******The Young Women With Long-Ironed Hair- With Joan Baez, Mimi Farina, And Judy Collins In Mind
The Young Women With Long-Ironed Hair- With Joan Baez, Mimi Farina, And Judy Collins In Mind
Laura
Perkins was talking to her daughter, Emily Andrews one afternoon in April when
she went to visit her and the grandkids up in Londonderry that is in New Hampshire,
after returning from Florida, down Naples way. Laura had spent the winter
there, a pilgrimage she had been doing the past five years or so since she, New
England born and bred had tired, wearily tired of the winters provided by that
section of the country and joined the “snow bird” trek south. Been doing more
of the winter since she retired as a computer whizz free-lance consultant a
couple of years ago. Emily the first born girl from the first of her three
marriages who now had a couple of kids of her own although she has retained as
is the “new style,” post-‘60s new style anyway, of women retaining their maiden
name, or went hyphenated, kept Andrews in the bargain although Laura had
given that name up minute one after the divorce which was messy and still a
source of hatred when Emily’s father’s name is mentioned and thereafter kept
her maiden name through the subsequent two marriages and divorces. During the
conversation Laura commented to Emily, having not seen her for a while, on how
long and straight she was keeping her hair these days which reminded her of the
old days back in the romantic early 1960s when she used to hang around the
Village in New York at the coffeehouses and folk clubs listening to lots of
women folksingers like Carolyn Hester, Jean Redpath, Thelma Gordon, Joan Baez,
Sissy Dubois and a bunch of others whose names she could just then not remember
but whose hair was done in the same style including her own hair then.
Laura
looked wistfully away just then touching her own now much shortened hair and
colored a gentle brown with highlights, how much and for how long only her
hairdresser knew and she, the well-tipped hair-dresser, was sworn to a secret Omerta
oath even the CIA and Mafia could admire in the interest of not giving into age
too much, especially once the computer whizz kids started showing up younger
and younger either looking for work or as competitors. Meanwhile Emily
explained how she came to let her hair grow longer and straighter (and her own
efforts to keep it straighter) against all good reason what with two kids, a
part-time accounting job and six thousand other young motherhood things
demanded of her that would dictate that one needed a hair-do that one could
just run a comb through, run through quickly.
“Ma,
you know how when you get all misty-eyed for your lost youth as you call it you
are always talking about the old folk days, about the days in the Village and
later in Harvard Square after you moved up here to go to graduate school at BU,
minus Dad’s part in that time which I know you don’t like to talk about for
obvious reasons. You also know, and we damn made it plain enough although you
two never took it seriously, back when we were kids all of us, Melinda and
Peter too, hated the very sound of folk music, stuff that sounded like
something out of the Middle Ages and would run to our rooms when you guys
played the stuff in you constant nostalgia moments. [That Middle Ages heritage,
some of it, at least the rudiments, actually was on the mark if you look at the
genesis of say half of the Child ballads which a folk enthusiast by that name
in the 1850s over on Brattle Street in Cambridge collected, a number of ballads
which ironically got picked up by the likes of Joan Baez in the late 1950s and played
at the coffeehouses like the Club 47 and Café Nana just down from that Brahmin
haven street. Or if you look to the more modern musicologists like the Seegers
and Lomaxes who went down South, down Appalachia way, looking for roots music
you will find some forbears brought over from the old country, the British
Isles, that can be traced back to those times without doing injury to the
truth.]
“Well
one day I was in Whole Foods and I hear this song over their PA system or
whatever they call it, you know those CDs they play to get you through the
hard-ass shopping you need to do to keep the renegade kids from starvation’s
door. The song seemed slightly familiar, folkie familiar, so I asked at the
customer service desk who was singing the song and its name which I couldn’t
quite remember. Of course the young clerk knew from nothing but a grey-haired
guy, an old Cambridge radical type, a professor-type now that I think about what
he looked like probably teaching English Lit, a guy you see in droves when you
are in Harvard Square these days doddering along looking down at the ground
like they have been doing for fifty years, standing in the same line as me,
probably to return something that he bought by mistake and his wife probably
ran his ass ragged until he returned the damn thing and got what she wanted, said
it was Judy Collins doing Both Sides Now.
That
information from the professor, and that tune stuck in my head, got me thinking
about checking out the song on YouTube which I did after I got home, unpacked
the groceries, unpacked the kids and gave them their lunches. The version I
caught was one of her on a Pete Seeger’s Rainbow Quest series from the 1960s
in black and white that was on television back then which I am sure you and Dad
knew about and she had this great looking long straight hair. I was envious.
Then I kind of got the bug, wanted to check out some other folkie women whose
names I know by heart, thank you, and noticed that Joan Baez in one clip taken
at the Newport Folk Festival along with Bob Dylan singing With God On Our
Side, God-awful if you remember me saying that every time you put it on the
record-player, had even longer and straighter hair than Judy Collins.
