Saturday, September 10, 2016

When The Wild Boys Roamed The 1950s Rockabilly Night-With Sunnydale Records In Mind.

When The Wild Boys Roamed The 1950s Rockabilly Night-With Sunnydale Records In Mind.





CD Review

By Zack James

Sunnydale Records-The Early Days, various artists well-known and one hit wonders, Rem Records, 1991

[This compilation of mainly rockabilly records from Sunnydale Records, a small label working out of a recording studio in Vicksburg, Mississippi run by the local legend Sam McGee was hatched initially from and interview the rock music critic Seth Garth had with Sam. Seth, doing double duty as a rock historian here prodded Sam to let him listen to some of his material. And the rest is history. He contacted Artie Samuels of Rem Records to see if they would re-release the material after working laboriously through Sam’s tapes and reels. These twenty-two recordings are the result. If you want to know what it was like when men, and it was mainly men then, played rockabilly for keeps listen up.]        

 

“You know the guys who came in here when I first opened my doors were the wild boys, the guys who were on the edge, the guys who wanted any way possible not be whatever fate had predicted would be in store for them. Maybe some of them were desperate too, at least some of them must have been desperate enough to fork down two dollars to record something, a lot of them couldn’t even carry a tune,” said Sam McGee to Seth Garth who was interviewing him for a history of rock and roll in the early days article that he was doing for Classic Rock magazine.

Right then Seth was looking for background information about all the guys who were not Elvis or Carl or Chuck or Jerry Lee and how they had fallen by the wayside in the fight for who would be king of the hill in the early days of rock when it was a jailbreak sound for a whole half generation of youth from East to West and back born during or just after the carnage of World War II which acted as a backdrop to what they were fighting a clandestine battle against. He had been tipped off about Sam McGee and his encyclical knowledge about and as a participant in the old days by Rodney Pease, a one-hit wonder back then with Shake My Tree which was originally recorded, demo recorded at Sunnyvale Records. He had met Rodney still at it at the Blue Note just off of Beale Street in Memphis, that town the natural spot to start looking of the roots of rockabilly which is what he needed more information on since he already had plenty of stuff on the blues, stuff associated with an off-shoot of the folk music minute of the 1960s. Rodney was doing rockabilly covers to the aging clientele who remembered when he kicked out the jams and made everybody dance when they were all kids.

Rodney had told Seth that he could find Sam at an assisted-living facility just outside of Vicksburg where it had all started for him, for Sam too. When he visited the facility, which he would do over a few sessions, he found a sprightly old man, filled with long white hair and a wispy old beard but still able to talk a mile a minute. Once Seth made his mission clear Sam was like a cannonball ready to explode. As background he told Seth that he had started out selling records and musical instruments out of what was then the Sunnydale Record Shop just after the war when he had come home from the European wars and decided that he would, having survived a few big battles, pursue his dream of working in the entertainment industry. That was when he got the bug, the idea of setting up a recording studio in the empty space in the back of the store after he had read too many stories about how Hank this and Jimmy that who had made it had started out via making a demo at this or that small recording studio.

Sam wanted in, wanted in bad, had half-dreamed that he could find the next gem, the next Hank, and later the next Elvis from the crowd who came through the Sunnydale doors. So from 1947 until he closed the shop and recording studio in 1961 to concentrate on his night club (which had only closed in 2000) after he realized that the big rockabilly minute that he had depended on, dreamed about had been eclipsed by other more sedate rock music Sam dreamed his big outlandish dreams (“outlandish” Sam’s expression).     

Sam had made Seth laugh at that “wild boys who couldn’t sing or play an instrument” since early on in his life, back in high school when he was a wild boy himself and hung around with such he decided that since he couldn’t do either, sing or play, he would become a music critic, at least until he won his spurs as a journalist although he never got to be that big time generic journalist that he had dreamed of becoming. Hence this next in an endless series of musical history assignments.         

Sam continued, “You know as many guys as came through Sunnyvale and there were plenty we only had that one big hit by Rodney Pease, and that was a fluke since there was a guy from RCA in that day looking for the next Elvis to add to their stable. All those other guys were getting waxed up for that record they could show their grandchildren I guess when they had them on their knees and they asked what rock and roll was down in the hills and hollows before it got sprung on the whole world, a whole generation which lost it inhibitions, or some of them listening and dancing to some primordial beat that they didn’t understand but made them jump.”

“But it was hard to stop them, hard to stop those hungry boys, or would have been if I had tried since Sam Phillip up at Sun in Memphis had his big breakthrough with Elvis although even he didn’t get the riches he deserved when he sold Elvis’ contract to RCA for what turned out to be cheap money. Frankly I needed the money myself so I wasn’t telling any guy and the few gals who came in not to fork down that two bucks. I was running a nightclub over on the Southside of Vicksburg, the Starlight Lounge and was running behind on all my payments until Sid Lawrence saved my ass when people were willing to pay to hear him in person but would not buy his records. Maybe it was his stage presence that didn’t get translated onto the vinyl. He could pack them in though God rest his wicked drunken, drugged up died at an early age soul. Here people were willing to fork up three dollars for a cover charge, drink an ocean of liquor, high shelf stuff too and would not fork out a buck for a silly 45 RPM which would have pushed him toward the big time. I am still trying to figure that one out.”    

Seth then asked Sam how the guys who came in (we will assume that the few girls who came had the same basic bug) found out about his Sunnyvale recording studio way down in Vicksburg and what was driving them to do so. Sam replied, “Well you know after the war, after World War II since we have had a few more since then, the young guys who missed the war, missed the action, good or bad, were restless, couldn’t be kept down on the farm. I mean that almost literally since the overwhelming majority of them coming through the door in those days were farm boys influenced by first I think Hank Williams who after all had that same kind of poor boy, good old boy upbringing as they had and maybe if Hank hadn’t gotten busted up with drink, drugs, some sullen women, and all that they would have followed his trail, maybe there would have been no rockabilly and no rock and roll either, the white good old boy part anyway. But Hank passed on early and there was still that restlessness.”

“Maybe part of it was the rockabilly music they heard on the radio, although that was not what it was called  back then just country like I said. What I know is this, these guys would all come in with their guitars, if they had any instrument at all, some of them in pretty good condition too, probably those pretty good guys did their ten thousand hours and had it down. Funny I was a jazz man back before the war, loved Benny and Artie Shaw, Chu Berry, and that music depended on horns and piano, even popular music too, show tunes, the guitar was from the back forty black folk (we called them n-----rs back then some still do in small clots drinking or in their exclusive country clubs) so there was a shift going on away from those more expensive instruments. Hell, you could get a guitar of some quality from the Sear catalogue for about five bucks along with your father’s tiller and your mother’s washing machine.”

