***The Roots Is The Toots-The Music That Got The
Generation Of ’68 Through The 1950s Red Scare Cold War Night-Ike Turner’s Rocket 88
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…she hadn’t thought
about the upcoming date all that much, hadn’t thought about how Art was going
to squire her to the first dance of the school year, the decisive Fall Frolic.
She had been slow, late 1950s bewildered young woman who had gotten her
“friend” late slow (her period but every girl called it anybody but that and
she had come to rely on that designation
as being as appropriate as any although it was anything but a friend more like
a curse) in the boy department. Although given her total logged time on the
girlfriend telephone, many times the midnight telephone when she was lonely, lonely
more so of late as she had been more distracted, with Jenny who was more up-to-date
on matters of the opposite sex (and sex although don’t let that so-called
advanced knowledge of Jenny’s part throw you off since most of what she knew was wrong, wrong gotten from
an older brother, Ted, who like all
young men, young Catholic men, got what he knew of sex from the streets just
like everybody else and thus not surprisingly mostly wrong which almost caught
her flat-footed in the pregnancy department one time when Sal “protection”
might not have protected) she was certainly interested in boys (and at least
theoretically sex, although that interest had a quality of being sealed with
seven seals and tied up, tied up with a big bow with that prevalent mores of
saving herself for marriage, or some such thing).
This Fall Frolic by
the way had a probable track record in creating class “items” come senior year.
While it was not a formal dance, not even semi-formal like the junior prom every
young woman who planned to attend planned to have a “fox” dress fitting for the
occasion and expected that her date would put some extra effort into looking
good for the dance. All classes at old North Adamsville at least since 1951
when the underclassmen put up a stink about being shut out were entitled (and
encouraged) to attend but no question the event reeked of a senior project.
Most of the dance committee were well-known seniors and the band selection and theme
of the year’s dance were a senior monopoly. It would take several more years
and something like a civil war to break the senior monopoly but by then nobody
was committed to an all-out defend of the old traditions. That was the 1960s
when everybody was ready for a jailbreak and there was even talk by school official
that the damn thing would be canceled if the drug use could not be controlled
(it was as everybody got stoned in cars or back alleys before the dance and at intermission).
So this was the environment which she was approaching her task ahead, a task
involving getting the best date possible for the big dance of the fall.
She knew, knew from
Jenny, and knew from about six other sources that the lead-up here was decisive
in that one’s date, one’s successful date, at that event usually foretold who
one would be going to the senior prom with. Since the end of junior year that
choice had come more and more to seen to be Art Graham. Art who began to talk
to her in World History class after ignoring her and about every other girl in
class as far as she could gather when she, not much for history, started to get
peppered by Mr. Nolan, the World History teacher, who thought girls were dumb
when it came to history and would publicly try to humiliate as many as possible.
Toward the end of the year he had aimed his barbs her way. Art, a history nut
and sort of Mr. Nolan’s pet, took pity on her and tried to coach her a little.
The coaching paid off and old Nolan backed off a bit. Then she found herself
talking to Art about other subjects and he didn’t seem to mind that they were
not about history so she started to dream a little about Art, but just a little
as summer break kind of ended what had started. They met at the beach a few
times during the summer, spent a few hours together but not what any
self-respecting girl in 1958 would call a date. So she laid her plans.
It wasn’t that she
was crazy for Art, not in the way best friend, Jenny, was crazy over Sal, Sal
with the wavy black hair and athletic build, crazy to let him do what he wanted
with her, but she did see him a one part of her “item” for the senior year if
only he showed a little spark her way. Although she knew exactly what Jenny let
sexy Sal do with her since Jenny burned many a midnight telephone call
describing what went down in the town’s lovers’ lane section of the beach she
had no intention of letting Art have his way with her, she wasn’t like that. She
began to think less of Jenny the more she told her about her sexual experiences
but she wanted that dance date and was frustrated when Art kept her at arm’s
length. Damn, she almost had to force the issue and invite him to the dance
herself after they had spent some time together in school talking once classes
resumed in September and she relied on him to bail her out in Problems in
Democracy class where she was more under water that in World History, if that
was possible. Then he started walking her home after school, talking, talking
about his big future plans, talking about maybe they could go to the movies or
to the school football games together. Anything but that damn dance (her term
so she, not given to swearing, was certainly frustrated). They spent their time
together like that before the date of the dance was getting perilously until
one afternoon she asked him if he liked to dance, he said he did although he
cushioned the remark with “I’m not very good” and they kind of by osmosis made
a date for the Fall Frolics.
