The song was "Leaving on a Jet Plane," the classic folk-style song written by John Denver in 1966 during my college years. At the time, Denver's titled it "Babe, I Hate to Go," the closing line of the lyrics. He put it on vinyl with 15 other songs and gave the 250 pressings to friends and family.
Peter, Paul and Mary changed the title and included it the
following year (1967) in their album, Album 1700. The song became a big hit two
years later (1969) when they released it as a single.
Whenever I hear the song, I have images of myself boarding a
Boeing 707 jet with my young wife and child to visit family in Hawaii. I also
remember two Peter, Paul and Mary live concerts that I went to in college –
Honolulu (1963) while at the University of Hawaii, and Long Beach (1966) while
at Woodbury College.
"Leaving on a Jet Plane" also evokes wonderful
memories of our folk-singing group, The Januaries, and our college performances
in the Los Angeles area.
What the commenter (obviously much younger than I) thinks of
when he hears the song is Ben Affleck (the character A.J. Frost) singing it as
he says goodbye to Liv Tyler (the character Grace Stamper) in the 1998 disaster
film, Armageddon.
What you remember sometimes depends on when you were born.
The much-older me rustles up images of meaningful true-to-life experiences, and
the much-younger he remembers artificial popular culture.
It's hard not to feel sorry for these young people. But
wait! I think that's what my dad said about my generation.
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