“I wouldn’t underestimate the influence of Les Paul since a lot of guys, good or bad, had some of his licks, had picked them up either from a guitar book also purchased via Sears or had watched his television show if they had a television where they could see what he was doing while they couldn’t on his old radio show but I could tell when a guy had certain licks that he had been paying attention. Funny a lot of guys when I asked them said they were self-taught and probably many of them were but those guys didn’t go anywhere except back to the farm.”

“That might have been all of it though, that desperate idea of getting off the fucking farm. I know I slipped the noose myself and I couldn’t sing a note and was murder on any instrument I tried to play, and believe me I tried. I did have a good ear for music though, and a desire to do something in the entertainment field and so there you have it .Yeah, they didn’t want to plow fields like their fathers and older brothers, they wanted what I called at the time “kicks,” something different. So that is what I think drove the thing, that and ego, maybe before Elvis for a girlfriend or to play at some county fair how the hell do I know. All I know is that I always, long before Elvis, had plenty of two dollars being forked down. Almost had Frankie Lavin who made it big with Ducca Records a few years later come in because he was from Leverett the next town over from Vicksburg but I couldn’t get the production values up, that heavy bass beat that Frankie loved behind him enough on my two bit machinery back then, basically a reel to reel tape recorder and a couple of other sound instruments put together with baling wire and spit. Otherwise you would be addressing me not just as a rock and roll man from back in the day but as a man with the words of wisdom of an elder statesman from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.”     

Seth had heard many stories of the deep separation between the races down South, down in the Mister James Crow South as Sam would call it and since Sam had brought up the point about the guitar being a simple-minded black instrument he decided to ask the “race question,” the race musical question that like everything else in America turned the dime on what was what back then, now too as Sam would gently put out when answering. Seth had prior knowledge from Allan Battles, the folk archivist who had interviewed Sam back in the early 1970s for a country blues article he was writing, that Sam had taken two dollars from good old boy white farm boys but also from black farm boys as well. Had had a shot at signing Chan Larson before he left the South and grabbed a lot of attention when he went to Chicago and lit up the electrified blues night at Chess Record.

“Yeah, I booked black guys in my place since you found out that information from Battles who was looking at something else, was trying to find guys, black guys who had performed in the 1920s, 1930s well before my time, in the time when RCA, the record company that made a ton of money off of Elvis later remember what I said earlier. They had sent out actual agents, guys, to comb the foothills, put posters up looking for what Battles called guys who did “roots music.” Really what he was looking for was “juke music,” the music of the Saturday night no electricity cabin, illegal liquor one guy picks up a guitar and plays until the early hours. And there was cussing, fighting, cutting guys up along the way, usually over some woman, some two-timing woman, just like with white guys hanging around their bars. I couldn’t help him directly since that really was before my time but I told him to go over to the Delta, over Clarksville way, over around Highway 61 and if anybody was still around that is where they would be, around the plantations, and small factories. Battles did find Tommy Jackson there, and through him whoever was left standing. He did write me to tell me I was in his article, later made into a book he said.”            

“As far as the black thing, you know the n----r thing back then sure I took money from anybody who wanted to have a record pressed-pay two dollars please on the fist. Now I ain’t very proud of this but this is the truth about my situation. I had to record the black guys in a separate studio once the white guys found out that I recorded black guys in “their” studio, otherwise I would have been lynched myself probably. Here is the way it worked though, the white guys said the great unwashed black guys stunk up the place and why did I let them in anyway. I also had to record the black guys under the Sunset label as “race records” otherwise some redneck would have come in and waylaid the place. That’s all I have to say on the matter, and no more but if you check the label, the Sunset label, you will find a guy like Bukka White there under the name Jimmy Stewart and later Ike Turner, under the name Johnny John. That was before he broke out with that classic Rocket 88 of his.”    

Seth having gotten all he was going to get from Sam on the race question shifted gears and was looking for anything Sam remembered about any of the guys who came in, what they played, who they covered, anything funny as well. 

“You know, or maybe you don’t, although you look old enough but the automobile was the king crazy thing that guys wanted, young guys, white farm boys, black turpentine factory boys, so a lot of it was about getting a big car and maybe a fancy suit, a few bucks to impress some current girlfriend or something to make an impression on some honey they were eyeing. No way that they were going to get that on the farm or factory so they took a chance, a two dollar chance to see if they had “it,” see if they were going to be the next Elvis or Bill Haley, Chuck Berry or Muddy Waters. Keep that in mind, okay. Remember too that these were country boys, both races and as you well know those few guys who did “win,” the one hit wonders, the guys who made a few bucks on the red barn Saturday night or chittling circuit didn’t know squat about money, got taken advantage of by record companies, night club owners and radio stations who pieced them off with chump change, that big old Cadillac that they were craving and not much else. I wanted you to know that, know too that I cut a few corners with guys, not so much in the recording end as at that nightclub that burned money to keep up.”

“The very first guy who came in, Hal Wallace, from Glover, on the other side of Vicksburg, came in after a cousin who read an ad I put in the Gazette offering to record anybody who wanted to be recorded for that two dollars. Here’s a real good example of what I was just talking about. The guy could play the guitar like crazy, had a fair singing voice but would get the words to the lyrics all scrambled up. I offered him a sheet of music with lyrics that he was trying to play, I had a sideline of selling sheet music in those days as well as selling records. Get this, he said he “never had not learnin,’” had never learned to read so he was much obliged but he would have to sing what he knew. Jesus”

“After that I stopped wondering what would make a guy think he could make a living out of anything having to do with music. Just kept the doors open and let what would happen happen. One guy, Jimmy Joe something came in wanting to do an instrumental since he was shy about singing. Only problem was that the guitar he brought in wasn’t “store bought” is the way he put it but had been handed down to him by some relative and so only had five strings, was missing  an E string and so he never could catch the high chords. Now you get what was going on down at the bottom, down where the dreams were a lot bigger than the talent. One poor boy black brother didn’t even have a guitar but asked me if I could lend him a hammer so he could nail a couple of nails in the wall and put up a string, one string, strangely enough he could play the hell out of that thing but its didn’t come through on the recording, although with today’s technology he probably would have sounded like he had an orchestra behind him.”

[Seth silently laughed to himself since he had a bug about over-produced songs, which the record companies, producers, hell, even the singers who were probably hard-pressed to realize that was them singing got pissed off about and would complain loudly to whatever publication he was writing for at the time.] 

“I can’t tell you how many guys came in to sing somebody else’s song, one string of guys ran around Warren Smith’s Rock and Roll Ruby which was a great song, a classic but how many guys were going to succeed doing that single cover. Another string had Sonny Burgess’ Red-Headed Woman as its hook. I had to laugh every time some trend got big and you could tell all these good old boys were smiling and scheming thinking they had as much talent as whoever it was they were trailing.”    

