Out In The Be-Bop 1960s Night- Frankie
Out In The Adventure Car Hop Night
A YouTube film clip of the Dubs
performing the classic Could This Be Magic? to set the mood for this
piece.
By Josh Breslin
Frankie Riley, the old corner boy
leader of the crowd, our crowd of the class of 1964 guys who made it and
graduated, not all did, a couple wound up serving time in various state pens
but that is not the story I want to tell today except that those fallen brothers
also imbibed Frankie’s wisdom (else why would they listen to him for they were
tougher if not smarter than he was) about what was what in rock and roll music
in the days when we had our feet firmly planted in front of Tonio’s Pizza
Parlor in North Adamsville, had almost a sixth sense about what songs would and
would not make it in the early 1960s night. Knew like the late Billy Bradley,
my corner boy when my family lived on the other side of town back then, did in
the 1950s elementary school night what would stir the girls enough to get them
“going.” And if you don’t understand what “going” meant or what “going and rock
and roll together in the same sentence meant then perhaps you should move
along. Why else would we listen to Frankie, including those penal tough guys,
if it wasn’t to get into some girl’s pants. Otherwise guys like Johnny Blade
(and you don’t need much imagination to know what kind of guy and what kind of
weapon that moniker meant) and Hacksaw Jackson would have cut of his “fucking head’
(their exact expression and that is a direct quote so don’t censor me or give
me the “what for”).
But that was then and this is now and
old, now old genie Frankie had given up the swami business long ago for the
allure of the law profession which he is even now as I write starting to turn
over to his younger partners who are begging just like he did in his turn to
show their stuff, to herald the new breeze that the austere law offices of one
Francis Xavier Riley and Associates desperately needs to keep their clients
happy. In that long meantime I have been the man who has kept the flame of the
classic days of rock and roll burning. Especially over the past few years when
I have through the miracles of the Internet been able between Amazon and YouTube to find a ton of the music, classics and one-shot wonders
of our collective youths and comment on it from the distance of fifty or so
years.
I have presented some reviews of that
material, mostly the commercially compiled stuff that some astute record companies
or their successors have put together to feed the nostalgia frenzy of the cash
rich (relatively especially if they are not reduced to throwing their money at
doctors and medicines which is cutting into a lot of what I am able to do), on
the Rock and Roll Will Never Die blog
that a guy named Wolfman Joe had put together trying to reassemble the “youth
nation” of the 1960s who lived and died for the music that was then a fresh
breeze compared to the deathtrap World War II-drenched music our parents were
trying to foist on us.
That work, those short sketch
commentaries, became the subject for conversation between Frankie and me when
he started to let go of the law practice (now he is “of counsel” whatever that
means except he get a nice cut of all the action that goes through the office
without the frenzied work for the dollars) and we would meet every few weeks
over at Jack’s in Cambridge where he now lives since the divorce from his third
wife, Minnie. So below are some thoughts from the resurrection, Frankie’s term,
for his putting his spin on “what was what” fifty or so years ago when even
Johnny Blade and Hacksaw Jackson had sense enough to listen to his words if
they wanted to get into some frill’s pants.
“Okay, you know the routine by now, or
at least the drift of these classic rock reviews. [This is the sixth in the
series that I had originally commented on but which Frankie feels he has to put
his imprimatur on just like in the old days- JB] The part that starts out with
a “tip of the hat” to the hard fact that each generation, each teenage
generation that is makes its own tribal customs, mores and language. Then the
part that is befuddled by today’s teenage-hood. And then I go scampering back
to my teenage-hood, the teenage coming of age of the generation of ‘68 that
came of age in the early 1960s and start on some cultural “nugget” from that
seemingly pre-historic period. Well this review is no different, except, today
we decipher the drive-in restaurant, although really it is the car hops
(waitresses) that drive this one.
See, this series of reviews is driven,
almost subconsciously driven, by the Edward Hopper Nighthawk-like
illustrations on the The Rock ‘n’ Roll Era CDs of this mammoth set of
compilations (fifteen, count them, fifteen like there were fifteen times twenty
or so songs on each compilation or over three hundred classic worth listening
to today. Hell, even Frankie would balk at that possibility).
In this case it is the drive-in
restaurant of blessed teenage memory. For the younger set, or those oldsters
who “forgot” that was a restaurant idea driven by car culture, especially the
car culture from the golden era of teenage car-dom, the 1950s. Put together
cars, cars all flash-painted and fully-chromed, “boss” cars we called them in
my working class neighborhood, young restless males, food, and a little
off-hand sex, or rather the promise or mist of a promise of it, and you have
the real backdrop to the drive-in restaurant. If you really thought about it
why else would somebody, anybody who was assumed to be functioning, sit in
their cars eating food, and at best ugly food at that, off a tray while seated
in their cherry, “boss" 1959 Chevy.
And beside the food, of course, there
was the off-hand girl watching (in the other cars with trays hanging off their
doors), and the car hop ogling (and propositioning, if you had the nerve, and
if your intelligence was good and there was not some 250 pound fullback
back-breaker waiting to take her home after work a few cars over with some
snarl on his face and daggers in his heart or maybe that poundage pounding you)
there was the steady sound of music, rock music, natch, coming from those
boomerang speakers in those, need I say it, “boss” automobiles. And that is
where all of this gets mixed in.
