***Out In The Be-Bop Be-Bop 1960s Night- Save The Last Dance For Me
A YouTube film clip of The
Drifters performing their classic Save The Last Dance For Me
Back in
the 1960s, probably now too, one of the great coming-of-age events, if you
could stand the gaff, was figuring out how you stood in the high school pecking
order (hell junior high too it started that far back). One of the determining
factors was your ability, male or female, to garner a date for one of the
myriad school dances that took part at various intervals during the year.
Topping off that conquest was the last dance, the last dance of the evening, a
slow one to allow the heat of sixty-seven rock and roll fast dances to die down
and get you ready for the “real” night (if you were lucky) down at the old
beach (or wherever the locale was if you were not ocean-worthy) and its subsequent
finish at some all-night diner. But you had to get some vibe going on that last
dance or else you were going to be home early watching the late shows on television.
That last dance thought and what would, or would not happen, came into my mind
recently when I saw a YouTube film clip
of the Drifters singing their classic last dance song, well, Save The Last Dance For Me with a bunch of
kids dancing in front. Some who looked like they were going to make the beach, others
ready to reach for that television knob.
Recently I told all who would listen
a little heart-rendering story about a girl I knew back at North Adamsville
High, a girl who went on to gain some fame as a torch singer fronting for jazz
bands (and an occasional rock group as well), Diana Nelson. Needless to say I
had a “crush” on her in ninth grade and she in turn would not give me the time of
day (or so I thought since I was so girl-shy that I did not pick any signals
and just daydreamed watching his ass). I mentioned, in detailing some of the
events surrounding the North Adamsville Class of 1962-sponsored version of the
traditional late September Falling Leaves Dance in that sketch was that one of
the perks that year was getting to hear the vocals of local singer and
classmate that Diana Nelson, backed up by local rock band favorite, The Rockin’
Ramrods.
I also mentioned that her selection to
front for the group at the dance had been the result of a singing competition
held by the town fathers and that I would relate some of the details of that
competition at a later date. At the time of the above-mentioned dance she was
“going steady” with some college joe, and had not given me the time of day,
flirting or encouraging-wise, since about tenth grade, although we always
talked about stuff, music and political stuff, two of my passions, and hers
too. Here’s the “skinny.”
******
No question that about 1960, maybe
into 1961, girl vocalists were the cat’s meow. (Okay, young women, but we
didn’t call them that then, no way.) Also no way as well is what we called
them, called them among we corner boys at Salducci’s Pizza Parlor, especially
when we got “no action.” I don’t have to draw you a diagram on what that meant,
right? You can, if you were around then, reel off the names just as well as I
can, Connie Francis, Carla Thomas, Patsy Cline, and the sparkplug Brenda Lee. I
won’t even mention wanna-bes like Connie Stevens and Sandra Dee, Christ. See,
serious classic rock by guys like Elvis, Bo Diddley, Chuck Berry and Jerry Lee
Lewis was, well, passé, in that musical counter-revolution night. But music,
like lots of other things abhors a vacuum and while guys were still singing, I
guess, the girl singers (read young women, okay, and we will leave it at that)
“spoke” to us more. Especially to record- buying girls who wanted to hear about
teen romance, teen alienation, lost love, unstoppable hurts, betrayal (usually
by the girl’s best friend and the sobbing girl’s boyfriend) stuff that
teenagers, boys and girls equally, have been mulling over, well, since they
invented teenagers a long time ago.
So it was natural for the
musically-talented girls around North Adamsville, and maybe around the country
for all I know, to test themselves against the big name talents and see what
they had. See if they could make teen heaven- a record contract with all that
entailed. In North Adamsville that was actually made easier by the town fathers
if you can believe that (and they were all men, mostly old men in those days so
fathers is right). Why? Because for a couple of years in the early 1960s, maybe
longer, they had been sponsoring a singing contest, a female vocalist, singing
contest. I heard later, and maybe it was true, that what drove them was that,
unlike those mid-1950s evil male rockers mentioned above, the women vocalist
models had a “calming effect” on the hard-bitten be-bop teen night. And calm
was what the town fathers cared about most of all. That, and making sure that
everything was in preparedness for any Soviet missile strike, complete with periodic
air raid drills, Christ again.
In 1962 this contest, as it was in
previous years, was held in the spring in the town hall auditorium. And among
the contestants, obviously, was that already "spoken for" Diana
Nelson who was by even the casual music listener the odds-on favorite. She had
prepped a few of us with her unique rendition of Brenda Lee’s I’m Sorry
so I knew she was a shoo-in. And she was. What was interesting about the
competition was not her victory as much as the assorted talents, so-called,
that entered this thing. If I recall there were perhaps fifteen vocalists in
all. The way the thing got resolved was a kind of sing-off. A process of
elimination sing-off.
Half a dozen, naturally, were some
variation of off-key and dismissible out of hand. These girls fought the worst
when they got the hook. Especially one girl, Elena G., if anyone remembers her
who did one of the worst versions of Connie Francis’ Who’s Sorry Now I
had (and have) ever heard. The more talented girls took their lost with more
grace, probably realizing as Diana got into high gear that they were doomed.
But here is the funny part. One of the final four girls was not a girl at all.
Jimmy C. from right down the end of my street dressed himself up as girl (and
not badly either although none of us knew much about “drag queen” culture then)
and sang a great version of Mary Wells’ Two Lovers. Like I said we knew
from nothing about different sexual preferences and thought he just did it as a
goof. (I heard a couple of years later that he had finally settled in
Provincetown and that fact alone “hipped” me to what he was about, sexually.)
I probably told you before that one
part of winning was a one thousand dollar scholarship. That was important, but
Diana, when she talked to me about it a couple of days later just before class,
said she really wanted to win so she could be featured at the Falling Leaves
Dance. Now, like I said, I had a big crush on her, no question, so I was amazed
that she also said that she wanted me to be sure to be at the dance that next
late September. Well, if you have been paying attention at all then you know I
was there. I went alone, because just then I didn’t have a girlfriend, a
girlfriend strong enough for me to want to go to the dance with anyway. But I
was having a pretty good time. I even danced with Chrissie McNamara, a genuine
fox, who every guy had the “hots” for since she, just the night before, had
busted up with Johnny Callahan, the football player. And Diana sang great,
especially on Brenda Lee’s I Want To Be Wanted. She reached somewhere
deep for that one.
Toward the end of the evening, while
the Rockin’ Ramrods were doing some heavy rock covers, Chuck Berry’s Sweet
Little Sixteen I think, and she was taking a break, Diana came over to me
and said, I swear she said it exactly like this- “save the last dance for me.”
I asked her to repeat herself. She said Bobby (her college joe) was not there
that evening for some reason I do not remember and that she wanted to dance the
last dance with someone she liked. Well, what’s a guy to do when someone like
Diana gives her imperial command? I checked my dance card and said “sure.” Now
this last dance thing has been going on ever since they have had dances and
ever since they have had teenagers at such events so no big deal, really. Oh,
except this, as we were dancing that last dance to the Ramrod’s cover of The
Dubs Could This Be Magic Diana, out of the blue, said this. “You know if
you had done more than just stared at my ass in class (and in the corridors
too, she added) in ninth grade maybe I wouldn’t have latched onto Bobby when he
came around in tenth grade.” No, a thousand times no, no, no, no…
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