“I’d like to have a dollar though for all the near misses I had, all the money I spent promoting some record I thought had something to it, but see I just never had enough money to do it right, even with the guys who I knew could have created a niche for themselves. Can’t tell you how much I spent in postage alone sending first class parcels to anywhere from fifty to one hundred radio stations within two hundred miles of Vicksburg as the crow flies to get a nibble, a few got taken for local consumption by no big hits except Rodney’s and like I say that was a fluke but I liked my cut, no question on that one. Even back in 1954, maybe 1955 sent the big rock DJ Allan Freedman about a dozen records at different times when I heard an interview that he was interested in rockabilly as well and rhythm and blues as the roots of rock music. Never heard back though.”      

“Either that would happen, no deal for my guy, or I would have a group come in, four or five guys with instruments and I just couldn’t put it together with my little space. That’s how I lost the Del-tones who did the big hit My Darlin’ Rock and Roll Susie and a bunch of others. So Seth when you write this article up, or the book when you get done with it, just remember old Sam McGee was in the thick of things when rock and roll and rhythm and blues rode the night waves. Say Sam almost made it, okay.”         

Friday, September 09, 2016

In Honor Of The 145th Anniversary Of The Paris Commune-All Honor To The Communards

In Honor Of The 145th Anniversary Of The Paris Commune-All Honor To The Communards

 








Some events can be honorably commemorated every five, ten, twenty-five years or so like the French Revolution. Other events need to be honorably commemorated yearly, and here I include the uprising which went on to form the Paris Commune, established on March 18, 1871, the first time the working class as such took power if only for a short time and only in one city, although that the city was Paris was not accidental since the city of lights had an honorable history of such plebian uprisings from 1789, 1830, and 1848 and other lesser such insurrectionary happenings (there was an expression at the time in radical and revolutionary circles that as long as Blanqui was alive and people remembered the Babeuf uprisings that when the deal when down you could always depend on Paris to rise). We can, those of us in what now is a remnant who still believe in the old time verities and who still fight for such things as working-class led revolution, socialism leading to a world communist federation or some such seemingly utopian vision and a fairer shake in the appropriation of the world’s good, still draw lessons from that experience.

Sadly the bulk of the world’s working classes most definitely in the wake of the rather quick demise of the Soviet Union and East Europe in the late 1980s and early 1990s which for better or worse had represented some socialist vision however distorted (or to use Trotsky’s terminology deformed workers states) have either dismissed socialist solutions out of hand these days when the situation in places like Greece, Spain and lots of East Europe countries cry out for such solutions or the links to such previous socialist ideas has become so attenuated that the ideas are not even in play. To take Greece as a current example anybody with the least bit of sense knows that you cannot keep squeezing the living standards of the vast majority of people in that country yet the number of those who seek a communist way out, at least as exemplified by the recent parliamentary results, a quick measure of the strength of the harder left is disheartening.

So yes, in the absence of more current positive examples, we can use the Commune to draw lessons that might help us in the one-sided fight against the human logjam that the international capitalist system, complete with its imperial coterie at the top, led by the United States, the has bequeathed us almost a century and one half later and that is ripe, no overripe to be replaced by a more human scale way of producing the good of this wicked world. Hence the commemoration in this the 144th anniversary year.

Some “talking head” commentator in the lead-up to the 2015 celebration of the French Revolution on July 14th, a commentator specifically brought in for the occasion, I heard recently on a television talk show reflecting the same sentiment I have heard elsewhere from other academic and ideological sources, had declared the French Revolution dead. By that he meant that the lessons to be learned from that experience has been exhausted, that in the post-modern world that event over two hundred years ago had become passé, passé in the whirlwind of the American century now in full bloom (an American century that we thought had run its course in the wake of the Vietnam defeat but drew new life, if only by default, with the demise of the Soviet Union and its sphere of influence). While not arguing here with the validity of that statement on the French revolution, a classic bourgeois revolution when the bourgeoisie was a progressive movement in human history and actually drew some connections between the Enlightenment philosophies that gave it inspiration and the tasks of the risen people, there are still lessons to be drawn from the Commune. If for no other reason than we still await that international working class society that such luminaries as the communist Karl Marx expanded upon in the 19th century.          

Obviously like the subsequent Russian revolutions of 1905 and 1917, the Chinese revolutions of the 1920s and 1940s, the Vietnamese which took up a great deal of the middle third of the twentieth century, and others the Paris Commune was formed in the crucible of war, or threat of war. Karl Marx, among others, the great Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky for one, had noted that war is the mother of revolution and the defeat of the French armies and the virtual occupation by the victorious German armies around Paris certainly conformed to that idea that the then current government was in disarray and the social fabric after a near starvation situation required more. Every revolutionary commentary has noted that those factors formed a classic pre-revolutionary phenomena. Moreover the Commune had been thrust upon the working masses of Paris by the usual treachery of the bourgeois government thrown up after Louis Bonaparte lost control. That had not been the most promising start to any new society. But you work with what you have to work with and defend as Marx, the First International, and precious few others did the best you can despite the odds, and the disarray. So no hard and fast blueprint on revolutionary upheavals except by negative example, by what was not done, could come ready-made from that experience.  

To my mind, and this is influenced by the subsequent Russian revolutions of 1905 and February and October 1917, no question the decisive problem of the Commune was what later became to be known as the crisis of revolutionary leadership. Of course they should have expropriated the banks and centered their efforts around strengthening the authority of the Central Committee of the National Guard and not let lots of windbags and weirdos have their say based on barely deserved reputations but the result of those failures were that no serious party or parties were available to take charge and create a strong government to defend against the Thiers counter-attack from Versailles. (Also no appeals to other communes to come to the defense of Paris and no work among the Versailles soldiers.) It is problematic whether given the small weight of the industrial proletariat (masses factory workers like at Putilov in Petrograd rather than the small shop artisans and workman which dominated the Paris landscape), the lack of weaponry to fend off both the Germans and the Versailles armies, and food supply whether even if such a revolutionary leadership had existed that the Commune could have continued to exist in such isolated circumstances but the contours for the future of working class revolution would have been much different. The central and critical role of a revolutionary leadership which got fudged around in places like Germany where the working class party for all intents and purposes was barely a parliamentary party in the struggle against capitalism would have been clarified and at least a few revolutions, including those in Germany between 1918 and 1924 might have turned out differently and the world as well. The “what ifs” of history aside which are always problematic that is the bitter lesson we still before us today.   


