The Roots Is The Toots: The Music That Got The Generation Of
’68 Through The 1950s Red Scare Cold War Night-The “Last Waltz”- The Never-Ending Classic Rock Review Tour
From The Archives Of Allan Jackson
[The attentive reader of this series
may know already that there was an agreement negotiated by his (and my) old
high school friend from their growing up days in the working class Acre section
of North Adamsville Sam Lowell and the current site manager Greg Green about
publicly acknowledging Allan Jackson, the previous site manager, as the driving
force behind this classic days of rock and roll at the creation in the
mid-1950s series. The “compromise” (thus far) is that Allan is now amorphously
acknowledged to have had the works in his archives without specifying that the
whole collection was of his inspiration and perspiration. What even the most
attentive reader cannot know is that Sam has been in further negotiations with
Greg about giving Allan full public credit with a by-line and including updated
introductions by him.
The hook? Here is where politics in
the Machiavellian raw, left-wing or not comes into play. Greg owes Sam a
“favor.” Essentially Greg owes his job to Sam’s decisive vote in the fall of
2017 when there was a fierce internal struggle at this publication over its
future direction and Sam sided with the younger writers to what everybody
agrees was a purge of the Jackson leadership after many years of hard copy and
on-line publication. To show what kind of guys we are dealing with (who I have
been dealing with for fifty years so am not surprised at anything these two do)
when Allan found out that Greg had initially rebooted the series using another
old friend of ours Frank Jackman as a “front” he went crazy with rage. But also
contacted Sam on the sly to get attribution for him on the series.
You have to know that these two had
cut their teeth in politics back in their radical past 1960s when nobody
thought anything of backstabbing one day and then going out for a long round of
drinks the next to understand that even though Sam lost him his job, threw him
to the exile woods by-gones were by-gones. Amazing. The hook on Greg’s side was
that Sam now knew that Greg had been instrumental in “doing Allan in” in the
publishing business after he went into exile. He had put the mark of Cain, had
put the kiss of death on Allan telling all who inquired about Allan’s
employability that he was “hard to work with.” That would explain as Sam and I
found out after we discovered where Allan was hiding out up in old haunt Bar
Harbor, Maine the source of a million wild rumors about his fate which will be
discussed further below and in a couple more introductions since we, Sam, Allan
and I, want the reader to read the sketch more than try to fathom the byzantine
politics of the publishing business. In any case Sam and Greg are still
negotiating about where Allan will ultimately land in this space.
One of the most persistent rumors after Allan
went “underground” (he, they, we are still addicted to the expressions and
attitudes of those by-gone 60’s) was that he was in America Siberia out in Utah
sucking up to the Mormons in order to get a by-line, to get work and later
after U.S. Senator Orrin Hatch announced his retirement and Mitt Romney
declared his candidacy that he attempted to get on the campaign as a press
secretary or speechwriter. Sam, Phil, Josh, all the older writer here and some
others who don’t but have known Allan for a long time dismissed the whole
scheme out of hand especially knowing how he had skewered Mitt as a chameleon,
a charlatan who would sell his soul if he had one to the highest bidder to get
whatever political office he was looking for in 2008 and 2012 when he ran for
the roses. Strangely that rumor proved to be the truest one of all although as
usual not exactly as the rumor mill had it. Once Greg put the kiss of death on
Allan with that “hard to work with” mantra he was frozen out of the East Coast
media hub. Having spent time in California in his younger days he headed out
there but also faced a stone wall trying to get a job, any job. Here is where
the personal and the political sometimes come into conflict. Allan, despite his
age and longtime in the business had over the years accumulated three ex-wives
and a parcel of kids, mostly nice and bright and college bound. He is still
paying alimony and costs of tuition so he needed, needs money. Hence his bright
idea that he would go to out of the way Utah and try to hustle some work.
The basis of that idea that he could
get some work from the hard shell Mormons came from a couple of articles he had
done during one of the Romney runs for President concerning the ritual of their
wearing white underwear and a secret admiration for either Romney’s grandfather
or great-grandfather who had five wives at one time and survived tell the tale
in the days when the Mormons were seriously polygamous. He did write am OpEd
piece for the Salt Lake Star which
got printed and some good comments on the sly from a couple of Romney’s aides
who thought the polygamy article was “cute.” Of course none of that went
anywhere since the secret of Mormonism, of Romney, is that you keep it in the
family, hire Mormons. Allan would never have survived a vetting in any case
either about his radical past or some other articles about old Mitt which put had
put him on the skewer and lit the fire. More later but read this sketch now.
