This is a Miller Avenue
Musings re-run.
By the beginning of 1964 I
had stopped buying singles altogether but this didn't keep me from dropping
into Village Music for a regular chat with Sara Wilcox. I did buy records at
this time but they tended to be comedy or film soundtracks.
The shop had moved from the Sequoia Theater building
up to one of the new units on Blithedale just about where it made the
transition from East to West.
Sara was the nicest person that I ever encountered in
any of the stores in downtown Mill Valley. She was smart, funny, beautiful,
impeccably dressed and it didn't matter to her whether I bought anything or
not. She enjoyed telling me all about the record company parties she regularly
attended and her yarns were never dull.
She spoke the
jargon of professional sales and of the business she was in but her syntax was
original and her stories were very funny.
John Goddard, who I didn't know at this time but who
subsequently bought the business from her, tells me that she was a reliable and
entertaining source of dirty jokes and I certainly would have been open to
hearing them and maybe I did but it isn't a detail which sticks in my memory.
What I do remember was that she was constantly amused by the ludicrous lengths
the record companies would go to in promoting their products and, as she was
regularly attending record biz shindigs she always had a new tale to tell.
My singles buying fizzled out throughout the year of
1958. I know I bought Tequila by
the Champs and loved its infectious rhythm. I also had a few discs by Chuck
Berry, The Everly Brothers and Jerry Lee Lewis but by 1959 I simply heard the
records on the radio rather than buying and collecting them. This didn't
prevent me being brainwashed with all the new releases, some of which I liked
and many of which I didn't. It is with profound irritation that I know many of
these songs by heart to this day. Top of my 'Most Hated' list would have to be Tell
Laura I Love Her by Ray Peterson. I
despised everything about this song: The shameless melodrama, the whining
crybaby voice and the ghastly use of sentiment combined to make it totally
loathsome. It was, however, a well crafted number which got in your head and
wouldn't go away.
The early sixties played host to a mix of popular
musical styles. Folk music was represented by the Kingston Trio as well as
Peter, Paul & Mary. Surf music came in the form of the Beach Boys and Jan
& Dean and there were dance crazes like the twist and mashed potatoes but,
though I heard all this music on the radio I had become a passive listener.
I remember being surprised by the film of Bye Bye
Birdie which came out in early 1963
as it reminded me of the hysteria which had surrounded Elvis around the time he
got drafted. Screaming girls were not something which accompanied any of the
popular music of the early 1960s and Bye Bye Birdie reminded me that such a phenomenon had once existed.
So I popped into Village Music one day after school in
early February, 1964 and what should Sara be telling me about but this new
British band on Capitol called The Beatles. She'd been to a reception and been
given this roll of stickers with four mop topped hairdos and the slogan: The
Beatles Are Coming!
I had a look at the album cover and was immediately
struck by the fact that the four Beatles all had haircuts like Moe Howard in
the Three Stooges. That took a bit of getting used to as Moe was my least
favourite Stooge. He was the bully amongst them who was constantly dishing out
hideous punishments like eye jabbing and hitting over the head with hammers.
The photo on the back had their names and I saw that
Paul McCartney looked very much like my school friend Johnny Lem. Also the
drummer was named Ringo like Ringo Hallinan. In fact another Ringo had been in
the charts recently which was a single by Lorne Greene the star of television's
Bonanza.
I don't think Sara played the album for me but I soon
heard I Want To Hold Your Hand on
the radio and was very taken by it. I'd never come across a song about holding
hands before and it seemed to speak to me about being a teenager. I was, at
this time, sixteen.
I certainly wasn't overly fascinated about The Beatles
until the Friday night of this particular week. I was at our house on Catalpa
getting ready to go out to a dance in Sausalito. I'd shaved what little beard I
had and doused my face in English Leather. The television sat right next to our
front door and Walter Cronkite was reading the news as I was about to exit. He
reported the arrival of The Beatles at JFK Airport. I paused to watch hoardes
of screaming girls and these four skinny guys with pudding bowl hairdos running
down the steps from their plane. They were all laughing.
This was the same phenomenon that Bye Bye Birdie had reminded me of with Elvis and had not been seen
by me since.
I delayed my departure long enough to watch all of the
report and when it was finished, Walter Cronkite gave a caustic glance to the
camera and said: "And that is
what some people consider to be news. Good night."
I have little memory of the dance in Sausalito except
that the hall was up the hill above Bridgeway, the main drag through the town.
The band might have been The Jesters which my friend Mark Symmes played drums
for. If so their repertoire would have included such numbers as What'd I Say by Ray Charles. Within a few weeks that would be
turned on its head as all the musical combos in Marin County would struggle to
learn every number the Beatles recorded. This, however, was Friday night and
the true conversion for millions of American teenagers would not come until
Sunday when the Beatles made their appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show.
The Jesters were a fine group. Dave Shallock played
lead guitar, Gary Fay rhythm and Jim Michaelson was on bass. In addition to
playing the drums my friend Mark also sang as did, I think, all of them. They
looked good and were always highly professional. Another classmate of mine who
was a musician and always had a band working the dance halls was Bill Champlin.
