Out In Jukebox Night-With Ben E. King's Spanish
Harlem In Mind
Spanish Harlem
Song by The Drifters,
Ben E. King
There is a rose in Spanish Harlem
A red rose up in Spanish Harlem
It is the special one, it's never seen the sun
It only comes out when the moon is on the run
And all the stars are gleaming
It's growing in the street
Right up through the concrete
But soft and sweet and dreaming
A red rose up in Spanish Harlem
It is the special one, it's never seen the sun
It only comes out when the moon is on the run
And all the stars are gleaming
It's growing in the street
Right up through the concrete
But soft and sweet and dreaming
There is a rose
in Spanish Harlem
A red rose up in Spanish Harlem
With eyes as black as coal
That looks down in my soul
And starts a fire there and then I lose control
I have to beg your pardon
I'm going to pick that rose
And watch her as she grows in my garden
A red rose up in Spanish Harlem
With eyes as black as coal
That looks down in my soul
And starts a fire there and then I lose control
I have to beg your pardon
I'm going to pick that rose
And watch her as she grows in my garden
I'm going to
pick that rose
And watch her as she grows in my garden
And watch her as she grows in my garden
La la la, la la
la, la la la la
(There is a rose in Spanish Harlem)
La la la, la la la, la la la la
(There is a rose in Spanish Harlem)
(There is a rose in Spanish Harlem)
La la la, la la la, la la la la
(There is a rose in Spanish Harlem)
Sometimes it is hard
to figure out why a certain memory draws certain other memories out although
today, musically, which is what I want to talk about, just flipping to YouTube
and its cross-references makes that statement more explicable since one is almost
automatically bombarded with about seven million songs with some memory
meaning. Meaning maybe a memory of that first record hop at school, elementary
school in the 1950s, just by the reference. Or that first time you noticed that
girls were, well, kind of interesting or at least approachable at some basement
family room “petting” party. (The first “private” time when adults may be
hovering around unseen but when they are persona non grata with the confines of
the party room and a time when lights low or out the first “feels” occurred
however innocent or bewildering for either sex. That basement family room also
serving as fall-out shelter, fully-stocked, if the Russkies decided to blow one
by us.) Better just a little time later, although time seemed then to drag
infinitely by and you tried to hurry it up then, when you started dreaming
about that brunette on television (you can fill in your own color preference)
swaying back and forth provocatively, provocatively in your mind anyway, just
for you after rushing home after school to watch American Bandstand. Or later when the hormones really kicked in
that first night time junior high school dance with her, the her with the
faraway eyes whose bubble soap (or maybe some “stolen” scent from the top of mother’s
dresser) drove you crazy. Yeah, I like the latter better since that scenario
would mean that she was provocatively trying to drive you crazy with her
amateur womanly wiles. Moving on to that first double-date night down by the
seashore watching the “submarine races” and you copped a “feel” (for those who
did not have a seashore to go down to in order to look for those locally famous
submarines at midnight, sorry, but okay so maybe at a drive-in movie, or that
spot out by the dam or up in the foreboding hills known strictly as a lovers’
lane). Then before you know it you had graduated high school and the memories
got fonder but faded with time until you got to the 2000s night and you woke up
in a sweat thinking about that girl with the faraway eyes and that damn bubble soap
smell that filled your nostrils (and wondering, wondering did she really have
the cunning to steal that mother’s scent right off the top of her
dresser).
Recently I have,
seemingly endlessly, gone back to my early musical roots, my memory roots, in
reviewing various commercial compilations of classic rock series that goes
under the general title Rock ‘n’ Roll Will Never Die. That classic rock designation signifying the
“golden age of rock,” the time of some Les Paul guitar zip rocket 88 Ike
Turner, zap finger-snapping the big man flapping shake, rattle and roll Big Joe
Turner, from long side-burned, sexy-eyed (yeah guys can say that now about guys
without blushing), sneering one night of sin hunger Elvis, from sweet little
sixteen Mister’s girl hunger telling Beethoven his time had passed Chuck Berry,
from the back of a flatbed truck double
girl hunger high school confidential Jerry Lee, the time of the original jail
break-out and not the smoother later patched-up stuff-ouch!. While time and
ear have eroded the sparkle of some of the lesser tunes (and lesser singers
like blueberry hill Fats and he/she good golly Little Richard) it still seems
obvious that those years, say 1955-62, really did form the musical jail
break-out for my generation, the generation of ’68, who had just started to
tune into music.
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 such
notable phenomena as the pre-chain convenience store mom and pop corner variety
store corner boy hangout with the tee-shirted, engineered-booted, cigarette (naturally
unfiltered, not some “faggy” (yeah, that’s what we said then and what did we
know about such things, such same-sex things that were whispered then and are
now laughingly out in the open, anyway) Kents, Winstons or Marboros but real
coffin nails Luckies, Camels, or Pall Malls) hanging from the sullen lips,
Coke, big sized glass Coke bottle at the side, pinball wizard guys thing. Complete
with foxy tight cashmere-sweaterd girls hanging off every bump and grind of
that twisted machine. And, of course, about the pizza parlor, you name it House
of Pizza, Marios’s, Mama Mia’s, juke-box
coin-devouring, playing some “hot” song for the nth time that night, hold the
onions on that order please as I might get lucky tonight, dreamy girl coming in
the door thing. Another of course, the soda fountain, and…ditto, dreamy girl
coming through the door thing, merely to share a sundae, please. Ditto for the
teen dance club, keep the kids off the streets even if we parents hate their
damn rock music, the now eternal hope dreamy girl coming in the door, save the
last dance for me thing (and where Mister Ben E. King at some point was
“walking with the king” to get us close on his la la la’s in Spanish Harlem.