Stop Continuing To Let The Military Sneak Into The High Schools-Down With JROTC And Military Recruiter Access


Stop Continuing To Let The Military Sneak Into The High Schools-Down With JROTC And Military Recruiter Access





 

 Frank Jackman comment:

 

One of the great struggles on college campuses during the height of the struggle against the Vietnam War back in the 1960s aside from trying to close down that war outright was the effort to get the various ROTC (Reserve Officer Training Corps, I think that is right way to say it) programs off campus. In a number of important campuses that effort was successful, although there has been back-sliding going on since the Vietnam War ended and like any successful anti-war or progressive action short of changing the way governments we could support do business is subject to constant attention or the bastards will sneak something in the back door.

        

To the extent that reintroduction of ROTC on college campuses has been thwarted, a very good anti-war action indeed which had made it just a smidgen harder to run ram shot over the world, that back door approach has been a two-pronged attack by the military branches to get their quota of recruits for their all-volunteer military services in the high schools. First to make very enticing offers to cash-strapped public school systems in order to introduce ROTC, junior version, particularly but not exclusively, urban high schools (for example almost all public high schools in Boston have some ROTC service branch in their buildings with instructors partially funded by the Defense Department and with union membership right and conditions a situation which should be opposed by teachers’ union members).

 

Secondly, thwarted at the college level for officer corps trainees they have just gone to younger and more impressible youth, since they have gained almost unlimited widespread access to high school student populations for their high pressure salesmen military recruiters to do their nasty work. Not only do the recruiters who are graded on quota system and are under pressure produce X number of recruits or they could wind doing sentry guard duty in Kabul or Bagdad get that access where they have sold many young potential military personnel many false bills of goods but in many spots anti-war veterans and other who would provide a different perspective have been banned or otherwise harassed in their efforts.  

 

Thus the tasks of the day-JROTC out of the high schools-military recruiters out as well! Let anti-war ex-soldiers, sailors, Marines and airpersons have their say.         

The Saga Of The Belfast Cowboy-With Van, Ah, Sir Van Morrison In Mind


The Saga Of The Belfast Cowboy-With Van, Ah, Sir Van Morrison In Mind




CD Review

By Zack James

Back on Top, Sir (then just plain) Van Morrison, Spectra Records,  

 

Seth Garth now that he was facing his own welcomed retirement from the grind of producing noteworthy copy for a string of publications large and small from Rolling Stone in the old days to Classic Rock magazine these days as a music critic of some note had to laugh, laugh a private laugh now that guys like surely, snarly, burn down the country club, turn the world upside down, we want the world and we want it now bad boy early 1960s folk minute “king of the hill” Bob Dylan was winning a presidential citation in America and more serious bad boys like Sir Mick Jagger (out of the London School of Economics, go figure), and Sir Van Morrison were being knighted by the Queen in England (Queen Elizabeth II, not the Virgin Queen from way back when Spanish Armada days if he was not mistaken, although he had not kept up with the royal succession since he was about twelve, didn’t see any need for it since the Brits had given up on the heathen colonies back in George III’s day and were still smarting from the blow and not some queen from Soho or someplace like that). Those awards, whatever their merit, got him thinking about the old days when guys like Dylan were talking about the times changing, about answers blowing in the wind and guys like Jagger were all but calling for red revolution or something like that, street fighting and gimme shelter anyway.          

Van Morrison too trying to break out with some new sound, started out going be-bop doo-wop Gloria, working the circuit to sailing into the Mystic, getting a mouthful of booze, drugs and whatever else he could get down his throat and finding some Tupelo honey. Taking a break from rock and roll put on a cowboy hat and named himself, branded himself the Belfast Cowboy, later got all bluesy and be-bop, have a few crashes in his life, had to clean up his act. Had to get back on top, got back on top and the Queen (remember not that queen in Soho or something like that) noted that change. Gave him her garter or whatever they give you when they put the sword on your shoulder for doing good for the former empire on which the crusty fiery old sun never set. And has just kept slugging away with the music muse. If you don’t believe that then check out this CD. What Seth wanted to know is whether they knighted music critics, you know guys like him who were blurry-eyed  in the trenches telling a candid world about guys like Dylan and what his lyrics meant in the great Mandela, Jagger and his heavy-lipped homages to be-bop blues brothers from Muddy to Howlin’ to Ray Charles and our man Morrison’s Tupelo honey reference. Probably not. Too bad.           

 

Out In The 1960s Be-Bop Working Class Night- The Face Of The Old Irish Working Class Hometown

Out In The 1960s Be-Bop Working Class Night- The Face Of The Old Irish Working Class Hometown








Another Moment In History- A Guest Post, Of Sorts



Kenny Kelly, Class of 1958?, comment:





A word. I, Kenneth Francis Xavier Kelly, at work they call me Kenny , although my friends call me “FX”, am a map of Ireland, or at least I used to be when I was younger and had a full head of wavy red hair, freckles instead of a whiskey and beer chaser-driven mass of very high proof wrinkles, and my own, rather than store-bought, rattlers, teeth I mean. For work, ya I’m still rolling the barrels uphill, I, well, let’s just say I do a little of this and a little of that. I am also the map of North Quincy, from the Class of 1958 at the old high school, or at least I should have been, except for, well, let’s leave that as at a little of this and that, for now, as well. I’ll tell you that story another time, if you want to hear it.



Let’s also put it that I grew up, rough and tumble, mostly rough, on the hard drinking-father-sometimes-working, and the plumbing-or-something-don’t-work- and-you-can’t- get- the-tight-fisted-landlord-to- fix-anything-for-love-nor- money walk up triple decker just barely working class, mean streets around Sagamore and Prospect Streets in Atlantic. You know, those streets right over by the Welcome Young Field, by Harold’s Variety (you knew Harold’s, with the always active pin-ball machine, and much else), and the Red Feather (excuse me, Sagamore Grille) bar room. Now I have your attention, right?



But first let me explain how I wound up as a “guest” on this “tales of north quincy” blog. Seems like Al, that’s the half-baked, manager of this blog, linked up some story, some weepy cock and bull story, about the Irishness of the old town, “A Moment In History… As March 17th Approaches” to the “North Quincy Graduates Facebook” page and my daughter, Clara, Class of 1978 (and she actually graduated), saw it and recognized the names Radley, O’Brian and Welcome Young Field and asked me to read it. I did and sent Al an e-mail. (Or Clara did, after I told her what to write. I’m not much of hand at this hi-tech stuff, if you want to know the truth)



I don’t know what he did with that e-mail, and to be truthful again, I don’t really care, but in that e-mail I told him something that he didn’t know, or rather two things. The first was that I “knew” him, or rather knew his grandmother Anna Radley because her sister, Bernice, and my grandmother, Mary, also an O’Brien but with an “e”, who both lived in Southie (South Boston, in those days the Irish Mecca, for the heathens or Protestants, or both meaning both Protestant and heathen like old Father Lally at Sacred Heart used to beta his gums about although I used to run with a couple of Protestant toughs who would have my boyos for lunch and have time for a quick hand of gin rummy, that might read this) were as thick as thieves. 


