The Roots Is The Toots: The Music That Got The Generation Of
’68 Through The 1950s Red Scare Cold War Night-They Shoot CD Players (Or iPODs) Don’t They- With Elvis’ Version Of Harbor
Lights In Mind
Sketches From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Harbor Lights Lyrics
(words & music by H. Williams - J. Kennedy)
(words & music by H. Williams - J. Kennedy)
I saw the harbor lights
They only told me we were parting
Those same old harbor lights
That once brought you to me.
I watched the harbor lights
How could I help it?
Tears were starting.
Good-bye to golden nights
Beside the silvery seas.
I long to hold you dear,
And kiss you just once more.
But you were on the ship,
And I was on the shore.
Now I know lonely nights
For all the while my heart keeps
praying
That someday harbor lights
Will bring you back to me.
***********
Some people have asked, although I am
not one of them, if there was music before 1950s rock ‘n’ roll, before what is
now called the classic age of the genre. Usually such people are young, or were
born well after what is now called the classic age of rock and roll became the
classic age. So they ask was there music before hip-hop nation beat down the
doors, or if any other genre that has struck their interest like techno-rock
that might have formed the basis for their question. In fact having thought
about the question for a while I got jolted one day when I listened on the
radio to an interview with a famous classic rock star who put the question a
different manner-will rock and roll ever die? His answer, and this is the part
that shocked me for a moment, was there would always be a niche, a niche for
Chrissakes, for rock even as now it has moved from the center of the music
universe. The shock coming from my own impression that rock and roll as an old
time song had it would never die. So rock will fade to the sidelines and be
just another piece of entertainment like our pre-rock parents and their swing
and jitter-buggery.
But rock, rock as I knew it, I, Frank
Jackman, who lived for the latest 45 RPM records (those were single song two-
sided pieces of vinyl which you can find examples of on YouTube when somebody
puts a classic rock song up) to hit the stores along with my corner boys was
the basis for the question back then. Back in the 1950s when the world was
young and America, young America, still had that capacity to wonder before the
lamp went out in the next decade. Wonder just like Scott Fitzgerald pointed out
about those who founded places like New York City, the Mecca for a lot of
things, including the production of those 45 RPM records that I mentioned. People
like those Dutch sailors with the Van names must have felt when they saw that
“fresh green breast of the new world” coming up the Long Island Sound. And wondering
rightly so since what we heard before, heard to perdition was some vanilla
stuff that our parents liked but I will get to that later.
In other words time, new millennium
time, has left classic rock for the aficionados or for, well, old fogies, you
know the AARP-worthy denizens whose demographics form the basis for rock musical
compilations and “oldies but goodies” revivals with now ancient heartthrobs
from back in the day who have lost a step or three coming out on some massive dwarfing
stage bright lights lit and lip-synch, yes, lip-synch their greatest hits (or
hit in the case of those important musical one-hit johnnie and janies who
formed more of the industry than usually is acknowledged). But there, believe
it or not, but “take my word from me” like old Rabbit Brown used to say his
song James Alley Blues, were other
types of music, music that helped formed rock and roll that I found out about
later after I had had my fill of 45 RPM records and corner boys and wanted to
dig into the history of the American songbook, see what drove earlier
generations of the young to seek their own jailbreak out from their parents
music.
