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They're Playing Our Song

A Memoir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A New York Times bestseller from Grammy and Academy Award–winning songwriter Carole Bayer Sager shares "a delightful and funny tell-all crammed with famous names and famous songs" (Steve Martin), from her fascinating (and sometimes calamitous) relationships to her collaborations with the greatest composers and musical artists of our time.
For five decades, Carole Bayer Sager has been among the most admired and successful songwriters at work, responsible for her lyrical contributions to some of the most popular songs in the English language, including "Nobody Does It Better," "A Groovy Kind of Love," "Don't Cry Out Loud," and the theme from the movie Arthur, "The Best That You Can Do" (about getting caught between the moon and New York City).

She has collaborated with (and written for) a dizzying number of stars, including Peter Allen, Ray Charles, Celine Dion, Bob Dylan, Neil Diamond, Clint Eastwood, Aretha Franklin, Whitney Houston, Michael Jackson, Carole King, Melissa Manchester, Reba McEntire, Bette Midler, Dolly Parton, Carly Simon, Frank Sinatra, and Barbra Streisand.

But while her professional life was filled with success and fascinating people, her personal life was far more difficult and dramatic. In this memoir that "reads like a candid conversation over a bottle of Mersault on a breezy Bel Air night" (Vanity Fair), Carole Bayer Sager tells the surprisingly frank and darkly humorous story of a woman whose sometimes crippling fears and devastating relationships inspired many of the songs she would ultimately write.

"This exceptionally candid memoir" (Los Angeles Times) will fascinate anyone interested in the craft of songwriting and the joy of collaboration, but They're Playing Our Song is also a deeply personal account of how love and heartbreak made her the woman, and the writer, she is. "Carole Bayer Sager is simply the finest....and this book is one of the best, most lasting songs she has ever written" (Carly Simon).
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 25, 2016
      Sager’s daily scene was something most only dream about: celebrity parties and red carpets, decked-out studios, and trips cross-country to create the perfect song. Carole Bayer Sager, known in her circle as “the woman with many names,” is a prolific songwriter who’s been sought after for decades. In this memoir, its title taken from the Broadway musical that Neil Simon based on her life in the early 1980s with composer Marvin Hamlisch, Sager tenderly illustrates an insider’s account of life behind the music. She has hundreds of hits to her credit, including “Don’t Cry Out Loud,” “That’s What Friends Are For,” and, more recently, “The Prayer”; her songs are treasured the world over. She recalls her friendship with Elizabeth Taylor and notes that Michael Jackson often called on her to ease his nerves. After Hamlisch, Sager spent a decade of her life, love, and talent with the once-unstoppable composer Burt Bacharach and for the last 20 years has shared her life with studio giant Bob Daly. Underscoring the glitz of her circle are a rich songwriting vocabulary, an emotional well, and an endless need to create. As a girlfriend and wife, she didn’t feel she measured up; as a woman, she rarely felt beautiful or thin enough; as a mom, she felt she could be doing more; but as a songwriter, she’s always had everything needed to create magical works of music. Sager’s writing is comfortably conversational, and her stories are lovingly told. Agent: Amanda Urban, ICM.

    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2016
      The driven life of an award-winning, hit-producing singer/songwriter.Sager's star-studded memoir begins with her personal recollections of growing up an indulgent "sneak eater" in the shadow of an anxious, pragmatic mother and a beloved father who died of heart failure just as her first hit song, "A Groovy Kind of Love," ascended the pop charts in 1965. Music grounded the author from a young age as she found herself writing songs as a teenager in the early 1960s, then abandoning a teaching career to write lyrics full time. Sager's treasury of chart-topping music includes "That's What Friends Are For," the Academy Award-winning "Arthur's Theme," and the book's title, from a Neil Simon-created 1978 Broadway musical based on the author's enchanted relationship with Marvin Hamlisch. Sager writes forthrightly about the irrationality of fears haunting her throughout her adolescence and into adulthood. Afraid of contracting polio in childhood, she grew into a successful woman battling a crippling fear of flying. These anxieties, she admits, "led me to my long-standing relationship with sleeping pills." However, these hurdles take a back seat to Sager's true passion for music, which comes through in enlightening chapters spotlighting her songwriting efforts for artists like Bette Midler and Carly Simon and, in later years, with Hamlisch and Burt Bacharach, whom she married in the 1980s and adored enough to endure a series of body enhancement surgeries "to look like I belonged with [him]." Socially, Sager nurtured a friendship with Elizabeth Taylor and, for better or worse, wrote career-reviving music for Michael Jackson and Whitney Houston. While sensitively chronicling her numerous ups and downs, the author is generous in her sharing of the anecdotes behind the music. The narrative is breezy and accessible, with writing that plays to the strengths of her crisp sense of humor, deep attachment to music, and resonant lust for life. An undemanding yet deeply felt memoir of a life lived through melody, lyrics, and the limelight of hard-won fame.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2016

      This is Sager's recollection of her life's work as a songwriter, lyricist, and collaborator with well-known popular composers, including Marvin Hamlisch and Burt Bacharach. Many women struggling in a man's world will enjoy the author's stories about her early family life and the challenges she faced growing up. It's fascinating to read about her path, especially working at New York's Brill Building. What makes this account appealing and different from typical celebrity biographies is Sager's honesty and forthright way of approaching her work. She relates her fears and neuroses: when Neil Simon's Broadway musical, They're Playing Our Song (based on the relationship between Hamlisch and Sager) becomes a hit, she mentions that many sought to interview her, to see if their lives were as portrayed on stage. She writes, "I was not all that sunny and quirky. Well, maybe a little quirk.... If Edward Albee had written it, it might have been a bit closer to the truth." VERDICT An enjoyable read for those who seek to understand the creative process of songwriting and the American songbook, as told by a woman.--Amy Lewontin, Northeastern Univ. Lib., Boston

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2016
      Before Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, there was They're Playing Our Song, Sager's musical based on her real-life relationship with composer Marvin Hamlisch. She recounts that story and much more in this honest, heartfelt, and often humorous memoir. Recipient of an Oscar, two Golden Globe awards, and a Grammy, Sager has written more than 400 songs. Her cowriters include Hamlisch, Burt Bacharach (her second husband), Peter Allen, Melissa Manchester, and David Foster. While still in high school, she wrote A Groovy Kind of Love with Toni Wine, and it topped the charts when a British group, the Mindbenders, recorded it in 1966. Later songs in her catalog include some of the biggest hits of the Seventies and early Eighties: Don't Cry Out Loud, Nobody Does It Better (the theme of The Spy Who Loved Me), Come in from the Rain, It's My Turn, and That's What Friends Are For. In 1987 she was inducted into the Songwriter's Hall of Fame. Music lovers will enjoy getting to know the talent behind all those memorable songs.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

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