In The Twilight Of The Folk Minute-
Peter Seeger And Arlo Guthrie In Concert In The Late 1980s
By Johnny Blade
“Jesus, they charged me fourteen
dollars each for these tickets to see Pete Seeger and Arlo Guthrie. Remember
Laura about ten or fifteen years ago when we saw Pete for five bucks each at
the Café Nana over in Harvard Square (and the price of an expresso coffee for
two people and maybe a shared piece of carrot cake since they had been on a
date, a cheap date when he didn’t have much cash and at a time when the guy was
expected to pay, no “dutch treat,” no Laura dutch treat expected anyway
especially on a heavy date, and that one had been when he was intrigued by her
early on) and around that same time, that same Spring of 1973, Arlo gave a free
concert out on Concord Common,” said Sam Lowell to his date Laura Peters and
the couple they were standing in line with, Patrick Darling and Julia James, in
front of Symphony Hall in Boston waiting for the doors to open for the concert
that evening. This would be the first time Pete and Arlo had appeared together
since Newport a number of years back and the first time this foresome had
seen either of them in a good number of years since Pete had gone to upstate
New York and had been spending more time making the rivers and forests up there
green again than performing and Arlo was nursing something out in Stockbridge.
“Maybe, Alice,” Patrick said and everybody laughed at that inside joke.
Sam continued along that line of his
about “the back in the days” for a while, with the three who were also
something of folk aficionados well after the heyday of that music in what Sam
called the “1960s folk minute” nodding their heads in agreement saying “things
sure were cheaper then and people, folkies for sure, did their gigs for the
love of it as much as for the money, maybe more so. Did it, what did Dave Van
Ronk call it then, oh yeah, for the “basket,” for from hunger walking around
money to keep the wolves from the doors. For a room to play out whatever saga
drove them to places like the Village, Harvard Square, North Beach and their
itch to make a niche in the booming folk world where everything seemed possible
and if you had any kind of voice to the left of Dylan’s and Van Ronk’s, could
play three chords on a guitar (or a la Pete work a banjo, a mando, or some
other stringed instrument), and write of love, sorrow, some dastardly death
deed, or on some pressing issue of the day.”
After being silent for a moment Sam got
a smile on his face and said “On that three chord playing thing I remember
Geoff Muldaur from the Kweskin Jug Band, a guy who knew the American folk
songbook as well as anybody then, worked at learning it too, as did Kweskin,
learned even that Harry Smith anthology stuff which meant you had to be
serious, saying that if you could play three chords you were sure to draw a
crowd, a girl crowd around you, if you knew four or five that meant you
were a serious folkie and you could even get a date from among that crowd, and
if you knew ten or twelve you could have whatever you wanted. I don’t know if
that is true since I never got beyond the three chord thing but no question
that was a way to attract women, especially at parties.” Laura, never one to
leave something unsaid when Sam left her an opening said in reply “I didn’t
even have to play three chords on a guitar, couldn’t then and I can’t now,
although as Sam knows I play a mean kazoo, but all I had to do was start
singing some Joan Baez or Judie Collins cover and with my long black hair
ironing board straight like Joan’s I had all the boy come around and I will
leave it to your imaginations about the whatever I wanted part.” They all
laughed although Sam’s face reddened a bit at the thought of her crowded with
guys although he had not known her back then but only later in the early
1970s.
Those reference got Julia thinking back
the early 1960s when she and Sam went “dutch treat” to see Dave Van Ronk at the
Club Blue. (Sam and Julia were thus by definition not on a heavy date, neither
had been intrigued by the other but folk music was their bond and despite
persistent Julia BU dorm roommate rumors what with Sam hanging around all the
time had never been lovers). She mentioned that to Sam as they waited to see if
he remembered and while he thought he remembered he was not sure. He 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.
Club Blue had been located in that same
Harvard Square that Sam had mentioned earlier and along with the Café Nana,
which was something of a hot spot once Dylan, Baez, Tom Rush and the members of
the Kweskin band started hanging out there, and about five or six other
coffeehouses all within a few blocks of each other (one down on Arrow Street
was down in the sub-basement and Sam swore that Dylan must have written Subterranean
Homesick Blues there). Coffeehouses then where you could, for a dollar or
two, see Bob, Joan, Eric (Von Schmidt), Tom (Rush), Phil (Ochs) and lots of
lean and hungry performers working for that “basket” Sam had mentioned earlier
passed among the patrons and be glad, at least according to Van Ronk when she
had asked him about the “take” during one intermission, to get twenty bucks for
your efforts that night.
