***Songs
To While The Time By- The Roots Is The Toots- The Music That Got Them Through
World War II-Peggy Lee Backed By The Benny Goodman Band- My Old Flame …
And
memories of that girl (or guy) who got away, or who was married to another, or
who had another girlfriend (or boyfriend, or today mix and match, and then too
come to think of it), or one of a thousand other reasons for parting, some good,
some bad but in misty future time regret, sheer regret for that maybe first love
and why things hadn’t worked out. Thus this song to get one by on that cold, lonely
remembrance night.
Over
the past several years I have been running an occasional series in this space
of songs, mainly political protest songs, you know The Internationale, Union Maid, Which Side Are You On, Viva La Quince
Brigada, Universal Soldier, and such entitled Songs To While The Class Struggle By. This series which could
include some protest songs as well is centered on roots music as it has come
down the ages and formed the core of the American songbook. You will find the
odd, the eccentric, the forebears of later musical trends, and the just plain
amusing here. Listen up-Peter Paul Markin
Additional
Markin comment for this series:
Whether we liked it or not, whether we even knew what it
meant to our parents or not, what sacred place it held in their youthful hearts,
this is the music that went wafting through the house of many of those of us
who constitute the Generation of “68. Those of us who came of age, personal,
political and social age in the age of Jack Kennedy’s Camelot, and who were
driven by some makeshift dream, who in the words of brother Bobby quoting from Alfred Lord Tennyson were “seeking a new
world.” Those who took up the call to
action and slogged through that decade whether it was in civil rights/black
liberation struggle, the anti-Vietnam War struggle or the struggle to find
one’s own identity in the counter-culture before the hammer came down. And that
hammer came down quickly as the decade ended and the high white note drifted
out into the ebbing tide. But enough of that about us this is about forbears
and their struggles, and the music that they dreamed by on cold winter nights or
hot summer days.
This is emphatically the music of the generation that
survived the dust bowl hard times of the 1930s Great Depression. Survived by
taking the nearest freight, Southern Pacific, Union Pacific, B&O, Illinois
Central, Penn Central, Empire State, Boston and Maine, or one of a million
trunk lines to go out and search for, well, search something that was not
cold-water flat, rooming house, tumbled down shack, and get out on the open
road and search for the great promised American night that had been tattered by
world events, and greed. Survived the Hoovervilles, the soup kitchens, the
scroungings of the trash piles of the urban glut, the rural fallow fields, and
that gnarring hungry that cried out in the night-want, want that is all. Survived the look, the look of those who in
their fortified towers tittered that not everybody was built to survive to be
the fittest. Survived too to slog through the time of the gun in World War II,
either carrying one on the shoulder in Europe or the Pacific or waiting at home
hoping to high heaven that some gun had not carried off sweetheart Johnnie or
Jimmy.
It wafted through the large console radio centered in the
living room of my house via local station WDJA in North Adamsville as my mother
used it as background on her appointed household rounds. It drove me crazy then
as mush stuff at a time when I was craving the big break-out rock and roll
sounds I kept hearing every time I went and played the jukebox at Doc’s
Drugstore over on Walker Street down near the beach. Funny thing though while I
am still a child of rock and roll (blues too) this so-called mushy stuff sounds
pretty good to these ears now long after my parents and those who performed
this music have passed on. Go figure.
No comments:
Post a Comment