The Last Chance
Dance- With The Kingsmen's Late Jack Ely And Louie, Louie In Mind
From The Pen Of Bart Webber
Fritz Jasper when he heard the news
that the Kingsmen’s lead singer and guiding spirit (okay, okay the guy who kept
things together) Jack Ely had passed away not only thought about the mortality
rate of those of his generation of ’68 starting to take its toll, for the
famous, the infamous, and the great unwashed, but that the Kingsmen probably
had the greatest one-hit wonder song of the whole rock and roll 1960s. Somehow
that one song Louie, Louie which
depended more on the beat and sense of romantic adventure connected with the
song got more mileage per turntable turn than one could shake a stick.
Certainly it was not the lyrics which were frankly mostly unintelligible and
those who have tried to decipher such things are still scratching their heads
over that hard fact. In one hundred years obscure devotees will still be
seeking the Roseate Stone on those lyrics. Jack Ely went to his grave keeping
his own counsel about the whole issue.
Hell, who was Fritz kidding, mortality
rates and one hits wonders were not what drove his thoughts when he heard about
Ely’s passing but rather thoughts of vivacious Minnie Callahan the girl who got
away, or maybe better let get away, during his high school days at Carver High.
The song would forever after bring back that memory. He, in the intervening
years, especially in the time immediately after they had graduated, after he
had gone away to school and after he had spent some “tribal” acid-etched time
on the hitchhike road with his friend, the late Peter Paul Markin, in the high
life turbulent 1960s gold rush before returning to his safe, sedentary “normal”
when he sensed the whirlwind days were ebbing and he went to graduate school to
eke out a career as a senior civil servant. Minnie, had stayed around town
after high school, had expressed to him dreams of a house on Pouty Point, the
upscale section of town created after the land was sold by some old-time
Finnish family who had given up a Mom and Pop existence trying to make a living
from harvesting the cranberry bogs which were the lifeblood of the town’s
economy since around the time of the Pilgrims it seemed. He could not see that
then, had had to “sow his wilds oats” and by the time that he figured out what
she had meant to him she was gone, who knows where, swallowed up in her own
version of the 1960s magical mystery tour. When he did make inquiries on his
occasional visits back to town when he was still in contact with his own
estranged family it was too later, the family had also left town and the one
source who could have helped him, Freddie Callahan, her brother, his best
friend since junior high and his primary source of intelligence about her
during those school days was “resting” out in Carver Cemetery, one of those
58,000 plus names etched in black marble down on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. as a result of the war of
their generation, Vietnam.
Funny, Fritz thought, as Ely’s passing
sparked thoughts back to sunnier times, he had been after Minnie since he first
arrived in Carver when his father had had to relocate for his job out on U.S.
Route 95 a few miles from town and he had run into her, literally, at Myles
Standish Junior High after he became best friends with Freddie, whom he would
continue to be friends with all through school until they lost contact except a
few passed letters once Freddie’s number got called in the damn military draft
that plagued a whole generation of young men then, and would continue to haunt
many of those who have survived even now.
Freddie had warned him even then that
she would break his heart, was nothing but a heart-breaker even then, one of
those as he found out later when he would continue to attracted to the type,
those virginal Irish Catholic girls who had their rosaries in one part of their
brains and theirs lusts in the other all while making sure they were observed
every Sunday morning at eight o’clock Mass. Jesus. (Jesus too the number times
he would walk that mile or so to Sacred Heart Church in order to sit a few rows
in back of her at that eight o’clock Mass and watch her ass. The Jesus part
being that she knew, as he knew from her best friend, Ellen, Markin’s sister
who told him, that he was looking at her ass, and not just there but in the
corridors at school whenever she walked by.) So, yes, he had been forewarned
but when seemingly involuntary hormonal actions dictates every move Freddie’s
“advise,” his truthful friend talking was so much wind. So it went all through
junior high when he would go over to the Callahan household sometimes knowing
Freddie was not in just on the off chance that she would be in and maybe take
pity on him. Take pity because he was as an outsider in a town where the
relationships were fixed early and where the social peeking order were
determined maybe at birth he was extremely shy around girls in general, Minnie
in particular. Having three brothers and no nearby girl cousins did not help
either. So junior high school drifted away with him and his Minnie Callahan
dreams all asunder.