When I was just a teenager myself I used to drive his grandmother over to her sister’s in Southie so that the three of them, and maybe some other ladies joined them for all I know, could go to one of the Broadway bars (don’t ask me to name which one, I don’t remember) that admitted ladies in those days, ladies alone where in some bars they could not do that unless escorted and others which were men's bars, period, and have themselves a drunk. And smoke cigarettes, unfiltered ones no less, Luckies or Chesterfield's if I recall correctly, of which his grandfather, Dan Radley, refused to allow in the house over on Young Street.



I know, I know this is not the way that Irish grandmothers are supposed to act, in public or private. And somebody, if I know my old North Quincy, and my North Quincy Irish, is going say why am I airing that “dirty linen” in public that Al talked about in his story about Frank O’Brian (that I gave the title of above) and what am I doing taking potshots as the blessed memories of those sainted ladies. That is where my second thing comes in to set the record straight – Al, and I told him so in that e-mail (or Clara did) with no beating around the bush, is to me just another one of those misty-eyed, half breed March 17th Irish that are the our curse and who go on and on about the eight hundred years of English tyranny like they lived it, actually lived each day of it.



Now don’t get me wrong. I am as patriotic as the next Irishman in tipping my hat to our Fenian dead, and the boys of ’16, and the lads on the right side in 1922, and the lads fighting in the North now but Al’s got the North Quincy Irish weepy, blessed “old sod” thing all wrong. No doubt about it. So, if you can believe this, he challenged me, to tell the real story. And I am here as his “guest” to straighten him out, and maybe you too. Sure, he is helping me write this thing. I already told you I’m a low-tech guy. Jesus, do you think I could write stuff like that half- baked son of an expletive with his silly, weepy half-Irish arse goings on? I will tell you this though right now if I read this thing and it doesn’t sound right, fists are gonna be swinging, old as I am. But let’s get this thing moving for God’s sake.



Let me tell you about the shabeen, I mean, The Red Feather, that bar room on Sagamore Street. That’s the one I know, and I am just using that as an example. There were plenty of others in old North Quincy, maybe not as many as in Southie, but plenty. If you seriously want to talk about the “Irishness” of North Quincy that is the place, the community cultural institution if you will, to start. Many a boy, including this boy, got his first drink, legal or illegal, at that, or another like it, watering hole. Hell, the “real” reason they built that softball field at Welcome Young was so the guys, players and spectators alike, had an excuse to stop in for a few (well, maybe more than a few) after a tough battle on the base paths. That’s the light-hearted part of the story, in a way. What went on when the “old man”, anybody’s “old man”, got home at the, sometimes, wee hours is not so light-hearted.



See, that is really where the straightening out job on our boy Al needs to be done. Sure, a lot of Irish fathers didn’t get drunk all the time. A lot of Irish fathers didn’t beat on their wives all the time. A lot of Irish fathers didn’t physically beat their kids for no reason. (I never heard of any sexual abuse, but that was a book sealed with seven seals then.) And a lot of Irish wives didn’t just let their husbands beat on them just because they were the meal ticket. And a lot of Irish wives didn’t make excuses for dear old dad (or pray) when the paycheck didn’t show up and the creditors were beating down the door. And a lot of Irish wives didn’t let those Irish fathers beat on their kids. And a lot of Irish mothers didn’t tell their kids not to “air the dirty linen in public.” But, don’t let anyone fool you, and maybe I am touching on things too close to home, my home or yours, but that formed part of the scene, the Irish scene.



And, maybe, because down at the Atlantic end of North Quincy the whole place was so desperately lower working class other ethnic groups, like the Italians, also had those same pathologies. (I am letting Al use that word, although I still don’t really know what it means, but it seemed right when he told me what it meant). Figure it out, plenty of fathers (and it was mainly fathers only in those days who worked, when they could) with not much education and dead-end jobs, plenty of triple decker no space, no air, no privacy rented housing and plenty of dead time. Ya, sure, I felt the “Irishness” of the place sometimes (mainly with the back of the hand), I won’t say I didn’t but when Al starts running on and on about the “old sod” just remember what I told you. I’ll tell you all the truth, won’t you take my word from me.

From the Archives of the ICL-“Soviet Workers: Defeat Yeltsin-Bush Counterrevolution!”-25 Years Ago

Workers Vanguard No. 1094
26 August 2016
 
From the Archives of the ICL-“Soviet Workers: Defeat Yeltsin-Bush Counterrevolution!”
25 Years Ago



