Welcome to Music Friday when we celebrate classic songs with jewelry, gemstones or precious metals in the title or lyrics. Exactly 50 years ago, Jim Croce introduced us to a giant man with an affection for diamond jewelry in his chart topper, “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown.”
In this song inspired by a friend he met while working as a lineman for the U.S. National Guard, Croce tells the fateful story of one of the toughest guys from the South Side of Chicago. Leroy Brown stood 6'4'' and had a reputation of being “meaner than a junkyard dog.” He was also a flashy dresser, loved his jewelry and was quite the ladies’ man.
Croce sings, “Now Leroy, he a gambler / And he like his fancy clothes / And he like to wave them diamond rings / In front of everybody’s nose.”
At the end of the song, Leroy approaches Doris at a local bar and learns a tough “lesson about messin’ with the wife of a jealous man.”
Written by Croce, “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown” spent two weeks at the top of the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart in July of 1973. The song also netted Croce two Grammy Award nominations in the categories of Best Pop Male Vocalist and Record of the Year.
Born in South Philadelphia in 1943, Croce expressed a love for music at a young age. He played his first song, “Lady of Spain,” on the accordion at the age of 5. While attending Villanova University, he performed with two singing groups, the Villanova Singers and the Villanova Spires. Croce graduated with a degree in psychology in 1965.
He joined the U.S. National Guard in 1966, and while stationed in Fort Jackson, SC, he befriended the larger-than-life Chicagoan who would inspire his 1973 hit.
Croce struggled early in his music career, appearing at large coffee houses, on college campuses and at folk festivals. In 1972, he scored a three-record deal with ABC Records.
Later that year, he made his national debut on American Bandstand, which sparked appearances on The Tonight Show, The Dick Cavett Show, The Helen Reddy Show and The Midnight Special.
Sadly, at the peak of his fame, in September 1973, Croce died tragically in a plane crash near Natchitoches, LA. He was 30 years old.
In a letter to his wife, Ingrid, that arrived after his death, Croce told her that he was homesick and couldn’t bear the pain of being away from her and their infant son. He was planning to stop touring and, instead, redirect his creative energy to writing short stories. It was never to be.
Please check out Croce’s June 1973 performance of “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown” on The Midnight Special. The lyrics are below if you’d like to sing along…
“Bad, Bad Leroy Brown”
Written and performed by Jim Croce.
Well the South side of Chicago
Is the baddest part of town
And if you go down there
You better just beware
Of a man named Leroy Brown
Now Leroy, more than trouble
You see he stand ’bout six foot four
All the downtown ladies call him “Treetop Lover”
All the men just call him “Sir”
And it’s bad, bad Leroy Brown
The baddest man in the whole damned town
Badder than old King Kong
And meaner than a junkyard dog
Now Leroy, he a gambler
And he like them fancy clothes
And he like to wave them diamond rings
In front of everybody’s nose
He got a custom Continental
He got an Eldorado too
He got a 32 gun in his pocket for fun
He got a razor in his shoe
And it’s bad, bad Leroy Brown
The baddest man in the whole damned town
Badder than old King Kong
And meaner than a junkyard dog
Well Friday ’bout a week ago
Leroy shootin’ dice
And at the edge of the bar
Sat a girl named Doris
And oh that girl looked nice
Well he cast his eyes upon her
And the trouble soon began
Leroy Brown learned a lesson
‘Bout messin’ with the wife of a jealous man
And it’s bad, bad Leroy Brown
The baddest man in the whole damned town
Badder than old King Kong
And meaner than a junkyard dog
Well the two men took to fighting
And when they pulled them from the floor
Leroy looked like a jigsaw puzzle
With a couple of pieces gone
And it’s bad, bad Leroy Brown
The baddest man in the whole damned town
Badder than old King Kong
And meaner than a junkyard dog…
Credit: Image by ABC Television, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.
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