With Roger McGuinn’s “Ballad
Of Easy Rider” In Mind The Search For The Great Working-Class Love
Song - With Richard Thompson’s Vincent Black Lightning, 1952 In Mind –Take
Three
From The Pen Of Joshua Lawrence Breslin:
Several
years ago, maybe about eight years now that I think about it, I did a series of
sketches on guys, folk-singers, folk-rockers, rock-folkers or whatever you want
to call those who weened us away from the stale pablum rock in the early 1960s (Bobby
Vee, Rydell, Darin, et al, Sandra Dee, Brenda Lee, et al) after the gold rush
dried up in what is now called the classic age of rock and roll in the mid to
late 1950s when Elvis, Jerry Lee, Buddy, Chuck, Bo and their kindred made us
jump. (There were gals too like Wanda Jackson but mainly it was guys in those
days.) I am referring of course to the savior folk minute of the early 1960
when a lot of guys with acoustic guitars, some self-made lyrics, or stuff from
old Harry Smith Anthology times gave us a reprieve. The series titled Not
Bob Dylan centered on why those budding folkies like Tom Rush, Tom Paxton,
Phil Ochs, Jesse Winchester and the man under review Richard Thompson to name a
few did not make the leap to be the “king of folk” that had been ceded by the
media to Bob Dylan and whatever happened to them once the folk minute went
south after the combined assault of the British rock invasion (you know the
Beatles, Stones, Kinks, hell, even Herman’s Hermits got play for a while), and the rise of acid rock put folk in the
shade (you know the Jefferson Airplane, the Dead, The Doors, The Who, hell,
even the aforementioned Beatles and Stones got caught up in the fray although
not to their eternal musical playlist benefit). I also did a series on Not
Joan Baez, the “queen of the folk minute” asking that same question on the
female side but here dealing with one Richard Thompson the male side of the
question is what is of interest.
I did a
couple of sketches on Richard Thompson back then, or rather sketches based on
probably his most famous song, Vincent Black Lightning, 1952
which dove-tailed with some remembrances of my youth and my semi-outlaw front
to the world and the role that motorcycles played in that world. Additionally,
in light of the way that a number of people whom I knew back then, classmates
whom I reconnected on a class reunion website responded when I posed the
question of what they thought was the great working-class love song since North
Adamsville was definitely a working class town driven by that self-same ethos I
wrote some other sketches driving home my selection of Thompson’s song as my
choice.
The latter sketches
are what interest me here. See Thompson at various times packed it in, said he
had no more spirit or some such and gave up the road, the music and the
struggle to made that music, as least professionally. Took time to make a more
religious bent to his life and other such doings. Not unlike a number of other
performers from that period who tired of the road or got discourage with the
small crowds, or lost the folk spirit. Probably as many reasons as individuals
to give them. Then he, they had an epiphany or something, got the juices
flowing again and came back on the road. That fact is to the good for old time folk (and
rock) aficionados like me.
What that
fact of returning to the road by Thompson and a slew of others has meant is
that my friend and I, (okay, okay my sweetie who prefers that I call her my
soulmate but that is just between us so friend) now have many opportunities to
see acts like Thompson’s Trio, his current band configuration, to see if we
think they still “have it” (along with acts of those who never left the road like
Bob Dylan who apparently is on an endless tour whether we want him to do so or
not). That idea got started about a decade ago when we saw another come-back
kid, Geoff Muldaur of the Jim Kweskin Jug Band, solo, who had taken something
twenty years off. He had it. So we started looking for whoever was left of the
old folks acts (rock and blues too) to check out that question-unfortunately
the actuarial tables took their toll before we could see some of them at least
one last time like Dave Von Ronk.
That brings
us to Richard Thompson. Recently we got a chance to see him in a cabaret
setting with tables and good views from every position, at least on in the
orchestra section, at the Wilbur Theater in Boston with his trio, a big brush
drummer and an all-around side guitar player (and other instruments like the
mando). Thompson broke the performance up into two parts, a solo set of six or
seven numbers high-lighted by Vincent Black Lightning, and Dimming Of
The Day which was fine. The second part based on a new album and a bunch of
his well-known rock standards left us shaking our heads. Maybe the room could
not handle that much sound, although David Bromberg’s five piece band handled
it well a couple of weeks before, or maybe it was the melodically sameness of
the songs and the same delivery voice and style but we were frankly
disappointed and not disappointed to leave at the encore. Most tunes didn’t resonant although a few in
all honesty did we walked out of the theater with our hands in our pockets. No
thumbs up or down flat based on that first old time set otherwise down.
However, damn it, Bob Dylan does not have to move over, now. Our only consolation that great working-class
love song, Vincent Black Lightning, still intact.
Which brings
us to one of those sketches I did based on Brother Thompson’s glorious Vincent
Black Lightning. When I got home I began to revise that piece which I have included
below. Now on to the next act in the great quest- a reunion of the three
remaining active members of the Jim Kweskin Jug Band, Jim Maria Muldaur, and of
course Geoff at the Club Passim (which traces its genesis back to the folk
minute’s iconic Club 47 over on Mount Auburn Street in Harvard Square. We’ll
see if that gets the thumbs up.
