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HISTORIES SECOND EDITION

David Brackett McGill University

New York Oxford

OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

2009

University Press, Inc., publishes works that further Oxford University's 'e of excellence in research, scholarship, and education.

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of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

, David .

.Jp, rock, and soul reader: histories and debates / David Brackett.-2nd ed. m.

les bibliographical references, discography, and index. n8-0-19-536593-1 (pbk.) 'ular music-United States-History and criticism. r. Title. 77.B68200R fN-de22

2008035590

gn by Cathleen Elliott

numl1 er: 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2

n the United StatE'S of America :ree paper

CONTENTS

Preface / XI

PART 1 BEFORE 1950

1. Irving Berlin in Tin Pan Alley / 1 Charles Hamm, "Irving Berlin and the Crucible of God," from 1ru;11:3 Berlin: Songs from the Melting Pot: The Formative Years, 1907-1914 j 2

2. Technology, the Dawn of Modern Popular Music, and the "King of Jazz" / 10 Paul Whiteman and Mary Margaret Iv1cBride, "On Wax" / 11

3. Big Band Swing Music: Race and Power in the Music Business ( 14

Marvin Freedman, "Black Music's on Top; White Jazz Stagnant" / 15

Irving Kolodin, "The Dance Band Business: A Study in Black and White" / 18

4. Solo Pop Singers and New Forms of Fandom / 21

Bing Crosby (as told to Pete Martin), from Call Mr Lucky / 22

Martha Wrin/lulIl Lear, "The Bobby Sox Have Wilted, but the Memory Remains Fresh" / 23

Neil McCaffrey, "I Remember Frankeee" / 26

5. Hillbilly and Race Music / 28

Kyle Crichton, "Thar's Gold in Them Hillbillies" / 28

6. Blues People and the Classic Blues / 32

Laoi fones, from Bilies Prople: Tile Negro Experil'11ce in White A 111criCil and the Mlisic That Developrd{rolll 11 / 34

7. The Empress of the Blues / 42

Nal Shapiro and Nat Hento[f, from Hmr Me Talkil" to Ya: The Stury of Ja:: tiS Told by the Mrn Who Made 11 / 43

8. At the Crossroads with Robert Johnson, as Told by Johnny Shines / 46

}Jete Welding, "Interview with Johnny Shines" / 48

iii

9· From Race Music to Rhythm and Blues: T-Bone Walker / 51

Kevin Sheridan and Peter Sheridan, "'I-Bone Walker: Father of the Blues" / 52

10. Jumpin' the Blues with Louis Jordan / 55

Down Beat, "Bands Dug by the Beat: Louis Jordan" / 56

Arnold Shaw, from Honkers and Shouters: The Golden Years o( Rhythm and Billes / 57

11. On the Bandstand with Johnny Otis and Wynonie Harris / 59

Johnny Otis, from Upside Your Head! Rhythm and Blues on Central Avenue / 60

Wyllollie "Mr. Blues" Harris, "Women Won't Let Me Alone" / 61

12. The Producers Answer Back: The Emergence of the "Indie" Record Company / 63

Bill SilllOn, "Indies' Surprise Survival: Small Labels' Ingenuity and Skill Pay Off" / 64

Arnold Shaw, from Honkers and Shoutas: The Golden Years of Rhythm lind Blues / 66

13· Country Music as Folk Music, Country Music as Novelty / 69

Billboard, "American Folk Tunes: Cowboy and Hillbilly Tunes and Tunesters" / 70

Newsweek, "Corn of Plenty" / 72

. 2 THE 19505

14· Country Music Approaches the Mainstream / 75

Ruflls Jarmlln, "Country Music Goes to Town" / 75

l5· Hank Williams on Songwriting / 78

Hllnk Willillms (with Jimmy Rule), from How to Write Folk and Western Music to Sell / 78

.6. Rhythm and Blues in the Early 1950s: B. B. King / 79

Arnold Shaw, from Honkers and Shouters: The Goldm Yellrs o( RhytlJnlllnd Blues / 80

7· "The House That Ruth Brown Built" / 82

Ruth Brown (with Andrew Yulc), from Miss Rhythm: The Autobiography o( Ruth Brown, Rhythm lind Bilies Legend / 83

8. Ray Charles, or, When Saturday Night Mixed It Up with Sunday Morning / 87

T?"IIY Charles and David Ritz, from Brother Ray: Ray Charles' Own Story / 88

19. Jerry Wexler: A Life in R&B / 94

Jerry Wexler lind David Ritz, from Rhythm mzd the Blues: A Life in American Music / 95

20. The Growing Threat of Rhythm and Blues / 99

Variety, "Top Names Now Singing the Blues as Newcomers Roll on R&B Tide" / 100

Variety, "A Warning to the Music Business" / 102

21. Langston Hughes Responds / 104

Langston Hughes, "Highway Robbery Across the Color Line in Rhythm and Blues" / 105

22. From Rhythm and Blues to Rock 'n' Roll: The Songs of Chuck Berry / 106

Chuck Berry, from C/lIIck Berry: Tlze Autobiography / 107

23. Little Richard: Boldly Going Where No Man Had Gone Before / 113

Charles White, from The Life and Times o( Little Richard: The Quasar o( Rock / 114

24. Elvis Presley, Sam Phillips, and Rockabilly / 119

Elizabeth Kaye, "Sam Phillips Interview" / 121

25. Rock 'n' Roll Meets the Popular Press / 127

New York Times, "Rock-and-Roll Called Communicable Disease" / 127

Time, "Yeh-Heh-Heh-Hes, Baby" / 127

New York Times, "Rock 'n' Roll's Pulse Taken" / 128

Gertrude Samuels, "Why They Rock 'n' Roll-and Should They?" I 128

26. The Chicago Defender Defends Rock 'n' Roll / 129

Rob Roy, "Bias Against 'Rock 'n' Roll' Latest Bombshell in Dixie" I 130

27. The Music Industry Fight Against Rock 'n' Roll: Dick Clark's Teen-Pop Empire and the Payola Scandal / 131

Peter Bunzel, "Music Biz Goes Round and Round: It Comes Out Clarkola" / 133

New York Age, "Mr. Clark and Colored Payola" / 136

PART 3 THE 19605

28. Brill Building and the Girl Groups / 138

C/mrlotte Greig, from Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow? Girl Groupsfrom the 50s on . .. / 140

29. From Surf to Smile / 147

Brian Wilson (with Todd Gold), from WOllldn't It Be Nice: My Own Story / 148

30. Urban Folk Revival / 153

Gene Bluestein, "Songs of tbe Silent Generation" / 155

Tillie: "Folk Singing: Sibyl with Guitar" / 158

31. Bringing It All Back Home: Dylan at Newport I 162 Irwin Silber, "Newport Folk Festival, 1965" / 164

Paul Nelsoll, "Newport Folk Festival, 1965" / 165

32. "Chaos Is a Friend of Mine" / 168

Nora EphrrJII lind Susan Edllliston, "Bob Dylan Interview" / 170

33. From R&B to Soul / 176

lames Baldwin, from The Fire Next Tillie / 177

lerry Wexler IIlId David [\itz, from Rhyth11land the Blues: A Lift' ill American Music / 178

34. No Town Like Motown / 180

Berry Gordy, from Til Be Loved: The Music. the Magic, the Memories of Motown / 181

35. The Godfather of Soul and the Beginnings of Funk / 187

lallles Brown (witll Bnlce Tucker). from The Godfntl!er of Soul / 188

36. "The Blues Changes from Day to Day" / 198

lilll Delchant. "Otis Redding Interview" / 199

37. Aretha Franklin Earns Respect / 202

P/n;1 Garlal/d. "Aretha Franklin-Sister Soul: Eclipsed Singer Gains New Heights" / 203

38. The Beatles, the "British Invasion," and Cultural Respectability / 208

Willialll Manl/. "What Songs the Beatles Sang .. ," / 209

Th('odore Strongin. "Musicologically . , ." / 211

39. A Hard Day' 5 Night and Beatlemania / 213

Barbam Ehrel1rcie/l, Elizabctfl Hess, and Glorialilcobs. "Bcatlcmania: Girls lust Want to Have Fun," from Re-Illaking Love: The FClllinization

Alldrfi(1 Sarris, "Br3vo BeatIes!" / 213

of Sex / 216

40. England Swings, and the Beatles Evolve on Revolver and Sgt. Pepper / 221

[,icl1C1rd Goldstcill, "Pop Eye: On 'Revolver'" / 222

lack Kroll, "It's Getting Better ..." / 225

41. The British Art School Blues / 227

Rill; Colclllal/. "Rebt'ls with a Beat" /229

42. The Stones versus the Beatles / 232 Ellen Willis, "Records: Rock, Etc. -the Big Ones" / 234

Lontents VII

43. If You're Goin' to San Francisco ... / 238

Ralph J. Gleason. "Dead Like Live Thunder" / 240

44. The Kozmic Blues of Janis Joplin / 243 Nat Helltojf. "We Look at Our Parents and, . ," / 244

45. jimi Hendrix and the Electronic Guitar / 247 Bob Dawham. "Second Dimension: Jimi Hendrix in Action" / 249

46. Rock Meets the Avant-Garde: Frank Zappa / 252

Sally Kell/ptoll, "Zappa and the Mothers: Ugly Can Be Beautiful" / 253

47. Pop!Bubblegum!Monkees I 256 Robert Christgall, from Any Old Way YOli CllOose It: Rock lind Otllef

Pop Music, 1967-1973 I 257

48 . The Aesthetics of Rock I 259 Paul Williams, "Get Off of My Cloud" / 260

Richard Goldstein. "Pop Eye: Evaluating Media" / 261

49. Festivals: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly I 264 J. R YOllng, "Review of Various Artists, Woodstock" I 265 George Palll Csicsery, "Altamont, California, December 6, 1969" I 268

PART 4 THE 19705

50. Where Did the Sixties Go? / 271 Lester Bangs. "Of Pop and Pies and Fun" / 273

51. The Sound of Autobiography: Singer-Songwriters, Carole King / 279

RolJert Windder. "Carole King: 'You Can Get to Know Me Through

My Music'" / 281

52 .loni Mitchell Journeys Within / 284 Maika. "Joni Mitchell: Self-Portrait of a Superstar" / 285

53. Sly Stone: "The Myth of Staggerlee" / 289 Greil MarClls, from Myst{'/'lf '1/"aill: images ofA11lerica I1I Rock '11' Ro)] Mlisic / 291

54. Not-so-"Little" Stevie Wonder / 297 B/:'Il FOllg- TInTes, "The Formerly Little Stevie Wonder" / 298

55. Parliament Drops the Bomb / 303 W A. Brow{'/', "George Clinton: Ultimate Liberator of Constipated Notions" / 304

56. Heavy Metal Meets the Counterculture / 310

Jolll1 Melldclsol1l1, "Review of Led Zeppelin" / 311

Ed Kelle/wl', "Black Sabbath Don't Scare Nobody" / 314

Ine 1950S From Rhythm and Blues to Rock 'n' Roll JUI

From coast to coast, and uptown to down, Broadway to Central Ave., Vme St. to W. frustrating high school experiences) to transcend many social bound­125th St. where stands the Hotel Theresa, the colored performer is yowling to high

heaven, "They got me and gone!" aries. This does not mean that Berry was motivated solely by a desire to cross over. Musically, he remained rooted in blues and the guitar styles of Muddy Waters, T-Bone Walker, and Charlie Christian, although he experi­Further Reading mented early on with incorporating influences from country and pop

Chapple, Steve, and Reebee Garofalo. Rock'n'Roll Is Here to Pay: The History and Politics music, developing a fusion that would prove important to his success. He of the Music Industry. Chicago: Nelson-Hall, 1977. also occasionally wrote lyrics that expressed subtle social commentary

"Lavern Baker Claims 15G Royalty Loss on Lifting of Song Arrangements." Variety, ("Too Much Monkey Business") and even racial pride ("Brown Eyed March 2,1955: 51. Handsome Man").

Discography In his autobiography, first pUblished in 1987 and one of the few such

See the discography for chapter 20. efforts not to involve a ghost writer, Chuck Berry displays the same love of language found in his lyrics! In addition to discussing significant events in his career, he provides insights into the writing of some of his most famous songs and illuminates the tension that inevitably exists between calculation and inspiration in creative endeavors. Beyond his songs and his recordings of them, Berry's legacy lives on in the numerous rock 'n' roll artists who owe a large part of their style to him, including the Beach Boys, the Beatles, and the Rolling Stones, to name only the most famous. Learning his trademark guitar licks and boogie-style accompaniment has

22. From Rhythm and Blues to Rock 'n' Roll become a rite of passage for every would-be rock guitarist, and his songs still feature prominently in many country and rock 'n' roll bar bands. 3

The Songs of Chuck Berry

from CHUCK BERRY: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY Chuck Berry

In chapter 18, Ray Charles described several factors that defined the dif­ With the recorder, I started hanging around more with Ira Harris. I picked up a lot of ference between him, a rhythm and blues artist, and rock 'n' rollers, such new swing riffs and ideas from Ira's playing, which was similar to the style of Charlie as Chuck Berry and little Richard; these factors included the intended Christian's. Ira showed me many licks and riffs on the guitar that came to be the audience for his recordings (more adult for R&B, more teenage for rock foundation of the style that is said to be Chuck Berry's. Carl Hogan, the guitarist in 'n' rolO, and the level of emotional gravity (rock 'n' roll projected more Louis Jordan's Tympany Five, was another idol of mine. I buckled down and started unadulterated "fun," while rhythm and blues was more serious). During taking seriously the task of learning to play the guitar. I studied a book of guitar 1955, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Bo Diddley, and Fats Domino all devel. chords by Nick Mannaloft and practiced daily. The chord book led to my getting a oped a new form of rhythm and blues that lent itself to being marketed to textbook explaining the basics of theory and harmony and the fundamental functions an interracial teenage audience.' Ofthese three, Chuck Berry (b. 19

2 6) in of notes, staff, and scale. It's amazing how much you can learn if your intentions are

many ways represented the prototypical rock 'n' roller because of his truly earnest. abilities as a singer, songwriter, and guitarist (the quality that separated him from Little Richard and Fats Domino, both pianists). More than the 2. The release of the book coincided with the release of a semi-autobiographical movie, Hail! other two, Berry was also the master of creating miniature stories Hail! Rock 'n' Roll. depicting experiences that were widespread enough (cars, dating, 3. For more on Berry's guitar style, see Steve Waksman, Instruments of Desire: The Electric

Guitar and the Shaping of Musical Experience (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999), 14tHi6; R. Vito, "The Chuck Berry Style: A Modern Rocker Pays Tribute to the Master," Guitar

1. Some may argue that of the three, Fats Domino's success resulted the least from a change Player Uune 1984), 72-75. of style, since he had been recording songs similar in sound since the late forties. In this case, changes in the audience and the popular music mainstream may be more responsible for his Source: From Chuck Berry: The Autobiography by Chuck Berry, pp. 88-91, 100, 110, 141-44, lSD-51, sudden success in the pop market. 152,155--58,246-49, copyright © 1987 by Isalee Publishing Co. Used by permission of Harmony

Books, a division of Random House, lnc.

.LVU I he 1950S

On June 13, 1952, Tommy Stevens phoned me to ask if I could sing with his three­ piece combo at Huff's Garden. It was to be our first time to play together since the All Men's Review yet we had seen each other at many intervals. My heart leaped as I answered, "When?" We squared away the address, agreed on the finances, and I showed up shouting that Saturday and every Saturday thereafter on through to December, earning six dollars a night. It was my first paid nightclub appearance.

The combo, a small group, consisted of Tommy on lead guitars, Pee Wee (can't remember his last name) was on alto sax, and I was on guitar singing the blues. Muddy Waters, Elmore James, and Joe Turner with his "Chains of Love" were the fa­ vorites of all the black disk jockeys' turntables while Nat Cole sang love songs and Harry Belafonte was popular also on the tropical scene. These were the types of songs that made up our selections, along with the backbone of our program, which was always the blues.

My work was divided into day and night with music. While Tommy Stevens didn't have the stage personality of some musicians I had encountered, he did have a congenial personality. He had no objection or reservations whatsoever about my pre­ senting ideas and tactics that often went beyond his own showmanship, in fact he encouraged me. For example, I would suddenly break out with a hillbilly selection that had no business in the repertoire of a soul-music-Ioving audience and the simple audacity of playing such a foreign number was enough to trigger the program into becoming sensational entertainment.

We were making a little name for ourselves, enough to keep the club packed every Saturday night until that Thanksgiving, when the owner added on Friday nights. After the first two weeks of two nights straight we were drawing a full house. The owner agreed to our salaries being raised to eight dollars per man for each night. As Christmas approached, a rumor was out that a good band was at Huff's Garden and Tommy was telling us that we were being sought by larger nightclubs for jobs.

On December 30, a piano player named Johnnie Johnson phoned me, asking me to join his Sir John's Trio for a gig on the eve of the year of 1953. The nightclub he mentioned was four times as big as Huff's Garden, six times as plush, and ten times as popular. It had been renovated from a supermarket and named the Cosmopolitan Club, which is still located on the corner of 17th and Bond Street in East St. Louis, illi­ nois. It was on New Year's Eve of 1953 that my career took its first firm step. If I could have stored the drinks that were offered me that night, I think I could have set up everyone in the house twice. The owner of the Cosmo Club, Joe Lewis, asked Johnnie to have me come back the follOWing week to start singing steady.

Johnnie Johnson was the leader and the pianist, Ebby Hardy was the drummer, and I replaced somebody to play guitar and sing. On holidays, Joe Lewis hired a bass to fill out the music more completely. By the Easter holidays we kept a steady packed house on weekends with a well-rounded repertoire programmed to the varied clientele.

The music played most around St. Louis was country-western, which was usu­ ally called hillbilly music, and swing. Curiosity provoked me to lay a lot of the coun­ try stuff on our predominantly black audience and some of the club goers started whispering, "Who is that black hillbilly at the Cosmo?" After they laughed at me a few times, they began requesting the hillbilly stuff and enjoyed trying to dance to it. If you ever want to see something that is far out, watch a crowd of colored folk, half high, wholeheartedly doing the hoedown barefooted.

Johnnie Johnson was reserved and jolly just like Tommy Stevens, and we didn't have any clash on stage when I would express myself and perform in excess of his

From Rhythm and Blues to Koel< 'n' KOlt .LV"

own performance. In the beginning, when I would get applause for a gesture, I would look back at Johnnie and see him smiling in approval of what I'd sponta­ neously added to the song or the show. We made a name for ourselves there at the Cosmopolitan Club.

Toddy [Berry's wife] would get the biggest kick out of our rehearsals around the house, hearing me sing the country stuff. She cared less for country music, being a blues lover, and saw only the fictitious impressions I would insert in a tune to impress the audience with my hilarious hilly and basic billy delivery of the song. It could have been because of my country-western songs that the white spectators showed up in greater numbers as we continued playing at the Cosmo Club, bringing the fairly crowded showplace to a full house. Sometimes nearly forty percent of the clients were Caucasian, causing the event to be worthy of publicity across the river in St. Louis.

The state of Illinois in the beginning of the 1950s was a bit more liberal than Missouri in regards to relations between blacks and whites. A traveler might notice a considerable difference in the community just across the Mississippi in East St. Louis. For one thing, if a black and white couple were stopped by a squad car there they did not have to go to a police station and get a mandatory shot for venereal disease, as was the custom across the river in St. Louis. Nightclub people were known to flock across the river to the east side, where they could escape the bounds of Missouri's early-closing blue laws and continue their enjoyment.

Over half of the songs I was singing at the Cosmo Club were directly from the recordings of Nat "King" Cole and Muddy Waters. They are the major chords in the staff of music I have composed. Listening to my idol Nat Cole prompted me to sing sentimental songs with distinct diction. The songs of Muddy Waters impelled me to deliver the down-home blues in the language they came from, Negro dialect. When I played hillbilly songs, I stressed my diction so that it was harder and whiter. All in all it was my intention to hold both the black and the white clientele by voicing the different kinds of songs in their customary tongues.

Way back then, to me, a gig was played for the purpose of entertaining the patrons. So many times I have sat listening to a group knocking themselves out play­ ing three-week-Iong songs that have the audience taking pit stops. I can never see why any group would not terminate a song that has boredom showing from the audience. But then some groups don't seem to consider that pleasing the patrons is their main objective. The varied audience at the Cosmo Club gave me an early start at judging the state of the people to be entertained.

[Following a successful audition for Chess records in Chicago] 1 traveled down from U.S. Highway 66, [and] I contacted Johnnie Johnson and Ebby Hardy and began arranging rehearsals. Johnnie, Ebby, and I had been playing other people's music ever since we started at the Cosmo, but for this tape I did not want to cover other artist's tunes. Leonard Chess had explained that it would be better for me if I had original songs. I was very glad to hear this because I had created many extra verses for other people's songs and I was eager to do an entire creation of my own. The four that I wrote may have been influenced melodically by other songs, but, believe me, the lyrics were solely my own. Before the week had ended, I brought fresh recorded tapes to the ears of the Chess brothers in Chicago.

Chess was in the heart of the Southside of Chicago amid a cultural district I knew all too well. Leonard told me he had formerly had a bar in the neighborhood as well, which accounted for his easy relations with black people. When I carried the new tape up I immediately found out from a poster on the office wall that Mudd)'j Little

111 11U The 1950S

Walter, Howlin' Wolf, and Bo Diddley were recording there. In fact Bo Diddley dropped by the studio that day.

Leonard listened to my tape and when he heard one hillbilly selection I'd included called "Ida May," played back on the one-mike, one-track home recorder, it struck him most as being commercial. He couldn't believe that a country tune (he called it a "hillbilly song") could be written and sung by a black guy. He said he wanted us to record that particular song, and he scheduled a recording session for May 21, 1955, promising me a contract at that time.

[After arriving in NYC on a trip to promote "Maybellene"] I phoned Jack Hook, Alan Freed, and Gene Goodman, who were New York business affiliates of Leonard Chess. Leonard had asked me to phone them to introduce me to his New York contacts and them to the guy who wrote "Maybellene."

Jack had a distributing shop in Manhattan where our number-one, and only one, record was being shipped out to dealers. He persuaded us to come immediately over to his storefront business on 8th Street, where I observed boxes and boxes of disks bearing the label of MAYBELLENE, CHESS, CHICAGO. They were triple stacked ceiling high covering one entire wall. We were stepping over opened boxes scattered about on the floor of the combination office-warehouse.

Between steps on the way to his desk in the back corner, I thought well of the amount of product carrying my identity on each item. Still it never entered my mind how much wealth such quantities should bring in sales. I didn't have any idea that Alan Freed was being compensated for giving special attention to "Maybellene" on his radio program by a gift from Leonard registering him part of the writer's credit to the song. In fact I didn't know then that a person also got compensation for writing as well as recording a song. My first royalty statement made me aware that some person named Russ Fratto and the Alan Freed I had phoned were also part composers of the song. When [ later mentioned to Leonard Chess the strange names added to the writer's royalties, he claimed that the song would get more attention with big names involved. With me being unknown, this made sense to me, especially since he failed to mention that there was a split in the royalties as well.

[ have been asked many times, "Where did you get the idea to write that song, Chuck?" Off hand, I wouldn't know, but [ always refer to the story within the song, which usually recalls my inspiration. Or sometimes the melodic lines bring me in sync with the time and place where the tune got its origin. The embarrassing thing is that sometimes when I have been asked about a song's origin I have made up a rea­ son that is dramatic enough to get by the question. But the origins have varied under different circumstances or with different interviewers. In the pages that follow I'll recall whatever I can about a few of my songs' true origins. They appear in the order, according to my records and memory, that I recorded them.

Writing a song can be a peculiar task. So much time can pass during the intervals [would be putting a song together that each time I'd get back to it, the tune or story it was following would likely take an entirely different route.

The kind of music I liked then, thereafter, right now and forever, is the kind I heard when I was a teenager. So the guitar styles of Carl Hogan, T-Bone Walker, Charlie Christian, and Elmore James, not to leave out many of my peers who I've heard on the road, must be the total of what is called Chuck Berry's style. So far as the Chuck Berry guitar intro that identifies many of my songs, it is only back to the fu­ ture of what came in the past. As you know, and I believe it must be true, "there is nothing new under the sun." So don't blame me for being first. just let it last.

From Rhythm and Blues to Rock 'n' Roll

To quote the lyrics the genius Ray Charles sang, "Sometimes I get sideways and stay up all night with a tune.... I like what I am doing and sho' hope it don't end too soon." The nature and back-bone of my beat is boogie and the muscle of my music is melodies that are simple. Call it what you may: jive, jazz, jump, swing, soul, rhythm, rock, or even punk, it's still boogie so far as I'm connected with it. When I can't connect to it, I have no right to dispute its title. When it's boogie, but with an alien title, the connection is still boogie and my kind of music.

So here are the stories of how and why a few of my earlier compositions came about. The entire catalogue of all my songs will be in a Chuck Berry Songbook that will follow this one with much data of when, where, and who were involved in the recordings plus information on every concert I ever played.

"Maybellene" was my effort to sing country-western, which I had always liked. The Cosmo club goers didn't know any of the words to those songs, which gave me a chance to improvise and add comical lines to the lyrics. "Mountain Dew," "Jambalaya," and "Ida Red" were the favorites of the Cosmo audience, mainly because of the hanky-tonk gestures I inserted while singing the songs.

"Maybellene" was written from the inspiration that grew out of the country song "Ida Red." I'd heard it sung long before when I was a teenager and thought it was rhythmic and amusing to hear. I'd sung it in the yard gatherings and parties around home when I was first learning to strum the guitar in my high-school days. Later in life, at the Cosmo Club, I added my bit to the song and still I enjoyed a good response so I coined it a good one to sing.

Later when I learned, upon entering a recording contract, that original songs written by a person were copyrighted and had various rewards for the composer, I welcomed the legal arrangement of the music business. I enjoyed creating songs of my own and was pleased to learn I could have some return from the effort. When I wrote "Maybellene" I had originally titled it "Ida May," but when I took the song to Chess Records I was advised to change its title. That was simple because the rhyth­ mic swing of the three syllables fit with many other names. The music progression itself is close to the feeling that I received when hearing the song "Ida Red," but the story in "Maybellene" is completely different.

The body of the story of "Maybellene" was composed from memories of high school and trying to get girls to ride in my 1934 V-8 Ford. I even put seat-covers inittoae­ commodate the girls that the football players would take riding in it while I waslnclass.

"Roll Over Beethoven" was written based on the feelings I had when my sister would monopolize the piano at home during our youthful school years. In fact most of the words were aimed at [my sister] Lucy instead of the Maestro Ludwig Van Beethoven. Thelma [my other sister] also took piano lessons in classical music but Lucy was the culprit that delayed rock 'n' roll music twenty years. Telling Mother in an attempt to get support for my kind of music did no good, but writing a letter and mailing It to a local OJ might have, as stated in the opening of the song.

What sounds like, "Way lay in the ... " is really "Early in the morning, [' m giv­ ing you a warning." Out of my sometimes unbelievably imaginative mind, the Iestof the self-explanatory lyrics came forth.

"Too Much Monkey Business" was meant to describe most of the kinds of hassles a person encounters in everyday life. When I got into writing on this theory, I realized I needed over a hundred verses to portray the major areas that bug people the most. I was even making up words then like "botheration" to emphasize the nuisances that bothered people. I tried to use (or make up) words that wouldn't be hard todeeiphel by

112 The 19505

anyone from the fifth grade on. I hadn't received any kickback about using "motorvat­ ing" in "Maybellene," so why not compete with Noah Webster again? Anyway, the first verse was directed toward a family supporter paying bills, while the filling station at­ tendant. the seduced, the student, and the veteran all declare their problems in the lyrics.

"Brown Eyed Handsome Man" came to mind when I was touring California, for the first time. After leaving St. Louis with six inches of snow lying under sub­ freezing temperatures, I found green grass under clear blue skies with eighty-degree breezes loitering along the evening sunset.

What 1 didn't see, at least in the areas I was booked in, was too many blue eyes. The auditoriums were predominantly filled with Hispanics and "us." But then 1 did see unbelievable harmony among the mix, which got the idea of the song started. I saw, during the length of the tour, quite a few situations concerning the life of the Mexican people. For example, a Caucasian officer was picking up a fairly handsome male loiterer near the auditorium when some woman came up shouting for the po­ liceman to let him go. He promptly did so, laughingly saluting the feminine rescuer. The verse in the song is situated a bit differently but was derived from that incident. The verse about Venus De Milo (believe it or not) came from thoughts out of a book I had come Up0n entitled Ve11m ill Furs and the last verse from a fictional condition always appreciated in a baseball game.

"School Days" was born from the memories of my own experience in high school. The lyrics depict the way it was in my time. I had no idea what was going on in the classes during the time I composed it, much less what's happening today. The phrases came to me spontaneously, and rhyming took up most of the time that was spent on the song. I remember leaving it twice to go get coffee and while out having some major lines come to me that would enhance the story in the song, causing me to rush back to my room to get them down. Recording the song with breaks in the rhythm was intended to emphasize the jumps and changes I found in classes in high school compared to the one room and one teacher 1had in elementary school. That's 90 percent of the song; 1 suppose the remainder could have been talent.

Further Reading Berry, Chuck. OUlck BCI't~: The Autobiography. Random House, 1987. Taylor, Timothy D. "His Name Was in Lights: Chuck Berry's JOhJU1Y B. Goode." In Read­

illg {'op: Approaches ill Textual Analysis in Popular Music. ed. Richard Middleton, 165-82. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 2000.

Vito, R. "The Chuck Berry Style: A Modern Rocker Pays Tribute to the Master." Guitar Player (June 1984): 72-75.

Waksman, Steve. lnstrwllcnts of Desire: The Electric Guitar and tile Shaping of Musical Experience. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999.

~~_. "The Tum to Noise: Rock Guitar from the 19505 to the 1970s." In The Cambridge Companion to tilc Guitar, ed. Victor Coelho, 109-21. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 2003.

Discography Berry, Chuck. Tllc Crcat Tll'cnty-Eight. MCA, 1990. ____. Johnny B. Goode: His Complete '50s Chess Recordings. Hip-O Select, 2007. Diddley, 1:\0. I'm a Man: Ti,e Clless Masters, 1955-1958. Hip-O Select, 2007. Legends Collection: Rock 'n' Roll Teenagers. Legends Collection, 2002.

23. Little Richard Boldly Going Where No Man Had Gone Before

Compared to Chuck Berry, Little Richard (b, 1932) came from a far more rural and humble background, and his early experiences in a backwoods Pentecostal church played a stronger role in his musical style than Berry's, Little Richard's extroverted and energetic singing, piano playing, and songwriting made him one of the biggest stars of the rock 'n' roll era, His vocal style, in particular, had an impact on many subsequent musi­ cians, including James Brown, Otis Redding, Paul McCartney, and John Fogerty (of Creedence Clearwater Revival), After making several unsuc­ cessful recordings in the early 19505, he recorded "Tutti Frutti" in September 1955, which rose high on both the R&B and pop charts. "Tutti Frutti" set the tone for the hits that followed between 1956 and 195 8 : Over a fast boogie-shuffle rhythm with many stop-time breaks, Richard would sing playful double entendres near the top of his range in a searing timbre interspersed with trademark falsetto whoops, His piano playing derives from boogie-woogie style, emphasizes the upbeat, and features a great many glissandi-In performance, Richard would frequently leave the piano to dance exuberantly, occasionally on top of the piano itself.

In addition to his uninhibited presence as a singer, pianist, and dancer, Richard's visual appearance added to the sense of his outra­ geousness: With his large pompadour, liberal use of makeup, and gaudy clothing, he raised the spectre of cross-dressing and ambiguous sexual­ ity at a time when such issues were strictly taboo, In pondering the improbability of Richard's mass acceptance at the time, one possible explanation suggests itself: His outrageous performance style camou­ flaged (and perhaps deflected and deflated) whatever threat he posed to heterosexual norms, After several more hits and appearances in three films (Don't Knock the Rock and The Girl Can't Help It, both in 1956, and Mister Rock' n' Roll, in 1957), Richard decided abruptly to quit his career for the ministry because of a vision he had during a flight back to the States from Australia,

The following excerpts come from an "oral history" of Little Richard, rather than an autobiography. Thus, in addition to Richard's voice, we hear from Bumps Blackwell, a famous A&R man for Specialty records (an independent record company specializing in African American sacred and secular music), An academically trained composer, Blackwell, along with Henry Glover and Jesse Stone, was one of the few African American A&R men at the time, His astute comments derive from the important role that

113

114 The 1950S

he played in Little Richard's early recordings: In addition to producing, he cowrote many of Richard's best-known songs. Richard presents his own views on how his music mapped racial relations, on the interesting origins of "Lucille," and on Alan Freed.

from THE LIFE AND TIMES OF LITTLE RICHARD: THE QUASAR OF ROCK

Charles White

Y\1u'd hear people singing all the time. The women would be outside in the back doing the washing, rubbing away on the rub-boards, and s0meb0dy else sweeping the yard, and somebody else would start singing "We-e-e-ll ... Nobody knows the trouble I've seen .... " And gradually other people would pick it \IP, until the whole of the street would be singing. Or "Sometimes I feel like a motherless child, a long way from home.... " Everybody singing. I used to go up and down the street, some streets were paved, but our street was dirt, just singing at the top of my voice. There'd be guitar players playing on the street-old Slim, Willie Amos, and my cousin, Buddy Penniman. I remember Bamalama, this feUer with one eye, who'd play the wash-board with a thimble. He had a bell like the school-teacher's, and he'd sing, "A-bamalam, you shall be free, and in the mornin' you shall be free." See, there was so much poverty, so much prejudice in those days. I imagine people had to sing to feel their connection with God. To sing their trials away, sing their problems away, to make their burdens easier and tIle load lighter. That's the beginning. That's where it started.

We used to have a group called the Penniman Singers-all of us, the whole fam­ ily. We used to go around and sing in all the churches, and we used to sing in contests with other family groups, like the Brown Singers, in what they called the Battle of the Gospels. We used to have some good nights. I remember one time. I could always sing loud and I kept changing the key upward. Marquette said it ruined his voice trying to sing tenor behind mel The sisters didn't like me screaming and singing and threw their hats and purses at us, shouting "Hush, hush, boys-hush!" They called me War Hawk because of my holler in' and screamin' and they stopped me singing in church.

From a boy, I wanted to be a preacher. I wanted to be like Brother Joe May, the singing evangelist, who they called the Thunderbolt of the West. My daddy's father, 'Walter Penniman, was a preacher, and so was my mother's brother, Reverend Louis Stuart, who's now pastor of a Baptist church in Philadelphia. I\nd I have a cousin, Amos Penniman, who's a minister in the Pentecostal Church. I have always been basically a religious person-in fact most of the black people where I'm from was. I went to the New Hope Baptist Church, on Third Avenue, where my mother was a member. My daddy's people were members of Foundation Templar AME Church,

SOl/rce: From 1'IlL' Life and Tlllles oj Little Ridtnrd: Tile Quas",' of Rock by Charles Whit", Richard Wayne Penniman, Robert BlackwPlI1, pp. 15-16, 39-40, 47-51, 60-62, 65-h6, 70, 75-76, copyri~ht

© 19R4 by Charles White, Richard Wayne Penniman, and Robert Blackwell!. Copyri~ht © 1994 by Charles White. Used by permission Dr Harmony Books, a division of Random HOllse, Inc.

Little Richard 115

a Methodist church on Madison Street, and my mother's father was with the Holiness Temple Baptist Church, downtown in Macon. So I was kind of mixed up in it right from the start. Of all the churches, I used to like going to the Pentecostal Church, because of the music.

Clint Brantley set up a tour around Georgia and Tennessee-Nashville, Knoxville, Milledgeville, Sparta, Fitzgerald, and Tallahassee, places like that. We used to draw the crowds all the time. The places were always packed. I was popular around those states before Chuck and Lee Diamond joined the band. I got two sax players and named the band the Upsetters. It made me outstanding in M"col1 at that time, to have this fantastic band in a little town like this. The other bands couldn't compete. So when it s"id "Little Richard and the Upsetters" everybody wanted to come. We had a station. wagon with the name written. on. it, and I thought it was fantastic.

We were each making fifteen dollars a night, and there was a lot you could do with fifteen dollars. We would play three, four nights a week-that's fifty dollars. And sometimes we would play at a place on the outskirts of Macon at a lllidnight dance. That would pay ten dollars and all the fried chicken you could eat. We were playing some of Roy Brown's tunes, a lot of Fats Domino tunes, some B. B. King tunes, and I believe a couple of Little Walter's and a few things by Billy Wright. I re­ ally looked up to Billy Wright. That's where I got the hairstyle from and everything. "Keep Your Hand on Your Heart," that was one of them. We'd play all around Georgia, Tennessee, and Kentucky, cos we had" big n"me around those places. We would draw packed houses every place and we'd get a guarantee and a percentage of the take over the guarantee. We were making a darned good living. One song which would reallv tear the house down was "Tutti Frutti." The lyrics were kind of vulgar, "Tutti Frutti good booty-if it don't fit don't force it. ... " it would crack the crowd up. We were playing without a bass and Chuck would have to bang real hard on his bass chum in order to get a bass-fiddle effect.

BUMPS BLACKWELL: When I got to New Orleans, Cosimo Matassa, the studio owner, called and said, "Hey, man, this boy's down here waiting for you." When 1 walked in, there's this cat in this loud shirt, with hair waved up six inches above his head. He was talking wild, thinking up stuff just to be different, you know? I could tell he wi's a mega-personality. So we got to the studio, on Rampart and Dumaine. I had the Studio Band in-Lee Allen on tenor sax, Alvin "Red" Tyler on baritone sax, Earl Palmer on drums, Edgar Blanchard and Justin Adams on guitar, Huey "Piano" Smith and James Booker on piano, Frank Fields, bass, all of them the best in New Orleans. They were Fats Domino's session men.

Let me tell you abou t the record ing methods we used in those days. Recording techniciilns of tod"y, surrounded by huge banks of computer-controlled sound tech­ nology, would find the engineering teclmiques available in the 1950s as primitive as the Kith/ Hawk is to the space shuttle. When I started there was no tape. It was disk to disk. There was no such thing as overdubbing. Those things we did at Cosimo's were on tape, but they v"ere all done straight ahead. The tracks you heard were the tracks as they were recorded from begilll1ing to end. We would take sixty or seventy takes. We were recording two tracks. Maybe we might go to surgery and intercut a track or cut a track at the end or something, but we didn't know what overdubbing was. The studio was just a bi'ck room in a furniture store, like an ordina.ry motel room. For the whole orchestra. There'd be a grand piano just as you came in' the door. I'd have the gnmd's lid up with a mike in tbe keys and Alvin Tyler and Lee Allen would be blowing into that. Earl Palmer's drums were out of the door, where I had one

116 The 1950S

mike, as well. The bassman would be way over the other side of the studio. You see, the bass would cut and bleed in, so I could get the bass.

The recording equipment was a little old quarter-inch single-chalmel Ampex Model 300 in the next room. I would go in there and listen with earphones. If it didn't sound right I'd just keep moving the mikes around. I would have to set up all those things. But, you see, once I had got my sound, my room sound, well then I would just start running my numbers straight down. It might take me forty-five minutes, an hour, to get that balance within the room, but once those guys hit a groove you could go on all night. When we got it, we got it. I would like to see some of these great producers today produce on monaural or binaural equipment with the same atmos­ phere. Cos the problem is, if you're going to get a room sound with the timbre of the instruments, you can't put them together as a band and just start playing. All of a sudden one horn's going to stick out. So I had to place the mikes very carefully and put the drummer outside the door.

Well, the first session was to run six hours, and we phmned to cut eight sides. Richard ran through the songs on his audition tape. "He's My Star" was very disappointing. I did not even record it. But "Wonderin' " we got in two takes. Then we got ''I'm Just a Lonely Guy," which was written by a local girl called Dorothy La Bostrie who was always pestering me to record her stuff. Then "The Most I Can Offer," and then "Baby." So far so good. But it wasn't really what I was looking for. I had heard that Richard's stage act was really wild, but in the studio that day he was very inhibited. Possibly his ego was pushing him to show his spiritual feeling or something, but it certainly wasn't coming together like I had expected and hoped.

The problem was that what he looked like, and what he sounded like didn't come together. If you look like Tarzan and sound like Mickey Mouse it just doesn't work out. So I'm thinking, Oh, Jesus ... You know what it's like when you don't know what to do? [t's "Let's take a break. Let's go to lunch." I had to think. I didn't know what to do. I couldn't go back to Rupe 1 with the material I had because there was nothing there that I could put out. Nothing that I could ask anyone to put a promotion on. Nothing to merchandise. And I was paying out serious money.

So here we go over to the Dew Drop Inn, and, of course, Richard's like any other ham. We walk into the place and, you know, the girls are there and the boys are there and he's got an audience. There's a piano, and that's his crutch. He's on stage reck­ oning to show Lee Allen his piano style. So WOW! He gets to going. He hits that piano, didididididididididi ... and starts to sing "Awop-bop-a-Loo-Mop a-good Goddam-Tutti Frutti, good booty.... " I said, "WOW! That's what I want from you, Richard. That's a hit l " I knew that the lyrics were too lewd and suggestive to record. It would never have got played on the air. So I got hold of Dorothy La Bostrie, who had come over to see how the recording of her song was going. I brought her to the Dew Drop.

Dorothy was a little colored girl so thin she looked like six o'clock. She just had to close one eye and she looked like a needle. Dorothy had songs stacked this high and was always asking me to record them. She'd been singing these songs to me, but the trouble was they all sounded like Dinah Washington's "Blowtop Blues." They were' all compose'd to the same melody. But looking through her words, I could see that she was a pwlific writer. She just didn't understand melody. So I said to her, "Look. You come and write some lyrics to this, cos I can't use the lyrics Richard's

1. Art Rupe, ownl'r of Spl'cialty Records.

Little Richard 117

got." He had some terrible words in there. Well, Richard was embarrassed to sing the song and she was not certain that she wanted to hear it. Time was running out, and I knew it could be a hit. I talked, using every argument 1 could think of. I asked him if he had a grudge against making money. 1 told her that she was over twenty-one, had a houseful of kids and no husband and needed the money. And finally, I convinced them. Richard turned to face the wall and sang the song two or three times and Dorothy listened.

Break time was over, and we went back to the studio to finish the session, leaving Dorothy to write the words. I think the first thing we did was "Directly from My Heart to You." Now that, and ''I'm Just a Lonely Guy," could have made it. Those two I could have gotten by with-just by the skin of my teeth. Fifteen minutes before the session was to end, the chick comes in and puts these little trite lyrics in front of me. I put them in front of Richard. Richard says he ain't got no voice left. I said, "Richard, you've got to sing it."

There had been no chance to write an arrangement, so I had to take the chance on Richard playing the piano himself. That wild piano was essential to the success of the song. It was impossible for the other piano players to learn it in the short time we had. I put a microphone between Richard and the piano and another inside the piano, and we started to record it. It took three takes, and in fifteen minutes we had it. "Tutti Frutti."

BUMPS BLACKWELL: The white radio stations wouldn't play Richard's version of "Tutti Fruth" and made Boone's cover number one. So we decided to up the tempo on the follow-up and get the lyrics going so fast that Boone wouldn't be able to get his mouth together to do it! The follow-up was "Long Tall Sally." It was written by a girl named Enortis Johnson and the story of how she came to us seems unbelievable today.

I got a call from a big disk jockey called Honey Chile. She fwd to see me. Very ur­ gent. I went, because we relied on the jocks to push the records, and the last thing you said to them was no. I went along to this awful downtown hotel, and there was Honey Chile with this young girl, about sixteen, seventeen, with plaits, who re­ minded you of one of these little sisters at a Baptist meeting, all white starched col­ lars and everything. She looked like someone who's just been scrubbed-so out of place in this joint filled with pimps and unsavory characters just waiting to scoop her up when she's left alone, you know?

So Honey Chile said to me, "Bumps, you got to do something about this girl. She's walked all the way from Appaloosa, Mississippi, to sell this song to Richard, cos her auntie's sick and she needs money to put her in the hospital." I said okay, let's hear the song, and this little clean-cut kid, all bows and things, says, "Well, I don't have a melody yet. I thought maybe you or Richard could do that." So I said okay, what have you got, and she pulls out this piece of paper. It looked like toilet paper with a few words written on it:

Saw Ul1Cle John witll Long Tall Sally Tiley saw Aunt Mary comin, So tlley ducked lJack i11 tile alley

And she said, "Aunt Mary is sick. And I'm going to tell her about Uncle' John. Cos he was out there with Long Tall Sally, and 1 saw 'em. They saw Aunt Mary comin' and they ducked back in the alley."

119 l1lS The 1950S

[ said, "They did, huh? And this is a song? You walked all the way from Ap­ paloosa, Mississippi, with this piece of paper?" (1' d give my right arm if I could find it now. I kept it for years. Tt was a classic. Just a few words on a used doily!)

Honey Chile said, "Bumps, you gotta do something for this child." So I went back to the studio. I told Richard. He didn't want to do it. J said, "Richard, Honey Chile will get mad at us .. , ," I kept hearing "Duck back in the alley, duck back in the alley." We kept adding words and music to it, to put it right. Richard started to sing it-and all of a sudden there was "Have some fun tonight." That was the hook. Richard loved it cos the hottest thing then was the shuffle.

Richard was reciting that thing. He got on the piano and got the music going and it just started growing and growing. We kept trying, trying it, and I pulled the musi­ cians in and we pulled stuff from everybody That's where Richard's "Ooooooh" first came in. That's what he taught to Paul McCarh1ey. Well, we kept rerecording because I wanted it faster. I drilled Richard with "Duck back in the alley" faster and faster until it burned, it was so fast. When it was finished I turned to Richard and said, "Let's see Pat Boone get his mouth together to do this song"* That's how it was done, and if you look at the copyright you'll see it's Johnson, Penniman, and Blackwell.

