Harry Chapin(1942-1981)
- Composer
- Music Department
- Director
A singer/songwriter and activist for many charitable causes, especially
in the realm of ending world hunger,
Harry Chapin never let the often lukewarm
reviews of his music-making abilities faze him and as a result of his
strong folksy persona, the fans he made stuck by him throughout his
career and continue to this day. Born December 7, 1942, in New York's
Greenwich Village the son of a big-band drummer, Harry's musical
influence took hold at an early age. He took up trumpet playing
originally but switched to strumming a guitar later and joined his
younger brothers, Tom Chapin and
Steve Chapin, in a homegrown
musical act that was well received in the folk era of the 1960s. After
a short stint in the Air Force Academy and studying architecture and later
philosophy, at Cornell University, Harry tried his hand at film-making
and found himself to be quite good at it, directing an academy
award-nominated film about boxing heavyweights,
Legendary Champions (1968). In the '70's, Harry joined Electra Records and
produced a number of albums capitalizing on his story-telling
abilities, resulting in his first major hit, "Taxi", which was one of
the longest songs played on radio up until that time. He also found the
time to produce a number of Broadway shows and write songs for his
brother Tom's children's TV series, '"Make a Wish' (1970)'". Other recordings
followed, such as the hits "Cat's in the Cradle" and "W.O.L.D". As
Harry decided to put his fame to work, establishing himself as an
activist for charitable causes as well as supporting self-sufficiency,
he convinced President Jimmy Carter
to create a Hunger Commission exploring ways to eliminate world hunger.
His own organization, "World Hunger Year," formed with Bill Ayres,
strenuously fought the good fight with Harry and his band performing
virtually every other concert solely for the causes he espoused. In
1981, while on the way to another benefit, Harry's life was tragically
ended in an automobile accident on the Long Island expressway.