,000

The contract was for nine albums in five years plus a $40,000 dollars advance. Columbia Records had offered an $80,000 advance, but Chapin felt that Jac Holzman, the Elektra chief, would look after his interests better. Holzman had given up producing records when he became company boss, but he returned to the sound desk for Chapin's first album.
Chapin owed that to the persistence of an Elektra executive called Ann Purtill, who fought his corner vociferously and persuaded Holzman to sign Harry. In succeeding years, Chapin named Purtill in the dedications on his albums.
3. Which was the first album to be released by Harry Chapin on the Elektra label in 1972?

Answer: Heads & Tales

The album was recorded in Los Angeles and was heavily hyped by Elektra, but did not reach the sales levels the company had hoped.
4. In 1975, the singer/songwriter Harry Chapin co-founded an organisation to raise awareness about world hunger. By what acronym was it known?

Answer: WHY

World Hunger Year was formed not merely to raise funds, but to raise awareness of the causes of world hunger and the ways to resolve it. During his career, Chapin performed more than 2,000 concerts, more than half of them for 'good causes' such as WHY. Chapin was in it for the long haul, the felt that education to eradicate the causes of hunger - and the main one was poverty - was the best way, rather than one-off concerts on initiatives. [As recounted by Peter M. Coan in his biography 'Taxi: The Harry Chapin Story'.]
WHY continued its work after Chapin's death.
5. "Mail Order Annie, never mind your crying..." Where did the storyteller in Harry Chapin's song provide a home for a new wife from the city?

Answer: North Dakota

"You know I'm just a dirty man from the North Dakota plains
You're one girl from the city who's been thrown out on her own
I'm standing here not sure of what to say to you
'Cepting Mail Order Annie, let's you and me go home".
In the emerging west of America in the 1800s there was an abundance of men but few women, while the position was reversed in the cities of the east. Many couples were brought together as a result of newspaper advertisements.
6. Throughout the ten years of his recording and performing career, Harry Chapin's band changed lineup several times. Who was the only constant member throughout?

Answer: John Wallace

Wallace was a Chapin family friend from their Grace Church days in New York. He played guitar and provided harmonies. Wallace had a five-octave vocal range from low bass to high falsetto. It's that falsetto you hear on songs like "Taxi".
7. As part of his campaign on hunger, Harry Chapin gave evidence to a US House committee in support of a law change on the production of a seemingly mundane commodity. Which of these was it?

Answer: Rice

Chapin supported a Bill that would change a law that kept the price artificially high in five US States. Harry's view was that hunger was persistent in all countries, even the mighty USA. He told concert audiences that in a country rich enough to feed the world many times over, it was "unconscionable" that millions of Americans went to bed hungry each night. [Source: various Chapin recordings.]
8. For which of his children and stepchildren did Harry Chapin write "Tangled Up Puppet"?

Answer: Jaime

"(Song for Jaime) Tangled Up Puppet" was the tale of the changing relationships between a father and his daughter. He also wrote "Dancing Boy" for Joshua.
Chapin's daughter, Jen, is also a singer and songwriter. Two of his nieces sing in a group called 'The Chapin Sisters'.
9. Which late-night airline flight was immortalised in song by Harry Chapin?

Answer: North West 222

"But now they've gone and canceled
Old Northwest 222
It's a late night bird that always
brought me back home to you
There's a thousand miles between us
Babe that I cannot get through
Is there nothing left to count on, now
That old 222 is gone?
Old 222 is gone."
Chapin had a grueling touring schedule, but after his wife found his little black book (enough said) of contacts, he always endeavoured to get back home after each concert. North West 222 was a late-night mail flight that could get him closer to home. Sometimes he would drive for eight hours after a show to get home. [As recounted by Peter M. Coan in his biography 'Taxi: The Harry Chapin Story'.]
10. Harry Chapin performed his first major concert as a recording artist in February 1972 opening for an established songstress. Who was she?

