An
Encore Salute To The Untold Stories Of The Working- Class 1960s Radicals-“The
Sam And Ralph Stories”-
Road Song Blues-From The Sam Eaton-Ralph Morris Series-From
The Pen Of Sam Lowell
Allan Jackson, editor The Sam And Ralph Stories -New General Introduction
[As my replacement Greg Green, whom
I brought in from American Film Gazette
originally to handle the day to day site operations while I concentrated on
editing but who led a successful revolt against my regime based on the wishes
of the younger writers to as they said at the time not be slaves to the 1960s
upheavals a time which they only knew second or third hand, mentioned in his
general introduction above some of the series I initiated were/are worth an
encore presentation. The Sam and Ralph
Stories are one such series and as we go along I will try to describe why
this series was an important testament to an unheralded segment of the mass
movements of the 1960s-the radicalized white working- class kids who certainly
made up a significant component of the Vietnam War soldiery, some of who were
like Sam and Ralph forever after suspicious of every governmental war cry. Who also
somewhat belatedly got caught up in the second wave rock and roll revival which
emerged under the general slogan of “drug, sex and rock and roll” which
represented a vast sea change for attitudes about a lot of things that under
ordinary circumstances would have had them merely replicating their parents’
ethos and fate.
As I said I will describe that
transformation in future segment introductions but today since it is my “dime”
I want to once again clear up some misapprehensions about what has gone on over
the past year or so in the interest of informing the readership, as Greg Green
has staked his standing at this publication on doing to insure his own survival,
about what goes on behind the scenes in the publishing business. This would not
have been necessary after the big flap when Greg tried an “end around”
something that I and every other editor worth her or his salt have tried as
well and have somebody else, here commentator and my old high school friend
Frank Jackman, act as general introducer of The
Roots Is The Toots rock and roll
coming of age series that I believe is one of the best productions I have ever
worked on. That got writers, young and old, with me or against me, led by Sam
Lowell, another of my old high school friends, who had been the decisive vote
against me in the “vote of no confidence” which ended my regime up in arms. I
have forgiven Sam, and others, as I knew full well from the time I entered into
the business that at best it was a cutthroat survival of the fittest racket.
(Not only have I forgiven Sam but I am in his corner in his recent struggles
with young up and coming by-line writer Sarah Lemoyne who is being guided
through the shoals by another old high school friend Seth Garth as she attempts
to make her way up the film critic food chain, probably the most vicious
segment of the business where a thousand knives wait the unwary from so-called
fellow reviewers.) The upshot of that controversy was that Greg had to back off
and let me finish the introducing the series for which after all I had been
present at the creation.
That would have been the end of it
but once we successfully, and thankfully by Greg who gave me not only kudos
around the water cooler but a nice honorarium, concluded that series encore in
the early summer of 2018 he found another way to cut me. Going through the
archives of this publication to try to stabilize the readership after doing
some “holy goof” stuff like having serious writers, young and old, reviewing
films based on comic book characters, the latest in video games and graphic
novels with no success forgetting the cardinal rule of the post-Internet world
that the younger set get their information from other sources than old line
academic- driven websites and don’t read beyond their techie tools Greg found
another series, the one highlighted here, that intrigued him for an encore
presentation. This is where Greg proved only too human since he once again
attempted an “end around,” by having Josh Breslin, another old friend whom I
meet in the Summer of Love, 1967 out in San Francisco, introduce the series citing
my unavailability as the reason although paying attention to the fact that I had
sweated bullets over that one as well.
This time though the Editorial
Board, now headed by Sam Lowell, intervened even before Greg could approach
Josh for the assignment. This Ed Board was instituted after my departure to
insure the operation would not descend, Sam’s word actually, into the so-called
autocratic one-person rule that had been the norm under my regime. They told
Greg to call me back in on the encore project or to forget it. I would not have
put up with such a suggestion from an overriding Ed Board and would have
willingly bowed out if anybody had tried to undermine me that way. I can
understand fully Greg’s desire to cast me to the deeps, have done with me as in
my time I did as well knowing others in the food chain would see this as their
opportunity to move up.
