In Commemoration Of The
50th Anniversary Of The Passing Of Legendary Soul Singer Otis
Redding (2017)
By Zack James (with
serious help from oldest brother Alex)
I have been this year,
the year of the 50th anniversary of the famous Summer Of Love,
centered mainly in and around San Francisco, probably the number one writer in
this space commemorating that event. Prodded unto perdition by my oldest
brother Alex who had actually taken part in many aspects of the Summer of Love,
1967 and a couple of years beyond before he settled down to his quiet and
lucrative law practice. Quickly the genesis of that prodding and the subsequent
over-the-top commemoration of that event was Alex’s business trip out to San
Francisco in the spring combined with his viewing of a special exhibition The Summer of Love Experience put on by
the de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park the scene of much of the activity
during that time. When Alex got back he gathered his old high school friends
together who had also gone out that year and they commissioned me to write,
edit and see to the publication of a small collective memoir book on their
experiences.
One of those high school
friends was the site administrator here, the soon to be retired Pete Markin,
who beyond contributing to the memoir went crazy to have his stable of writers,
including me, young and old, acquainted with that time or not, to go all out to
commemorate the event. That whirling dervish fury is the main reason that Pete lost
a vote of confidence initiated by the so-called “Young Turks” (although all of
us are thinking 50 something) and supported decisively by his old friend and colleague
old-timer Sam Lowell which has ushered in his retirement and replacement by
Greg Green from the on-line American Film
Gazette website. (The details of that internal fight will be addressed by
others in the future since I was not privy to most of what happened to give
Peter the boot. And also not privy to whether the whole affair was not some
purge like in the old radical days disguised as a retirement. If Peter goes to
the Gulag we will know which one it was) But enough of genesis.
One of the assignments
that Pete in his frenzy ordered up was a review by film critic Sandy Salmon of
a documentary by the famed filmmaker D. A. Pennebaker about the first Monterey
Pops Festival in June of that same Summer of Love year. That review centered on
the explosive appearance of Little Girl Blues Janis Joplin at the Festival.
That subsequently led to a review by younger writer Alden Riley ordered by
Peter over Sandy’s head when he found out that Alden did not know who Janis
Joplin was. All well and good as Ms. Joplin deserved plenty of attention for
her short burning star rise and fall too young. What got short shrift in all of
this worthy commemoration was the equally explosive entrance of king the
essence of soul Otis Redding on that same Monterey stage. Maybe it was that
Otis’ music did not fit in with the “acid” rock very much associated with that
Summer of Love stuff. Maybe it had something to do with a “white bread” lack of
appreciation for the emergence of soul. Maybe a Martin Luther King passive
resistance generational “post-racial” break from a serious understanding of the
continuing racial sores that mark this country’s landscape. Maybe it was combination.
Nevertheless not only
was Otis Redding worthy of a better representation on this site but in his
short, too short, appearance on the wider music stage he had an outsized
influence on the subsequent evolution of soulful music. His most famous song,
the lonesome hobo Sitting on the Dock of
the Bay an instant classic released shortly before his death in a plane
crash in the Midwest in late 1967 showed a glimmer of where he was going.
In this 50th
anniversary year for the song and Otis’ death the well-known NPR commentator Christopher
Lydon on his Open Source radio show
featured the life, work and influence of the great recording artist on one
program. Maybe a link here to that program makes up one tiny bit for the
previous neglect on this site.
Click here to link to
the Open Source program:
http://radioopensource.org/afterlife-otis-redding/
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