Terry Cashman is a record producer and singer-songwriter, best known for his 1981 hit, "Talkin' Baseball". While the song is well recognized today, it was all but ignored by typical Top 40 radio during its chart life, making only the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart.
Career
Cashman was the lead singer for a band called The Chevrons in the late 1950s through the early 1960s. He also played Minor League Baseball in the Detroit Tigers organization at around the same time. In 1967, Cashman teamed up with Gene Pistilli and Tommy West to form the pop-folk group Cashman, Pistilli and West. Their debut album, Bound to Happen, included the Cashman-Pistilli composition "Sunday Will Never Be the Same", a No. 9 hit on the BillboardHot 100 for Spanky and Our Gang that year and No. 7 in Canada. Cashman, Pistilli and West had a 1969 No. 22 hit single, "Medicine Man", under the name Buchanan Brothers. The follow-up "Son of a Lovin' Man" hit No. 50 in Canada. In November 1972, Cashman & West's song "American City Suite" hit No. 27 on the Billboard chart and No. 25 on the Canadian RPM chart. Cashman, Pistilli and West enjoyed modest success, recording six albums through 1975. The Cashman-West team also produced all the hit recordings of singer-songwriter Jim Croce. In 1975 they launched Lifesong Records, which would have hits including "Shannon" by Henry Gross and "Ariel" by Dean Friedman. In 1973, one of the Partridge family episodes featured a song with the music and lyrics by Terry Cashman and T.P. West called Sunshine Eyes. Inspired by a picture he had received of Willie Mays, Duke Snider, Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle, Cashman decided to write a song dedicated to 1950s baseball. The popular choral refrain in the song "Talkin' Baseball" — "Willie, Mickey, and The Duke" — immediately struck a chord with fans in 1981 who were disappointed by the Major League Baseballstrike that summer. Cashman has since recorded multiple versions of the song for different Major League Baseball teams. Because of this, he is now known as "The Balladeer of Baseball". He also recorded a parody of the song in 1992, "Talkin' Softball," for the end credits The Simpsons episode "Homer at the Bat."