***The Roots Is The
Toots- The Music That Got Them Through The Great Depression And World War II…
…she could not have been more thrilled,
thrilled to be sitting, actually sitting, in Boston’s famous jazz club, the
Hi-Top that she had heard so much about, sitting waiting just that minute with
Lillian, her tagalong girlfriend, for the
Duke to begin his show. And as she, they, waited she thought back to
just a few short months before when she had dismissed jazz, swing, anything
faster than some slow waltzy thing as nothing but the devil’s music and good
riddance.
Of course that theory had been drilled
into her (and Lillian too) by every single thing that had happened in their
blessed lives back up in Olde Saco, that’s in Maine if anybody was asking. Her
(their) old-fashioned parents who had come down the vale of tears from Quebec
and tried to replicate everything that had gone on there. Including tolerating
only jolie blon music that seemed to
have come from about the time of the forbears’ expulsion from Arcadia by the
bloody British. Apparently they had not gotten over it (especially her father,
Jacques, a frantic francophone ). Worse, if anything could be worse, was the
weekly (maybe daily if she counted her parents’ harangues) preachment from the
pulpit at Saint Anne Dupre’s railing against jazz, blues, mixing with the
coloreds, and any movement faster that a trot. Jesus. (She knew she shouldn’t
say that but there in Boston it probably would not get back to Olde Saco and
penance.)
But that was then. One night, a Friday
night after work, she (they) had gone to the Starlight Ballroom down by the far
end of the beach at Olde Saco where they expected to hear Lester Mack and the
Pack play their slow, dreamy music for the mixed crowd of G.I.s from the local
military installations and civilians who had not heard the new dispensation.
Somehow Lester had taken sick and Jean Bleu and the Dews were that band’s
replacements and they came out swinging with Duke’s “A-Train.” What a night, a night when all those dreary guys turned
out to be very happy to see some Jills (she, Lillian, and all the women in the
place) swing to high heaven, jitter-bug to give it a name.
That was the start and that was why on
that very cold October night in 1943, after a three- hour train ride down from
Portland, she (they) were sitting waiting on his lordship the Duke. And the
only worry she (they, see they had talked it all over coming down on the train)
had was where they were to meet the next morning if either of them “got lucky.”
Yeah, bless that old devil’s music …
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