Whee! That’s maybe
enough memory lane stuff for a lifetime, especially for those with weak hearts.
But, no, your intrepid messenger feels the need to go back again and take a
little different look at that be-bop jukebox Saturday night scene as it
unfolded in the early 1960s. Hey, you could have found the old jukebox in lots
of places in those days. Bowling alleys, drugstores, pizza parlors, drive-in
restaurants, and as had been shown in the cover art on one of that rock and
roll series CDs I reviewed also at the daytime beach. While boy or girl
watching. Basically any place where kids were hot for some special song and
wanted to play it until the cows came home. And had the coins to satisfy their
hunger.
A lot of it was to
kill time waiting for this or that, although the basic reason was these were
all places where you could show off your stuff, and maybe, strike up a
conversation with someone who attracted your attention as they came in the
door. The cover artwork on that daytime beach scene, for example, showed a
dreamy girl waiting for her platters (vinyl records, okay, check on it) to work
their way up the mechanism that took them from the stack and laid them out on
the player. And tee-shirted sullen guy (could have been you, right?) just
hanging around the machine waiting for just such a well-shaped brunette (or
blond, but I favored brunettes in those days, and still do if anybody is asking),
maybe chatting idly was worth at least a date or, more often, a telephone
number to call. Not after nine at night though or before eight because that was
when she was talking to her boyfriend. Jesus. But lucky guy, maybe.
But here is where the
real skill came in, and where that white-tee-shirted guy on the cover seemed to
be clueless. Just hanging casually around the old box, especially on a no, or
low, dough day waiting on a twist (one of about a dozen slang words for girl in
our old working-class neighborhood usually made up by or learned from corner
boy leader Frankie Riley who had a thing for old time detective novels and films
where he would pick them up) to come by and put her quarter in (giving three or
five selections depending what kind of place the jukebox was located in)
talking, usually to girlfriends, as she made those selections. Usually the
first couple were easy, some old boyfriend memory, or some wistful tryst
remembrance, but then she got contemplative, or fidgety, over what to pick
next.
Then you made your
move-“Have you heard Spanish Harlem. NO! Well, you just have to hear
that thing and it will cheer you right up. Or some such line. Of course, you
wanted to hear the damn thing. But see, a song like that (as opposed to Chuck
Berry’s Sweet Little Rock and Roller, let’s say) showed you were a
sensitive guy, and maybe worth talking to... for just a minute, I got to get
back to my girlfriends, etc., etc. Oh, jukebox you baby. And guess what. On
that self-same jukebox you were very, very likely to hear some of the following
songs. Here’s the list and there are some stick-outs (and a few that worked
some of that “magic” just mentioned above on tough nights):
1)My
Boyfriend's Back (it seemed that every good-looking girl had some hidden boyfriend
stashed away for just that occasion when you got too close and she sprung the
hurting news on you without grace)- The Angels; 2)Nadine
(Is It You?)(anything by Chuck by definition then, or by the various hot licks he
laid down on his guitar spoke of sex, back seat of the car sex which was just
fine then when you were young and agile)- Chuck Berry; 3)Spanish Harlem(I
have already pointed out the central importance of this song come late night
school dance night when you want that she you were eyeing all evening to slow
dance with you on that last chance to dance, thanks Brother King) - Ben E.
King; 4)Come & Get These Memories(Well, it is not dancing in the
streets but Martha and the girls had that Motown sound down) -
Martha & the Vandellas 5 )Little Latin Lupe Lu (every guy, at least
every guy I knew, wondered about that Latin girl thing from these guys like
maybe we missed something)- The Righteous Brothers; 6)It's Gonna Work Out
Fine(Yeah, I know Ike was not nature’s noble man but they rocked on this
one with that drop dead guitar work of Ike’s) - Ike & Tina Turner; 7)When
We Get Married (after a bunch of busted marriages, a few off-hand affairs
that didn’t work out and a few things that did that kid’s rush to the aisle
seems kind of wishful thinking now)- The Dreamlovers; 8)Dear Lady Twist – (Brother
Bonds saved more two-left feet guys in this universe than you could shake a
stick with his twist mania where you could look pretty good all tangled up)-Gary
"U.S." Bonds; 9)If You Gotta Make a Fool of Somebody( the
national anthem for guys who did not get to dance that last chance dance, damn,
after eyeing her all evening until your eyeballs got sore)- James Ray;
and 10) I Count the Tears (a great
backup just in case Spanish Harlem was already played or the record was
worn out from play or the guy running the record-player had absolutely no sense
of what a high energy, high hormonal count teenage crowd wanted to hear late at
night)- The Drifters.
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