The Roots Is The Toots: The Music That Got The Generation Of
’68 Through The 1950s Red Scare Cold War Night-In
The Time Of The Be-Bop Baby Boom Jail Break-Out-The Cats Are Still Rocking –With The Chiffons He’s
So Fine In Mind
By Allan Jackson
[A while back, maybe
a couple of modern introductions ago I mentioned that out in the corner boy
night a lot, a very lot if one can use such a term, of the talk was about
girls, and not just the local girls who gave us more hard times and hard luck
than you could imagine (that hard times and hard luck having a lot to do with
them to use a crude term of art of the corner boy times not “coming across”
meaning exactly if you were, are, a teenage boy no sex, or worse no “do the do”
as we called after we heard the old blues master mad monk Howlin’ Wolf use the
term in one of his blues songs, which might be expected after they got you all
worked up although that did not preclude, not preclude at all lying our asses
off saying we got whatever we wanted from some sullen frail of interest. That
too a very lot part of the stifling corner boy night around Tonio’s Pizza
Parlor “up the Downs” where we working class boys from the Acre section of
North Adamsville hung when we weren’t doing something). We also talked, endlessly
talked when the Scribe was on the run, when he wanted to dazzle us with one of
his two thousand arcane facts about other faraway girls, girls which I would
later following Mick Jagger call the girls with the faraway eyes.
The big category in
high school though, this long before the Scribe dragged us out to the West
Coast at the time of the Summer of Love uprising in 1967 were the golden dream
girls of Southern California, the ones that the Beach Boys were endlessly
writing songs about and which in our
vapid imaginations made us hunger for those seemingly easy blonde, tanned,
long-legged surfer girls who according to urban legend or against our from
hunger minds were ready to do the do at the drop of a hat. Nice dream if not
the reality, well, no the reality for me anyway as much as I loved the ocean
and figure that I could have learned to surf, learned to fret about not having
a little deuce coup, fret about that perfect wave and such. That was then
though, the dream time which made our many girl-less nights, our many no come
across nights a little less onerous.
Here’s the funny
part, the part that drove me to re-think about that phantom surfer girls
experience when the real deal went down. When we did get to the West Coast a
few years later after high school we could see the sea change in dramatic form,
in the form of “Butterfly Swirl” for one who can stand in for what I want to
mention today about the genesis of this sketch. Butterfly Swirl, obviously not
her real name but a moniker I think Josh Breslin, who had an affair with her as
did others from our crowd, put on her since she was a flaming light for our
sore eyes, real name Kathy Callahan, from Carlsbad about forty miles north of
San Diego whom we met when we were riding Captain Crunch’s merry prankster
yellow brick road converted bus to psychedelic travelling caravan home down
into La Jolla. La Jolla one of the surfing kingdom’s hot spots.
In 1963 said she, we,
would probably not come within ten thousand miles of each other-Carlsbad surfer
girl and North Adamsville corner boys not matter what our desires, our Beach
Boy-etched desires. In 1967 though there was convergence in an odd way.
Butterfly really was the classic surfer girl of the day all blonde, corn-fed
great figure as opposed to her Okie forebears who left the dust bowl to seek
the Garden of Eden written with hunger on every face, the bluest of blue eyes
but most importantly she had imbibed the whole surfer culture which meant then,
not now when you can’t tell the gender of the surfer until they come ashore and
take off their wetsuits, waiting on some forlorn beach looking beautiful if
bored until your surfer boy found his perfect wave-which usually took all day.
That bored part is what got Butterfly to come over to the bus and ask what we
were about, whether we had dope which she had heard about, the answer yes, and
where we were headed. Anyplace. That night, no the next night Butterfly fed up
with waiting around those forlorn beaches decided to travel with us for a
while. Those travels, her affairs for the few months she was with us have been
detailed elsewhere. Like I have said before-wasn’t that a time. A time when
surfer girls and hippies plied the same sodden path. But also like I said
before the road, the long winding road seeking that newer world that the Scribe
was always yakking about wasn’t for everybody and it wasn’t for Butterfly who
having flown the coop for a while went back to her perfect wave surfer boy.