That part I had no problem with,
told Greg exactly that. What bothered me was the continuing “urban legend”
about what I had done, where I had gone after that decisive vote of no
confidence. Greg continued, may continue today, to fuel the rumors that not only
after my initial demise but after finishing up the Roots Is The Toots series I had gone back out West to Utah of all
places to work for the Mormons, or to Frisco to hook up with my old flame
Madame La Rue running that high-end whorehouse I had staked her to in the old
days, or was running around with another old high school pal, Miss Judy
Garland, aka Timmy Riley the high priestess of the drag queen set out in that
same town whom I also helped stake to
his high-end tourist attraction cabaret. All nonsense, I was working on
my memoir up in Maine, up in Olde Saco where Josh grew up and which I fell in
love with when he first showed me his hometown and its ocean views.
If the reader can bear the weight of
this final reckoning let me clear the air on all three subjects on the
so-called Western trail. Before that though I admit, admit freely that despite
all the money I have made, editing, doing a million pieces under various
aliases and monikers, ballooning up 3000 word articles to 10,000 and having the
publishers fully pay despite the need for editing for the latter in the days
before the Guild when you worked by the word, accepting articles which I
clearly knew were just ripped of the AP feed and sending them along as gold I
had no dough, none when I was dethroned. Reason, perfectly sane reason,
although maybe not, three ex-wives with alimony blues and a parcel of kids, a
brood if you like who were in thrall to the college tuition vultures.
Tapped out in the East for a lot of
reasons I did head west the first time looking for work. Landed in Utah when I
ran out of dough, and did, DID, try to get a job on the Salt Lake Star and would have had it too except two things somebody
there, some friend of Mitt Romney, heard I was looking for work and nixed the
whole thing once they read the articles I had written mocking Mitt and his
white underwear world as Massachusetts governor and 2012 presidential candidate.
So it was with bitter irony when I heard that Greg had retailed the
preposterous idea that I would now seek a job shilling for dear white undie
Mitt as press agent in his run for the open Utah United States Senate seat.
Here is where everybody should gasp though at the whole Utah fantasy-these
Mormons stick close together, probably ingrained in them from Joseph Smith
days, and don’t hire goddam atheists and radicals, don’t hire outside the
religion if they can help it. You probably had to have slept with one of Joseph
Smith’s or Brigham Young’s wives to even get one foot in the door. Done.
The helping Madame La Rue, real name
of no interest or need to mention,
running her high-end exclusive whorehouse out in Half Moon Bay at least
had some credence since I had staked her to some dough to get started after the
downfall of the 1960s sent her back to her real world, the world of a high
class hooker who was slumming with “hippies” for a while when it looked like our
dreams were going to be deterred in in the ebbtide. We had been hot and heavy
lovers, although never married except on some hazed drug-fogged concert night
when I think Josh Breslin “married” us and sent us on a “honeymoon” with a
fistful of cocaine. Down on dough I hit her up for some which she gave gladly,
said it was interest on the “loan: she never repaid and let me stay at her
place for a while until I had to move on. Done
The whole drag queen idea tells me
that whoever started this damn lie knew nothing about my growing up days and
had either seen me in The Totem, Timmy Riley’s aka Miss Judy Garland’s drinking
with a few drag queen who worked and drew the wrong conclusions or was out to
slander and libel me for some other nefarious reason. See Miss Judy Garland is
the very successful drag queen and gay man Timmy Riley from the old
neighborhood who fled to Frisco when he could no longer hide his sexual
identity and preferences. To our great shock since Timmy had been the out-front
gay-basher of our crowd, our working-class corner boy gay-bashing crowd. I had
lent, after getting religion rather late on the LGBTQ question, Timmy the money
to buy his first drag queen cabaret on Bay Street and Timmy was kind enough to
stake me to some money and a roof before I decided I had to head back East.
Done.
