Libby Titus

Libby Titus

July 6, 1947 – October 13, 2024

Libby TitusHer New York Times obituary described Libby Titus as “A highly regarded songwriter and backup vocalist in the 1970s...[who] never scaled the commercial heights as a solo artist. Still, she garnered critical praise for her first and only major-label album, called simply “Libby Titus

Early Life

Libby was born Elizabeth Jurist in Woodstock.  Her mother, Julia Irene Jurist had been a dancer for the Earl Carroll revue. Libby attended Bard College, but her studies were cut short  when she became pregnant and married novelist Barry Titus (grandson of Helena Rubinstein) in 1966; they had one son,Ezra, but separated in 1968.

Libby Titus #1

Around 1968, she released her first album entitled Libby Titus. It included covers of the Beatles’ “Fool On The Hill” and “Here, There And Everywhere” as well as John Sebastian’s “You Didn’t Have to Be So Nice.”

The back cover of the album says, “Libby Makes The World Go Round,” but the title of the album seems to be just ‘Libby Titus.’

Levon Helm

I wasn’t familiar with Titus until her name came up in Barney Hoskins‘s 2016 Small Town Talk: Bob Dylan, The Band, Van Morrison, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix and Friends in the Wild Years of Woodstock.

The way the story goes (and likely requires a large grain of salt), The Band’s Levon Helm, Rick Danko, and Richard Manual were Woodstock’s wilder and crazier members and they were particularly interested in the women of Woodstock as were the Woodstock women in them.

Rick Danko and Levon Helm were racing to see Libby Titus. Rick crashed resulting in The Band’s inability to tour following the critical success of their Music From Big Pink album. Poor Albert Grossman, manager of many including Bob Dylan and The Band.  Bob’s motorcycle crash prevented him from touring and now another of Albert’s stars are unable to tour.

Anyway, Levon won

From 1969 through much of the 1970s, Libby and Levon were together  On December 3, 1970, they had a daughter . Amy.

Libby Titus
Levon Helm, daughter Amy, Libby

 

Libby Titus #2

Libby TitusIn 1977 Columbia released her second album, also called Libby Titus. A  a mix of covers and original co-writings, it featured noteworthy names such as Phil Ramone, Paul Simon, Carly Simon, Garth Brooks, and Robbie Robertson among the many noteworthy credits (All Music listing)

Note the last cut on Side One: Love Has No Pride. Written by Titus and Eric Kaz, it will become her best known song, but not by her. Perhaps the cover you know best is Bonnie Raitt’s.

A few other well-known names covered the song such as Linda Ronstadt, Rita Wilson, Lynn Anderson, and Rita Coolidge.

Dr John

After splitting with Levon Helm, Titus took up with Dr. John, who wrote a lovely instrumental for her, “Pretty Libby,” on his solo piano LP Brightest Smile In Town.

Not only did Titus inspire Dr John, but Carly Simon, too.

If all our flights are groundedLibby, we’ll meet in ParisDance along the boulevardsAnd have no one to embarrass,Puttin’ on the Ritz in style With an Arab and an Heiress,Libby we’ll fly away – heyLeave behind our bluesTrade them all inFor a Paris breeze.Libby we’ll fly

Donald Fagen

Though he did not grow up there, Passaic, NJ’s Donald Fagen, like so many other then young musicians, became (and continues to be) another Woodstock resident He had attended Bard College at the same time as Titus, but they were simply two ships passing in the night.

Titus met Fagen in 1987 when they both went backstage to hang with Dr. John.

Titus recalled in a Variety article, “…we went to dinner and got into this conversation that never ended. He took me out to dinners, and we kept talking until the spring of ’89.”

She continued, In May of 1989 he did a show for me with Dr. John at Elaine’s [NYC], of all places, and it was the first time he had performed in years.

“After that we decided to do our own show. We got various artists to do Jerry Ragovoy songs. Donald didn’t want to perform, but I said, ‘You have to, or no one’s going to come.’ We did our shows once a month or once every two months then – it became the New York Rock and Soul Revue.”

New York Rock & Soul Revue

The Revue gathered veteran vocalists and session heroes (Michael McDonald, Phoebe Snow, Boz Scaggs, David & Eddie Brigati, Donald Fagen and later Walter Becker). The performances were collected for The New York Rock & Soul Revue: Live at the Beacon (released 1991). Titus’s show-producing role is widely credited with pulling these artists together and, by some accounts, encouraging Donald Fagen’s renewed interest in live performance.

The video below features a 1991 New York Rock & Soul Revue show featuring Fagen, Boz Scaggs, Michael McDonald, Phoebe Snow, and Eddie and David Brigati,

Fagen and Titus married in 1993 and of course he’d write about their relationship, a sometimes rocky one.

