***Out In The Be-Bop 1960s Teen
Dance Club Night-Sonny James’ Young Love
I
have always been intrigued by the different little social gatherings that
dominated our teen-age lives back in the late 1950s and early 1960s. To a
certain extent every generation of teen-agers since they invented the category
as enough kids in a family made it to that age and had enough free time on
their hands to form a distinct segment of society has had some of the same
institutions, you know school, sports, special day parties and periodic dances
stuff like that. Although I am not as familiar with the inner workings of
today’s millennial generation I do not believe that I have heard much about an
institution that was mainstay while I was growing up, the teen dance club. The
place where you were allowed to go and have fun and of which parents approved (which
should have made us suspect, and would have later but while we were dealing
with trying to fit the fixture into our lives we looked forward to its weekly
charms.
The teen dance club memory just did not
suddenly come up and hit me out of the blue but was a result of some work I
have been doing of late that brought it to the fore. I, seemingly, have
endlessly gone back to my early musical roots in reviewing various compilations
of a classic rock series that goes under the general title Rock ‘n’ Roll Will
Never Die. And while time and ear have eroded the sparkle of some of the
lesser tunes, tunes that our local jukeboxes devoured many a
hard-earned father nickel and dime it still seems obvious that those
years, say 1955-58, really did form the musical jail break-out for my
generation. The generation of ’68, the generation that slogged through the red
scare cold war night, survived and, for a minute, were ready to turn the world
upside down in the mid to late 1960s before the wave ebbed and we wound up
fighting something like a forty plus year rearguard action to maintain the semblance
of dignity, and who had just started to tune into rock music as some sort
of harbinger of things to come, that jailbreak previously mentioned.
And we, we small-time punk (in the
old-fashioned sense of that word, not the derogatory sense), we hardly wet
behind the ears elementary school kids, and that is all we were for those who
would now claim otherwise, claiming some form of amnesia about when that
beat hit them square in the eyes, listened our ears off. Those were strange
times indeed in that be-bop 1950s night when stuff happened, stuff parents did
not have a handle on and stuff we saw as our way out of the box that was being
fit around us. Kid’s stuff, sure, but still stuff like a friend of mine, my elementary
school best friend “wild man” Billie who I will talk about more some other
time, who claimed, with a straight face to the girls, that he, all ten years
old of him, was Elvis’ long lost son. Did the girls do the math on that one?
Or, maybe, they like us more brazen boys were hoping, hoping and praying, that
it was true despite the numbers, so they too could be washed by that flamed-out
night when Elvis (and us, us too) were young and hungry.
Well, this I know, boy and girl alike
tuned in on our transistor radios (small battery- operated radios that we could
put in our pockets, and hide from snooping parental ears, at will and we owe a
lot to whoever put that idea together especially for poor ass projects boys
with too little space as it was) to listen to music that from about day one, at
least in my household was not considered “refined” enough for young, young
pious you’ll-never get-to-heaven-listening-to-that-devil's- music and you had
better say about eight zillion Hail Marys to get right Catholic, ears.
Yeah right, Ma, Pa like Patti Page or Bob Crosby and The Bobcats (not Bing, not
the Bing of Brother, Can You Spare A Dime? anyway. I would come to know that
song more closely, too closely later but that is another story) were supposed
to satisfy our jail-break cravings.
And we had our own little world, or as
some hip sociologist trying to explain that Zeitgeist today might say,
our own sub-group cultural expression. I have already talked about the pre 7/11
mom and pop corner variety store hangout with the tee-shirted, engineered-booted,
cigarette (unfiltered, of course) hanging from the lips, Coke, big-sized glass
Coke bottle at the side, pinball wizard guys thing. And about the pizza parlor
jukebox coin devouring, hold the onions I might get lucky tonight, dreamy girl
might come in the door thing. And, of course, the soda fountain, and…ditto,
dreamy girl coming through the door thing. Needless to say you know more about
middle school and high school dance stuff, including hot tip “ inside” stuff
about manly preparations for those civil wars out in the working-class
neighborhood night, than you could ever possibly want to know, and, hell, you
were there anyway (or at ones like them).
