The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #164219   Message #3927275
Posted By: Helen
26-May-18 - 06:50 PM
Thread Name: Origins: Hello Hooray - Kempe, Collins, Cooper
Subject: Origins: Hello Hooray - Kempe, Collins, Cooper
Hi all,

Some decades ago, in a shared student house one of the other students owned a vinyl record by Meg Christian called I Know You Know AND a record player (WooHoo!), There are two stories relating to that statement. I'll explain later.

Anyhow, back to the topic:

One of the songs on the record was
Hello, Hooray, written by Rolf Kempe

I just heard my hubby's Alice Cooper CD and the track was Hello Hooray, which I always thought was a bit odd. Rough, tough Alice Cooper singing a song sung by a lesbian-feminist? The lyrics aren't all the same, either.

So, I did a Google and found the information linked to above. All is now explained. Rolfe Kempe wrote the song, Judy Collins heard it from him in 1968 and started performing it, Alice Cooper started using it but added extra lyrics which Kempe apparently was cool with, and Meg Christian also recorded it and added some lyrics to suit her purposes, which Kempe was cool with as well.

So the song has some history and evolution attached to it.

Now for one aside, and two unrelated stories.

The aside is that one track on Meg C's album is called Freest Fancy/Kemp's Jig and I wonder whether she put the Kemp's Jig on there as a nod to Rolfe Kempe for the Hello Hooray song.(Kemp's Jig was also on the 1973 Gryphon record - which I didn't hear until some years later. It's a favourite tune of mine.)

Thread creep #1:
In the
Gipsy Kings thread I posted this:
"Buying a recording without the means to play it seems to be a repeat habit of mine. When I was an extremely poor student, I heard a piece of music on my tinny little transistor radio and I had to buy the vinyl record even though I had no record player. It was a couple of years before I moved in with some other students who owned a record player and that's when I finally heard the record. It was a classical piece called Erbarme Dich from 'ST Matthew Passion' BWV 244 played on the flute by Thijs van Leer (of the Focus band) and Letty DeJong on vocals. I upgraded to a CD a few years ago because my record player is packed away so I can hear it again."

The house where I finally heard that record was the same house where I heard the Meg Christian record. I bought my own copy of the Meg C record because I loved her musical style so much.

Thread creep #2:

That house was an old weatherboard house in a lovely old suburb. It came up for sale when I lived there but as a poor student it was way out of my universe to buy it. I even asked my parents if they wanted to invest in it but they were children of the depression era, and very careful with their hard earned money. About 20 years later I did buy it, but it was so run down that it made more sense to knock it down and rebuild on the land, than throw lots and lots of money away on trying to shore it up. So now, I live in the same place where I first heard Meg Christian sing Hello Hooray, and where I finally heard that record that I had bought a couple of years earlier.

Sometimes I have time-flips and I see myself in the old house listening to those records or playing my flute, and sometimes the time-flip takes me to the 10 years I lived in the old house before knocking it down. It's a bit trippy, sometimes.

I suppose it was Hello Hooray to my old house, and to the new house, Hello! Hooray! (Hooray can mean goodbye, or it can mean WooHoo!)

Helen