Chicago Sun-Times

Wrote Chicago anthem ‘ Lake Shore Drive’

- BY MAUREEN O’DONNELL Staff Reporter Email: modonnell@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ suntimesob­its

Skip Haynes, who wrote the Chicago anthem “Lake Shore Drive,” died of cancer Monday in California.

Mr. Haynes, 71, had been the last surviving member of Aliotta, Haynes and Jeremiah, whose performanc­e of the jingly- jangly early 1970s song became a hardy perennial of radio.

It gained new exposure this year when it was featured on the soundtrack of the movie “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,” which gave him great pleasure, said Rikki Poulos, his partner of 30 years.

When Mr. Haynes grew ill, Poulos told the Chicago native she’d try to see that some of his ashes get scattered on Lake Shore Drive.

“Yeah, that would be the best,” she said Thursday. “I told him that’s what we are going to do, and he smiled maybe just a little bit.”

Mr. Haynes, who’d lived since 1988 in the Laurel Canyon neighborho­od of Los Angeles, was thrilled about making it onto the movie soundtrack.

Writer- director James Gunn “loved the song and wanted to include it,” Poulos said. “Skip was so excited.”

He went to the Los Angeles opening of the movie with other Chicago expatriate­s.

“It’s a twist of fate,” Poulos said, that “he’s not going to get a chance to enjoy” some of the money from the soundtrack. “But just having it happen for him, it brought him great joy.”

Mr. Haynes was born Eugene Heitlinger, but a club manager told him early in his career there wasn’t enough room on the marquee for that. His grandfathe­r called him Skippy, so he decided to take the name Skip Haynes, Poulos said.

Bassist Mitch Aliotta and keyboardis­t John Jeremiah — who’d performed with legendary soul singer Minnie Riperton — were the other members of Aliotta, Haynes and Jeremiah, formed after Mr. Haynes met Aliotta at the old Saddle Club in Old Town.

“We just ended up going back to my place, and we would sing till, like, 8 in the morning,” Mr. Haynes told the Chicago SunTimes in 2015. “The first time we sang together, it sounded really cool.”

Their big break came in 1970. Mr. Haynes was living at the time above the Earl of Old Town, the legendary folk club at North and Wells.

“John Jeremiah came over to rehearse, and [ club owner] Earl Pionke came upstairs and said, ‘ My act just quit — can you come down and do something?’ ” Mr. Haynes said. “So we went down and started singing. And we didn’t stop for 12 years.”

When Mr. Haynes composed their signature tune, “I only intended that song to be played once for our manager — he’s the only one that liked the song. We didn’t like it. Two weeks later, we’re in the studio recording it.

In an interview earlier this year posted on YouTube pegged to the release of “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2,” Mr. Haynes said: “We thought: Why? There’s 10,000 people that live on Lake Shore Drive. What are we going to sell — four records? And we just didn’t want to do it.”

Then, Jeremiah disappeare­d for two days and worked out “this incredible piano part,” according to Mr. Haynes. “We liked the part so much that we started performing the song just to listen to John play the piano.”

The band recorded a demo they used to get financial backing for the profession­al recording that became the hit.

Mr. Haynes worried, though, that radio stations might view the song’s abbreviati­on for the lakeside thoroughfa­re as a drug reference and keep it off the air.

“Right at the very end, Mitch and I were going to do the vocals, ‘ Slippin’ on by on L. S. D., Friday night trouble- bound,’ ” he said in the 2015 Sun- Times interview. “Mitch said, ‘ Definitely, put the “L. S. D.” in.’ Mitch was a funny guy.”

Aliotta died in 2015. Jeremiah died in 2011.

The song lived on — on radio and iTunes and in commercial­s, including one in Switzerlan­d.

Poulos said a community memorial for Mr. Haynes is being planned in Laurel Canyon, where he was a well- known wildlife activist and operated Laurel Canyon Animal Company, which created recordings she said some veterinari­ans use to soothe animals.

He worked to preserve wildlife habitat and fought the use of a rodenticid­e that works up the food chain from rats to birds and coyotes, according to Poulos, who said he once spent three and a half months trying to find a sick coyote so it could be treated for mange.

Though an animal activist, Mr. Haynes never gave up meat. When he’d get a craving for an Italian beef sandwich, Poulos said he’d drive to Taste Chicago, a Burbank restaurant run by actor Joe Mantegna’s wife Arlene that specialize­s in Chicago foods.

 ??  ?? Skip Haynes ( center) performs with partners John Jeremiah ( left) and Mitch Aliotta of Aliotta, Haynes and Jeremiah. | FILE PHOTO
Skip Haynes ( center) performs with partners John Jeremiah ( left) and Mitch Aliotta of Aliotta, Haynes and Jeremiah. | FILE PHOTO
 ??  ?? Skip Haynes
Skip Haynes

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