“There
she was all young, beautiful and dark-skinned Spanish exotic, something out of
a Cervantes dream with that great hair. So I let mine grow and unlike what I
heard Joan Baez, and about six zillion other young women did, including I think
you, to keep it straight using an iron I went to Delores over at Flip Cuts in
the mall and she does this thing to it every couple of months. And no I don’t
want you to give me your folk albums, as valuable as they are, and as likely as
I am to get them as family heirlooms when as you say you pass to the great
beyond, please, to complete the picture because the stuff still sounds like it
was from the Middle Ages although Dylan sounded better then than I remember, better
than that croaking voice he has now that I heard you play one time on your car
radio when we were heading up to Maine with you to go to Kittery to get the
kids some back to school clothes.”
Laura
laughed a little at that remark as Emily went out the door to do some
inevitable pressing shopping. After dutifully playing with Nick and Nana for a
couple of hours while Emily went to get some chores done at the mall sans the
kids who really are a drag on those kinds of tasks and after having stayed for
supper when Sean got home from work she headed to her own home down in
Cambridge (a condo really shared with her partner, Sam Lowell, whom she knew in
college, lost track of and then reunited with after many years and three
husbands at a college class reunion).
When
she got home Sam, making her chuckle about what Emily said about that guy in
the line at Whole Foods looked like and tarring Sam with that same brush, working
on some paper of his, something about once again saving the world from the
endless wars of the American government (other governments too but since as he
said, quoting “Che” Guevara, always Che, about living in the heart of the beast
the American government), the climate, nuclear disarmament, social inequality at
home and in the world, or the plight of forgotten political prisoners, which
was his holy mantra these days now that he was semi-retired from his law
practice was waiting, waiting to hear the latest Nick and Nana stories instead
she told him Emily’s story. Then they started talking about those old days in
the 1960s when both she and he (he in Harvard Square having grown up in Carver
about thirty miles south of Boston and her in the hotbed Village growing up in
Manhattan and later at NYU where they went to school as undergraduates) imbibed
in that now historic folk minute which promised, along with a few other things,
to change the world a bit.
Laura,
as Sam was talking, walked to a closet and brought out a black and white
photograph from some folk festival in 1963 which featured Joan Baez, whom the
clueless media always looking for a single hook to hang an idea on dubbed her
the “queen of folk (and Dylan the king),” her sister Mimi Farina, who had
married Richard Farina, the folk-singer/song-writer most poignantly Birmingham Sunday later killed in a motorcycle
crash and Judy Collins on stage at the same time. All three competing with each
other for the long straight hair championship. Here’s part of what was said about
the picture that night, here’s how Laura put it:
“Funny
how trends get started, how one person, or a few start something and it seems
like the whole world follows, or the part of the world that hears about the new
dispensation anyway, the part you want to connect with. Remember Sam how we all
called folk the “new dispensation” for our generation which had begun back in
the late 1950s, early 1960s, slightly before our times when we caught up with
it in college in 1964. So maybe it started in reaction to the trend when older
guys started to lock-step in gray flannel suits. That funny Mad Men, retro-cool today look, which is
okay if you pay attention to who was watching the show. In the days before Jack
and Bobby Kennedy put the whammy on that fashion and broke many a haberdasher’s
heart topped off by not wearing a soft felt hat like Uncle Ike and the older
guys.”
“Funny
too it would be deep into the 1960s before open-necks and colors other than
white for shirts could be worked in but by then a lot of us were strictly
denims and flannel shirts or some such non-suit or dress combination. Remember
even earlier when the hula-hoop fad went crazy when one kid goofing off threw a
hard plastic circle thing around his or her waist and every kid from Portland,
Maine to Portland, Oregon had to have one, to be tossed aside in some dank
corner of the garage after a few weeks when everybody got into yo-yos or Davey
Crockett coonskin caps. Or maybe, and this might be closer to the herd instinct
truth, it was after Elvis exploded onto the scene and every guy from twelve to
two hundred in the world had to, whether they looked right with it or not, wear
their sideburns just a little longer, even if they were kind of wispy and girls
laughed at you for trying to out-king the “king” who they were waiting for not
you. I know I did with Jasper James King who tried like hell to imitate Elvis
and I just stepped on his toes all dance when he asked me to dance with him on It’s
Alright, Mama.”
“But
maybe it was, and this is a truth which we can testify to when some girls,
probably college girls like me, now called young women but then still girls no
matter how old except mothers or grandmothers, having seen Joan Baez on the
cover of Time (or perhaps her sister Mimi on some Mimi and Richard
Farina folk album cover)got out the ironing board at home or in her dorm and
tried to iron their own hair whatever condition it was in, curly, twisty, or
flippy like mine, whatever don’t hold me to all the different hairstyles
to long and straight strands. Surely as strong as the folk minute was just then
say 1962, 63, 64, they did not see the photo of Joan on some grainy Arise
and Sing folk magazine cover, the folk scene was too young and small back
in the early days to cause such a sea-change.”