LITTLE RICHARD: We were breaking through the racial barrier. The white kids had to hide my records cos they daren't let their parents know they had them in the house. We decided that my image should be crazy and way-out so that the adults would think I was harmless. I'd appear in one show dressed as the Queen of England and in the next as the pope.

They were exciting times. The fans would go really wild. Nearly every place we went, the people got unruly. They'd want to get to me and tear my clothes off. It would be standing-roam-only crowds and 90 percent of tbe audience would be white. I've always tbought that Rock 'n' Roll brought tbe races togetber. Although I was black, tbe fans didn't care. I used to feel good about that. Especially being from the South, wbere you see the barriers, haVing all these people who we thought hated us, showing all this love.

A lot of songs I sang to crowds first to watch their reaction, that's how I knew they'd hit, but we recorded them over and over again. "Lucille" was after a female imper­ sonator in my hometown, We used to call him Queen Sonya. I just took the rhythm of an old song of mine called "Directly from My Heart to You" slowed down and I used to do that riff and go "Sonya'" and I made it into "Lucille." My cousin used to live in a place called Barn Hop Bottom in Macon, right by the railway line, and when the trains came past they'd shake the houses-cllOcka-cllOcka-clwcka-and that's how I got the rhythm for "Directly from My Heart" and "Lucille." I was playing it way before I met Bumps. I was playing "Lucille" and "Slippin' and Slidin'" in my room in Macon way before [ started recording for Specialty. I'd make up the music while I was mak­ ing the words fit.

"Good Golly Miss Molly" I first heard a D.}. using that name. His name was Jimmy Pennick, but you know it was Jackie Brenston that gave me the musical inspi­ ration. Jackie Brenston was a sax player with Ike Turner's Kings of Rhythm when he

Elvis Presley, Sam Phillips, and Rockabilly

did "Rocket 88" and "Juiced," and Ike Turner's band backed him, but they didn't take any credits because of their contracts. I always liked that record, and I used to use the riff in my act, so when we were looking for a lead-in to "Good Golly Miss Molly" I did that and it fitted,"

Further Reading Altschuler, Glenn C. All Shook Up: How Rock '11' Roll Changed America. New York: Oxford

University Press, 2003, White, Charles, Richard Wayne Penniman, and Robert Blackwell. The Life and Times of

Little Richard: The Quasar of Rock. New York: Random House, 1984,

Discography Boone, Pat. Pat's 40 Big Ones. Connoisseur Collection, 2001. ___. The Sil1gles+. Br Music Holland, 2003. Little Richard. Little Richard: Eighteel1 Greatest Hits. Rhino/WEA, 1985. ___' Greatest Gold Hits, Mastercuts Lifestyle, 2004. ___. The Explosive Little RidJnrd. Edsel Records, UK, 2007.

24- Elvis Presley, Sam Phillips, and Rockabilly

As the most successful artist of the mid-1950S rock 'n' roll explosion, Elvis Presley (1935-77) had a profound impact on popular music. His sense of style, musical and personal, was both the focal point of the media reaction to early rock 'n' roll and the inspiration for some of the most important rock musicians to follow. The narrative of his meteoric rise and subsequent decline amid mysterious and tawdry circumstances fueled many myths both during his life and after his death at 42.'

The earliest musical experiences of Presley, who was raised in poverty in the Deep South, came in the Pentecostal services of the First

1. The mythologizing after his death has been prolific enough to spawn at least two 1100ks that are devoted to understanding it, as well as numerous articles; see Gilbert Rodman, Ell'is'B()one did cover "Long Tall Sally." An anemic version in which he reverses the Midas touch After Elvis: Tlte Posthllmolls Career of II Living Legend (New York: Routledge, 1996); and Grelland turns gold into dross, managing to sound as though he is not quite sure what he is singing

about. 1l sold a million. Marcus, Dead Elvj,,: A Clll'Onicle of II Clllhll'al 0I's('"iol1 (New York: Doubleday, 1991).

120 The 1950S

Assembly of God Church. 2 Other formative influences included popular tunes of the day, country music, blues, and rhythm and blues. Although he had little experience as a performer, in 1954, at age 19, he came to the attention of Sam Phillips, owner of a Memphis recording company, Sun Records. Philips teamed Presley, who sang and played guitar, with local country and western musicians, Scotty Moore (guitar) and Bill Black (bass). During their first recording session in june 1954, the trio recorded a single with "That's All Right, Mama" (originally recorded in 1946 by blues singer Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup) on one side and "Blue Moon of Kentucky" (originally recorded in 1946 by bluegrass pioneer Bill Monroe) on the other. The group's style blended elements of country and rhythm and blues without being identifiable as either; the distinctive sound in­ cluded Moore's rhythmically oriented lead guitar playing, Black's slapped bass, and Presley's forceful, if crude, rhythm guitar, with the recording swathed in a distinctive electronic echo effect. Presley's voice, however, attracted the most attention: Swooping almost two octaves at times, changing timbre from a croon to a growl instantaneously, he seemed not so much to be synthesizing preexisting styles as to be juxta­ posing them, sometimes within the course of a single phrase. 3 While the trio's initial record provoked enthusiastic responses immediately upon being broadcast on Memphis radio, it confused audiences, who won­ dered if the singer was white or black. And although white musicians' music had incorporated African American instrumental and vocal ap­ proaches since the earliest "hillbilly" recordings of the 192os, no previ­ ous white singer had so successfully forged an individual style clearly rooted in a contemporaneous African American idiom.

Presley, Moore, and Black released four more singles on Sun during 1954-55; each one featured a blues or rhythm and blues song backed with a country-style number. Presley's uninhibited, sexually charged per­ formances throughout the Southeast provoked frenzied responses and influenced other musicians: By the end of 1955, performers, such as Carl Perkins and johnny Cash, had emerged with a style (coined "rockabilly") that resembled Presley's.

Presley's growing popularity attracted the attention of promoter "Colonel" Tom Parker, who negotiated the sale of Presley's contract to RCA records for the then unheard-of sum of $35,000. Presley's first recording for RCA, "Heartbreak Hotel" (released in March 1956), achieved the unprecedented feat of reaching the Top 5 on the pop, rhythm and blues, and country charts simultaneously. This recording and the songs that followed in 1956 all combined aspects of his spare Sun recordings with increasingly heavy instrumentation-including piano, drums, and background singers-that moved the sound closer to that of mainstream pop. Both sides of his third RCA single "Hound

2. C. Wolfe: "Preslev ilnd the Cospel Trildition," in The Eluis Rl'I7der: Texts al1d Sources 0" the

ill, ut Ruck '11' 1'011, ed. K. QlIilin (New York: St. Milrtin's Press, 1992j, 13-27.

1. These ilsfwds of Pn·slev's 5tyle ilre described in Richilrd Middleton, "All Shook Up," in The '(Ii...; r~l'ad('r, 3-12.,

.LL.LElvis Presley, ~am PhilliPS, ana KocKaolLLY

Dog" /"Don't Be Cruel" hit number one on all three charts. "Hound Dog" radically transformed Willie Mae "Big Mama" Thornton's 1952 R&B hit, while "Don't Be Cruel" was a more pop-oriented recording written specif­ ically for Presley by Otis Blackwell. Presley's vocal style already showed signs of mannerism, trading the unpredictable exchanges of different voices of the early recordings for a single affect throughout each song,

Although Elvis Presley did participate in some interviews throughout his career, the questions and his answers in these interviews tended toward the perfunctory (e.g., in response to questions about rock 'n' roll, Elvis re­ sponded "It's hard to explain rock 'n' roll. It's not what you call folk music. It's a beat that gets you. You feel it.").4 In contrast, Presley's first pro­ ducer, Sam Phillips, has reflected at length on those early recording ses­ sions and the conditions that gave rise to rockabilly. Prior to recording Presley's first five singles and Elvis's rockabilly successors at Sun, such as Carl Perkins, jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, and Roy Orbison, Phillips recorded local blues and R&B musicians like B. B. King, Ike Turner, and Howlin' Wolf, including a session that resulted in the important proto­ rock 'n' roll recording, Jackie Brenston's "Rocket 88" (with a band led by Turner) in 1951. Phillips is also a natural-born storyteller, as revealed by many of the anecdotes in this interview.

SAM PHILLIPS INTERVIEW

Elizabeth Kaye

There arc 111 a11 1/ stories abollt how Elvis came to 51111 ill 1954. rd like to hear .11 011 1' version of it. He was working for Crown Electric. r d seen the truck go back and forth outside, ~nd

I thought, "They sure are doing a hell of a lot of business around here." But I never saw it stop anywhere, So Elvis had .. , he had cased the joint a long time before he stopped the truck and got out. And there's no telling how many days and nights behind that wheel he was figuring out some way to come in and make a record without saying, "Mr, Phillips, would you audition me?" So his mother's birthday gave him the opportunity to come in and make a little per­ sonal record, [Elvis claimed he was making the record for his mother, but her birthday was, in fact, months away, so perhaps he had other motives.]

Thefirst sOllg he recorded was "My Hnppincss." What do you thil1k when you heard it? There wasn't anything that striking about Elvis, except his sideburns were down to

here [gestures], which I kind of thought, well, you know, "That's pretty cool, man. Ain't nobody else got them that damn long," We talked in the studio. And I played the record back for him in the control room on the little crystal turntable

4. This qlll)te (nmes from Mick l'illTen ilnd Peilrce Marchbank: Elvis in His OWI1 Words

(London: On1l1ibu, I'res5, 1g77), 27.

Source: EJizilbeth Kilye, "Silml'hillips Interview," from Rolling Stlme, February 13, 1986, pp. 54-58,

86-88. © Rolling Stone l.LC 1986. All Rights Reserved. Reprinted by permission.

~LL I ne 19505

and walked up front and told Marion [Philips's assistant, Marion Keisker] to write down Elvis' name and a number and how we can get ahold of him.

YOIi called hilll back to Clit a lJallad called "Wit/lOut You." Tllat song was never released. What '{vent 'wrollg?

We got some pretty good cuts on the thing, but I wanted to check him out other ways before I made a final decision as to which route we were going to attempt to go with him.

And I decided I wanted to look at things with a little tempo, because you can really hang yourself out on ballads or when you go up against Perry Como or Eddie Fisher or even Patti Page, all of those people. I wasn't looking for anything that greatly polished.

After that, you pllt Elvis with a band, Scotty Moore on guitar aud Bill Black on bass. Why did .'Iou choosc thcm?

The two of them, they'd been around the studio, Lord, I don't know how many damned times, you know? Scotty had been playing with different bands, and al­ though he hadn't ever done a session for me, 1 knew he had the patience and he wasn't afraid to try anything, and that's so important when you're doing labora­ tory experiments.

Scotty was also the type of person who could take instruction real good. And 1kidded him a lot. 1 said, "If you don't quit trying to copy Chet Atkins, I'll throw you out of this damn place." And Bill, he was just Bill Black, and the best slap bass player in the city.

What were YOIi tryillg to adlieve with Elvis? Now you've got to keep in mind Elvis Presley probably innately was the most

introverted person that came into that studio. Because he didn't play with bands. He didn't go to this little club and pick and grin. All he did was set with his guitar on the side of his bed at home. 1 don't think he even played on the front pl)fch.

So I had to try to establish a direction for him. And 1had to look into the mar­ ket, and if the market was full of one type of thing, why try to go in there? There's only so many pieces in a pie. That's how 1 figured it. I knew from the be­ ginning that I was going to have to do something different and that it might be harder to get it going. But if I got it going, 1 might have something.

HOII' did yOIl COIllC to cut "That's All Right"? That night we had gone through a number of things, and I was getting ready to fold

it up. But I didn't want to discourage the damn people, you understand? I knew how enthusiastic Elvis was to try to do something naturally. I knew also that Scotty Moore was staying there till he dropped dead, you know? I don't re­ member exactly what l said, but it was light hearted. I think I told him, "There ain't il damn song you can do that sounds worth a damn," or something like that. He knew it was tongue in cheek. But it was getting to be a critical time, be­ cause we had been in till:' studio a lot. Well, 1 went back into the booth. I left the mikes open, and I think Elvis felt like, really, "What the hell have I got to lose? I'm really gonna blow his head off, man." And they cut down on "That's All Right," and hell, man, they was just as instinctive as they could be.

Ws said tlrat .'lOll heard him singillg it, alld yOIi said, "What are yOIl doing?" and he said, "I dOIl't know." alld 1/011 said, "Do it again." Is t/rat true?

I don't remember exactly verbatim. But it was something along the lines that I've been quoted.

Elvis Presley, Sam Phillips, and Rockabilly lL-'

Scotty Moore says that when he heard the I"ayback he tlroUgllt 111" d be tim Olll of 1011'11. How did you feel when you heard it?

First of all, Scotty wasn't shocked at any damned thing 1 attempted to do. Scotty isn't shockable. And for me, that damned thing came through so loud and clear it was just like a big flash of lightning and the thunder that follows. I knew it was what I was looking for for Elvis. When anybody tells you they know they've got a hit, they don't know what the hell they're talking about. But r knew I had it on "That's All Right." I just knew 1 had found a groove. In my opinion. And that's aliI had to go on, honey. I mean I let people hear it. But 1 didn't ask them their damn opinions.

Thell what happened? 1 let Scotty, Bill and Elvis know 1 was pretty damn pleased. Then 1 made an acetate

dub of it and took it up to [Memphis disc jockey] Dewey Phillips and played him the tape. And Daddy-O Dewey wanted to hear it again. "Goddamn, man," he says, "1 got to have it." Red, hot and blue. You'd have to know Dewey.

And two nights later he played that thing, and the phones started ringing. Honey, I'll tell you, all hell broke loose. People were calling that station, and it really actually surprised me, because 1 knew nobody knew Elvis. Elvis just didn't have friends, didn't have a bunch of guys he ran with or anything, you know? Anyway, it was just fantastic. To my knowledge, there weren't any adverse calls.

WlJy did you decide to back "That's All Right" with "Blue Moon of Kentucky"? This was before anybody thought of young people being interested in bluegrass. But

we did this thing, and it just had an intrigue. And that's the one where I thought maybe there was a good possibility of getting run out of town, 'cause hey, man, you didn't mess with bluegrass. Bluegrass is kind of sacred, you know.

Ollce the record was released, there was all incredible fllror. How did it afJI'Ct yOIl? Rock & roll probably put more money in the collection boxes of the churches across

America than anything the preacher could have said. I certainly know that to be a fact. Not only them. Disc jockeys broke the hell out of my records. Broke' em on the air. Slam them over the damn microphone. Now if I hadll't affected people like that, I might have been in' trouble.

Do .'lOll remember ti,e session for "Good Rockin' Tonight"? Oh, God, we all loved that song, man. 1 took Bill, and I said, "1 don't want none ot this

damned slapping. I want you to pull them damned strings, boy."

Your contract witlr Eh,is had him completely locked lip. so the 0111.'1 way Colonel Parkn cOllld have become involFed was as a concert booker. WIlY did you decide to sell his contract jllSt a year and a half after 111' started (pith .'lOll?

1 had looked at everything for how I could take a little extra money and get myself out of a real bind. 1 mean, 1 wasn't broke, but man, it was hand-to-mouth. I made an offer to Tom Parker, but the whole thing was that I made an offer 1 didn't think they'd even consider-$35,OOO, plus lowed Elvis $4000 or $5000.

So you thought the offer was so Iriglr 110 olle would take it 7 I didn't necessarily want them not to take it.

Did .'1011 realize how much EIFis was worth? Hell, no. 1 didn't have any idea the man was going to be the biggest thing th"t ever

happened to the industry.

~.L'+ I ne 1950S

WiTC yOIl cpcr ,orry .11011 let him go? No. That was the best judgment call I could make at the time, and I still think it is. And

Sun went on and did many, many things, I hoped the one thing that wouldn't happen to me was that I would be a one-artist or a one-hit label.

Did .'lOll giuc Eluislmy oduice when he lcft S,W? The one real ammunition I gave him was "Don't let them tell you what to do. Don't

lose your individuality."

Thcn liow did .11011 fce! ,da'll he started mokin/\ tlie typc of 1110pie, he made? They were just things that you could make for nothing and make millions off

of, and Elvis didn't have anything to do with it. That was Colonel Tom Parker and the moguls at the different studios. I think it was almost sinister, I really do,

Did you euer think of becoming a manager? I'm insane. But I'm not that insane.

Once Elpis was gone, were you bonkillg Sill/'S futllre on Cllrl Perkins? Absolutely. And there was another one of those instincts. I was giving up some kind

of a cat, man, but, sure enough, I sold him, and that's what financed "Blue Suede Shoes."

Stepe Sholes of RCA called yOIl at tl/(' time "Blue Suede Shoes" was climbillg the charts. RCA coII/dll't get 11m/thing going with Elvis, lind Sholes asked you, "Did we buy the wrong guy?" Whllt did yOll tell him?

I told him, "You haven't bought the wrong person." And I gave him the reasons. Number one, Elvis certainly had the talent. And unlike Carl, he was single and had no children and was a helluva-looking man. He said, "Well, would you be mad at us if we put out 'Blue Suede Shoes'?" Man, that staggered me. 1 said, "Steve, you all are big enough to kill me, you know." But they didn't put it out as a single. They released it as an EP.

Did it olltsell Perkins' persioll? Hell, no. Well, I guess over the years when it was put in nineteen packages. But the only

reason Carl is not recognized for "Blue Suede Shoes" is that Elvis became so mam­ mothlybig.

When did you realize how big EI1'is wOldd be? Not when I heard "Heartbreak Hotel." That was the worst record. I knew it when I

heard "Don't Be Cruel." I was driving back from the first vacation I'd had in my life, and it came on the radio, and I said, "Wait a minute. Jesus, he's off and gone, man." I'd like to run off the road.

Were you jealolls? Hell, no, 'cause when I heard "Heartbreak Hotel," I said, "Damned sons of bitches

are going to mess this man up." Then, boy, I heard "Don't Be Crue!," and I was the happiest man in the world.

What was the dij(iTellce in what ljOIl ,piTe trying to achieve first with Elvis, thell with Perkins?

With Elvis I kind of wanted to lean more toward the blues. I wanted to get Carl more into modifying country music.

tlvlS preSley, ::>am pnllups, ana 1<0CKaOIllY ~L:>

What WIIS your favorite Perkins song? This is the craziest thing, but one of the cutest songs I ever heard was his "Movie

Magg." And "Boppin' the Blues."

Do you remember wllCn you first heard Jerry Lee? It was the day after I first heard "Don't Be CrueL" Jerry had come to Memphis with

his cousin, staying at his house. He was a pretty determined person, ilnd he made up his mind he was going to see Sam Phillips. Jack Clement [Sun's pro­ ducer] was at the studio, and Jerry didn't even want to audition for him. But they cut this little audition tape. And when I went to the studio, Jack says, "Man, I got a cat I want you to hear." Well, I had been looking for somebody that could do tricks on the piano as a lead instrument. La and behold, man, I hear this guy and his total spontaneity.

Then, when you met Jerry Lee and he played for you, you're supposed to have told hil11, "Yim are a rich man."

I probably did. Not in the connotation of money, but of talent.

You've said that Jerry Lee was the most talented person you ever worked Wil/1 but that yOll don't think he could have been bigger thlln Elvis. Why is tl1llt?

That gets into the thing of the total effect of the person. There is no question that the most talented person I ever worked with is Jerry Lee Lewis. Black or white. But Elvis had a certain type of total charisma that was just almost untouchable by any other human that I know of or have ever seen.

But this is a tough comparison for me to make. It looks like I'm drawing lines between two of the most talented people in the world, and I don't like to do that. But I would say that if they were both at their peak, and Elvis was booked for a show but Jerry Lee showed up, no one would be disappointed. Is there a better answer you can think of than that?

What do you remember about recording "Great Balls of Fire"? That was the toughest record I ever recorded in my life. Otis Blackwell had done the

demo.s When I heard it I said, "What in the hell are they doing sending me a record like this? It ought to be out." He'd written the damn thing on a napkin in a bar he owed a lot of money to. And we worked our ass off because those breaks ... with Jerry having to do his piano, it had to be exactly synced with his voice.

You didn't do any o(lerdubbing on it? Hell, no. We didn't have nothing to overdub with.

When Elvis died, you said I/wt he died of a broken heart. Can you amplify that? When you really don't have something to look forward to with a good, sweet, beau­

tiful attitude, you're in trouble. I don't care who you are. You're also in trouble if you're in bondage in any way. I'm talking about emotional entrapment. That's deep stuff. And it's serious stuff. And no matter what happens to you in this world, if you don't make it your business to be happy, then you may have gained the whole world and lost your spirit and maybe even your damned souL

5. Blackwell also wrote many songs for Presley, including "Don't Be Cruet" "All Shoo lc Up:'

and "Jailhouse Rock."

I Ill:' l~~U~

BIll wasn't E/pis elltrappcd by eirClllnslllllcc? Absolutely.

What could hc ha1'<' dOllc difTi'rentllf?

Been hardheaded like m~; and ~aid, "[ will break your damned neck, I don't care­ you can't scare me. Monetary factors can't scare me. Starvation can't scare me. Threats can't scare me." I mean you have to have that attitude.

Elvis also knew that success wasn't enough. It's like Mac Davis said, man, and I think this is one of the greatest quotes, Bible included: "Stop and smell the roses." Now that's where we can all find ourselves if we don't stop and smell the roses.

And the sad thing about it is dying before you actually physically die. I mean, you know, bless his heart.

Further Reading

Farren, Mick, and Pearce Marchbank. Eluis in His Own Word". London: Omnibus Press, 1977.

Guralnick, Peter. Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Eluis PreslClI. Boston: Little, Brown, 1994.

---' Cal't'lc,s Lope: The Un/llaking of Elpis Presley. Boston: Little, Brown, 1999. M.arcus, Greil. Mystery Train: I/llages of Alllerica in Rock 'n' I~oll Music. 3rd rev. ed.

New York: Plume, [1975J 1990.

Middleton, Richard. "All Shook Up." In The Elpis Reader: Texts and Sources on the King of I~ock 'n Roll, ed. Kevin Quain, 3-12. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992.

Rodman, Gilbert. EIi'is after Ell'i,: The Posthumous Career of a Living Legend. New York: Routledge, 1996.

Wolfe, Charles. "Presley and the Gospel Tradition." In The Elvis Reader: Texts alld Sources on the King of Rock 'n Roll, ed. Kevin Quain, 13-27. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1992.

Discography Legendary Sun I~ecords Story. Castle/Pulse, 2003. Legends Cel/eetion: Rock 'n' Roll Ti'tllagers. Legends Collection, 2002. Orbison, [{oy. The Essmtial Roy Orbisoll. Sony, 2006. Presley, Elvis. E/pis Preslel/. RCA Victor, 1956. - __. £ll'is. RCA Victor, 1956. --_. Lopillg tim. RCA Victor, 1957. --_. EIl'is 30 #1 Hits. BMG/Elvis, 2002. - __. £Il'i" af SUIl. BMe/Elvis, 2004. --_. The Essential EI"is Presley. BMG/Elvis, 2007. Thornton, Big Mama. Houlld Dog: The Peacock Recordings. MCA, 1992.

25- Rock '0' Roll Meets the Popular Press

Beginning in 1956-after the first wave of national hits by Fats Domino, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, and Elvis Presley-articles on rock 'n' roll began appearing in mainstream newspapers, such as the New York Times, and in magazines like Time, Newsweek, and Ufe. These articles recall and amplify some of the topics presented in the series of Variety ar­ ticles included earlier: The tone, by and large, is condescending, making frequent references to the connections among rock 'n' roll and sex, vio­ lence, and juvenile delinquency. In particular, descriptions abound of au­ diences and performers trespassing societal norms, and this aberrant behavior (one article describes "snake-dancing around town and smash­ ing windows")' is typically linked to the influence of the beat or rhythm of the music. The four excerpts that follow are representative of the invec­ tive directed toward early rock 'n' roll, although they constitute but a small portion of it.

ROCK-AND-RoLL CALLED COMMUNICABLE DISEASE

New York Times

Conn. March 27 (UP)-A noted psychiatrist described "rock-and-roll" music -today as a "communicable disease" and "another sign of adolescent rebellion."

Dr. Francis J. Braceland, psychiatrist in chief of the Institute of Living, called rock-and-roll a "cannibalistic and tribalistic" fortn of music. He was commenting on the disturbances that led to eleven arrests during the week-end at a local theatre.

It is insecurity and "rebellion," Dr. Braceland said, that impels teenagers to affect "ducktail" haircuts, wear zoot-suits and carryon boisterously at rock-and-roll affairs.

YEH-HEH-HEH-HES, BABY

Time

When [the names of the stars] appear on theater and dance-hall marquees announc­ ing a stage show or "record hop," the stampede is on. The theater is jammed with adolescents from the') a.l11. curtain to closing and it rings and shrieks like the jungle bird house at the zoo. If one of the current heroes is announced-groups such as Bill Haley and His Comets or The Platters or a soloist such as Elvis Presley-the shrieks

1. This phrase comes from "Yeh-Heh-Heh-Hes, Bilby," 7'il1lt', June 11', 1'156,54. Part of thi,

article is reprinted hert', bllt !lot this particular passage.

S01t1'l'L "Rock-and-Roll Called COl11monicabl1' Dise"se," Nt'''' \'ork Til1les, March 28, I~S6, p. ~3.

Sourc<': "Yeh-Heh-Heh-Hes, 13aby," TI///I', June 18, 19.56, P S4.

127

_.,...._"U"'.I.JI "'v~" 111 ,,"ULL LAII:~I OUMBSHELL IN UIXIE

Rob Roy

In a small town in Alabama not so many moons ago, and after several "moonshines" (at a rpar bar) this corner ILe., the author] attempted to playa number on la] juke box that was situated neilr a front bar. The bartender yelled, "No, no, no" so no music was playpd. That will not happen again.

One of the reasons is factual-this corner will hardly be in a position to reach a jukp box in that little town again. Then there is the other reason: Should council leader Asa Carter of Birmingham have his way there will be no Rock 'N' Roll num­ bers on the juke box and of course no reason for this corner to wish to spend his dime. Even in Birmingham a dime is a dime.

Councilman Asa Carter says "Rock 'N' Roll" music is nothing but a plot by [the] NAACP to lowpr American youth's morals. He indicates he'll ask blacklisting of juke box operators who carry "Rock 'N' Roll" records on their vendors. Only thing wrong here is Mr. Carter, if successful, wouldn't be hurting the NAACP or the customers who wish to play the music but the juke box operators and the tavern owners.

Fancy if you can, a group of youngsters, patronizing a dancehall tavern and haVing to waltz each number that isn't a fox trot. "What, no jittprbugging,"? they'd sayan the way out of the plact'. In that case who would be hurt? Of course Mr. Carter would hardly be hurt. One must feel that he does not operatp a tavern. Nor is it likely that his accomplishments include the jitterbug or rugcutting dance. To do either one mllst be alert of limb, fast, think what is the next move just naturally, and a few more sensible things. If Asa's feet match his expressed mind and actions they are too sluggish and out of line for even a dancer. Just an old story? "Free schouls yet dumb people."

Carter, executive secretary of the powerful pro-segregation group, declared that citizen's councils through the state were circulating petitions demanding that "rock and roll" music be banned from jukeboxes.

He said in an interview that what he called "this generate music" was being encouraged by the NAACP and other pro-integration groups, adding:

"TIle NAACP uses this type of music as a. means of pulling the white man clown to the level of the Negro."

He declarpd that "rock and roll" as well as other forms of jazz, was undermining the morals of American youth with its "degenerate, anamalistic [sic] beats and rhythms." He added:

"This savage and primiti\'e type of music which comes straight from Africa brings out the base things in man."

"Rock and Roll" music, he said, got its start in Negro night clubs and Negro radio hroadcasts and its influence was spread by the NAACP.

"Insteild of opposing it in an attempt to raise the morals of the Negw," he said, "the NAACP encouraged it slowly for the purpose of undermining the morals of white people."

He estimated that 300,000 signatures would be wllected by the petitions and added:

"If jukebox operators hope to stay in business they better get rid of these smutty records with their dirty lyrics."

S(llll"Ce: Rub r{oy, "13iC1S Against 'Rock 'n' HoW Latest Bombshell in Dixip," Chicago Dejt'llder, April 7. 1%6, F. 14.

130

toe 1'V'US1C lnaU~lfY r1}:;l1lf"\~Ctlll~ll\.Vl.." II I\VU

Further Reading "Alabamans Attack 'King' Cole on Stage." New York Tillie:;, April 11, 1956: 1. 27. Gourse, Leslie. Unforgettable: Tile Life alld Mystique of Nat Kil1g Cole. New York: Cooper

Squilr",2000.

Discography Cole, Nat King. After Midrlight: Tile C011lFIete Sessioll. mue Note Records, 1956. ___. Tire Gr-eatest Hits. Capitol, 1994.

27. The Music Industry Fight Against Rock'n'Roll Dick Clark's Teen-Pop Empire and the Payola Scandal

The 1950S ended on a bum note for rock 'n' roll: Chuck Berry was on the verge of being convicted for having transported a minor across state lines; Elvis was in the army; Little Richard had left popular music for the ministry; Jerry Lee Lewis had effectively been blacklisted for having married his 13-year-old cousin; and Buddy Holly, Richie Valens, and the Big Bopper (all of whom had scored major hits during 1957-5 8) had died in a plane crash. As early as 1956, defenders of pop music's old guard, represented by ASCAP officials and songwriters-performers associated with ASCAP, mounted an attack on rock 'n' roll by linking it to the rise of BMI and by accusing BMI of manipulating public taste owing to its undue influence in the broadcast media. Several rounds of public hearings resulted.' The repeatedly asserted link between BMI and radio stations was specious: All broadcasters at that time had licenses from both BMI

1. For a summary and anatysis of these hearinf;s, see Trent Hill, "TIle Enemy Within: Censorship in Rock Music in the 19505," SOli 111 Atlantic Quarlc,.lJr 90 , No.4 (Fa111991), 675-708. The hearinf;s lasted frcml 1%6 into 1958. Fm aCCllunts in the press, see "Rock 'n' Roll Laid to B. M. 1. Control: Billy H.ose Tells House Unit That 'Electronic Curtain' Furthers 'Monstrosities:" New Y01'k Ti11les, September 19,1956,75; Val Adams, "Networks Hetd Biased on Music: Senate Unit Hears Charges That They Promote ProdUcts of Their Own Affiliates," Nez" Y01'k Time" March 12, 1958,63; Val Adams, "Hanson Decries Hillbillv Music: Tells Senate Unit Hearing Tunes Heard on Air Are 'Madison Ave.' Version," Nt'll' York Times, March 14,1958,51.

~ J"- I ne 195 0 5

and AS CAP that required them to pay a fee for using music affiliated with those organizations, and even radio stations that owned stock in 8MI did not receive dividends. No. the battle's focus truly lay in a conjunction of aesthetics and politics.' The old guard were defending their business interests, as well as their taste in music. The analyses of 8MI's power, while inaccurate, could have been applied quite fairly to the position of ASCAP before BMI-affiliated music began making inroads in the pop music mainstream during the late 19405.3

The payola hearings (which grew out of congressional hearings into crooked practices on television quiz shows) represented yet another offi­ cial intervention into the business and media practices associated with early rock 'n' roll. In media accounts of payola, one is struck by how politicians were so quick to believe that the popularity of rock 'n' roll was due to either a conspiracy with 8MI or payola; in other words, they thought that the music was so horrible that there had to be some form of external coercion involved for people to want to listen to it.

A new form of rock 'n' roll emerged that was designed to please both politicians and teenagers. The main variety of this new rock 'n' roll, "teen pop," was promoted by a nationally syndicated television show, American Bandstand, hosted by Dick Clark, a figure at once youthful and nonthreatening. Teen pop adopted older techniques of pop music pro­ duction to late-1950S' popular music, incorporating aspects of rock 'n' roll while reinstating the separate roles of songwriter, instrumentalist, and singer that had been collapsed by artists like Chuck Berry and Little Richard. American Bandstand largely featured the stars of teen pop, known as "teen idols": good-looking young people from the Philadelphia area (where American Bandstand originated) singing music that was produced with a vague resemblance to rock 'n' roll.

Equally striking as the official, public response to rock 'n' roll was the disparate fates of Alan Freed and Dick Clark: The Jewish Freed rose to success by playing black popular music to white kids and by promoting concerts at which both performers and audiences were integrated. The clean-cut, All-American Clark's signature show, American Bandstand, featured a virtually all-white audience and was cautious about integra­ tion on the air. 4 Freed's career was effectively ended by the scandal; Clark's career, as of this writing, was still going strong (despite his suf­ fering a stroke in 2004), and he hosted American Bandstand until 1989.5

2. See Rpeb"e Carofa'o, I,o,kill' OUI: ropular Music illihe USA (B0ston: AlIvn and Bacon. 1Q47j,

) 172;and Russell Sanj"k. "TI"" War' on Rock," Downbeal Music '72 )/-nrbook (Chicago: Maher, 1(72).

3. Set> Richard A. Pelt'rson and David G. BNgCl; "Cycles in Svmbol Production: The Cas" of 'of)ular Music," in l)" Record.' "ock. Pop. and til/' WrillC11 W,'rd (New York: Pantlwon B"uks, 1(90), 14(1-54.

4. ThClt this '\Ivas recognized by African American viewt'rs is substrll1ti.lte-d by the article jrom hE' AfrlCrlll American neV\,':"p<1jx'r, the NCZ(l York Age, reprintt:.'d in this chapter.

5. F(lr <l thorough hLc:{"c)"y of Amcrilim Hnlldstl1nd, H"'e John A, JacksCln, AmC'"inm Bandstand: Oick ~/ark nlld Ihe M()kill.~ ofa R,ock '11' linll EII/pire 'New Y",k: Oxford University Press, 1(197).

The Music Industry Fight Against Rock 'n' Roll Ijj

The following article from Life describes the payola hearings of late 1959-early 1960 and focuses on the host of American Bandstand, Dick Clark. This article reproduces many of the criticisms and stereotypes found in early media reports on rock 'n' roll, even suggesting in the open­ ing paragraph that a teenager murdered his mother because she refused to let him watch American Bandstand. More evenhanded than some other mainstream reports of the time, the article gives space to the views of fans of the show in order to explain why they like it. And while the familiar condescending tone is present, most of the comments critical of rock 'n' roll are ascribed to the members of the Senate committee. Along the way, a history and explanation of payola is presented and contrasted with the specifics of Clark's business operation so as to anticipate his ultimate exoneration.

MUSIC BIZ GOES ROUND AND ROUND: IT (OMES OUT (lARKOlA

Peter Bunzel

Back in September 1958 a roly-poly Tulsa boy named Billy Jay Killion came home from high school and wanted to watch Dick Clark's television program, American Balldstalld. His mother, who didn't pnrticular\y care for rock 'n' roll music, was all set to wntch a different program, so she told Billy "No."' He seethed the whole night long. Then in the morning Billy took out a rifle and shot his mother dead.

Millions of American teen-agers feel just as strongly about Dick Clark, though no others have vented their feelings so violently. Last week their loyalty was put to the supreme test, for Clark was up before Congress to answer for mayhem of another kind. For six months the Harris Committee had been investigating payola in music and broadcasting, and had dt'veloped a greedy image of the whole industry. A long succession of disk jockevs admitted taking payments from mtlsic companies. But the one man the committee had always been gunning for was Dick Clark, the biggest disk jockey of all and a symbol. in giant screen, of tIlE' whole questionable business.

"1 have never," Clark told the committee, "agreed tn playa recnrd in return for payment in cash or any other consideration." This statement seemed more and more astonishing to the cnmmittee as Clark went on to admit that in the last three years he had parlay prJ his position into a whopping personal fortune of $576,590. "'Plugola," "wyola"' and "Clarknla,"' thp committeemen variously called it.

But tlwir skepticism did not alter Clark's mien as he sat on the stand giving off the same air of proper respectahilitv he dncs on TV He wore a blue suit, button-down shirt and black loafers. Every strand of his hair was ncatly lacquered into place. His voicc had the bland, dulcet tone of the TV announcer that he is.

A Most Important Commercial His tone was appropriate, for 30-year-old T{ichard Wagstaff Clark was delivering the most impnrtant commercial of his life. He is out to sell his highly select adult

Source: Pt'ter BUllzt'!. "fv(nsic Biz Gnes Rnnnd and Rnund:!t Cnnws (lut C]arko]"." l.if,', May 16,

1960, pp. '1 Hi-l22. (C) l%l! TIME, Inc., reprinted by pt'rmi.ssiol1.

U4 The 19505

audience the same moralistic image of himself that he has convincingly sold to the nation's teen-agers. It was an image he had peddled not only on the air but in a book of adolescent etiquette called Your Happies! Years. In this work he made a strong pitch for neatness and good manners, pausing briefly for little homilies: "Don't make the mistake of thinking those TV cameras arc branches of the United States mint. Contrary to popular opinion, dollar bills don't come out of them like bread from a bakery oven."

Clark himself made the mistnke he warned his public against, but it turned out fine for him. After all, he was in a unique spot to profit by his error. Most disk jockeys perform on radio. Clark is on TV Most others are only on local stations He is on a na­ tional network and he reaches some 16 million people with his stock in trade, rock 'n' roll. This form of music is alien to most adults, for whom it has all the soothing charm of a chorus of pneumatic drills. "But we love it," said a teen-age girl from Charleston, W. Va., who attended the Clark hearings. "When I hear a Beethoven symphony, I don't feel anything, When I hear our kind of music, I feel something way down deep, like oatmeal."

Payola as a Compliment The same adults who disparage rock 'n' roll unwittingly helped get it going. When long-playing records came in, grown-ups stopped buying single records. Manufac­ turers of singles had to aim their products at teen-age taste and rock 'n' roll became the staple. The singles are easy and cheap to make and 600 record companies are expelling a constant flow, But the big problem is selling them.

First the records get a test run in such "break-out" cities as Cleveland, Boston or Detroit to see which can be sold-or which the public can be conned into buying. A sure way to boost the songs has been to put money on the line to disk jockeys. Many deejays were proud to be bribed, for, in their curious little fraternity, payments be­ came a status symbol. "Payola comes to the top disk jockeys, not the others," said one. "If you are in show business, don't you want to be at the top? Isn't this the great­ est compliment'"

A large number of fraternity brothers felt the same way, for the Federal Trade Commission estimates that 250 disk jockeys accepted the compliment. Generally the recipients deny that there is any connection between paying and playing. But re­ marked Congressman John Moss of the committee, "Some kind of telepathic com­ munication seems to take place. By intellectual osmosis between the disk jockey and the record manufacturer, money is passed and records get played."

Actually the committee should not be so surprised at payola. It is old stuff in the music business. In Victorian England, before he teamed up with William Gilbert, a young composer named Arthur Sullivan dashed off a song called Thou'rt Passing Hencl'. He got it performed in public by giVing a share of the royalties to Sir Charles Santley, a leading baritDne of the time. Sir Charles was still collecting his payoff when the tunE' was played at Sullivan's funeral.

In the U.s., in the 11i9Us, the music publishers paid to have their songs played in beer gardens. Later, top stars like Al Jolson and Eddie Cantor were offered enor­ mouslv tempting payola deals-and in the '30s maestros of big-name bands got a cut of the royalties for playing new tunes on network radio.

Until the payola scandals broke, disk jockeys had no pangs of conscience about benefiting from a practice with such a tradition. Payola was simply the way they did business and they imagined that everyone else did it that way too, "This seems to be

The Music Industry Fight Against Rock 'n' Roll Ij~

the American way of life," said Boston's Stan Richards, "which is a wonderful way of life. It is primarily built on romance: 'I'll do for you. What will you do for me"?'''

V\'hat Dick Clark did for music people was to give them a pre-sold market and what they gave him in return was a windfall. He did not rely on com'entional cash payola but worked out a far more complex and profitable system. It hinged on his nu­ merous corporate holdings which included financial interests in three record com.pa­ nil'S, six music publishing houses, a record pressing plant, a record distributing firm and a company which manages singers. The music, the records and the singers in­ volved with these companies gained a special place in Clark's programs, which the committee said gave them systematic preference.

A statistical breakdown showed how his system worked. In a period of 27 months Clark gave far less air time to a top star like Elvis Preslev than to a newcomer named Duane Eddy, one of the several singers whom he has helped make into a star. Clark had no stake in Preslev. Rut firms in which he held stock both managed and recorded Eddy. During th~ same 27 months Clark played only OIW record by Bing Crosby (the almost mandatory Wlli!e Cliris!l1las) and none at all by Frank Sinatra. "You sought to exploit your position as a network personality," said Moss. "By almost any reasonable test records yOll had an interest in were played more than the om's you didn't." Replied Clark, "1 did not consciously favor such records. Maybe I did so without reallzing it,"

"You laid It On" Nor did Clark neglect revenues from copyright ownership. He ownf'd 160 songs, and of these 143 came to him as outright gifts, much as Gilbert's TlltJli'r/ Pils,dng Hellce came to Santley. "Once you acquired an interest," said Moss, "then you really laid

it on." A shining example was a record called 1GCandles, Before getting thE' copyright,

Clark spun it only foUl' times in 10 weeks, and it got nowhere. Once he owned it, Clark played it 27 times in less than three months and it went up like a rocket. Each time the record was purchased Clark shared in the profits to the merry tune of $12,000. This pattern was duplicated with a song called Buttertly-and for his trou­ ble tlw publisher gave him $7,000.

Many of his deals afforded Clark a special tax brt'ak. In May 1957 he invested $125 in the Jamie RE'cord Company, which was then $450 in the red. Once he was a stockholder, Clark found Jamie records very attractive. By plugging them on his show he helped make many of them hits, When 11(' sold nut last December for $15,000, Clark had a cool profit of $11,900, and he could declare it all as capital gnins. Clark granted the accuracy of thesp figures but explained, "I followed the ground rules that existed." He was familiar with tile rules from another angle. Although he denied he had taken payola he admitted, paradoxically, that one of his record com­ panies had passed out payola to get its wares plugged.

Coming back again and again to rock 'n' roll, the committee members strongly implied that Clark had deliberately foisted it on teen-agers. "\ don't know of any time in our history when we hilL! comparably bad, uniformly bad music," said Moss. Clark replied, "Popular music has always become popular because of young people. You can't force the public to like anything they don't want. If they don't want it, it won't become a hit."

Clark's soft sell made him an effective, if slippery, witness, At the end Chairman Oren Harris remarked, "You're not the inventor of the system or t'yen its architect.

136 The 19505

You're a product of it." Then showing as much perspicacity as any 15-year-old, the congressman added, "Obviouslv you're a fine young man."

This encomium was sweet music to teen-agers who came to the hearing to see their hero in his hour of travail. Seated in the front row were two sisters from West Orilnge, N.J., whose parents had brought them to Washington to view the sights. To them the loveliest Sight of all was Dick Clark.

"I don't care if he took payola," said Karen Katz, 13. "He gets to us as kids. The reason 16 Candles took off is because we liked it. They SilY he didn't play enough Bing Crosby. Look, his show isn't for grandmothers. And Frank Sinatra, who needs him?"

The final verdict on Clark rests in part with teen-agers like Karen, but even more with his many sponsors. 1£ they decide that his value as a pitchman has been hurt, then they will drop him like a cracked record. Already the danger signals are up. "We aren't happy about this thing," said the account executive for Hollywood Candy Bars, "and neither ilre ilny of the other ad agencies. 'vVe want to keep our noses clean."

The American I3roadcasting Company is playing it cautious, waiting to see which way the wind will blow. Its stake in Clark is huge, for the network carries both of his shows, and each year they bring $6 million in advertising revenue. At least one disk jockey, a Miami man, says that ABC has already lined him up as Clark's re­ placement, just in case-and he is waiting for word to catch the next plane north.

But the sponsors had better think twice before dropping Clark. The teen-agers feel an almost fanatical bond with him. An investigator for the committee named James Kelly ran into this fanaticism rig!,t in his own family. Kelly's wife has a 15-year-old sister and they used to be great pals. But ever since Kelly started prying into Dick Clark's affairs, the girl has cut him absolutely dead.

The conclUding article for this chapter, published in the New York Age, an African American newspaper, explores an aspect of American Bandstand's "all-American" appeal ignored by the previous article.

MR. CLARK AND COLORED PAYOLA

New York Age

With all of the publicity focusing on disc jockey payola, we arc concerned about another matter which has never seemed to bother many people. This is the question of Negro participation on the various TV bandstand programs.

If there's one shining star in the constellation of Alan Freed's career. it has been his detertnined, quiet, but effective war on racial bigotry in the music business. Largely as a result of his efforts, several Negro singing groups are top successes today because of his encouragement and fairness.

At the same time, his "Big Party" has always had Negro kids right in there putting down" tough "slop" with the best of them.

Have you "ven seen N"gm kids on Dick Clark's program? Perhaps,,, few times, but the unspoken rule operates-Negro kids simply have been quietly barr"d from the" American Bandstand."

Somebody should raise the question £IS to whether there was ever any payola to keep Negro kids off of Dick Clark's American Bandstand TV program.

SOli/we "Mr. Clark and Colored Payola," Nf11' York Ag", December 5, 1989, p. 6.

Ij/The Music Industry Fight Against Rock 'n' Roll

Further Reading Adams, Val. "Networks Held Biased on Music: Senate Unit Hears Charges That They

Promote Products of Their Own Affiliates." New York Times, March 12, 1958. ___. "Hanson Decries Hillbilly Music: Tells Senate Unit Hearing Tunes Heard on

Air Are 'Madison Ave.' Version." New York Times, March 14, 1958: 51. Blitz, Stanley, and John Pritchard. Bandstand the Untold Story: Ti,e '(('lIrs Before Dick ermA.

Phoenix: Cornucopia Publications, 1997. Clark, Dick. TI,e History of Americnn BlIndstllnd. New York: Ballantine Books, 1985. Hill, Trent "The Enemy Within: Censorship in Rock Music in the 1950s." Soutll Atlantic

Quarterly 90, No.4 \FaIl1991): 675-708. Jackson, John A. American Bandstand: Dick Clark mId the Makillg of a Rock '11' Roll Empire.