So of course there was music before
rock, I had better say classic rock so nobody gets confused, and I have taken
some pains to establish the roots of rock back to Mississippi country blues
around the turn of the century, the 20th century, when all those
freed slaves who thought they were economically free and not just manacle-free
wound up working for Mister in his twenty-eight thousand acres of the best
bottomland in Mississippi for a pittance. Kept in line, and here is where the
bitch of the thing is by a guy, well, not really a guy but a way of life, a
legal, political, economic and social way of life, named after a guy maybe, one
Mister James Crow, and so those freed blacks who slaved on Mister’s land had to
blow off steam and that was the basic of the blues, and I don’t mean blues like
when a guy has a good girl who done him wrong on his mind. Hell that problem
was easy to solve. What I mean is when Mister, or his Captain, pushed the pace
all week (half a day Saturday included) and every worthy buck and every
good-looking gal, big thighed or not, hit Jimmie Jack’s juke joint to listen to
some itinerant brother with a broken down guitar (hell maybe just a board and
string if times were tough) wail away about that damn Captain, his, the
singer’s, unfaithful women and about how “the devil’s gonna get him” if he
didn’t stop chasing those very women, drinking that applejack, and gambling his
wages away in some back alley crap shoot, for nickels and dimes in the pot (and
some of Jimmie Jack’s homemade brew) and got the crowd swaying and clapping
their hands to the beat on See See Rider
or Mississippi Highwater Rising.
Yeah, that’s the start. Okay.
Too far back for you, too much root?
Okay let’s travel up the river, the Big Muddy, maybe stop off at Memphis for a
drink, and to nurse the act, before hitting the bitch city, Chicago, hog
butcher, steel-maker and every other kind of tool and appliance-maker to the
new industrial world just ask Carl Sandburg. But also maker by proxy of the
urban blues, those old hokey plantation Son House/Charley Patton/ Blind Blake
(and a million other guys with Blind in front of their names) juke joint
Saturday night full of homemade blues turned electric with the city and turned
guys like plain boy Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf (you would laugh at their
real names although you would not do that in their presence, especially the Wolf
because he would cut you bad, real bad) into the kings of Maxwell Street and all the streets around
with back-up and all putting just the right twist on Look Yonder Wall, Rocket 88, Hoochie Goochie Man and Little Red Rooster (with kudos to Willie
Dixon on that one too but first heard not by Wolf but by the “classic” rock the
Stones, so how is that for cache). So, yeah, electric blues as they traveled
north to the heartland industrial cities
Jazz too maybe a little Duke and Benny
swing as it got be-bopped and hurried up the beat, for the drum action, for the
“it don’t mean a thing if you ain’t got that swing” that took over after a
while once the old tine Scott Fitzgerald Jazz Age got waylaid by the Great
Depression and World War II. But Dizzy, Charlie, Thelonius too with that cool,
detachment mood that spoke to the beat down, the beaten down, the big blast
beaten fellahin world. Certainly throw in rhythm and blues, north and south,
throw in big time one Mister Big Joe Turner toot-tooting his sweet mama to Shake, Rattle and Roll that had all
those alienated, angst-ridden white guys (whether they knew they were alienated
or not like some model James Dean) lined up to cover the damn thing. Yeah guys
like Elvis (when he was young and hunger working the hayride circuit for
nickels and dimes, and an off-hand willing woman), Bill Haley when he needed to
kick his act up a notch, and Jerry Lee when he needed to put fire into that
piano.
Then came alone a strange mix and
match, rockabilly as it came out of the white small town South, Tupelo, Biloxi,
Lake Charles, Lafayette, a little Cajun thrown in. Jesus, the smaller the town
it seemed the more the guys wanted to breakout, wanted to push the envelope of
the music, wanted to get away from that “from hunger” look, wanted that big bad
Caddy they saw in the golden age of the automobile magazines. Came out with
those same boys lining up to sing Joe Turner, hungry Elvis, Carl, Johnny, Jerry
Lee, to sing black along with that good old boy Saturday night moonshine tucked
in the back seat of that bad ass Chevy looking, looking for danger, and looking
for women to sing to who were looking for danger. Country boys, yeah, but not
hokey George Jones country boys these guys wanted to breakout of Smiley’s Tavern over on Highway One, wanted
girls to dance on the tables, wanted guys to get up and dance with those Rubys
and red-headed girls. Yeah, they mixed it and matched like big time walking
daddies (and I hear had fun doing it, hell, it beat eking out a living clerking
at Mister Smith’s feed store.