But the crème de la crème to
beat all was the teen night club. Easy concept, and something that could only
have been thought up by someone in cahoots with our parents (or maybe it was
them alone, although could they have been that smart). Open a “ballroom” (in
reality some old VFW, Knight of Columbus, Elks, etc. hall that was either going
to waste or was ready for the demolition ball), bring in live music on Friday
and Saturday night with some rocking band, ours the Ready Rockers who did good
covers on all but Elvis since they lacked his implicit sexual energy (but not too rocking, not Elvis swiveling at
the hips to the gates of hell rocking, no way), serve the kids drinks…, oops,
sodas (Coke Pepsi, Grape and Orange Nehi, Hires Root Beer, etc.), and have them
out of there by midnight, no later, unscathed. All supervised, and make no
mistake these things were supervised, by something like the equivalent of the
elite troops of the 101st Airborne Rangers. Usually some maiden teachers dragged
in to volunteer and keep an eye, a first name eye on things, or some refugees from
the sporadic church-sponsored dances who some priest or minister dragooned into
volunteering with heaven held out as a reward but eagle-eyed for any unauthorized
hand-holding, dancing too close or off-hand kissing.
And we bought it, and bought into it
hard. And, if you had that set-up where you lived, you bought it too. And why?
Come on now, have you been paying attention? Girls, tons of girls (or boys, as
the case may be). See, even doubting Thomas-type parents gave their okay on
this one because of that elite troops of the 101st Airborne factor. Those
hardened surrogate parents with the beady eyes and tart tongues. So, some down
at the heels, tee-shirted, engineer- booted Jimmy or Johnny Speedo from the
wrong side of the tracks, all boozed up and ready to “hot rod” with that
‘boss”’57 Chevy that he just painted to spec, was no going to blow into the
joint and carry Mary Lou or Peggy Sue away, never to be seen again. No way.
That stuff happened, sure, but that was on the side. This is not what drove
that scene for the few years while we were still getting wise to the ways of
the world The girls (and guys) were plentiful and friendly in that guarded,
backed up by 101st Airborne way (damn it). And we had our …sodas (I won’t list
the brands again, okay). But, and know this true, we blasted on the music. The
music that was on the compilations I have reviewed, no question. And I will
tell you some of the stick outs that made my pray for dance card:
Save The Last Dance
For Me, The Drifters (oh, sweet baby, that I
have had my eye on all night, please, please, James Brown, please save that last
one for me, and on too few occasions she did, or her kindred did later when I
had other roving eyes so I came out about even); Only The Lonely, Roy
Orbison (for some reason the girls loved Ready Rockers’ covers of this one,
especially one night, not a teen club night but a night the Rockers were
playing a church hall teen dance Friday night when a certain she planted a big
kiss on my face, well, on my lips after I sang, really more like lip-synched that one along with the band. Unfortunately
she soon had a boyfriend and I was strictly past history but the memory of that
kiss lasted lots longer); Alley Oop, The Hollywood Argyles (a good goofy
song to break up the sexual tension that always filled the air, early and late,
at these things as the mating ritual worked its mysterious ways and despite prying
prudent eyes hand-holding, dancing too close and off-hand kissing got done, got
done much more than our parents would ever know); Handy Man, Jimmy
Jones( a personal favorite which dove-tailed into my “style” then, as I kept telling every girl, and maybe a few
guys as well just to keep them away from the ones I was seriously eyeing, that
I was that very handy man that those self-same gals had been waiting,
waiting up on those lonely weekend nights for. Egad! Did I really use that line?);
Stay, Maurice Williams and The Zodiacs (nice harmonics and good feeling,
and excellent for dancing too close on); New Orleans, Joe Jones (great
dance number as the twist and other exotic dances started to break into the
early 1960s consciousness and great too because awkward self-conscious dancers
like me could “fake it” with juke moves since we were basically dancing by ourselves
on the fast ones); and, Let The Little Girl Dance, Billy Bland (yes, let
her dance, hesitant, saying no at first mother, please, please, no I will not
invoke James Brown on this one, please). Oh yeah, and Sonny James’ Young Love that got the girls all juiced
and happy to dance close even with guys like me with sweaty hands and unsure
feet.
So you can see where the combination of
the dance club, the companionship, and that be-bop rock beat that we could not
get enough of would carry us along for a while. Naturally the thing could not
go on forever, our forever, once we got older, once we tasted cigarettes and
liquor (okay, okay beer) and once parents took fright when too many down at the
heels, tee-shirted, engineer- booted Jimmy or Johnny Speedos from the wrong
side of the tracks, all boozed up and ready to “hot rod” with that ‘boss”’57
Chevy that they just painted to spec, started blowing into the joint to carry
Mary Lou or Peggy Sue away, carry them away gladly never to be seen again.
No comments:
Post a Comment