Where the boys are, someone waits for me

OK, so singer Connie Francis died last week. She was 87.

I’m guessing there’s no more than a handful of readers of this blog — in their 60s or 70s — who might say, “Oh, I used to LOVE her songs!”

Others (like me) know her name and are vaguely aware of her career in the late 1950s and early 1960s, but didn’t much care for her music.

Most readers probably might not be able to tell me anything about her, or even recognize her name.

Francis was from that bygone era when pop/jazz/swing vocalists still dominated the US pop charts as the upstart new genre known as rock and roll was beginning to make inroads. She had more in common with traditional ’50s crooners like Rosemary Clooney, Doris Day and Jo Stafford than the early ’60s pop/rock singers like Lesley Gore, Dionne Warwick or Nancy Sinatra.

So why write a tribute about her on my rock music blog?

Well, I did some research and learned she was more groundbreaking and influential for a spell than I had realized. In listening to the highlights of her catalog, I must say that much of it is too cloying and even cringey for my tastes, but Francis had a quality singing voice, charted 14 Top Ten singles (including three Number Ones) and another couple dozen in the Top 40. She also recorded albums in a variety of styles, ranging from R&B, jazz, country, Broadway, children’s music, spiritual songs and traditional ethnic music, many in their native languages (mostly Italian, Yiddish, German, Spanish and Irish), which made her hugely popular in Europe. Between 1958 and 1962, she was one of the biggest singing stars in the music business internationally.

Francis also earned some credentials in rock music circles because she wasn’t averse to recording solid cover versions of early rock classics like Elvis Presley’s “Heartbreak Hotel” and “Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me,” Dave Bartholomew’s “I Hear You Knockin’,” Fats Domino’s “I’m Walkin'” and Ray Charles’s “Hallelujah I Love You So.”

She might be best known for the 1960 hit “Where the Boys Are,” the title song for the relatively innocent “coming of age” teenage film in which Francis also made her acting debut in a secondary role. The song reached #4, and the film is credited with turning the sleepy Florida town of Fort Lauderdale into THE Spring Break destination for years to come. (She went on to starring roles in two similar films, 1963’s “Follow the Boys” and 1965’s “Where the Boys Meet the Girls.”)

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Born in 1937 as Concetta Rosa Maria Franconero, the first child of Italian-American parents in Brooklyn, Francis was encouraged (some say pushed) by her father to enter talent contests and pageants as a child singer and accordionist. At age 13, she was tapped to appear on the TV/radio program “Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts,” where she was advised to change her name to Connie Francis and drop the accordion (which she was all too happy to do). She continued singing and performing at local events throughout high school, reverting to using Concetta Franconero or Connie Franconero to please her Italian family and friends, and appeared on NBC’s “Startime Kids” variety show for two years.

Then in 1955, her father helped secure her a recording contract with MGM Records, which also led to singing voiceovers for non-singing actresses in film roles. Francis sang “I Never Had a Sweetheart” and “Little Blue Wren” for Tuesday Weld’s starring role in the 1956 jukebox musical “Rock, Rock, Rock.” But none of her MGM singles charted, and she was about to lose her record deal when she relented to her father’s insistence that she record a contemporary arrangement of, of all things, a 1923 waltz called “Who’s Sorry Now?”

“I didn’t want to record the song, but my father insisted,” Francis said in 1984. “I thought that trying to sell a young audience on a 35-year-old song was ridiculous, but I went along as a favor to my dad. I didn’t try to imitate other singers, as I often did, I just sounded like myself for the first time. Then, I was watching ‘American Bandstand’ in January 1958 when Dick Clark introduced ‘a new song by a new girl singer. No doubt about it,’ he predicted, ‘she’s headed straight for the Number One spot.’ And he played ‘Who’s Sorry Now?’ I couldn’t believe it!” By March, the song reached #4 on US charts and #1 in the UK, and by a wide margin, Francis was voted Best Female Vocalist by “American Bandstand” viewers, a distinction she won three times over the next four years.

Suddenly, she was being approached by songwriters pitching all kinds of songs to her, including up-and-coming Brill Building team Neil Sedaka and Howard Greenfield, who supplied “Stupid Cupid” (#14), “Everybody’s Somebody’s Fool” (her first #1), “My Heart Has a Mind Of Her Own” (#1) and also “Where the Boys Are.” Francis seemed at ease with multiple genres — easy listening, country, R&B, blues, Christmas songs, traditional ethnic music — that broadened her appeal and kept her high on the charts for several years.