New York: Oxford University Press, 1997. Peterson, Richard A., and David G. Berger. "Cycles in Symbol Production: The Case of

Popular Music." In 011 Record: Rock, Pol" and tlie Written Word, ed. Simon Frith and Andrew Goodwin, 140-59. New York: Pantheon Books, 1990.

"Rock 'n' Roll Laid To B.M.!. Control: Billy Rose Tells House Unit That 'Electronic Curtain' Furthers Monstrosities." New York Times, September 19,1956: 75.

Discography Avalon, Frankie, and Fabian. Col/ector's Edition: Frankie Eo' Fabian-Teen Tdo/s. Madacy

Records, 2000. The 50's Decade: Teen Idols. St. Clair Records, 2001. The Official American Bandstand Library of Rock (;0 Roll. Atlantic/WEA, 2000. The Rock 'n' Roll Era: Tee1l Idols. Time Life/Warner, 1989. Teenage Idols. Disky, 2001. Wolfmall Jack's: Teen Idols. St. Clair Records, 2001.

139

The 19605

28. Brill Building and the Girl Groups

The payola hearings, one of the most publicized aspects of popular music as the 1950S ended and the 1960s began, highlighted some of the dominant trends in the mainstream: The early wave of rock 'n' roll, represented by Alan Freed and promoted by independent recording companies, lay dormant while teen idols coexisted with continuations of previous popular styles embodied in soundtrack themes and new versions of standards.' Until recently, histories of popular music describing this period tended to trace an arc of declining quality, as authentic, virile rock 'n' roll was supplanted by mass-produced schlock.

A closer inspection of popular music circa 1960, however, leads one to resist such tidy characterizations. It is true that music industry centers, such as the Brill Building in New York City, did revive some of the production practices of Tin Pan Alley, but not all their efforts can be dismissed as "schlock-rock." A breed of young songwriters combined the youthful energy of rock 'n' roll with the sophisticated harmonic and melodic techniques of earlier popular music to create new forms of soulful, dance-oriented popular music. These songwriters-who in­ cluded among their ranks newcomers, such as the teams of Carole King and Gerry Goffin, Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, Ellie Greenwich and Jeff Barry, and Burt Bacharach and Hal David, along with seasoned pros like Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller-created new syntheses working with young singers, many of whom were African American and female. Thus, the period 1961-63 witnessed the emergence and success of numerous

1. Rt::"t'bl'P Carofalo and Stcvl' Chapple use the term itschJnck~rnck" to refer h) the music

kvdc>ped around tet'n idols (I<ock and 1'0111, Flere I"~ I'ml !Chica~,): Npls"n-H~I1, jQ77l!. By the

li.id-sixties, rf'C'ording~ of pre-rock 'n' roll pop music led to the creation of a new cZltegofV, "easy

istcning," rllternalC'iv referred tp as "middle-l)f-tht'-I"{lad" or ('ven 85 "g\)od music." Despite the

ack of ilttentlon p"id in this bonk cJnd Jlml)st en~rv history of popular musk to th\~ type of rn.usic ,ftc'r thE" lq,I:jOs, it continued to be extrpJnely popular; soundtrilcks and original C{\~t recordings of

nllsic(ll~ remained mnong the bt'st~s£'l1ing (llbums up through the late ll)(,Os,

138

Brill Building and the Girl Groups

"girl groups," marking the first time that female subjectivity had been so widely represented, perhaps because many of the people just noted who were involved with the songwriting and production of the girl groups were women (also a new development). Production teams in New York and Philadelphia also participated in the creation and promo­ tion of dance crazes: songs based in R&8 and rock 'n' roll that named and described a particular dance (e.g., the "jerk," the "limbo," the "mashed potatoes"). The most successful of these songs was "The Twist," which became a Number One hit for Chubby Checker twice, in

1960 and 1961.

The frequent collaborations of Brill Building songwriters, most of whom were Jewish, with young African American female singers marked the most recent reemergence of a partnership observed in chapter 1 in the discussion of Irving Berlin's career. While most of the earlier writers on the girl groups quite rightly trace the emergence of "girl" vocal groups back to 1958 and the Chantels' hit "Maybe," the particular convergence of production-songwriting teams based in the Brill Building with female vocal groups first came to prominence in the Shire lies' late- 1 960 hit, "Will You Love Me Tomorrow," which initiated one of the dominant trends of the era. More hits followed by the Shirelles and other artists, such as the Marvelettes and the Crystals, in which a particular ap­ proach to vocal arrangement and a typical range of subjects coalesced. Z Vocal arrangements relied on a modified call-and-response approach, adapted primarily from African American gospel practice, with the lyrics frequently arranged to simulate a dialogue between lead and backing

vocalists. Lest the forgoing description of the participants in the genre

appear monolithic, it is important to note that many girl group recordings occurred outside the orbit of the Brill Building, that some of the singers were white (e.g., the Angels, the Shangri-Las), that some of the song­ writers and producers were black (e.g., Luther Dixon), and that some recordings that are now understood as part of the girl group phenome­ non because of their musical arrangements were credited to individuals (e.g., Little Eva, Leslie Gore). The following passage from Charlotte Greig's book focuses on the experience of songwriters, such as Carole King and Ellie Greenwich, and underscores the flexibility of the working arrangements at the Brill Building, where songwriters could quickly assume the role of producer and/or performer.

2. Por more on the relationship b('t\vcl'1l this <1pproal'11 tn vocal arr<lngenwllt and Y0ung

female identity, st't' n"rbara Bmdby. "Do·Talk and Don't-Talk: The Division "f the Subject in

Girl-Group Music." in Sinl0n Frith and /\ndre\v Goorh"'ill, t:'Lis., 01/ RL'col'd: !{oc)e Pop (md tIlt'

W,irtm Wo,d (New York: Routledge, jQ90), 341-69; for" more comprehensive studY "f the girl group gf'nrt:', see lacqueline "V"rwick Cirl Croupfi, Girl CI/IIl/re: f1(1pUrar Music and. IdrntH.'I hI the

19605 (New Y,'rk: RoutJrdge, 2L1(7).

141

jfUm VVILL YOU ~T1ll LOVE ME TOMORROW? GIRL GROUPS FROM THE 1950s ON

Charlotte Greig

The Shirelles, as the first popular rock 'n' roll girl group, were largely responsible for introducing what we think of as "pop" mu~ic to a wide public. In the fifties, there had been two very scparate strands of popular music on the one hand, rock 'n' roll, and on the other, the showbiz songs written by the professional songwriters of Tin Pan Alley. The mostly Jewish songwriters of Tin Pan Alley traditionally looked to Italian Americans, with their suitably romantic good looks and operatic vocal style, as per­ formers of their songs. The imitation-Elvis, teen-boy pop idols of the late fifties and early sixties were essentially a continuation of this tradition. At the same time, how­ ever, the music industry was changing. The songwriters of Tin Pan Alley were no longer all middle-aged men churning out novelty songs; a new breed of young men and women songwriters was coming up who looked to black artists to perform their songs. Pete Waterman explains:

What happened in the early sixties is that white guys, people like Barry Mann, and white girls like Carole King met, for the first time, black artists. So you had black artists singing doo wop, but you had white songwriters writing white melodies. Suddenly, there was an interpollination of black voices with white melodies; and mo~t of the writers at that time were of Jewish descent, so of (Ourse you got very different chordal structures. There were these amazing black girls singing Jewish melodies that didn't quite work out; here was a new form of music. Because of the white clement, girls like Carole King, arrangers put strings on the records which doo-wop bands could never have afforded. You had major companies like Liberty and Roulette making records with full orchestras' They would pay the money, and they were white; the only black thing about the records was the artists and the manage­ ment. Suddenly you had this dichotomy of cultures; and it worked, it worked perfectly.

These cultures were being forged together not just by a happy blending of musi­ ~al stvles, however; the essential element that bound the black artists and the white iong.:vriters and producers together was that they were young. They were, however :Iirectlyor indirectly, part of a teen culture built on the legacy of fifties' rock 'n' roll ",hose tendencies towards "aural miscegenation"-as Gerry Hirshey calls it in her 'ook Nowhere 10 HUH-had so disturbed the establishment both morally and. in the nusic business, financially. In a sense, the girl groups who were used to effect the nass crossover of black music into white pop in the early sixties represented Tin Pan \lIey's attempt to co-opt and control rock 'n' roll; but because the songwriters and 'roducers involved were so young and so much part of rock 'n' roll themselves, their ery attempt to sweeten up and sanitize the black sound to appeal to a teenage pub­ c brought with it something genuine: a new, female-centred pop sensibility that was /Onderfully fresh.

Carole King entered the music business in New York as a teenage songwriter at a me when the industry had recognized the huge profits to be made out of selling pop ~cords to teenagers. She was hired by a music publisher, Don Kirshner, one of the first

mrre: Charlotte Greig, \Vi/t Ytll/ Still LOlli' Me Tomorrow? Girl Grollp~.from the 50s on . . . (London: ra~o Press, 19RQ), 37-43, 51-54. Reprinted by permission of Charlotte Greig.

140

Brill Building and the Girl GroupS

to gear his whole output tm"ards the teenage market. Aldon, as his company was called, was part of the Brill Building on Broadway, where virtually everyone in the music business congregated. There was a frantic atmosphere of ,vheeling and dealing in the building, almost like that of the stock exchange; songs were written, demos were cut, and tracks were recorded and released, all at a speed which noW seems quite incredible; a song could be written in the morning, recorded in the afternoon and re­ leased a few days later on one of the many small labels that operated out of the Brill. It was a production line, as Carole King pointed out to writer Paula Taylor in 1976:

We each had a little cubby hole with just enough room for a piano, a bench, and maybe a chair for the lyricist-if you were lucky. You'd sit there and write, and you could hear someone in the next cubby hole composing some song exactly

like yourself.

In the offices of another publisher, l.eiber "nd Stoller, pl"ns were also being made to cash in on the teen boom. Ellie Greenwich was one of the star songwriters the duo hired to give them those teen hits, and she did, coming up with such classics as "Da 000 Ron Ron:' "Then He Kissed Me," "Doh Wah Oiddy" and "Chapel of Love."

Today Ellie lives in a New York apartment not far from Broadway. A big brass musical note adorns her front door, and the theme is continued throughout the apart­ ment, even to treble and bass clefs on the wallpaper in the bathroom and piano-key motifs on the toilet seat. Still working in the music business, and looking a million dollars with a Dusty Springfield hairdo, Ellie beams warmly at me, welcomes Ine like an old friend and settles back to entertain me with stories of those early days. Chain smoking her way through a heavy cold, which only improves her husky New York

tones, she remembers the past with affection:

I went to Leiber and Stoller's office to wait for my appointment. They thought I was Carole King, so they went, "Hey, Carole, come on in." 1 told them who I was and started playing away, a nervous wreck They offered me a job writing, $75 a week. I said, no, $lLJLJ, and they agreed. Wow! 1 thought. A hundred bucks a week! I'm flying here. And I have my own cubby hole where I can write my stuff to my heart's content, and who knows who I might meet ...

There were many small labels in the Brill Building that offered you the op­ portunity to just run up there and say, "Hey, listell to this song." There was a spontaneity then', the doors were easy to walk through. If you played a song and they liked it, they'd say, "Let's think. Do we know anyone who can do this? Do you?" So thel1 you could go out and look for an artist, and a record label would give you a shot to produce a single. 11 it did well, great, you started gelling a name for yourself. If it didn't, so what, no big deal. Not any more. Now it's album, album ... nobody would hire you just like that.

H was a happy time. Monetarily stupid, maybe, but on a creative level you just weren't bothered with any problems. All you did was come in and hone in on your craft. We were very grateful to be signed to a music publisher and get our weekly little paycheck. We always got our royalties. But we never knew to ask about retaining songs. So I didn't finally make $200,000. J got $25,OLJO Fine.

Who knew those songs would live on?

By 1962, when Ellie joined Leiber and Stoller, Carole King was already making a name for herself as a songwriter after her success with "Will You Love Me Tomorrow?" In partnership with lyricist Gerry Goffin, an ex-chemistry student she married at the ilge of eighteen, Carole was now writing for white teen idols like Bobby

~"'L The 1960s

Vee. A whole industry was by this time building up around TV shows like American Bandstand, which not only introduced a never-ending stream of wooden boy idols to the nation's teenagers but also created hundreds of dance crazes. When the Goffins came up with "The Locomotion," a new dance tune, they asked their babysitter-who had inspired the song by her style of dancing-··to cut the demo for them. Kirschner liked the demo so much that he released it as it was on his new Dimension label, and in no time, "The Locomotion" had rcached the number-one spot. Little Eva, as she was now called, became an overnight sensation; such a huge success by an unknown artist on a nt'W label was extraordina ry. Yet her subsequent records, like "Let's Turkey Trot" did not match "The Locomotion." Her sister Idalia was pulled in to make a record, a track called "Hula J loppin"; but by now the label was flogging a dead horse. Having been feted in Europe and America, in less than two years Eva's career was Over.

TIle tale of Little Eva showed the industry both at its best and at its worst. In the Brilll3uilding, indi\'iduals, often working freelance, could set up a series of loose re­ lationships: songwriters could sell their songs to different publishers or record labels, producers could look for songs amongst the many publishers, and so on. Often, a sin­ gle individual would perform some or all of these functions; many songwriters set up their own labels, produced, and even sang on the records. The speed at which a11 this happened meant that a trend could be quickly spotted and exploited. TIle sheer volume of records that such a system produced made it likely that a certain percent­ age at least would chilrt.

The ildvantages of tilt' system were that it allowed for an extraordinary degree of creative fleXibility and a fast response to an ever-changing market so that the small labels could make it. MlHl0lithic recording corporations like RCA Victor, although they had all the financial muscle, simply could not keep up with what was going on. But tlwre were clear disadvantages for the artists, as the Shirellps had already seen. Singers were at the very bol!Dlll of the hierarchy. Producers could take their pick from the Illilny talented young blilck singers who were desperate to succeed and sold their skills chmp. ['or these singers, the world of entertainment was the only way out from a life of poverty, unemployment or hard labour; they would characteristica11y record songs for nothing, or for a flat fee, in order to get their start.

Also, bemuse the functions of singing and songwriting were complPtely split at the time, so that singers seldom wrote or recorded their own songs, their "oices came to bp regarded virtually as sounds only, for the producer to use as he Wished. Thus for any singer who wanted to build a career in the music industry, the situdtion was iI disaster.

Little EVil at least had her moment of fame. The other girls that King and Coffin werE' writing for did not fare so well. The Cookies were a trio who provided backing VOGlls for many of the releases on Aldon's label, and who also recorded songs writ­ t.'n for them by Coffin and King. Some of these did well at the time: "Chains" and "Don't SilY Nothin' Had About My Babv" were hits for the Cookies, while Earl-Jean, their lead singer, charted with 'Tm Into Something Good." The fo11ow-up to "Don't Say Nothin' Had," "Will Powel/' didn't do so we11, but it is interesting as an example of the kind of plHverful, contilined sexuality that the Supposedly over-naive, roman­ tic girl groups actually prpsented their teenage listeners with:

It'~ bl'l'l1 1111 h"I" sfllC<' 71'1' /'i'ae/ltd Illy door / rl'll/ll/ oug!lt to SOir goodnight It's ""C11anhour since you said {('(lu'f .'IOU Xi1.Y' 111C,fivf' 11liJlll!l's more don't you sec thai /hardly fl'l'n k'1<JW yc'u ycl

Brill Building and the Girl Groups l'+.)

I should be playfUl: hard 10 gft 011 baby what you do 10 my will power

The doo-wah, doo-wah choruses and the young, sweet voices of the Cookies dis­ guised the fact that wbat was being described here were not the joys of coy feminin­ ity but its awful restrictions.

As with Little Eva, Aldon was keener to make the most of the Cookies while the going was good than to help the group sustain its popularity over the long term. The group never got the attention they deserved, and soon disappeared from view. Their songs are now best remembered for the cover versions they inspired the Beatles' "Chains" and Herman's Hermits' ''I'm Into Something Good." In the space of two years, the sudden rise of black girl singers, whether singly or in groups, and their equally sudden fall from popularity as they released a string of sound alike records after their initial hit, was fast becoming a time-honoured tradition of Teen Pan Alley,

Over at Leiber and Stoller's, Ellie Greenwich was beginning to rival Carole King as the songwriting queen of teen pop. She had arrived in the business in 1962, later than Carole King, and began by teaming up with several different writers until she settled into a partnership with Jeff Barry. In the early days, she remembers:

Most of the women in the industry were background singers or lyricists. There were very few women that played piano, wrote songs and could produce a session, go into a studio and work those controls.

The studio would be booked from two to five and those singers would go in there and read off the songs; maybe they'd do seventeen songs in three hours. 1 couldn't do that. I'd write a song and go in and put the background parts on myself; 1 learnt about overdubbing and laying down tracks, so a different sound started coming out.

Ellie had not set out to be a producer, but she soon found herself becoming one:

Myself and Carole King ... we came into an industry strictly as songwriters. We also sang. So we'd go in and make demos on our songs and they sometimes sounded great. The publishers would take the demo off to a record label who would say, "OK, let's put this out." And then they'd ask, "Who produL'ed this?" Well, Carole King, or Jeff and I. . we didn't think about being produc­ ers; it sort of happened to us, we came in through the back door.

Not only was Ellie the songwriter finding herself in the position of producer, she was also effectively becoming an artist too. Since record companies were beginning to re­ lease the demos they got from publishers as records, Ellie soon became the voice be­ hind a host of fictitious teen groups:

Acase like that was the Raindrops, which was just myself and Jeff doing all the voices. We did this demo for a group called the Sensations; it was a song called "What A Guy," which we thought would be great for them. We made the demo, and the publishers said, "This could be a record." I said, "What do you mean? There is no group." But there had to be a group. So we released it as a record by "The Raindrops." Back then, a lot of labels put out "dummy groups." We'd throw a few people together and have them go out and lip synch the record. There really wasn't a Raindrops....

~'+'+ The 1960s

As the tales of little Eva and her sister Idalia and of groups like the Shirelles and the Cookies demonstrate, the creative flexibility of the Brill Building could work to the disadvantage of the singers. The fate of recordings, such as "Let's Turkey Trot" and "Hula Hoppin,''' showed that singers were often viewed as interchangeable parts. It is also difficult to ignore how the racial identities of the actors involved reproduced disparities in the larger society, even though a few of the tunes, such as the Crystals' "Uptown," hinted at the heightened aware­ ness, fostered by the civil rights movement, of racial inequities (the song was written in 1962 by Mann and Weil and begins "He gets up each mornin' and he goes downtown/Where ev'ryone's his boss and he's lost in an angry land").

In what is probably not a paradox, the most widely celebrated figure connected with the singer-songwriter genre was male: producer­ songwriter Phil Spector (b. 1939). Spector developed a trademark sonic quality on his recordings, known as the "Wall of Sound," that featured a dense, reverberant texture filled with instruments that were often diffi­ cult to separate from one another undergirded by an R&B rhythm sec­ tion, an approach that found fruition in his productions from 1962 on­ ward with artists such as the Crystals, Bob B. Soxx & the Blue Jeans, Darlene Love, and the Ronettes. Although this sound has often been inaccurately compared (occasionally by Spector himself) to the textural approach of European Romantics, such as Richard Wagner, what Spector shared with Wagner was a grandiosity of vision and a tendency toward self-aggrandizement. Taking the exploitation of the singers that we have already noted to an extreme, Spector assumed complete power and eco­ nomic control over the female artists who appeared in his productions_3 While a case can be made that Spector's achievements have been over­ glorified in historical narratives about popular music, his recent well­ publicized personal travails make him a tempting and all-too-easy object of ridicule as well.

4 His sound was Widely influential, and Spector repre­

sented a shift of power in the music business to people who were of the same generation as the audience,S a trend that intensified with the alignment of songwriter and performer that came to dominate American popular music in the wake of the girl groups.

Darlene Love (b. 1938) sang on many of Spector's best-known recordings, inclUding the first Number One hit he produced, "He's a Rebel." However, as she makes clear, she benefited little from the prominent role

.'1. A particularly' disturbing case on:urn..·d \vith I~llllllic Bennett, k'.1d singer of tht' i{oneUes, who I~ter married Spt'ctor; she pn'sE'nts her ~CCOl!nt ill l~onT1ie Spector (with Vince W~ldn>n), flc My Bil"y: 11mI'I SlIrl'i""d Masmrll, 1\1il1iskirls, ilJIIi Mildl1ess or A1,1/IA;' II> il F'II'1I10'I> I\",,,'lle (New York H~rperl'ert'nni~J, ] "lc)()) ,

4. I aIn reft'rring to his arn!st for the murder of J ,<1na Clilrkson on Febru£-lr.v 3, 2003, and the

subsequent triul thilt ended ",,'ith a verdict of "mi:-;trial" nn St'F'tl'll1ber 26, 2007. These t'vcnts set:"lllPd to cap ypars of n:.'\'(,/C1tions (lbout Spector's hizarre bf.hi1\'ior.

5, Thi, is ~ point Ill~de hv linn Wolf" in his cekbr~leJ pmfile of Spector, "TIl<' Firsl Tycoon of Teen," in TIJ,. Kllluly-f("l"r,.d Ti1l1gl'rill,.-Fll1k,. 5Ir,.,,/IIlil1l' R,lhu (N"w York: Pock,'t l3ooks, 19(6), 47-hl.

Brill Building and the Girl Groups 1'+

she played in Spector's success. While Spector allowed her to make record­ ings under her own name, she also appeared on recordings attributed to any number of other groups whose names existed as trademarks con­ trolled by Spector. Both the structure of the music business and the anonymity-by-design of the performers make it little wonder, then, that Spector's notoriety has far outstripped that of the people who sang (and played and arranged and engineered) on the recordings that are associated with him.

"He's A Rebel" was the highest point of the Crystals' career; but it was also on of the lowest. Here, Darlene Loye takes up the story. When I visited her, she was ltv ing in style at the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford on Ayon, during the firs run of the musical Carrie, which later bombed on Broadway. We sat in her dressingl room oyerlooking the riYer, and she told me:

I first met Phil in Los Angeles through his partner Lester Sill, because I was d"ing ,1 lot of sessions for Lester singing back-up. I was called in to do "He's A Rebel." ] went in, he showed me the song, and within three or four days, we had recorded it.

But why did Phil Spector choose Darlene rather than the real Crystals back in New York to do the song?

Something had happened with their friendship at the time. Phil owned the name of the Crystals. During that time, producer, owned groups' names so they could record anyone they wanted under any name. Phi] gave me mv name, in fact; at thaI time I was called Darlene Wright. He asked me if] liked the name 'Love'--there was a gospel singer called Dorothy Love that he admired-~nJ I said yes ... so] bE'came Darlene Love.

During the sixties, the sc~le for 'after' background singers, for three or less, was $22.50 an hour. I told Phil I'd do 'He's A Rebel' for him if he paid me triple scale. So I got about 1,500 dollars.

Iw~s nineteen when I 111<'t Phil, and] was a profession~1 ,Inger. Th~tpr()b­ ably gave me the edge on the rest of the girl, he was working with, because they were really young, ~bout thirteen up. He ~Iway, had to pay me because. as professionals, me and the Blossoms went through thE' union; we always got paid session fees, but not necessarily royalties, The only money] ever made in those days was through sessions.

AftE'r "He's A RebeL" I wanted ~ contract I wanted royalties-they were three Cl'nts a record in those d~vs, 01' something ridiculous like th~t. Well, J never got what I felt w~s due to me,

Meanwhile, back in New York, the real Crystals were astonished to find therl1selves with their first number-one hit, a record that they had not even made. There was nothing they could do; indeed, they were helpless without Spector. To this day, Dee Dee Kennibrew of the Crystals, who did finally manage to retrieve the group's name from Spector and work under it, refuses to acknowledge Darlene Love's part in the Crystals' career,

Darlene's slory is, howeYer, that Spector, like so many other producers in the business, paid no regard to anyone's names, including her own:

When we Wf'nt to record with Phil WE' never knew which record was going to he by who. After "He's A Rebel," the next thing he wanted wa, another record

~ ...v The 1960S

for the Crystals. I said, this time you're going to pay me a royalty, not just no $1,500. But I didn't get it. Well, the next record was "He's Sure the Boy I Love" which was supposed to be my Darlene Love record-I was going to record it under my own name. But no. When I heard it on the radio, they announced that it was by the Crystals.

I asked for a contract again with "Da 000 Ron Ron." Phil said OK, but I wasn't convinced and I never gave him a dean finish of the song so he brought La La Brooks in from the Crystals and put her voice on top of what 1had already done. We didn't sign contracts in the end until after "Da 000 Ron Ron."

Clearly, Spector's by now very powerful role as the Boy Wonder of the pop industry gave him carte blanche to override the inconvenient demands of his young singers. l{ecords were issued by fictitious groups, mere names dreamed up by Spector; pol­ ished, experienced session singers like Darlene would be brought in to record, and then they or others who looked the part would pose for publicity shots. To all intents and purposes, groups like the Crystals appeared only to exist now in Spector's imag­ ination as concepts for the next single.

The public did not seem to mind or notice what was going on. The Crystals­ whoever they were-scored big hits in 1963 with "He's Sure the Boy I Love:' "Da Doo Ron Ron" and "Then He Kissed Me." The records were now usually in the con­ fident, romantic boy-meets-girl-they-fall-in-love-and-marry vein that had replaced the plaintive, adolescent uncertainties of the early girl groups, but writers like Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil still held out for a bit of social realism in songs like "He's Sure the Boy 1 Love":

He doesn 'I hang diamond, roultd /Ili/Iteck al/ lie's got is all uI1clIIl"oymrnl cllcck HI' 5/11'1' nlf,'t tile /Joy "ve /'1'1'11 dreamil/g '1: but He's SUI"/' IIII' boy I love

Besides recording as the Crystals, Darlene also then became-with Bobby Sheen and Fanita James of the Blossoms-Bob B. Soxx and the Blue Jeans:

Phil had this idea l)f recording "Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah." We thought that was the funniest thing we'd ever heard: everybody knew that song, what could he possibly do with it? But it was a huge hit, and we became Bob B. Soxx and the Blue Jeans. After that, I finally rf'corded as Darlene LO\'e. Nobody knew who [ was at all. They were trying to figure out if there was one person doing all the singing on Phil's records. They thought it was Barbara Alston of the Crystals.

Jarlene's wonderful voice put her solo recordings, like "Today I Met the Boy I'm :;onna Marry" and "Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)," in a class of their own lmongst Spector's by now unbelievably successful teen pop discs. Yet she still did lOt emerge as a solo artist in her own right:

I didn't really push my career as Darlene Love. I was a very successful back-up singer, and that was important, because J had something to fall back on; it was a job, like being a secretary. Tdidn't just depend on Phil, 1 had my own career. Also, I had children and I didn't want to tour. I've had a very full career; in the sixties, I sang with all kinds of people, including Elvis on his comeback special in 1968. From 1972 to 1981 J sang back-up for Dionne Warwick. In the eighties, my career has really taken off; I got a part in "Lethal Weapon," then there was Cnrrie, nnd my new album is coming out too.

lLf' From Surf to Smile

You know, [ started off in 1959, and in 1981 I started a solo career. That's kind of unusual. It helps that no one has ever rf'ally seen me. I'm a fresh idea.

Further Reading Bradby, Barbara. "Do-Talk and Don't-Talk: The Division of the Subject in Girl-Group

Music," in On Rl'cord: Rock, Po/, IIl1d Ihe 1''/rilll'l1 Word, edited by Simon Frith and

Andrew Goodwin, 341-69. New York: Routledge, 1990. Brown, Mick. Tmring 00i1'11 the Wall or Sound: The Rise and FilII or Phil Spector. New York:

Alfred A. Knopf, 2007. Clemente, ]01u1. Girl Grollps: Fa/1ulous Females Thnl Rackl'd fhl' World. lola, Wise.: Krnuse

publications, 2000. Emerson, Ken. Alwavs Magic in Ihe Air: The Bomp and Brilliance of l/1e Brill BuildillR Era.

New York: Viking, 2005. Spector, Ronnie (with Vince Waldron). Be Mv HalJlt: How 1 Sllrl'il'ed MnsC/1r11, Miniskir!s,

and Madlless or Mil Life as a Fabulous ROllette. New York Harper Perennial, 1990. Warwick, Jacqueline. Girl Gralips, Girl Culture: Po/,ulnr M/I'ic lind Idenlity in Ihe 19605.

New York: Routledge, 2007. Wolfe, Tom. "The First Tycoon of Teen," in Tom Wolfe, TIlt' Knlldy-Kolored Tangeril1l'-Finke

Sirenmlille Boby, 47-11 1. New York: pocket Books, 1966.

Discography The Best or llie Challiels, The Chantels, Rhino. 1990. Tile Best ol tilt' Gil"! GrOll/'S, Vals. 1 alld 2. Rhino/WEA, 1990. Spector, Phil (with various artists). Blick 10 MOllO (195R-1969). Abcko, 1991.

29 .. From Surf to Smile

Concurrent with the dance crazes and girl-group phenomenon, the American imagination increasingly shifted westward to the land of fruit and nuts, as California rapidly became the most populous and econom' ically important of the 50 states. Out of the sun-drenched expanses of the rapidly growing suburbs in Southern California came surf music, with its litany of beaches, blondes, and Bonneville sport coupes. Initially, an instrumental genre led by guitarist Dick Dale (a real, live surfer) and by guitar-dominated instrumental bands, such as the Ventures, surf came to be associated most strongly with the Beach Boys, a band that developed a distinctive, contrapuntal, falsetto-led

vocal style.

I ne 19605

The group was a family affair, consisting of three Wilson brothers (Brian. Carl, and Dennis), cousin Mike Love, and pal Al Jardine. The eldest brother, Brian (b. 1942), was the musical mastermind of the group, con­ cocting a potent brew of multipart harmony singing (derived from 1950S' vocal groups, such as the jazz-influenced Four Freshmen and the Hi-Los), Chuck Berry riffs, trebly guitar timbres (a holdover from surf instrumental groups), and lyrics extolling the ennui of beach-loving, middle-class, white teens. The early hits of 1962-63 all hewed close to these themes in one way or another, although the emotional range and the harmonic palette ex.panded in ballads like "Surfer Girl" and "In My Room." Their first major national hit, "Surfin' U.s.A.," owed so much to Chuck Berry's "Sweet Little Sixteen" that Berry was eventually awarded songwriting cred it for it.

The following excerpts from Brian Wilson's autobiography describe a period after Wilson suffered a nervous breakdown in 1964 and subse­ quently stopped touring, a move that enabled him to devote more energy to songwriting and production. While his songs had continuously in­ creased in musical complex.ity beginning with the Beach Boys' first recordings in 1962, the Beatles' Rubber Soul, released in December 1965, inspired Wilson to try and surpass his earlier efforts. The result? Pet Sounds, one of the first "concept" albums, and one of the first to feature overt studio experimentation (including elaborate overdubbing and mix­ ing, unusual instruments, and songs with multiple tempi). Although Pet Sounds did not equal the success of earlier Beach Boys' albums (manag­ ing nevertheless to reach the Top 10), it, and the commercially successful single that followed, "Good Vibrations," subsequently established critical high-water marks for the band. Here, Wilson describes the creation of these recordings.'

from WOULDN'T IT BE NICE: My OWN STORY Brian Wilson (with Todd Gold)

n December, the Bcatles' latest LP, I\I/bber SOlli, hit Number One in Britain and the J,S. I heard indi\'iduaJ cuts but didn't listen to the entire LP until someone from my 'xpanding circle of frif'nds, most of whom I'd inIwrited from Loren [Loren Schwartz, close friend of Wilson during this period], brought It over to my house in early 1966 nd insisted 1 list"l1 and give my opinion, as if J were some kind of oracle.

\. ror n portralt of 'Nilson during the F't'riexi following IICood VibratitlllS" while he worked on

HilC'. the imploding f(111(n~'-llp to n'f SmulI/s, see ,rules Siegel, "A Teen-age Hymn to God," in

'illiam McKeen, ed., I'P'hlllld 1,,,11 b fierI' to Stall: 11/1 Al/tholol(ll (New York: W. W. Norton, 211(0). :7",·QQ. VVrittl'l1 in It)b7.

'1/1'(',': Brian Wil-e'n (with Todd Cold), WOI//dl/'J It BI' ,\lice: MIl Oz,'" SI""y (New York: Harper­ ,lIins I'tlblislwrs, 19QI). pp. ·12CJ-.lll, 131,1:'\4-35, 13H-41, 145,147-48.

"+7 From Surf to 5mile

Under a cloud of pol smoke, it was a ceremonial event. A bunch of US sat around the dining room table, gazing out the window at the expanse (If city lights shimmer­ ing below, smoking joints as the album played. No one ventured an opinion until I expressed mine. That was easy. I was knocked out. E\ery song from "Michelle" to "Norwegian Wood" to "In My Life," and "The Word" was great.

"I'm flipped by it," I exclaimed. "1 can't believe il." "John and Paul, those guys are geniuses," Loren said, "That album is just blowing my mind," 1continued, excited bv its amazing con­

sistency. "They put only great stuff on the album. That's what 1w~nt to do." . "What?" he asked. "I want to make a whole album a gas!" I said.

Around January 1966 J had all these pieces of music, feels? and they needed lyrics. I remembered that five months earlier Loren had brought a friend of his to Western, where I was in the midst of laying tracks on the S1IJ1Imrr oalls album. Tony Asher was a bright young copy-and-jingle writer for Carson/Roberts, an advertising agency, During a break, I'd played them one of my feels and asked for an opinion. Then Tony

played a little melody he had written.

Among our first songs was "You're So Good to Me," one of Tony'S favorites. He thought it was a good pop song, light and Illlmmable. 1 agreed but explained that

those qualities were what I wanted to get away from. "I want to show that the Beach Bovs know 11111S;C," I said. "I don't want to do the

easy stuff" . "I understand," he said. Our next song was done with the record company breathing so hard down rny

neck for a new single that I began every day by unplugging the phone. One of the prettiest, most personal songs I've ever written, "Caroline, No" concerned growing up and the loss of innocence. I'd reminisced to Tony about my high school crush on Carol Mountain and sighed, "Jf I saw her today, I'd probably think, God, she's lost

something, because growing up does that to people." But the song was most influenced by the changes Marilyn [Wilson's wife1 and 1

had gone through since meeting at Pandora's Box. We were young, Marilyn nearing twenty and l11e closing in on twenty-four, yet I thought we'd lost the innocence of oUI youth in lhe heavy seriousness of our lives. The lightness that had once been ours was fading. Subconsciously, I might've sensed that the power allowing me to do spe­

cial things naturally might not last too much longer.

All that made me sad. The first time I plaved the melody of "Caroline, No" he told me the song had sin­

gle potential. He took a tape home, embellished on my concept, and completed the words. The Beach Boys were on the road when il came time to record "Caroline, No," though between the pressure Capitol was putting on me to get a single ready, the song's intensely personal nature, and the creative space I was in at the time, 1 didn't think about waiting for them to get back to town. Instead, 1 did it myself.

It took seventeen takes before the song sounded the way I wanted, perfect. At the end of the seventeenth take, tears were streaming down my eyes, and I knew I'd

nailed it. But it still wasn't finished."

2. "feels" wa~ a term that Wilson used to refer to unfinished fragments of tTHJ""ic

I ne 19605

I played "Caroline, No" for my dad. Though our contact W,IS minimal, for some reason I continued to solicit his opinion. He praised the song but suggested that I change the key from C to D. The engineer put a wrap around the recording head, a technique which sped up the playback, and the two of us listened again. My dad was right, and I took his advice.

As work progressed, I began to consider making the album a solo project. 1 kept the thought private, but it reflected my growing intuition that the guys, when they began hearing the music, wouldn't like or understand it. The' songs were a telling self-portrait of my twubled psyche: "I Just WaSl1't Made for These Times" was a lament about being too advanced and having to leave people behind; "I.et's Go Away for a While," a Burt Bacharach tribute, was explained by the title. The track originally included lyrics but worked better as an instrumental and became one of the most sat­ isfying of my songs.

I pulled myself oul of bed, went to the !'ianoto save myself, and resumed work with Tony. It was mid-February. l played hin, the song I'd written titled "Good, Good, Cood Vibrations." I had the chorus but no lyrics for the verses. lIe loved the song but was a little weirded out when [ explained why T'd written the song and what I wanted it to convey

"My mom told me dogs discriminate between people," I said. "They like some because the people give off good vibrations. Thev bite others because they give off bad vibrations. I haw a feeling this is a v.ery spiritual song, and [ want it to give off good vibrations."

He tried his hand at writing lyrics, and things were going so well that I put "Good, Goocl. Good Vibrations" on the preliminary list of songs [ told Capitol would be on the album. Two weeks later, though, I changed mv mind and took the song off. The time wasn't right. [ couldn't produce it yet.

With plenty of other good songs needing work, Tony and I turned our attention to "God Only Knows," the song about which j felt the strongest and proudest. The melody was inspired by a John Sebastian record I'd been listening to, and the idea summarized ev.erything I was trying to express in a single song. But it began with an argument. I hated the opening line, "I may not always love you." I didn't think it was the right way to begin a l(lVE~ song. It was too negath'e.

"Brian, that's rcallife," Tony argued. "People who are in love may not always stay in love with each other. But consider the next [ine."

Then Tony sang: '''But as long as the stars are abovp yOll, you'll never l1eed to doubt me. '"

'''The love wp're writing about will last until the stars burn oul."· he sang.''' '" And that won't ever happpn.'''

That made me feel bdter. Then we had another argument over the word God. No one had ever recorded it before in a popular song. I W<lS (oncPlTled that with God in the song we wouldn't get any radio airplay. Tony understood, but he was adamant about not compromising the artistic integrity I eventually agrepd too. First, beCause Cod was a spiritual '''''ord, and second, because we'd be breaking ground. Both were good reasons to leave it unchanged.

People who werE' al the "Cod Only Knows" sessions still tplJ me that they were t[w most magical. beautiful musical exp"riences they've "vel' lll'ard. I gathered twenty-thrt'e lllusicians in one studio, an extraordinary number for a pop record. Everyone played simultaneously, the different sounds bleeding into one other, producing a rich. heavenly blanket of music.

.. .., .. From Surt to ~ml/e

It wasn't likp making records is today, with seventy-eight tracks and eVPlY instrument recorded individually and mixed later. Then, everyone had to play live. It either worked or it didn't. The ability to make the tvpe of snap decisions a production of that size required was what separated 5pectm from the pack. I excelled there too, but 1 still did twenty takes before the tracks sounded the way I heard them in

mvhead.~ "Goddamnit. thatwas beautiful," Dennissaid afterward. "How' d vou w rite that?" "I prayed," 1 answered. "1 prayed to Cod." "Well, I pray to Cod it sells," Mike interjected. 1ndeed, not everyone appreciated what thcy heard. I played bits and pieces of

songs to Mike and Carl over long-distance telephone, but by the time of the "God Only Knows" sessions they still hadn't heard any completed songs and didn't know whether they liked wbat they'd heard. Al complained that he spent three months singing the chorus to "Wouldn't It Be Nice" before he ever knew the verses. Then 1 decided not to use the guys playing instruments on the album, the first I,P on which

none of the Beach Boys does anything more than sing. By March 1966, the time at which they began listening to the songs Tony and I

had done, which was around the "God Only Knows" sessions, they were prepared not to like the music. And they didn't. First, they were put offbv the fact that 1 didn't need them. The tracks and vocals were all well developed without them. I think their egos were bruised. But the guys also weren't prepared for how different the music

was from till' songs we'd done in the past. Especially Mike, whose biggest concern was, Will it sell? He hated every­

thing. He criticized it as "ego music." He complained that the songs were too avant-garde and didn't sound like the old stuff. He refused to sing on "Hang On to Your Ego" until the lyrics were reworked to "I Know There's an Answer." After one stormy vocal session, he let his disgust surface and snapped at me, "Who's

gonna hear this shit? The ears of a dog?" Ironically, Mike's barb inspired the album's title, Pet SOlmds. It was quite clear

that none of them, except Dennis, who was always my biggest supporter in the stu­ dio, and Bruce Johnston, who loved everything, understood the album's significance to me. I'd poured my soul into tlwse songs. The pain, the JOY, the conflicts, the sad­ ness, the love. They were everything to me, my flesh and blood. They only knew the

songs weren't about sun, fun, and bikini-clad buns. But that's always been the core difference between me and the Beach Boys. To

the guys, the group WaS a great gig, a terrific job. The pay was good, the fringe bene­ fits even better. They just wanted me to crank ('ut the spngs like a machine. Stick in a nickel, pull the handle, tak" five doll 'lIS. Money never entered my mind when 1 wrote

a song. Writing songs was what 1 did. ret Sounds represented the maturing of 111Y talent. the single-minded pursuit of a

personal vision. I wasn't just entertaining people, 1 was speaking directly to them, di­

rectly from my heart. The clash of egos wasn't helped any when it was decided to release "Caroline,

No" in earlyM'lfch, not as the first Beach Boys single off Pet 5(lIjJ/[l~ put as <J Brian Wilson solo. De,pite protests from the group, enpitol supported the idea as a meanS of broadening our marketability. LelU1lln and McCartney were as widely known by themselves as the Beatles. Likt'wise, Mick Jagger and the Rplling Stones. Yet the Beach Boys were as bland personalitywise as the sand on the beach.

Having given up on my dre<lm of making Pet SOU lids a Brian Wilson album, 1 liked the idea of releasing "Caroline, No" as a solo record, but 1 still made it clear to

I ne 19bOS

the guys that they didn't have to worry about me leaving the Beach Boys for a career of my own. 111at wasn't my goal. I'd worked too hard mother-henning the band to where it was. Besides, they were my family.

Unfortunately, "Caroline, No" got no higher than twenty-three, causing the record company to jump on Mike's side and ask, "What the hell is going on with the music?"

They immediately rushed out "Sloop John B," which was more in line with the Beach Hays' formula, and by May 1966 it was at number three. That was more like it.

At the peak of a creative streak that had begun during the Summer Days album and found itself in the making of Pet Sounds, I talked about going further, breaking old boundaries and setting new standards, and I knew the song I began working on im­ mediately after Pet SOllnds was the one that was going to catapult me to that place.

"Good Vibrations" was going to be the summation of my musical vision, a har­ monic convergence of imagination and talent, production values and craft, songwrit­ ing and spirituality. I'd written it five months earlier and imagined the grand, Spectorlike production while on the LSD trip I'd described so enthusiastically for Al [Jardine, member of the Beach Boys1. Instinctively, I knew it was the right song at the right time.

Written in three separate parts, "Good Vibrations" required seventeen sessions and six weeks-not six months as has always been reported-spread over three months, to record, costing a sum somewhere between $50,000 and $75,000, then an unheard amount for one song. I threw everything I could think of into the stew: fuzz bass, clarinet, cello, harp, and a theremin, a strange, electronic instrument. Chuck Britz, who worked the board on all seventeen sessions, always said the first session was the best. Glen Campbell, one of the nearly twenty musicians used that day, agreed, exclaiming, "Whew, Brian! What were you smokin' when you wrote that?"

In August, I finished the final edit, mixed the tracks down to mono, and knew, dur­ ing the playback, that it was right. Thr0ughout, r repeatedly thought, Oh my God, this is a real mindblower. r played it for Mike, Carl, Dennis, A!, and Bruce the fol­ lowing day, and when the song finished they looked at me with bewilderment. They'd never heard anything like it, and they honestly didn't know whether or not it was any good. It was just different.

Finally. Bruce spoke up: "We're gonna have either the biggest hit in the world," he said. "Or the Beach Boys' career is over."

Further Reading Gaines, Steven. Heroes al1d Villains: The True Story of the Beach Boys. New York: New

American Library, 1986 Lambert, Philip. Inside Ihe Music of Brian Wilsoll: The Songs, s01ll1ds, I1nd Infillences of the

Beach Buys' Formdil1g Gel1illS. New York: Continuum, 2007. Nilson, Brian (with Todd Gold). Wouldlt't It Be Nice: My OWI1 Story. New York: Harper

Collins, ] 991.

30. Urban Folk Revival

The whole notion of "urban folk" summons a number of paradoxes: If we take "folk music" to mean music that survives in an oral, rather than a written, tradition, preserved in face-to-face encounters between people who recognize one another as belonging to the same community, then the idea of "urban folk," in which the music exists among widely dis­ persed city dwellers and is shared through mass-mediated technOlogy, seems at least somewhat contradictory. If we try to retain some sense of American folk music as connected to the rural folk in a premodern era, the term "urban folk" similarly involves a suspension of disbelief.