Twenty-five years ago, Boris Yeltsin’s ascension to power in the Soviet Union was a pivotal event leading to the restoration of capitalism in the home of the October Revolution. We reprint below excerpts from “Soviet Workers: Defeat Yeltsin-Bush Counterrevolution!” (WV No. 533, 30 August 1991), which was translated into Russian and circulated in over 100,000 copies throughout the USSR. As Trotskyists, we had always defended the Soviet Union against imperialism and internal counterrevolution because it was a workers state, based on a planned, collectivized economy. At the same time, we fought for proletarian political revolution to oust the Stalinist, nationalist caste sitting atop the workers state and to return to the internationalism and proletarian democracy of Lenin and Trotsky’s Bolsheviks.
In August 1991, there was a botched coup attempt by supposedly hardline opponents of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who was committed to the gradual reintroduction of capitalism while also pushing glasnost (openness). The coup plotters were no less committed to capitalist restoration; they merely sought to maintain the USSR as a unitary state (dominated by Russia). Seizing on this coup, U.S. imperialism (then led by the first President Bush) employed its stooge, Yeltsin, to mount a counterbid for power.
A month after the coup, we forthrightly stated: “In an armed struggle pitting outright restorationists against recalcitrant elements of the bureaucracy, defense of the collectivized economy would have been placed on the agenda whatever the Stalinists’ intentions” (WV No. 535, 27 September 1991). However, all wings of the bureaucracy proved equally bankrupt. As Bush openly backed Yeltsin and the petty-bourgeois rabble and fascistic scum supporting him, the pathetic coup plotters refused to lift a finger. They ignominiously collapsed within days.
When we issued the statement below, the proletarian state power had been fractured but not yet destroyed. The imperialist-installed Yeltsin regime was fragile and the working class had not moved. Ours was the first widely circulated piece of propaganda calling for workers action to smash the counterrevolutionary drive. We concretized this perspective through calling for independent workers committees to prevent layoffs and privatization by taking over control of production, for the formation of committees of soldiers and officers in the armed forces to prevent anti-Communist purges and the use of the army against the interests of the workers, and for multinational workers defense guards to ward off communalist massacres.
However, decades of Stalinist rule had systematically destroyed the consciousness of the Soviet working class, rendering it mute and passive. Under the anti-Marxist dogma of building “socialism in one country,” the Stalinist misrulers capitulated to the imperialists and suppressed numerous international revolutionary opportunities, for example, China in 1927, Spain in the 1930s and Italy following World War II. Through repression and lies they methodically attacked every aspect of the revolutionary and internationalist consciousness of the Soviet proletariat. Finally, with the bureaucracy having fatally undermined the Soviet economy through gross mismanagement and corruption, the heirs of Stalin proclaimed that socialized property had been a “failed experiment” and capitalism was really the only possible system. At the same time, the accompanying virulent nationalism was a huge impetus to counterrevolution in East Europe and the multinational Soviet Union.
As the document of the Second International Conference of the ICL in 1992 stated: “The events of August 1991, placing the forces of open capitalist restoration in the ascendancy in the Soviet Union, marked a turning point in contemporary world history. A piecemeal consolidation of this counterrevolution has taken place. The degenerated workers state of Stalin and his heirs has been destroyed, representing a world-historic defeat for the international working class” (“For the Communism of Lenin and Trotsky!” Spartacist [English-language edition] No. 47-48, Winter 1992-93).
The bourgeoisie and the bulk of its camp followers on the reformist left hailed the counterrevolution and proclaimed the “death of communism.” Meanwhile, the peoples of the former USSR were plunged into the most desperate poverty. U.S. imperialism, no longer challenged by Soviet military might, was emboldened to launch more wars and occupations against dependent and semicolonial peoples across the world.
Unevenly and not without contradictions, a rightward shift took place internationally, reflected in a retrogression in proletarian consciousness, wherein the connection between working-class struggle and the goals of socialism was severed. We in the ICL, the party of the Russian Revolution, continue the struggle to win the working class to Marxism in order to open the road to new Octobers.
*   *   *
The working people of the Soviet Union, and indeed the workers of the world, have suffered an unparalleled disaster whose devastating consequences are now being played out. The ascendancy of Boris Yeltsin, who offers himself as Bush’s man, coming off a botched coup by Mikhail Gorbachev’s former aides, has unleashed a counterrevolutionary tide across the land of the October Revolution. The first workers state in history, sapped and undermined by decades of Stalinist bureaucratic misrule, lies in tatters. The state power has been fractured, the Communist Party—its bureaucratic core—shattered and banned from the KGB and armed forces, the multinational union is ripping apart as one republic after another proclaims secession.
But while Yeltsin & Co. now see a clear field to push through a forced-draft reintroduction of capitalism, the outcome is not yet definitively decided. As the imperialists rejoice and the pro-capitalist petty bourgeoisie exult, Soviet workers are facing a disaster of catastrophic proportions: every gain for which they, their parents and grandparents sacrificed is on the chopping block. An explosion of even greater nationalist strife is looming. The lash of capitalist exploitation being introduced amid universal economic dislocation threatens widespread hunger and mass unemployment in the coming winter. The Soviet proletariat, whose capacity for militant action was dramatically shown in the miners strike of the summer of 1989, has not been heard from. Opposition from the factories against the ravages of capitalist assault could throw a giant wrench in the works and prevent the rapid consolidation of counterrevolution.
Soviet Stalinism has breathed its pathetic last gasp. Even up to the coup, many of the most advanced workers, who opposed Yeltsin’s plans for wholesale privatization and Gorbachev’s market reforms, looked to the so-called hardline “patriotic” wing of the bureaucracy. There is no room anymore for such illusions.
The coup’s collapse and the ascendancy of counterrevolution in the Soviet Union buttresses, for the present moment, Bush’s proclaimed “New World Order” militarily dominated by the U.S. Following its annihilation of Iraq, the triumphalist and vengeful American ruling class threatens to turn its wrath, unrestrained by the deterrent of a powerful USSR, against myriad peoples of the world. Cuba, in particular, is in Bush’s cross hairs, and its defense is more than ever a duty of all opponents of Yankee imperialism.
From the time of Stalin’s bureaucratic usurpation of power in 1924, Leon Trotsky and the Left Opposition waged an unrelenting fight for the internationalist program of the Bolshevik Revolution. Under the deadly blows of Stalinist terror and slander, the Trotskyists persevered as the best and only consistent defenders of the remaining revolutionary gains. Today the International Communist League (Fourth Internationalist) continues this struggle.
Stalinism was the political rule of a bureaucratic caste parasitically sitting atop the proletarian property forms created by the October Revolution of 1917. Whether during the bloody purges of the 1930s or the myriad “reforms” from Khrushchev and others, this system based on lies and repression of the working class not only blocked further progress toward socialism but clogged every pore of Soviet society. After decades of self-sacrifice extracted from the proletariat in the name of building “socialism in one country,” Gorbachev’s perestroika was the last desperate attempt of the Stalinist bureaucracy to preserve its position by adopting capitalist measures. But like Nikolai Bukharin’s appeals to the rich peasants (kulaks) in the late 1920s to “enrich yourselves,” perestroika fueled the forces of capitalist restoration which have now reached their fruition with Yeltsin’s countercoup.
Boris Yeltsin is not a “Westernizer”—he is an extreme Russian chauvinist who intends to sell out the Soviet Union to the West. He is connected to a far-right, racist outfit in the U.S. called the “Free Congress Foundation” (whose East European operatives include notorious Nazi collaborators) which takes credit for “training” him and his staff on how to seize power. His laws are being drawn up by advisers supplied by the U.S. government. One of Yeltsin’s first acts as Moscow party chief in the mid ’80s was to legitimize the anti-Semitic Pamyat fascists when they emerged from their ratholes. While he promises working people that the free market will bring them prosperity, in fact it will lead to the elimination of what every Soviet worker considered a right until recently: a stable job, free health care, an education for their children—gains which all rest on the collectivized economy.
The alternatives posed before the Soviet bureaucratically degenerated workers state have always been: counterrevolution or Trotskyism. Today Stalinism is dead. The key to frustrating the bloody plans of Bush, Yeltsin and their counterrevolutionary cohorts is the early forging of a Trotskyist nucleus in the Soviet Union, regrouping those elements in the workers movement, the army and throughout society who would fight for the program of October....
Fight Capitalist Enslavement!
For decades, the Stalinists and imperialists have joined together in identifying the system of bureaucratic rule installed by Stalin and his henchmen in 1924 with Leninism. Nothing could be further from the truth. The Bolsheviks under Lenin and Trotsky carried out the October Revolution as the first step of the world socialist revolution. Backward Russia, the “weak link” of imperialist rule, was the scene of the first workers revolution, but it had to be completed by the proletariat in the advanced imperialist countries if it was to sustain itself and lead to socialism, a society of equality based on abundance. It was on the basis of the defeat of the European revolutions, centrally in Germany, in the 1918-23 postwar period, that the usurpers Stalin/Bukharin “discovered” the profoundly anti-Marxist notion that it was possible to construct “socialism in one country.” Trotsky denounced this nationalist dogma as writing off the world revolution, and predicted it would be the undoing of the Soviet Union if the bureaucracy was not swept away by the resurgent working class.
In his decisive analysis of Stalinism, The Revolution Betrayed (1937), Trotsky asked prophetically, “Will the bureaucrat devour the workers’ state, or will the working class clean up the bureaucrat?” In developing this, he elaborated the program of proletarian political revolution led by a Bolshevik party to re-establish Soviet democracy. The planned economy would be subordinated to the will of the workers, freeing it from the arbitrary zigzags of the faceless, grey bureaucrats. And instead of the conservative anti-revolutionary policies of Stalin’s Kremlin, the Soviet Union would again become the headquarters of international socialist revolution. He also spelled out the bleak alternative:
“If—to adopt a second hypothesis—a bourgeois party were to overthrow the ruling Soviet caste, it would find no small number of ready servants among the present bureaucrats, administrators, technicians, directors, party secretaries and privileged upper circles in general. A purgation of the state apparatus would, of course, be necessary in this case too. But a bourgeois restoration would probably have to clean out fewer people than a revolutionary party. The chief task of the new power would be to restore private property in the means of production. First of all, it would be necessary to create conditions for the development of strong farmers from the weak collective farms, and for converting the strong collectives into producers’ cooperatives of the bourgeois type—into agricultural stock companies. In the sphere of industry, denationalization would begin with the light industries and those producing food. The planning principle would be converted for the transitional period into a series of compromises between state power and individual ‘corporations’—potential proprietors, that is, among the Soviet captains of industry, the émigré former proprietors and foreign capitalists. Notwithstanding that the Soviet bureaucracy has gone far toward preparing a bourgeois restoration, the new regime would have to introduce in the matter of forms of property and methods of industry not a reform, but a social revolution.”
Every Soviet worker, collective farmer, pensioner and soldier will immediately recognize that this process of counterrevolution is well under way. The state monopoly of foreign trade has been scuttled, the planned economy abandoned. In their stead, imperialist corporations from Pepsi-Cola to Chevron oil have made encroachments on the Soviet economy. The Russian federation’s new “land reform” lays the basis for destroying the kolkhoz collectives, promising rural poverty for the many and riches for the new kulaks. “Cooperative” profiteers and black market speculators have grown explosively in the vacuum of the collapsed distribution system. But this is only the beginning. Yeltsin now intends to ram through capitalist restoration at breakneck pace. Yavlinsky, co-author of the Harvard-designed “grand bargain” to sell out the Soviet Union to the imperialists, is now in charge of the economy. But for the Soviet working masses, the “magic of the marketplace” holds the promise of hunger and homelessness....
We Trotskyists Have Defended the Soviet Union
Today the Soviet Union faces being dismembered and its constituent republics turned into neocolonies of Washington, Berlin and Tokyo. The present collapse of the Stalinist bureaucracy has its immediate origins in the renewed Cold War offensive launched by American imperialism after its ignominious defeat in Vietnam. In every key battleground of Cold War II—Afghanistan, Poland, the German Democratic Republic (DDR)—the International Communist League (ICL, formerly the international Spartacist tendency) has stood resolutely in defense of the Soviet Union against the capitulation of the Kremlin bureaucracy.
Where the Soviet Stalinists waged a halfhearted war against CIA-armed Islamic reactionaries in Afghanistan, ultimately selling out and withdrawing, we said “Hail Red Army in Afghanistan!” and called to “Extend Social Gains of the October Revolution to the Afghan Peoples!” When in late 1981 Polish Solidarność, under the guidance of Reagan and Pope John Paul Wojtyla, made a bid for power in the name of “bourgeois democracy,” we raised the call: “Stop Solidarność Counterrevolution!” General Jaruzelski’s countercoup temporarily spiked these clerical-nationalist front men for Wall Street and Washington. But the Stalinists had neither the moral authority nor the program to undercut counterrevolution, and eight years later the same Jaruzelski, with Gorbachev’s approval, abdicated political power to Walesa & Co.
When in late 1989 the Honecker regime in East Germany fell and the Berlin Wall was opened, the ICL threw its forces into the fight for the perspective of a red Germany of workers councils. We initiated the call for the giant Treptow anti-fascist demonstration of 3 January 1990, which drew 250,000 people to honor the Soviet soldiers who died liberating Germany from the Nazis. Then, as Gorbachev gave the green light to a reunified Fourth Reich of German imperialism, our comrades of the Spartakist Workers Party of Germany were the only party which clearly and unambiguously opposed capitalist reunification.
Within the Soviet Union representatives of the ICL have fought for a revolutionary internationalist perspective. Thus at a coal miners congress last October in Donetsk, we helped block the effort of right-wing, Yeltsinite forces advised by the American “AFL-CIA” federation to enlist Soviet miners in the international anti-Communist witchhunt against British miners leader Arthur Scargill. The imperialist rulers hate Scargill because he led the 1984-85 British miners strike—which Soviet workers generously aided. This momentous class battle gave the lie to the self-serving Stalinist myth that workers in advanced capitalist countries are incapable of hard-fought class struggle.
We urgently seek to bring the program of Trotskyism to the Soviet proletariat and socialist-minded intelligentsia with our Russian-language Spartacist Bulletin, containing in addition to key documents of the ICL the section on the USSR from Trotsky’s Transitional Program.

