Motorcycle Days, Circa 1958-The Search For The Great Working-Class
Love Song - With Richard Thompson’s Vincent Black Lightning, 1952 In
Mind –Take Two
From The Pen Of Joshua Lawrence Breslin:
Several
years ago, maybe about eight years now that I think about it, I did a series of
sketches on guys, folk-singers, folk-rockers, rock-folkers or whatever you want
to call those who weened us away from the stale pablum rock in the early 1960s (Bobby
Vee, Rydell, Darin, et al, Sandra Dee, Brenda Lee, et al) after the gold rush
dried up in what is now called the classic age of rock and roll in the mid to
late 1950s when Elvis, Jerry Lee, Buddy, Chuck, Bo and their kindred made us
jump. (There were gals too like Wanda Jackson but mainly it was guys in those
days.) I am referring of course to the savior folk minute of the early 1960
when a lot of guys with acoustic guitars, some self-made lyrics, or stuff from
old Harry Smith Anthology times gave us a reprieve. The series titled Not
Bob Dylan centered on why those budding folkies like Tom Rush, Tom Paxton,
Phil Ochs, Jesse Winchester and the man under review Richard Thompson to name a
few did not make the leap to be the “king of folk” that had been ceded by the
media to Bob Dylan and whatever happened to them once the folk minute went
south after the combined assault of the British rock invasion (you know the
Beatles, Stones, Kinks, hell, even Herman’s Hermits got play for a while), and the rise of acid rock put folk in the
shade (you know the Jefferson Airplane, the Dead, The Doors, The Who, hell,
even the aforementioned Beatles and Stones got caught up in the fray although
not to their eternal musical playlist benefit). I also did a series on Not
Joan Baez, the “queen of the folk minute” asking that same question on the
female side but here dealing with one Richard Thompson the male side of the
question is what is of interest.
I did a
couple of sketches on Richard Thompson back then, or rather sketches based on
probably his most famous song, Vincent Black Lightning, 1952
which dove-tailed with some remembrances of my youth and my semi-outlaw front
to the world and the role that motorcycles played in that world. Additionally,
in light of the way that a number of people whom I knew back then, classmates
whom I reconnected on a class reunion website responded when I posed the
question of what they thought was the great working-class love song since North
Adamsville was definitely a working class town driven by that self-same ethos I
wrote some other sketches driving home my selection of Thompson’s song as my
choice.
The latter sketches
are what interest me here. See Thompson at various times packed it in, said he
had no more spirit or some such and gave up the road, the music and the
struggle to made that music, as least professionally. Took time to make a more
religious bent to his life and other such doings. Not unlike a number of other
performers from that period who tired of the road or got discourage with the
small crowds, or lost the folk spirit. Probably as many reasons as individuals
to give them. Then he, they had an epiphany or something, got the juices
flowing again and came back on the road. That fact is to the good for old time folk (and
rock) aficionados like me.
What that
fact of returning to the road by Thompson and a slew of others has meant is
that my friend and I, (okay, okay my sweetie who prefers that I call her my
soulmate but that is just between us so friend) now have many opportunities to
see acts like Thompson’s Trio, his current band configuration, to see if we
think they still “have it” (along with acts of those who never left the road like
Bob Dylan who apparently is on an endless tour whether we want him to do so or
not). That idea got started about a decade ago when we saw another come-back
kid, Geoff Muldaur of the Jim Kweskin Jug Band, solo, who had taken something
twenty years off. He had it. So we started looking for whoever was left of the
old folks acts (rock and blues too) to check out that question-unfortunately
the actuarial tables took their toll before we could see some of them at least
one last time like Dave Von Ronk.
That brings
us to Richard Thompson. Recently we got a chance to see him in a cabaret
setting with tables and good views from every position, at least on in the
orchestra section, at the Wilbur Theater in Boston with his trio, a big brush
drummer and an all-around side guitar player (and other instruments like the
mando). Thompson broke the performance up into two parts, a solo set of six or
seven numbers high-lighted by Vincent Black Lightning, and Dimming Of
The Day which was fine. The second part based on a new album and a bunch of
his well-known rock standards left us shaking our heads. Maybe the room could
not handle that much sound, although David Bromberg’s five piece band handled
it well a couple of weeks before, or maybe it was the melodically sameness of
the songs and the same delivery voice and style but we were frankly
disappointed and not disappointed to leave at the encore. Most tunes didn’t resonant although a few in
all honesty did we walked out of the theater with our hands in our pockets. No
thumbs up or down flat based on that first old time set otherwise down.
