Steam was an American pop rock music group, best known for their 1969 number one hit single, "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye". The song was written and recorded by studio musicians Gary DeCarlo (aka Garrett Scott), Dale Frashuer, and producer/writer Paul Leka at Mercury Records studios in New York City. The single was attributed to the band Steam, although at the time there was actually no band with that name. The group separated but kept in contact. Leka became a songwriter with Circle Five Productions and in 1967, he wrote and produced the Lemon Pipers' "Green Tambourine" and other Pipers songs with Shelley Pinz.

Steam

In 1969, Leka was working at Mercury Records recorded four singles, all of which Bob Reno, the label's head, thought would do well issued as an A-side. DeCarlo's first single was to be "Workin' On a Groovy Thing", but it was beaten by the 5th Dimension version released a week earlier. Then the company and Leka decided on "Sweet Laura Lee" as the next single and a B-side was needed. DeCarlo and Leka were asked to cut a B-side along with Frashuer. The trio chose to use a previously unrecorded song from their Chateaus days, which became "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye". Leka, DeCarlo, and Frashuer did not take part in the touring group,

Steam has also been a live touring band for 3 decades and under several reincarnations dating back to 1970 until its demise in 2006. Some of the touring members were, Tommy Scott Freda on vocals (1970 – 1996) and bass, Paul Freda on guitar (1970 – 1996), Alan Tebaldi on drums (1997 to 2006), Bruce Herring on percussion (1978), Howie Rose on bass (1997), Greg Bravo on vocals (1997 - 2006, and Bill Pascali on vocals and keyboards (1970s, 1980s, and 1990s).

Later years

Frashuer stepped out of the public eye. He died in 1998 at age 59. Leka became a successful songwriter and producer before his death in 2011. DeCarlo, whose solo career as Garrett Scott did not achieve chart success, left the music industry until making a comeback in 2014, performing at oldies shows.

By the beginning of the 21st century, sales of "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye" had exceeded 6.5 million records. In 1977, Nancy Faust, the organist for the Chicago White Sox began playing the song to taunt the visiting team. Since then it has been used across the worlds of sport (particularly in relation to player ejections and strutting post-victory celebrations) and politics (at rallies to mock political opponents).

In 2014, DeCarlo released the album Long Time Comin, which included a new version of his hit, 23 days after his 75th birthday. He died on June 28, 2017, of lung cancer.

Musicians

;Key musicians on the record, "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye":

  • Paul Leka: Producer, co-writer, keyboards (died 2011)
  • Dale Frashuer: co-writer (died 1998)
  • Gary DeCarlo: (as "Garrett Scott") co-writer, lead vocalist and percussion (died 2017)

Touring musicians who performed as “Steam”:

  • Bill Steer: vocals
  • Jay Babina: guitar
  • Tom Zuke: guitar
  • Mike Daniels: bass
  • Hank Schorz: keyboard
  • Ray Correia: drums
  • Tommy Scott Freda: Vocals
  • Paul Freda: Guitar
  • Alan Tebaldi: Drums
  • Bill Pascali: Vocals / Keyboards

Sources:

! style="width:45px;"|<small>CAN</small><br>

|-

| 1970

| Steam

| Mercury SR 61254

| align=center | 84

| align=center | 67

|-

|}

Singles

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! scope="col" rowspan="2"|Year

! scope="col" rowspan="2"|Single

! scope="col" colspan="4"|Peak chart positions

|-

! style="width:45px;"|<small>US</small><br>

! style="width:45px;"|<small>UK</small><br>

|-

|rowspan="1"| 1969

| "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye"

| align=center | 1

| align=center | 20

| align=center | 6

| align=center | 9

|-

|rowspan="4"| 1970

| "I've Gotta Make You Love Me"

| align=center | 46

| align=center | —

| align=center | 44

| align=center | —

|-

| "What I'm Saying Is True"

| align=center | —

| align=center | —

| align=center | —

| align=center | —

|-

| "Don't Stop Lovin' Me"

| align=center | —

| align=center | —

| align=center | —

| align=center | —

|-

| "Love And Affection"

| align=center | —

| align=center | —

| align=center | —

| align=center | —

|-

| colspan="6" style="text-align:center; font-size:9pt;"| "—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that territory.

|}

See also

  • List of one-hit wonders on the UK Singles Chart
  • List of one-hit wonders in the United States

References

Steam's Gary DeCarlo Dead at 75 (LiteFavorites.com)