******Will The Circle Be Unbroken-The Music Of The Carter Family (First Generation)



******Will The Circle Be Unbroken-The Music Of The Carter Family (First Generation)

 
 
 
From The Pen Of Bart Webber

You know it took a long time for Sam Eaton to figure out why he was drawn, seemingly out of nowhere, to the mountain music most famously brought to public, Northern public, attention by the likes of the Carter Family, Jimmy Rodgers, Etta Baker, The Seegers and the Lomaxes back a couple of generations ago. The Carter Family famously arrived via a record contract in Bristol, Tennessee in the days when radio and record companies were looking for music, authentic American music to fill the air and their catalogs. (Jimmy Rodgers, the great Texas yodeler was discovered at that same time and place. In fact what the record companies were doing to their profit was to send out agents to grab whatever they could. That is how guys like Son House and Skip James got their record debuts, “race record” debut but that is a story for another time although it will be told so don’t worry). The Seegers and Lomaxes went out into the sweated dusty fields, out to the Saturday night red barn dance the winds coming down the Appalachian hollows, I refuse to say hollas okay, out to the Sunday morning praise Jehovah gathered church brethren (and many sinners Saturday wine, women and song singers as well as your ordinary blasphemous bad thought sinners, out to the juke joint(ditto on the sinning but in high fiddle on Uncle Jack’s freshly “bonded” sour mash come Saturday absolution for sins is the last thing on the brethren’s minds), down to the mountain general store to grab whatever was available some of it pretty remarkable filled with fiddles, banjos and mandolins.