However, damn it, Bob Dylan does not have to move over, now. Our only consolation that great working-class
love song, Vincent Black Lightning, still intact.
Which brings
us to one of those sketches I did based on Brother Thompson’s glorious Vincent
Black Lightning. When I got home I began to revise that piece which I have included
below. Now on to the next act in the great quest- a reunion of the three
remaining active members of the Jim Kweskin Jug Band, Jim Maria Muldaur, and of
course Geoff at the Club Passim (which traces its genesis back to the folk
minute’s iconic Club 47 over on Mount Auburn Street in Harvard Square. We’ll
see if that gets the thumbs up.
From The Pen Of Joshua Lawrence Breslin-Motorcycle Days,
Circa 1958
Yes, 1958 was a good time to be a
motorcycle boy, a de facto, de jure wild boy according to the chattering,
clueless, disapproving parents of the time, especially the parents of
impressionable teenage girls (and not just teenage girls either if they, the
parents, had had a clue what was going on over at State U with the twenty some-things,
including their Janie, when the music and liquor (and in some “hip” or badass
locales the dreaded dope, marijuana or worse previously only hearsay of seen and
read in Nelson Algren be-bop Man With A Golden
Arm junkie sagas) got going and the wild boys all “dressed-up” in greasy denim,
tee-shirt, greasy or not, denim cut-off jacket, doo rag handkerchief for the head and whatever magic
number-word symbol represented their chapter existence, showed up to get it on
and a few girls, adventurous girls in those pre-pill sex times, got a little
wet thinking about that possibility and don’t kid yourself on that, to the everlasting
chagrin of Joe College who got nothing but some midnight kiss).
Of course parents didn’t count, count
for much anyway, when trends, moods, and what was cool got discussed in front
of night times mom and pop variety stores where corner boys of all descriptions
and attitudes held forth. Or Doc’s Drugstore, after school, high school, of
course, lesser grades need not bother to show up except maybe in early morning
to get some candy bar or other sweet to get them through until growing-up time
lunch, where all manner of school boy and girl went for a soda and snack but
mainly to hear some latest tune, maybe some hot Jerry Lee wild boy mad man
thing, seventeen times in Doc’s amped up super juke box. In those quarters
motorcycle wild boys were cool, if maybe just a little dangerous.
And maybe just slightly illegal too as
their parents’ cops (as part of that
parent-police-teacher-priest-politician-hell-maybe even mom and pop variety
store owner authority continuum) frowned, no more than frowned, when some local
detachment of the Devils’ Disciples roared through the Adamsville Beach
boulevard night. The sight of flashing blue lights on the boulevard usually
meant one thing. Some wild boy had his exhaust system too loud, or he wasn’t
wearing a helmet, or he switched lanes without signaling, or maybe for just
being ugly, cop’s eyes ugly, or some lame thing like that. Those small civic
sins only added to the mystique though. Especially on sultry summer nights when
the colors passed turning every guy’s eyes, even mine, to listen to that power
and to set every girl, impressionable or not, to thinking, thinking Wild Boy
Marlon Brando thinking about what was behind that power.
See before Tom Wolfe and Hunter
Thompson put everybody straight about the seamy side of motorcycle life,
life-style motorcycle life with its felonies and mayhem, Marlon and his wild boys
(and maybe throw in James Dean and his “chicken run” cars although they were a
little too tame to be as revered as the motorcycle boys were) had cleaned up
the wild boy scene, made it okay to be an easy rider, made it sexy. Not the
weekend warrior flip turns and wheelies and then Monday morning back to the
bank stuff but real alienated Johnnies just like you and me. Old Marlon had
made alienated wild boys cool. Old sexy white tee-shirt, maybe a pack of
Luckies rolled up one sleeve, a cap rakishly turn at an angle on his head, but
mainly an attitude, an attitude of distain, hell, maybe hatred, toward that
ever present authority that told every kid, every boy and girl that you had
better take what you can when you can because it won’t be there long. And that slight
snarl that accompanied every word. Yah, cool, cool daddy cool.