Jack Callahan]
************
Sam
Lowell had several years before, maybe in about the middle of 2010, done an
extensive survey of a commercially-produced Oldies But
Goodies series (this series had fifteen separate CDs,
more about its mass in a minute, in twenty to thirty song compilations and had
torn his ear off from the endless listening. He had begged for a little gangsta
hip-hop to soothe his ravaged soul although he was strictly a white-bread blues
guy around that kind of music, around black-burst out roots is the toots music)
and he had selected one song in each CD to highlight the music. He sought to
highlight in particular the music that he and his corner boys, Frankie Riley
the acknowledged leader, Pete Markin (also known as the “Scribe” for his
endless “publicity” for the group, especially the fountain of wisdom put forth
by one Frankie Riley, who later when the drug craze hit full blossom in the
late 1960s went over the edge down in Mexico trying to rip off a couple of
bricks of cocaine from the hard boys and Pete got two slugs and a face down in
a dusty Sonora back alley for his efforts), Jimmy Jenkins, Rats McGee, Johnny
Callahan, and other guys like Luke the Juke, Stubby Kincaid, and Hawk Healey
who walked in and out of the group at various high school points, had grown up with.
Better, had come of age with the music in Adamsville, that is in Massachusetts
(Sam had been born in Clintondale a few towns over before moving to Adamsville,
a similar town, in junior high school and taken under Frankie Riley’s corner
boy wing but had decidedly not been corner boy in that town for the simple
reason that there were, unlike in Adamsville at Doc’s Drugstore and later
Benny’s bowling alleys, no stand-out corner to be a corner boy in, for good or
evil). Yeah, the music of the great jail-break rock and roll 1950s and early
1960s when Sam and the guys came of age had driven his memory bank at that
time, some of that material had been placed in a blog, Rock and Roll Will Never Die, dedicated to classic rock and roll
music (the classic period now being deemed to have been between about the
mid-1950s to the mid-1960s although Sam flinched every time he heard some young
guy, some guy who might be an aficionado but was nevertheless not splashed by
that tide, called his time the “classic age,” yeah, that rubbed him raw).
Sam had
received some comments at the time, mostly from his generational brethren
inquiring about this or that song, asking about where they could get a copy of
the song they were seeking and he would inform them of the monstrous beauties
of YouTube if you could stand the damn commercials that notoriously plague that
site to get to your selection, especially Elvis and Jerry Lee stuff. Asked
about whether he knew where a 45 RPM vinyl copy could be had, had at any price,
a tougher task and asked about the fate that had befallen various one hit
johnnies and janies whose single song had been played unto death at the local
hang-out jukebox or on the family record player thus driving some besotted
mother to the edge. Many though, with almost the same “religious” intensity
that Sam brought to his efforts, wanted to vividly describe how this or that
song had impacted their lives. Sam had presumed then, presumed a passing fancy
but a few apparently had been in a time warp and should have sought some
medical attention (although Sam was too much the gentleman to openly make that
suggestion). A lot of times though it came down purely to letting Sam know what song did they first dance to, a
surprising number listing Bill Haley’s Rock
Around The Clock and Danny and the
Juniors At The Hop as the choice,
surprising since that would have meant a very early introduction not only to
rock and roll but to the social etiquettes of dancing with the opposite sex, to
speak nothing of the sweaty palms, broken nerves and two left feet which
blocked the way, which Sam had not done until he was a freshman in high school.
Or what song in what situation had they gotten, or given, their first kiss and
to whom, not surprisingly in the golden age of the automobile generation that
frequently took place in the back seat of some borrowed car (a few
over-the-edgers had gone into more graphic detail than necessary for adults to
go into about what happened after that kiss in that backseat). Yeah, got in the
back seat of some Chevy to go down to the local lovers’ lane (some very unusual
places, the lovers’ lanes not the backseats which were one size fits all) Or
had their first fight and make-up to, stuff like that.
