Arts & entertainment We've Got A Friend On the occasion of her first concert tour in more than a decade, Carole King performs Saturday at Meadow Brook Music Festival. MARTIN NATCHEZ Special to the Jewish News W Still Love Me Tomorrow?" and "Up On The Roof" in the `60s and "You've Got a Friend" and "Jazzman" in the `705, wrote some of the most timeless, musical jewels of her generation. But today, despite her indisputable reputation as the queen of songwriters, she describes herself as an "anti-diva" on the generational timeline. "It's a fancy way of saying I'm older," King, 63, told National Public Radio. "I'm proud of it. I've nothing to hide; nothing to be a shamed of; nothing to apologize for." This week, the Jewish Brooklynite, born Carole Klein, embarks on the first dates of "The Living Room 2005 Tour," which will bring her one- woman musical retrospective to Meadow Brook Music Festival on July 9. Additionally, her 27-date concert itinerary coordinates with a forthcom- ing double-CD release of The Living Room Tour on King's own Rockingale Records, scheduled to arrive in stores and at all Starbucks coffee locations on July 12. hatever your age, summer is the season for melodies and memories. So if you're an oldies expert who knows that Earl-Jean, one of the Cookies of "Chains" fame, had the original Top 40 hit of "I'm Into Something Good" before Herman's Hermits, or that Steve Lawrence waxed "Go Away Little Girl" before Donnie Osmond, or that it was Little Eva who tracked "Loco-Motion" more than a decade prior to Grand Funk Railroad's No. 1 remake, you've been there, heard that, and are already familiar with some smash songs writ- ten by Carole King. Yes, the same Carole King who, in the summer of 1971, climbed to the top of the Billboard charts, singing "It's Too Late" from her Grammy-win- ning, multi-platinum album Tapestry, garnering unprecedented recognition as a performing singer-songwriter. Off the same collection spun more pearls, including "So Far Away," "I Feel the Earth Move Under My Feet" New CD and "Smackwater Jack" — all still played on the radio and each one a Recorded last year, the new CD fea- reminder of how wonderful well-writ- tures King performing at the piano, ten pop music used to be. accompanied by guitarists-vocalists Few would argue that King, who Gary Burr and Randy Guess. The sou- was inducted into the Rock and Roll venir edition combines her greatest Hall of Fame in 1990 and also crafted hits, two new songs and a sampling of such pop masterpieces as "Will You tunes written for and made famous by other artists. King, herself, was immortal- ized as the inspiration for Neil Sedaka's 1959 hit "Oh! Carol." "We dated off and on for three years," he recalled in his autobiography Laughter in the Rain, "[but] Carole's mother couldn't stand me. Carole was a straight-A student, and her mother felt I was a bad influ- ence on her daughter." Their teenage romance may have faded, but not before King countered Sedaka's record HE LIVING Room TOUR with an obscure novelty 45 called "Oh! Neil." On it, she King's latest album will be released July 12. recited cornpone lyrics like "I'd 7/ 7 2005 38 give up a month's supply of chewin' tobaccy just to be known as Mrs. Neil Sedaky." For King, that goofy chunk of anthracite is no more than a peb- ble in her past, because when the 1960s arrived, she was poised to become one of the new breed of young Jewish songwriters who would revolu- tionize Tin Pan Alley. Teaming with future first hus- band Gerry Goffin, they wrote, recorded and produced their own multi- million sellers on shoestring budg- ets. In fact, it's King who plays drums on the Shirelles' 1961 classic "Will You Still Love Me Carole King: "Take charge of what happens in your living Tomorrow?" and room, your community, your country and the world" who sang uncred- ited background Political Activist vocals on Little Eva's "Loco- Motion." Today, King is a fiercely private music And Goffin-King's prolific song- icon who resides in a mountain village book delivered hits to early teen sen- near Challis, Idaho, with her fourth sations Bobby Vee ("Take Good husband, Richard Sorenson, com- Care of My Baby"), Tony Orlando manding her offstage time as a politi- ("Halfway to Paradise"), the cal activist and lobbyist. Chiffons ("One Fine Day") and the King does not label herself a modern Cookies ("Don't Say Nothin' Bad kabbalist, but her passions tend to About My Baby"). exemplify tikkun olam — healing the The pair would divorce, but not world with her music, vigorously before they penned the Top 10 hit advocating environmental conserva- "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural tion and proactively drawing attention Woman" for Detroit soul legend to improving America's government. Aretha Franklin and "Pleasant Valley That's why the nation saw King on Sunday," popularized by the C-SPAN, CNN and speaking at last Monkees in 1967. year's Democratic National Convention as a tireless stumper for