***The Roots Is The Toots-The Music That Got The Generation
Of ’68 Through The 1950s Red Scare Cold War Night-Elmore James’ Look On Yonder Wall
…who knows when he first began to notice the difference,
notice that the music, his parents’ music, the stuff, as they constantly told
him, that got them through the “Depression and the war,” grated on his ears. Of
course they, his parents specifically, no question, and their kindred later
designated the “greatest generation” by pundits and accepted wisdom as they
died off although this sketch is about his generation so we will let that issue
pass gained that distinction for having suffered the pangs of hunger,
displacement, the struggle for survival, the train smoke and broken dreams
heading west (hell maybe in any direction that was not where they lonesome,
separate, at luck’s end were) looking for work, looking for a new start in the
1930s. Then gathering themselves up when the war clouds turned into live
ammunition lined up to fight whatever evil had reared its head in this wicked
old world in the 1940s, or waited at home fretfully reading the casualty lists
as they were posted in home towns across America.
Of course like every generation since they invented that
term “generation” and put some special onus on each one going back to Adam and
Eve, maybe before, they had their own tribal music to get them through the
tough spots, to dance to or just to find some secluded spot and listen to. And
that would have been fine with him that secluded spot idea (although at the first
grating on the ears time he was too young to be aware of what that secluded
spot stuff portended but he picked the idea up easily later when he came of
age) except he had to face that big old family RCA console radio plucked right down
in the living room every day blaring away while his mother did her housework,
his father listened after work, and they
got all dreamy together over WJDA every Saturday night when for five hours,
five hours count them, the station endlessly played “the songs that got them through
the Depression and the war.” Jesus.
Still although it was a daily plague on his ears he was not
sure when he noticed that he had had enough of silky-voiced Nat King Cole all
smooth and mellow and ready to put him to sleep (or worse), the Inkpots
spouting off and gumming things up by
talking the lyrics for half the song on If
I Didn’t Care or his mother’s favorite I’ll
Get By (the song she said that got her through the war what with her
working as a clerk down at the Naval Depot in Hullsville at the time his father
was Marine island-hopping in the Pacific and while she fretted over those
casualty list postings in front of the Daily
Gazette office), Bing Crosby (not the 1930s Bing of Yip Harburg’s Brother, Can You Spare A Dime but the
later pretty-boy mellow White Christmas
stuff) and the like. He had moreover become tired unto death of the cutesy
Andrews Sisters and their antic bugle boy, rum and coca-cola, under the apple
tree music, tired of Frank (later called the “chairman of the boards” but still
way too placid for him although he remembered his mother showing him a
photograph of perfectly sane looking girls in bobby-sox swooning all over the
place to get next to him at some theater in New York City ), Frankie (Lane
okay) and Dean (before Jerry), tired of Tony fly me to the moon, Benny and his very
tired clarinet Buddha swing, the whole Harry James/Jimmy Dorsey/Tommy
Dorsey/Duke/Count/Earl/King and whatever other royalty they could latch onto big
band sound and even blessed Charley/Dizzy/Miles be-bop, be-bop jazz (stuff that
he would later, way later, crave when he went “beat” joined, joined late that
big beat fellahin world Jack Kerouac was always going on and on about). Yes,
yeah, tired unto death craving some sound that moved him, some sound that he
could sway his rigid locked-up boyish man hips to. A break-out for sure.
Maybe it was because he was showing serious signs of growing
pains, of just being a pain like his parents had taken to call him more and
more often lately, and just wanted to be by himself up in his room (as the oldest
boy he got the single room once the family moved to the new three bedroom house
from that cramped apartment over on Elmer Street where all three boys ah dot sleep
in one room and there were more fights over that fact mercifully done now) and
let the world pass by until his growing pains passed by. It started one day in
1956 as far as he could remember the first time that he asked his parents to
turn off the radio, or turn off WJDA, or turn on this new station that one of the
kids at school was talking about coming out of Boston, WMEX the call letters he
thought. This kid, Richie, a good kid who knew a lot about music swore that one
of the commercials on the show was about Max’s Drive-In over on the other side
of North Adamsville and a place where his parents had taken him and his brothers
for burgers and fries which if you could believe this was the new “hot” spot because
Max had installed speakers in each stall so that every hip guy and swaying gal
could listen to WMEX while munching on a burger or swallowing a French fry. Listen
to stuff that was Frank-Benny-Duke-Bing-less. Something was in the wind.