Answer: Carly Simon

Simon was the biggest name on the Elektra label at that time. The concert was at Symphony Hall, Boston. The next day, Ernie Santosuosso wrote in the 'Boston Globe': "Chapin, in fact, stole Carly's thunder".
11. Harry Chapin's regular backing band contained an unusual instrument for a pop/rock group. What was it?

Answer: Cello

The cello gave Chapin's music a distinctive sound. It could be used to counterpoint the drama of his story songs. But the position of cellist was a difficult one, with five individuals filling the position in ten years of recording and touring.
12. After relentless lobbying of politicians, the singer/songwriter Harry Chapin persuaded the US Congress and Senate to set up a Presidential Commission on world hunger. Which President signed up to the commission?

Answer: Jimmy Carter

In February 1978, Chapin and key supporters met Carter at the White House. Carter had the power to veto the proposal, but surprised those present by saying "It's gotten so bad that even Amy [his daughter] is asking what I am going to do about world hunger." [Source" "Taxi: The Harry Chapin Story" by Peter M. Coan.]
13. Which disaster gave Harry Chapin the title song for a 1977 album?

Answer: Sinking of the Titanic

"Dance band on the Titanic
Sing "Nearer, my God, to Thee"
The iceberg's on the starboard bow
Won't you dance with me"
"Dance Band On The Titanic" was a double album on the Elekta label. It was, however, poorly marketed and continued the series of disappointing sales for Chapin records.
14. The Greyhound bus company used the Harry Chapin song "Greyhound" in a TV commercial.

Answer: False

Greyhound were interested, until they realised that the song was not very complimentary:
"Take the Greyhound
It's a dog of a way to get around..."
15. What was the name of the song that formed the basis of the 1975 Broadway show that Harry Chapin wrote and starred in?

Answer: What Made America Famous

"The Night That Made America Famous" was previewed in February 1975 at the Ethel Barrymore Theater. It included around 30 songs by Chapin, and although it featured a strong cast, it received mixed reviews and closed within two months.
16. Which was the only Harry Chapin song to reach number one in the US charts?

Answer: Cat's In The Cradle

The lyrics were written by Sandy Chapin and it was the second single off the album "Verities & Balderdash". The first, "What Made America Famous" sank without a trace. "Cat's In the Cradle" sold more than 1.3 million singles.
In the 1980s, this tale of a young boy who grew up to be just like a frequently absent father was used in Northern Ireland in a government-backed public information film that portrayed the boy as the son of a terrorist gunman who grew up to be a gunman himself.
17. In 1980, the singer/songwriter Harry Chapin made his first - and only - appearance in a feature film called "Mother And Daughter - The Loving War". Who was the leading actress?

Answer: Tuesday Weld

Chapin even got to kiss the girl in his one and only scene when he turned up as a former lover of a divorced mother who had raised a daughter alone. He also wrote the musical score.
18. What was the name of the album that Harry Chapin was working on shortly before his death and which was released posthumously?

Answer: The Last Protest Singer

"The Last Protest Singer" was released on the Dunhill label in 1988. Chapin had laid down the basic tracks in the weeks before his death and they were overdubbed later. "Anthology" and "Story Of A Song" were posthumous albums of previously released material.
19. Which of these honours was awarded posthumously to the singer/songwriter and humanitarian activist Harry Chapin?

Answer: Congressional Gold Medal

This is the highest honour the US Congress can bestow. His name is listed there right above Winston Churchill's.
Chapin's interest in world hunger pre-dated that of other artists who became involved in such campaigns as "USA For Africa". At the 1986 Grammy Awards, Harry Belafonte accepted an award for the "We Are The World" song. He told the audience: "It was Chapin who started this whole thing when nobody was listening." [Source" "Taxi: The Harry Chapin Story" by Peter M. Coan.]
20. From which Harry Chapin song was the inscription on his gravestone taken?

Answer: I Wonder What Would Happen To This World

"If a man tried
To take his time on Earth
And prove before he died
What one man's life could be worth
Well I wonder what would happen to this world"
Harry Chapin was interred near his home in Huntington, New York in July 1981. He was aged just 38.
Thanks for playing, I hope you enjoyed these quizzes.
Source: Author darksplash

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