But enough about me. This is about two other working- class guys,
Sam Eaton and Ralph Morris, met along life’s road one from Carver about fifty
miles away from where Seth, Sam, Timmy and a bunch of other guys grew up and
learned the “normal” working-class ethos-and broke, tentatively at times, from
that same straitjacket and from Troy, New York. Funny Troy, Carver, North
Adamsville, and Josh’s old mill town Olde Saco all down-in-the-mouth working
class towns still produced in exceptional times a clot of guys who got caught
up in the turmoil of their times-and lived to tell the tale. I am proud to introduce
this encore presentation and will have plenty more to say about Sam and Ralph
in future segments.]
***********
Road Song Blues-From
The Sam Eaton-Ralph Morris Series
From The Pen Of Sam Lowell
“What your all-time
favorite road album, Sam?” asked his old friend Ralph Morris as they were
driving to Washington for the nth time in order to place their warm bodies on
the line once again for some progressive cause, this time the struggle against
escalating war in the Middle East by the Obama administration. They had been
doing such anti-war duty since they had “met” each back on May Day 1971 when
they, Sam a very activist anti-warrior and Ralph a returned Vietnam veteran who
had turned on a war that he had fought, among the thousands arrested for trying
to “shut down the government if it would not shut down the war” (the Vietnam
War then for those too young or those who have forgotten). By the way while it
might have been the nth time they had driven down to D.C. on these missions of
mercy that was not always the way they had got there. In their youths they were
as likely to have thumbed from either Boston, Sam’s base in those days, or
Albany, Ralph’s base picking up rides from others heading that way for the same
purposes or friendly truckers looking for somebody, anybody to talk to at
seventy miles an hour having been on the road probably sixteen straight and
going stir crazy.
In any case Sam and
Ralph making sure they cleared the vicious Connecticut State Police on U.S. 95
or else they could expect, at the least, some serious hassles. Maybe they had
taken the dreaded Greyhound bus with its eight million stops and the inevitable
winding up beside (a) some scatter-brained mother who let her child run wild on
her lap and who then exploded into your space as well, (b) some severely
over-weight snoring behemoth, male or female, (c), some lonely-heart girl who
you could tell if you had given any thought at all to talking to her had some
serious mental health issues or she would be sitting in some “boss” car with
some max daddy and not travelling alone on some forlorn public transportation.
Maybe worse riding down with a busload of activists aboard a “movement” rented
bus and the other denizens wanted to stay up all night talking politics, not
bad in itself, but talk politics like they just invented the profession and
wanted to fill your empty vessel with every arcane fact they had gleaned from
the latest alternative newspapers or from Professor so-and-so in some introductory
political science class. Hell, the Marxists were the worst, some obvious
products of the leafy suburbs and elite colleges always talking about the class
struggle and working people which is exactly the roots that both men had come
from and so knew from day one of their respective existences exactly what the
class struggle was even if they could not have named the phenomenon as such
back then.
Ralph reminded Sam
that a couple of times they had gone “bourgeois,” (Sam’s expression since he
actually did hang with some radicals and reds in Cambridge in the early 1970s
when he was at his wits end about how to stop the “fucking,” also his word,
Vietnam War before he met Ralph) when Sam had latched onto a Mayfair swell
daughter from Radcliffe who insisted they all fly down to National Airport on Poppa’s
credit card (“Poppa” her term of endearment). Her argument-they by flying
rather than travelling the roads for ten hours up and then ten hours back would
save time for other things, movement things of course since she was one of
those leafy suburbs radicals that Sam was fatally attracted to at the time. Like
then they didn’t have anything but time since they were that minute “full-time”
activists.
But this early
Saturday morning spring day Sam and Ralph were as they had the majority of
times after the big gold rush of the 1960s uprising ebbed into nothing driving in
a car, this time Sam’s, down to D.C. A
call had come out from the National Anti-War Network headquartered in that town
for all peace-loving groups and individuals to make their voices heard against
the very most recent escalation of the war situation in the Middle East, in
Iraq, with the announcement by the Obama administration that the government was
upping the ante on the number of “advisors,” read troops on the ground being
sent in. The ostensible reason given by the administration was to help, once
again, to stem the panic of the Baghdad government over the constitutional
inability of its own armed forces to not flee the minute an enemy cannon (or
maybe any cannon) was heard in the distance. The enemy de jus now a nasty Islamic fundamentalist outfit called ISIS, and
called about seven variations of that designation including the
“self-proclaimed Islamic State” depending on which news source you got your
news from.