Yeah, but wasn’t that a time. Allan Jackson]
************
Everybody knew, everybody who got
within fifty feet of him, distance enough for him to bellow out some 1950s
song, sometimes on key sometimes off depending on his pipes since he had not
been gifted with perfect pitch, knew that Jimmy Jones had been on some kind of
childhood nostalgia kick back in 2012 when he went wild or as he said more
soberly at the time, “I have recently been on a tear in reviewing individual
CDs in an extensive commercial Rock ‘n’ Roll series and have kicked out the
jams doing that deed.” Done so for a purpose to be described now. Well, hell,
you already know if you knew Jimmy back in the day, back when that rock and
roll music was just coming off the presses as fast a discretionary spending
teenagers could get their hands on the latest be all and end all number, or
like I did when I met him about twenty years ago when he was married to my
sister Jenny, his third and hers too so there was no crying about what to
expect, or not expect out of that institution, that it had to be about some woman.
A lot of the nostalgia gag, given that
Jimmy had just turned seventy at the time, and frankly should have been past
such childish things had been a result of running into Melinda Loring, an old
classmate and one time dream flame in high school, Hampton Falls High up in New
Hampshire, although nothing had come of it then. Nothing had come of it after
he, having been properly warned off after inquiring of some guys at school
about whether she had a boyfriend or not, important information to avoid the fatal
faux pas of making a “move” on
somebody who was “taken” that she was “unapproachable,” had moved on.
There are books that could be written,
and maybe they have already, about the subtle and not so subtle codes in that
old time mating ritual but I think Jimmy had it about right to move on rather
than test the waters and become the tittle at some Monday morning before school
girls’ locker room talkfest where such an indiscretion would have been the kiss
of death for him for the rest of his high school time. See too Melinda
confirmed that information when he ran into her at some class reunion thing or
I think he said it was the class celebrating all those who had survived three
score and ten having gained some wisdom from two broken marriages. Get this though
and you may not find it in any code book but maybe just the book of getting on
in life she said that she was not “unapproachable” to Jimmy now.
And so they had had a short affair, a
few month thing not exactly a fling but not exactly forever, an affair that
just didn’t have the will power to survive on both parts, her with her
incessant need to plan in detail their every move for the next three years and
he by an incessant need after his own three failed marriages to keep running
away from the serious commitment that she craved. However during the high life
of the affair Jimmy felt that he needed to go back and retrace their musical
times, felt as was his wont that he had to trace every blessed song (and bellow
them out as well) from their youth in order to impress her with his sincerity.
See that was his style, his way to work the woman scene back then and it
worked, worked on girls who were as nerdy as him but not genuine foxes like
Melinda (and looking at an old high school yearbook photograph, no, not the
silly class picture where everybody looked like they had just done five to ten
for armed robbery at the state pen, even the girls, but one of her as an
officer some club, the Glee Club I think, confirms that “fox” designation).
And so the affair, or whatever it was
in each of their minds, might not have lasted but his CD review work has a
certain lasting quality that he insisted that I read. See I knew guys like
Jimmy in high school, nerdy guys who had to know every blessed thing about some
subject or they felt stupid or incomplete but you had better ask your shrink
about that, and being the same age roughly knew the music (unlike my sister
Jenny who was ten years younger and so knew “acid rock” and later stuff) and so
I became something of a sounding board as he “discovered” each new selection.
Oh yeah, and in case you don’t remember I would have been a guy who warned
Jimmy off of Melinda back in the day, and that little recent affair they had as
well except I was in California then, and so he said I “owed” him. In the
interest of full disclosure, and Jimmy knows this opinion of mine so I am not
telling tales out of school. See I too was a guy who was interested in a girl,
Diana Wilson, and another classmate had warned me off her as “unapproachable” except
I did not move on and faced a few Monday morning before school girls’ locker
room bashings (again showing how important intelligence is to have before
making some fatal blushing move).
