Of Angels And Things-With Mark
Dinning’s Teen Angel (1960) In Mind
By Zack James
Fritz Taylor as he has grown older, has
reached retirement age from his career as a professional printer having worked
for newspapers and after that position went south along with the industry with
the crush of the new digital technology as a main form of people getting their
news then as the owner of a small specialty print shop that he is in the
process of turning over to younger hands, has been increasing inclined to stray
thoughts from seemingly out of nowhere. Recently he told his old friend Bart
Webber over lunch and cocktails at Johnny’s Dinner in Gloversville the town
where both had come of age as both had harkened back to on occasion just to
thrash out old memories. He told Bart that he had been having a series of
dreams about angels, although not in any context that one would expect from a
guy who was getting closer to meeting his maker or whatever happens when he
passes.
No, emphatically no, old Fritz as he
explained to a credulous Bart he was having neither one of those increasingly
frequent “senior moments” nor was he reverting back to his youth when
discussing what he now called the Tommy-rot that plagued his life. That
Tommy-rot reference referring to the days before he got “religion” on religion
and would take on all-comers on such Thomist scholastic subjects as how many
angels could fit on the head of a needle. When he was a believer, a believer in
the hard-core Roman Catholic version of religion the religion of his forbears
as far back as anybody could remember, he would think nothing of wiling away
the hours with anybody who wanted to discuss what was what about religion,
about the “true” religion and eventually the question of angels would come up,
especially the question of that vaporous guardian angel who every priest, nun,
his mother, hell, the Pope in Rome told him was looking out for him. Then one
day when he really was down on his luck, had made a series of disastrous
decision when he could not hold his wanting habits in and was homeless and
friendless and needed an angel in the worst way he got wise and finally figured
out that he was on his own. After that the thrill of such argumentation abandoned
him as well along with the thoughts of angels.
No, Fritz was thinking of a different
context, a different way in which angels came into play also in his youth. As
one could have figured out indirectly since it was mentioned earlier that Fritz
had come of retirement age so one could also figure out that he had come of age
in the classic age of rock and roll and while there may have been a few guys
around who loved their rock better Fritz held his own when it came to the songs
that influenced his generation. So his series of dreams centered on his sitting
fixed like glue in a booth in Doc’s Drugstore circa 1960 listening to something
on Doc’s jack-up top end jukebox provided for the listening pleasure of the
Gloversville High students who made the trek across the street from the school
to listen and sip sodas and grab a snack. But here is the freaky part of the
dreams every song that would come on that fabulous jukebox had something to do
with angels-and no other songs would penetrate the airwaves. Fritz told Bart he
took this for a sign, a sign of what he did not know.
Those dreams when he awoke one morning
after having a particularly vivid one got him thinking that there were in fact
many angel-based songs back in the day. So he went onto YouTube typed in
“angel” and came up with a zillion angel songs. Not all were from his time but
enough were so that they brought back reminiscences of lost time.
Say a song like Earth Angel by the Penguins where the heavens, or heavenly angels
take a back seat to the earthly delights, a song like Johnny Angel where some frill was crying for some loving from her
Johnny boy who was out two-timing her, probably with her best friend, a song
like Angel Eyes which is
self-explanatory, or a song like Devil or
Angel where the composer of the song forgot his or her basic John Milton Paradise Lost when we all knew that
devils and devils’ kindred were all noting but fallen angels, those who took
the wrong side in the big ass civil war in the heavens before the gates of Eden
fell. Fritz said that he could have gone on but Bart who after all had been there
sitting in real time alongside him most afternoons at Doc’s and so knew what
Fritz was getting at could figure out the
rest for himself.
The one song Fritz couldn’t figure, one
that kept recurring in several dreams was the eternal playing of Mark Dinning’s
famous classic angel song, Teen Angel.
Then he finally figured out what that damn song kept reoccurring. This was the
one song that he and Seth Garth, yes, Seth Garth the well-known free-lance
music critic for such publications as Rock,
Folk Age and The Stone Today whom
they had gone to school with had fought a battle royal over. See Seth had back
then, back in 1960 when they were both just naïve and ignorant freshman,
had written a review of the song for
Mimi Murphy, the editor of the school newspaper, The Magnet where he extolled the young girl in the song whose rash
action would soon make her a teen angel as a model for the real girls of
Gloversville. Undying devotion to her boyfriend after she had run back her
boyfriend’s car which was stalled on the tracks and a railroad train was
heading that way. Apparently the boyfriend narrator of the song had pulled her
out when the car first got stuck and they were safe but somehow during the
confusion she had left his class ring, a big deal then signifying “going
steady,” signifying hands off and stuff like that, in the car. She ran back and
you know the rest, or can figure it out.
“Bullshit” said Fritz to Seth one
Friday night in front of Vinny’s Sub Shop where they all hung out when they had
no dough or no dates after he had read Seth’s article extolling this phantom
angel. The frill was a cluck, a stupe, and about seven dizzy other things
according to Fritz. Here is how the fight progressed at least from Fritz’s side
since Seth as was his wont then, and now, would not budge on his take on the
song. First of all Fritz said that the guy narrator’s car probably was some
“shit-box” and the bimbo should have had had better sense than to hang with a
guy who didn’t have a “boss” car, or had a car probably handed down from a
hard-pressed father that couldn’t even maneuver a railroad track without causing
mayhem. Next point, really the clincher, the guy probably had given that
cheapjack class ring to every girl whom he tried to get into the pants of before
teen angel’s time, used that token of teenage seriousness to get whatever he
could from any bimbo who would fall for his two-bit charm. Worse, worse of all
was that a freaking class ring was about one rung above giving a girl a cigar
band, or maybe a twisted paper clip. Anybody who would even think of buying an
overpriced nowhere class ring from Kay’s Jewelry which would tarnish about
three days after you got it was, well, from nowhere. The guys around Vinny’s
that night tended to line up with Fritz seeing the dizzy doll as just another
hapless fool for love-and good riddance.
The funny thing was that “controversy”
would come up periodically the rest of freshman year, usually on those
dough-less, date-less Friday nights until at some point all sides got tired of
the thing and moved on to critiquing some other song. Funnier still was that
fifty years later when Fritz Googled “teen angel” to look once more at the
lyrics he knew in his heart that he had been right and all the old bile came to
the surface. Maybe not world-historic right, but right. The frail was a cluck
then, and now. Funniest of all though was the recent interest that Fritz had
been taking old time folk ballads and religious hymns a number of them dangling
angels around their lyrics. One in particular was drawing his attention, Angel Band. As he was getting closer to
meeting his maker or whatever happened when he passed Fritz thought about one
phrase in the last verse of that hymn-“I hear the noise of wings.” He wondered
whether just before that end as the light faded he would hear that noise of
wings. And too whether he would get the “skinny” from “teen angel” about her take
on that rash move she made that fateful night.
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