Bill and Mark Symmes were both dedicated students of Mister Greenwood who ran
the music department at Tam High. They were both in his marching band. Another
disciple of Mister Greenwood's was George Duke whose jazz trio was working
professionally throughout his years as a student at Tam.
One more schoolmate of mine was part of this musical
club and that was Billy Bowen who I'd known well when we were in grade school
at Homestead. I remember seeing Bill walking home from Village Music in the
late 1950s carrying a Chuck Berry album and when I asked him why he had a whole
album he told me it was to practice his drums to.
The thing which makes this particular dance at
Sausalito something of a mystery to me is the fact that I'm pretty certain I
went alone and without alcoholic enhancement. The usual routine for the weekend
was to find a way to secure enough booze to become blotto then stagger onto the
dance in Mill Valley in the hope that your inebriation would give you the
courage to successfully pick up a young lady. The fact that this scenario never
seemed to work out in no way discouraged me from trying again and again.
One of the most stunningly beautiful young women in my
year at Tam was Hollis Hite, someone I had an agonizing crush on ever since I had
first met her. It must be mentioned here that I was tiny, looked much younger
than my sixteen years and had become accustomed to the dreadful syndrome of
unrequited love. I was constantly falling in love with unattainable women.
Inside I was a handsome athletic movie star but the physical reality of my
presence was something less impressive. I was so far from cool it made me ache.
However, I happened to be pretty good friends with
Hollis Hite and simply had to keep my feelings secret. She was, at this time
going out with another pretty good friend of mine, Bruce Crawford. Bruce,
unlike me, was tall, blond, extremely handsome and easy going in a way that I
was not.
By the time Sunday came around I found myself up at
Hollis's to watch the Ed Sullivan Show. Bruce was there along with Christy
Flagg and Chuck Collins.
Ed Sullivan's show was one of those American
institutions in the 1950s and 60s. He had a face like a pickle and the weirdest
speaking voice. He always pronounced the word show like 'shoe' and seemed to be
the most unlikely fellow to be in the entertainment business but in it he was.
He and Steve Allen had a deadly rivalry for ratings being on opposite networks.
There was nothing remarkable about The Beatles' first
appearance on the Sullivan show except the screaming was pretty loud. As the
camera did close-ups, the name of each Beatle would appear and I think by the
end of the evening I knew John, Paul, George and Ringo by sight.
They were something totally different. Their press conferences
were terribly funny and they took delight in making fun of their inquisitors.
In spite of the Moe Howard hairdos they seemed to have much more in common with
the Marx Brothers than the 3 Stooges.
Their witty replies to the asinine questions of the
American press were made all the more colorful by their thick Liverpool
accents.
From my perspective the Beatles seemed to take America
in one week and by the end of that week I was, like everybody else, a
Beatlemaniac. I bought the LP Meet The Beatles and just loved their songs. Paul McCartney had the
most amazing rock and roll voice as demonstrated on I Saw Her Standing There and John Lennon's vocals had such a lyrical quality.
Their songs were all about the agonies of teenage love but in a new and
original way.
Coming, as I did, from a highly non-conformist family,
I did not often find myself going with the flow when it came to popular culture
so it was a strange kind of liberation to be swept along with everybody else in
total admiration for the Fab Four.
I Want To Hold Your Hand went to number one which was soon followed by She
Loves You and Please Please Me.
Before long the other British bands began landing on
our shores. The Kinks were great even though all their songs seemed to have the
same riff. Much publicity was made
of The Dave Clark Five but they were so mediocre that they faded fast. The
Animals, Gerry And The Pacemakers, Herman's Hermits, Billy J. Kramer & The
Dakotas, Peter And Gordon, The Zombies and Donovan all came across in what soon
was referred to as the British Invasion. I remember a photo of The Rolling
Stones was published in the Chronicle under the headline 'Here come five more!'
They looked so ugly I couldn't imagine ever liking them.
It is difficult to under estimate the cultural impact
which The Beatles had on the United States at this time and their huge success
was to change show business and the media in fundamental ways.
Probably the most amazing thing about The Beatles was
the fact that they kept coming out with amazingly fresh and memorable new
sounds for several years to come and, together with Bob Dylan, The Rolling
Stones, The Byrds and countless sixties groups, provided the soundtrack for my
teenage years.
Of course there was more to come. The Vietnam War and
the emergence of drugs within the white middle class of America stirred up a
complex brew which gave that time a unique place in our history.
But The Beatles came along before the confusions of
the drug culture wrought such carnage and the horrors of Vietnam got out of
control. For that brief moment in time these four giggling Liverpudlians led
us, like the children of Hamlin, away from our otherwise undiluted Americanism.
We would never be the same again.
Great blog, Johnny. I am a decade or so behind you at Tam but can appreciate the local musings...
ReplyDeleteSuperb! Another great musing and thanks for the memories...
ReplyDelete