The idea of urban folk music first gathered momentum in the 1930s. Many of the early performers were either black or white southerners who had been brought (or encouraged to come) to New York City by folklorists-musicolOgists who were associated with the leftist popular Front political movement, such as john and Alan Lomax and Charles Seeger.' While early urban folk performers did include African American blues singers like "Lead belly" (Huddie Ledbetter) and lash White among their ranks, the dominant musical style derived, in large part, from the ballad tradition of white, rural Southerners and thus shared qualities with the "hillbilly" music of the period. Many of the differences between "hillbilly" and "folk" were, in fact, more sociological than musicological: Rather than the utilitarian, overtly commercial aims of 19 20S and 1930S hillbilly music, urban folk used the associations of rural, traditional

music to evoke a sense of timeless purity. Of all the performers who are associated with the urban folk move­

ment, Woody Guthrie (1912-67) became the most recognized. Born and raised in Oklahoma, Guthrie wrote original songs (using melodies with strong connections to traditional tunes) that chronicled the tribulations of dust.bowl refugees-"Okies" like those memorialized in John Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath -and the hardships endured by the common "folk." Guthrie's lyrics were pro-labor and pro-working class, but suffi­ ciently populist so that people from various political perspectives could adopt a song like "This Land Is Your Land," especially when the most

For more on the popular fl"Onl ond the urban folk re\'i\'a1. see Michael Denning, TIll" Cuillirlli

f""'1: Tlte Lnh>ril1S O(AI/ICdcali ClIlll/r(" UI II.e T,pCI1lielli CmlIlry (New York: Verso, 19(7); Roberl Cantwell, WiTr"II We Wne Goed: Tllf f"I'/k 1\el,;,>,,1 (Cambridge, Moss.: Harvard L1ni,·""itv PrE'SS,

t 1996); Benj"min Fill'lw, nPIIIIII1<';"S Ille r"ik. PIII,lie MelliI'll/ a"d Americnll RI~)I, MII"C (Chapel Hill: )iscography The University of North Cornlina I'res5, 2(00); Bryon Carman, A Rnce or Sil1sn" Wllil>1111>1'5

Worki11g-0 ;;s Hero/ro111 GlItJmc hl Sprifl;-:.stl'l'J1 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Pres,;,l ;each Boys. Pet Sounds, The Beach Boys, Capitol. 1966. rl ___. Good ViIJraliolls: Tllirty )/'ars of the Beach Boys. Capitol, 199~. r 20(0).

153

155 l)q

The 1960s

explicitly leFt-wing verses were excised. For example, the often-deleted fourth verse of "This Land Is Your land" protests the negative effects of land ownership: "Was a high wall there that tried to stop me/A sign was painted said: Private Property,'" Guthrie also developed a ramblin', gam­ blin' persona in many witty talking blues that had much in common with personae developed later by Beat writers, such as Jack Kerouac, and that influenced many male singers of the 1960s,

In 1941, Guthrie joined the Almanac Singers, a group that included among its members, Pete Seeger (b. 1919), son of the noted musicologist Charles Seeger. The Almanac Singers continued to stress political and social issues, such as the importance of civil rights and labor unions. Seeger then Formed the Weavers, a group that continued to be associ­ ated with the liberal themes of the Almanac Singers, while their richly harmonized (and thickly orchestrated) versions of songs, such as Lead­ belly's "Goodnight Irene" (Number One for 13 weeks in 19500 and Guthrie's "So long It's Been Good to Know You" (Number Four in 1951) were SUfficiently successful to enter the popular music mainstream. Al­ though the Weavers' hits eschewed strong political messages, their left­ wing views brought them to the attention of Joseph McCarthy and the House Un-American Activities Committee, the proceedings of which led to the group's demise in 1953.

Despite their blacklisting, the Weavers and other folk musicians like Burl Ives planted seeds for the popularity of urban folk music that led some of their fans to an awareness of Guthrie, leadbelly, Josh White, and others. Although the McCarthy hearings effectively suppressed urban folk music, artists like Harry Belafonte-who found success with several Caribbean-flavored recordings in 19s6-57-and the Kingston Trio­ whose "Tom Dooley" went to Number One in 19s8-maintained the mass-mediated presence of folk music, and the music gained popularity among college-age audiences. Urban folk music also maintained its paradoxical stature as the anticommercial form of popular music and was heard by many as the antidote to mainstream pop music and early rock 'n'roll.

The article that follows describes the links between many of the artists associated with the urban folk music of the 1930S and 1940S and their successors in the late 1950S and early 1960s. The article notes how, from the late 1950S onward, urban folk reasserted its political connotations (which for many it had never lost) and how distinctions were already being made between overtly commercial folk groups (the Kingston Trio) and artists who were viewed (rightly or wrongly) as making few, if any, concessions to mass taste. The civil rights movement provided the strongest public Cause for this new confluence of folk music (dubbed by

2. The sixth verse of this song. abo llst1aHy omitted, describes the dC"Elst(lting effects of povt>rty in the United St<1tE>s.

Urban Folk Revival

historians the urban folk music revival) and politics, and, as the article notes, the fight for civil rights provided the strongest motivation for the "nonconformity" exhibited by folk music fans. It is significant that. despite the prominence of several African American performers within the movement and its strong commitment to civil rights, the vast majority of the performers and audience members were white, college educated, and middle class, thereby forming another link with the 1930S urban folk scene.

SONGS OF THE SILENT GENERATION

Gene Bluestein

Mademoiselle, the magazine which specializes in telling smart young women what the bright young men of Madison Avenue think they ought to know, got around to ex­ plaining (in its December 1960 issue) what the "folksong fad" is all about. Notwith­ standing a brief nod in the direction of anthropology and social psychology (folksinging proVides students with a sense of "togetherness," it helps them channel­ ize their feelings toward a "brutal and threatening" world), what Mademoiselle wants to emphasize is the fact that this generation of college students are "hungry for a small, safe taste of an unslick, underground world" and folksong, like pizza and pop­ corn, takes the edge off their appetites.

Mademoiselle's description of the college "folkniks" as a "student middle class" which has adapted "the trappings and tastes of a Bohemian minority group" is based on the assumption that the students draw their main inspiration from the bearded "beatniks" who inhabit the countless coffee houses which have sprung up around the country. But as Kenneth Rexroth has been pointing out from the beginning, the "beatnik" is the creature of Time, Inc; it is a popular dew of the artist as irrE'sponsi­ ble, incomprehE'nsible, and "maladjusted." And, as in the case of the new young poets, the analogy is false.

NeithE'r does the collE'ge folksong addicl flip over the antics of commercial folk­ song groups which have become shmdard property in the stables of such bigtime op­ erators as RCA Victor, Decca, and Columbia. (The Kingston Trio was so out of place at the first Newport Folk Festival that it did not appear at the second onE'.) The reper­ toires of these groups do consist mainly of traditional songs but they arE' adapted, dislocated, expurgated or, when the occasion is right, turned into popular songs. Often the appeal of tlw big time night club singers comes Jess from their vocal or in­ strumental skill than from the patter ill betHJPl'I7 the songs; the routines are st'cond-rate imitations of the humor developed by the "sick" comics.

But the interest of large numbers of college students in folksong goes far beyond the limits of wisecracks accompanied by banjo and guitar. Evpn Madel/miselle noticed this, for its reporter can't quite undE'rstand what attracts these middle class kid~ to a music which evokes "the idpas and emotions of the downtrodden and the heartbro­ ken, of garage mechanics and mill workers and miners and backwoods famwrs"-a lineup of materials which reflects neither the world of the beats nor of thE' slick trios.

Source: Gene Bluestein, "Songs of tilE' Silent Cencretion." Nne r'l'l'"blir, 144, no. II (March 13, 1961), Pl'. 21-22. ReprintE'd by permission of The New Republic. <D 1%1, The New Rq>llblic, LLC.

The 1960s

Here is wllE're a little historical perspective would hell" As Harold Taylor has pointed out recently, this generation of college students has begun to react agilinst being treated like adolescents. If they have not been idpologieal, Mr. Taylor points out, tlwy have been Willing to associate themselves with non-conformist movements, despite warnings by parents and teachers that such activities ,.vill endanger their personal as well as their job security The moral leadership for this so-called "silent generation," Mr. Taylor notes, was "established by the '\Jegro students in the South who quietly and courageously began to assert their rights with the sit-in strikes at lunch counters." And as TV coverage of events in the South has revealed, the passive resistance movement of young people and adults is a singing movement as well. .

Martin Luther King's meetings with Negro college students almost always con­ clude with a song- a popular one has its roots in the spiritual: "We shall ovprcome­ Oh Lord, Deep in my heart, I do believe, we shall overcome some day." A Huntley­ Brinkley special on the sit-ins showed students singing a West Indian work song which they had sung in jail-"Daylight's mmin' and I wanna go home." The same program featured snatches of a song which told how the "cops went wild over me, and they locked me up and threw away the key." The words were up to date, but it was unmistakably the IWW protest song called the "Popular Wobblv." Earlier, the bus-boycotters in Mongomery, Alabama, had sung, "Walk Along Together."

That spirituals, work songs, and other protest songs should figure prominently in the expression of the students in the South is not surprising. What is significant is that the main stream of the song traditions that interest college students in general derive from similar materials. Almost fifty years ago, John Lomax told a meeting of academic folklorists that the significance of American folksong was to be seen not in transplanted ballads, but in songs of the miners, lumbermen, Great Lakes sailors, railroad men, cowboys, ;md Negroes. (A special category singled out "songs of the down and out classes-the outcast girls, the dope fiend, the convict, the jail bird and the tramp.") It was a shocking revision of the academic approach to American folk­ song, for in 1913, as today, the professional folklorist tends to be C!)ncerned mainly with ballads, and especially the relationship between American and British ballads. But as Lomax continued to collect in the field the vitality of non-ballad traditions im­ pressed upon him. With the help of his son Alan, John Lomax explored the prisons of the South, uncovering such singers ilS Huddie Ledbetter (I,ead Belly), Vera Hall, Dock Reed; they were impressed by the songs of the dust bowl songmaker, Woodie Guthrie, but especially by "the singers who hiwe moved us beyond all others that we have heard ... the Negroes, who in our opinion have made the most important and original contributions to American folksong ... "

Long before folksongs became mmmercially profitable, singers like Guthrie, Lead Belly, and Pete Seeger were spreilding the Lomax gospel on picket lines, at union meetings, and through the recordings made by quixotic Moses Asch, whose supreme devotion to traditional material kept his record companies producing even when he had neither a large audience nor a source of capital. Through the thirties and forties Guthrie kept Cl constant stream of songs flowing like an underground river-about the dust bowl, hohoes, folk heroes (including the Oklahoma Robin Hood, Pretty Boy Floyd), the Grand Coulee Dam, New York Citv, mining disasters, as well as a Whitmanesque catalogue about America called "This Land Is Your Land." Lead Belly pt'pularized such songs as "Good Night [rene," "The Midnight Special," The Rock Island Line," and dozens of blues including "Bourgeois Blues," based on his attempt to find housing in Jim Crow Washington, D.C. Seeger, whose sensitiVity to vocal and instrumental traditions is unril'allC'd, has been, since the

Urban Folk Revival 157

early forties, a Johnny Appleseed encouraging his audience to pick up a banjo and make music.

Lead Belly died in 1949, just before the Weavers put "Good Night Irene" at the top of the hit parade, paving the way for a mass folksong audience. But like other se­ rious arts in America, folksongs resist the mass production and standardization of tin-pan alley. (Lee Hays, who sings bass with the Weavers, commented that the suc­ cess of "Good Night Irene" made tin-pan alley believe America was ready for a waltz revival!) Guthrie has become seriously ill and is unable to appreciate fully the re­ sponse to his songs and his artistry which has de\-eloped among enthusiasts in America and in England. Pete Seeger is today the most sough t a fler performer on col­ lege campuses, more often through the insistence of student groups than the promo­ tion by official university concert bureaus. With obvious respect for his materials and the people who produced them, Seeger continues in the tradition of the Lomaxes, Guthrie and Leaclbelly.

This is still a young movement, composed of students who are filled with the stubborn idealism that permeates the songs of Negro slaves, miners, hoboes, and blues singers If the Kelmedy ildministration is serious in its proposal to recruit tlwm into a corps which will work to push the new frontiers, they will respond en masse and bring thpir guitars with them.

In a manner curiously redolent of the girl group trend, the urban folk music revival was also more egalitarian in terms of gender than many genres that preceded and/or followed it. Notable females in the folk re­ vival included Judy Collins, Peggy Seeger, Odella, Carolyn Hester, Mary (of Peter, Paul & Mary), and Sylvia (of Ian & Sylvia), but by far the best known (and most successful as a solo performer) was Joan Baez (b. 1941). The following article from Time focuses on Baez and makes plain that she was beloved by purists even as her success superseded all but a handful of other folk artists.] The beginning of the article draws a parallel between the "purity" of Baez's voice, her unadorned appear­ ance, and her commitment to "authentic" folk music; the focus on her appearance and personal life sets the stage for a profile in which the article's anonymous author struggles to make sense of Baez's persona within the existing range of available roles for women. While space is given to Baez's own comments, which touch on some of her political con­ cerns, the overall tone of the article downplays her musical and political activities using the focus on her lifestyle, romantic life, clothes, and appearance to accent her eccentricity.

This feature article on Baez in Time, one of the weekly publications with the widest circulation in the U.s., illustrates the high profile of the folk revival at the time. Indeed, not long after this article appeared, a weekly show, Hootenanny, began its run on U.s. national television and lasted from April 1963 to September 1964.

3. For an account of the folk music re\'j"al that focuses on di"isinns \vithin the movement,

see DlCb. Weissman, Whieh Side Are You 01/' All [Ilside History of the Folk !'vI1/sic RCl'i1'll1 ill America (New York: Continuum, 2006); for a history that conn('cts the earlier urban folk movement with its fevival, set.' Ronald. D. Cohen, RaiJJbou) Quest: The Fulk A1usic Rcz'hwl L:r Amaicml Society,

1940-] 970 (Amherst and Bosh'll: University of Massachusetts Press, 2002).

159 tOlK SINGING: SIBYL WITH GUITAR

Time

Removed from its natural backgrounds, folk singing has become both an esoteric cult and a light industry. Folk-song albums are all over the bestseJler charts, and folk­ singing groups command as much as $10,000 a night in the big niteries. As a cultural fad, folk singing appeals to genuine intellectuals, fake intellectuals, sing-it-yourself types, and rootless root seekers who discern in folk songs the fine basic values of American life. As a pastime, it has staggeringly multiplied sales of banjos and gui­ tars; more than 400,000 guitars were sold in the U.s. last year.

The focus of interest is among the young. On campuses where guitars and ban­ JOs were once symptoms of hopeless maladjustment, country twanging has acquired new status. A guitar stringer shows up once a week at the Princeton University Store.

The people who sit in the urban coffeehouses sipping mocha java at 6U¢ a cup are mainly of college age. They take folk singing very seriously. No matter how bad a performing singer may be the least amount of cross talk will provoke an angry shhhh.

These cultists often display unconcealed, and somewhat exaggerated, contempt for entertaining groups like the Kingston Trio and the Limeliters. Folk singing is a re­ ligion, in the purists' lexicon, and the big corporate trios are its money-changing De Milles. The high pantheon is made up of all the shiftless geniuses who have shouted the songs of their forebears into tape recorders provided by the Library of Congress. These country "authentics" are the all but unapproachable gods. The tangible sibyl, closer to hand, is Joan Baez.

Her voice is as clear as air in the autumn, a vibrant, strong, untrained and thrilling soprano. She wears no makeup, and her long black hair hangs like a drap­ ery, parted around her long almond face. In performance she comes on, walks straight to the microphone, and begins to sing. No patter. No show business. She usu­ ally wears a sweater and skirt or a simple dress. Occasionally she affects something semi-Oriental that seems to have been hand-sewn out of burlap. The purity of her voice suggests purity of approach. She is only 21 and palpably nubile. But there is lit­ tle sex in that clear flow of sound. It is haunted and plaintive, a mother's voice, and it has in it distant reminders of black women wailing in the night, of detached madri­ gal singers performing calmly at court, and of saddened gypsies trying to charm death into leaVing their Spanish caves.

Impresarios everywhere are trying to book her. She has rarely appeared in night­ clubs and says she doubts that she will ever sing in one again; she wants to be some­ thing more than hackground noise. Her LP albums sell so well that she could hugely enrich herseli by recording many more, but she has set a limit of one a year. Most of her concerts are given on college campuses.

She sings Child ballads with an ethereal grace that seems to have been caught and stopped in passage in the air over the 18th century Atlantic. Barbara Allen (Child 84) is one of the set pieces of folk singing, and no one sings it as achingly as she does. From Lonesome Road to All My Trials, her most typical selections are so mournful and quietly desperate that her early records would not be out of place at a funeral. More recently she has added some lighter material to create a semblance of variety, but the force of sadness in her personality is so compelling that even the wonderful and instructive lyrics of Copper Kettle somehow manage to portend a

511"I"ee: "Folk Singing: Sibyl with Guitar," Time, November 23, 1962: 54-56, 58. Reprinted by permission of TimE' Inc.

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Urban Folk Revival

doom deeper than a jail sentence:

Build yourfire with hickory­ Hickorv and ash and oak. Don't use 110 greell or rotten wood, They'll get you by the smoke. While yOIl JIIII there by the juniper. While the m00l1 is bright, Watch ("I'm jug" n~fillil1g 111 the pille moonlight.

That song is a fond hymn to the contemplative life of the moonshiner, but Joan Baez delivers it in a manner that suggests that all good lives, respectable or not, are soon to end.

The people who promote her records and concerts are fDrever saying that "she speaks to her generation." They may be right, since her generation seems to prefer her to all others. If the subtle and emotional content of her attitude is getting through to her contemporaries, she at least has an idea of what she is trying to say to them and why they want to hear it. "When I started singing, I felt as though we had just so long to live, and I still feel thai way," she says. "It's looming over your head. The kids who sing feel they really don't have a future-so they pick up a guitar and play. It's a des­ perate sort of thing, and there's a whole lost bunch of them."

Resentful Stones After she finished high school, the family moved to Boston, where her father had picked up a mosaic of jobs with Harvard, M.LT., Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, and the Smithsonian Institution. They had scarcely settled when Dr. Baez came home one night and said, "Come, girls, 1h~ve something to show you." He took them to Tulla's Coffee Grinder, where amateur folk singers could bring their guitars and sing.

Joan was soon singing there and in similar places around Boston. She spent a month or so at Boston University studying theater-the beginning and end of college for her-and she met several semipro folk singers who taught her songs and guitar techniques. She never studied voice or music, or even took the trouble to study folk­ lore and pick up songs by herself. Instead, she just soaked them up from those around her. She could outsing anybody, and she left a trail of resentful stepping­ stones behind her.

She sang in coffeehouses in and around Harvard Square that were populated by what might be called the Harvard underworld-drifters, somewhat beat, with Penguin classics protruding from their blue jeans and no official standing at Harvard or anywhere else. They pretended they were Harvard students, ate in the university dining halls and sat in on some classes. Joan Baez, who has long been thought of as a sort of otherworldly beatnik because of her remote manner, long hair, bare feet and burlap wardrobe, actually felt distaste for these ilcademic bums from the start "They just lie in their pads, smoke pot, and do stupid things like that," she says.

They w('re her first audiences, plus Harvard boys and general citizens who grew in num!wr until the bums were choked out. She was often rough on them all. She ig­ nored their requests if she chose to. When one patron lisped a request to her, she cru­ elly lisped in reply. When another singer turned sour in performance, Joan suddenly stood up in the back of the room and began to sing, vocally stabbing the hapless girl on the stage into silence.

161 160 The 19605

Sometime Thing She made one friend. His name is Michael New. He is Trinidad English, 2:\ years old, and apparently aimless-a sulky, moody, pouting fellow whose hair hangs down in golden ringlets. He may go down in history as the scholar who spent three years at 1iarvard as a freshman. "I was sure it would only last two weeks as usual," says Joan. "But then after three weeks there we were, still together. We were passionately, in­ sanely, irrationally in love for the first few months. Then we started bickering and quarreling violently." Michael now disappears for months at a time. But he always comes back to her, and she sometimes introduces him as her husband.

In the summer of 1'159, another folk singer invited her to the first Folk Festival at Newport, KT. Her clear-lighted voice poured over the 13,000 people collected there and chilled them with surprise. The record-company leg-and-fang men closed in. "Would you like to meet Mitch, Baby?" said a representative of Columbia Records, dropping the magic name of Mitch Miller, who is Columbia's top pop artists-and­ repertory man when he isn't waving to his mother on TV

"Who's Mitch?" said Joan. The record companies were getting a rude surprise. Through bunk and ballyhoo,

they had for decades heen turning sows' ears into silk purses. Now they had found a silk purse that h<1d no desire to become a sow's ear. The girl did not want to be ex­ ploited, squeezed, and stuffed with cash. Joan eventually signed with a little outfit called Vanguard, which is now a considerably bigger outfit called Vanguard.

Cats and Doctors Sonwwhere along the line Joan Baez' family became Quakers, but Joan herself is not a Friend. "Living is my religion," she says. She practices it currently on California's rugged coast. She has lived there for morE' than a year, induding eight months in the Big Sur region in a squalid cabin with five cats and five dogs. TIle cabin was a frail barque adrift on a sea of mud, and sometimes when Joan opened the front door, a comber of fresh mud would break over the threshold and flow into the living room. When she couldn't stand it any more, she moved to cleaner quarters in nearby Cannel.

She does not like to le<1ve the area for much more than a slwrt concert tour, for her psychiatrist is there and she feels that she must stay near him. He is her fourth "shrink," as she calls analysts, and the best ever. Mercurial, subject to quickly shifting moods, gentk sllspicious, wild and frightened as <1 deer, worried about the bugs she kills, Joan is anything but the harsh witch that her behavior in the C<1mbridge coffee­ houses would suggest. Sympathetic friends point out that her wicked manner in those d<1Ys was in large part <1 cover-up for her small repertory. She could not h<1ve honored most requests if she had w<1nted to. Actually, friends insist, she is honest and sincere to a faull, sensitive, kind and confused. She once worked to near exhaustion at the Perkins School for the Blind near Boston.

Segregation and Sentiment Like many folk singers, she is earnestly political. She has taken part in peace marches and ban-the-bomb campaigns. Once in Texas she broke off singing in the middle of i\ concert to tell the <1udience that even at the risk of embarrassing <1 few of them, she wanted to say that it made her feel good to see some colored people in the room. "They all clapped and cheered," she says. "I was so surprised and happy."

Urban Folk Revival

She is a lovely girl who has always attracted numerous boys, but her wardrobe would not fill a hatbox. She wears almost no jewelry, but she has one material bauble. When a Jaguar auto salesman looked down his nos·e at the scruffily dressed customer as she peered at a bucket-seat XK-E sports model, she sat down, \vrote a giant check, and bought it on the spot. Wildly, she dashes across the desert in her Jaguar, <15 unse­ cured as a grain of flying sand. "I have no real roots," she says. "Sometimes, wilen I walk through a suburb with <111 its tidy houses <1nd lawns, I get a real feeling of nos­ talgia. I want to live there and hear the screen door slam. And when I'm in New York, it sometimes smells like when I was nine, and llove it. I look b<1ck with gre<1t nost<11­ gia on every place I've ever lived. I'm a sentiment<11 kind of a goof."

Further Reading Cantwell, Robert. When We Were Good: The Folk I<ClJiIJal. C<1mbridge, Mass.: Harvard

University Press, 1996. Carman, Bryan. A Race of Singers: Wl1itmnJl', jA,lMkil1g-Class Hero fr,1 mGulliric to Spring­

steen. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 200D. Cohen, Ronald D. Rainbow Quest. Tlw Polk Music RClJiml and Americall Society, 1940-1970.

Amherst and Boston: University of M<1ssachusetts Press, 2002. Elene, Benjamin. Romancing the Folic P"blie Memory and American Roots 1"fu.'ic. Chapel

Hill: University of North Carolim Press, 2000. La Chapelle, Peter. Proud to Be an Okie: Cultural Politics, Counlry Music, and Migrationta

Southem Califomia. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2007. Weissman, Dick. Which Side Are )'(JII all? An Inside History of the Folk Mw;ic l<e1'ival in

America. New York: Continuum, 2006.

Discography Alan Lomax Collection Sampler. Rounder Select, 1997. The Almanac Singers. Talking Ul1irl1 <1nd Gtller Unioil SOl1g" Smithsonian Folkwilys,

2007. Baez, Joan. Joan Barz. Vanguard Records, 1960. ___. The First 1,'1/ Years. Vanguard Records, 1990. Folk Hits of tile '60s. Shout Factory, 2003. Guthrie, Woody. Tile Ascii Hecordi'lgs (4 vpls.). Smithsonian Folkways, 1999. The Kingston Trio. Tile Esselltial Kingstoll Trio ShOllt Factory, 2006. In the Wind: Tile Folk Mllsic Collection. Varese Fontana, 2003. Peter, Paul, and Mary. Prter, Paul, and Mary. Warner Brothers, 1962. ____. The Very Rest of Peler, Paul, I/7ld Mary. Rhino/WEA, 2005. Seeger, Pete. Pele Seeger's Grmtesi Hits. Sonv, 2002. Van Ronk, Dave. Inside Um'e Val1 HOllk. Fantasy, 1991.

163

31. Bringing It All Back Home Dylan at Newport

Early in 1961, Bob Dylan (b. 1941) left Minneapolis, arrived in New York City's Greenwich Village, and quickly made his way to the forefront of the folk music scene there. Early signs of outward encouragement came in September 1961 with a glowing review from the New York Times critic Robert Shelton! and with a contract from Columbia Records (the largest record company at the time) that resulted in his first album, the epony­ mous Bob Dy/an, recorded in November 1961 and released in March 1962. In keeping with the practice of the folk revival at the time, the album relied heavily on preexisting material, containing only two originals, both heavily indebted to Dylan's idol Woody Guthrie. The other songs on the album reveal what set Dylan apart from the rest of the folk performers: an eclectic mixture of material, which included renditions of hard-driving country blues that were first recorded by Blind Lemon Jefferson and Bukka White.

In fact, Dylan's performance style at this time owed a lot to the high. energy performances of the musicians he had emulated in high school: Little Richard, Jerry lee lewis, and Hank Williams. This performance style, which he combined in concert with Chaplinesque physical humor and a moodiness derived from the image of James Dean, makes it easy in retrospect to see what made Dylan appear much hipper than the other "pure" folkies who tended to project a kind of somber earnestness. Fur­ thermore, in another atypical move for a "folky," Dylan never denied the influence of overtly commercial musicians, and he moved quickly toward writing the majority of the songs he performed.

The political orientation of many folksingers was directly implicated in the development of the protest song movement, which sought to ex­ press the folk revival's political concerns with newly composed songs that addressed topical matters. Here. Seeger was again a pioneer: He had written songs with topical themes dating back to the 1940S - "\ Had a Hammer" co-written by Seeger and Weavers band mate Lee Hays in 1949 was a hit for Peter, Paul, and Mary in 1962 -and several of his songs, such as "Where Have All the Flowers Gone," and "Turn, Turn, Turn," figured prominently in the new wave of politically inspired mater­ ial. Many of Dylan's earliest songs fell into the protest genre. but stood out from other songs of their ilk in their use of allusion, rather than

I, "Bob Dylan: A Distinctive Folk-Song Styli~l," Nfll' York IiI'''',. S<l'temtwr 24,1% 1,

162

Bringing It All Back Home

straightforward description, a quality evident in his most famous song in this mode, "Blowin' in the Wind."

Peter, Paul, and Mary's recording of "Blowin' in the Wind" provided a commercial breakthrough for Dylan, albeit as a songwriter, rather than as a performer. The trio followed with another hit recording of Dylan's "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright," and Dylan himself performed at one of the keystones of the civil rights movement in August 1963 -the March on Washington in front of 200,000 people-an event that featured Dr. Martin Luther King's famous "I Have a Dream" speech. These events sealed an image of Dylan with the public as the conscience of his generation.'

With the arrival of the Beatles and other British groups, along with the emergence of Motown in 1964. folk music had already slipped from its 1963 peak of popularity even as it retained its core audience. However, the album Dylan recorded early in 1965, Bringing It All Back Home, along with the single released from it, "Subterranean Homesick Blues," consti­ tuted a serious threat to the aesthetic and political beliefs of the folk movement. Many of Dylan's new songs featured a rock 'n' roll beat, and the lyrics became increasingly surrealistic. drawing from the Beat poets, Walt Whitman, and the French symbolist Artur Rimbaud. While the songs did not directly address any recognizable political causes, their sarcastic and bizarrely imaginative humor contained a critique of society, albeit a fairly abstract one. Rather than specific causes, the targets were now the moral fabric and cultural assumptions of Western society itself, including sexual repression; materialism; received notions of "normality"; and the taken-for-granted beliefs in "reality," "truth," and "rationality."

In June 1965, Dylan followed Bringing It All Back Home with "Like a Rolling Stone," which featured the organ and electric guitar·led backing that would be most associated with him during this period. "Rolling Stone" ran over six-minutes long, an unheard-of length for a single, and became his biggest hit, reaching number two on the pop charts. "Rolling Stone" had been preceded onto the charts by an electrified version of Dylan's "Mr. Tambourine Man," recorded by the Los Angeles-based rock band, the Byrds. While Dylan's recording of "Tambourine Man" had ap­ peared on Bringing It All Back Home with a muted electric guitar added to Dylan's voice, acoustic guitar, and harmonica, the Byrds added a rhythm used in recent hits, such as the Beach Boys' "Don't Worry Baby," and overlaid it with leader Roger McGuinn's electric 12-string guitar, and the distinctive harmony singing of David Crosby. The music industry and mass media recognized the combined impact of these recordings with the swiftly coined label, "folk-rock," Numerous cover versions of Dylan

2. POl' a \'i\'id pprtr<l\t of this period, set" David Hajdu's account of the rel.?ltionships among

Dytm; j"an B,wz; l1a,'7's sister, Mimi (a folksinger in her own right); and Richard Farina, husband of Mimi <'Ind zlllthnr of R,YII DO/PI1 50 LOllS It L(lok~ Like U1 1 ttl J\1c (Hajdu, Positive!.\) FOIlrtl1 St,.('('t; Tlie Li"c~ I1Ild Timcs or /0011 Bacz, Hoil n.tdml, lv1illli Bacz Farifia, l1!1d Richard Faril1a [New York: Farrar, Straus aud Ciroux, 2001]), And, f"r an almost hagiof',rilphical depiction of Dylan and Baez circa 19(,4, see Farina's ilrtic1e, "T3Cll~Z and D~:lan' A Generation Singin~ Out." ld(1dcl11oisclle, 59, no. 4 (AUgllst 19M).

165 164 The 1960s

songs with electric backing, as well as countless imitations, swiftly appeared, all with "deep" and "relevant" lyrics-the most commercially successful of these imitations was "Eve of Destruction," recorded by Barry McGuire and written by P. F. Sloan (August 1965).3

As the folk-rock craze was gathering momentum, Dylan appeared in late July at the Newport Folk Festival, accompanied by members of the Butterfield Blues Band. A storm of controversy followed: The folk move­ ment could no longer ignore Dylan's "defection," nor could certain con­ tradictions in folk music's opposition to commerce be ignored. Dylan's hit single and his use of a rock 'n' roll band seemed to embody the very commercial forces to which the folk revival had seen itself in revolt.

The following two articles appeared in Sing Out, a major publica­ tion devoted to folk music, and they chart the reaction to Dylan's Newport appearance and a subsequent appearance in August at Forest Hills, New York. To folk purists, Dylan's move toward amplification and rock 'n' roll smacked of a "sellout"; to supporters of his new style, Dylan's music was becoming more personalized and conveyed a truer picture of the contemporary world. However, as the descriptions of the other performers at Newport indicate, even the split between "pure" folk and pop music revealed unsuspected complexity: All was not well with the urban folk music world's equation of simple, acoustic music with left-wing politics.

NEWPORT FOLK FESTIVAL, 1965 Irwin Silber

The Festival's most cnntroversial scene was played out on the dramatically-lit giant stage halfway through the final night's concert when Bob Dylan emerged from his cult-imposed aura of mystery to demonstrate the new "folk rock," and [sic] expres­ sion that has already begun to find its way into the "Top Forty" charts by which musical success is measured. To many, it seemed that it was not very good "rock," while other disappointed legions did not think it was very good Dylan. Most of these erupted into silence at the conclusion of Dylan's songs, while a few booed their once-and-former idol. Others cheered and demanded encores, finding in the "new" Dylan an expression of themselves, just as teen aged social activists of 1963 had found themselves summed up in the angry young poet's vision.

Shocked and somewhat disoriented by the mixed reaction of the crowd, a tearful Dylan returned to the stage unelectrified and strained to communicate his sense of

J. t~()r a conternpor(1ry ovcrvielN 01 ~ornE' of these recordings, see Robert Shelton, "On Records: The Folk-Rock Rage," Nt'''' )','rk Ti,ll"-', lanuarv 30, ]%6, 17-18.

S"lIree: Irwin Silber. "Newport Folk Festival, 1%5." SillS Ollt (November 19(5). © Sing Out! Used by p(,rtni~sion, All rig-hts resen'ed.

Bringing It All Back Home

unexpected displacement through the words and music of a song he made fearfully appropriate, "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue."

But if the audience thought that the Dylan scene represented a premature cli­ max to the evening, more was yet to come. A double finale (presumably a Newport tradition by now) saw hordes of singers, musicians, self-appointed participants and temporary freaks take over the stage in a tasteless exhibition of frenzied incest that seemed to have been taken from a Hollywood set. One singPl' called it a "nightlllare of pop art," which was one of the lllore apt and gentle of the comments heard in the audience. The stage invasion took place during the singing of Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer, one of that incredible band of Mississippi heroines who are in the process of reshaping America for us all. It seemed as though everyone wanted to make sure they were in on the big "civil rights act," and a moment that might have become the highpoint of the entire weekend was suddenly turned into a scene of opportunistic chaos-duplicated once again after the inevitable Peter, Paul and Mary finale and reducing the meaning of Newport to the sense of a carnival gone mad,

At the height of the frenzy, it was easy to forget the music and the collviction that had come before. There were many who thought they sensed a feeling of revulsion even among some of the Newport directors who were themselves participating in the debacle. And when the end finally came, the crowd filed out to the sound of a mourn­ ful and lonesome harmonica playing "Rock of Ages." It was the most optimistic note of the evening.

Here is the second account of the 1965 Newport Folk Festival.

NEWPORT FOLK FESTIVAL, 1965 Paul Nelson

For all its emphasis on tradition and its quiet highpoints (Roscoe Holcomb and Jean Ritchie singing "Wandering Boy" was my favorite among many), Newport is still a place for the Big Moment, the Great Wham, that minuscule second of High Drama that freezes the blood and sparks the brain into the kind of excitement that stays for­ ever in one's memory. Nothing approaching such a moment happened at Newport in 1964 (it was a dull circus), but Bob Dylan provided it 011 Sunday night this year: the most dramiltic scene f've ever witnessed in folk music.

Here are two accounts of it, tl,e first sketched quicklv in my notebook at the time: "Dylan doing his new R&R, R&13, R&? stuff knocked me out.... I think his new

stuff is as exciting as anything I've heard lately in any field. The Newport crowd ac­ tually booed the electric guitar numbers he did, and there followed the most dra­ matic thing I've seen: Dylan walking off the stage, the audience booing and yelling 'Get rid of that electric guitar: Peter Yarrow trying to talk the audience into clapping and trying to talk Dylan into coming back, Yarrow announcing that Dylan was coming back, George Wein asking Yarrow in disbelief 'Is he coming back?' Dylan coming back with tears in his eyes and singing 'It's All Over Now, Baby Rlue: a song

SOIllW: Paul Nelson, 'Newport Folk Festival, j 965," SillS 0,,1 (N(wember j 965). © Sing Out' Used by permission. All rights reserved.

167 166 The 19605

that 1 took to be his farewell to Newport, an incredible sadness over Dylan and the audience finally clapping now because the electric guitar was gone, etc." (Dylan did only his first three numbers with electric guitar and band.)

The second account is from a long report on Newport by Jim Rooney of Cam­ bridge, Massachusetts:

"Nothing else in the festival caused such controversy. His (Dylan's) was the only appearance tllilt was genuinely disturbing. It was dist~!rbing to'the Old l;uard, I think, for several reasons. Bob is no longer a neo-Woody Guthrie, with whom they could identify. He has thrown away his dungarees and shaggy jacket. He has stopped singing talking blues and songs about 'causes'-peace or civil rights. The higllway he travels now is unfamiliar to those who bummed around in the thirties during the Depression. He travels by plane. He wears high-heel shoes and high-style clothes from Europe. The mountains and valleys he knows are those of the mind-a mind extremely aware of the violence of the inner and outer world. 'The people' so loved by Pete Seeger are 'the mob' so hated by Dylan. In the face of violence, he has chosen to preserve himself alone. No one else. And he defies everyone else to have the courage to be as alone, as unconnected. . as he. He screams through organ and drums and electric guitar, 'How does it feel to lw on your own?' And there is no mis­ taking the hostility, the defiance, the contempt for all those thousands sitting before him who aren't on their own. Who can't make it. And they seemed to understand that night for the first time what Dylan has been trying to say for over a year-that he is not theirs or anyone else's-and they didn't like what they heard and booed. They wanted to throw him out. He had fooled them before when they thought he was theirs.... Pete (Seeger) had begun the night with the sound of a newborn baby crying, and asked that everyone sing to that baby and tell it what kind of a world it would be growing up into. But Pete already knew what he wanted others to sing. They were going to sing that it was a world of pollution, bombs, hunger, and injus­ tice, but that PEOPLE would OVERCOME.... (But) can there be no songs as violent as the age? Must a folk song be of mountains, valleys, and love between my brother and my sister all over this land? Do we allow for despair only in the blues? (That's all) very comfortable and safe. But is that what we ShOllld be saying to that baby? Maybe, maybe not. But we should ask the question. And the only one in the entire festival who questioned our positilm was Bob Dylan. Maybe he didn't put it in the best way. Maybe he was rude. But he shook us. And that is why we have poets and artists."

Indeed, that's why we have poets and artists. Newport 1965, interestingly enough, split apart forever the two biggest names in folk music: Pf'te Seeger, who saw in Sunday night a chance to project his vision of the world and sought to have all oth­ ers convey his impression (thereby restricting their performances), and Bob Dylan, like some fierce young Spanish outlaw in dress leather jacket, a man who could no longer accept the older singer's vague humanistic generalities, a man who, like Nathaniel West, had his own angry vision to project in such driving electric songs as "Like a Rolling Stone" and "Maggie's Farm."

And, like it or not, the audience had to choose. Whether, on the one hand, to take the word of a dignified and great humanitarian whose personal sincerity is beyond question but whose public career more and more seems to be sliding like that other old radical Max Eastman's tuward a Reader's Digest Norman Rockwell version of how things are (Pete's idea of singing peace songs to a newborn baby makes even the most middlebrow Digc.,t ideas seem as far-out as anything William Burroughs ever did l );

Bringing It All Back Home

or whether to accept as truth the Donleavy-Westian-Brechtian world of Bob Dylan, where things aren't often pretty, where there isn't often hope, where man isn't always noble, but where, most importantly, there exists a reality that coincides with that of this planet. Was it to be marshmallows and cotton candy or meat and potatoes? Rose colored glasses or a magnifying glass? A nice guy who has subjugated and weakened his art through his constant insistence on a world that never was and never can be, or an angry, passionate poet who demands his art to be all, who demands not to be owned, not to be restricted or predicted, but only, like Picasso, to be left alone from petty criticisms to do his business, wherever that may take him?

Make no mistake, the audience had to make a clear-cut choice and they made it: Pete Seeger. They chose to boo Dylan off the stage for something as superficially silly as an electric guitar or something as stagnatingly sickening as their idea of owning an artist. They chose the safety of wishful thinking rather than the painful, always diffi­ cult stab of art. They might have believed they were choosing humanity over a reck­ less me-for-me attitude, but they weren't. They were choosing suffocation over in­ vention and adventure, backwards over forwards, a dead hand instead of a live one. They were afraid, as was Pete Seeger (who was profoundly disturbed by Dylan's per­ formance), to make a leap, to admit, to consider, to think. Instead, they took refuge in the Seeger vision as translated by the other less-pure-at-heart singers on the program, indeed, by all other than Seeger: the ghastly second half of Sunday night's program, where practically all forms of Social Significance ran completely out of control in a sickening display of egomania and a desperate grasping for publicity and fame [see Irwin Silber's account earlier in this chapter]. The second half of Sunday night (from all reports) was more ugly and hysterical than anything in a Dylan song; and, re­ member, the impetus for it was not Dylan at all, but Pete Seeger. (Ironically, although the audience chose the Seeger vision, it was a hollow victory for Pete, who felt he'd failed badly.)

It was a sad parting of the ways for many, myself included. I choose Dylan, I choose art. I will stand behind Dylan and his "new" songs, and I'll bet my critical rep­ utation (such as it may be) that I'm right.

Further Reading Bramel!, Nick. Tomorrow Net'er Knows: Rock and Psychedelics in the 1960,. Chicago and

London: University of Chicago Press, 2000. Cott, Jonathan, ed. Bob Dylan, The Essentinl Interviews. New York: WeImer Books, 2006. Dylan, Bob. Chronicles: Voillme One. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2004. H~jdu, David. Positiz'e!y 4th Street: The Life nnd Times of JOlin Baez, Bob Dylan, Mimi Baez

Fari1in, and Rirlwrd Fnrilia. Nt'w York: Farrar, Straus and Gimux, 2001. Heylin, Clinton. Bob Dlllan: Behil1d the Shades, Revisited. New York: William Morrow,

2001. Marcus, GreiL Invisible Repllblic: Bob Dylan's Basement Tapes. New York: Henry Holt,

1997. ___. Likc II Rolling Stone: Bob Dylan at the Crossroads. New York: Public Affairs, 2005. McGregor, Craig, ed. Bob Dylan: The Eal'iy Years, A Refrospectil'e. New York: Oa Capo,

1990 [1972]. Scaduto, Anthony. Boh Dyilln: An Intimate Biograpll.11' New York: Signet Books, 1973. Unterberger, Richie. Tum' Tum! Tum! The '60s Folk-Rock Revolution. San Francisco:

Backbeat Books, 2002.

100 The 1960s

Discography

Dylan, Bob. Bob Oyll1ll. Columbia, 1962. ___. Th" r,.""wlwclill· Bob Oulall. Columbia, 1963. __. Brillsill' 11 A/I Bil"k HOIIIC, Bob Dylan, Columbia, 1965. ___. Highway 61 R",'i';iled. Columbia, 1965.

32. "Chaos Is a Friend of Mine"

With his move from self-accompanied topical songs to symbolist- and beat-inspired lyrics accompanied by a rock band, Dylan's music became the focal point for a number of issues that still figure prominently in crit­ ical and fan discourse. Foremost among them is the issue of personal sin­ cerity, or "authenticity," meaning, in this case, that the persona projected in performance is identical with the lived experience of the performer and that the performer is motivated by a desire to express his or her own feel­ ings, not by a desire for financial gain. This idea of authenticity, as we have seen, figured prominently in the urban folk revival, which had adopted this idea from traditional music, where it was assumed that the participants were motivated by a desire to perpetuate a sense of com­ munity, rather than by commercial purposes. Some of this attitude trans­ ferred into the value system of the counterculture, which was sometimes described as a "community" (as in "Woodstock Nation"). Loyal fans of Dylan brought these ideas with them as he changed styles. Dylan (along with critics and fans) also merged this discourse of authenticity with an­ other idea about authenticity-the notion, derived from Euro-mod­ ern ism, that "artistic expression" is opposed to commercial interests as well (see, for example, Paul Nelson's article reprinted in chapter 31).'

Often arguments about authenticity in Dylan's songs were trans­ ferred to the ground of aesthetics (a transference that followed from the modernist view of the separation of art from commerce). Whereas

1. The trat1sfert'nce of the idea of c011ll11unit.V fron1 the urhrtll folk rE'vi\ nl to rOLk music is ex~

"I"'ed bv Sirn"ll rrith in '''TI", Magic That Cen Set YOll Free': the Ideology of Fc,lk and the Myth

)f tlw Rock COll1nlunily" In PopUlar .'\illl~·i( 1: Folk or Popular? LJif;fillctiul1s 1}/f1J{('II(C~, COllthlldties, 1

~d. David Horn ,lI)<1 Richerd Middlt'\(lil. (Cambridgc, England: Cambridge University Prcss, 19~1), 159-61\; fm a disuls5ion of Dylan as moderni,! mtist, St'e Greil Marcus.IIll';sible RepUblic: Jol' Dylan's HI/Sl'IIIC111 7"1'1'5 (Nt'w York: Henry f lolt 1997), I -4 I.

"Chaos Is a Friend of Mine" It>

arguments had previously raged over the quality of Dylan's voice, now these arguments were joined to discussions of whether or not his lyrics were poetry. University classes attempted to parse the meanings of his songs, and interviewers naively asked him to expound on his philosophy. These forms of attention signaled a new attitude toward popular music, as critical stances previously reserved for high art (or perhaps for urban folk music) were now shifted to certain types of popular music. This new critical attitude toward popular music is perhaps the most significant legacy of folk and folk-rock, in general, and of Dylan's musical career, in particular: Despite his relatively brief stay in the national media lime­ light, Dylan (together with the Beatles) demonstrated that the forms of rock 'n' roll did not forswear the possibility of "serious" content and that these forms were open to numerous permutations. Almost overnight, as it were, college audiences now found the most hip and intellectual forms of popular music to be acceptable listening material for dorm room pot­ smoking sessions.2

What this newfound seriousness toward Dylan's lyrics seemed to miss at first is that whatever "profundity" the lyrics possessed was due as much to their delivery (i.e., the fact that they were sung by Dylan) and surrounding musical context as to their relative complexity compared to other folk and popular music-which isn't to say that Dylan didn't do more than any other individual to expand the subject matter of popular music and change notions of what song lyrics could be. 3 As for Dylan's singing, the fact that it wasn't conventionally "pretty" in the vein of many other folk singers owed much to his early interest in rock 'n' roll and country blues. When his voice is heard with this background in mind, the "shift" to rock 'n' roll does not come as a surprise.

One amusing result of the sudden increase in public interest in Dylan, much of it by media that had previously avoided popular music or had condescended to it, was a vast increase in the number of interviews given by Dylan. These media performances throughout 1965-66 grew increas­ ingly surreal as Dylan took a creative approach to the interview situation. Because his lyrics were more "serious" and "poetic" than those found in previous pop songs, he was barraged with questions about what the songs meant, which he steadfastly refused to answer. One of the most famous interviews from that period, conducted by Nat Hentoff (a well-known jazz critic, social commentator, and a writer who was not likely to ask naive questions), provides a particularly amusing exchange on the subject of "message songs." When asked why he thought

2. Set' Nick Brolllt'11., TOll11 J /Tmu Ncz'cr KIl11WS: Rock ami P~,lI(hede'ics i11 the 196()s (Chicago: Univer,ity of Chicago l'ress, 2UDD).