Earlier I called her material “cloying and even cringey,” which I attribute to syrupy string arrangements, cutesy lyrics and heavy-handed vocal harmonies. Take a track like “Lipstick On My Collar,” a Top Five hit in 1959. The annoying backing voices and insipid words had me reaching for the mute button within mere seconds (even though, if you dig deeper, you can hear Francis doing a fine job on the lead vocal). Just because I’ve never been able to embrace this style, the numbers show it was quite popular with large segments of the record-buying public in those years. Indeed, Francis made an astonishing 26 appearances on “The Ed Sullivan Show” between 1958 and 1970, ranking her among the most frequent guests on that highly rated TV variety show.

Francis and Darin sing a duet on “Ed Sullivan” in 1963

Like many of the “teen idol” singers of the period (Frankie Avalon, Bobby Rydell, Fabian Forte, Bobby Darin), Francis found herself largely upstaged and replaced by The Beatles and the British Invasion in 1964-65, and by the Motown vocal groups and American rock bands. Although her songs no longer made the pop charts, she remained a fixture on Easy Listening/Adult Contemporary format stations as late as 1967, and she remained a popular live act into the 1970s, not only in Las Vegas but in smaller markets across the country. In Europe, her popularity never waned, thanks to her foreign-language LPs, and she toured there as late as the 1990s.

Sadly, she suffered significant difficulties in her personal life. She was married and divorced four times, with three of those marriages lasting less than a year. Most traumatically, Francis was the victim of a brutal rape in a motel in Long Island, New York, in 1974, which caused severe depression, drug addiction, suicide attempts and psychiatric institutionalization that kept her mostly in seclusion for more than a decade. She successfully sued the motel chain for lax security, which brought about widespread industry upgrades in that regard.

She occasionally resurfaced with a new recording or a rare concert, most notably a disco version of “Where the Boys Are” that saw some airplay in 1978. She wrote and published her “Who’s Sorry Now?” autobiography in 1984, which was a best seller, and a second one, “Among My Souvenirs,” in 2017. In her memoirs, she made a point of thanking Dick Clark and “American Bandstand” for their early support. “If not for his endorsement, I was about to go back to college and pursue a degree in medicine,” Francis said. “My life would’ve been completely different if not for him.”

Dick Clark and Connie Francis in the 1970s

In the 2000s, Francis headlined shows in Vegas, San Francisco, the Philippines and Rome, sometimes in tandem with others like Warwick. During that period, she was in lengthy talks with Gloria Estefan about her producing and starring in a biopic about Francis’s life. “She isn’t even in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and yet she was the first female pop star worldwide, and has recorded in nine languages,” said Estefan in 2007. “She has done a lot of things for victims’ rights since her rape in the ’70s. There’s a major story there.” But Francis and Estefan couldn’t agree on a screenwriter or a budget, so the project never proceeded.

Francis retired in 2018, and lived in Florida the remainder of her life. She had recently fractured her hip and was diagnosed with pneumonia the day before she died on July 16.

Although she died before she could see it, a 2025 Broadway musical about the life of Bobby Darin, “Just in Time,” features actress Gracie Lawrence portraying Francis as both a singing partner and a paramour of Darin in their younger days.

However, Francis lived long enough to see her 1962 song “Pretty Little Baby” become an unlikely hit on digital media platforms during the past year or two. It became a viral sensation 63 years after its first release, with 10 billion Tik Tok views and 14 million global streams on Spotify and elsewhere, with users lip synching to the track while showing off stylish, often retro, outfits and using it to soundtrack videos of their babies, kids and pets. “My granddaughter told me about it,” said Francis earlier this year. “I didn’t remember the song at first because it wasn’t a hit I sang much. It’s a blessing to know that kids today know me and my music now, even if just a little bit.”

Rest in peace, Concetta.

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How’s that for openers?

Every writer — novelist, speechwriter, essayist, lyricist — knows that you’ve got to have a great opening line. You need a thought, an image or a line of dialog that really grabs readers/listeners and pulls them in.

You might startle them, make them chuckle, shock them or just caress them in such a way that they have no choice but to stick around and see what happens next.

In the song lyrics of classic rock, there are many thousands of great examples of this. From The Beatles’ “I read the news today, oh boy” to Simon and Garfunkel’s “Hello darkness, my old friend”, the archives runneth over with captivating opening lines that demand our attention.

Many songs take the easy way out and start things off by using the title as the opening line (“Hey Jude, don’t make it bad”, “Here’s to you, Mrs. Robinson”), and that has certainly been a successful tactic as well. I’m drawn, however, to the song lyrics that begin with some mystery, some indelible image, some phrase that I simply must follow to learn more.