As a kid, as a very conscious Northern city boy, Sam could not abide that kind of music (and I know because if I tried to even mention something Johnny Cash who was really then a rock and roll stud he would turn seven shades of his patented fury) but later on he figured that was because he was so embroiled in the uprising jail-break music of his, our generation, rock and roll, that anything else faded, faded badly by comparison. (And I was with him the first night we heard Bill Haley and the Comets blasting Rock Around The Clock in the front end  of a double feature of Blackboard Jungle at the Strand Theater when it was playing re-runs so you know I lived and died for the new sounds)   

Later in high school, Lasalle High, when Brian Pirot would drive us down to Cambridge and after high school in college when Sam used to hang around Harvard Square to be around the burgeoning folk scene that was emerging for what he later would call the "folk minute of the early 1960s" he would let something like Gold Watch And Chain register a bit, registering a bit then meaning that he would find himself occasionally idly humming such a tune. (The version done by Alice Stuart at the time gleaned when he had heard her perform at the Club Nana in the Square one time when he had enough dough for two coffees, a shared pastry and money for the “basket” for a date, a cheap date.) The only Carter Family song that Sam consciously could claim he knew of theirs was Under the Weeping Willow although he may have unconsciously known others from seventh grade music class when Mr. Dasher would bury us with all kind of songs and genre from the American songbook so we would not get tied down to that heathen “rock and roll” that drove him crazy when we asked him to play some for us. (“Don’t be a masher, Mister Dasher,” the implications of which today would get him in plenty of hot water if anybody in authority heard such talk in an excess of caution but which simple had been used as one more rhyming scheme when that fad hit the junior high schools in the 1960s and whose origins probably came from the song Monster Mash not the old-fashioned sense of a lady-killer) But again more urban, more protest-oriented folk music was what caught Sam’s attention when the folk minute was at high tide in the early 1960s.           

Then one day not all that many years ago as part of a final reconciliation with his family which Sam had been estranged from periodically since teenage-hood, going back to his own roots, making peace with his old growing up neighborhood, he started asking many questions about how things turned so sour back when he was young. More importantly asking questions that had stirred in his mind for a long time and formed part of the reason that he went for reconciliation. To find out what his roots were while somebody was around to explain the days before he could rightly remember the early days. And in that process he finally, finally figured out why the Carter Family and others began to “speak” to him.         
The thing was simplicity itself. If he had thought about and not let the years of animosity, of estrangement, hell of denial that he even came from the town that he came from things had been that bad toward the end although all those animosities, estrangements, denials should not have been laid at the door of that simple, hard-working father who never got a break, a break that he saw. Didn’t see that the break for his father was his wife, didn’t see that whatever hardship that man faced it was better than where he had from, all that wisdom came too late and a belated public eulogy in front a whole crowd in town, that stingy back-biting Olde Saco of a town, some who knew the Sheik (he was so alienated some stranger, stranger to him, had to tell him that had been what his father’s moniker had been when he was in the Marines and later when a few ladies in town thinking with his dark good looks he was French-Canadian, one of them, had furtively set their sights on him) and some who didn’t but it was the kind of town that set store by memory glances of those who had lived and toiled in the hard-bitten bogs for so long. Hell, in the end, also too late but only by a whisper he realized that all those animosities, estrangements and denials should not have been laid at the door of his mother either but no private sorrows eulogy at a class reunion could put that wall back together.
Here is how the whole thing played out. See his father hailed (nice word, a weather word, not a good weather word and maybe that was a portent, another nice word for the troubles ahead) from Kentucky, Hazard, Kentucky long noted in song and legend as hard coal country. A place where the L&N stopped no more, where “which side are you on” was more than a question but hard fighting words, maybe a little gunplay too, a place where the hills and hollows had that “black gold,” that seamy dust settling over every tar-papered roof and windowless cabin with a brood, another nice word for the occasion for widower Father John and come Saturday night, rain dust, gun play, railroad-less tracks down at Fred Dyer’s old dilapidated red barn Joe Valance and the boys would play fiddle, guitar, mando, and Sweet Emma on mountain harp all the swingy and sad tunes that drove their forbears to this desolate land (so you can image what their prospects were in the old country to drive them out. Nelson Algren wrote profusely about such driven-out people and what it did to them over several generations so to wander aimlessly others to sit still aimlessly)
When World War II came along, not as infamy, not as catastrophe, but like rain he left to join the Marines to get the hell out of there. During his tour of duty he was stationed for a short while at the Portsmouth Naval Base and during that stay attended a USO dance held in Portland where he met Sam’s mother who had grown up in deep French-Canadian Olde Saco. Needless to say he stayed in the North, for better or worse, working the mills in Olde Saco until they closed or headed south, headed south back close to his homeland in North Carolina and South Carolina too, to  for cheaper labor and then worked at whatever jobs he could find. All during Sam’s childhood though along with that popular music that got many mothers and fathers through the war mountain music, although he would not have called it that then filtered in the background on the family living room record player.
But here is the real “discovery,” a discovery that could only be disclosed by Sam’s parents, if he had asked and if they had been willing to tell them like they did his older brother Prescott who got along with them better when he was young and they were first born proud of him and his looks. Early on in their marriage they had tried to go back to Hazard to see if they could make a go of it there, so you know things were dicey or getting dicey in Olde Saco if they were going to half-dying eastern coal country mainly played out or being replaced by oils and gases. This was after Prescott was born and while his mother was carrying him. Apparently they stayed for several months in Hazard before they left to go back to Olde Saco a short time before Sam was born since he had been born in Portland General Hospital, which is what it said on his birth certificate when he had to go get a copy for his first passport application. So see that damn mountain, that damn mountain music, those many generations of back-breaking work in the old country before the work ran out or they were run as vagabonds and thieves and that wandering and sitting still in the murky hills and hollows coal enough to choke you but also remember all those generations of Fred Dyer’s red barn Saturday fiddle, guitar, mando and some vagrant Sweet Emma on mountain harp playing the swingy and sad tunes that go back beyond Child ballad time, was in his DNA, was just harkening to him when he got the bug. Funny, isn’t it.