As the
shelf-life these days for all things Internet is short Sam thought no more
about that series, the article or the comments until recently when a young guy
(he had presumed a young guy since most devotees of classic rock fall into that
demographic, although his moniker of Doo-Wop Dee could have signaled a young woman)
who had Googled the words “rock and roll will never die” and had come upon the
blog and the article. He sent an e-mail which challenged Sam to tell a candid
world (Sam’s expression not Doo-Wop Dee’s who probably would not have known the
genesis of that word) why the age of the Stones, Beatles, Animals, Yardbirds,
etc., the 1960s age of the big bad guitars, heavy metal, and big backbeat did
not do more for classic rock than Elvis (Presley), Chuck (Berry), Roy
(Orbison), Bo (Diddley), Buddy (Holly), Jerry Lee (Lewis) and the like did all
put together.
Well Sam
is a mild-mannered guy usually, has mellowed out some since his rock and roll
corner boy slam bang jail-break days, his later “on the road” searching for the
great blue-pink great American West night hippie days and his later fighting
against his demon addictions days (drugs, con artist larceny, cigarettes,
whiskey, hell, even sex, no forget that, drop that from the addiction list) and
he had decided, not without an inner murmur, to let the comment pass, to move
on to new things, to start work on an appreciation of electric blues in his
young life. Then one night late one night he and his lady friend, Melinda (and
the reason to forget about that sex addiction stuff above), were watching an
old re-run on AMC (the old-time movies channel, featuring mostly black and
white films also a relic from his youth and his high school time at the
retro-Strand Theater that existed solely to present two such beauties every
Saturday afternoon, with or without popcorn) and saw as the film started one
ghost from the past Jerry Lee Lewis sitting (hell maybe he had been standing,
twirling whirling whatever other energy thing he could do back then to add to
the fury of his act) on the back of a flat-bed truck, piano at the ready, doing
the title song of the movie, High School
Confidential, and then and there Sam had decided that he needed to put old
Doo-Wop right. The rest of the movie, by the way, a classic 1950s cautionary
tale about the pitfalls of dope, you know marijuana automatically leading to
heroin, complete with some poor hooked girl strung out by her fiendish
dealer/lover, and of leading an unchaste life, you know that sex addiction
stuff that Sam had not been addicted to along his life’s way, as a result was actually
eminently forgettable but thanks Jerry Lee for the two minute bailout blast.
Here is what Sam had to say to his errant young friend and a candid world:
First off the term “last waltz” used
in the headline is used here as a simple expression of the truth. But that
expression will also give Doo Wop and anybody else who asks an idea of the huge
amount of material from the classic rock period, like I said in my blog sketch
from the mid-50s to the mid-60s, which was good enough, had rung our running
home after school to check out the latest dance moves and the cute guys and
girls American Bandstand hearts
enough, to make the cut. (And that really was true, out of over four hundred
songs at least one hundred, a very high percentage, could have had a shot at
the one hundred best popular songs of all times lists. When I had started that Oldies But Goodies series a few years
ago in a fit of nostalgia related to reconnecting with guys like Frankie Riley,
Johnny Callahan and Frank Jackman from the old hometown I had assumed that I
had completed the series at Volume Ten. I then found out that this was a fifteen,
fifteen count ‘em, volume series. I flipped out.
Thereafter I whipped off those last
five CDs in one day, including individual reviews of each CD and a summing up
for another blog, and was done with it. Working frantically all the while under
this basic idea; how much can we rekindle, endlessly rekindle, memories from a
relatively short, if important, part of our lives, even for those who lived and
died by the songs (or some of the songs) in those compilations. How many times
could one read about wallflowers, sighs, certain shes (or hes), the moonlight
of high school dances (if there was any) and hanging around to the bitter end
for that last dance of the night to prove... what. Bastante! Enough! Until
Doo-Wop decided that my coming of age era paled, paled if you can believe this,
in comparison to Johnny-come-lately rockers like Mick and Keith, John and Paul,
Jerry, Neil, Roger and the like.
No, a thousand times no, as right
this minute I am watching a YouTube film clip of early Elvis performing Good Rockin’ Tonight at what looks like
some state fairgrounds down south and the girls are going crazy tearing their
hair out and crying like crazy because the new breeze they had been waiting for
in the death-dry red scare Cold War 1950s night just came through and not soon
enough. If Doo-Wop had paid attention to anything that someone like Mick Jagger
said all the over whelming influence, the foundation for their efforts it might
have held his tongue, or been a bit more circumspect. Guys like Mick, and they
were mainly guys just like their 1950s forebears know that much. Yeah, it was
mainly guys since I admit the only serious female rocker that I recall was Wanda
Jackson whereas Doo-Wop’s time frame had Bonnie Raitt, Linda Ronstadt, Grace
Slick, Janis Joplin, just to name a few. If he had argued on the basis of
female rockers I would have no argument that the 1960s was a golden age for
female rockers but his specified only the generic term “rockers.”