What rock and roll owed little to, or
at least I hope that it owes little to, is that Tin Pan Alley/ Broadway show
tune axis part of the American songbook. You know Cole Porter, George Gershwin,
Oklahoma, Singing in the Rain, Over The
Rainbow stuff. That part of the songbook seems to me to be a different
trend away from that jailbreak song that drove us wild and one that was
reflected in a CD compilation review I did one time (for the young, maybe the
very young, CDs were discs loaded with a bunch of songs, some you liked, maybe
three, and the rest you had to buy as
well because you desperately wanted those three not like today when you just
hopped on some site to grab something you liked one at a time and download it,
presto), The 1950s: 16 Most Requested Songs, which really was about the
16 most requested song before the rock jailbreak of the mid-1950s. Yeah, not
exactly stuff your parents liked but stuff that maybe was good if you a “hot”
date that did not turn out well and you listened to it endlessly on your
defeated way home. Yeah, let’s be clear about that, that stuff your older
brothers and sisters already halfway to that place where your parents lived
swooned over, not you.
I have along the way, in championing
classic rock as the key musical form that drove the tastes of my generation,
the generation of ’68, contrasted that guitar-driven, drum/bass line driven
sound to that of my parents’ generation, the ones who survived the Great
Depression of the 1930s and fought or waited impatiently at home World War II,
and listened to swing, jitter-buggery things and swooned (they really did check
YouTube if you don’t want to take my word from me) over big bands, brass and
wind swings bands, Frank Sinatra, the Andrews Sisters and The Mills Brothers,
among others. In other words the music that, we of the generation of ’68, heard
as background music around the house as we were growing up. Buddha Swings,
Don’t Sit Under The Apple Tree, Rum and Coca-Cola, Paper Dolls, Tangerine,
and the like. Stuff that today sounds pretty good, if still not quite something
that “speaks” to me. That is not the music that got us moving to break out and
seek a newer world, to try to scratch out an existence in a world that we had
not say in creating and dream, dream do you hear me, about turning the world
upside down and keeping it that way for once. I remember writing in that review
that the music in that compilation drove me up a wall and I was ready to shoot
my CD player, the instrument that I heard it on, once I heard it (younger
reader just put “shoot your iPod” and we will be on the same page.
No, this was the music that reflected,
okay, let’s join the cultural critics’ chorus here, the attempted
vanilla-zation (if such a word exists) of the Cold War Eisenhower (“I Like
Ike”) period when people were just trying to figure out whether the Earth would
survive from one day to the next. Not a time to be rocking the boat, for sure.
Once things stabilized a bit though then the mad geniuses of rock could hold sway,
and while parents and authorities crabbed to high heaven about it, they found
out that you could let that rock breakout occur and not have everything wind up
going to hell in a hand basket. Mostly. But this music, these 16 most requested
songs were what we were stuck with before then. Sure, I listened to them then
like everyone else, everyone connected to a radio, but this stuff, little as I
knew then, did not “speak” to me. And unlike some of that 1940s stuff still
does not “speak” to me.
Oh, you want proof. Here is one
example. On that compilation Harbor Lights was done by Sammy Kaye and
his Orchestra. This was cause number one for wanting to get a pistol out and
start aiming. Not for the song but for the presentation. Why? Well, early in
his career Elvis, when he was young and hungry while he was doing his thing for
Sam Phillips’ Memphis Sun Records
operation, covered this song. There are a myriad Elvis recordings during the Sun period, including compilations with
outtakes and alternative recordings of this song. The worst, the absolute worst
of these covers by Elvis has more life, more jump, dare I say it, more sex than
the Kaye recording could ever have. No young women would get all wet, would get
all sweaty and ready to throw their underwear at the drop of a hat for Sammy’s
version. Elvis you know or heard about what women were ready to do. Case
closed. And the compilation only got worse from there with incipient things
like Frankie Lane’s I Believe, Johnny Mathis’ It’s Not For Me To Say,
and Marty Robbins’ (who did some better stuff later) on A White Sports Coat
(And A Pink Carnation). And you wonder why I ask whether they shoot CD
players. Enough said.
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