Something may have been in the wind but he was still filled
with all kinds of teen angst and alienation (no, he did not use those terms to describe
his condition and only learned the terms much later after much turmoil, a few
beefs with the parents, and after reading a Time
magazine article about kids today going to hell in hand basket what with
hanging around corners in white tee-shirts and snarls, doing crazy stuff to
pass the time of day and listening although he was foggy on the music they
described but it sounded interesting which is why he picked up the article from
his father’s chair in the first place). Mainly though what was on his mind had
been about his growing so fast, fast and awkward, too fast and awkward to
figure out what this new found interest in girls was all about. Last year, last
year before his parents’ music grated on his ears, they were nothing but giggly
girls and a bother but now he could see, well, he could see that they might be
interesting to talk to if he could find something to say. Could maybe ease his
way in with some music talk like that good guy Richie did. All he knew was that
life was tough and made tougher by his parents always saying no, no in
principle like there was no other possible answer.
But here is the funny part his parents, like he found out
later when he figured out how parents worked, parents always do and had worked
it out as a science, switch up on kids. See one day to placate him (or, heaven
forbid, to keep him out of sight and therefore out of mind) they, his usually
clueless parents, had gone to the local Radio Shack store and bought him a
transistor radio to be able listen to music up in his room rather than lie
around the living room all night after his parents had gone to bed changing the
dials, their dial settings, looking for some other stations, looking for WMEX
to see if Richie was right about Max’s Drive-In, on that damn old family RCA
radio which had formed the center piece of the room before the television had
displaced it. This transistor radio was a new gizmo, small and battery-powered,
which allowed the average teenager to put the thing up to his or her ear and
listen to whatever he or she wanted to listen to away from prying eyes. Hail,
hail.
And that little technological feat saved his life, or at
least help save it. The saving part was his finding out of the blue on one late
Saturday night Buster Brim’s Blues
Bonanza out of WRKO in Chicago. Apparently, although he was ignorant of the
scientific aspects of the procedure, the late night air combined with the
closing down of certain dawn to dusk radio stations left the airwaves clear at
times to let him receive that long distance infusion. Buster was a mad man monk
talking in a drawl like maybe he was from down south, talking jive, talking a
line of patter with sing-song words, words that he would later recognize as
from the be-bop vocabulary pushed into the orbit of this rock and roll thing
some DJ invented (DJs the guys who spun the platters-played the records for the
squares who don’t know) for the new sound that was putting a big crimp in vanilla
popular music. He immediately sensed that the music emanating from that show
had a totally different beat from his parents’ music, a beat he would later
find came out of some old-time primordial place when we all were born, out of
some Africa cradle of civilization. Then though all he knew was that the beat
spoke to his angst, spoke to his alienation from about twelve different things,
spoke to that growing pains thing. Made him, well, happy, when he snapped his
fingers to some such beat. What he was unsure of, and what he also did not
found out about until later, was whether this would last or was just a passing
fancy like those Andrews Sisters his parents were always yakking about.
What he didn’t know really was that though that little gizmo
he had been present at the birth of rock and roll. Was right at the place where
that be-bopping sound was turning into a sway by white guys from the farms down
in Tennessee, getting refined by some black guys from the Delta, being turned
out by some urban hep-cats from New Jack City and anybody else who could get his
hips moving to the new time beat. Geez, and all he thought he was doing was
snapping his fingers until they were sore to Elmore James’ Look On Yonder Wall…
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