3. An illu111inuting rontt'm.porary discussion of this phellonlenon is Robert Christgau's, "Rock Lyric, Are Poetry (Maybe),"' in Jonathan Eisen, ed., The Ase of Rock: SOl/nds at Ihe Amer;can ClIllliral Re"""ll;ol/ (New York: Random House, 1%9),230-43. First published in Cheelah in December

1967.

1/1 ~ I V I ne 1900s

message songs were vulgar, Dylan replied, "You've got to respect other people's right to also have a message themselves. Myself, what I'm going to do is rent Town Hall and put about 30 Western Union boys on the bill. I mean, then there'll really be some messages. People will be able to come and hear more messages than they've ever heard before in their life."4

The following interview, from 1965, occurred after Dylan's Forest Hills, New York, concert in August and was conducted by Nora Ephron and Susan Edmiston. Ephron, who began her career in journalism, is now well known for her work in films as a screenwriter, director, and producer (When Harry Met Sally, Sleepless in Seattle, You've Got Mail, and many others). This interview provides glimpses of Dylan's humor, as Ephron and Edmiston found him in an unusually agreeable mood. Particular points of interest are Dylan's comments on folk music, the value of contemporary R&B, and his critique of the institutions of high art.

BOB DYLAN INTERVIEW

Nora Ephron and Susan Edmiston

Thi~ intervin!' took pillce il1 latc ~l/lllmer of 1965 in tile office of Dylan's manager Albert Grosslllan. 01/11111 had illst been booed in the hi~toric Forest Hills concert wllere he aban­ dOllf<i folk 1'1I;'ity to the lise of electric accompllllimrnl. He was wearing a rl'd-and-l1l1Z'yap­ art ~hirt. a navy blazer and pointy high-heeled [JOots. His face so shalT and harsh when tml1.,lated throngh Ihe media, wos then illfinitl'ly soft and delicate. His Ilair was not bushy or electric 01' Afro: it 7Oas(ll1e-'"1'11I1 soft froth /ike thcfoal1l of a wave. He looked like all LIn­ dcrfrd 11IIgellllit" 11 nose from the Imld of the Chosen Pe0l'!e.

SOll1e A ll1crinm folk sillgers-Cal'oilin Hester,for examl'le--sl1l( that what you're 11010 doing, /1/1' nC1P SOlilld, "f{J/k rock," is li!leratiliX them.

Did Carolyn say that? You tell her she can come around and see me any time now that she's Iilwrated.

Docs labeliflg. flsiflg the tel'lIl "j<'lk rock," tend to obscure iullllt'S happening 7 Yes.

It's like "pOl' gosl'el." What docs the IeI'll/mean to yOll? Yeah, classical guspel could be the next trend. There's country rock, rockabilly. What

does it mean to m.. ? Folk rock. I've never even said that word. It has a hard gutter sound. Circussy atmosphere. It's nose thumbing. Sound like you're looking down on what is ... fantastic, great music.

4. Not Hentofl', "The Plovbo\' Interview: Rob Dylan~;\ Candid C''JlVersation with the leono­ clastic Idol of the Folk-Rock Set," PI"l/h't{ (March 19(,6); reprinted in Bo/J n,/la", The Early Year." A Relm.'I'edl7'e, pd. Croig McGregor (New York: Da Capo Press, [1972] 1990),132-33.

Sjlllr('I': Nora Ephrull Jnd StIS<l11 Edmiston, "Boh ny1;m Interview," ill Craig ~1cGregor, ed., Bob Dylan: Tile F;ar{ll Ye,lrs: A r'I'III"I'(<,t;1'(, 82-0(1. New York: William Mormw, 1972

"Chaos Is a Friend 01 Mine"

The defhlitioll111os{ often given offolk /'Ock is tile combinatioll of the electric SOli/1ft of rock and /'011 witll the 1l1eallill,l'"fulll{/'ies offolk IIlHsic. Docs that SIlIIlIl)1 11'11at 1/ou're doing?

Yes. It's very complicated to play with electricity. You play with other people. You're dealing with other people. Most people don't like to work with other people, it's more difficult. It takes a lot. Most people who don't like rock ano roll can't relate to other people.

You lIlf'lltion tile Apollo Theatre ill Harlem 011 olle of YOllr album cm'ers. Do you go there oftell?

Oh, I couldn't go up there. I used to go up there a lot about four years ago. I even wanted to play in one of the amateur nights, but I got scared. Bad things can hap­ pen tn YOLl. I saw what the audience did to a couple of guys they didn't like. And I would have had a couple of things against me right away when I stepped out on the stage.

Who is Mr. {ones;l1 "Ballad ofa Thill Man"? He's a real person. You know him, but not by that name.

Like Mr. Charlie? No. He's more than Mr. Charlie. lIe's actually a person. Like I saw him come into the

room one night and he looked like a camel. He proceeded to put his eyes in his pocket. I asked this guy who he was and he said, "That's Mr. Jones." Then I asked this cat, "Doesn't he do anything but put his eyes in his pocket?" And he told me, "He puts his nose on the ground." It's all there, it's a true story.

Where did you gl't that shirt? California. Do you like it? You should see mv others. You can't get clothes like that

here. TI,ere are a lot of things out there we haven't got here.

IS/l't Califomia on t!Je way llfl'C? It's uptight here comp~red to there. Hollywood [ mean. It's not really breathable

here. It's like there's air out there. The Sunset Strip can't be compared to any­ thing here, like 42nd Street. The people there look different, they look more like . .. you want to kiss them out there.

Do yOll sl'Clld a 101 of tillle 01lt t!Jere? I don't have much time to spend anywhere: The same thing in England. In England

everybody looks very hip East Side. They wear things ... tlwy don't wear things that bore you. They've got other hang-ups in other directions.

Do yOll cOllsider 1I011rself' I'ril1lllr;lI{ a poet? No. We have our ideas about poets. The word doesn't mean any more than the word

"hollse." There are people who wlite /,oems and people who write poems. Other people write /,OeIl15. Everybody who writes poems do you call them a poet? There's a certain kind of rhythm in some kind of way that's visible. You don't necessarily have to write to be a poet. Some people work in gas stations and they're poets. I don't call myself a poet because I don't like the word. J'm a trapezE' ortis!.

What I111Cil/lt WI1S, clo lfllll thil1k YOllr ,,'ords sla11d witllOUt t!Je music? They would stand but I don't read them. I'd rather sing them. 1 write things that

aren't songs-l have a book coming out.

What is it? It's a book of words.

IlL The 19605

[s it [ike the back of your albums? 1t seemed to 1IIe thai Ihe album copy you write is a lot like the writil/g of William Burroughs. S'Hlle of the accidental SCIltCI/CCS­

Cut-ups.

Yes, al/d s01lle of the imagery and anecdotcs. I wondercd if IIOU [wd read allythillg by l1il11. I haven't read Naked LIllich but I read some of his shorter things in little magazines,

foreign magazines. I read one in Rome. I know him. I don't really know him-I just met him once. r think he's a great man.

Burnnlghs keeps aI/ a1/JlIII1, a collection of photographs that illustrate his writing. Do you hapc aIlythillg similill to that?

I do that too. I have photographs of "Gates of Eden" and "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue." I saw them after I wrote the songs. People send me a lot of things and a lot of the things are pic lures, so other people must have that idea too, I gotta admit, maybe [ woukln'l have chosen them, but I can see what it is about the pictures.

I heard you used 10 plall Ihe pial/ofor Buddll Holly. No.1 used to play the rock and roll piano, but 1 don't want to say who it was for

because the cat will try to get hold of me. I don't want to see the cat. He'll try to reclaim the friendship. 1 did it a long time ago, when I was seventeen years old. I used to playa country piano too.

This was before IIOU bccame illtcrested ill folk 1IIl1sic? Yes. I beca'me i;1terested in folk music because I had to make it somehow. Obviously

I'm not a hard-working cat. I played the guitar, that was all I did. I thought it was great music. Certainly I haven't turned my back on it or anything like that. There is-and I'm sure nobody realizes this, all the authorities who write about what it is and what it should be, when they say keep things simple, they should be eas­ ily understood-folk music is the only music where it isn't simple. It's never been simple. It's weird, man, full of legend, myth, Bible and ghosts. I've never written anything hard to understand, not in my head anyway, and nothing as far out as some of the old songs They were out of sight.

Like what sOllgs? "Little Brown Dog." "1 bought a little brown dog, its face is all gray. Now I'm going

to Turkey flying on my bottle." And "Nottemul1 Town," that's like a herd of ghosts passing through Oil the way to Tangiers. "L(lrd Edward," "Barbara Allen," they're full of myth.

Ami contradictiolls? Yeah, contradictions.

Alld dlno,? Chaos, watermelon, clocks, everything.

YiJII 1l'rote on the /lack on one I/lbulIl, "I I/ccept cill/os but does chaos accept 1111'." Chaos is a friend of mine. It's like I accept him, does he accept me.

Do you ,<ee tile wlH'ld as cilaos? Truth is chaos. Maybe beauty is chaos.

Poets like Eliot and Yeat5­ I haven't read Yeats.

"Lnaos IS a rneno 01 IVllne J~I

They saw the world as chaos, accepted it as chaos and attempted 10 bring order from it. Arc you trying 10 do that?

No. It exists and that's all there is to it. It's been here longer than I have. What can I do about it? I don't know whal the songs I write are. That's all I do is write songs, right? Write. I collect things too.

Monkey wrcllches? Where did vou read about that? Has that been in print? I told this guy out on the

coast that I collected monkey wrenches, all sizes and shapes of monkey wrenches, and he didn't believe me. I don't think you believe me either. And I collect the pictures too. Have you talked to Sonny and Cher?

No. They're a drag. A cat gets kicked out of a restaurant and he went home and wrote a

song about it.s

They say your fall l1Iail has radically increased since you switched sounds. Yeah. I don't have time to read all of it, but I want you to put that I answer half of it.

I don't really. A girl does that for me.

Does she savc <Illy for YOll--any particlilarly intcrestin;.; letters? She knows my head. Not the ones that just ask for pictures, there's a file for them. Not

the ones that say, I want to make it with you, they go in another file. She saves two kinds. The violently put-down-

The ones tiint call yOll n sellout? Yeah. Sellout, fink, Fascist, Red, everything in the book. I really dig those. And ones

from old friends.

Like, "You don't rcmember me {JUt I ll'm; ill the fourth grade Witll you"? No. I never had any friends then. These are letters from people who knew me in

New York five, six years ago. My first fans. Not the people who call themselves my first fans. They came in three years ago, two years ago. They aren't really my first fans.

How do yon feci nbout being booed at your concert at Forest Hills? I thought it was great, I really did. If I said anything else I'd be a liar.

And at the Newport Folk Festival? That was different. They twisted the sound. They didn't like what I was going to play

and they twisted the sound on me before 1 began.

I heard you were wcarin;.; a selloul jacket. What kind of jacket is a sellout jacket?

Black lelltller. I've had black leather jackets sincE' 1 was five years old. I've been wearing black

leather all my life.

I wonder if we could talk about eleclronic music and what made you decide to use it. I was doing fine, you know, singing and playing my guitar. It was a sure thing,

don't you understand, it was a sure thing. I was getting very bored with that.

5. Dylan is referring here to lyrics of lhe song "Laugh et Me," which were credited to Sonny of

Sonny and Cher. The song wes popular at the tiIlle of this interview.

114 The 19605

1 couldn't go out and play like that. I was thinking of quitting. Out front it was a sure thing. 1 knew what the audience was gonna do, how they would react. It was very automatic. Your mind just drifts unless you can find some way to get in there and remain totally there. It's so much of a fight remilining t0tally there all by yourself. It takes too much. I'm not ready to cut that much out of my life. You can't have nobody around. You can't be bothered with anybody else's world. And 1 like people. What I'm doing now-it's a whole other thing. We're not playing wck music. It's not a hard sound. These people call it folk rock-if they want to call it that, something that simple, it's good for selling records. As far as it being what it is, 1 don't know whilt it is. 1 can't call it folk rock. It's a whole way of doing things. It has been picked up on, I've heard songs on the rildio that have picked it up. I'm not talking abnut wnrds. It's a certain feeling, and it's been on every single record I've ever made. That has not changed. I know it hilsn't changed. As filr as what I was totally, before, maybe I was pushing it a little then. I'm not pushing things now. I knnw it. I know very well hnw to dn it. The problem of how I want to play somcthing­ I know it ill front. J know what I'm going to say, what I'm going to do. I don't hav" to work it out. The band 1 work with-they wouldn't be playing with me if they didn't play like I want them to. I hilve this song, "Queen Jane Approxinwtely"­

Who is Qlleell /alle 7 Queen lilne is a man.

Was there somethillg that made lfoll decide 10 challge ;;olll1ds? }(JlIr trip to Ellgltmd? I like the sound. [ like what I'm doing now. I would have done it before. It wasn't

practicill to do it befort'. I spt'nt most of my time writing. I wouldn't have had the time. I had to get where I was going all alone. I don't know what I'm going to do next. 1 probably will record with strings some time, but it doesn't necessarily change. It's just a different color. And I know that it's real. No matter Whilt any­ body says. They can boo till the end of time. 1 know that the music is real, more rea [ thiln the boos.

How do 1/011 work? Most ot"the time I work at night. I don't really like to think of it as work. 1don't know

how important it is. It's not important to the ilverage Cilt who works eight hours a day. What does he care? The world can get along very well without it. I'm hip to that.

Surc, but till' world ("till gct alollg withOilt al/l/llUlI/ber of thillgs. I'll give you a comparison. Rudy Vallee. Now that was a lie, that was a downright lie.

Rudy V'llke being popUlar. What kind of people could h<lve dug him? You know, your grandmothers and mothers. But what kind of people were they? He was so sexless. If you W<lnt to find out about those times ilnd you listen to his music you're not going to find out anything about the times. His music was a piped ream. All escapes. There are no more escapes. If you want to find out an v­ thing that's happening now, you have to listen to the music. I don't mean the words, although "Eve of Destruction" will tell you something about it. The words are not really gonna tell it not really. You gotta listen to the Stapes Singers, Smokey and the Mirilcles, Marthil and the Vandellas. That's scary to a lot of peo­ ple. It's sex th'lt'S involved. It's not hidden. 1I's real. You can overdo it. It's not only Sl'X, it's a whole beilutiful feeling.

LllctU~ I;:) a IllttlU VI 1YIIliC

But Ncgro rill/ti/ll/ and IJlues has beell aroulld ulldelxroulld for at least twelz'e years. What IJrougltl it out now?

The English did that. They brought it out. They hipped everybody. You read iln in­ terview asking who the Beatles' favorite singer WilS and they say Chuck Berry. You never used to hear Chuck Berry records on the radio, hilrd blues. The Eng­ lish did that. England is greilt and beautiful, though in other ways kinda messy. Though not outside London.

[II what Will! ll1CS;;I!? There's a ~nobb;shness. Wh<lt you see people doing to other people. It's not only

class. It's not that simplt' It's a kind of Queen kind of thing. Some people are roy­ alty and some are not. Here, man, somebody don't like you he tells you. There it's very tight, tight kinds of expressions, their whole tone of speaking changes. It's an everydilY kind of thing. But the kids are a whole other thing. Great. They're just more free. I hope you don't think 1 take this too seriously-J just have a headilche.

I think you started out to Sill! that music ((las more ill tll11e luith what's happelling than other art forl1ls.

Great paintings shouldn't be in museums. Have you ever been in il museum? Muse­ ums are cemeteries. Paintings should be on the walls of restaurants, in dime stores, in gas stations, in men's rooms. Great pilintings should be where people hang out. The only thing where it's happening is on the radio and records, that's where people hang out. You Ciln't see great paintings. You pay hillf a million and hang one in your house and one guest sees it. That's not art. That's a shame, a crime. Music is the only thing that's in tune with what's happening. It's not in book form, it's not on the stage. AU this art they've been talking about is nonex­ istent. It just remains on the shelf. It doesn't make anyone happier. lust think how many people would really feel great if they could see a Picasso in their daily diner. It's not the bomb that has to go, man, it's the museums.

Further Reading See Chapter 3 I.

Discography Dylan, Bob. BIOIule 011 BIOI/de. Columbiil, 1966. _'__. Bob Dyla/l Ui'e. 1966: The'" Royal Albert Hall CO/ll"l'l"1. ,. Sony, 1998.

33 .. From R&B to Soul

The mid-1950S represented a time of relative rapprochement between rhythm and blues and mainstream pop that found its greatest expression in early rock 'n' roll. Despite the overlapping of the two categories. how­ ever, rhythm and blues did maintain a distinct style, as we!! as its own audience and set of connotations. As Ray Charles noted in the excerpt from his autobiography in chapter 18, beFore the release of "What'd I Say" in 1959, his music had not been programmed on Top 40 radio, nor had it found much support among the portion of the rock 'n' ro!! audience constituted by white teenagers. The same is true of numerous other R&B stars, including Dinah Washington and James Brown, who enjoyed a suc­ cession of hits on the R&B charts but rarely, if ever, crossed over.' These singers' styles were heavily indebted to gospel music, and the singers continued to embrace themes in their lyrics that were not obviously di­ rected toward teenagers. The use of gospel vocal technique in secular music, as pioneered by Charles and Clyde McPhatter, was increasingly adopted by R&B singers as the 19505 waned, and was one of the main musical factors involved in the gradual acquisition of a new name for R&B: soul music. In addition to its association with a cluster of musical practices, the ascendancy of the term "soul music" is inextricably linked to the growth of the civil rights movement.

Along with Ray Charles and James Brown (who began recording in 1956), two other artists form an important link between the gospel­ influenced R&B of the 1950S and soul music of the 1960S: Sam Cooke (1935-64) and Jackie Wilson {1934-84).Although both artists experienced crossover success in the late 1950S and early 1960s, Cooke's career formed an early template for the extensive mainstream success of the African American singers who were to follow. Cooke used the smooth and sophis­ ticated vocal technique that he developed in the popular gospel group, the Soul Stirrers, to record a major crossover hit in 1957, "You Send Me," as we!! as numerous other hits. Cooke's approach to ballads, which conveyed an understated spirituality and sensuality, was a major influence on soul singers of the 1960s and 1970s, such as Otis Redding and AI Green, while his involvement in the management of his own career also established an important precedent for subsequent black stars.

It was a number of newcomers, however, who signaled the stirrings of a recognizable soul genre when they began in the early 196 0s to record songs that merged spiritual fervor with secular topics. Among the many

1 Dinah Washington did "njoy several pop hit, beginning in the late fifties until her death in J9ilJ aftt'r she started r<'L'Ord111g with increilsingly lush arrangenlents.

176

nU11I f',.ClU tV JVUI

emerging talents were Solomon Burke ("Cry to Me," 1962), Wilson Pickett ("I Found a Love," with the Falcons, 1962), Otis Redding ("These Arms of Mine," 1962), and Etta James (who, after an early hit as a teenager with "The Wallflower," racked up a string of hits in the early 1960s). In addition to the melismas, bent notes, and wide range of tim­ bres employed by these singers, their hit recordings from this period (al­ most all of which were in a slow tempo) prominently featured triplet sub­ divisions that were often articulated in arpeggiations played by piano or guitar; they also frequently featured interjected "sermons" that usually took the form of romantic advice addressed to the audience. Many of these artists recorded for either Atlantic or stax, which had a distribution deal with Atlantic for a time.

While it may seem as if no genre could make stronger claims about cultural purity than soul music, Solomon Burke describes the unique blend-"multicultural" before the phrase existed-that contributed to the Atlantic sound:

Ahmet would come in to a session and ask you if you wanted a pastrami sandwich. He'd order it from the Jewish deli, then start yakking in French on another phone. Some wheezy cat from Bogalusa's on tenor sax. working at a carton of takeout Cantonese. A pleasant Jewish man name of Wexler is cussing out a late drummer with some mighty greasy Lenox Avenue jive. Me, the black preacher, the apprentice mortician from Philadelphia. standing at the mike. Singing country and western. Now what would I call those years at Atlantic? Broadway fricassee.'

The excerpt from James Baldwin's novel, The Fire Next Time, vividly de­ picts the central importance of the church and gospel music in the up­ bringing of African Americans of his generation. This wellspring of ecsta­ tic spiritual power received more and more direct expression in African American popular music during the 1960s.

from THE FIRE NEXT TIME James Baldwin

There is no music like that music, no drama like the drama of the saints rejoicing, the sinners moaning, the tambourines racing, and all those voices coming together and crying holy unto thE' Lord. I have never seen anything to equal the fire and excitement that sometimes, without warning, fill a church, causing the church, as Leadhelly and so many others have testified, to "rock." Nothing that has happened to me since equaJs the power and the glory that I sometimes felt when ... the church and I were one. Their pain and their JOy were mine, and mine were theirs ... and their cries of "Amen!" "Halleluj8h!" and "Yes, Lord!" "Praise His name'" "Preach it brother'" sus­ tained and whipped on my solos until we all became equal, wringing wet singing and dancing in anguish and rejoicing, at the foot of the altar.

2. Gerri Hirshey, N"'''!''TC to RIIIl: TI,,' Story 0/50111 MIISIC (New York: P,'nguin n"oks, [19841 1985), 80.

Source: James Baldwin, TIl(' Fire Next Timc (excerpt). (New York: Dial Press, ]ll(3).

Ille .L~OU~

There was a zest and a joy and a capacity for facing and surviving disaster that are very moving and very rare. Perhaps we were, all of us-pimps whores, racke­ teers, church members, and children-bound together by the nature of our oppres­ sion. If so, within these limits we sometimes achieved with each other a freedom that was close to love. [ remember, anyway, church suppers and outings, and, later, after I left the church, rent and waistline parties where rage and sorrow sat in the darkness and did not stir, and we ate and drank and talked and laughed and danced and for­ got ,lll about "the man."

This is the freedom that one hears in some gospel songs, for example, and in jazz. In all jazz, and especially in the blues, there is something tart and ironic, authoritative and double edged. White Americans do not understand the depths out of which such an ironic tenacity comes but they suspect that the force is sensual. To be sensual, I think, is to respect and rejoice in the force of life, of life itself, and to be present in all that one does, from the effort of living to the breaking of bread.

Because of his position of importance at Atlantic, Jerry Wexler held a good vantage point for recounting central events in the R&B world during the early- to mid-1960S. In this excerpt from his autobiography, he describes his work with Wilson Pickett and Stax records and the memo­ rable occasion of the recording of "In the Midnight Hour."

from RHYTHM AND THE BLUES: A LIFE IN AMERICAN MUSIC Jerry Wexler and David Ritz

Pickett was a pistol. I called him the Black Panther even before the phrase was politi­ cal. He had matinee-idol looks, flaming eyes, lustrous ebony skin, a sleek, muscular torso. His temperament was fire, his f1ash-and-fury singing style a study in con­ trolled aggression, his blood-curdling scream always musical, always in tune. In the mid-sixties Wicked Wilson Pickett mainlined American music with a hefty dose of undiluted soul. Three decades later, his steel-belted hits like "Funky Broadway," "Mustang Sally," "In the Midnight Hour," and "Midnight Mover" have lost none of their tread.

Pickett told me he wanted to be on Atlantic when we met in my Broadway office in 1964. This was only a year after the fight over "If You Need Men-Wilson Pickett versus Solomon Burke-and I asked if that hadn't pissed him off3

"Fuck that," he said. "I need the bread." I sent Wilson into the studio with Bert Berns ... but all I got back was a single, a

seven-thousand-dollar production bill (outrageous for those days), and no hits. Pickett was obstreperous, and Bert abrasive; the chemistry couldn't work. So I took it upon myself to find the songs; but what I liked, Wilson didn't, and vice versa. For a year we did the dance of the fireflies. We couldn't get it together. I knew what a pow­ erhouse singer he w"s, and it was killing me.

J. The previous )'('[1[, Wpxler and Atlantic records had released a cnvef of Pickett's "If You Need Me," recorded by Solomon Burke, that surpassed the sales of Pickett's recording.

SOllree: From l\iIytlllll a"d the Blues: A Life ill AII/erican Music by jerry Wexler and David Ritz, pp. 175-71>. Copyright © 19q3 by Jerry Wexler and David Ritz. Used by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, a d;";s]on of Random House, lnc

rlV11l f\OlU tv JUUI

Finally I got an idea-not for a song but for a trip: me and Pickett to Memphis, whose freshness just might give us the edge. And instead of trying to provide mate­ rial, I urged him-with local geniUS Steve Cropper-to create his own. I put the two of them in a hotel room with a bottle of Jack Daniel's and the simple exhortation-­ "Write!"-which they did. When we got in that beat-up old movie theater on East McLemore, the place was rocking, the speakers nearly blown by the power of Wayne Jackson's punctuated horns. One of the songs was "In the Midnight Hour." I loved the lyric and the gospel fervor; Cropper inspired Pickett's truest passion, Originally from Prattville, Alabama, the Wicked One was back home, r"ising hell.

I was taken with everything but the rhythm pattern. Jim Stewart was at the board setting knobs, and I was working the talkback, directing the vocaL when 1 sud­ denly realized I was on the wrong side of the glass.

"Jerry amazed us," Cropper told Jann Wenner for a piece in [(oiling StoHe, "He

ran out of the booth and started dancing." "The bass thing was Wexler's idea," Duck Dunn said. "We were going another

way when Jerry started doing the jerk dance." I was shaking my booty to a groove made popular by the Larks' "The Jerk," a

mid-sixties hit. The idea was to push the second beat while holding back the fourth­ something easier demonstrated than explained. The boys caught it, put it in the pocket, and sent Pickett flying up the charts. "Midnight Hour" was a stone smash, Wilson's vocal a cyclone of conviction. The song became a bar-band anthem; the Me's incorporated the little rhythm variation into their playing from then on.

Further Reading George, Nelson. Tile Death of Rllytll1l1 and Billes. New York: E. P. Dutton, 19139. Guralnick, Peter. Sweet 50111 Music: RIll/tllm and Billes and tile Southem Dream o( Freedolll.

New York: Harper & Row, 1986. Hirshey, Gerri. Nml'11ere to RUI1: Tile Story 0(50111 Music. New York: Penguin Books, 1984. Ward, Brian. JIlSt My Soul Respollding: RI1ytllm and Billes, Black Consciousness, and Race

Relations. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1998. Wexler, Jerry, and David Ritz. Rhlltlml alld Billes: A Life in A11leriC17n Music. New York:

Alfred A. Knopf, 1993.

Discography Atlantic RJlytlml E:" B111es 1947-1974. Atlantic, 1991. Cooke, Sam. Tlte BeM of Sam Cooke, RCA Victor, 1962. ____. Port mit ora Legl'l1d 1951-1964. Abkco, 2003. James, Etta. At Lasl! Chess, 1961. ___. Tlte Denilitive Collectioll. Geffen, 2006. Wilson, Jackie. The Ultimate Jackie Wilson. Brunswick, 2006.

1: f....'.•....• ",1 '

r

10.1

34. No Town Like Motown

As the term "soul music" began to enter mainstream usage, black popular music increasingly cut its ties with 1950S rhythm and blues to establish a distinctive 1960s soul genre. At the same time, differences began to emerge between a down-home, "southern" soul style - identified with the Stax and Atlantic recording companies and with studios based in Memphis and Muscle Shoals, Alabama-and a "northern," "smooth," or "uptown" soul style- identified primarily with Motown Records based in Detroit.

The story of Motown is so remarkable as to become the stuff of myth. Aspiring songwriter Berry Gordy (b. 1929 and the writer of Jackie Wilson's biggest hit, "lonely Teardrops") began the company on a family loan of $700 in 1959. Gordy's keen ear for catchy tunes and infectious rhythms, along with his deft judgment of personnel and his business sense, combined to establish Motown as both the most Successful inde­ pendent record company and the most successful black-owned business in the United States by the mid- 1960s.

Initially, Motown's musical style blended in with other developments in R&B and pop with its successful recordings by girl groups (e.g., the Marvellettes. "Please Mr. Postman," 1961) and soulful ballads (e.g., the _ Miracles, "You Really Got a Hold on Me," 1963). Gradually a distinctive style began to form; "Heat Wave" (1963) by Martha and the Vandellas provided a template: Written and produced by the songwriting team of Holland­ Dozier-Holland (the most successful of such teams at the company), the recording features Martha Reeves's gospel-influenced vocal over an irre­ sistably danceable groove and an instantly memorable melody. Between 1964 and 1972, Motown produced an extraordinary number of hits; its roster of artists included many of the leading names of 1960s soul: (in addition to those already noted) the Supremes, the FourTops, the Temptations, Marvin Gaye, Mary Wells, Junior Walker and the All Stars, Smokey Robinson (songwriter and leader of the Miracles), Stevie Wonder, the Isley Brothers, and Gladys Knight and the Pips. The sound, while frequently stereotyped as being only "sweet" and "pop," actually ranged from the pop stylings of the Supremes ("Where Did Our Love Go?" "Baby love," "Come See About Me"­ all from 1964-6 5) to the downright fonkiness of Junior Walker and the All Stars ("Shotgun," 1965).'

1. For more nn the stylistic range of 1\1oto\\'I1, St-'e Jon Fitzgerald, "Motown Crossover Hits 1963-196(-, and the Creative rruce.ss," Pupular A1ll~ic, 14, no, 1 (January tq( 5): 1--12; for a less-than­ tlatt~ring account of the cOl1lpany, sec Nelson George, Where Did Ollr I~01'e Go? The Ri,e alld Fall ol the MotowJI SOU lid (New York: St. M<lrtin's Press. 1985)

180

No Town like Motown

The following portrait of tife at Motown consists of excerpts from Berry Gordy's autobiography. Here Gordy discusses many aspects of Motown that made the company unique: the importance of Motown's house band and its approach to recording, the development of a "finishing school" to ensure a consistent public style and image for Motown artists, and strategies for dealing with race. These excerpts include Gordy's profiles of many of the most important artists to record for the company, includ­ ing the discovery of the Jackson Five. Gordy, begins by discussing Motown's house band, the Funk Brothers, who, while responsible for the distinctive instrumental sound of the 1960s' recordings, received no credit on the liner notes. 2

from To BE LOVED: THE MUSIC, THE MAGIC, THE MEMORIES OF MOTOWN

Berry Gordy

Probably the two musicians who were the key for me in this loosely organized group were Benny Benjamin on drums and James Jamerson on bass. The other two mem­ bers that made up the core of the Funk Brothers were Earl Van Dyke (on piano) am.! Robert White (on guitar). Others included from time to time Joe Hunter (pianot Eddie Willis (guitar), Johnny Griffith (piano), Joe Messina and David Hamilton (gui­ tar), drummers Uriel Jones and Richard "Pistol" Allen, and percussionists Eddie "Bongo"l3rown, Jack Ashford, and Jack Brokensha. Our saxophonist/flute player ex­ traordinaire was Thomas "Beans" Bowles-nicknamed "Beans" for being taJ] and thin like a stringbean. I had first spotted him at the Flame Show Bar, playing in Mau­ rice King's band, and used him on the "Come To Me" session. Maurice King also joined Motown, where he wore many hats.

Whenever a new player came into the group the suund would change slightly, based on his stvlp.

Artists sal~g background on each other's sessions, or playpd the tambourine Dr clapped their hands; any employee who could carry a lune or keep a beat was used.

Each person.-whether directly in the creative process or behind the scenes­ somehow affected the mix.

The love we felt for each other when we were playing is the most undisputed truth about our music. 1 sometimes referred to our sound as a combination of Tilts, roaches, soul, guts and love.

On mv sessions we'd work from handwritten chord sheets. The "feel" was 11511­ ally the first thing I'd go for. After locking in the drumbeat, I'd hum a line for each musician to start. Once we got going, we'd usually ad lib all over the place until we got the groove I wanted. Many uf these guys came from a Jazz background. I undeI­ stood their instincts to turn things around to their liking, but I also knew what I wanted, to hear-commercially. So when they went too faJ~ ['d stop them and stress,

2. A recent documentary. Stmufi"s ill tile Siladows o(Mot07l'/1 (2002) seeks to redress this negl,'ct of the Funk Brothers. George's Wllere Did Our L01'e Go also gives the musicians their due.

So",.ce: Berry Cordy, To Be Loved: Tile M",ic. tile Magic. the Memo,.i", of MotOll'/1 (New York: WArtll'r Books, Inc., 1994), pp. 129-30,230-34,253-55,290-91,313-16.

HSL The 19605

"We gotta get back to the funk-stay in that groove." Then 1'd make it as plain as pos­ sib I,,: 1 would extend my arms a certain distance apart, saying, "I want to stay be­ tween here and there. Do whatever you want but stay in this range, in the pocket." But between "here and there" they did all kinds of stuff-always pushing me to the limit and beyond. Especially Jamerson.

James Jamerson was a genius on the bass. He was an incredible improViser in the studio and someone r always wanted on my sessions. He'd get a simple chord sheet and build his own bass line so intricately it was hard to duplicate. Even he had trou­ ble. That was great for the record, but when he stayed in Detroit and other musicians went out on the road to play the song live, they'd go crazy trying to play his lines. Som", of the stuff he did on the bass, people are still trying to figure out today.

Another musician I had to have on all my sessions was Benny Benjamin. He was so good on the drums and had a feel no one could match. He had a distinctive knack for executing various rhythms all at the same time. He had a pulse, a steadiness that kept the tempo better than a metronome. Benny was my man.

Long before there were electronic synthesizers, r was looking for new ways to create different sound effects. We would try anything to get a unique percussion sound: two blocks of wood slapped together, striking little mallets on glass ashtrays, shaking jars of dried peils-anything. I might see a producer dragging in big bike chains or get­ ting a whole group of people stomping on the floor.

0)ever having forgotten that big orchestral sound from the Jackie Wilson "Lonely Teardrops" session, I tried to recreate it in our own studio, often bringing in string players from the Detroit Symphony. At first they had no idea what to make of me or how their music would fit into ours. But in time they became an integral part of the Motown family ilnd our sound.

Another regular aspect of our early productions was the background voices of the Andantes-Judith Barrow, Louvilin Demps,JacquelineHicks-anotherbackup group.

Since many producers, myself included, lacked a lot of formal music education, when it came time to merge all these different elements, we sometim",s looked for help from some of our arrangers. In the process, the talents of such people as Johnny Allen, Willie Shorter, Paul Riser and Hank Cosby would also leave a distinctive mark on our music.

Mixing was so important to me that it seemed 1 spent half my life at the mixing board. To get just the right sound, just the right blend, I would mix and mix and then remix. Smokey ilnd I hild a running joke over what a mix maniac I was.

Often the differences between the various mixes were subtle; but those sub­ tleties, [ felt, could milke or break a record.

Whether 1 was cutting a record, mixing it or listening to someone else's, I was open to just about ilnything.

lmay not hm'e always known what 1 was looking for exactly, but when 1 found it I knew it. While open to a broad r<lnge of influences--(~()spel,Pop, Rhythm & Blues, Jazz, Doo-Wop, Country-l always emphasized simple, clear communication.

When I look back ill these years from 1965 to 1968 it seems we could do no wrong. rhe stream of hits was endless. The whole world was fast becoming aware of our overall success--our artists, our songs, our sound. I was being cillled the star maker, the magic man.

During that time, at Hitsville, a battle for another kind of supremacy continued. ~nr our first five years the strongest thread in our musical tapestry had been sewn by Smokey with his clever, poetic lines pushing the Miracles, Mary Wells and the

No Town Like Motown ~OJ

Tempts to the top. Now the texture was being dominilted by the Holland-Dozier­ Holland booky, simple-yet deep, driving, melodic overtures. But tbe competition to stay on top was no small matter for HDH. When they gave Marvin another hit with "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)" Smokey answered with "Mv Cirl" all the Temptations, their first #1 record. HDH then hit again on Martha and the Vanddlas with "Nowhere To Run." Smokey came back with one of the sexiest records of his career, "000 Baby Baby," on the Miracles.

There was no stopping HDH, whose #1 "1 Hear A Syn,pho11Y" 011 the Supremes became one of my favorites of that era. HDH seemed to hit as easily on newer artists like the Isley Brothers' "This Old Heart Of Mine (Is Weak For You)," Shorty Long's "Function At The Junction" and the Elgins's "Heaven Must Have Sent You."

HDH benefited from my policy that, if two records under consideration were equally strong, the release would be given to the producer who had the last hit. In ad­ dition to the monster hits on the Supremes, in the next couple years they would give the Four Tops five smilshes: "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)," "It's The Same Old Song," "Reilch Out I'll Be There," "Standing In The Shadows Of Love" and "Bernadette." 1 loved them all but for me "Bernadette" would epitomize the Holland-Dozier-Holland genius for Cilpturing a listener's ear and not letting it go. It also helped fuel my belief that Levi Stubbs of the Four Tops could interpret and de­ liver the meaning of a song better than anybody. He made Bernadette live. 1wanted to meet her myself.

What was equally remarkable was that though Smokey was on the road most of the time he continued to compete, often writing or producing with fellow Miracles Ronnie White, Pete Moore and Bobby Rogers, as weD as longtime friend, Marv Tarplin, the group's guitar player. These different collaborators produced hits on the Miracles like "Going To A Go-Go," "The Tracks Of My Tears," "I Second that Emo­ tion" and "More Love," and on other artists like the Marve1ettes with "Don't Mess With Bill" and Marvin GayI' with ''I'll Be Doggone" and" Ain't that Peculiar."

"Tracks Of My Tears" brought out something about Marv Tarplin and Smokey working together that always touched il dramatic chord with me. It became my fa­ vorite song of theirs. 1began calling it a masterpiece.

Smokey was now more confident than ever. It looked like he couldn't lose. Then, after he had kept almost a complete hold on the Tempts for about three years, he did "Get Reildy" in early 1966. It went to #1 on the R&B charts but couldn't get past #29 Pop. A crack in Smokey's armor. That was all Norman Whitfield needed.

At the FridilY meeting Norman sat confidently as we listened to his new produc­ tion on the Tempts-" Ain't Too Proud To Beg." The reactions were mixed, from "1 hate it" to "It's a big hit."

1 was the last one to give my opinion. "I love the feel-it's stTee!," 1said. "But it doesn't have enough meat. I gotta hear more story."

The next week Norman was back with an improved" Ain't Too Proud To Beg." ]t got more votes, but was again rejected. Norman looked crushed when the group went along with my "Not quite there."

But the following week he was back-and taking no prisoners. David Ruffin's voice came jumping off that record begging like I'd never heard before-

I know you 11'0I111n lenve me, hul I reFuse 10 lef you go. If/have to /les, I'/mdfor !/our SlnHl'nlln/, I don'l mind 'cause you 11I['tl/1 II7<1t mild, IPHIC. Ain'f too pmud 10 /leg...

184 The 19605

Just as HDH had a lock on the Supremes and Tops, so began Norman's on the Temptations. He had snatched them right out of Smokey's pocket.

Norman had such passion. He was relentless. When a song wnsn't n hit on one artist he'd produce it over and over again on other artists. After" Ain't Tixl Proud To Beg," he continued with hits like "Beauty Is Only Skin DE'ep," (I Know) l'm Losing You," "You're My Everything" and "I Wish It Would Rain." Each song was different, but there was always something undeniably Whitfield about Norman's productions. He was versatiil', unique and getting stronger and cockier with every hit.

I told him he had fire deep in his soul and a little would come out each time he produced a record.

Though I was finding less and less time to get into the studio, early in '65 [, too, jumped into the mix, co-producing a record with engineer Lawrence Horn. It was a tune called "Shotgun," written by Jr. Walker for himself and his group the All Stars.

Junior was incredible. His saxophone sound was like nobody else's. The down­ home feeling he and his band got when he sang and played his horn made it easy to produce him. All we had to do was get a good sound balanc<' in the studio and just wait. He could put together some of the damnedest lyrics you'd ever heard-and come out with a smash:

ShoIR"I1. shoot 'el1lfore he 1'11/1 1I0W VO the jcrk Im!>.l!, do t!1f jcrk rwI!' I'ut Oil your high Ill'eI slioes Wc're Roin' dD/1'1I here 1I(1Z!' alld listen to '011 play tlic Bilies Wc're gomlll dig potil toes WI"re g01l1l1l picA t(lllil/toes.

He broke every rule in the book, but I still loved it.

New people wert' coming all the time and from everywhere. When I think of the two young songwriters who came to us from New York around this time one word comes to mind-TA LENTED! Nickolas Ashford and Valerie Simpson had joined our grow­ ing writing staff at ]obde ilfter an earlier hit they'd written for E.ay Charles, "Let's Go Get Stoned." When I first saw them they both seemed warm aud ljuiet. While that held true, 1 later found out Valerie was a pint-sized ball of dynamite, especially when working in the studio.

One day Harvey Fuqua, in his quest for material for a duo he had put together­ Marvin Caye and Tammi Terrell-listened to a demo of their songs. Liking what he heard, he and Johnny Bristol produced" Ain't 1\0 Mountain High Enough" and "Your Precious Love." Both songs became big hits.

Sooner or later just about every songwriter, and some performers, want to pro­ duce their own records. But talent in one area doesn't alwilYs mean you have it in an­ other. With Nick and Val it did. The success of their songs eClrned them a chance to produce some of their own materiil1.

Their production of Nick's lyrics with Valerie's melodies and arrangements added a new sophisticated element to our overall sound. When their production on Marvin and Tammi was brought into the Friday morning meeting there was no de­ bilte. "Ain't Nothing Like the Real Thing" was voted a smash and it was. When their next record on the same duo, "Yuu're Alii Need To Get By" was played it sounded so great to me I didn't bother to take a vote. No one complained. It is still one of my all­ time favorites.

No Town Like Motown 10:>

When selling records to the mainstream market I had learned long before that you had to deal with people's prejudices.

I had not forgotten the hurt I felt when my brother's record, "Everyone Was There," had died when the public rf'illized that this white-sounding record was per­ formed by a blilck ilrtist.

That was why we released some of our early albums without showing the artists' faces on them. The Marvelettes' album Pleasl' Mr.l'ostmnn had a picture of a mailbox un it; Bye Byl' Baby by Mary Wells, a love letter. We put a cartoon of an ape on the cover of The Miracles' Voirl!;; Mickey's Monkey; and an Isley Brothers album had two white lovers at the beach on its cover.

TI,is practice became less necessary as our music's popularity started overcom­ ing the prejudices

But there were so many other color barriers to overcome. I remember one day sit­ ting in Barney's [Barney Ales, head of the sales department at Motown] offic; in a meeting when I noticed I was the only black person in the room. My own company'

After the meeting I talked to Barney and Phil [Jones, a member of the promotion staff]. "How come there's nothing but white folks in the Sales Department?"

"You just now noticed?" Barney asked. I smiled. "I guess I never saw black and white, I only saw record sales." Of course, I knew the Sales Department was all white. Barney had built it with

experienced people he knew in the business. They were a powerful team. With their know-how they not only dealt successfully with the distributors with one-stops and a new sector of the market known as rackjobbcrs-the guys who sold records in large quantities to supermarkets and drugstores.

"You always told me you wanted a general market company, and that's what we got here," Barney said. "We want to sell our records across the board and when I put my team togethel~ there were no black salesmen I knew out there that had ever done that or that could do it the way we needed it done."

"Have you tried to find any?" "Well, no." "'Nell I think you should. If black promotion men can get white stations to play

a record, why can't blacks get white distributors to buy them as well?" I could see Barney was surprised because he had never known me to challenge

him on the basis of race. I felt a little strange myself. "Getting radio play is one thing, but selling records is another. The distributors

are going to give you a lot more resistance than any D)," he said. "It would be really tough-especially in the South."

"That may be. But I think we're so strong now we can change things. It's time." "He's right,' Phil jumped in. "I think we can." It was rare for anv of Barney's peo­

pie to side with me-in front of him. But Barney was all for it. "Let's get on it," he told Phil, "But we can't hire just any black guy," Phil said. "He's got to be real special.

strong." They were lucky. They found Miller London. He was shortish and thinnish, with

a pleasant face and a great smile that he used a lot. My first impression was that he might be too f1'ilgile. I was wrong.

Soon he was joined by otl1E'r black sales and promotion men-Chuck Young, Eddie Gilreath, Ralph Thompson and Skip Miller.

Phil enjoyed telling about one of the first incidents when he sent Miller London on a trip to the South.

186 The 1960s

As soon ilS Miller arrived for his first appointment at one of our major Southern distrihutors, Phil got a hysterical call.

"Phil," the distributor screamed, "you sent a nigger down here to sell white Pop accounts? Are vou fuckin' nuts?"

"How mu~h money do you make a year off Motown?" Phil responded. "Oh, I don't know. Quite a bit I guess." "Well, if you want to keep making that 'quite a bit,' you better get used to look­

ing in that nigger's face." Miller had been waiting in an outer office. As soon as the distributor got off the

phone he rushed out smiling: "Miller, nice to see you, come on in, my friend." Miller was in. But it took about a year of insults, threats and narrow escapes

before he could breathe easily.

In the next excerpt, Berry recalls his first encounter with the Jackson Five and the young star of the group, Michael Jackson.

When I look at it today I can still remember the intensity we all felt standing there that July morning [in 1961\] watching those five young boys from Gary, Indiana, per­ form. Nine-year-old Michael, eleven-year-old Marion, fourteen-year-old Jermaine, and fifteen- and seventeen-year-old Tito and Jackie meant business. All of them moved, silng and played instruments like winners.

They tore into the Temptations' "Ain't Too Proud to Beg" all moving togetlwr like little David Huffins, with a style all their own. When they sang "I Wish It Would Rain" and "Tobacco Hoad," they made the songs sound like they were written just for them. They wound up with Michael doing James Brown's "I Got The Feelin'." His dazzling footwork would have certainly made the Godfather proud.

