***The Roots Is The Toots-The Music That Got The Generation Of ’68 Through The 1950s Red Scare Cold War Night-Out In The Church Hall Dance Night-Danny and the Juniors At The Hop
Funny how memory draws you in, draws
you in tight and hard once you focus in just a little. Take this combination. Recently
I have been involved in writing some little sketches for my North Adamsville High
School reunion Class of 1964 website. You know never before revealed stuff (and
maybe should not be revealed now except I believe the statute of limitations
has run out on most offenses) about what went on in the class rooms when some
ill-advised teacher turned his or her on the class; the inevitable tales of
triumph and heartbreak as told in the boys’ or girl’s Monday morning before
school talkfest about what did, or did not, go on over the weekend with Susie
or Billy; the heart-rending saga of being dateless for the senior prom; the
heroics and devastating defeats of various sports teams especially the goliaths
of the gridiron every leaf-turning autumn; the mysteries of learning about sex
(I thought this might get your attention, innocent exploration or not) in the
chaste day time down at the summer-side beach, or late at night after not
watching the double feature at the outdoor drive-in movies (look it up on the
Internet there was such a way to watch them); date night devouring some
hardened hamburgers complete with fries and Coke at the local all-know drive-in
restaurant (ditto look up that too); older and car-addled taking the victory
spoils after some after midnight “chicken run”; spending “quality time”
watching breathlessly the “submarine races” (ask somebody from North Adamsville
about that); and, just hanging out with your corner boys at Doc’s Drugstore
throwing dimes and quarters in the jukebox to while the night away. Yeah,
strictly 1960s memory stuff.
Put those memory flashes together with
my, seemingly, endlessly gone back to my early musical roots in reviewing a
commercial classic rock and roll series that goes under the general title Rock
‘n’ Roll Will Never Die. I noted in one review and it bears repeating here while
time and ear have eroded the sparkle of some of the lesser tunes 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, who had just started to tune into
music. Those two memory-inducing events coming together got me thinking even
further back than high school, back to elementary school down at Adamsville
South where music and sex (innocent, chaste variety) came together at the
record hop (alternatively called the sock hop if in your locale the young girls
wore bobby sox rather than nylons to these things. Nylons being one of the sure
signs that you were a young women and not merely some stick girl so the
distinction was not unimportant).
See we, we small-time punk in the
old-fashioned sense of that word meaning not knowledgeable, not the malicious sense,
we hardly wet behind the ears elementary school kids, and that is all we were
for those who are now claiming otherwise, listened our ears off to the radio or
when we scurried home right after school to watch American Bandstand when that program came on in late afternoon. And
we hungry to be “hip” (although not knowing that word, not knowing that out in
the adult world guys, guys mostly, guys in places like North Beach in Frisco
town or the Village in New Jack City were creating the ethos of hipness which
we would half-inherit later as latent “beats”) wanted to emulate those swaying,
be-bopping television boys and girls if not on the beauties of that medium then
with some Friday or Saturday night hop in the school gym or in some church
basement complete with some cranky record player playing our songs, our generation-dividing
songs (dividing us for the prison of our parents music heard endlessly, too endlessly
if there is such a concept).
Those were strange times indeed in that
be-bop 1950s night when stuff happened, kid’s stuff, but still stuff like a
friend of mine, not Billy who I will talk about some other time, who claimed,
with a straight face, to the girls that he was Elvis’ long lost son. My friend’s
twelve to Elvis’s maybe twenty. 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.
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) 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 music and you had better say about eight zillion Hail Marys
to get right Catholic, ears. Yah right, Ma, like Patti Page or Bob Crosby and
The Bobcats were supposed to satisfy our jail break cravings (not Bing, not the
Bing of Brother, Can You Spare A Dime? anyway). And the local hop put
paid to that notion, taking the private music of our bedroom dreams and placing
us, for good or evil, out on the dance floor to be wall-flower or “hip” (remember
we did not know that term then, okay.)