And so we move
forward to the big night and she was now
up in her room (and darting to the bathroom as well) preening herself, fluffing
her hair, tightening that damn girdle to make her more slender than she already
was, applying yet another touch-up on the make-up, as expected of any girl
going to the Frolics with a guy that might form part of an “item” for senior
year. She just hoped, hoped to high heaven that he, not known for being a sharp
dresser like Sal, would look okay and also not forget to bring her a corsage so
she would not be the only girl without one, especially since she practically
had to order the thing herself.
She wasn’t sure when
she heard the rumble of the engine coming up the street, maybe just before the
car stopped in front of her house, but she definitely heard it before Art
knocked on the door downstairs as her mother welcomed him in while she was
finishing her last preparations. As she came down the stairs she noticed that
he looked especially handsome in his suit and with his hair parted just so.
Things already looked up for the evening. She did not know the half of it
though until he opened the front door for her as they were leaving and she spied
that big old Cadillac sitting in front of her sidewalk. Seems that old Art,
once he got the message from the time they had danced around the dance
invitation, started his own version of the courting ritual and convinced his
friend, Spider Mack, to let him borrow his souped-up Caddy. Spider was well
known around town, notorious to many parents, especially girl parents for getting
the back seat of that vehicle messed up around midnight or maybe later after so
two o’clock “chicken run” victory and he collected the spoils of war, some wet
girl thrilled by the prospect of that backseat with the king of the North Adamsville
muscle car night. So she knew that if Art had such an automobile and moreover that
Spider trusted Art with his most precious possession that the night might be interesting,
and she might make it interesting for Art once she thought about that
possibility. And off they went, first to pick up Jenny and Sal, she proud to be
seem in the company of a man who knew how to bring a girl to the dance in style,
and she too thinking how envious Jenny was that she was sitting in the front
seat of Spider’s car just like she belonged there.
But that was only the
beginning of it once they got to the school gym when the Frolics were held
annually. She could hardly believe the transformation of the old smelly
medicine ball gym into something that looked like a downtown hotel setting
(even if only a hokey North Adamsville setting) with flowers festooned all over,
table covered with school colors white and blue tablecloths, the walls filled
with various rock posters to hide the creepy cinderblocks, and the entrance
with a trestle also garlanded with flowers. Yes, special. But more special Art
seemed a man transformed as the cover band hired for the evening by the Fall
Frolic senior committee (like I said before it was always a senior-sponsored
affair back then, a kind of last gift to their fellow schoolmates leaving or to
be left behind), the Ready Riders, kissed off the old classics, you know Patti
Page, Frank, Dean, those guys, that had guided previous dances and kicked out
the jams. Kicked out the ones guaranteed parent approved and hence boring, or something
like that. She noticed that Art, a guy who said he had two left feet and maybe
he did but he looked, well, sexy, had become almost a whirling dervish as he
rocked by himself in her direction, that was no other way to put it since previously
everybody did a waltz or a variation at school dances also parent approved, to
some older rhythm and blues stuff and then laid out the full program when the
band tore into a big riffing dose of Ike Turner’s Rocket 88.
That was the tune
that everybody at Doc’s Drugstore over on Main was dropping endless nickels and
dimes in the juke-box to hear over and over. Although it was actually an older
song, maybe the early 1950s, Doc had refused to place it on his jukebox (or
rather he was pressured to not put it on his jukebox by those meddlesome parents)
since it was considered a “colored” record back then. Jesus. But the kids, late
1950s kids including apparently Art, flipped out over it. And so the night went
as she got more in tune with Art’s new form of dancing and mimicked his moves
to his delight. As the dance ended, ended with a slow one by the Dubs’ Could This Be Magic, she, they ran into
Jenny and Sal, and she, she who had so often secretly scorned the stuff Jenny
told her that she and Sal did down at Adamsville Beach, suggested that the
foursome take Spider’s car and go down to that very beach to, well, she said
“cool off” after the dance. But you know what she meant just in case her parents
might be around, or some girlfriend who would have plenty to say come Monday morning
before school girls’ lav talk about how she had come of age, had come into the
time of her time. So, yes, if anybody was interested she and Art were an “item”
that year …
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