That same situation, that same getting
nowhere with Minnie, would have probably gone on high school as well, that same
feeling that disturbed his sleep dreaming although maybe he would have gotten
over it once he saw that Minnie had been matched up with the heroic senior halfback
on the football team, Mickey Larkin once he spied her freshman year. It was not
like he didn’t have other girls he was interested in, or were interested in
him, although they tended to be the girls most influenced by the folk music
craze that was being spear-headed by the emergence of Joan Baez as the “queen
of the folk scene” and they all were ironing their hair to be as straight and
long as hers and begging their dates to take them to coffeehouses in Cambridge
some forty miles away to hear old British ballads and mountain music. Fritz
though, having come of age in the prime of rock and roll hated folk music,
hated it later too when Marston would drag him to those places when they were
at Boston University. Nah, another guy with Minnie or girls interested in him
would not have extinguished the flame, no way.
And no way he would have gotten to
first base with Minnie either except for one important event in his freshman
year, the annual Fall Frolic which was sponsored as a fund-raiser by the Senior
Class each year and which was the only event that the prideful senior class permitted
underclassmen to attend, attend if they had the two dollar admission charge and
by long enforced tradition if they kept out of the hair of any senior that they
might run across. So usually until one became a senior and could take on the
royal attributes most of the underclassmen, underclass guys were clinging to
the walls for most of the evening. The girls though, if not with dates, not
with senior dates were another matter and were fair game for senior boys.
Needless to say Minnie was in attendance with one Mickey Larkin jealous fist
and snarky remarks by half the girls in the school.
Fritz had not figured to go to the
event having no particular reason to go and having a serious disability in the
dance world. He could not dance and he had two left feet. Freddie however had
convinced him that he had go to “show the colors,” meaning to begin the long
four year process becoming school royalty. If not then then perhaps never. So
he went and held up his share of the wall for most of the evening hoping that
he would survive, just survive.
The Fall Frolic really was a well-done
affair with the senior dance committee going all out to make the drab gymnasium
where the dance was held seem like a hotel ballroom what with all the flowers,
bunting and disguising the bleachers by setting up tables along a couple of the
walls (don’t worry those tables were exclusively for seniors and their dates,
some rituals never change). The highlight though unlike most of the dances
throughout the year was that the committee hired a live band, a live local band
to provide the music, usually a band who could cover the latest hits, some
classic rocks tunes, and of course, that last chance last dance song to end the
evening. That year, somebody on the committee, Helen Kelly, Fritz thought as he
thought back on the time, was friends with Rickey Rhodes, the lead singer of
the “hot” local cover band around Boston, the Rockin’ Ramrods. So that night
the Ramrods were scheduled to play.
And play they did heating up the
audience with lots of great covers of Elvis, Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee and Fritz
could not remember who else but they were “hot” that night starting right from
the first set. Fritz had been hanging onto the wall mainly although he did
dance to Chuck Berry’s Sweet Little
Sixteen since it was fast one with Ellen Marston who told him that she
thought Minnie was looking in his direction (Fritz would later find out that
Minnie had put Ellen up to that comment.). He blushed but thought nothing of as
the song ended and he went back to the wall.
As the Ramrod’s opened up the second
set (there were three as was usual in a big dance night) Fritz immediately
picked up on the beat of a new song that everybody who hung out at Jimmy’s
Jack’s Diner where he had the best jukebox in town was going crazy over, an
unknown band from California, or he had heard they were from California, called
the Kingsmen who were singing this song, Louie,
Louie that had all the guys making suggestive moves, and the girls just
kind of giggling, or getting into it. As they music played on Fritz spotted
Minnie, Minnie looking radiant and beautiful and for the moment without Mickey.
Maybe it was the way she looked, maybe, it was Ellen’s comment, hell, maybe he
was just reacting against that string of long, straight-haired folkie girls
that he had run into of late but whatever it was he found himself walking as if
in a trance over to Minnie and making some very suggestive moves her way, Not
bad for a two left-feet guy either. After he was done, flushed, turning red he
turned around and went back to the wall. So nothing happened that night,
nothing happened for a couple of weeks, but one night he went over to the
Callahan house to see Freddie about something but he was not there according to
Minnie. As he turned to go Minnie asked him if he would like to stay and listen
to her latest records, one of them being her own recording of Louie, Louie. Thus started one of the
great romances of the Carver High School Class of 1967.
Yeah, Fritz thought just at that
moment, whatever happened to Minnie Callahan. Then he chuckled to himself,
hell, what am I complaining about, he had gotten more shy boy dances later down
at the Surf Ballroom from girls on that one song than he could shake a stick
at. Not everything worked out but, thanks guys. Thanks, Jack Ely wherever
you are and whatever the words were. RIP
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