But can you blame me, or us, for our
jail-break visions and our clandestine subterranean life-transistor radio
dreams of lots of girls (or boys as the case may be), lots of cars, and lots of
money if we could just get out from under that parental noise. Now getting back
to that rock and roll series I told you that I had been reviewing. The series had
many yearly compilations but as if to prove my point beyond discussion the year
1956 has two, do you hear me, two CDs to deal with that proposition that I
mentioned above. And neither one includes Elvis, Jerry Lee, Bo Diddley or some
other stuff that I might have included so you know we are in the golden age
when there is that much good none Hall of Fame stuff around. Here are some stick-outs
records that every decent hopping, be-bopping record hop (or sock hop, okay)
spun out of pure gold:
Blue Suede Shoes, Carl Perkins (Elvis covered it and made millions but old
Carl had a better old rockabilly back beat on his version); In The Still Of
The Night, The Five Satins (a doo wop classic that I am humming right this
minute, sha dot do be doo, sha dot do be doo or something like that spelling,
okay); Eddie, My Love, The Teen Queens (incredible harmony, doo wop
back-up, and, and “oh Eddie, please don’t make me wait too long” as part of the
lyrics, Whoa!); Roll Over Beethoven, Chuck Berry ( a deservedly early
break-out rock anthem. Hell I thought it was a big deal just to trash my
parents’ Patti Page old Chuck went after the big boys like Beethoven and Tchaikovsky.);
Be-Bop-a-Lula, Gene Vincent (the guy was kind of a one hit wonder but
Christ what a one hit, "yah, she’s my baby now"); Blueberry Hill,
Fats Domino (that old smooth piano riffing away); Rip It Up, Little
Richard (he/she wild man Richard rips it up); Young Love, Sonny James (
dreamy stuff that those giggling girls at school loved, and so you
"loved" too); Why Do Fools Fall In Love?, Frankie Lymon and
the Teenagers (for a minute the king be-bop, doo wop teenage angel boy.
Everybody wanted to be the doo wop king or queen, including my friend Billy); See
You Later, Alligator, Bill Haley and The Comets (yah, these “old guys”
could rock, especially that sax man. Think about the expression people still use “see you later alligator”);
and Since I Met You Baby, Ivory Joe Hunter (every dance pray, every last
dance pray, oh my god, let them play Ivory Joe at the end so I can dance close
with that certain she I have been eyeing all night).
Note: I have mentioned previously the excellent album cover art
that accompanied each classic rock series compilation. Not only do they almost
automatically evoke long ago memories of red hot youth, and those dreams, those
steamy dance night dreams too, but has supplied this writer with more than one
idea for a commentary. One of the 1956 compilation album covers is in that same
vein. The cover shows what looks like a local cover band from the 1950s getting
ready to perform at the local high school dance, not a record hop but if they
are worth anything at all they will play the songs us po’ boys were listening to
on the transistor radio or via that cranky record player lent by somebody for
the occasion at the hop. Although the guys, especially the lead vocalist, look
a little skittish they know they have to make a good showing because this is
their small-time chance at the big time. Besides there are about six thousand
other guys hanging around in their fathers’ garages ready and willing to step
up if the Danny and the Bluenotes fall flat. If they don’t make that big splash
hit like Danny and the Juniors did with At
The Hop, the first song that got me jumping, jack.
This live band idea was actually
something of a treat because, from what I personally recall, many times these
school dance things survived on loud record playing dee-jay chatter, thus the
term “record hop.” From the look of it the school auditorium is the locale
(although ours were inevitably held in the school gym), complete with the
obligatory crepe, other temporary school-spirit related ornaments and a
mesmerized girl band groupie to give the joint a festive appearance.
More importantly, as I said before, at
least for the band, as they are warming up for the night’s work, is that they
have to make their mark here (and at other such venues) and start to get a
following if they want to avoid another dreaded fate of rock life. Yes, the
dreaded fate of most bands that don’t break out of the old neighborhood, the
fate of having to some years down the road play at some of the students they
are performing for that night children’s birthday parties, bar mitzvahs,
weddings and the like. That thought should be enough to keep these guys working
until late in the night, jamming the night away, disturbing some old fogy Frank
Sinatra fans in the neighborhood, perfecting those covers of Roll Over
Beethoven, Rip It Up, Rock Around The Clock and Jailhouse Rock. Go to it boys, buy the ticket and ride
the furies.
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