Steve Goodman made four guest appearances on disc jockey Vin Scelsa's radio show on WNEW-FM in New York in the mid-'70s, three of them broadcast on successive Easter Sundays in 1976, 1977, and 1978. These airchecks are the source for
The Easter Tapes, and they present a charmingly offhand
Goodman, whose acoustic performances stand in contrast to the more polished and produced albums he was making for Asylum Records during the same period. Encouraged by Scelsa,
Goodman turns in versions of songs from some of those albums -- "This Hotel Room," "I Can't Sleep," "Banana Republics," "Video Tape" -- along with some of his older songs, among them the standard "City of New Orleans," and a bunch of one-off numbers including
Irving Berlin's "Blue Skies,"
Marty Robbins' "Big Iron," and
Cole Porter's "Don't Fence Me In." After he performs "Eighteen Yellow Roses" and points out that it was written by
Bobby Darin, Scelsa requests
Darin's hit "Splish Splash," which
Goodman surprises himself by remembering in full. With bits of casual conversation and even a few announcements of upcoming concerts (one of them featuring
Goodman, of course), the sessions have a friendly, thrown-together feel that gets even more spontaneous in the hidden track, a medley of "Mama Don't Allow" and "The Saints Go Marching In" that serves as a showcase for multi-instrumentalist sideman
David Amram and even gives Scelsa a chance to blow on a saxophone. Those more accustomed to hearing
Goodman on his regular albums, which usually feature much more elaborate arrangements, will be impressed with his expert guitar playing .~ William Ruhlmann