Jimmy told me a lot of his reviews had
been driven by the artwork which graced the covers of each CD, both to stir
ancient memories and reflect that precise moment in time, the youth time of the
now very, very mature (nice sliding over the age issue, right?) baby-boomer
generation who lived and died by the music. And who fit in, or did not fit in
as the case may, to the themes of those artwork scenes. The series basically
went from about 1955 to 1965 the time now called the age of classic rock and
roll. One year, the year I want to hone in on, 1959, Jimmy found the artwork a
case of the latter, of the not fitting in.
He said on the cover (actually he
showed me the cover after he described the thing since I just had to see it), a
summer scene (always a nice touch since that was the time when we had least at
the feel of our generational breakout), two blondish surfer guys, surf boards
in tow, were “checking out” the scene. A term back then, maybe now too, meaning
only one thing in summer, hell, in any season, meaning checking out the frails
(a localism that got started as far as Jimmy knew by his corner boy, Frankie
Kelly, who had about twenty different names for girls, so many that he and the
other corner boys could not keep up).
The two blonde surfers, although not
all surfers were blonde even though I think all their girlfriends were out
there in sunny California, were just the front. Just the frosting, okay. The
important scene although not pictured (except a little background fluff to
inform you that you are at the beach, the summer youth beach and no other, the
place where oldsters, even old hipsters in the black night let out for a day of
sun are not welcome here, and certainly not the tortuous family beach scene
with its lotions, luggage, lawn chairs, and tacky hot dogs and tepid
hamburgers, longings, longings to be elsewhere in early teen brains), can only
mean checking out the babes, girls, chicks, or whatever you called them in that
primitive time before we called them sister, and woman. No question that this
whole scene had been nothing but a California come hinter scene. One thinks
ahead to warm night breezes and souped-up cars traveling the boulevard (also
not pictured) looking, and looking hard like we all did, and not just in cool
breeze California for the heart of Saturday night.
No way that it has the look of Eastern
pale-face beaches, family or youth. This is nothing but early days California
dreamin’ cool hot days and cooler hot nights with those dreamed bikini girls.
These surfers, if that is what they are calling themselves are, no question
“beach bums,” inventing themselves in classic Hollywood-driven California
style, little did we know in the frigid East unless we had relatives or friends
there that whole sub-cultures, or what would be called sub-cultures by the
hoary academics who wanted to explain everything, of surfers, hot-rodders,
outlaw bikers valley boys, and later girls, out there waiting for the winds to
blow eastward. No way that they are serious surfer guys, certainly not Tom
Wolfe’s Pump House La Jolla gang where those surfers lived for the perfect
wave, and nothing else better get in the way. For such activity though for
avoiding becoming a prune waiting on those perfect waves needed rubberized surf
suits complete with all necessary gear. In short these guys are “faux” surfers.
Whether that was enough to draw the attention of those shes they are checking
out Jimmy said he would leave to the reader’s imagination.
And what caused Jimmy not to fit into
that scene other that the fact that he was not blonde, had not known until he
actually when out there in the mid-1960s that surfers as a culture even
existed, and as we know had been rebuffed before he started by a fetching girl
who probably, no definitely, in summer was one of those bikini-clad frails.
Eastern version. Believe it or not Jimmy was afraid, or at least half afraid,
of the ocean even though he had grown up (as had I) a stone’s throw from the
ocean all his growing up times. I had actually gone many times to the beach
with him when he was married to Jenny (and we were talking not always
coterminous) and had forgotten that I had never seen him go in the water. There
was a reason for him not going into the water, although he said that he would
go in when the spirit moved him or he was hot, just not over his head.
