When Mister Beethoven Got
Rolled Over-With The Music Of Mister Chuck Berry In Mind
CD Review
By Zack James
Chuck Berry: The Definitive
Collection, Chuck Berry, Chess Records, 2006
You never know when two or
more old guys, two or more mature forget the old at your peril gals too but
this one is about guys, will gather down memory lane or what will trigger that
big cloudburst. Seth Garth and Jack Callahan two old time friends from high
school in Riverdale had an abiding interest in music successively rock and
roll, the blues and folk music (never losing interest in any in the process
just that one would wax and wane at any given time). Seth had eventually become
as an early part of his journalistic career been a music critic for the now
long defunct The Eye, an alternative newspaper out in the Bay Area in the days
when he, Jack and a few other guys like Phil Larkin headed out there to see
what everything was all about.
Recently though Seth and
Jack, and occasionally Phil would get together and talk music shop at the Erie
Grille where they would down a few scotches to level out (their expression).
One night they had been at Seth request discussing the first time they had heard
the legendary Woody Guthrie sing his songs, or one of them anyway. As it turned
out Seth had drawn a blank on when that might have occurred and he begged Jack
to think the matter through since he was preparing an article, an unpaid
article, for the American Folk Music Review and needed a frame of reference.
Jack had come up with the answer-in Mr. Lawrence’s seventh grade music class
when he put on Woody and a bunch of other stuff to try to ween them off rock
and roll which he hated (and which they loved, loved to perdition). Seth had
accepted that answer (although later he contacted Phil and Phil reminded him
about the song This Land Is Your Land covered by the Weavers with Pete Seeger
in Miss Winot’s fourth grade class on her cranky old record player and he would
use that source in the article).
All this talk of that
fateful seventh grade music class, and Mr. Lawrence, is probably what
solidified everybody in the class to their devotion to rock and roll. But that
was a hard fought and paid for devotion. A few days after the night with Jack
at the Erie Grille Seth woke up from a nap thinking about the time in Mister
Lawrence’s class when he was being crazy about Beethoven, wanted the class to
appreciate classical music. Seth, Jack and Phil had had enough and
started in one class singing Chuck Berry’s throwing down the gauntlet Roll Over
Beethoven and the class cheered them in. Of course in this penalty-ridden world
Mr. Lawrence took his revenge and the trio spent several afternoons after
school since they refused to apologize for their outbursts. Seth smiled to
himself-Yeah, rock and roll will never die. To prove that assumption just
listen to Mister Chuck Berry’s gold star compilation here. And be prepared to
do something rash.
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