The funny part, at
least Sam when he mentioned the “self-proclaimed” moniker that the newscasters
were using ever since ISIS starting coming out of the hills of Syria and Iraq
like bats out of hell, to Ralph back in the summer of 2014, was that they
actually controlled enough land in the area to be de facto rulers of those
regions. To be the Islamic State they claimed to control. Nobody then could
claim they were not a state, except maybe the government in Baghdad whose writ
barely extended beyond the city limits. Ralph thought that was ironic as well,
especially since the regime in Baghdad was barely even holding the city itself
at that point.
That gives the “why”
of why they were on the road that early morning. Hell the sun had not even come
up and Ralph had not even had time to grab a cup of coffee when Sam drove up to
his house in Troy where he had been born and grew up, raised a family and all
of that. Sam had stayed with a cousin whom he had not seen in a while that
Friday night in Albany and they agreed to get an early start for the long ride
south. The “why” of the question though needs a little further explanation.
Both men had been immersed in the music
of their generation, the generation Sam, the more literary of the two, had
called the Generation of ’68, in recognition that that seminal year was
decisive in many ways, not all good, for the fate of a small but significant
segment of their generation. Of course that musical bonding meant for both of
them the classic rock of their coming of age in the mid-1950s. The time of
Elvis, Carl, Chuck, Bo, Buddy, Wanda, Jerry Lee and a whole cast of lesser
names and one-note johnnies and janies. For Ralph it had also meant a small
appreciation of the blues, mostly Chicago blues of the Muddy Waters, Howlin’
Wolf, Magic Slim, James Cotton strand and for Sam a very big appreciation of
the folk music minute of the early 1960s. Folk, a genre that Ralph sneered at
every time Sam, or anybody mentioned the word, or the times on trips like this
when he hoped to high heaven that Sam would not go on and on about some folkie
road songs when he had asked the question.
But coffee, or no
coffee, as Ralph (who during the first stretch of the drive was the “co-pilot”
and therefore in charge of the musical selections and the CDs in the car’s CD
system) the question was on the floor. Was on the floor like it had been ever
since they started driving down to D.C. some forty plus years before. It had
become something like the rituals kids go through counting numbers of various
states’ license plates on the road, or kinds of automobiles, or kinds of signs,
you know to pass the time away. Although for Sam and Ralph it had more meaning
since at any given point in their relationship the answer might have
varied.
Here are some
examples. About ten years before, 2004,2005, when they were travelling down to
protest the then “early” phase, another one of those escalations during the
Bush administration of the now seemingly never-ending war in Iraq, Ralph had
been in a second coming of Elvis phase. Somehow through YouTube or some
Internet site he had heard Elvis’ One
Night Of Sin and had flipped out(the original more sexually suggestive song
not, One Night With You, the one
released to the panicky parents public worried about the dreaded unnamed “s”
word creeping up on their Jimmys and Marys). See while he was a child of the
rock and roll 1950s he didn’t like Elvis or his music for the very simple
reason that every girl in Troy (and probably America, if not the world) would
have nothing to do with (a) guys who did not slick their hair back, (b) guys
who could not swivel their hips, and, (c) who did not have Elvis’ patented
sneer for them to take off his face. So it was personal (and Ralph was not
alone as Sam mentioned one time about a schoolboy friend his, Bart Webber, who
felt the same way at the time). But once Ralph heard that song he went out to
Tower Records and got every Sun Recording Studio CD he could find (Sun, the
recording studio of early Elvis, Elvis when he was lean and hungry and probably
wore that sneer in earnest). So that trip was filled with Elvis, Elvis, Elvis
all the way down including such classics as That’s
Alright, Mama, Jailhouse Rock, and his version of Shake, Rattle and Roll. That turned out to be okay since Sam liked
him too after not paying attention to his early music since about 1958, or
whenever Elvis stopped being lean and hungry and started recording nondescript
songs and ugly strictly for the dough movies.