Like I said part of what got me
going on the re-tread trail had been that nostalgia thing with my old corner
boys and all our nights dropping dimes and quarters in Doc’s or Benny’s
jukeboxes, listening on our transistors until our ears turned to cauliflower,
and swaying at too many last change dance to mention but I also had been doing
a series of commentaries elsewhere at the time on another site on my coming of
political age in the early 1960s. You know the age of our own Jack Kennedy, the
age of the short-lived Camelot when our dreams seemingly were actually within
our grasp, and of the time we began realizing the need for serious struggles
against all kinds of wars, and all kinds of discriminations, including getting
a fair shake for the working people, those who labor, the people who populated
our old time neighborhoods, our parents for chrissakes, in this benighted
world. But here when I am writing about musical influences I am just speaking
of my coming of age, period, which was not necessarily the same thing as the
former.
No question that those of us who
came of age in the 1950s were truly children of rock and roll. We were there,
whether we appreciated it or not at the time, when the first, sputtering,
musical moves away from ballady Broadway show tunes from Oklahoma, South Pacific and the like and rhymey Tin Pan Alley
pieces hit the transistor radio airwaves. (If you do not know what a transistor
radio is then ask your parents or, ouch, grandparents, please. Or look it up on
Wikipedia if you are too embarrassed to not know ancient history things. Join
the bus.) And, most importantly, we were there when the music moved away from
any and all staid arm in arm music that one’s parents might have approved of,
or maybe, even liked, or, hopefully, at least left you alone to play in peace
up in your room when rock and roll hit post- World War II America teenagers
like, well, like an atomic bomb.
Not all of the material put forth
was good, nor was all of it destined to be playable fifty or sixty years later
on some “greatest hits” compilation but some of songs had enough chordal
energy, lyrical sense, and sheer danceability to make any Jack or Jill jump
then, or now. Think Elvis almost any place where there were more than five
girls, hell more than one girl, or Jerry Lee and that silly film high school
cautionary film that got this whole comment started where he stole the show at
the beginning from that flatbed throne or Bill Haley just singing Rock Around The Clock in front of the
film Blackboard Jungle. Here is the
good part, especially for painfully shy guys like me, or those who, like me as well,
had two left feet on the dance floor. You didn’t need to dance toe to toe,
close to close, with that certain she (or he for shes). Just be alive…uh, hip
to the music. Otherwise you might become the dreaded wallflower. But that wallflower
fear, the fear of fears that haunted many a teenage dream then, that left many
a sad sack teenage boy, girls can speak for themselves, waking up in the middle
of the night with cold sweats worrying about sweaty hands, underarms, course
breathe, stubble, those damn feet (and her dainty ones mauled), and bravery,
bravery to ask that she (or he for shes) for a dance, especially the last dance
that you waited all night to have that chance to ask her about, is a story for
another day. Let’s just leave it at this for now. Ah, to be very, very young
then was very heaven.
So what still sounded good to a
current AARPer, and perhaps some of his fellows who comprise the demographic
that such 1950s compilation “speak” to (and some early 60s songs as well). Carl
Perkins original Blue Suede Shoes (covered by, made famous by, and made millions
for, Elvis). Or the Hank William’s outlaw country classic I’m So Lonesome I
Could Cry. Naturally, in a period of classic rock numbers, Buddy Holly’s Peggy
Sue (or, like Chuck Berry and Fat Domino from this period, virtually any
other of about twenty of his songs).
But what about the now seeming
mandatory to ask question the inevitable end of the night high school dance (or
maybe even middle school) song that seemed to be included in each of those CD
compilations? The song that you, maybe, waited around all night for just to
prove that you were not a wallflower, and more importantly, had the moxie to,
mumbly-voiced, parched-throated, sweaty-handed, ask a girl to dance (women can
relate their own experiences, probably similar). Here Elvis’ One Night With You fills the bill. Hey,
I did like this one, especially the soulful, snappy timing and voice
intonation. And, yes, I know, this is one of the slow ones that you had to
dance close on. And just hope, hope to high heaven, that you didn’t destroy
your partner’s shoes and feet. Well, one learns a few social skills in this
world if for no other reason than to “impress” that certain she (or he for
shes, or nowadays, just mix and match your preferences) mentioned above. I did,
didn’t you? Touche Doo-Wop!
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