This little kid had an incredible knowingness about him that really made me take notice. He sang his songs with such feeling, inspiration and pain-as if he had expe­ rienced everything he was singing about. In he tween songs he kept his eyes on me the whole time, as if he was studying me.

All the right clues were there-their professionalism, their discipline, their tal­ ent. And something else that Michael had, an unknown quality that I didn't com­ pletely understand but I knew was special. Somehow even at that first meeting he let me know of his hunger to learn, and how willing he was to work as hard as necessary to be great, to go to the top. He let me know he believed I was the person who could get him there.

Further Reading Coffey, Dennis. Guitars, Bars, lind MOtUWl1 Superstars. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan

Press. 2004. Earl~', Gerald. 01/(' Nation Under a Groo/'e: Motou'n lind Americlln Culture. Ann Arbor: Uni­

versity of Michigan Press, 2004. Cordy, Berry. 7" Be L,med: The Music, the Magic, the MClllories of MotOll'n: An Autobiogra­

pill/. New York: Warner Books, 1994. Neal, Mark Anthony. What the Music Said: Black Poplilar MII;:i( and Black i'opular Culture.

New York, Routledge, 1999. Ward, Brian. n,is Is My Soul Respol/diug: Rhythlll aud Rille" Black Cou,ciouslU'SE', aud Race

F.elations. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991\.

HHThe Godfather of Soul and the Beginnings of Funk

Warwick, Jacqueline. Girl Groups, Gil"! Culture: POf'ular Music and Identity it, the 1960s. New York: Routledge, 2007.

Werner, Craig. A Clllwge Is GOilIla COllie: Music, Race ami the Soul of America. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2006.

Discography The Four Tops. F.l'lIcll Oul. Motown, 1967. Hitsville USA, Tile MotolUn Siugles Collection, 1959-1971. Motowll, 1992. Martha and the Vandellas. Heatwave. Gordy, 1963. The Marvelettes. Please Mr. POst17UlI1. Tamla, 1961. The Supremes. Wlll're Did Our Love Go. Motown, 1964. The Temptations. TIl(' Tempta!ious Sing Smokey. Gordy, 1965. Wonder, Stevie. The 12 Year Old Genius. Tanda, 1963.

4> The Godfather of Soul and the Beginnings of Funk

James Brown (1933-2006) stands out as one of the most influential and successful musicians in the history of R&B. While his innovations as a singer, performer, composer. arranger, and bandleader virtually defined the genre of funk and contributed mightily to the development of hip­ hop, his achievements cannot be measured only in terms of his musical contributions: During the height of his popularity, he became a cultural icon in the African American community, exploring the limits of economic self-determination for a black performer and demonstrating how crossover success could be achieved without forswearing the black ver­

nacular. Born into extreme poverty in the rural South (in Barnwell, South

Carolina, near Augusta, Georgia), Brown began his career as a profes­ sional musician with the gospel-based Flames in the early 1950s. By 195 6 , the group had recorded the R&B hit, "Please, Please, Please" and changed their name to "James Brown and the Famous Flames," This early recording established what was to become a stylistic trademark: insistent repetition of a single phrase (in this case consisting of the song's title) resulting in a kind of ecstatic trance. This trademark and Brown's charac­ teristic raspy vocal timbre and impassioned melismas display his debt to the African American gospel tradition. His stage shows, dancing, and in­ spired call-and-response interactions with the audience also convey the

fervor of a sanctified preacher.

188 The 1960s

The subsequent highpoints of his career are numerous: the surprising smash success of his 1962 recording, Live attheApollo; his development of funk during the years 1964-65 with three successive hits, "Out of Sight," "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag," and "I Got You (I Feel Good)"; his continued crossover success with a string of recordings-including "(old Sweat," "Say It Loud (I'm Black and I'm Proud)," "Superbad," "Hot Pants"-that further defined the funk genre during the years 1967-72. In recordings, such as "(old Sweat," verse-chorus structures were replaced by sections of irregular length, defined by densely overlapping ostinati played by all the instruments. Brown's lyrics grew increasingly impressionistic, cele­ brating black vernacular speech (often creating slang in the process) and emphasizing racial pride.'

In a book organized by decades, where does one place a musician who was active and influential in three of them (the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970S) and who continued to perform and record until his death? While funk will be discussed at greater length in Part 4, I placed Brown in this chapter because it was during the 1960s that he developed the innovations that were felt and continue to be felt across a broad musi­ cal spectrum.

The following excerpts come from Brown's autobiography, The Godfather of Soul, and detail his early experiences and eclectic influ­ ences, his indebtedness to gospel music and charismatic preaching styles, the importance of audience-performer interaction (also learned in church), his firsthand experience of the ring shout, and the somewhat surprising link between minstrel shows (and professional wrestling!) and the later development of his stage act. He also charts the development of soul and funk, the circumstances of the famous Live at the Apollo album, and his business philosophy and profiles several of the well-known musicians who worked for him.

from THE GODFATHER OF SOUL James Brown (with Bruce Tucker)

I liked gospel and pop songs best of all. I got all the Hit Parade books and learned all the pop tunes-Bing Crosby's "Buttermilk Sky," Sinatra's "Saturday Night Is the Loneliest Night of the Week:' "String of Pearls." I also admired Count Basie's "One O'Clock Jump:' but r couldn't play piano good enough to do it.

I. For an essay exploring how Brown's funk expressed an African American aesthetic in its conjunction of music and lyrics, see David Brackett, "lames Brown', 'Superbad' and the Double­ Voiced Utterance," IJllcl'/m'tiIlS P"I'uIII/ Music (Berkeley: Univer,ity of California Press, [1'!95] 2(00), 108-56.

S"urce: lames Brown with Bruce Tucker, from Tile Codf"!her of SOil I, pp_ 17-19,23-24,106-07,120, 134-36,138--39, 157-51',178-79,218-19,221-22,224,227,242-43. Reprinted with permission of Snibner, an imprint of Simon and Schust,'r Adult Publishing Group. Copyright © 1986 by James Brown and Bruce Tucker.

10:;1The Godfather of Soul and the Beginnings ot Funk

I heard a lot of church music, too, because I went to all the different churches with a crippled man named Charlie Brown who lived in one of the shacks in Helmuth Alley. He had to walk with two sticks or with somebody on each side holding his arms. On Sundays when we weren't shining shoes, Junior and I walked Mr. Charlie tn one or another of the churches because they'd take up collections for

people like him. At the churches there was a lot of singing and handclapping and usually an

organ and tambourines, and then the preacher would really get down. I liked that even more than the music. I had been to a revival service and had seen a preacher who really had a lot of fire. He was just screaming and yelling and stomping his foot and then he dropped to his knees. The people got into it with him, answering him and shouting and clapping time. After that, when I went to church with Mr. Charlie, I watched the preachers real close. Then I'd go home and imitate them because 1wanted to preach. I thought that was the answer to it.

Audience participation in church is something the darker race of people has going because of a lot of trials and tribulations, because of things that we understand about human nature. It's something 1 can't explain, but I can bring it out of people. 1'm not the only person who has the ability, but I work at it, and 1'm sure a lot of my

stage show came out of the church. One thing 1 never saw in the churches was drums until I went to Bishop Grace's

House of Prayer. Those folks were sanctified-they had the beat. See, you got sancti­ fied and you got holy. Sanctified people got more fire; holy people are I1'\Ore secluded-sort of like Democrats versus Republicans. I'm holy myself, but I have a

lot of sanctified in me, Bishop Grace was a big man, the richest and most powerful of that kind of

preacher in the country, bigger than Father Divine or any of 'em. He had houses of prayer in more than thirty cities in the East and South, and he had these "Grace Societies" that just took in the money. Every year when he came back to Augusta there was a monstrous parade down Gwinnett Street for him, with decorated floats and cars and brass bands. Everybody in the Terry2 turned out for it, and other people came from as far away as Philadelphia to march in it. You could join in it with your car or, if you had a musical instrument, you could fall in with onE' of

the bands. He was called "Daddy" Grace, and he was like a god on earth, He wore a cape

and sat on a throne on the biggest float, with people fanning him while he threw candy and things to the children. He had long curly hair, and real long fingernails,

and suits made nut of money. His House of Prayer on Wrightsboro Road in Augusta resembled a warehouse. A

sign over the door said: "Great joy! Come to the House of Prayer and forget your troubles." And everybody did come at one time or anothel~ even people who didn't believe in him, because he put on such a show. Inside there were plank benches, a dirt floor covered with sawdust, and crepe paper streamers on the ceiling. At one end there was a stage where Daddy Grace sat on a red throne.

He'd get to preaching and the people would get in a ring and they'd go round and round and go right behind one another, just shouting. Sometimes they'd fall out right there in the sawdust, shaking and jerking and having convulsions. The posts in the place were padded so the people wouldn't hurt themselves. There was a big old tin tub sitting there, too, and every time they went by the tub, they threw something in it. See who could give the most. Later on he had various big vases out there, like urns, Dne for

2. The name for the African American neighborhood where Brown lived.

lYU The 19605

five-dollar bills, one for tens ilnd twenties, ilnd one for hundreds. It seemed like the poorest people sacri ficed the most for him.

Daddy Grace had to be a prophet, but seeing him 1 knew I was an outsider beciluse I couldn't believe in him. I believed in God so that made me an outsider right away.

The Lenox [Theater in Augusta] was where I first saw films of Louis Jordan perform­ ing. Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five. They played a kind ofjumping R&Band jazz at the Sinne time, and they were something else. They did a lot of comedy, but they could playa blues if they had to, or anything in between. The films were shorts of Louis doing whatever his latest song was, and they showed them before the regular picture. He played alto sax real good and sang pretty good. Louis Jordan was the man in those days, though a lot of people have forgotten it. His stuff was popular with blacks ol1d whites, and he usually had several hits at one time, a lot of 'em that sold a million. "Choo Choo Ch'Boogie," "Early in the Morning," "Saturday Night Fish Fry," and"Ain't Nobody Here but Us Chickens" were all his. When I first saw him I think he had out "G. I. Jive" and "Is You Is, or Is You Ain't (Ma' Baby)?" but the one that knocked me out W<IS "C<Ildonia, What Makes Your Big Head So Hard?" especially the way he'd go up real high; Cal-don-yo! I learned the words as quick as I could, picked it out on the piano, and started playing it and singing it whenever I got the chance.

"Caldonia" Was a song you could really put on a show with, and I guess that Louis Jordan short is what first started me thinking along those lines. That and the preachers. The circus and the minstrel shows that came through town played a part, too.

Johnny J. Jones was my favorite circus Junior and I used to craw! through a hole in the fence in the back of the fairgrounds to see him. Since he stayed for a whole week, they called it a fair, but it was really a circus. A circus is supposed to do all its stuff in one night and then move on to the next town, the way I did with my show years la ter.

We had to pay to get into the minstrel shows, but only because we couldn't fig­ ure out a way to sneak in. Silas Green from New Or-leans was the best. He presented a complete varied program with singers, dancers, musicians, and comics. That's what I tried to do fifteen years later wilen I put together tile James Brown Revue.

It's strange: Even though I'd seen just about everything there was to see in the house on Twiggs Street,' j thought the short dresses on Silas Green's girls were unbe­ lievable. To me, those brown skinned models were the prettiest things in the world. I saw some top talent in those shows, too, like Willie Mae Thornton, who first did "Hound Dog." I saw a lot of great comedians, too. In those days the comics still worked in blilckface, but like everybody else I just thought it was funny.

Ever since the Uptown we'd worked on our closing routine with "Please." I'd fall to my knees and out would come the coat to go around my shOUlders. At first, we used anybody's coil! thilt was laying around. Might belong to one of the Flames or one of the fellas in the band. It worked fine until people started hiding their coats; cleaning bills were mounting up, and didn't nobody want their coat to be the one. So they started bringing me a towel, like for a boxer. That was effective, too. Then one night in Chattanooga on a bill wi th B. B. King and Bobby "Blue" Bland they brought me the

]. TilL' "house on I"wiggs Street" refers to the whorehouse where Brown spent many of his formClti\'e rf'ars

The Godfather of Soul and the l:Iegtnnmgs or rUi'1\

towel, and after a little bit I threw it into the audience. They loved it, so we did it that way for a good while.

Later on in that tour, when we were in Atlanta, we sat around the hotel one day watching wrestling on television. Gorgeous George was on, and when he got through killing whoever he was killing, he started walking around the ring taking his bows. A handler followed him and threw a robe over his shoulders. Gorgeous shook it off, went to another side of the ring, and took another bow. The fella threw the robe over him aguin, und George shook it off and took another bow. Watching it, I said, "We got to get a robe." So we went out and got some store-bought robes. Later on we got capes that I signed and had tailor-made, but the whole thing really started coming together while watching Gorgeous George.

Willie John or somebody might have said we were using more tricks to get over, but they didn't understand that everything was developing at once-the stage show, the band, the dancing, the music. There were a lot of different ilspects to what we were doing. 1 wanted people to appreciate them so I decided to record the band on an instrumental and kind of popularize the mashed potatoes at the same time. Most entertainers today never really understand that show business means just that, show business.

You can hear the thing starting to change on the records 1 put out during the bl>gin­ ning of 1960. I was changing before that, but that's when you can heaf it. 'Tll Go Crazy" came out in January; "Think" and "You've Got the Power" were released in May. ''I'll Go Crazy" is a blues, but it's a different kind of blues, up-tempo, a kind of jazz blues. "Think" is a combination of gospel and jazz-a rhythm hold is what we used to call it. Sou I really started right there, or at least my kind did. See when peo­ ple talk about soul music they talk only about gospel and R & B coming together. That's accurate about a lot of soul, but if you're going to talk about mine, you have to remember the jazz in it. That's what made my music so different and allowed it to change and grow after soul was finished.

Once Mr. [Syd] Nathan [owner of King Records] saw I was going to go ahead with the livE' recording [from a performance at the Apollo in 1962], he started cooperating. Mr. Neely took care of getting the equipment from A-I Sound in New York, the only ones who had portable stuff-Magnacorders, I think. Matter of fact, Mr. Nathan started cooperating too much. He sent word that he wanted us to use cue cards to direct the audience participation. I said, "Now if y'all are going to pay for it, then I'11 do it the way y'all want to, but if l'm going to pay for it, then please leave it alone. All I want y'aU to do is tape the stuff. ,,4 That was the end of it.

We had opened on the nineteenth and were building up to recording on the twenty-fourth, a Wednesday, which meant amateur night. I wanted that wild amateur-night crowd because I knew they'd do plenty of hollering. The plan was to record all four shows that day so we'd have enough tape to work with. I think Mr. Neely and Chuck Seitz, the engineers, had six or eight mikes, two crowd monitors in front, one above the crowd, and then the mikes on me, the band, and the Flames.

The other acts on the bill were Olatunji, the Sensations, Curley Mays, and Pigmeat Markham. Yvonne Fair had a solo spot, and so did Baby Lloyd. On the twenty-fourth I was going around backstage telling the Flames and the band not to get nervous, and I guess I was probably the most nervous of all. I wasn't worried

4. Brown was paying for the recording because of Nathan's initio! objections.

l';lL The 1960s

about performing; [was worried about the recording coming off good. I had a lot rid­ ing on it, not just my own money but my reputation because here I was having to prove myself to Mr. Nathan dnd them all ()ver again, just like when [ had to demo "Try Me." I was standing in the wings thinking about all this when Fats stepped up to the microphone and did his intro:

"So now, ladies and gentlemen, it is startime. Are you ready for startime?" Yeah! "Thank you and thank you very kindly. It is indeed a great pleasure to present to you at this particular time, nationally and internationally known as the Hardest Working Man in Show Business, the man that sings, 'I'll Go Crazy'" ... afal1fnre from Ihr hand: Taaaaa! "'You've Got the Power'" Taaaaa' "'Think'" Taaaaa! "'If You Want

l Me'" . 7i1llaaa '''j Don't Mind'" ... Taaaaa! '"Bewildered''' ... Taaaaa' "million­ dollar seller 'Lost Someone'" ... Taaaaa l "the v<:'ry latest release, 'Night Train'" . Taaafla! "Let's everybody 'Shout and Shimmy'" " Tanaaal "Mr. Dynamite, the amaZing Mr. 'Please Please' himself, the star of the show ... Tames Brown and the Famous Flames."

Then the band went into the chaser-the little up-tempo vamp we uS<:'d between songs-and I hit the stage. As soon as I was into ''I'll Go Crazy" I knew it was one of those good times. That's a hard feeling to describe-being on stage, performing, and knowing that you've really got it that night.1t feels like God is blessing you, and you give more and more. The audience was with me, screaming and hollering on all the songs, and I thought, "Man, this is really going to do it."

[t's a funny thing, though. When I'm up on stage I'm very aware of everything that's going on around me-what the band and the backup singers are doing. how the audience is reacting, how the sound system's working, all that. When you work small clubs you watch the door, check out how rough the crowd looks, listen for lit­ tle pitch changes in your one little amplifier that tell you it's about to blowout. You can't just be thinking about the song or how pretty you look up there. You learn to be aware.

As the show went along I started noticing little things and filing them away in my mind. Every now and then the band made a mistake or the Flames were a half tone off. Sometimes I hollered where I usually didn't in the song, and some of the au­ dience down front was too enthusiastic. A little old lady down front kept yelling, "Sing it motherf--r, sing it!" She looked like she must have been seventy-five years old. [ could hear her the whole time and knew the overhead crowd mike was right above her. Mr. Neely had strung it on a wire between the two side balconies. Most times none of those things would've mattered, but we were recording and I was thinking, "Oh, Lord, this take's ruined."

During a quiet stretch of "Lost Someone" the woman let out a loud scream, and the audience laughed right in the middle of this serious song. I thought "Well, there goes that song, too." Then I thought I had better try to fix it some kind of way so [ started preaching: "You know we all make mistakes sometimes, and the only way we can correct our mistakes is we got to try one more time. So I gut to sing this song to you one more time." 1 stretched out the song, hoping we could get something we could use; then I went into "Please."

Mr. Neely brought the tape into a back room between the first two shows and played it for us on a little tape recorder. As soon as \ve heard the little old lady, we all busted out laughing. He didn't understand. All he could hear was her high piercing voice, but he didn't really understand what she was saying even though it was clear as a bell. Finally, somebody told him. Then he understood.

"Oh no," IlP said. "[ can't' have that. [ have to get it out of there and make sure she's not here for the other shows, too. This is terrible."

The Godfather of Soul and the Beginnings ot ~unk l:;'.J

He was getting all worked up, while all the cats were listening to it over and over, laughing, having a great time, and getting other cats to listen to it. After a while, watching everybody carryon, Mr. Neely settled himself down and said, "Hey, maybe we've got something here."

HE' found the lady down front and told her he'd buv her candy and popcorn and giV<:' Iwr $10 if slw'd stay for the other three shows-he didn't lell her why. He moved the overhead mike so it wouldn't pick her up so strong. We were using two-track, which meant practically mixing as we went along. She stayed for the next three shows and hollered the same thing every time I did a spin or something she liked. It was like it was on cue. I think the shows got even better as the day went along. By the end of the last one we had four reels of tape. Mr. Neely was so excited he brought the master up to the dressing rooms and passed around the headphones for us to listen. None of us had ever heard ourselves live like that. It sounded fantilstic. We knew we really had something.

By this time we had completely forgotten about the finale, where all the acts chilnge clothes and come out on stage together to close till' show. Everybody else had changed and was waiting backstage, but we were listE'ning to the tape over and over. Never did do that finale.

A lot of people don't understand about the hollering I do. A man once came up to me in a hotel lobby and said, "So you're James Brown. You make a million dollars, and all you do is scream and holler."

"Yes," I said, very quiet, "but I scream and holler on key." ] WilS branching out in a lot of directions. At the end of 1962 I formed mv own

song publishing company, Jim Tam Music, and got King to give me my own label, Try Me. I had alreadv been producing on Federal and King and Dade and wanted to bring it all togPlher on Try Me. I wasn't content to be only a performer and be used by other people; [ wanted to be a complete show business person: artist, busi.ness­ man, entrepreneur. It was important to be because people of mv origin hadn't been allowed to get into the busi/lfsS end of show business before, just the show part.

Bv this time Mr. Keely had finished editing the Live lit tlie Apollo tape. He had a good mix of the performance and the audience, and he had fixed all the cussing so it wasn't right up front. He figured it would become an underground thing for people who knew what the lady was screaming; he was right too. He worked on the tape a long time and did a fantilstic job of mixing it.

When Mr. Nathan finilily heard the tape he hated it. "This is not coming out:' he said. "We have a certain standard, and we're going to stick with it." What he didn't like now was the way we went from one tUI,\(, to another without stopping. He just couldn't understand that. I gu<:'ss he was expecting exact copiE's of our earlier records, but with people politely applaUding in between. He had all kinds of theories about how records should be. He wanted the hook right up front because he knew that disc jockeys i\uditioned hundreds of records every week by putting the needle down and playing only the first fifteen or twenty seconds.lf that didn't grab them, thev went on to the next record. The same thing happened in record stores, where they usually let you 11E'ar fifte<:'n or twenty seconds on a player on the counter. A lot of my things were mor<:, like stage numbers, and he couldn't understand that. After more conversntil1n, he finall y agreed to put the album out. I think Mr. Neely was the one who final! y sold him On it.

After all the editing and all the arguing it was January 1963 before L,I'/, 11t tile Apollo was finally released. Then discussion began about what singles to release oU it. Byrd thought "Think" should be spun off it, especially since the live version W<lS so

1~4 The 19605

different from the version we'd put out before. Some people thought "Try Me" was going to do it again, some people had faith in "Lllst Someone."

The idea of a smash Illbum was far from anybody's mind. Those were the days when most popular albums had only one hit on them plus filler. Mr. Nathan was waiting to see which tune the radio stations were going to play from the album, and then he would shoot it out as a single. I said, "What do you mean? We're not going to take any singles off it. Sell it the way it is.

"James," he said, "aJj the money I've made in this business I made off singles. That's how it's done. As soon as we get the reports from the radio stations, we're going to start releasing singles."

"Nosir, Mr. Nathan," I said. 'No singles." "You've been paid. You have no say in it anymore, James." I didn't give him no more argument. I still had faith in the album. While he was

waiting to see what would break off the album, King put out the "Prisoner of Love" single in April; it crossed over into the pop market and made it to the top twenty. It was very different from the raw stuff on the Liue album, which was starting to build momentum.

When Mr. Nathan checked the radio stations to see what was being played off the album, he got a surprise; They told him that there wilsn't a tune the stations were playing. They were playing the whole album. It was unheard of for a station to play a whole album uninterrupted, but a lot of stations with black programming were doing it. You could tune in at a certain time each night to some of them and they would be playing it. Mr. Nathan couldn't believe it, but it convinced him to let the album keep going on its own.

Meantime, it was a standoff between King Records and Mercury." I started to think there was something funny about it; Mercury seemed more interested in putting Mr. Nathan out of business than in recording me on vocals. The doors at King were all but closed; they had beat him, he had nothing to fight with. I felt bad about it, so I went to Arthur Smith's studio in Charlotte, North Carolina, cut "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag," and sent the tape to Mr. Nathan. It was done underground-I had to sneak the tape to him.

The song started out as a vamp we did during the stage show. There was a little instrumental riff and I hollered: "Papa's got a bag of his own!" I decided to expand it into a song and cut it pretty quick to help Mr. Nathan, so when we went into the stu­ jio I was holding a lyric sheet in my hand while I recorded it. We were still going for that live-in-the-studio sound, so we cranked up and did the first take.

It's hard to describe what it was I was going for; the song hilS gospel feel, bul it's out together out of jazz licks. And it has a different sound-a snappy, fast-hitting :hing from the bass and the guitars. You can hear Jimmy Nolen, my guitar player at :he time, starting to plav scratch gUitar, where you squeeze the strings tight and :juick a!?;ainst the frets so the sound is hard and fast without any sustain. He was Nhat we called a chanker; instead of playing the whole chord and using all the ;trings, he hit his chords on just three strings. And Maceo plaved a fantastic sax solo 11l the break. We had been doing the vamp on the show for a while, so most of it was

5. Brown had tripd to get out of his contract with King 'lnd had released a single on Mercury. 'his single. "(Jut of Sight." was an important prpcursor to "Pap,,'s Got a Brand New Bag" (see 71( Cod/i,ll,a 0(50111.148-49, and Brown', uptempo performance of the song in the famous '11M!. ShOll' from late in 19M).

The Godfather of Soul and the I:!eglnnlngs or rUrJK

fine, but the lyrics were so new I think I might have gotten some of them mixed-up on the take. We stopped to listen to the playback to see what we needed to do on the next take. While we were listening, I looked around the studio. Everybody-the band, the studio people, mc-was dancing. Nobody was standing still.

Pop said, "If I'm paying for this, I don't want to cut any more. This is it." And that WIlS it. That's the way it went out. I had an acetate made and took it to

Frankie CrllCkel~ a deejay in New York. He thought it was terrible, but he put it on the air and the phones lit up. Then he admitted I was right about it.

"Papa's Bag" was years ahead of its time. In 1'165 soul was just really getting popular. Aretha and Otis and Wilson Pickett were out there and getting big. I was still called a soul singer-I still call myself that-but musically 1 had already gone off in a different direction. I had discovered that my strength was not in the horns, it was in the rhythm. 1 was hearing everything, even the guitars, like they were drums. I had found out how to make it happen. On playbacks, when I saw the speakers jumping, vibrating a certain way, I knew that was it; deliv·erance. I could tell from looking at the speakers that the rhythm was right. What r d started on "Out of Sight" I took all the way on "Papa's Bag." Later on they said it was the beginning of funk. 1 just thought of it as wlwre my music was going. The title told it all: I had a new bag.

My music was changing as fast as the country. The things I'd started doing in "Papa's Bag" and "Cold. Sweat," and other tunes around that time, I was taking even further now. In the middle of 1967 Nat Jones left the band and was replaced by Alfred "Pee Wee" Ellis as musical director Hf' was really in sync with what I was trying to do. He played alto, tenor, and some keyboards. Maceo, after a hitch in the army, came back in April that year. 1 still had St. Clair Pinkney and L. D. Williams on saxes. Joe Dupars and Waymond Reed played trumpets; Jimmy Nolen and Alphonso Kellum gav'e me that distinctive scratch guitar sound; and John "Jabo" Starks and Clyde Stu bblefield were two of the funkiest drummers you could find. They did it to draf".

1 started off 1968 by buying my first radio station. I got into the radio business be­ cause of all the things going on in the country. 1 believed in human rights- not civil rights, fIlii/mil rights of 1111 people everywhere-and I loved my country. But I would speak out for my people, too. That was part of loving my country. I thought we needed prick and economic power and, most important of all, education. So 1 bought WGYW which I changed to WJBE, in Knoxville, Tennessee.

1 know people might not believe it but I didn't go into it to make money. First, I thought black communities need stations that really served them and represented them. The station 1 bought in Knoxville had been a black-oriented station, but it had gone off the air. Whenl put it back Nil kept a format of soul and. gospel and jil7Z­ the whole spectrum of black music. We had talk shows, too, and editorials and pro­ grams directed at the kids to get them to stay in school. We directed a lot of it at their parents, too, encouraging them to give their kids the support they needed.

Second, I wanted my station to be a media training ground so black people could do more than just be jocks. 1 wanted them to learn advertising, programming, and management at all levels. Third, as owner 1 wanted to be a symbol of the black entrepreneur. All three of these reasons were, to me, part of education. That was real

black power. Eventually I bought twomon' radin stations, WEBB in Baltimore and WRDW in

Augusta. At that time there were around five hundred black-oriented radio stations in the country, but only five of them were owned by black people-three of lhos.. were mine. 1 did the same thing with my other two stations that I did in Knoxville.

J.7U The 1960s

We used to jokc' that WEBB really stood for "We Enjoy Being Black." WRDW was really special because that was in my hometown.

We did many politicill things on the stations, editorials that irritated a lot of peo­ ple. Sometimes I would cut an editorial and just say what I was really thinking. I Wilsn't il rildio professionill, so some of 'em were il little too mw for the FCC and they got on us every now and then. With the war in Vietnam and the unrest at horne, you couldn't avoid politics during that time.

Brown re-formed his band in 1970. New members included bassist "Bootsy" Collins, and his brother, guitarist "Catfish" Collins. Bootsy later went on to fame with Parliament-Funkadelic and with his Own Rubber Band.

Bootsy and the others turned out to be the nucleus of a very good band. They were studio musicians so when I hummed out solos and things they knew how to give me what I wantf'd. I think Bootsy learned a lot from m('. When I met him he was playing il lot of bass-the ifs, the ands and the buts. I got him to see the importance of the aile in funk-the downbeilt ilt the beginning of every bar. I got him tn key in on the dynamic pilrts of tIll' one insteild of playing all around it. Then he could do all his other stu ff in the right places-after the one.

I think the first thing of my own I recorded with the new bilnd was "Hot Pants (She Cot to Use What She Got to Gl't Whilt She Wants)," and it was one of my biggest records." It came out in July 1971 and went to number 1 on the soul charts and numher 1S on the pop charts. At the same time I recorded another live album at the Apollo, Rcz'olution of thc Mind, a two-record set that came out in December. In August I followed up "Hot Pants" with "Make It Fun kYo" which went to number 1 on the soul chMt, and with ''I'm a Greedy Man," which went to number 7. Those songs did well on the ~10P charts, too. Most of my music right on through the mid­ seventies did, but a funny thing was happening to music on the radio then. It was starting to get segregilted again, not just by black and white but by kinds: cmUltry, pop, hard rock, soft rock, every kind you could name. Radio formats became very rigid. Because of that and because of my political thing, about 80 percent of the popular stations in the country would not play James Brown records. But my silles were so strong to Afro-Americans and some hip whites that they couldn't keep me off the pop charts. Matter of fact, in all of the seventies I tied with Elvis for the 1110st charted pop hits-thirty-eight. The bad thing about it is that J was making some of my strongest music during that period, and I think most whites have been deprived of it.

Because of my stuff, Poly-dol' was really starting to hit the charts for the first time. My first album for them, Hoi Pants, came out soon after I signed. RCl'ollltiol1 of the Mind came out in December. At the beginning of 19721 released "Talkin' Loud and Sayin' Nothing" and "King Ht'roin," which was a rap song like "Get Up, Get Into It, Get Involved" ilnd "America Is My Home." But, really the very first rap in my career was a thing I did back in 1'163 called "Choo-Choo (Locomotion)." We were in the studio

6. The "new band" r,'lerred to here is the one Brown formed after the Collins brothers ::Jepafted nnd inch.H.:lpd Fwd Wes!py as arranger and troHlbonist.

The Godfather of Soul and tne t:leglnnlngs 01 rurlK

at King one night recording it and it just wasn't happening. It was ilbout two or three in the morning, and Mr. Neely said, "Why don't you just play conductor and call off the names of the towns and talk about them 7 " So that's what I did.

In August 1972 I opened the Festival of Hope at Roosevelt Raceway on Long Island. It was the first rock festival held to help an established charity, the Crippled Children's Society. It was a big show: us, Chuck Berry, Ike and Tina Turner, Billy Preston, Sly and the Family Stone, Stephen Stills, Jefferson Airplane, Commander Cody, and so on. The festival didn't bring in as much money as everybody hoped, but it was worth it if it brought in anything. I had visited an Easter Seal summer day camp in Albertson, New York, and my heart went out to those kids.

Right before the festival I put out "Get on the Good Foot." Afriki1 Bambaataa says it's the song that people first started break dancing to. I feel solidarity with the breakers and rappers and the whole hip hop thing~as long as it's clean. Their stuff is an extension of things I was doing for a long time: rapping over a funky beat about pride and respect and educiltion and drugs and all kinds of issues. I did what I said in the songs: I got up, got into it, and got involved. I was determined to have a say, and I thought anybody with a big following had a responSibility to speak out like I'd done with" America Is Mv Home" and with "Black and Proud."

By the middle of 1975 disco had broken big. Disco is a simplification of a lot of what I was doing, of what they thOllg17t I was doing. Disco is a very small part of funk. It's the end of the song, the repetitious part, like a vamp. The difference is that in funk, you dig into a groove, you don't stay on the surface. Disco stayed on the sur­ face. See, I taught 'en1. everything they know, but not everything r know.

Disco was easy for ilrtists to get into because they really didn't have to do any­ thing. It was all electronic sequencers and beats-per-minute-it was done with ma­ chines. They just cheated on the music world. They thought they could dress up in a Superfly outfit, play one note, and that would make them a star. But that was not the answer. It destroyed the musical basis many people worked so hnrd lo build up in the sixties. The record companies loved disco because it was a producer's music. You don't really need artists to make disco. They didn't have to worry about an artist not cooperating; machines can't talk back and, unlike artists, they don't have to be paid. What disco became was a lawyer's recording; the attorneys were making records.

Disco hurt me in a Jot of ways. I was trying to make good hard funk records that Polydor was trying to soften up, while people were buying records that had no sub­ stance. The disco people copied off me and tried to throw me away ilnd go with young people. You can't do that. You have to come back to the source. Disco hurt live music in general. The black concert business was already hurting. Whites wnuldn't come even if the black artist had big record sales. Black America was in a serious re­ cession; there was just no money in the black community Later on, that situation hurt records sail's, too. For everybody.

Further Reading Brackett, David. "James Brown's 'Superbad' and the Double-Voiced Utterance," il1ter­

preting Porillar Music, 108-56. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000 (1995). Brown, Geoff. Tlli' Liji' of James Browll. London: Omnibus Press, 2008 [1996J. Brown, James (with Marc Eliot). I Feel Good: A. M('/1Ioir ofo Life of Soul. New York: New

American Library, 20U5. Danielsen, Anne. Pres1?I1ce and Pleasure: The FIII1K GWlJ1lCS ilf JOilles Browl1 lIl1d Pnrlir11l1cl1t.

Middletown, Corm.: Wesleyan University Press, 2006.

I he 1960s

Ramsey, Guthrie P. Jr. Race Music: Black Cultures fi-Onl Bebop to Hip-Hop. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003.

Stewart, Alexander. '''Funky Drummer': New Orleans, james Brown and the Rhythmic Transformation of American Popular Music." PopUlar Music 19 (2000): 293-318.

Wolk, Douglas. lallles Brown's Liue at the Apollo (33 1/3). New York: Continuum, 2004.

Discography

Brown, James. Live at the Apollo Theatcr. King/Polydor, 1963. --__. Star Time. Polydor/UMGD, 1991. The j.B.s. Pass the Pms: The Best of the /.B. 'so Polydor, 2000.

36. "The Blues Changes from Day to Day"

During 1965-66, the Southern Soul sound gained prominence in tandem with Motown. Southern Soul recordings tended to eschew some of the complexities of Motown arrangements, emphasizing (like James Brown) the gospel roots of the music and presenting a looser, more sponta­ neous-seeming sound. Among these artists, Otis Redding (194 1- 6 7), from Macon, Georgia, achieved a special sort of notoriety with the white counterculture by being the only soul artist to appear at the Monterey Pop Festival in 196 7. While Redding had been one of the most consis­ tently successful artists associated with Stax and a staple on the R&B radio for years, his exposure to the white audience had been fairly lim­ ited up to that time. His greatest commercial triumph, with "(Sittin' on) The Dock of the Bay" (Number One pop and R&B early in 1968), followed his death in a plane crash in December 196 7. The following interview from 1967 reflects the newfound interest in Redding among the pop and rock audiences and touches on Redding's views about the musical rela­ tionships between black and white performers, as well as the differ­ ences between Motown and Stax. The initials "J. D." stand for Jim Dele­ hant, the editor of Hit Parader who conducted the interview in the summer of 196 7.

OTIS REDDING INTERVIEW

Jim Delehant

J.D: What do you dislike about Enf;lalld? Otis: Nothing. I loved England from head to toe. I love the weather, the people.

I was there in the summer and it was nice. The people are so groovy; they treated me like I was somebody. They took me wherever I wanted to go. 1 loved Paris too.

J.D: Did you find any language problems witll your lIudiences ill Paris? Otis: No, they sang along with almost all the songs. But England is a beautiful

country. If 1were to leave the U.s., l'd live in England. But]' d never leave the U.s. lawn a 400-acre farm in Macon, Georgia. I raise cattle and hogs. lawn horses too. I love horses as much as singing. I'd like to hunt on horseback.

J.D: Tell us about tltc IIlbum 1/0U recorded with Cllrla Thomas. Otis: Carla and I worked on this album for three days. We do things like "It Ta kes

Two" that Marvin GayI' and Kim Weston did. And we do "Tramp" by Lowell Ful­ sam. I wrote an original called "00 Wee Baby." We do "Telllt Like It Is." There's a lot of great stuff on it.

J.D: Your voices are so diffcre11t. Did youlzave alllj problems u'orkillg tOf;ether? Otis: My voice right today is hoarse from working on the album. We didn't have

any problems working at all. I went in first and sang my part, and then she came in and overdubbed her part. We used Booker T. & MG's too. Booker played both the piano and the organ. We cut eleven songs in three days.

J.D: How did you write "Respect"? Otis: That's one of my favorite songs because it has a better groove than any of my

records. It says something too: "What you want, baby you got it. What you need baby, you got it. All I'm asking for is a little respect when I come home." The song Ivrics are great. The band track is beautiful. It took me a whole dav to write it and ~bout tw~nty minutes to arrange it. We cut it once and that wa~ it. Everybody wants respect, you know.

J.D: Why did ljou choose to do "Satisfaction"? Otis: That came from Steve Cropper and Booker. We were all in the studio one day

to record an album and they suggested I do "Satisfaction." They asked me if I had heard the new Rolling Stones song but I hadn't heard it. They played the record for me and everybody liked it except me. If you notice, I use a lot of words different from the Stones' version-that's because I made it up.

J.D: Were l/OU in the nlUS;C business bet'ore I/OU ;oitled Stax? 'Otis: No, i used to be a well driller.·1 m~de a $1.25 an hour drilling wells in Macon,

Georgia. One day I drove a friend of mine, Johnny jenkins, up to do a recording session. They had thirty minutes left in the studio and I asked if I could do a song, "These Arms of Mine." TI1ey did it and it sold about 800,000 copies. ['VI' been going ever since. [ wrote that song in 1960 when I wasn't even thinking about the music business. I recorded it in November, 1962. I tried the song out with a small recording company but it didn't do anything. I knew it was saying something though. I dug the words.

Source: Jim Delehant, "Otis Redding lntL'rview," HI! l'aroda (Septemher 1%7).

199

LVV [he 1960s

J.O: What was the/irst music you heard that impressed l/OU deeply? Otis: My mother and father and [ used to go to parties wlwn [ was a kid. We used to

go out to a place called Sawyer's Lake in Macon. There was a calypso song out then called "Run,Joe." My mother and daddy used to play that for me all the time. I just dug the groove. Ever since then ["ve been playing music. As [ was grOWing up, I did a lot of talent shows. I won fifteen Sunday nights straight in a series of tal­ ent shows in Macon. I showed up the sixteenth night and they wouldn't Jet me go on anymore. Whatever success I had was through the help of the good Lord.

J.O: What do yOIl think of people like Muddy Waters and Jimmy Reed? Otis: I dig them because they give me a lot of ideas. I listen to them a lot. J.D: Dovolllikeharmonicn?

Otis: Yes, I love harmonica. I haven't done one on record, yet, but I might try. [ play it a little. rt's easy. I play piano too~the chords. I write songs with my guitar.

J.D: How mal/Y pieces do you have in your band?

Otis: I used to have ten, but now I have eight. I cut it down because itwas getting away from my sound. I have two trumpets, two tenors, guitar, bass, drums and organ.

J.D: What do you think ofSall1 and Dave and the R(r.;hteolls Brothers? Otis: I'll tell you. When I first heard the Righteous Brothers, I thought they were

colored. I think they sing better than Sam and Dave. But Sam and Dave are much better showmen. Sam and Dave have been together for ten or twelve years. I think Sam and Dave are my favorites.

J.O: Why do you think white blues performers are so /Ill/ch llIore successfiil thall the originals?

Otis: Because the white population is much larger than the colored. I like what these rock and roll kids are doing. Sometimes they take things from us, but I take things frum them too. The things that are beautiful, and they do a lot ofbeautiful things.

J.D: What do you think of Eric Burdon?

Otis: Now, Eric is one of the best friends I have. He's a great guy. I like the way he works. I like the way he sings, too. He's a good blues performer. I've seen him work in a club in England. This boy came on stage with a blues song and he tore the house up. They called me up on stage after he finished and I wouldn't go up. I knew I couldn't do anything to top it. Eric can really sing blues.

T·D: AnI! blues by the Stones you like?

Otis: N~). I like "their uptempo songs. They really groove on "Satisfaction." It's too much. I like their original things better. They can't do anybody else's songs.

J.O: You're II producer and mallager IIOW, arC/I't you? Otis: I have an artist that just came out on Atlantic Records named A rthur Conley.

He does one of my songs, "Sweet Soul Music." It's uptempo and he does it beau­ tifully. I manage him and record him. My band is on the record too.

J.D: What's the difference between rock i7nd rolland rlzythllland blues? Otis: Everybody thinks that all the songs by colored people are rhythm and blues

but that's not true. Johnny Taylor, Muddy Waters and B. B. King are blues musi­ cians. James Brown is not a blues singer. He has a rock and roll beat and he can sing slow pop songs. My own songs "Respect" and "Mr. Pitifu!." aren't blues songs. I'm speaking in terms of the beat and structure of the music. A blues is a song that goes twelve bars all the way through. Most of mv songs are soul songs. When I go in to record a song, I only have the title and maybe a first verse. The 1"('s[ I make up as we're recording. We'll cut it three of four tinws and I'll sing it different every time. You know, once I cut a song, I can't pantomime it on a TV

"The Blues Changes from Day to Day" 4V!

show. I've goofed TV shows every time. I missed the lyrics. I'd be going my own way but then 1'd catch up.

J.D: What's the difference betwel'1l tile Stax sOl/nd alld tlie Motown sOl/nd? Otis: Motown docs a lot of overdubbing. It's mechanically done. At Stax the rule is

whatever you feel, play it. We cut everything together-horns, rhythm, and vocals. We'll doitthree or four times, go back and listen to the results and pick the best one. If somebody doesn't like a line in the song, we'll go back and cut the whole song over. Until last year, we didn't even have a four-track tape recorder. You can't over­ dub on a one-track machine. Like yesterday, we cut six songs in five hours for my album with Carla. They were perfect songs, and they'll all be in the album.

).0: Do you think RE."B Izas chnll[;ed a great deal? Otis: Yes, I'd like to say something to the R&B singers who were around ten years

ago. They've got to get out of the old bag. Listen to the beat of today and use it on records. Dnn't say we're gonna go back ten years and use this old swing shuf­ fle. That's not it. 1 know what the kids want today, and I aim all my stuff at them. I'd like to see all those singers make it again. I'd like to take Fats Domino, Little Richard, Big Joe Turner, Clyde McPhatter and bring them into the bag of today. They'd have hits all over again. The blues changes from day to day. It all depends on what the kids will be dancing to, what they're moving to. 1 watch people when 1 sing. If they're stompin' their fo(\t, or snappin' their fingers, then I know I got something. But if they don't move, then you don't have anything. Five years from now, I know the kids are going to be tired (\f my singing. If] can keep a good mind with the help of the good Lord, I'm gonna keep producing records. You can't have anything else on your mind but the music business. When 1 go into the studio, I'm strictly for business. I can go in there any time of the day and cut six songs if I want to. I don't like any fooling around in the studio.

J.D: Do yOlllike country and westem 1111.ISic? Otis: Oh yeah. Before I started singing, maybe ten years ago, I loved anything that

Hank Williams sang. Eddy Amold does some groovy things, too. Everybody'S got their own bag and if they're doing something good, I can hear it.

J.D: Fr01l1 your experience, what's tlle /Jest advice you wl/ld give to someone who wants to get in tlie business?

Otis: If you want to be a singer, you've got to concentrate on it 24 hours a day You can't be a well driller, too. You've got to concentrate on the business of entertain­ ing and writing songs. Always think different from the next person. Don'. ever do a song as you heard somebody else do it. Concentrate and practice every sin­ gle day. It took me four years to get into sllow business in a big way. Also 1 think it's very important to write your own songs.

Further Reading Bowman, Rob. Soulsl'ille, U.S.A.: Tile Story of Stax Rt'cnrds. New York: Schirmer Books,

1997. freeman, Scott. Otis!: Tile Otis Reddin;;; Story. New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 2002. Guralnick, Peter. SH'eet Soul Music RIIl/t1lm fll/d BlllfS and tile SOli them DreanJ of Frel'd()m.

New York: Harper & 1<ow, 191'0. Ware, Vron, and Les Back. Ollf of WllitC11ess: Color, Politics, and Cultllre. Chicago: 1.. niver­

sity of Chicago Press, 2002.

See also "Further Reading"' for chapters 33 and 34.

LUL The 1960s

Discography

Booker T. nnd the M.C.s. The Dejilliti,'e 50111 Collection. Atlantic, 2006. Redding, Otis. Paill ill M11 Hmrt. Stnx, 1964.

----. T!Ie Crm! Otis l?cddillg SinSE' 50111 Ballads. Stax, 1965. ._-_. The Dock 0/ the Bm/. Stnx, 1968.

T11f Very Best 0/ Otis Redding Elektra/WEA, 1992. ---- and Carla Thomas. Khl,\!, lind QueI'll. Stax, 1967.

37 .. Aretha Franklin Earns Respect

In 1967-68, Aretha Franklin's version of Otis Redding's "Respect" and James Brown's "Say It Loud (I'm Black and I'm PrOUd)" signaled soul music's entry into a new phase of political engagement. The emergence of Aretha Franklin (b. 1942), one of the first solo female stars in the genre, had a huge impact: Her tremendous range, mastery of all aspects of gospel singing technique, and sturdy gospel piano playing, applied to consistently excellent material (some of which she wrote or cowrote), resulted in a series of brilliant recordings in 1967-70, during which time she sold more records than any other African American artist. Her record­ ings from the late 1960s include, in addition to "Respect," such anthems as "I Never Loved a Man (the Way I Love You)," "Natural Woman (You Make Me Feel Like a)," "Chain of Fools," and "Think." While her other recordings did not have quite the broad political resonance of "Respect," these hits did convey a sense of pride and strength not previously expressed by black female singers.