I’ve selected two dozen of my favorite opening lines from rock songs of the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s for you to ruminate on and identify. For the most part, these should generally be rather easy to pick out because they’re mostly from big hits. As usual, you can scroll down in the text to find the answers, and a little bit of info about what inspired the songwriters. And there’s a Spotify list at the end so you can enjoy hearing the lyrics performed by the artists.

Good luck!

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1 “Just yesterday morning, they let me know you were gone…”

2 “I was a little too tall, could’ve used a few pounds…”

3 “In the corner of my eye, I saw you in Rudy’s, you were very high…”

4 “Well, no one told me about her, the way she lied…”

5 “It was raining hard in Frisco, I needed one more fare to make my night…”

6 “It was the Third of June, another sleepy, dusty Delta day…”

7 “Chewin’ on a blade of grass, walkin’ down the road…”

8 “Now I’ve heard there was a secret chord that David played, and it pleased the Lord…”

9 “Stayed in bed all morning just to pass the time…”

10 “‘There must be some kind of way out of here,’ said the joker to the thief…”

11 “I saw her today at the reception, a glass of wine in her hand…”

12 “It’s the same kind of story that seems to come down from long ago…”

13 “Let us be lovers, we’ll marry our fortunes together…”

14 “The screen door slams, Mary’s dress sways…”

15 “Really don’t mind if you sit this one out…”

16 “On a morning from a Bogart movie, in a country where they turn back time…”

17 “Picture yourself in a boat on a river with tangerine trees and marmalade skies…”

18 “I can see her lying back in her satin dress in a room where you do what you don’t confess…”

19 “On a dark desert highway, cool wind in my hair…”

20 “Hey, where did we go, days when the rains came…”

21 “You walked in to the party like you were walking onto a yacht…”

22 “If there’s a smile on my face, it’s only there trying to fool the public…”

23 “When are you gonna come down? When are you going to land?…”

24 “Gonna write a little letter, gonna mail to it my local deejay…”

25 “I came upon a child of God, he was walking along the road…”

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ANSWERS:

1 “Just yesterday morning, they let me know you were gone…”

“Fire and Rain,” James Taylor, 1970

Taylor’s breakthrough hit address three issues in its three verses: the loss of a friend, his struggle against addiction, and his concerns for the future of his career. Taylor had spent time in a psychiatric hospital at age 18 and, upon release, he learned his ladyfriend had killed herself, which became the stark opening line of “Fire and Rain,” a mature piece about the ups and downs of life.

2 “I was a little too tall, could’ve used a few pounds…”

“Night Moves,” Bob Seger, 1976

After seeing “American Graffiti” upon its release, Seger was inspired to write his own story about adolescent love and coming-of-age challenges. He said he lacked self-confidence and felt physically awkward — “a little too tall, could’ve used a few pounds,” as he wrote in the opening line of “Night Moves” — but his ability to sing and play music gave him an in with the “cool” kids, he recalled.

3 “In the corner of my eye, I saw you in Rudy’s, you were very high…”

“Black Cow,” Steely Dan, 1977

I could’ve picked almost any song from the Steely Dan catalog to include here. The Fagen-Becker songwriting team had an uncanny ability to draw you in with mischievously cryptic lyrics. In this song, they revealed years later, the narrator is talking about a girl he used to be involved with, who’s sitting stoned at Rudy’s soda fountain drinking a coke float (known as a Black Cow in many regions of the country).

4 “Well, no one told me about her, the way she lied…”

“She’s Not There,” The Zombies, 1964

When Rod Argent was encouraged to write an original song for the group’s upcoming session, he was inspired by a John Lee Hooker song called “No One Told Me,” deciding that would be a great opening line to describe a cheating, dishonest woman who, when the shit hit the fan, up and disappeared. Breakup songs were popular, but one that vilified the woman for being a chronic liar was something new in 1964.

5 “It was raining hard in Frisco, I needed one more fare to make my night…”

“Taxi,” Harry Chapin, 1972

Chapin developed an enviable reputation as a songwriting storyteller, introducing characters and their evolving relationships with uncommon flair. Here, in his signature tune, Chapin sets the stage by identifying the locale, the weather and the protagonist’s occupation all in one busy opening line. He goes on to introduce his former flame, who’s rich but evidently very unhappy (at least, compared to Harry).