And the girls, wells, they were doing
that wondering, wondering about what was behind that power thrust, as those
leather jackets and engineer boots roared by. To the detriment of her date
while sitting in the front seat of his father’s borrowed plain vanilla boxed
tail fin car that he had had to almost declare a civil war to get for the
evening and promise to mow some future lawn as compensation. Jesus. Or worse,
infinitely worse, seeing that metal, chrome and fire pass by after her date,
her car-less date, had just walked her over to the beach to sit on that cold
stony seawall. Her eyes flamed red, as she almost flagged down some local easy
rider as he passed by just to get some kicks, and maybe freedom.
It wasn’t always low-down grunges who
occupied the flamed night either. Every town probably had it story, many more
that one, of some wild boy motorcycle boy who ruled the roost, who took what he
needed, or better, wanted and said the hell with civilization. Yah, a real
outlaw, an outlaw way outside the system like North Adamsville wild boy James
Preston, a guy they still talk about, although not when tender ears are around.
Back in 1957, maybe 1958 that was all the talk, all the talk that counted among
anguished and alienated teen like I said when Pretty James Preston got his
chopper. Damn, I can still hear that explosion when he gunned that pedal even
now.
See, Pretty James Preston (and nobody
called him, as far as I know, anything else except that exact designation) had
Elvis-like looks to go with his outlaw snarl. Dark hair combed back like Elvis
(but never ever use that comparison then, not if you don’t want to fight, fight
whip chains fight or cut-up knives just so you know), black kind of Spanish
eyes, long and tall, wiry some would say, but tough as a kid from the wrong
side of the tracks could be. Nobody messed with Pretty James Preston (see,
hell, even fifty years or more later I still call him that just in case, just
in case his chain-wielding ghost is still around). So tough that he, around
ordinary citizens, was almost civilized. He could afford to be and because it
cost him nothing in his world calculus that was that.
So naturally every high school girl,
even women since at that time Pretty James Preston was about twenty-one, had
some tough nights up in her lonely room thinking about that wild boy. Now maybe
not everyone, okay, North Adamsville was not that small a town but let’s say
any girl (or young woman) who thought she had a shot, or maybe half a shot, at
his favors was having sweaty summer nights. Even Mimi Murphy, my girlfriend, my
faithless girlfriend. Now Mimi was maybe not the dish of the town, with her
flaming red hair and her slender, maybe skinny is better, body but she had a
certain something, a certain, smile, a certain style about her that made some
guys who you would never ever think would give her a second look (like I did to
my delight) were intrigued by her. Including one Pretty James Preston.
So one summer night after I walked
Mimi, yes, car-less walked, Mimi over to the seawall down at the Seal Rock end
of old Adamsville Beach I (we) heard that roar, that roar that meant only one
thing- Pretty James Preston was coming down the boulevard full throttle. I
turned around and before I knew it there he was stopped in front of us as we
sat on the seawall. I swear I don’t remember him saying word one to Mimi (or
me). Maybe a nod, maybe they had some secret karmic thing, I don’t know. All I
know is that the queen of Sacred Heart Church (Roman Catholic) for number of
novenas said in the old days, some white veil aura always present, one of the
smartest girl in our class and, also probably the closest thing we had to a
quirky girl in our class walked over to Pretty James Preston and his strange
and powerful Vincent Black Lighting and straddled her long legs on back saddle
of the bike. And into the night they roared.
But see that strange bike, that
British-made exotic Vincent Black Lightning (which later proved to have been
stolen, not by Pretty James but someone else, and then ferreted over from
England to take its place in North Adamsville lore) was the undoing of Pretty
James Preston (although not to hold you in suspense not of Mimi Murphy, not
officially). Pretty James was leading kind of a double life. Let me explain, or
try to, the way I heard it from some sources that I trusted (not Mimi, for I
never really saw her to speak to after that fateful roar off into the Pretty
James night).
In order to keep up his bike, his
chopper Pretty James Preston robbed, robbed persons, places and things if you
like. Not around North Adamsville since he was too well known (although after
it was all over a few people around town admitted that he had robbed them,
robbed them at gun-point and they were too scared to say anything. Maybe true,
maybe not.). But around, a gas station here, a mom and pop variety store there,
a couple of department stores, a few wealthy homes over in Millsville, maybe
jack-roll a drunk if things got desperate. Not much dough but steady.