With Roger
McGuinn’s“Ballad Of Easy Rider” In Mind, Take Two
This is the way Doug Powers told the
story, Jeff’s story, the way he got it from Little Peach mostly, the road
stuff, straight up, and then later when he checked up …
He, the ghost of… Peter Fonda he,
Captain America he , Dennis Hooper he, Bill The Kid he, Hunter Thompson he,
Doctor Gonzo on an Indian he, James Ardie he, Vincent Black Lightning he, hell,
Sonny Barger or one of one hundred grunge, nasty mothers keep your daughters
indoors under lock and key Hell's Angels brethren he (as if that would help,
help once she, the daughter, saw that shiny silver sleek Indian , Harley,
Vincent, name it, whatever and did some fancy footwork midnight creep out that
unlocked suburban death house ranchero back door), Jeff Crawford he, Norton he,
just wanted to drive down that late night Pacific Coast Highway. Where else in
the American world could you have the hair-raising blown warm wind at your back
and the sometimes hard-hearted, but mainly user-friendly, ocean at your right.
Somehow Maine icy stretch Ellsworth Point did not make its case against that
scenario. He knew those forlorn streets and back roads like the back of his
hand but there was no going back, and no reason to since his divorce and his Ma
dying.
Drive, ride really, motorcycle ride
just in case you were clueless and thought that this was to be some sedan buggy
family, dad and mom, three kids and Rover, car saga. Maybe with his new sweet
mama behind holding on to her easy rider in back, holding tight, her breasts
rising and falling hard against his waiting back, and riding, laughing every
once in a while at the square world, his old square world (and hers too, she
used to serve then off the arm while attending some dink college when he fell
into her at the local breakfast place), against the pounding surf heading south
heading Seals Rock, Pacifica, Monterrey, Big Sur, Xanadu, Point Magoo, Malibu,
Laguna, Carlsbad, La Jolla, Diego, south right to the mex border, riding down
to the sea, see. Riding down to the washed sea, the sea to wash him clean. Her,
she had nothing to be washed, hadn’t been out in life long enough to build up
soul dirts, except maybe a little off-hand kinky sex she picked up somewhere and
had curled his toes doing so one night, and that didn’t count in the
soul-washing department . Not in his book. Not some big old poet- wrangled
washed clean either, some what did old ‘Nam Brad call it, some metaphor, if
that was right, if that was how he remembered it, not for him, just washed
clean.
Easy, Jeff thought, just an easy rider
and his sweet, sweet mama, her hair, her flaming red hair, or whatever color it
was that week (he didn’t care what color really just as long as it was long. He
had had enough of short- haired women all boyish bobbed, all snarling every
which way, all kind of boyish do it this way and that way, all tense, and
making him tense. He liked the swish of a woman’s hair in his face all snarly
and flowing and letting things take their course easy. A ‘Nam lesson.) blowing
against the weathers, against the thrust of that big old Norton engine, all
tight tee-shirt showing her tiny breasts in outline that a shirt or sweater
made invisible (he didn’t care about big breasts, or small, like a lot of guys
around the bar, the biker hang-out, where he hung out over in Richmond, the
Angel Tavern, the one run by Red Riley,), tight jeans (covering long legs which
he did care about), tight. Maybe a quick stop off at Railroad Jim’s over on
Geary before heading to ‘Frisco land’s end Seals Rock and the trip south (and
if Railroad wasn’t in then Saigon Pappy’s, Billy Blast or Sunshine Sue’s) to
cope some dope (weed, reefer, a little cousin cocaine to ease that ‘Nam pain,
the one Charley kissed his way one night through his thigh when he decided to
prove, prove for the nth time that he, Charley, was king of the night) to
handle those sharp curves around Big Sur, and get her in the mood (she, ever
since that midnight creep out Ma’s back door over in Albany a few months before
when he had challenged her to do so when he wanted to test her to see if she
was really his sweet mama, craved her cousin, craved it to get her into the
mood, and just to be his outlaw girl).
Yah, it was
supposed to be easy, all shoreline washed clean (no metaphor stuff, remember,
just ocean naked stuff), stop for some vista here (about a million choices, he
would let her pick since this was her first run, her first working run), some
dope there and then down to cheap Mexico, cheap dope, and a haul back El Norte
and easy street, easy street, laying around with sweet mama, real name, Susan
White, road moniker, Little Peach (an inside joke, a joke about a certain part
of her anatomy that is all she would give out) until Red Riley needed another
run, another run against the washed sea night.
Then it
turned into one thing after another. He took a turn around Pacifica way too
fast, went way over the edge with his right hand throttle (Little Peach so
excited by this her first outlaw run she slipped her hands low, too low while
he was making that maneuver, thinking, maybe, they were in bed and well you
know things happen, distracting things, just bad timing) and skidded hair- pin
twirl skidded off the on-coming road. Little Peach was hurt a little but the
bike was dented enough to require some work at Loopy Lester’s (Red Riley had
guys, bike magic guys, up and down the coast) back in Daly City. So delay.