6 “It was the Third of June, another sleepy, dusty Delta day…”

“Ode to Billie Joe,” Bobbie Gentry, 1967

Here’s another fine example of an opening line that beautifully captures an image — in this case, life in the South one hot summer afternoon. It reads almost like a William Faulkner novel, and it sure makes me say, “Go on…” There’s a great deal more to the story, but it left certain crucial facts unstated, which created curiosity in listeners and kept them coming back to examine the lyrics many times over.

7 “Chewin’ on a blade of grass, walkin’ down the road…”

“Ventura Highway,” America, 1972

Dewey Bunnell, one of the trio of singer-songwriters who comprised America, said he remembered growing up in the cornfields of Nebraska, wondering if there wasn’t more to life than chewing on grass, walking down a rural road. Maybe he could head out West to California, where he vacationed with his family. He envisioned the Pacific Coast Highway but he called it Ventura Highway, which doesn’t really exist, although some consider it Route 101, which travels through the town of Ventura.

8 “Now I’ve heard there was a secret chord that David played, and it pleased the Lord…”

“Hallelujah,” Leonard Cohen, 1984

Legend has it that Cohen agonized for months over the lyrics to this epic piece, composing as many as 75 different verses before settling on just three for the final recording, which appeared on his 1984 LP.  Other artists, most notably Jeff Buckley, took the song to much greater chart heights than Cohen’s original, but “Hallelujah” remains one of the most important songs in the Canadian poet laureate’s extraordinary catalog. 

9 “Stayed in bed all morning just to pass the time…”

“It’s Too Late,” Carole King, 1971

Breakup songs can be brutal and full of bitterness or, conversely, they can be tender and tinged with sadness. Carole King’s sometime collaborator Toni Stern came up with this treatment that approaches its subject gingerly, knowing that the end of the relationship has arrived but wanting to end it on soft ground without so much heartbreak. Who hasn’t wanted to stay in bed longer rather than face a tough decision?

10 “‘There must be some kind of way out of here,’ said the joker to the thief…”

“All Along the Watchtower,” Bob Dylan, 1967

Even though Jimi Hendrix’s ferocious cover version is the one most people know, Dylan’s stark original does an amazing job of capturing the same apocalyptic intensity in a different way. The opening line is a grabber, but it has been said that Dylan’s brief tale actually begins with the final verse, and ends with the beginning, where the princes stood in the watchtower keeping an eye out for the impending doom.

11 “I saw her today at the reception, a glass of wine in her hand…”

“You Can’t Always Get What You Want,” The Rolling Stones, 1969

I can’t count the number of times I’ve used this opening line as I have approached a female friend holding a glass of vino at a wedding reception. The woman Mick Jagger sings about here turns out to be out of reach because she has another agenda. He wrote this amazing song as a philosophical treatise on how to balance our desires for the unattainable with our basic needs for the more basic elements of life.

12 “It’s the same kind of story that seems to come down from long ago…”

“Hypnotized,” Fleetwood Mac, 1973

The insistent, hypnotic music created by this earlier lineup of Fleetwood Mac is matched by furtive lyrics that remind us, “There’s no explaining what your imagination can make you see and feel.” It begins by telling us its story is like so many others “that seem to come down from long ago,” and it coaxes the listener in with a mixture of everyday images and visions of “a strange, strange pond,” among other mysteries.

13 “Let us be lovers, we’ll marry our fortunes together…”

“America,” Simon and Garfunkel, 1968

One of the most concise, literary songs ever, about a romantic couple eager to hit the road and explore the world and search for their souls simultaneously. Simon chooses to open the track with dialog as the man asks the woman to share his dream of traveling to find their future together. It struck a chord with many, because America was experiencing violent, angry times when this album and song were released.

14 “The screen door slams, Mary’s dress sways…”

“Thunder Road,” Bruce Springsteen, 1975

On a brilliant album chock-full of marvelous imagery, the first line of the first song might be the best. The hero is waiting in his car as the radio plays when his girl Mary emerges from her house to come join him for another adventure. Who can’t relate to the sound of a screen door slamming to announce someone’s arrival or departure? It’s a universal thing, and Springsteen knew it.

15 “Really don’t mind if you sit this one out…”

“Thick as a Brick,” Jethro Tull, 1972

What a bold thing to do: Compose an epic, 45-minute piece of progressive rock music with multiple sections, movements, moods and instrumental passages, with lyrics about generational relationships, and then undercut the whole thing by starting it with the line, “Really don’t mind if you sit this one out.” Tull’s Ian Anderson knew that it needed to have self-deprecating humor so as not to be taken too seriously.