Then one day we heard that Pretty James
Preston had stepped up his act. Banks, or rather a bank, the Granite City
National Bank branch over in Braintree. And that was his downfall. Somehow he
bungled the job, or some alarm went off, or some rum brave cop got religion and
before he could get out the door Pretty James was shot, shot six ways to
Sunday. Dead, DOA, done. The only thing left to say is that somebody thought
they saw a skinny, long haired, red-headed girl in a leather jacket and dungarees
standing across the street from the bank and when they turned around after
looking away upon hearing the shots the girl were gone. They later found the
Vincent Black Lightning over in the Adamsville projects kind of mashed up.
The red-headed girl, my Mimi, was not
seen around town again. (Rumors, small rumors swirled for a few months about
her fate, some reported that she was in a convent up North, others that she was
holed up doing tricks in some high –end whorehouse in Boston but I never got
very far with the few leads I had and soon gave it up.) Yes, Pretty James
Preston was an outlaw from his first to last breath. And you wonder why they
still talk about him with hushed breath.
The music too befit the motorcycle wild
boy time of end of time times, the times when it seemed every little mishap in
some godforsaken corner of this wicked old world turned into a major crisis
causing everybody at some invisible authority’s urging to head for the air-raid
shelters and keep their heads down. And their butts up. Jerry Lee wild man
piano stuff, always ready to break out, jail break out ever since he popped the
question in high school confidential, Chuck leering at sweet little sixteens
and you know what I mean, Eddie Cochran giving us a summer time blues anthem to
hang our hopes on, and all kinds of one hit wonders trying to put a dent in our
angst, our special teen angst that was ready to boil over, to break out and be
free. Free from that invisible hand authority.
No wonder the wild boys had a field
day. Those impressionable girls, maybe Mimi too although we never talked about
such things, Jesus no, worried they would never get to “do it” but were fearful
to “do it” nevertheless in that Pill-less world. And guys hoping that the girls
were worrying about not “doing it” before the world exploded egged them on
although not with as much concern as necessary about consequences. The wild
boys, those easy riders, though said “take no prisoners” and that was
attractive, that and that promise of power that had many a girl restless late
at night.
So no wonder too some young thing in
the Jody Reynolds’ song “Endless Sleep” , maybe worried about getting pregnant
after she let lover boy go further than she (and he) expected decided to go
down to that sunless beach and let old Neptune have his way with her. And he,
lover boy, maybe with a wild boy sensibility on the surface but more the
weekend warrior when the deal went down, went looking for the dizzy dame, his
dizzy dame and left old Neptune in the lurch. And many years later, maybe in
some dream remembrance, they would throw the old records on the turntable, amp
up the teen angst, the teen alienation, then sit back and listen to maybe the
last minute in the 1950s when free-wheeling rock and roll blasted the night
away. And the motorcycle boys held forth in the thundering night.
ARTIST: Richard
Thompson
TITLE: 1952 Vincent Black Lightning
Lyrics and Chords
TITLE: 1952 Vincent Black Lightning
Lyrics and Chords
Said Red Molly to James that's a fine
motorbike
A girl could feel special on any such
like
Said James to Red Molly, well my hat's
off to you
It's a Vincent Black Lightning, 1952
And I've seen you at the corners and
cafes it seems
Red hair and black leather, my favorite
color scheme
And he pulled her on behind
And down to Box Hill they did ride
/ A - - - D - / - - - - A - / : / E - D
A /
/ E - D A - / Bm - D - / - - - - A - -
- /
Said James to Red Molly, here's a ring
for your right hand
But I'll tell you in earnest I'm a
dangerous man
I've fought with the law since I was
seventeen
I robbed many a man to get my Vincent
machine
Now I'm 21 years, I might make 22
And I don't mind dying, but for the
love of you
And if fate should break my stride
Then I'll give you my Vincent to ride
Come down, come down, Red Molly, called
Sergeant McRae
For they've taken young James Adie for
armed robbery
Shotgun blast hit his chest, left
nothing inside
Oh, come down, Red Molly to his dying
bedside
When she came to the hospital, there
wasn't much left
He was running out of road, he was
running out of breath
But he smiled to see her cry
And said I'll give you my Vincent to
ride
Says James, in my opinion, there's
nothing in this world
Beats a 52 Vincent and a red headed
girl
Now Nortons and Indians and Greeveses
won't do
They don't have a soul like a Vincent
52
He reached for her hand and he slipped
her the keys
He said I've got no further use for
these
I see angels on Ariels in leather and
chrome
Swooping down from heaven to carry me
home
And he gave her one last kiss and died
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