Me writing about Mill Valley is the fault of Mexican food and a famous director.
For dinner during the last week in December 2016, my bride made tacos. We hadn’t had them, either at home or in a restaurant, in months. And I – as is my wont – started singing The Taco Man, actually The Candy Man, but with a word change. You may know the 1972 hit by Sammy Davis Jr. That made her think of I’d Like To Teach the World to Sing by the New Seekers from that same year.
She also recalled a song called Mill Valley. I know LOTS of songs from the late 1960s and early 1970s, but I didn’t know this one. She even knew the lyrics!
I’m gonna talk about a place
That’s got a hold on me,
Mill Valley
A little place where life
Feels very fine and free,
Mill Valley
Where people aren’t afraid to smile
And stop and talk with you awhile,
And you can be as friendly
As you want to be.
Mill Valley!
As it turns out, a teacher named Rita Abrams wrote the song and recorded with children at the school where she was teaching, released under the name Miss Abrams and the Strawberry Point Third Grade Class. The song spent only a couple weeks on the lower rungs of the Billboard pop charts, peaking at #90 in 1970.
But it must have done better with those easy-listening stations that weren’t playing Mama Told Me Not To Come by Three Dog Night or Ball of Confusion by the Temptations, because it’s been referred to as a radio staple.
There were stories in Newsweek, Life Magazine and Rolling Stone. “Annie Liebovitz stood on top of the piano to take our picture,” the educator recalled. An album, which referred to the students as 4th graders, which they were by then, was released.
Ironically, there were 2014 stories suggesting the teacher-turned-songwriter could no longer afford to live in her Mill Valley condo because of rising real estate costs.
Rita Abrams and her class had a 45th reunion in 2015.
And the director who made the video? An obscure young director named Francis Ford Coppola, who, two years later, would be directing the film that would win the Oscar for Best Movie, The Godfather.
That recording showed up right at the peak of Warner Bros. Records’ most eclectic period; I’m surprised they never put it out on one of the Loss Leaders.
Wow…that’s quite the story and history. So…you and your wife talk to each other in song lyrics? That happens at this old house…
Very interesting.
Is Mill Valley just north of San Fransisco? If so, I was there and had a wander through the woods…I think…
Leslie
abcw team
Mill Valley is 48 min (14.2 mi) north of SF via US-101 S
How lovely… sometimes hubbie and me do to.. not in english lyrics ofcourse 😉
Have a nice ABC-day / -week
♫ M e l ☺ d y ♫ (abc-w-team)
http://melodymusic.nl/20-m/
We sing the song or advert I’m sticking with you, ‘cos you’re made out of glue,
Everything that you can do I’m going to do too !
Can’t remember the rest, but still great fun to have a sing-along
with your dearest.
Sorry but I haven’t heard of Mill Valley.
Best regards,
Di,
ABCW team.
Very interesting.
My ABC WEDNESDAY
I was amused by the chain of events that led to the topic of your post, as well as those in the story you told. Blessings!
Very interesting!
I don’t remember that song either, but then there is a lot of stuff from the 60s and 70s that I cannot remember.
Hope you are having a great day!
You always come up with something new and interesting for ABCWs
I will try this singing language at home. 🙂
Very interesting post. I’m happy you mentioned Coppola. I love ‘The Godfather’.
Don’t recall that song ~ but wonderful post and do hope Ms Abrams got to stay in her condo ~ thanks,
Happy Weekend to you ~ ^_^
I like how chance led you to a whole story. I feel all warm and fuzzy now after watching the videos. Not surprisingly I don’t remember the song but I can hear that Hill Valley chorus/tune in my head, I suspect an ear worm has arrived.
Being in California, Mill Valley was played off the wall. Didn’t this song inspire the creation of The Partridge Family?