Sam
piped up and after giving the photograph a closer look said, “Looking at that
photograph you just pulled out of the closet now, culled I think from a
calendar put out by the New England Folk Archive Society, made me think back to
the time when I believe that I would not go out with a girl (young woman, okay)
if she did not have the appropriate “hair,” in other words no bee-hive or flip
thing that was the high school rage among the not folk set, actually the rage
among the social butterfly, cheerleader, motorcycle mama cliques. Which may now
explain why I had so few dates in high school and none from Carver High. But no
question you could almost smell the singed hair at times, and every guy I knew
liked the style, liked the style if they liked Joan Baez, maybe had some dreamy
sexual desire thing about hopping in the hay, and that was that.”
“My
old friend Bart Webber, a guy I met out in San Francisco when I went out
West with my old friend Josh Breslin in
our hitchhike days with whom if you remember I re-connected with via the
“magic” of the Internet a few years ago, told me a funny story when we met at
the Sunnyville Grille in Boston one time about our friend Julie Peters who
shared our love of folk music back then (and later too as we joined a few
others in the folk aficionado world after the heyday of the folk minute got
lost in the storm of the British Beatles/Stones invasion).”
“He
had first met her in Harvard Square one night at the Café Blanc when the place
had their weekly folk night (before every night was folk night when Eric Von
Schmidt put the place on the map by writing Joshua Gone Barbados which
he sang and which Tom Rush went big with) and they had a coffee together. That
night she had her hair kind of, oh he didn’t know what they called it but he
thought something like beehive or flip or something which highlighted and
enhanced her long face. Bart thought she looked fine. Bart, like myself, was
not then hip to the long straight hair thing and so he kind of let it pass
without any comment.”
“Then
one night a few weeks later after they had had a couple of dates she startled
him when he picked her up at her dorm at Boston University to go over the Club
Blue in the Square to see Dave Van Ronk hold forth in his folk historian
gravelly-voiced way. She met him at the door with the mandatory straight hair
although it was not much longer than when he first met her which he said
frankly made her face even longer. When Bart asked her why the change Julie
declared that she could not possibly go to Harvard Square looking like somebody
from some suburban high school not after seeing her idol Joan Baez (and later
Judy Collins too) with that great long hair which seemed very exotic, very Spanish.”
“Of
course he compounded his troubles by making the serious mistake of asking if
she had her hair done at the beauty parlor or something and she looked at him
with burning hate eyes since no self-respecting folkie college girl would go to
such a place where her mother would go. So she joined the crowd, Bart got used
to it and after a while she did begin to look like a folkie girl, and started
wearing the inevitable peasant blouses instead of those cashmere sweaters or
starched Catholic school shirt things she used to wear.”
“By
the way Laura let’s be clear on that Julie thing with Bart back in the early
1960s since his Emma goes crazy every time anybody, me, you, Bart, Frankie
Riley, Jack Callahan mentions any girl that Bart might have even looked at in
those days. Yeah, even after almost forty years of marriage so keep this
between us. She and Bart went “Dutch treat” to see Dave Van Ronk at the Club
Blue. They were thus by definition not on a heavy date, neither had been
intrigued by the other enough to be more than very good friends after the first
few dates but folk music was their bond. Just friends despite persistent Julie
BU dorm roommate rumors what with Bart hanging around all the time listening to
her albums on the record player they had never been lovers.
“Many
years later she mentioned that Club Blue night to me since I had gone with them
with my date, Joyell Danforth, as we waited to see Pete Seeger and Arlo Guthrie
with us to see if I remembered Van Ronk’s performance and while I thought I
remembered I was not sure.
I
asked Julie, “Was that the night he played that haunting version of Fair and
Tender Ladies with Eric Von Schmidt backing him up on the banjo?” Julie had
replied yes and that she too had never forgotten that song and how the house
which usually had a certain amount of chatter going on even when someone was
performing had been dead silent once he started singing.”
As
for the long-ironed haired women in the photograph their work in that folk
minute and later speaks for itself. Joan Baez worked the Bob Dylan anointed
“king and queen” of the folkies routine for a while for the time the folk
minute lasted. Mimi (now passed on) teamed up with her husband, Richard Farina,
who as mentioned before was tragically killed in a motorcycle crash in the mid-1960s, to write and
sing some of the most haunting ballads of those new folk times (think Pack Up Your Sorrows). Julie Collins, now coiffured like that mother Julie was beauty
parlor running away from and that is okay, still produces beautiful sounds on
her concert tours. But everyone should remember, every woman from that time
anyway, should remember that burnt hair, and other sorrows, and know exactly
who to blame. Yeah, we have the photo as
proof.
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