Aretha Franklin's success brought with it media coverage from a wide range of publications. The following article, from Ebony, seeks to present Franklin to a then-growing black middle-class readership. This orienta­ tion may be responsible for the emphasis on Franklin's "homebody" per­ sona in the article, although it should be noted that other articles and subsequent profiles on her also tend toward superficiality, perhaps because she is a famously reticent interviewee. The opening passage of the piece emphasizes the connection between Franklin and her audience, evoking gospel music's ritualistic power in a secular setting­ ;n the words of the author, Phyl Garland, Franklin exudes a "magnetic appeal that exceeds simple entertainment." Garland details Franklin's

Aretha Franklin Earns Respect LU~

background in the Baptist church and the impact of the church on her de­ velopment as a musician, ranging from her father's career as a famous preacher to her own early experiences as a teenage gospel singer; in one revealing passage, she reflects on the importance of timing in her music and observes how she owes this sense of timing to her father's singing and, perhaps a bit more surprising, to his preaching. Her father's position as a famous minister also brought Franklin into early contact with several musicians who influenced her, from famous gospel singers, such as James Cleveland and Clara Ward, to gospel singers who achieved fame in popular music like Sam Cooke and Lou Rawls. This piece also under­ scores the importance of Franklin's switch from Columbia to Atlantic Records and the simultaneous move from an "easy listening" pop-jazz style to one based more on her gospel roots.

The relationship of soul music and "soul" in general to the black church and to changing notions of black racial self-consciousness is another focus of the article, which came at a moment when racial politics were assuming a higher and more militant profile, and as public aware­ ness was increasing about black nationalism and the black power movement. These larger political currents form (at least part of) the context that enabled recordings like "Respect" and "Think" to resonate so strongly with African American audiences.' .

ARETHA FRANKLlN-"SISTER SOUL"; ECLIPSED SINGER

GAINS NEW HEIGHTS

Phy/ Gar/and

It had been an ordinary evening, so far as the noisy, star-crowdhi events called jazz festivals are concerned. Some considerate deity seemingly had answered the pro­ moter's prayer that it wouldn't rain as more than 35,000 fans huddled in the stands or rocked their folding chairs on the grass of Downing Stadium on Randall's Island, a little bit of New York rising in the East River within walking distance of Harle11l. In a relaxed atmosphere suggestive of an evening picnic, they elbowed their way through clusters of competitors for a dwindling supply of bot dogs and beer, ~rum­ bled about defects in the sound system, talked loudly during acts that were not their favorites, and, above all, awaited the top-billed performers in a show heavily steeped in gospel-flavored funk. They were pleased enough, but some singer or instrumen­ talist had yet to unleash their full capacity to enjoy. Then the moment came when a

1. For accounts of Franklin's first recordings for Atlantic, oJ nlPmentou.s event in the' hi~b')q' of

recent popular music, see the following; lerry Wexler and David Ritz, Rhythllll1l1d Blurs: A Ufl' in American Music (NewYprk: Allred A. Knorr. 1(93), Pl'. 2I1R-l1; Peter Curillnick, Su'ed Scm I M ",ic: Rhythm al1d Blues l111d thr Soul/lem Dream o/Freedom (New York: Harper and Row, 1986),339-42; Aretha Franklin (and David Ritz), Arctha: From These Ronfs (New York: Villard, 1(99), Pf>. 1C9·-1O, 123-24.

Saurce: Phyl Garland, "Aretha Franklin-Sister Soul: Eclipsed Singer Gains New Heights," FI'{)IIl/ (October 1967); 47-52. Reproduced by rerm;ssion of Ebmlll Milgazine. © 1%7 Johnson Publ;,11;ng

Company, Tnc. All rights reserved.

lU4 The 19605

full-bodied YOWl/) woman with a chocolate-brown face offset by ;1 pink brocade gown came onto the stage to be greeted by a chorus of expectant shouts, cheer" and applause that were soon tTansformed into frenZied hand-clapping and foot-tapping. It was the sort of unbridled response that is accorded only a star, a favorite, an enter­ tainer possessing the uncommon ability to electrify an audience.

For the singel~ Aretha Franklin, the piano-plunking, earthy-sounding daughter of a Detroit ministel~ it was a resounding "am<>n" to all the words and emotions she has projected in a series of top-selling record hits that hdv€ added a new dimension to her precocious but uneven career. Within less than a year, tIlt' one-time gospel singer hns returned from near obscurity to achieve a level of popularity where she is regarded by many a fan as "sister soul herself." Under a contract negotiated with Atlantic Records in late ]966, she has released three conspcutive million-selling sin­ gles. Her first album on that labeL I Neuer Lm'ed iJ Mall the Way I Luve YOIl, is a certified million-seller, with a second album, Arrtllll Arriues, nosing its way up on the charts. Triumph in the recording world has, in turn, brought honors from the arbiters of pub­ lic taste-three awards from the National Association of Rad io Announcers for being the top female vocalist who produced the top single record and top alhum for 1%7; recognition from Hecord World, Billboard and Cashbox magaZines as a It'ading arlist.

However, her Success can be measured in more thnn monetary terms, for Aretha's version of the Otis Redding composition Respect stands, week after week, at the head of JET magazine's Soul Brothers Top 20 Tunes poll and is considered by fur more than a few of those "brothers" to be "th(' n('w N('gro national anthem." Due to this magnetic appeal that exceeds simple entertainment, Dr. Martin Luther King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference presented her with a special citation at the organization's convention in Atlanta, Ga., this summer.

All this sudden ildulation might overWhelm some, but not Ardha, who endured the experience of illmost making it once before, only to become a comet that appilr­ ently burnt out too soon. A reticent person whose basic shyness might be mistaken for hostility or indifference, she is aware of where she has been and where she wants to go. "I don't feel very different," she stiltes with a quiet simplenpss that belies her ebullience in song. "People ilsk for my autograph now and that's real nice, but I don't think it puts you up on any pedestal. You can't get carried away with it." She is quick to acknowledge the ups and downs that came in t1w wake of her earlier success, in ] 96], when John Hammond, the man credited with disCllvering 13illie Holiday, said she had "the best voice I've come acmss in 20 years," and signed her to an exclusive contrnct with Columbi<l Records.

Though some of her recordings from thai period gained critical favor, ;lamely 7hdl/Y I SillS the Bliles, Try a Little Tel1derness and Sky/ark, sht> failed to break into the top money-making level of til<' big hits and, after a while, her public follOWing begim to fade. "Things wen' kinda hungry then," she savs of tl10 interim years, adding, "J might just be 25, but I'm an old woman in disgUise ... 25 goin' on 63."

lf till' appeal of her music can be linked lolhe sum of her experiences ns a hUJ1lnn being, a significilnt portion of it lies in her early background. She WilS born ill Memphis, Tpnn., one of thn>e dilughters and two sons of a Baptist minister fathcr, the Rev, C. L. Franklin, who went on to become a noted radio nnd recording artist. and a lllusiGl1ly gifted mother who died when Aretha was a child. Though- the family soon moved to Buffalo, N.Y, and filter Detroit, Mich., the South left nn imprint 0;1 her speech wilh its softened endings on words. When An.tha was "about eight or nine," she h.>gan trying to teach herself how to play the piano by listening to Eddie Heywood records, "just bangill', not playin', but finding a little somethin' here and there." Her fatlll'r noticed her efforts and hired a piano teacher whose approach was

Aretha ~ranKIJn l:arn~ ""~)J"Ll

scorned by the young Aretha. "When she'd come, I'd hide," she recalls. "I tried for maybe a week, but 1 just couldn't take it. She had all those little baby books and 1 wanted to go directly to thp tunes." This failure was overcome, shortly afterwards, by the arrival of James Cleveland, the noted gospel singer, who came to live with the family. "He showed me some rea] nice chords and I liked his deep, deep sound," Aretha remembers. There's a whole lot of earthiness in the way he sings, and what he was feelin', I was feelin', but I just didn't know how to put it across. The more I watched him, the more I got out of it." Cleveland helped Aretha, her older sister Erma and two otIwr girls form a gospel group that appeared at local churches hut lasted only eight months because "we were too busy fuss in' and fightin.'" But in this group, Aretha got her first public experience as a singer and sometime pianist. An­ other gospel artist who left a deep impression on Ar<>tha was Clara Ward. "1 wasn't really that conscious of the gospel sound," she explains, "but I liked all Miss Ward's records. I learned to play 'em because 1 thought one day she might decide she didn't want to play and I'd be ready."

The Franklin household was a fertile one for the development of musical talent. Because of her father's prominence as an evangelist Aretha had an opportunity to meet ilrtists of more than one genre. Mahalia Jackson, Arthur Pryscnck, B. B. King, Dorothy Donegan and the late Dinah Washington were likely houseguests. She met Lou Rawls when he was an unknown singer with the Pilgrim Travelers and became a friend of the late Sam Cooke when he appeared at her father's churcll with the Soul Stirrers. She remembers Cooke as being "just beautiful, a sort of person who stood out among many people." Along with Sillll Cooke, .lames Cleveland ilnd Claril Ward, one of the celebrities who impressed Aretha tremendously with "the way he could just sit down and play" was the blind jazz piilnist Art Tatum. "I just cancelled that out for me and knew lhat I could never do that, but he left a strong impreSSion on me as a pianist and a person." Above all others, Aretha credits her father with having the greatest ill"tistic influence on her in his singing stvle and his more broadly acknowl­ edged fusion of rhythm and words in preaching. "Most of what 1 learned vocally came from him," she readily admits. "He gave me a sense of timing in music and tim­ ing is important in everything."

Before entering her teens, Aretha had become a member of the youth choir at New Bethel Baptist Church, which Rpv. Franklin pastors in the heart of Detroit's black ghetto. Occasionally she was soloist and during four important years of her adolescence, she loured the country with her father's evangelistic lroupe. During one of those tours, she recorded her version of NellCJ" Grow Old and Precious l.ord, Take My HiJlld, which are still regarded as classics in the gospel vpin and established her reputation as a child singer. However, at the time, she had no dreams of becoming a star or iln entertainer of any sort. Her primary ambition ...vas to become "just a housewife."

Fate didn't play it that way. When Aretha wns 18, yet another friend, Major "Mule" Holly, bassist for the jazz

pianist Teddy Wilson, convinced her that she had il certain basic style that could be commercially salable if applied to jazz or popular music. Though rumors persist that the religiollsly oriented elder Franklin opposed his daughter's pursuit of a secular career, he actuilllv escorted her to New York Citv when she made her first demon­ striltion records t:J be presented to commercial fir~ms. His ()pinion has been that "onp shpuld make his own life and take care of his own business. If she feels she can do what she is doing as successfully as she does it, I have nDthing against it. I like most kinds of music myself." He observes that in his congregation there was "at first a quiet and subdued rpsentment, but now they acclaim her in loud terms."

207 I he 1960s

For Aretha, the experience of being thrust into a different milieu was, if not trau­ matic, somewhat difficult. As she attended classes in New York that were intended to polish her as a performer and personality, she was confronted with the problems that face most fledgling entertainers. She was ensnarled in hassles with booking agents and managers that earned her a reputation for being difficult to handle. As the first glimmer of success began to vanish, she retreated into silence, returning to Detroit and a personal life that she secludes from the public. [n 1963, she did appear at the Newport Jazz Festival and the Lower Ohio Jazz Festival, and in subsequent years played Bermuda, the Bahamas and Puerto Rico. Yet the plum of a major success had not come her way. There was some enthusiasm for a European tour, but her current personal manager, Ted White, who is also her husband, contends that "Her earnings wouldn't have made it possible to take along the musicians who could back her up and show off her talents in the best way. Even in this country, you have to work for practically nothing if you don't have a hit, so she just worked less."

White, a native Detroiter whose experience in show business before his alliance with Aretha was as "a sandlot" promoter not in the major leagues, contends that part of his wife's lag in her previous professional outing was due to the fact that her Columbia recordings were not geared to the rhythm and blues or rock 'n' roll market and, therefore, received limited jukebox and radio attention. A five-year contract with a one-year option precluded any drastic change in approach. "We waited out those years," says White, "but when the time came to move, we were ready. We knew we had something to offer."

When the time did come for a change, Ted and Aretha got a helping hand from Timmy Bishop, a Philadelphia deejay, and his wife, Louise, who had access to the in­ terested ear of Jerry Wexler, vice-president of Atlantic Records. A new contract re­ mItI'd and ever since that momentous day, Aretha has been waxing hit after hit. If there is any key to her resurgence, Wexler believes that it is based in the magnitude )f her talent as a singer, pianist and prolific song writer.

I'd say that she's a musical genius comparable to that other great musical genius, ~ay Charles," says the bearded recording executive who has specialized in "soul" Irtists for 15 years, having been involved with Wilson Pickett, Solomon Burke, Ruth 3rown and Charles during his earlier efforts. He believes that many parallels can be lrawn between Aretha and Ray Charles. "Both playa terrific gospel piano, which is lIle of the greatest assets one can have today," he states. "Since they have this broader alent, they can bring to a recording session a total conception of the music and thus ontribute much more than the average artist." According to Wexler, Aretha's record­ :1gs evolve out of "head arrangements." She sets the tone for the whole session. \fterwards, strings and other instrumental trappings can be built around her effort. )n her first album, Aretha accompanies herself at the piano, though an arm injury ustained during a tour with the Jackie Wilson show early this year prevented her 'om following through on many of the tunes on her second album. Unknown to llIch of the public, she was backed, on most of her hit records, through a process of ver-dubbing, by a vocal group consisting of Aretha herself and her two sisters, rma, a recording artist in her own right, and Carolyn, a singer-composer. On other utings, the Sweet Inspirations shared the spotlight. The combination seems to work ld the proof is in the success of the sound.

For some artists, the "soul" sound might be a mere artifice, but for Aretha 'anklin, it is an element deeply imbedded in herself. She has never learned how to 'pretentious enough to build a false image and deeply identifies with people on all vels who hear her music. "Everybody who's living has problems and desires just as :lo," she remarks. "When the fellow on the corner has somethin' botherin' him, he

Aretha Franklin Earns Respect

feels the same way [ do. When we cry, we all gonna cry tears, and when we laugh, we all have to smile." She is not eager to adopt any image of herself as a new queen of the blues and asserts, "The queen of the blues was and still is Dinah Washington." Though her future engagements will include some of the nation's top nightclubs, one-nighters are more suited to her as a rather withdrawn personality. "I dig playin' at night and leavin' in the morning,''' says Aretha.

Away from tile public, she shuns crowds, admitting, "When I'm not workin', I like to come in the house and sit down and be very quiet. Sometimes nobody even knows I'm home. I don't care too much about gain' out. By the time I get home, 1'1'1'

had enough of nightclubs." Her essential tastes are for the same "soul" things she sings about, and she

makes no bones about the fact that chitterlings are her favorite food, "with maybe

some hot water cornbread and greens or ham." In the flush of a new affluence that might reap for her a gross income of $500,000

this year, she anticipates, more than anything, moving into a new house she and Ted have purchased in a quiet, tree-shaded section of Detroit that is fast becoming a haven for middle-class Negroes. "I just want a big, comfortable house," she says, "where we can lock the door and have a lot of family fun. There she hopes to pursue a peaceful private life with her mate and her three sons.

While the lure of public acclaim is enticing and she wants to continue selling a million on all her records, Aretha is, underneath it all, a homebody with interests that she refuses to compromise in order to comply with public demands. During a previ­ ous phase of her career, she provoked controversy by appearing, in 1963, before an audience in Philadelphia, though eight months pregnant. The shadows of scandal that enshrouded her at the time were fanned by the fact that her secret marriage to her manager, Ted White, had not yet been revealed.

To those who might question anything she does onstage or off, she supplies a sin gIl' answer: "J must do what is real in me all ways. It might bug some and offend oth­ ers, but this is what [ must live by, the truth, so long as it doesn't impose on others."

Further Reading Awkward, Michael. SOIiI C01'ers: Rhl/thm and Blues Remakes tllld the Struggle for Artistic

Identity: Aretlla Franklill, Al Grem. Phoe!>e Snow. Durham, N.C.: Duke Univer~ity

Press,2007. Dobkin, Matt. [ NeZ'er LoZ'ed a Man the Way I Love You: Aretlm Franklin, Respect, am! Ike

Making ofa Soul Music Masterpiece. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2004. Franklin, Aretha (and David Ritz). Arl'tl1l1: From These Roots. New York: Villard, 1999. Guralnick, Peter. Sweet Soul Music: Rlrythm and Blues and the Southern Dream of Freedom.

New York: Harper & Row, 1986. Wexler, Jerry, and David Ritz. Rhythm and Blues: A Life ill American Mlisic. New York:

Alfred A. Knopf, 1993.

Discography Franklin, Aretha. Aretha. Columbia, 1961. ____. Lady Soul. Atlantic, 1967. ____ .1 NfZ'fr Loped a Mall the Way 1 Love You. Atlantic, 1968. ____ . Arrtlw LiZ'e at Fillmore West. Atlantic, ] 971. ____. Tire Defillitive SOli I Collectioll. Atlantic/WEA, 1993.

209

38. The Beatles, the "British Invasion," and Cultural Respectability

The Beatles' music emerged with such distinctiveness from the other popular music of the time that the band's popularity became a media sensation, first in the United Kingdom during 1963, then in the United States in 1964. In the United States, the novelty of a British pop group contributed to their singularity and set them apart. The energy and en­ thusiasm conveyed by their recordings and performances, the variety of repertoire, the musicality and skill of the singing and playing, all con­ veyed with an irreverence toward establishment figures- these qualities created an effect of overWhelming charisma, especially for the white, middle-class teenagers who made up the bulk of their early audience.

The Beatles consisted of four members: rhythm guitarist John lennon (1940-80) and bass guitarist Paul McCartney (b. 1942) wrote most of the songs and sang most of the lead vocals, while lead guitarist George Harrison (1943-2001) occasionally contributed songs and sang, with drummer Ringo Starr (Richard Starkey, b.1940) rounding out the group. In combining the functions of songwriting, singing, and playing, the band recalled some ofthe pioneers of rock 'n' roll, particularly Chuck Berry, with the important innovation that they were a band whose recordings repro­ duced almost uncannily their sense of camaraderie (in this, they were preceded to some extent by the girl groups and the Beach Boys). The pro­ ducer of all but one of their albums, George Martin, was also an unusually sympathetic partner; he ensured that the recordings possessed remark­ able clarity, gave them a classically trained ear to help with arrangements, and had a knack for recognizing and capturing peak performances.' Martin also contributed much to the originality of the Beatles' use of orchestral instruments when they began to use them in 1965. Despite the importance of his contribution, skeptics of the Beatles who assign all credit for their Success to Martin are surely overstating their case.

In light of the Beatles' impressive originality, it is easy to (ose sight of where they came from. Somewhat in the manner of earlier interna­ tional, multimedia superstars, such as Bing Crosby and Elvis Presley, at least Some of that originality resulted from the synthesis of preeXisting strains of popular music that had been kept more or less separate. From their start in "skiff/e" (a form of folk music performed in a highly rhythmic manner borrowed from "trad" jazz, a British adaptation of New

I. C1os" hstening 10 th" Bealles' Alilhologf! (Ihree double-CD albums filled wlth rilre recordings and alternate tak"s) sets pnwokes few quibbles about whether the best take of a gil'en song was included On the official ft'lc8.fiP.

208

The Beatles, the "British Invasion," and Cultural Respectability

Orleans-style jazz), the Beatles' early performing repertory in numerous nightclub and dance performances consisted of liberal doses of 1950S' rhythm and blues (especially Chuck Berry and Little Richard), rockabilly (especially Elvis, Carl Perkins, and the Everly Brothers), Brill Building­ produced pop music (especially the songs and arrangements of the girl groups), and the songs and performing style associated with Motown. The Beatles also occasionally included "standards" from pre-rock 'n' roll pop music, especially those that had been recently rerecorded by other artists, and influences from British music hall, a style dating back to the 19th-century, also occasionally appeared in their compositions. The Beatles' first two albums, Please Please Me and With the Beatles, released in the United Kingdom in 1963, mixed cover tunes of their night­ club repertory with original compositions.

The significance of the Beatles extends far beyond their popularity or their ability to create something fresh from a synthesis of previous styles: The Beatles, along with Bob Dylan, did more than any other pop musicians to shift the perception of popular music in the mainstream media. 2 The early article presented here-originally printed unsigned but later attributed to the London Times music critic William Mann­ shows how critics were taking the Beatles seriously even during the first year of their popularity. Mann, with his musicological terminology, even compares the Beatles' musical processes to those used by Austrian com­ poser, Gustav Mahler (1860-1911). While some of their most dedicated fans may dispute the appropriateness of this terminology for the Beatles' music, the fact that a music critic for the london Times would deign to analyze the music in this way (and approvingly at that) was significant and a harbinger of things to come.

WHAT SONGS THE BEATlES SANG •• ,

William Mann

The outstanding English composf'rs oi 1963 must seem to have been John Lennon and Paul McCartney, the talented young musicians from liverpool whose spngs have been sweeping the country since last Christmas, whether perionned by their own group, The BeatIE'S, or by the numerous other teams oi English troubadours that they also supply with songs.

2. Bernard Gendron tern1E'd this phenolnellon "cultuwl accreditation. '.' This ch€lpt(>r on the Beatles is much indehted to the chapters in Gl'ndron', book dealin~ with the band; sel' From Montmarlre to the Mudd Club: P0l'ular Music and Ihe A i'I1 II I Gmle (Chica~o: University of Chicago Press, 2002), chaps. 8-9.

SOl/rce: From Our Music Critic [William Mann], "What Songs the Bf'Jt)es Sang. The Time." December 27, 1963. p. 4. © TI,c Ti111es, December 27,1963. Used by permission.

211 210 The 19605

I am not concerned here with the sociJI phenonwnol1 of Beatlemania, which finds expression in handbags, balloons and other articles bearing the likenesses of the loved ones, or in the hysterical screaming of young girls whenever the Beatie Quartet performs in public, but with the musical phenomenon. Fot" several decades, in fact since the decline of the music-hall, England has taken her popular songs from the L'nited States, either directly or by mimicry. But the songs of Lennon and McCartney are distinctly indigenous in character, the most imaginative and inventive examples of a style that has been developing on Merseyside during the past few yt'ars. And there is a nice, rather flattering irony in the news that The Beatles have now become prime fa vouritt's in America too.:<

The strength of character in pop songs ,eems, and quite understandably, to be determined usually by the number of composers involved; when three or four peo­ ple are required to make the original tunesmith's work publicly presentable, it is un­ likely to retain much individuality or to wear very well. 111e \'irtue of The Beatles' repertory is that, apparently, they do it themselves; three of the four are composers, they are versatile instrumentalists, and when they do borrow a song from another repertory, their treatment is idiosyncratic-as whC:n Paul McCartney sings 'Till there was you' from The Music Man, a cool, easy, tasteful version of this ballad, quite with­ out artificial sentimentality.

Their noisy items are the ones that arouse teenagers' excitement. Glutinous crooning is generally out of fashion these days, and even a song about "Misery" sounds fundamentally quite cheerful; the slow, sad song about "This boy," which fig­ ures prominently in BeatIe programmes, is expressively unusual for its lugubrious music, but h~rmonically it is one of their most intriguing, with its chains of pandia­ tonic clusters, and the sentiment is acceptable because voiced cleanly and crisply. But harmonic interest is typical of their quicker songs too, and one gets the impression that they think simultaneously of harmony and melody, so firmly are the major tonic sevenths and ninths built into their tunes, and the flat-submediant key-switches, so natural is the Aeolian cadence at the end of "Not a second time" (th"e chord pro­ gression which ends Mahler's SOllg of the Eartll).

Those submediant switches from C major into A-flat major, and to a lesser extent mediant one, (e.g. the octave ascent in the famous "I want tel hold your hand") are a trademark of Lennon-McCartney songs-they do not figure much in other pop repertories, or in The Beatles' arrangements of borrowed material-and sllow signs of becoming a mannerism. The other trademark of their compositions is a firm and purposeful bass line with a musical life of its own; how Lennon and McCartney di­ vide their creative responsibilities I have yet to discover, but it is perhaps significant that Paul is the bass guitarist of the group. It may also be significant that George Har­ rison's song "Don't bother me" is harmonically a good deal nwre primitive, though it is nicely enough presented.

I suppose it is the sheer loudness of the music that appeals to Beatles admirers (there is something to be heard even through the squeals), and many parents must have cursed the electric guitar's amplification this Christmas-how fresh and euphonious the ordinary guitars sound in The Beatles' version of "Till there was you"-but parents who are still managing to suryive the decibels ,md, after copious repetition over several months, still deriving some musical ple<lsure from the

J. This sti'\temt'nt \vas " bit pren1ature when this article was published; no Beatles' recordings

entl'rl'd IJil/l'ol1nt"s Hot lOll until January 11, 1Q(>4.

The Beatles, the "British Invasion," and Cultural Respectability

overhearing, do so because there is a good deal of variety-oh, so welcome in pop music-about what they sing.

The autocratic but not by any means ungrammatical attitude to tonality (closer to, say, Peter Maxwell Davies's carols in 0 Magnum Mysifriu11I than to Gershwin or Loewe or even Lionel Bart); the texhilarating and often quasi-instrumental vocal duetting, sometimes in scat or in falsetto, behind the melodic line; the melismas with altered vowels ("I saw her yesterday-ee-ay") which have not quite become mannered, and the discreet, sometimes subtle, varieties of instrumentation-a suspicion of piano or organ, a few bars of mouth-organ obbligato, an excursion on the claves or maracas: the translation of African blues or American Western idioms (in "Baby, it's you," the Mag­ yar 8/8 meter too) into tough, sensitive Merseyside.

These are some of the qualities that make one wonder with interest what The Beatles, and particularly Lennon and McCartney, will do next, and if America will spoil them or hold on to them, and if their next record will wear as well as the others. They have brought a distinctive and exhilarating flavour into a genre of music that was in danger of ceasing to be music at all.

The following article by Theodore Strongin (music critic for the New York Times), published two months after Mann's piece, demonstrates how the intellectual apparatus of high culture could be marshaled against pop music. Strongin's article perpetuates a tradition that goes back to dismissive academic descriptions of jazz and swing,4

MUSICOLOGICALLY •••

Theodore Strongin

"You can tell right away it's the Beatles and not anyone else," is the opinion of a 15­ year-old specialist on the subject who saw the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan show last night. The age of 15 or 16 or 14 or 13 is essential in a Beatles expert.

Taking the above axiom as gospel, this listener made an attempt to find out just what is musically unique about the British visitors.

The Beatles are directly in the mainstream of Western tradition: that much may be immediately ascertained. Their harmony is unmistakably diatonic. A learned British colleague, writing L'n his home ground, has described it as pandiatonic, but I disagree.

The Beatlt's have a tendency to bnild phrases around unresolved, leading tones. This precipitates the ear into a false modal frame that temporarily turns the fifth of tile scale into a tonic, momentarily suggesting the Mixylydian [sic] mode. But every­ thing always ends as plain diatonic all the same.

Meanwhile, the result is the addition of a \'ery. very slight touch of British coun­ tryside nostalgia with a trace of Vaughan Williams to the familiar elements of the

4. For numerous t'x(lmp]es of such descripti0ns, S('P Walser, Keepins Time; Readinss in ffc:::, History (New York and Oxford: Oxforn University Press, 19(9).

501lrce: Theodore Strongin, "Musicologically ... " Nell' York Till1es, February 10, 1%4, p. 53. Copyright © 1964 bv thl' \jew York Times Co. Reprinted with permission.

212 The 19605

rock and roll prototype. "It's just that English rock and roll is more sophisticated," ex­ plained the 15-year-old authority.

As to instrumentation, three of the four Beatles (George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and John Lennon) play different sizes of electronically amplified plucked-stringed instruments. Ringo Starr ("He's just like a little puppy, he's so cute," said our specialist) plays the drums. The Beatles vocal quality can be described as hoarsely incoherent, with the minimal enunciation necessary to communicate schematic texts.

Two theories were offered in at least one household to explain the Beatles' pop­ ularity. The' specialist said "We haven't had an idol in a few years. The Beatles are different, and we have to get rid of our excess energy somehow."

The other theory is that the longer parents object with such high dudgeon, the longer children will squeal so hysterically.

Further Reading The Beatles (John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr). The

Bentles Anthology. San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 2000. Bromell, Nick. Tomorrow Never Knows: Rock and Psychedelics in tile 1960s. Chicago:

University of Chicago Press, 2000. Davies, Hunter. The Beatles: The Authorized Biography. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1968. Everett, Walter. The Beatles as Musicians: Revolver through the Anthology. New York:

Oxford University Press, 1999. ____. Tile Beatles as Musicians: The Qllilrry Mm Through l~ubber Soul. New York:

Oxford Univt'rsity Press, 2001. Gendron, Bernard. Between Montmartre and the Mudd Club: Popular Music and the Avant­

Carde. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002. Spitz, Bob. Tile Bealles: The Biogmphy. Boston: Little, Brown, 2005. Thomson, Elizabeth and David Gutman, eds. The Lennon Companion: Twenty-Fipe Years of

COlllmrnl. New York: Schirmer Books, 1987. Rorem, Ned. "The Music of the Beatles." Music Edumtors Journal 55 (1968): 33-34, 77-83. Wenner, Jann. LellllOll Remembers: The Rolling Stone Interviews. New York: Popular

Library, 1971.

Discography The Beatles. Please Please Me. Parlnphone, 1963. ____. Witll Il7e Beatles. Parlophone, 1963. ____. A Hard Day's Nigili. Parlophone, 1964. ___. Bt'atlesf<,,· Sale. I'arlophone, 1964. ____. licl!,1 f'arlophont" 1965. ____. !<lIbber SOli!. f'arlophone, 1965. ____. Yesterday aud Todalf. Capitol, 1966. ____. ReI'o!""". Capitol, 1966. ____ . Sgt. Pel'ptr'S Lonely HCl1rts Club Baud. Capitol, 1967. _~__. 7962-7966. Capitol, 1993.

39- A Hard Day's Night and Beatlemania

The Beatles' third British album, A Hard Day's Night (1964), was also the title of their first movie, and their first consisting entirely of original compositions. The movie, however, rather than the album, won them a whole legion of new converts among high-middlebrow cultural authori­ ties and audiences. Andrew Sarris's review is indicative of the pleasantly surprised reception that greeted A Hard Day's Night among the intelli­ gentsia, and Sarris was not alone in applauding the film for its incorpora­ tion of sophisticated cinematic style derived, at least partly, from the French nouvelle vague (or "New Wave"),'

BRAVO BEATLES!

Andrew Sarris

A Hard Day's Nigllt is a particularly pleasant surprise in a year so full of unexpectedly unpleasant surprises. I have no idea who is the most responsible-director Richard Lester or screenwriter Alun Owen or the Messrs John Lennon, Paul McCarh,ey, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr, better known collectively as The Beatles. Perhaps it was all a happy accident, and the lightning of inspiration will never strike again in the same spot. The fact remains that A Hard OilY'S Night has turned out to be the Citizell Kane of jukebox musicals, the brilliant crystallisation of such diverse cultural particles as the pop movie, rock 'n' roll, cinema <'('rite, the l1oUl'cll!' l'llgll!', free cin­ ema, the affectedly hand-held camera, frenzied cutting, the cult of the sexless sub­ adolescent, the semi-documentarv, and studied spontaneity. So help me, I resisted The Beatles as long as I could. As a cab driver acquaintance observed, "So what's new about The Beatks? Didn't you ever hear of Ish Kabibble?" Alas, I had. I kept looking for openings to put down The Beatles. Some of their sly crows' humour at the expense of a Colonel Blimp character in a train compartment is a bit too deliber­ ate. "I fought the war for people like you," sez he. "Bet you're sorry you won," sez they. Old Osborne ooze, sez 1. But just previously, the fruitiest looking of the fOUT predators had looked up enticingly at the bug-eyed Blimp and whimpered "Give us a kiss." DepraVity of such honest frankness is worth a hundred pseudo-literary exercises like Becket.

Stylistically, A Hard Day's Night is everything Tony Richardson's version of 7iml JOlles tried to be and wasn't. Thematically, it is everything Peter Brook's version of lord of the Flies tried to be and wasn't. Fielding's satiric gusto is coupled here with Golding'S primordial evil, and the strain hardly shows. I could have done with 2l hit

f I,

____.1%7-1970. Capitol, 1993. ____. ;lnlllll logl/1. Capitol, 1995. t 1. For another, even more surprised-sounding review, set> Bosley Crowther, "The rour Bea tl~5

in'A Hard Day's Night:" Neil' York Tillles, August 12, 1964, 41.

50"rce: Andrew Sarris, "Br"vo Beatles!" Vilil/gc Voice, August 27,1964, p. 13.

______. Alltlw!o,'(lf 2. Capitol, 1996.

213I

215 214 The 19605

less of a false sabre-toothed, rattling wreck of an old man tagged with sickeningly repetitious irony as a "clean" old man. The pop movie mannerisms of the inane running joke about one of the boys' managers being sensitively shorter than the other might have been dispensed with at no great loss.

The foregoing are trifling reservations, however, about a movie that works on every level for every kind of audience. The open-field helicopter-shot sequence of The Beatles on a spree is one of the most exhilarating expressions of high spirits I have seen on the screen 2 The razor-slashing wit of the dialogue must be heard to be believed and appreciated. One as horribly addicted to alliteration as this otherwise sensible scribE' can hardly resist a line like "Ringo's drums loom large in his legmd."

I must say I enjoyed even the music enormously, possibly because I have not yet been traumatised by transistors into open rebellion against the "Top 40" and such. (I just heard "Hello, Dolly" for the first time the other day, and the lyrics had been changed to "Hello, Lyndon.") Nevertheless I think there is a tendency to underrate rock 'n' roll because the lyrics look so silly in cold print. I would make two points here. First, it is unfair to compare R&R with Gershwin, Rodgers, Porter, Kern, et al., as if all pre-R&R music from Tin Pan Alley was an uninterrupted flow of melodious­ ness. This is the familiar fallacy of nostalgia. I remember too much brassy noise from the big-band era to be stricken by the incursions of R&R. I like the songs The Beatles sing despite the banality of the lyrics, but the words in R&R only mask the pound­ ingly ritualistic meaning of the beat. It is in the beat that the passion and togetherness is most movingly expressed, and it is the beat that the kids in the audience pick up with their shrieks as they drown out the words they have already heard a thousand times. To watch The BeatIes in action with their constituents is to watch the kind of direct theater that went out with Aristophanes, or perhaps even the Australian bush­ man. There is an empathy there that a million Lincoln Center Repertory companies cannot duplicate. Toward the end of A Hard Day's Night 1 began to understand the mystique of The Beatles. Lester's crane shot facing the audience from behind The Beatles established the emotional unity of the performers and their audience. It is a beautifully Bazinian deep-focus shot of hysteria to a slow beat punctuated by the kind of zoom shots I have always deplored in theory but must now admire in prac­ tice. Let's face it. My critical theories and preconceptions are all shook up, and I am profoundly grateful to The Beatles for such a pleasurable softening of hardening aesthetic arteries.

As to what the Beatles "mean," I hesitate to speculate. The trouble with socio­ logical analysis is that it is unconcerned with aesthetic values. A Hard Day's Night could have been a complete stinker of a movie and still be reasonably "meaningful." I like The Beatles in this moment in film history not merely because they mean some­ thing but rather because they express effectively a great many aspects of modernity that have converged inspiredly in their personalities. When I speak affectionately of their depravity, I am not commenting on their private lives, about which I know less than nothing. The wedding ring on Ringo's finger startles a great many people as a subtle Pirandellian switch from a character like Dopey of the Seven Dwarfs to a performer who chooses to project an ambiguous identity. It hardly matters.

A Hard Day's Night and Beatlemania

What interests me about The Beatles is not what they are but what they choose to express. Their Ish Kabibble hairdos,' for example, serve two functions. They be­ come unique as a group and interchangeable as individuals. Except for Ringo, the favourite of the fans, the other three Beatles tend to get lost in the shuffle. And yet each is a distinctly personable individual behind their collective fac;ade of androg­ ynous selflessness-a fa<;ade appropriate, incidentally, to the undifferentiated sex­ uality of their sub-adolescent fans. The Beatles are not merely objects, however. A frequent refrain of their middle-aged admirers is that The Beatles don't take them­ selves too seriously. They take themselves seriously enough, all right; it is their middle-aged admirers and detractors they don't take too seriously. The Beatles are a sly bunch of anti-Establishment anarchists, but they are too slick to tip their hand to the authorities. People who have watched them handle their fans and the press tell me that they make Sinatra and his clan look like a bunch of rubes at a county fair. Of course, they have been shrewdly promoted, and a great deal of the hyste­ ria surrounding them has been rigged with classic fakery and exaggeration. They may not be worth a paragraph in six months, but right now their entertaining mes­ sage seems to be that everyone is "people." Beatles and squealing sub-adolescents as much as Negroes and women and so-called senior citizens, and that however much alike "people" may look in a group or a mass or a stereotype, there is in each soul a unique and irreducible individuality.

Previous articles on the Beatles mentioned the remarkable reaction of the audience to their performances; for the most part, these references are deprecatory-"hysterical screaming of young girls" (Mann), "squealing adolescents" (Sarris), and "children [who) squeal so hysteri­ cally" (Strongin) -and gendered (hysteria has had clear associations with femininity at least since Freud's earliest theories). In the next essay, Barbara Ehrenreich, Elizabeth Hess, and Gloria Jacobs note that this intensity had its precedents in the reaction of fans to Frank Sinatra (see chapter 4) and Elvis Presley, but they then explain what separates Beatlemania from these previous phenomena in terms of both the audi­ ence and the mass media response. 4 In brief, they contend that the "experts" were slow to recognize the sexual dimension of the fans' excitement because asserting an active, powerful sexuality was revolu­ tionary and because the received wisdom of the day dictated that the life of the middle-class, white American left nothing to be discontent about. Yet later in this essay (not reprinted here), the authors connect the intensity of Beatlemania to an emerging form of female awareness that began to rebel against the twin dangers of sexuality for middle­ class girls: that of being either too sexual or too puritanical. If "publicly advertis[ing] this hopeless love [represented by Beatlemania] was to protest the calculated, pragmatic sexual repression of teenage life," then it mattered that the Beatles were "while not exactly effeminate, at least not easily classifiable in the rigid gender distinctions of middle-class

2, This scenf', ac('otnpanied by "Can't Buy Me Love" on the soundtrack, was one of the clear­ est antE'cedents of post-MTV music video and of contemporary rock film scoring; see Jeff Smith, 3. Ish Kabibble was a trumpeter and novelty singer with Kay Kyser's swing band during 111~ Tile Sounds a/Coll1l11erce Marketing ro)'ular Filll1 Music (New York: Columbia University Press, 1930s and 1940s. Kabibble wore a distinctive "pudding basin"-style haircut. 1'1'18),15'1-60. 4. The title of this essay refers to Cyndi Lauper's 1983 recording of the same name.

217 216 The 1960S

American life."s It is also surely significant that this androgynous image was a product of the gay sensibility of the Beatles' manager, Brian Epstein, providing yet another twist on the strict heterosexual dichotomies that ruled public perceptions of sexuality.6 In other, more general, terms, the Beatles represented the freedom the girls wished they could have, even as these girls celebrated their power in creating Beatlemania.

BEATLEMANIA: GIRLS JUST WANT TO HAVE FUN

Barbara Ehrenreich, Elizabeth Hess, and Gloria jacobs

... witness the birth of eve-she is rising she was sleeping she is fading in a naked field sweating the precious blood of nodding blooms ... in the eye of the arena she bends in half in service-the anarchy that exudes from the pores of her guitar are the cries of the people wailing in the rushes ... a riot of ray/dios ...

-Patti Smith, "Notice," in Babel

The news footilge shows police lines straining against crowds of hundreds of young women. The police look grim; the girls' faces are twisted with desperation or, in some cases, shining with what seems to be an inner light. TI1e air is dusty from a thousand run­ ning and scuffling feet. TI1ere are shouted orders to disperse, answered by a rising vol­ ume of cha nts and wild shrieks. The young women surge forth; the police line breaks ...

Looking at the photos or watching the news dips today, anyone would guess that this was the sixties--a demonstration-or maybe the early seventies-the beginning of the women's liberation movement. Until you look closer and see that the girls are not wearing sixties-issue jeans and T-shirts but bermuda shorts, high-necked, preppie blouses, and disheveled but unmistakably bouffant hairdos. This is not] 968 but] 964, and the girls are chanting, as they surge agilinst the police line, "I love Ringo."

Yet, if it WilS not the "movement," or a deilr-cut protest of any kind, Beatlemania was the first mass outburst of the sixties to feature women--in this case girls, who would not reilch full adulthl)()d until the seventies ilnd the emergence of a genuinely politicill movement for women's liberation. The screilming ten- to fourteen-year-old filns of 1964 did not riotfi1r anything, except the chance to remain in the proximity of

~. Barbara Ehrpnreich. Elizabeth Hpss, and Gloria Jacobs, "Beatlemania: Cirh; III'{ Wall! 10 Have FilII. from "c-makillg L(l["" TIIC FClIlilliza!iollofScx (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1987), 27,34.

6. A history "'mains to be written on the impact of gay style on British rock of the 1960s, wl",ther it be through managers, such as Brian Epstein and Andrew Loog Oldham, or the artists themselves, such as Ray Da\'ies of the Kinks (in" song like "See My Friends")' or, a little bit later, David Bowi,' and rlton John.

So/Iree: BarhrHil Ehrenrpich, et (11. "Beatlpmania: Girls lllst \A/ant to f-1m. 1/, FUll, frol11 Rr~1IItlkillg Love:

The Feminization or Sn by Barbara Ehrenreich, Elizabeth Hess, and Gloria Jacobs (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubled"y, 1YR7),1 \1-19. © IYRb by Barbara Ehrenreich, Elizabeth Hess, and Gloria Jacobs. Used by permission of D"ubleday, " division of Random House, Inc.

A Hard Day's Night and Beatlemania

their idob imd hence to remain screaming. But they did have plenty to riot against, or at least to overcome through tlw act of rioting: In a highly sexualized society (one sociologist found that the number of explicitly sexual references in the mass media had doubled between] 950 and 1960), teen and preteen girls were expected to be not only "good" and "pure" but to be the enforcers of purity within their teen society­ drawing the line for overeager boys and ostracizing girls who failed in this responsi­ bility. To ilbilndon control-to scream, faint, dash about in mobs-was, in form if not in conscious intent, to protest the sexual repressiveness, the rigid double standard of femille teen culture. It was the first and most dramatic uprising of 1/I0ll1e11'S sexual revolution.

Beatlemania, in most accounts, stands isolated in history as a mere craze-­ quirky and hard to explain. There hild been hysteria over male stars before, but noth­ ing on this scale. In its peak years-]964 and 1965-Beatlemania struck with the force, if not the conviction, of il social movement. It began in England with a report that fans had Illobbed the popUlar but not yet immortal group after a concert at the London Pallildiulll on October 13, ]963. Whether there was in fact a mob or merely a scuffle involving no more than eight girls is not clear, but the report acted as a call to mayhem. Eleven days later a huge and excited crowd of girls greeted the Beatles (returning from a Svvedish tour) ilt Heilthrow Airport. In early November, 400 Carlisle girls fought the police for four hours while trying to get tickets for a Beaties concert; nine people were hospitalized after the crowd surged forwilrd and broke through shop windows. In London and Birmingham the police could not guarantee the Beatles silfe escort through the hordes of fans. In Dublin the police chief judged that the Beaties' first visit: was "all right until the milnia degenerated into bar­ barism.'" And on the eve of the group's first US tour, Life reported, "A BeatIe who ventures out unguarded into the streets runs the very real peril of being dismem­ bered or crushed to death by his fans."t

When the BeiltJes arrived in the United States, which was still ostensibly sobered by the assassination of President Kennedy two months before, the fans knew wh~t to d~. Television had spread the word fro~ England: The ilpproach of the Beatles is a license to riot. At least 4,000 girls (some estimates run as high as 10,000) greeted them at Kennedy Airport, and hundreds more laid siege to the Plaza Hotel, keeping the stars virtual prisoners, A record 73 million Americans watched the Beatles on "The Ed Sullivan Show" on February 9, ] 964, the night "when there wasn't a hubcap stolen anywhere in America." American Beatlemania soon reached the proportions of reli­ gious idolatry. During the Beiltles' twenty-three-city tour that August, local promot­ ers were required to provide a minimum of lOO security guards to hold back the crowds. Some cities tried to ban BeatIe-bearing craft from their runways; otherwise it took heavy deployments of local police to protect the Beaties from their fans and the fans from the crush. In one city, someone got hold of the holel pillowcases th~t had purportedly been used by the Beatles, cut them into ]60,000 tiny squares, mounted them on certifiCiltcs, ilnd sold them for $1 apiece. The group packed Carnegie Hilll, Washington's Coliseum and, a year later, New York's 55,600-seat Shea Stildiunl, and in no setting, at any time, was their music audible above the frenzied screams of the audience. Tn ] 966, just under three years after the stilrt of Beatlemania, the Beatles

'Frederick Lewis, "Britons Succumb to 'Beatlemania:" NC1i' York Tillles Magazine, D"celnl>"r ], 1963, p. 124.

jTimothy Cre"n, "They Crown Their Country with a Bowl-Shaped Hairdo," Lit;', January 3 L 1964, p. 30.

219 218 The 1960s

gave their last concert-the first musical celebrities to be driven from the stage by their own fans.

