Erik's Midwestern Boyhood
I was born in Oak Park IL in 1940. It's on the outskirts of Chicago. Although I was the son of Norwegian immigrants, I think I had a pretty typical suburban midwestern American boyhood. In this little film, I share some of my memories from those good old days, which now seem so innocent and long ago.
-
Erik Dreng JacobsenDirector
-
Erik Dreng JacobsenWriter
-
Erik Dreng JacobsenProducer
-
Project Type:Documentary, Short
-
Runtime:10 minutes 51 seconds
-
Completion Date:January 2, 2024
-
Country of Origin:United States
-
Country of Filming:United States
-
Language:English
-
Shooting Format:35mm
-
Film Color:Color
-
First-time Filmmaker:No
-
Student Project:No
As a musician, producer and song publisher, Erik Jacobsen spent a long, rewarding career finding and nurturing young unknown singer-songwriters, helping them realize their full artistic potential and commercial success. After 30 years of making hit records, he has since focused on producing short films about his extensive travels. What began as an effort to write an autobiography, blossomed into the full-blown creative pursuit of storytelling through video production.
Erik was born in Chicago in 1940. As a student at Oberlin College, he learned to play the five-string banjo. After graduating he toured the country for several years with his bluegrass band, "The Knoblick Upper 10,000". After hearing the Beatles for the first time he decided to change career direction. Jacobsen quit the group, went back to Greenwich Village, and began trying to produce records as well as publish music.
In 1963 he discovered his first artist, the singer-songwriter Tim Hardin. He produced Hardin’s first recordings and published his songs, among them - “If I Were a Carpenter" and "Reason to Believe". Both of which went on to great success when they were covered by well-known artists. Teaming up with John Sebastian 1964, they put together the group, "The Lovin' Spoonful". Jacobsen produced and published all their hits, including "Do you Believe in Magic?", "Summer in the City", and "Daydream". In1967, he made the record “Hello Hello” with the group The Sopwith Camel. It went on to be the first hit emanating from the burgeoning psychedelic San Francisco music scene. In 1969 he worked with a schoolteacher named Rita Abrams, along with her third-grade class, and recorded a song called "Mill Valley" she wrote about her hometown. In 1970 It reached #1 on the national adult contemporary charts.
In 1968, at The Troubadour’s open mic night, Jacobsen met Norman Greenbaum, and together they made the iconic recording of his song, "Spirit in the Sky". It became a world-wide phenomenon and the #1 best seller in the USA for 1970.
Erik’s writer and publishing partner, Brian Elliot, wrote Madonna's, "Papa Don't Preach", and in 1986 it sold over 100,000,000 copies. In the mid-eighties, Jacobsen began a long creative partnership with Chris Isaak. Together they recorded seven albums, including the multi-platinum hit, "Wicked Game" in 1987. The video of the song, made with director Herb Ritz, was voted "Sexiest Male Video of the 20th Century” by Billboard Magazine.
Retiring from the recording studio, Erik began work on an autobiographical website (AllAboutErik.com) and became fully engrossed in story telling through video production. He has traveled extensively to exotic places and is now making films utilizing the pictures and video footage from these trips.