That was the night during that same
intermission Dave also told her that while the folk breeze was driving things
his way just then and people were hungry to hear anything that was not what he
called “bubble gum” music like you heard on AM radio that had not been the case
when he started out in the Village in the 1950s when he worked “sweeping out”
clubs for a couple of dollars. That sweeping out was not with a broom, no way,
Dave had said with that sardonic wit of his that such work was beneath the
“dignity” of a professional musician but the way folk singers were used to
empty the house between shows. In the “beat”1950s with Kerouac, Cassady, Ginsberg,
and their comrades (Dave’s word reflecting his left-wing attachments) making
everybody crazy for poetry, big be-bop poetry backed up by big be-bop jazz the
coffeehouses played to that clientele and on weekends or in the summer people
would be waiting in fairly long lines to get in. So what Dave (and Happy Traum
and a couple of other singers that she could not remember) did was after the
readings were done and people were still lingering over their expressos he
would get up on the makeshift stage and begin singing some old sea chanty or
some slavery day freedom song in that raspy, gravelly voice of his which would
sent the customers out the door. And if they didn’t go then he was out the
door. Tough times, tough times indeed.
Coffeehouses too where for the price of
a cup of coffee, maybe a pastry, shared, you could wallow in the fluff of the
folk minute that swept America, maybe the world, and hear the music that was
the leading edge then toward that new breeze that everybody that Julie and Sam
knew was bound to come what with all the things going on in the world. Black
civil rights, mainly down in the police state South, nuclear disarmament, the
Pill to open up sexual possibilities previously too dangerous or forbidden, and
music too, not just the folk music that she had been addicted to but something
coming from England paying tribute to old-time blues with a rock upbeat that
was now a standard part of the folk scene ever since they “discovered” blues
guys like Mississippi John Hurt, Son House, Bukka White, and Skip James. All
the mix to turn the world upside down. All of which as well was grist to the
mill for the budding folk troubadours to write songs about.
Julie made her companions laugh as they
stood there starting to get a little impatient since the doors to the concert
hall were supposed to open at seven and here it was almost seven fifteen (Sam
had fumed, as he always did when he had to wait for anything, a relic of his
Army days during the Vietnam War when everything had been “hurry up and wait”).
She had mentioned that back then, back in those college days when guys like Sam
did not have a lot of money, if worse came to worse and you had no money like
happened one time with a guy, a budding folkie poet, Jack Dawson, she had a date
with you could always go to the Hayes-Bickford in the Square (the other H-Bs in
other locations around Boston were strictly “no-go” places where people
actually just went to eat the steamed to death food and drink the weak-kneed
coffee). As long as you were not rowdy like the whiskey drunks rambling on and
on asking for cigarettes and getting testy if you did not have one for the
simple reason that you did not smoke (almost everybody did then including Sam
although usually not with her and definitely not in the dorm), winos who
smelled like piss and vomit and not having bathed in a while, panhandlers
(looking you dead in the eye defying you to not give them something, money or a
cigarette but something) and hoboes (the quiet ones of that crowd who
somebody had told her were royalty in the misfit, outcast world and thus would
not ask for dough or smokes) who drifted through there you could watch the
scene for free. On any given night, maybe around midnight, on weekends later
when the bars closed later you could hear some next best thing guy in full
flannel shirt, denim jeans, maybe some kind of vest for protection against the
cold but with a hungry look on his face or a gal with the de riguer
long-ironed hair, some peasant blouse belying her leafy suburban roots, some
boots or sandals depending on the weathers singing low some tune they wrote or
reciting to their own vocal beat some poem. As Julie finished her thought some
guy who looked like an usher in some foreign castle opened the concert hall
doors and the four aficionados scampered in to find their seats.
…As they walked down the step of
Symphony Hall having watched Pete work his banjo magic, work the string of his
own Woody-inspired songs like Golden Thread and of covers from the big sky
American songbook and Arlo wowed with his City of New Orleans and some
of his father’s stuff (no Alice’s Restaurant that night he was saving
that for Thanksgiving he said) Sam told his companions, “that fourteen dollars
each for tickets was a steal for such performances, especially in that
acoustically fantastic hall” and told his three friends that he would stand for
coffees at the Blue Parrot over in Harvard Square if they liked. “And maybe
share some pastry too.”
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