The stars are bright tonight
The air is sweet
Though summer’s over now
There’s a strange new music in the street
You and I
Know the world can’t be like this
It’s our love that makes it shineGirl
Whatever trouble waits outside these doors
We’re safe inside this house of light
We make up our own storyline

 

Around the neighborhood
They stare and grin
As if they live their lives
Just to help maintain the state we’re in
But when we fight
Then those hungry wolves close in
We’re one thoughtless word away
From poison skies
And severed heads
And pain and lies
So follow me
I’ll hold you tight
And we’ll build a life together
In the great pagoda of funn

Passing

Donald Fagen announced Libby’s death at Steely Dan‘s site.“

My beautiful wife, Libby Titus Fagen, passed on October 13th surrounded by family. Thanks for keeping us in your thoughts, and for respecting our privacy at this time.”

 

 

 

1969 Asbury Park Summer of Stars

1969 Asbury Park Summer of Stars

1969 festival #19

On my list of 1969’s rock festivals, I decided to include summer music series as well.

The Asbury Park Summer of Stars is another one of them.

1969 Asbury Park Summer of Stars

Mo Septee

1969 Asbury Park Summer of Stars
Producer Moe Septee in a publicity shot fr. the Broadway musical revue “Those Were the Days”.

Organized by Moe Septee (Moses Septytor–a rabbi he met advised him to change his last name if he wanted a career in entertainment.) was born in 1925. When he was  three, his parents, fled their native Poland’s antisemitism and sought opportunity in the United States. They settled in Newark, NJ.

In a 2008 article in New Jersey Monthly, Bruce Springsteen wrote:

Septee didn’t start out down the [New Jersey] Shore. He began close to home, at Newark’s Mosque Theater—today known as Newark Symphony Hall—where his first booking, sometime in the late 1950s, was Andrés Segovia, the father of modern classical guitar. On May 2, 1961, Septee helped bring Judy Garland to Newark for a show that, according to news accounts, packed about 3,800 people into the 2,800-seat hall.

By then, he and his wife, Ruth, had three young daughters, and he noticed that young people were listening to a different kind of music. He met Bob Dylan after booking Joan Baez and then booked Dylan twice. In 1964 he produced the Beatles’ appearance in Philadelphia.

1969 Asbury Park Summer of Stars

Asbury Park Convention Hall

By the mid-1960’s, the Asbury Park Convention Hall was no longer attracting the sold-out performances it once had. Septee thought that booking acts that would attract a more youthful audience would revitalize the venue. Asbury Park pushed back fearing undisciplined kids.

Septee prevailed.

1969 Asbury Park Summer of Stars

John Scher

John Scher grew up in northern New Jersey, though he went to college at Long Island University and got his first concert-promoting experience there. One summer (1969  or 1970) he got a job at the Sunshine In in Asbury Park, booking shows.

In 1971, Scher converted the Capitol Theatre, a movie house in Passaic, NJ, into a concert venue, and started doing shows at the Casino in Asbury Park as well…right nearby Septee’s shows.

In a Backstreets.com article, Scher said Septee was: “Very good guy, very interesting guy. Didn’t know a thing about what was going on in contemporary music, and actually — and it’s hysterical to say that in this day and age — actually trusted the agents, that they’d sell him the right shows. He’d been doing it, and I had gone to shows when I was a teenager: I used to spend much of the summers down in Bradley Beach, and we used to walk over to Asbury Park and go to Moe Septee’s Summer of Stars.

1969 Asbury Park Summer of Stars

Led Zeppelin/Joe Cocker

1969 Asbury Park Summer of Stars

Of all the shows Septee booked for 1969 series, the more interesting one, not just because of who performed, but when they played, was Joe Cocker opening for Led Zeppelin on August 16.

Many Woodstock fans know that Led Zeppelin had been invited to play at Woodstock, but turned it down.  Cocker not only performed that night, but traveled to Bethel in time to open on Sunday!

J.Pikula wrote in the Asbury Press‘s August 18 edition:

A good example – perhaps the best in one case – of a thing called British Blues was heard at Convention Hall Saturday night when Led Zeppelin and Joe Cocker shared a double bill.

The main attraction, Led Zeppelin, is a four-man unit headed by guitarist Jimmy Page. It features Robert Plant on lead vocals and harmonica and produces a kind of contemporary blues (Page’s term)-hard rock blend of things written mainly by Page, John Paul Jones (the group’s bassist, pianist, organist, and arranger) and John Bonham, its drummer.

Joe Cocker, on the other hand is mainly an interpreter of songs. He is about the best voice interpreting the blues today, and is rapidly gaining an audience of ardent followers in the US as well as England. His group – which looks as if it is still the Grease Band, a Sheffield group he’s been with for several years, is one of the most together groups playing today- The Who notwithstanding.

1969 Asbury Park Summer of Stars

Septee’s Summer of Stars ends

In 1975, Septee stopped booking concerts at Convention Hall. He went another direction to become a Broadway producer, bringing Bubbling Brown Sugar, Yentl, and Richard III with Al Pacino to the stage.

He won Tony Awards for:

1976 Best Musical Bubbling Brown Sugar
1977 Most Innovative Production of a Revival Guys and Dolls

Septee died on April 1, 1997.  He was 71.  His New York Times obituary emphasized his classical background: “Moe Septee, a theatrical producer and founder of the successful Philly Pops orchestra…

1969 Asbury Park Summer of Stars

Next 1969 festival: Newport Jazz