A couple of
days delay too, they ran into rain down around Big Sur, pouring rain and Little
Peach moaned about it and they had to shack up in a motel for a couple of days,
days looking at that fierce ocean. More delay. Then he made his first serious
mistake, short on funds he decided to rob a liquor store in Paseo Robles. Hell,
not decided, he was hard-wired compelled to make that decision, hard –wired by
his whole sorry, beautiful life, his father (a drunk) then mother (none too
stable, a product of those too close Maine family relationships and those long,
bad ass Maine winter nights) left him Maine dumped, his whore first wife from
over in Richmond cheating on him with every blue jean guy in town while he was
in ‘Nam, his very real ‘Nam pain (while saving Brad’s, metaphor Brad’s city
boy, college boy sorry ass when Mister Charlie decided, probably hard-wired too
to come prove who was boss of the night), and, a little his dope habit (picked
up courtesy of ‘Nam too, he had been strictly always a whisky and beer man before).
Little Peach, gentle in some womanly ways, no question, and the eternal ocean,
gentle, when it co-operated, his only rays.
Hard-wired
to just take now, take it fast, and get out fast. Hell, it was easy he had been
doing since he was about sixteen and just needed that first Harley some
Ellsworth guy was selling, selling cheap, since was headed to Shawshank for a
long stretch. That time he wasn’t even armed, easy. As so it went. Easy, except
that time down in Rockland where the clerk flipped the alarm and the cops were
just a block away. Yah, he didn’t figure that one right, not at any point. That
was when he got the choice- three to five in county or ‘Nam. He hadn’t messed
with that kind of thing in California since he hooked up with Red’s operation
about a month after he got out of the VA hospital over in ‘Frisco.
Trouble this
time, the night he tried to rob the Paseo Robles liquor store, was the owner,
and he identified himself as the owner, must have thought he was Charley, shot
at him, nicking him in the shoulder. He grabbed the owner’s gun in the tussle
and bang, bang. Grabbed the dough (almost five thousand dollars in that two bit
town), and the extra ammo under the counter and roared off, Little Peach
trembling, into the Pacific highway night.
A serious
mistake, for sure, one the cops kind of pressed the issue on. They caught up
with him just outside Carlsbad, South Carlsbad down near the airport road, near
the state park camp sites, where he was resting up a little (bleeding a little
too). He had left Little Peach back in Laguna to keep her out of it and with
most of the dough, telling her to get out of town on the quiet, to use the
dough to go back to school, and have a nice life. He was okay that she didn’t
argue a lot about staying, or getting all weepy about his fate. She had been
his ray and that was enough, enough for what was ahead. So alone, not wanting
to face some big step-off ahead, he
wasn’t built for jails and chambers, not wanting to face another downer in his
sorry, beautiful life, taking a long look at the heathered, rock strewn,
smashing wave shoreline just below, he took out that damn gun, loaded the last
of the ammo, doubled around to face the blockading police cars, and throttled
–up his Norton. Varoom, varoom…
ARTIST: Richard
Thompson
TITLE: 1952 Vincent Black Lightning
Lyrics and Chords
TITLE: 1952 Vincent Black Lightning
Lyrics and Chords
Said Red Molly to James that's a fine
motorbike
A girl could feel special on any such
like
Said James to Red Molly, well my hat's
off to you
It's a Vincent Black Lightning, 1952
And I've seen you at the corners and
cafes it seems
Red hair and black leather, my favorite
color scheme
And he pulled her on behind
And down to Box Hill they did ride
/ A - - - D - / - - - - A - / : / E - D
A /
/ E - D A - / Bm - D - / - - - - A - -
- /
Said James to Red Molly, here's a ring
for your right hand
But I'll tell you in earnest I'm a
dangerous man
I've fought with the law since I was
seventeen
I robbed many a man to get my Vincent
machine
Now I'm 21 years, I might make 22
And I don't mind dying, but for the
love of you
And if fate should break my stride
Then I'll give you my Vincent to ride
Come down, come down, Red Molly, called
Sergeant McRae
For they've taken young James Adie for
armed robbery
Shotgun blast hit his chest, left
nothing inside
Oh, come down, Red Molly to his dying
bedside
When she came to the hospital, there
wasn't much left
He was running out of road, he was
running out of breath
But he smiled to see her cry
And said I'll give you my Vincent to
ride
Says James, in my opinion, there's
nothing in this world
Beats a 52 Vincent and a red headed
girl
Now Nortons and Indians and Greeveses
won't do
They don't have a soul like a Vincent
52
He reached for her hand and he slipped
her the keys
He said I've got no further use for
these
I see angels on Ariels in leather and
chrome
Swooping down from heaven to carry me
home
And he gave her one last kiss and died
No comments:
Post a Comment