Reason: when Jimmy was about eight or
nine he had almost drowned when he lived on the other side of town, down at the
treacherous Snug Harbor Beach. That summer shortly after school got out he had
been out swimming on a decent day, not a threatening day at all, and had lazily
drifted out with the tide. While there he grabbed on to a floating log, a
telephone pole, and drifted some more until he realized that he was pretty far
out for a kid who was not a good swimmer. Typical kid’s move though as he
started back for shore he let go of the log as he swan back. Swimming for a
while and getting tired he knew he could not make it back and started to go
down. Somehow his older brother, Sam, saw what was happening and called for
help to the swimming instructor who was stationed at the beach that day. She
went out and saved him before he went down for the third time. When she got him
ashore and revived him he thanked her and scurried off totally embarrassed. And
also made his brother swear not to tell their mother. So that was why he was
cold to that 1959 cover art. Why he could not relate to the surfers, beach bums
or whatever they were trying to pull off.
Oh yeah, get this, the woman who saved
him was Melinda Loring’s mother and Melinda had been on the beach that day
sitting with her mother since she was too young to be left at home. She had
watched the whole episode, and vividly remembered that her mother was both
shaken and elated. Shaken since Jimmy was very close to drowning and elated
because she had acted coolly and saved a life, her first save. The way Jimmy
found out about that connection was when he mentioned that he had gone to Snug
Harbor Elementary School and Melinda thought back the times when she would
accompany her mother to the beach which was near the school. Melinda had mentioned in an e-mail about her
mother saving an eight or nine year old boy at the beach and that was that. One
of the things Jimmy said to Melinda before they started dating, while they were
still feeling each other out about getting together, was that they might as
well get together since they had already “met.” Melinda laughed and agreed.
During their short time together both thought for a while that the “meeting” at
the beach when they were eight or nine meant that their thing was “written in
the stars.” It was not but Jimmy said don’t blame the sea for that.
As for the music that Jimmy was crazy
for Melinda to know about, the 1959 music that backs up this cover art that
didn’t quite fit well that didn’t fit either, really. As Jimmy said we were
clearly in a trough as anybody who had heard the shift in musical tone on the
transistor radio that provide the source of most of our music and formed our
tastes knew. The golden age of rock with the likes of Jerry Lee Lewis, Elvis,
and Chuck Berry was fading, fading fast into what Jimmy said when he described
the music scene back then could only be called “bubble gum” music. (Strangely
or maybe not, Melinda told Jimmy she liked the Fabian -Bobby Vee – Bobby
Darin-Everly Brothers stuff that dominated that year and a few years after
which may have been an omen but maybe Jimmy was just exhibiting sour grapes
about the affair and not a fair evaluation of what these guys were doing except
they were “pretty” to the girls who grabbed their fan magazines).
Jimmy said sure he listened to it (and
so did I), listened to it hard on his old transistor radio (as did I), mainly
because that was all that was presented to us. It would be a while until the
folk, folk rock, British invasion, and free expression rock (aka “acid” rock)
engulfed us. Jimmy said the bulk of this CDs contents attested to our marking
time. There were, however, some stick-outs there that have withstood the test
of time. They include: La Bamba, Ritchie Valens; Dance With Me,
The Drifters; You’re So Fine (great harmony),The Falcons; Tallahassee
Lassie (a favorite then at the local school dances by a New England
boy who made good), Freddy Cannon; Mr.
Blue (another great harmony song and the one, or one of the ones, anyway
that you hoped, hoped to distraction that they would play for the last dance),
The Fleetwoods; and, Lonely Teardrops, Jackie Wilson (a much underrated
singer, then and now, including by this writer after not hearing that voice for
a while). So that was Jimmy take on the music year 1959.
Oh yeah I would be remiss if I didn’t
mention this. After a recent trip to the Southern California coast I can inform
you that those two faux surfer guys are still out there and still checking out
the scene. Although that scene for them now is solely the eternal search for
the perfect wave complete with full rubberized suit and gear. Forget the
girls part. Moreover their days as cover
art material have taken a turn for the worst, No artist would now, or at least
I hope no artist would, care to rush up and draw them. For now these brothers
have lost a step, or seven, lost a fair amount of that beautiful bongo blonde
hair, and have added, added believe me, very definite paunches to bulge out
those surfer suits all out of shape. Ah, such are the travails of the
baby-boomer generation. Good luck though, brothers.
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