16 “On a morning from a Bogart movie, in a country where they turn back time…”

“Year of the Cat,” Al Stewart, 1976

England’s version of the songwriting storyteller was Stewart, who had studied historical fiction and different world cultures and became quite good at creating both short and long tales about romantic encounters and entanglements. For “Year of the Cat,” he began by recalling the setting of the classic film “Casablanca” in a nameless North African country “where they turn back time.” I’m hooked, how about you?

17 “Picture yourself in a boat on a river with tangerine trees and marmalade skies…”

“Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds,” Beatles, 1967

Recreational drug users swear that this John Lennon fantasy simply must be experienced under the influence of psychedelics to be fully appreciated. Maybe, but at the very least, he sucks us in with colorful, idyllic images that invite us all to join him in his boat on the river. Other dazzling phrases (“rocking-horse people,” “cellophane flowers”) follow, taking us further into his apparent dream sequence.

18 “I can see her lying back in her satin dress in a room where you do what you don’t confess…”

“Sundown,” Gordon Lightfoot, 1974

As a talented songwriter and lyricist, Lightfoot was often mentioned in the same breath with his fellow Canadians Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen.  While his subject matter and vocabulary were perhaps not quite as weighty, Lightfoot had a fine flair for storytelling and painting a picture with words.  Witness “Sundown,” which deftly describes the telltale actions of a cheating lover.

19 “On a dark desert highway, cool wind in my hair…”

“Hotel California,” The Eagles, 1976

This is one of the most thoroughly examined songs in classic rock, with multiple interpretations of what Don Henley and Glenn Frey were talking about here. They certainly set the table from the outset, as someone approaches on one of California’s dark desert highways. Is Hotel California a real place, or a metaphor for the allure of the Los Angeles entertainment industry? You decide.

20 “Hey, where did we go, days when the rains came…”

“Brown-Eyed Girl,” Van Morrison, 1967

The fun and frolic of this song is evident from the get-go as Morrison describes what he and his young brown-eyed girl would do and where they’d go — down in the hollow, down in the old mine, along the waterfall, behind the stadium. He has said the lyric originally focused on a “brown-skinned girl” he met in Jamaica, but his conservative record label insisted he change it to something less controversial.

21 “You walked in to the party like you were walking onto a yacht…”

“You’re So Vain,” Carly Simon, 1972

You can just picture the guy, oozing with ego and cockiness, that Simon is describing in that opening line. The song goes on to become a damning indictment of a man so full of himself that he has no concern for others, particularly the many women he loves and leaves with careless abandon. Simon has said she was writing about three different men who shared this trait, one of whom was actor Warren Beatty.

22 “If there’s a smile on my face, it’s only there trying to fool the public…”

“Tears of a Clown,” Smokey Robinson and The Miracles, 1970

The idea of a happy-face clown actually being a sad person behind the makeup was not new, but in this marvelous slice of Motown, Robinson used it to describe a man who puts on a brave face to the world even though he’s brokenhearted inside about a romantic breakup. The music was written by Stevie Wonder, who struggled with the lyrics until Robinson helped him find the right words to complete it.

23 “When are you gonna come down? When are you going to land?…”

“Goodbye Yellow Brick Road,” Elton John, 1973

Lyricist Bernie Taupin used one of his favorite films, “The Wizard of Oz,” as a metaphor for the trappings of success in the rock music business. He said in 2014, “I said I wanted to leave Oz and get back to the farm. I was never turning my back on fame or saying I didn’t want it. I was hoping that maybe there was a happy medium way to exist successfully in a tranquil setting. My naiveté was believing I could do it so early on.”

24 “Gonna write a little letter, gonna mail to it my local deejay…”

“Roll Over Beethoven,” Chuck Berry, 1956

As rock ‘n’ roll was gaining momentum, Berry was amused by the idea of writing a song in which rock (and R&B) would replace classical music. At home, Berry’s sister was often at the piano playing classical pieces, leaving Berry frustrated enough to wish that Beethoven, Mozart and the rest would “roll over” out of the way and make room for his new musical art form. And don’t forget to “tell Tchaikovsky the news.”

25 “I came upon a child of God, he was walking along the road…”

“Woodstock,” Joni Mitchell, 1970

Mitchell was on the list of artists due to perform at Woodstock, but because of the difficulty in getting in and out of the festival grounds, her manager was afraid she would miss her scheduled appearance on the next night’s taping of “The Dick Cavett Show,” so she remained in New York.  From her hotel room, watching news reports of the momentous event, she wrote the song “Woodstock,” the remarkably perceptive account of what transpired there.

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