So you know what Ralph’s answer would have been during his Elvis
sighting.
What had not been
alright was during the first Gulf War (the one Bush I got heated about when
Iraq went into Kuwait of all places) Sam had gotten back into a folk thing
which Ralph though he had gotten over. Apparently Sam had, between marriages,
he had been married and divorced twice (as had Ralph), gone on a “date” with
some woman he met in a Harvard Square bar and she had wanted to go to the Club
Passim (the then and current incarnation of the old Club 47 which spawned Joan
Baez, Bob Dylan, Tom Rush, Tom Paxton, The Jim Kweskin Jug Band and a million
other one song folkies) to see, Jesus, to see Dave Von Ronk (Ralph’s
expression). He had dated that woman, Leslie, for several months so he/they
would cut up old touches about that folk minute of the 1960s. As a result when
it was time to head to Washington in the early winter of 1991 Sam told Ralph
that he had been saving the three CD set of Harry Smith’s Anthology of American Folk Music he had just purchased (at a steep
price for that was the early days of CDs and such “exotic” staples cost
aficionados) for the trip down. For
those who do not know that compilation has over eighty songs from the hills and
hollows, down in Appalachia and places like that.
Ralph, an ex-Vietnam
War soldier who had served eighteen months and as a result had turned
drastically and dramatically against that war, and the American government’s
endless wars ever since, was ready to lose his pacifistic feelings, ready to
take up the gun again which he hadn’t shouldered since late 1969, as Sam told
him that bit of news. And he, Ralph, would have to as co-pilot place the bloody
things in the bloody CD player. That one is best left forgotten.
Not to be forgotten
though was the time when they went down to D.C. to protest Ronald Reagan’s
merciless support for the Contras down in El Salvador (and Nicaragua when the
American military spotlight hit that small nation) in the mid-1980s. Ralph had
“re-discovered” the Doors a rock group which had provided the background music
for a million midnight parties when the booze and drugs were being freely
passed around. Sam was more than happy to have Ralph place those tapes in the
tape-deck and blast away Light My Fire,
L.A. Woman, The End, Spanish Caravan. And you know the time flew on that
trip for some reason which need not detain us here.
So you get the
picture of the substance behind the “why” of Ralph’s question. And you might
have also guessed although Ralph is not a lawyer by profession (he ran a
high-skill electrical shop before he retired recently turning over the day to
day operations to his son) that he had an answer to the question he was asking
Sam on that trip. Just the week before he had been listening to WXKE, a country,
a progressive country radio station according to Ralph when Sam asked about the
kind of music played by the station, when he heard some lonesome cowboy voice
singing a song called Colorado Girl.
He liked it right away, liked it a lot and so waited for the DJ (a guy who
called himself Sleepy LaGrange) to announce the song title and singer. Turned
out to be a guy by the name of Townes Van Zandt, a guy who had had a disturbed
life down in Texas and places like that and had died back in the mid-1990s from
a heart attack probably brought on by heavy drug use but who had written a ton
of songs that many other singers had covered. Ralph admitted (as did Sam) that
he had never heard of the guy before. But he was the guy who wrote Pancho and Lefty that Willie Nelson,
Emmylou Harris and a bunch of other singers had covered and which both men knew
about. But Ralph was intrigued enough to go on YouTube and find out what else
he had written. There was a ton of stuff on the site by him (or covers by
others). Some very good, most kind of lonesome prairie dog sad, mostly with a
very close call with reality. But Ralph was hooked. He did not have time to run
over to Albany to the last remaining brick and mortar record store in the area
to get some CDs for the road so he went on line to Amazon and downloaded a
bunch on his iPod and so you know Ralph’s answer to his own question.
As Sam stops at a
truck stop diner off of U.S. 87 South so Ralph could get that desperate cup of
coffee he needed to keep him awake for the next several hours they were listening
to Van Zandt’s If I Needed You. The
road ahead is long so we will have to wait for Sam’s answer…
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