Of course, just like another time when
I was reviewing one of the CDs in this series, and discussing teenage soda
fountain life, the mere mention, no, the mere thought of the term “car hop”
makes me think of a Frankie story. Frankie, Francis Xavier Riley, Frankie from
the old hell-fire shipbuilding sunk and gone and it-ain’t-coming-back-again
seen better days working class neighborhood where we grew up, or tried to.
Frankie who I have already told you I have a thousand stories about, or hope I do.
Frankie the most treacherous little bastard that you could ever meet on one
day, and the kindest man (better man/child), and not just cheap jack, dime
store kindness either, alive the next day. Yeah, that Frankie, my best middle
school and high school friend Frankie.
Did I tell you about Joanne, Frankie’s
“divine” (his term, without quotation marks) Joanne because she enters, she
always in the end enters into these things? Yes, I see that I did back when I
was telling you about her little Roy “The Boy” Orbison trick. The one where she
kept playing Running Scared endlessly to get Frankie’s dander up. But
see while Frankie has really no serious other eyes for the dames except his
“divine” Joanne (I insist on putting that divine in quotation marks when telling
of Joanne, at least for the first few times I mention her name, even now.
Needless to say I questioned, and questioned hard, that designation on more
than one occasion to no avail) he is nothing but a high blood-pressured,
high-strung shirt-chaser, first class. And the girls liked him, although not
for his looks although they were kind of Steve McQueen okay. What they went for
him for was his line of patter, first class. Patter, arcane, obscure patter
that made me, most of the time, think of fingernails scratching on a blackboard
(except when I was hot on his trail trying to imitate him) and his faux “beat”
pose (midnight sunglasses, flannel shirt, black chinos, and funky work boots
(ditto on the imitation here as well). And not just “beat’ girls liked him,
either as you will find out. Certainly Joanne the rose of Tralee was not beat
sister (although she was his first wife).
Well, the long and short of it was that
Frankie, late 1963 Frankie, and the...(oh, forget it) Joanne had had their
207th (really that number, or close, since 8th grade) break-up and Frankie was
a "free” man. To celebrate this freedom Frankie, Frankie, who was almost
as poor as I was but who has a father with a car that he was not too cheap or
crazy about to not let Frankie use on occasion, had wheels. Okay, Studebaker
wheels but wheels anyway. And he was going to treat me to a drive-in meal as we
went cruising the night, the Saturday night, the Saturday be-bop night looking
for some frails (read: girls, Frankie had about seven thousand names for them)
Tired (or bored) from cruising the
Saturday be-bop night away (meaning girl-less) we hit the local drive-in hot
spot, Arnie’s Adventure Car Hop for one last, desperate attempt at happiness (yeah,
things were put, Frank and me put anyway, just that melodramatically for every
little thing). What I didn’t know was that Frankie, king hell skirt-chaser had
his off-hand eye on one of the car hops, Sandy, and as it turned out she was
one of those girls who was enamored of his patter (or so I heard later). So he
pulled into her station and started to chat her up as we ordered the haute
cuisine, And here was the funny thing, now that I saw her up close I could
see that she was nothing but a fox (read: “hot” girl).
The not so funny thing was that she was
so enamored of Frankie’s patter that he was going to take her home after work.
No problem you say. No way, big problem. I was to be left there to catch a ride
home while they set sail into that good night. Thanks, Frankie.
Well, I was pretty burned up about it
for a while but as always with “charma” Frankie we hooked up again a few days
later. And here is where I get a little sweet revenge (although don’t tell him
that).
Frankie sat me down at the old town
pizza parlor [Tonio’s Pizza Parlor of blessed memory-JB] and told me the whole
story and even now, as I recount it, I can’t believe it.
Sandy was a fox, no question, but a
married fox, a very married fox, who said she when he first met her that she
was about twenty-two and had a kid. Her husband was in the service and she was
“lonely” and succumbed to Frankie’s charms. Fair enough, it is a lonely world
at times. But wait a minute, I bet you thought that Frankie’s getting mixed up
with a married honey with a probably killer husband was the big deal. No way,
no way at all. You know, or you can figure out, old Frankie spent the night
with Sandy. Again, it's a lonely world sometimes.
The real problem, the real Frankie problem, was once they
started to compare biographies and who they knew around town, and didn’t know,
it turned out that Sandy, old fox, old married fox with brute husband, old Arnie’s
car hop Sandy was some kind of cousin to Joanne, second cousin maybe. And she
was no cradle-robber twenty-two (as if you could rob the cradle according to Frankie)
but nineteen, almost twenty and was just embarrassed about having a baby in
high school and having to go to her "aunt's" to have the child.
Moreover, somewhere along the line she and cousin Joanne had had a parting of
the ways, a nasty parting of the ways. So sweet as a honey bun Arnie's car hop
Sandy, sweet teen-age mother Sandy, was looking for a way to take revenge and
Frankie, old king of the night Frankie, was the meat. She had him sized up
pretty well, as he admitted to me. And he was sweating this one out like crazy,
and swearing everyone within a hundred miles to secrecy. So I’m telling you
this is strictest confidence even now fifty years later and long after his
divorce from her. Just don’t tell Joanne. Ever.
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