In its intensity, as well as its scale, Beatlemania surpassed all previous outbreaks of star-centered hysteriil. Ypung women had swooned over Frank Sinatra in the for­ ties and screamed for Elvis Presley in the immediate pre-BeatIe years, but the Fab Four inspired an extremity of feeling usually reserved for football games or natural d.isilsters. These baby bpomers far outnumbered the generation that, thanks to the censors, had only been ilble to see [Jresley's upper torso on "The Ed Sullivan Show." Seeing (whole) Beatl,,'s on Sullivan was exciting, but not enough. Watching the band on television was il thrill-particularly the close-ups-but the real goal was to leave home and meet the Beatles. The appropriate reaction to contact with them-such as occupying the same auditorium or city block-was to sob uncontrollably while screaming, 'Tm gonna die, I'm gonna die," or, more optimistically, the name of a fa­ vorite Beatie, until the onset of either unconsciousness or laryngitis. Girls peed in their pants, fainted, or simply col1apsed from the emotional strain. When not in the vicinity of the Beatles-ancl only a small proportion of fans ever got within shrieking distance of their idols-girls exchanged Beatie magazines or cards, and gathered to speculate obsessi\'e\y on the details and nuances of BeatIe life. One woman, who now administers il Washington, D.C.-based public interest group, recalls long discussions with other thirteen-year-111ds in Orlando, Maine:

I especially liked talking about the Beatles with other girls. Someone would say, "What do you think Paul had for breakfast?" "Do you think he sleeps with a different girl every night?" Or, "Is John really the leader?" "Is George really more sensitive?" And like that for hours.

This fan reached the zenith of junior high school popularity after becoming the only girl in town tp travel to a BeatIes' concert in Boston: "My mother had made a new dress for me to wear [to the concert] and when I got back, the other girls wanted to cut it up and auction off the pieces."

To adults, Beatlemania was an affliction, an "epidemic," and the Beatles them­ selves were only the carriers, or even "foreign germs." At risk were all ten- to fourteen-year-nld girls, or at least all white girls; blacks were disdainful of the Beatles' initially derivative and unpolished sound. There appeared to be no cure except for age, and the media pundits were fond of reassuring adults that the girls who had screamed for Frank Sinatra had grown up to be responsible, settled house­ wives. H therp was a shortcut to recovery, it certainly wasn't easy. A group of Los Angeles girls organizPd a detox effort called "Beatlesaniacs, Ltd.," offering "group therapy for those living near active chapters, and withdrawal literature for those going it alone ilt far-flung nutposts." Among the rules for recovery were: "Do not mention the word Beatles (or beetles)," "Do not mention the word England," "Do nol sppak with an English accent," and "Do not speak English.'" In other words, Beatlemania was as inevitable as acne and gum-chewing, and adults would just havp to wpather it out.

But why was it happening? And why in particular to an America that prided itself on its post-McCarthy m,ltmity, its prosperity, and its clear position as the num­ ber one world power? True, there were sncial problems that not even Reader's Digest

'''How to Kick the Beatie Habit," Life, AllgU,t 28, 1964, p. 66.

A Hard Day's Night and Beatlemania

could afford to be smug about-racial segregation, for example, and the newly discovered poverty of "the other America." But these were things that an energetic President could easily handle-or so most people believed at the time-and if "the Negro problem," as it was called, generated overt unrest, it was seen as having a cor­ rective function and limited duration. Notwithstanding an attempted revival by presidential candidate Barry Goldwater, "extremism" was out of style in any area of expression. In colleges, "coolness" implied a detached and rational appreciation of the status quo, and it was de rigueur among all but the avant-garde who joined the Freedom Rides or signed up for the Peace Corps. No pne, not even Marxist philoso­ pher Herbert Marcuse, could imagine a reason for Widespread discontent among the middle class or for strivings that could not be satisfied with a department store charge account-much less for "mania."

In the media, adult experts fairly stumbled over each other to offer the most re­ assuring explanations. The New York Times Magazine offered a "psychological, an­ thropological," half tongue-in-cheek account, titled "Why the Girls Scream, Weep, Flip." Drawing on the work of the German sociologist Theodor Adorno, Times writer David Dempsey argued that the girls weren't really out of line at all; they were merely "conforming." Adorno had diagnosed the 1940s jitterbug fans RS "rhythmic obedients," who were "expressing their desire to obey." They needed to subsume themselves into the mass, "to become transformed into an insect." Hence, "jitterlmg," and as Dempsey triumphantly added: "Beatles, too, are a type of bug ... and to 'beatle: as to jitter, is to lose one's identity in an automatized, insectlike activity, in other words, to obey." If Beatlemania was more frenzied than the outbursts of obedi­ ence inspired by Sinatra or Fabian, it was simply because the music was "more fran­ tic," and in some animal way, more compelling. It is generally admitted "that jungle rhythms influence the 'beat' of much contemporary dance activity," he wrote, blithely endorsing the stock racist response to rock 'n' roll. Atavistic, "aboriginal" in­ stincts impelled the girls to scream, weep, and flip, whether they liked it or not: "It is probably no coincidence that the Beatles, who provoke the most violent response among teen-agel's, resemble in manner the witch doctors who put their spells on hundreds of shuffling and stamping natives.'"

Not everyone saw the resemblance between Beatlemanic girls and "natives" in a reassuring light however. Variety speculated that Beatlemania might be "a phenomenon closely linked to the current wave of racial rioting."t It was hard to miss the element of defiance in Beatlemania. If Beatlemania was conformity, if was conformity to an imperative that overruled adult mores and even adult jaws. In the mass experience of Beatlemania, as fpr example at a concert or an airport, a girl who might never have contemplated shoplifting could assault a policpman with her fists, squirm under police barricades, and othenvise invite a disorderly conduct charge. Shy, subdued girls could go berserk. "Perky," pony tailed girls of the type favored by early sixties sitcoms could dissolve in histrionics. In quieter cnntemp la­ tion of their idols, girls could see defiance in the Beatles or project it onto them. Nen'slPcck quoted Pat Hagan, "il pretty, 14-year-old Girl Scout, nurse's aide, and daughter of a Chicago lawyer ... who pre\'iously dug 'West Side Story,' Emily Dickinson, Robert Frost, and Elizabeth Barrett Browning: 'They're tough: she said

'Dal'id Dempsey, "Why the Girls Scrpam, Weep, Flip," New York Times M(/snz;I1<', Februarv

23,1964, p. 15. 'Quoted in Nicholas Schaffner. The Brntlrs Forn',,,, (New York: McCraw-Hili, 19 77), p. j f>.

of the Beatles. 'Tough is like when you don't conform.... You're tumultuous when you're young, and each generation has to have its idols."'* America's favorite sociologist, David Riesman, concurred, describing Beatlemania as "a form of protest against the adult world."t

There was another element of Beatlemania that was hard to miss but not always easy for adults to acknowledge. As any casual student of Freud would have noted, at least part of the fans' energy was sexual. Freud's initial breakthrough had been the insight that the epidemic female "hysteria" of the late nineteenth century­ which took the form of fits, convulsions, tics, and what we would now call neuroses-was the product of sexual repression. In 1964, though, confronted with massed thousands of "hysterics," psychologists approached this diagnosis warily. After all, despite everything Freud had had to say about childhood sexuality, most Americans did not like to believe that twelve-year-old girls had any sexual feelings to repress. And no normal girl-or full-grown woman, for that matter-was sup­ posed to have the libidinal voltage required for three hours of screaming, sobbing, incontinent, acute-phase Beatlemania. In an article in Scimce News Letter titled "Beatles Reaction Puzzles Even Psychologists," one unidentified psychologist offered a carefully phrased, hygienic explanation: Adolescents are "going through a strenuous period of emotional and physical growth," which leads to a "need for expressiveness, especially in girls." Boys have sports as an outlet; girls have only the screaming and swooning afforded by Beatlemania, which could be seen as "a release of sexual energy." j

For the girls who participated in Beatlemania, sex was an obvious part of the excitement. One of the most common responses to reporters' queries on the sources of Beatlemania was, "Because they're sexy." And this explanation was in itself a small act of defiance. It was rebellious (especially for the very young fans) to lay claim to sexual feelings. It was even more rebellious to lay claim to the active, desiring side of a sexual attraction: The Beatles were the objects; the girls were their pursuers. The Beatles were sexy; the girls were the ones who perceived them as sexy and acknowl­ edged the force of an ungovernable, if somewhat disembodied, lust. To assert an active, powerful sexuality by the tens of thousands and to do so in a way calculated to attract maximum attention was more than rebellious. It was, in its own unformu­ lated, dizzy way, revolutionary.

Further Reading See chapter 38.

Discography See chapter 38.

'''George, I'aul, Ringo and John," Newsweek, February 24, J964, p. ,'14. '''Wh"t the Be"lIes Prove About Tepn,agers," U.S. Nm's « World Rc!'tlrl, Febru"ry 24,1964,

p.88.

j "Ikatlps Re"ction ['uzzlps EVe'n Psychologists," SeiCllec News Letter, Februmy 29, 1964, p. 141.

40. England Swings, and the Beatles Evolve on Revolver and Sgt. Pepper

The album A Hard Day's Night, along with the two that followed­ Beatles for Sale (1964) and Help! (1965, also the title of their second movie)-featured a steady expansion of musical and technological resources. The Beatles had begun to use four-track recording on A Hard Day's Night, which increased the possibilities of overdubbing (j.e.,layer­ ing vocal and instrumental parts in succession, rather than recording everything at once). The expansion of instrumentation was modest on these albums but nonetheless significant as more songs featured acoustic guitars, additional percussion instruments, and piano and organ, as well as unusual instrumental effects, such as the guitar feed­ back that opens '" Feel Fine" (1964, from Beatles for Sale). One song from Help!, "Yesterday," was the first Beatles' song to feature orchestral instruments. Compared to the thick texture found in most pop recordings employing orchestral instruments, the chamber ensemble texture of the string quartet on "Yesterday" produced a novel and relatively trans­ parent sound.

The modest sense of evolution found in the Beatles' early albums. regardless of its novelty for a rock 'n' roll group, did little to prepare the public for what was to happen next. On Rubber Soul, released late in 196 5, the combination of subtle instrumentation with introspection of lyric content and an "artsy" cover photo was novel within the pop music context of the time.' The U.s. version of the album enhanced the effect of seriousness by deleting several of the songs with clearer ties to rock 'n' roll and by adding some quieter acoustic tracks that had been left off the U.S. release of Help.' Many listeners shared Brian Wilson's reaction to Rubber Soul (described earlier in the excerpt from Wilson's autobiog, raphy; see chapter 29). On the eve of the explosion of media attention to the counterculture and psychedelia, Rubber Soul and its successor Revolver (1966), along with the concurrent albums of Bob Dylan, con, vinced many that rock could be the music of adults, even those with intellectual inclinations. While Dylan had primarily brought notions of artistic sincerity with him from the folk music movement, where such

1. One rpcent artid" described the envpr of Rubber Soul as "the first suggestion of p,;ychedeli, ". with its hallucinatory photo of the band and distorted Art Nouveau-derived lettering"). Spe Steve Jones and Martin Sorger, "Covering Music: A Brief Historv and Analysis of Album Cover Design," 101/71111/ of Popular Music Studies, 11-12 (1999-2000): 68-102.

2. British albums typically contained 14 songs, rather than 12 in thp United State,;, rpsulting i]l differpnt versions of albums rplpased on both sidps of the Atlantic.

221

222 The 1960s

notions were connected to creating a sense of community between per­ former and audience, the Beatles achieved their sense of authenticity through their allusions to high art. Sarris's review, in chapter 39, de­ scribed how A Hard Day's Night helped accomplish this cultural accred­ itation, but many of the songs released in 1965-66 achieved a sense of artiness musically via format complexity, textural variety, and lyrical introspection.

With Richard Goldstein's review of Revolver, we enter the realm of a new form of criticism that arises from a sensibility and milieu similar to that of the music it describes. While earlier critics. such as Robert Shelton, Nat Hentoff, and Ralph ). Gleason, had written sympathetically about popular music, their critical sensibilities were honed in the 1940S and 1950S on jazz and folk music. Goldstein was among the first of a new breed of critic who had come of age with "rock music" (now distinct from the earlier "rock 'n' roll") and who were trying to articulate an alternative aesthetic that might correspond with the new music. Goldstein asserts his belief in the validity of aesthetic contemplation for rock when he writes "we will view this album in retrospect as a key work in the development of rock 'n' roll into an artistic pursuit." That Goldstein (and other early rock critics) devoted a lot of space to the Beatles was not fortuitous: he wrote in a later piece (on Sgt. Pepper) that "Without [the Beatles] there could be no such discipline as 'rock criticism.' The new music is their thing.'"

POP EVE: ON "REVOLVER" Richard Goldstein

SWINGING LONDON, August 17-As though displaying unswerving loyalty to its idols, British youth has flipped completely over the new Beatles album "Revolver." The single chosen from these songs-"Yellow Submarine b/w Eleanor Rigby"­ came on the charts one week ago at number four. Today it is number one. The entire Ollbum is in the top twenty. Large record stores and tiny street stalls feature mass dis­ plays of the art-nouveau-ish album jacket. The sound of "Revolver" blrlres from win­ dow after window. John harmonizes with Paul in greengrocers and boutiques. ~eorge plays his sitar from cars stalled in traffic. Ringo ricochets from the dome of 3t. Paul's. The Beatles are harder to avoid than even the Americans.

But there is more than mere adulation behind the sudden conquest of Britain Jy this particular LI'. "Revolver" is a revolutionary record, as important to the ~xpansion of pop territory as was "Rubber Soul." It was apparent last year that the

3. Richard Goldstein. "Pop EyE': ] Blew My Cool Through the New York Times," Village Voice.

uly 20, 1967: 14,25-26.

,Ollrce: Richard Goldstpin, "['01' Eye: On 'Revo]wr,'" Village Voice, August 25, ] 966, Pl" 23,25. Reprintpd with permission by the author.

England Swings, and the Beatles Evolve on Revolver and Sgt. Pepper 223

12 songs in "Rubber Soul" represented an important advance. "Revolver" is the great leap forward. Hear it once and you know it's important. Hear it twice, it makes sense. Third time around, it's fun. Fourth time, it's subtle. On the fifth hearing, "Revolver" becomes profound.

If "Rubber Soul" opened up areas of baroque progression and Oriental instru­ mentation to pop commercialization, "Revolver" does the same for electronic music. Much of the sound in this new LP is atonal, and a good deal of the vocal is dissonant. Instead of drowning poor voices in echo-chamber acoustics, "Revolver" presents the mechanics of pop music openly, as an integral part of musical composition. Instead of sugar and sex, what we get from the control knobs here is a bent and pulverized sound. John Cage move over, the Beatles are now reaching a super-receptive audi­ ence with electronic sound.

Resemble Mantra The key number on the album is that last track, "Tomorrow Never Knows." No one can say what actually inspired the song, but its place in the pantheon of psychedelic music is assured. The lyrics resemble a mantra in form and message:

Turn off your milld Relax and float downstream This is 1I0t dying This is 1I0t dying

Lay dowlI all thought Sli rrender to the void It is shillillg It is shilling

That you l11aI! see tlze mealling of wi liz ill It is being It is being

Love is all and love is everyolle It is knowing It is kllowing .

While not unprecedented, the combination of acid-Buddhist imagery and rock beat had never before been attempted with such complexity. At first, the orchestration sounds like Custer's last stand. Foghorn-like organ chords and the sound of bird·like screeching overshadows the vocal. But the overall effect of this hodge-podge is a very effective suspension of musical reality. John's vocal sounds distant and God-like. What he is saying transcends almost everything in what was once called pop music. The boundaries will now have to be re-negotiated.

"Revolver" also represents a fulfillment of the raga-Beatie sound. A George Harrison composition, "Love You To," is a functioning raga, with a natural beat and an engaging vocal advising: "Make love all day long/Make love singing songs."

"Eleanor Rigby" is an orchestrated ballad about the agony of loneliness. Its char­ acters, Eleanor herself and Father McKenzie, represent sterility. Eleanor "died in the church and was buried along with her name." The good father writes "words to the

224 The 1960s

sermon that no one will hear. No one comes near." As a commentary on the state of modern religion, this song will hardly be appreciated by those who see John Lennon as an anti-Christ" But "Eleanor Rigby" is really about the unloved and un-cared for. When Eleanor makes up, the narrator asks: "Who is it for?" While the father darns his socks, the question is: "What does he care?"

More Next Door "Yellow Submarine" is as whimsical and child-like as its Hip side is metaphysical. Its subject is an undersea utopia where "our friends are all aboard/many more of them live next door," and where "we live a life of ease/Everyone of us has all he needs."

"For No One" is one of the most poignant songs on the record. Its structure ap­ proaches madrigal form-with an effective horn-solo counterpoint. Its lyrics are in an evocative Aznavour bag.

"Tax1llan" is the album's example of political cheek, in which George enumer­ ates Britain's current economic woes. At one point, the group joins in to identify the villains. "Tilxman-Mr. Wilson ... Taxman-Mr. Heath." They lay it right on the non­

partisan line. Therp is some mediocre material on this album. But the mystique forming

around "Revolver" is based on more than one or two choice tracks-it encompasses the record as a whole.

It is a bit difficult to gauge the importance of "Revolver" from this city, where it has become gospel and where other beat groups are turning out cover copies like Guttenberg Bibles. But it seems now that we will view this album in retrospect as a key work in the development of rock 'n' roll into an artistic pursuit.

If nothing else, "Revolver" must reduce the number of cynics where the future of pop music is concerned--even on the violent side of the Atlantic.

The Beatles' critical acceptance reached new heights with the release of their next album, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967). The album was a loosely organized "concept" album, simulating a concert given by the Beatles' alter egos-the namesake of the album. The album made extensive use of the recording studio, incorporating numerous sound effects, tape collages, orchestral instruments, and sound process­ ing. The brief article that follows appeared in Newsweek and documents how Sgt. Pepper won over even those middlebrow publications that had maintained a condescending stance toward popular music until that point, although the author cannot completely relinquish the patronizing tone of yore adopted by such publications. While the album won new ad­ mirers for the Beatles' music, and most rock fans and critics were daz­ zled, not all agreed. One of the disenchanted, Richard Goldstein, pub­ lished a review of the album and a defense of the review; in both cases, he argued that innovations in instrumentation and recording techniques were leading formal innovations in songwriting, rather than the other

4. This is probably a reference to Lpnnnn's remarks, published in March 1966, that the Bealles

were "more populor than Jesus," a comment that when rep"ated in the United States caused a

furor on tl1<' eve of their 1966 tour.

England Swings, and the Beatles Evolve on Revolver and 5gt. Pepper 225

way around, much to the detriment of the Beatles' music. s The release of Sgt. Pepper coincided with the Beatles' withdrawal from "live" perfor­ mance, a coincidence that suggested to Goldstein that performance has the potential to rein in excesses that result from the pursuit of dazzling effects in the recording studio.

IT'S GETTING BETTER ...

Jack Kroll

The problem of choosing Britain's new Poet Laureate is easy. The obvious choice is the BeatIes. They would be the first laureates to be really popular sine" Tennvson­ their extraordinary new LP, "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Balld," has been out for two weeks and has already sold 1.5 million copies in the U.S. alone. And the BeatIes' recent LP's "Rubber Sou!," "Revolver," and now "Sgt. Pepper" are really volumes of aural poetry in the McLuhan ag"."

Indeed, "Sgt. Pepper" is such an organic work (it took four months to make) that it is like a pop "Fa<;ade," the suite of poems by Edith Sitwell musicalized by William Walton. Like "Fa<;ade," "Sgt. Pepper" is a rollicking, probing language-and-sound vaudeville, which grafts skin from all three brows-high, middle, and low-into a pulsating collage about mid-century manners and madness.

111e vaudeville starts immediately on the first track, in which the Beatles, adding several horn players, create the "persona" of the album-Sgt. Pepper's band, oompahing madly away with the elephant-footed rhythm, evoking the good old days when music spoke straight to the people with tongues of brass, while dubbed in crowds cheer and applaud as the BeatIes make raucous fun of their own colossal popularity.

After this euphoric, ironic, nostalgic fanfare, the Beatles leave Sgt. Pepper polishing his coronet in the wings and go on with the show, creating little lyrics, dramas, and satires on homely virtues, homely disasters, homely people and a II the ambiguities of home. "She's leaving home," sing John and Paul, as a harp flutters, a string group makes genteel aspidistra sounds and a lugubrious cello wraps the soggy English weather around the listener's ears. The song is a flabby family fiasco in miniature, spiking the horrors of the British hearth like a stripped down Osborne play. "Me used to be an angry young man," sings Paul in "Getting Better," and adds "it's getting better all the time," as the group sarcasticallv repeats "get-ting bet-teT, get-ting bet-ter" in those Liverpudlian accents.

Vision Getting better? Well, there's John's vision of a vinyl Arcadia, with it's Sitwellian im­ ages: "Cellophane flowers of yellow and green ... Plasticine porters with looking-glass

5. Richard Goldstein, "We Still Need the Beatles, hut .. ," Ntll' )'Jrk Times. June 18,1%7,

sec. II, p. 24; and idem., "Pop Eye: I Blew My Cool Through the New York Times," Village Voice,

July 20, 1967: 14, 2,"-26.

6. This reference to Marshall McLuhan echoes remarks made by Richard Goldstein in an arti­

cle reprinted in chapter 48; see "Pnp Eye: Evaluating Media," ViI/age Voice, July 14, 1966,6·-7.

Source: Jack Kroll, "It's Getting Better ... ," Ncu',moeek, June 26,1967, p. 70. © 1967 Newsweek, Inc All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission.

226 The 1960s

ties" which turns Wordsworth's idealized Lucy into a mod goddess, "Lucy in the sky with diamonds." And then there's Paul announcing ''I'm painting my room in the col­ orful way / And when my mind is wandering/There I will go/ And it really doesn't matter if I'm wrong I'm right/Where I belong I'm right." But even this manifestation of psychedelic individualism is undercut as George's sitar boings one note relentlessly like a giant mocking frog.

"Within You Without You" is George Harrison's beautiful new cuddle-up with Mother India. Backed by three cellos, eight violins, three tambouras, a dilruba, a tabla, and a table-harp, George plays the sitar as he chants Vedantic verities such as "The time will come when you see we're all one, and life flows on within you and without you." These Himalayan homilies are given powerful effect by the wailing, undulating cascade of sound which turns the curved, infinite universe of Indian music into a perfect tonal setting for the new pantheism of the young. But even here, the Beatles, like Chaplin, deflate their own seriousness as the song ends-to be fol­ lowed by a crowd laughing.

Some critics have already berated the Beatles far the supersophisticated elec­ tronic technology on this record. But it is useless ta lament the simple old days of the MersE'Y sound. The Beatles have lost their innocence, certainly, but loss of innocence is, increasingly, their theme and the theme of a more "serious" new art from the sto­ ries of Donald Barthelme to the plays of Harold Pinter.

The new Beatles are justified by the marvelous last number alone: "A Day in the Life," which was foolishly banned by the BBC because of its refrain ''I'd love to turn you on." But this line means many things, coming as it does after a series of beauti­ fully sorrowful stanzas in which John confronts the world's incessant bad news sigh­ ing "Oh boy" with a perfect blend of innocence and spiritual exhaustion. Evoking the catatonic metropolitan crown (like Eliot's living dead flowing across London Bridge), John's wish to "turn you on" is a desire to start the bogged-down juices of life itself. This point is underscored by an over-whelming musical effect, using a 41-piece orchestra-a growling, bone-grinding crescendo that drones up like a giant crippled turbine struggling to spin new power into a foundered civilization. This number is the Beatles' "Waste Land," a superb achievement of their brilliant and startlingly effective popular art.

Further Reading See chapter 38.

Discography See chapter 38.

41. The British Art School Blues

The Beatles hailed from Liverpool, a seaport on England's northwest coast. Liverpool had long had access to the latest releases from the United States, and, consequently, other bands (in addition to the Beaties) developed a blend of rockabilly, pop, and R&B for playing in local dance halls and nightclubs, resulting in a style dubbed "Merseybeat" by the British music press. In the wake of the Beatles, other Merseybeat artists, such as Gerry and the Pacemakers, Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas, and Peter and Gordon (not from Liverpool but with a song written by Lennon and McCartney) had hits in the United States, thus inspiring the media to coin the term "British Invasion" to describe the phenomenon. It had been rare for any British artists to penetrate the American pop market until that time, and this sudden success set off a fad for all things British.

Concurrent with the pop-oriented Merseybeat artists, a more blues­ oriented music scene was thriving down in London, fueled by record en­ thusiasts and collectors, along with refugees from British art schools. The role of art schools cannot be underestimated in the development of a distinctive form of British rock 'n' roll: With no real equivalent in the United States, art schools in Britain filled a gap somewhere between university (which during the 1950S and 1960s was still a fairly exclusive affair) and technical or trade schools. Better-than-average students with some vague artistic inclination were often sent to art school, where they would presumably learn a trade, such as graphic design. These schools became hotbeds for aspiring pop musicians, some of whom even absorbed some fashionable theories about art along the way.' The Rolling Stones' lead guitarist, Keith Richards (b. 1942), memorably described his experience:

I mean in England, if you're lucky, you can get into art school. It's somewhere they put you if they can't put you anywhere else. If you can't saw wood straight or file metal. It's where they put me to learn graphic design because I happened to be good at drawing apples or something. Fifteen ... I was there for three years and meanwhile I learned how to play guitar. latta guitar players in art school. A lot of terrible artists too. It's funny.'

Several groups from the London blues and British art school scenes achieved commercial success during this period, most notably the Kinks, the Who, the Yardbirds, and the Rolling Stones. The Kinks scored three

1. For an extensive study of the impact of British art school on the development of British rock, see Simon Frith and Howard Horne, A,-f il1to Pop (London: Methuen, 1987).

2. Robert Greenfield, "Keith Richard: Gotto Keep it Growing:' in Th/' [,,,lIing Sf0111' iI,ten'i"",. Vol. 2 (New York: Straight Arrow, 1973, 218; first published in Rollil1g Sfonr in August 1971).

227

229 228 The 1960s

hits in a row in the United States in late 1964-early 1965 with "You Really Got Me," "All Day and All of the Night," and "Tired of Waiting." The first two of these songs were proto-heavy metal, constructed around primal riffs played on a highly distorted electric guitar. Subsequent Kinks' recordings saw them developing a style based on British music hall influences and ironic, detached personae ("Well Respected Man," "Sunny Afternoon"), presenting an interesting antithesis to the "authen­ tic" ethos so prevalent during the era. Many have viewed this self­ consciousness and the nonblues sound of their later music as peculiarly representative of a British-identified pop, with main songwriter Ray Davies (b. 1944) seen as particularly responsible for this sensibility.

The Yardbirds, on the other hand, came out of the same London blues scene as the Rolling Stones and recorded numerous covers of American blues recordings, especially songs associated with the Chicago blues. Their American hits included both bluesy songs, such as "I'm a Man," and the more pop-oriented "For Your Love." The Yardbirds are also notable for having featured a succession of guitarists who eventually became famous on their own or as leaders of other groups: Eric Clapton (b. 1945), Jeff Beck

(b. 1944), and Jimmy Page (b. 1944)· The Who had a main songwriter, Pete Townshend (b. 1945), who did

time in art school. The band was associated with the Mods, a London subculture of the mid-1960s that worshipped American R&B and had a particular fondness for motor scooters, smart clothes, and ampheta­ mines. The Who's music included blues influences at times, along with generous dollops of ironic self-consciousness. Master manipulators of mass cultural symbols, the band began wearing clothing redolent of "old England" years before Sgt. Pepper. They were also practitioners of performance art-their stage act featured a kind of highly theatricalized violence, which for a time included the destruction of their equipment. Pete Townshend became one of the more articulate spokespeople for understanding 1960s rock through the prism of modernist theories about art. The Who's music presented two somewhat opposed tendencies: an emphasis on performance and the enduring values of early rock 'n' roll and the blues, and an exploration of extended forms associated with art music, which reached its apogee in the "rock opera," Tommy.3

The Rolling Stones were the most famous band to emerge from the early 1960s London blues scene, and they had roots in art school as well. The Stones were quickly pegged in the press as a scruffy foil to the Beatles' bohemian charm. The following article is one of the earliest in the British music press to seize upon the rebellious image of the Stones, an image that seemed to flaunt its artificiality. The music press did little to hide its complicity in the production of this image: An article appearing a month later, in March 1964, featured a headline screaming, "Would You Let Your

3. For Pele Townshend's witty appraisal of the Who's career from 1965 to 1971, see Peter Townshend, Re\'i,'w of "The Who: MeatII, Bealll, 13iS, lllld BOllI/Cli," R"I/illg StOlle, December 7, 1971.

The British Art School Blues

Sister Go with a Rolling Stone?"; the headline, however, had little to do with the content of the article, which was little more than a profile of "life on the road" with the band. 4 The article reprinted here appeared in Melody Maker, one of the two leading British popular music magazines, along with the New Musical Express. At a time when no real equivalents existed in the United States, these magazines mixed informative profiles with tabloid-style sensationalism. The author, Ray Coleman, who later went on to write respectable biographies of pop musicians, seems to be writing with tongue firmly placed in cheek.

REBELS WITH A BEAT

Ray Coleman

"Wasn't that the Rolling Stones you just left?" asked the taxi driver as I left a restaurant in London's Mayfair.

"Yes. What do you think of them?" "A bunch of right 'erberts!" he replied with the cutting pertinence so typical of

the London cabbie. '''Ere, aren't they the boys they say are trying to knock the Beatles off the top?"

While cab drivers are often noted for their lack of tact, some have rare percep­ tion. Had [ been an agent or a record chief, I would probably have signed that taxi driver immediately as my trends adviser.

The Rolling Stones might have had other ideas, like punching him on the nose. Because they deeply resent any suggestion that they are attempting to overtake the Beatles.

Yet if the BeatIes are to be knocked from their perch in the future, by a British group, the popular notion is that the Rolling Stones could easily be their successors.

Why? Their image is perfect ... five disheveled rebels who have already made a firm imprint on the hit parade, who have gained a huge following among young people, who never wear stage uniforms, and who JUST DON'T CARE.

There are even rumblings inside show business of a swing against the BeatJes in favor of the Rolling Stones. Many observers endorse the view of an alert writer to Melody Maker's Mailbag.

She asserted that young pop fans instinctively turn against an idol whom their par­ ents endorse, like the Beatles. Fans actually enjoy hearing their elders spurning their worship of their heroes. That way, there is an outlet for their emotional involvement.

Horrors That taxi driver we met earlier was aged 42. He loathed the Rolling Stones. Like cer­ tain others he considers them downright scruffy, hairy horrors who need a severe talking-to from Lord Montgomery.

4. Ray Coleman, "Would You Let Your Sister Go with a Rolling Stone?" Melody Milker, March 14, 1964,8. Note that this article was written by the same author as, and appeared in the same maga­ zine a mere montl1later than, the article reprinted in this anthology.

SOllrce: Ray Coleman, "Rebels with a Beat." Melody Milker, February 8, 1964, p. 11. © Ray Coleman/Melody Maker/IPC Syndication. Used by permission.

231 230 The 19605

I have no psychiatric or sociological qualifications, but I think I can confirm that the Rolling Stones are 100 percent human beings, acutely aware of what is going on.

They have no leader, but Mick Jagger. 19-year-old ex-economics student (lead singel~ harmonica) and Keith Richard (19, ex-art student, guitarist) do most of the talking.

The others are Brian Jones, aged 2lJ (harmonica, guitar), whom the rest describe as an ex-Iayabout; Bill Wyman (22, bass guitarist, fonner electronics man); and 22-year-old drummer Charlie Watts, a man of few words who claims to have been a brilliant advertising executive before turning to music.

They all come from Southern England, and have a close association with Rich­ mond, where they played a seven-month residency when started under their present title 18 months ago.

"Yes!" replied Jagger when I asked if they were jealous of the Beatles' success. "Nol" said the others. With that formality over, we switched to talk of images and money, untidiness and fans.

Jagger spoke: "Yeah, we know about the image. 1 think most groups need one. You see, you can get so far without an image in people's minds, but as soon as you make a not-so-hot record, you feel it.

"If you've got an image, you sell the records on the image, if you see what I mean, and you can always rely on a following whatever you do.

Strange "But we didn't all sit down and say 'right, let's be untidy and let's not have uniforms and let's grow our hair long like the Beatles' or anything like that'."

Wyman said: "The image was a thing that just happened. We always carried on like this. People thought, when we started, that we were so strange to look at. Now we're lumbered with the image."

The difference [between the Stones and the Beatles] is that Keith and Mick do not write their own material, but work on orders for songs from other groups and solo artists.

Visually, the Rolling Stones are not the prettiest quintet in the land. Although they dpny it, the truth is that they are angry young rebels who scorn conformity.

Groan "We're not deliberiltely untidy," says Keith. "We think il lot of this 'rebel' thing has been brought up by people thinking too much about it. People like you come up to us and say 'are you rebels?' The answer's no."

To which one could reply that they are either rebels or blatant exhibitionists. Said Charlie Watts: "We like it this way-we like to please ourselves what we do.

Wl' don't like this 'big star' bit. We get treated by the fans as just ordinary blokes, and that's good. There's none of this 'fab gear' and all that."

I asked how much they parned today and how much they earned when they started. At once, their publicist and co-manager, 20-year-old Andrew Oldham, joined the conversation.

"It's abuut 20 times more than we got when we started," Mick Jagger stated. "Abuul £1 ,500 a week for personal appearances, that's between them, and exclud­

ing record rOyillties," said Andrew, who now sports a Rolling Stone-type hair style.

The British Art School Blues

And what about that hair style? There was a groan of horror at the mere sugges­ tion that it had been described as BeatIe-ish.

"Look," said Keith, "These hair styles had been quite common down in London long before the Beatles and the rest of the country caught on. At art school and years ago, ours had always been the same."

"Look at Jimmy Savill'," urged Jagger. "He had his like it is long before others started that style. It's the samp with us."

"And Adam Faith," added Bill Wyman. "He had hair like the Beatles years ago, didn't he?"

"I dunno," Richard said to Wyman. "J reckon your style came direct from the Three Stooges."

They talked about extravagancies now they had money, and disclosed that they had few. "I\obody's gone really mad with money," said Keith, "except that Charlie's bought a blue suede coat."

"I spend a lot of money on records," said \Vyman "Six new LPs a week." "You can't," declared Keith. "There aren't six good LPs issued a week." "Well, I do, and that's where the money goes," said Bill.

"Charlie likes jazz," said Jagger. "He's the only one in the group who does, really." Wyman said he preferred R&B from Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis, "and Fats Waller." "I go for singers like Ben E. King" said Jagger. "So do L," said Keith. "And Muddy Waters."

Mates

Do the Stones call themselves an R&B group? "We claim to be R&B as much as ill1Y­ one," Richard said. "We were playing R&B material long before this beat craze got going.

"You know, the beat craze that's going on at the mnment will last longer than a lot of people think. Kids realize that having four or five stars, like a group, is better than having one star, and groups are improving tremendously all the time.

"The Searchers' 'Needle and Pins' is the best record thev ever made." Was there any prejudice from promoters because of their dress habits? "Some­

times," said Keith. "They used to have this attitude of 'that scruffy lot from London who don't turn up on time and are nasty to look at."

"But once we appear, we always get re-booked." "TIley just think we're layabouts," addf'd Wyman. "Well, they can lump it," announced Keith. "They callus the ugliest pop group in the country," admitted Wym~n. "We could

name a few uglier people in the business," said Jagger, whose face creases jnto a mammoth smile at the slightest provocation. "Yes, guite a few more.

"Do you know," said Wyman, "some places we go, they bill us as London's an­ swer to the Beatles. TI1ey don't like it when we say we don't do 'Twist and shout.'"

"Yes," said Jagger. "And whatever you do, don't write that article saying we're knocking the Beatles. They're good mates of ours. We like 'em and they've done so much good for the whole scene see?"

"The cancer business doesn't scare me," said Wyman, lighting up. They all smoke about 20 a day and drink moderately. "We not boozers." said Richard, "but we enjoy a drink and fags like anybody else."

"No, it doesn't scare me at all," affirmed Wyman. "Let's face it, if you have got to go, you have got to go."

233 LJL

The 1960s

''I'll probably die of electric shock," said Keith, the guitarist. He jit up. They trailed out of the restaurant.

People eating lunch looked up, aghast at such a sight. Unkempt the Stones may bp, but their music has Vitality and they are mentally sharp.

AND COMMERCIAL.

further Reading

Booth, Stanley. The Tme Ad"el1ll1fes ofthc Rolling Siolles. Chicago: Chicago Review 200D.

Prith, Simon, and Howard Horne. Art ililo Pop. London: Methuen, 1987. Groom, Bob. Thc Blues Revival. London: Studio Vista, ]971.

Jagger, Mick, Keith Richards, Charlie Walts, and ROImie Wood (Dora Loewenstein Philip Dodd. f'ds.). AecordillS 10 the Rolli/zg StOIlI'S. Sail Francisco: Chronicle Books. 20m.

Kitts, Thomas. Ray Davit's: Not Like El'eryvody Else. New York: Routledge, 2007. Marsh, Dave. BCfj)rr I Gel Old: The Siory of tlze Wizo. Npw York St. Martin's Press, 1983. Marten, Neville. and Jeff Hudson. The Khlks. London: Bobcat Books, 2007.

Discography

The Kinks. The Kinks. Pye,19M.

----. Tllc SillsleO' Colleeliol1. Sanctuary UK, 2004. The Rolling Stones. Hoi Nocks, 7964-1971. Abkco, 20021]972). - ---' MOI'1' !lol Rocks: Big Hits c"Y Fllzed Cookies. Abkco, 2002 [J972j. The Who. My Gelleration. Brunswick, 1965. ---' Tim/my. Polydor, 1<169. -~---' Thirlt,1 Yi'lIrs ot'Ala.l'irulllll R&B. MeA, 199,1. The Vnrdbirds. Havillg 11 Rave Up with Ihe YindlJirds. Epic,I96S.

~. The l'cmfbinls - Greatcst Hil~, Vol. 1: 1964-1966. Rhino/WEA, 1990.

42. The Stones versus the Beatles

The preceding chapter described SOme of the ways in which the Rolling Stones, especially lead singer Mick Jagger (0. 1942), projected an ironic detachment, arrogance, and aggressive sexuality that made them seem as if they were the opposite of the cuter, more polite public image of the Seatles. The rawer, blues-based Sound of the Stones also seems at odds with the polished, more conventiona{(y melodic, pop of the Beatles.

The Stones versus the Beatles

This apparent difference masked many similarities: Both bands were influenced by the rock 'n' roll of the 1950S (the Stones more by Chicago blues, the Beatles more by rockabilly), and by the soul music of the early 1960s (the Stones more by "down-home" singers, such as Solomon Burke, and the Beatles more by Motown). As the Stones began writing their own material, the Beatles' influence became clearer. Although they tended to retain a less polished sound, the Stones followed the Beattes ctoselyin the use of strings ("As Tears Go By," late 1965, after "Yesterday"), the sitar ("Paint It Black," 1966, after "Norwegian Wood"), and psychedelia (Their Satanic Majesties Request, late 1967, after Sgt. Pepper). Following Satanic Majesties, the Stones began developing their own brand of hard rock; "Iumpin' Jack Flash" (1968) stands as both the inaugural and arche­ typal song in this style, with its hypnotic syncopated riff based on a fragment of the blues scale.

The following article by Ellen Willis dates from 1969 and explicitty com­ pares what were then the two latest releases of the Stones and Beatles, Beggars Banquet and The Beatles (aka, "The White Album"). Willis captures welt the Stones' appeal and uniqueness within the pop context. She also refers to debates about the Stones' imitations of the Beatles that were rampant at that point and discusses the connection between rock and politics, another hot topic among critics, fans, and musicians. Both bands had produced songs that had brought political involvement into the foreground-the Stones with "Street Fighting Man," the Beatles with "Revolution"-during 1968, the year when the relationship between the counterculture and politics began to become more pressing and contentious. The sources of this shift were numerous: the growth of the antiwar movement, riots at the Democratic convention in Chicago, and the assassinations of Dr. Martin Luther King, Ir. and Robert Kennedy all played a role.

A curious aspect of this article, in retrospect, is Willis's failure to mention the Stones' misogyny, something she was to comment upon later. Willis was one of the first female rock critics, and the lack of con­ sciousness on this subject was symptomatic of the lack of feminism within the counterCUlture at this time. The paradox becomes more palpa­ ble in that Willis subsequently became better known as a writer about cultural politics and feminism than as a rock critic.'

1. Curiously, this issue had been debated in a series of articles on the Stones in the l\1arxist

jouma!, Tile New LeFi Repinl'. See Alan Beckett I Richard Merton, "Stones/Comment," in Jonath ..n Eisen, ed., The Axe or Rock: Sound- or tlte Ame,·tcall Cultllml Re1'''!lIti''ll (New York: Random House, 1969),109-17; and Michael Parsons, "Rollinp; Stones," in Eisen, cd., The Age "f Rock, 118-20. These articles originally appeared in the Ncll' Lell Review in 1%8. issues 47 and 48. For more of Willis's wIitings, see BeS{II1Jillg hi Sec 01(' Light: Sex, Hopc, find ]\OCk-011l.f-RofJ (Hano\.'erl N.H.: Wesleyan University Press and L:niversity Press of New England, 1992).

235 RECORDS: ROCK, ETC.-THE BIG ONES

Ellen Willis

t's my theory that rock and roll happens between fans and stars, rather then be­ ween listeners and musicians-that you have to be a screaming teen-ager, at least in 'our heart, to know what's going on. Yet J must admit I was never much of a scream­ ng teen-ager myself. I loved rock and roll, but I felt no emotional identification with he performers. Elvis Presley was my favorite singer, and I bought all his records; ust tbe same, he was a stupid, slicked-up billbilly, a bit too fat and soft to be really ;ood-looking, and] was a middle-class adolescent snob. Jerry Lee Lewis? More re­ 'olting than Elvis. Buddy Holly? I didn't even know what he looked like. Fats )omino? He was cOlllic-and black. When I went to rock shows, I screamed, all 'ight, but only so] wouldn't be conspicuous. Actually, I grooved much more easily -vith records than with concerts, which forced me to recognize the social chasm sep­ lrating me from the performers (and, for that matter, from much of the audience). rhe social-distance factor became more acute as I got older; that was one reason I iefected to folk lllusic. By the time the Beatles came on the scene, I wasn't paying l1UCh attention to rock. Naturally, I was aware of them, but I didn't have the slight­ 'st inkling of their importance. Their kookiness had the same effect on kids that Cilvis's dirtiness had had; as far as I was concerned, the twe> phenomena were iden­ :ical, and neither had much to do with me. I didn't realize that Elvis was to the Beatles as a Campbell Soup can is to an Andy Warhol replica. (Of course, the Beatles probably didn't realize it, either.) At first, I reacted to the Stones with equal incom­ prehension. Mick Jagger had his gimmick: he was a hood. The j.-d. [juvenile delin­ quent] image WilS il filmi]im one, though Mick played the role with more than the usuill elan. He was so aggressively illiterate, his sexual come-on was so exaggerilted ilnd tasteless thilt it never occurred to me he might be smilrt. (l didn't know then thilt he'd gone to the London Schoo] of Economics.) But his songs, which had all the energetic virtues of rock ilnd roll, also displayed the honesty and clear-headedness I expected only from blues. I loved both rock and blues, but in each case my response was incomplete: rock was too superficial, blues too alien. The Stones' music was the perfect blend. And, I came to realize, so was Mick's personillity; he was an outcast, but he was also thoroughly indigenous to mass society. Because he was so unequiv­ oCillly native, he touched a part of me thilt the blilck bluesmen and alienated folk singer could never reach. And because I couldn't condescend to bim-his "vulgar­ ity" represented a set of social and aesthetic ilttitudes as sophisticated ilS mine, if not more so-he shook me in a way Elvis had not. I became a true Stones fan-i.e., an inward screamer-ilnd T'Vt~ been one ever since.

As il fan, I feel ilmbivillent about "Beggars Banquet." It's a good album-the Stones hilve never put out il bild one-but something of an anti-climax. This is the first Stones L.P. in il yt'ar, and tht're have been no miljor performances since 1966. When stars have as little contilct with their public as this, everyone's fant<,sies get so baroque that the eventual reality rarely satisfies. (Bob Dylan hilS got away with this sort of thing twice; if he tries it again, he'll be pressing his luck.) Besides, "Beggars Banquet" had an unusually long gestiltion-the rumors of its imminent appearance began back in August. Through the fall, I followed the Stones' hassle with (British) Decca over thilt men's-room-with-graffiti-album cover. I took it for granted they'd

S""rc<': Elkn Willis, "Records: l\"ck, Ftc.-the Big Ones," Tile N,'1I' Yorker, 44, 11(1. 5(1, February 1, 1464, Pl'. 55-65. R"printed bv permission of the Charlotte Sheedy Agency.

., ':II.

The Stones versus the Beatles

win. The cover was really pretty innocent, and, anyway, what mere record company could thwart the Rolling Stones? But they lost. For the first time, I had to think of the Stones as losers. So even before I heard the record the reality-that black and white jacket designed to look like an engraved invitation-was a letdown from the fantasy.

There's another reason, ill so having to do with contact, that "Beggar's Banquet" doesn't quite make it: ] have the feeling- that Jagger is responding more to the Beatles than to the world, ilnd that the album gets to us only after bouncing off John Lennon. In a very general way, the Stones' sensibility has always been-at least in part-a revision of and a reaction to the Beatles. But the symbiosis-or, rather, the competition-has become more pronounced and specific since "Sergeant Pepper" forced them to respond with "Their Satanic Majesties Request." I'm not putting down "Siltanic Majesties" as a mere imitation, or pilrody, or comment. There was nothing mere about that illbum. The Stones showed they could do the studio thing; they did it with just the right amount of extravagance ilnd wit, ilnd with beautiful songs. Anyway, they could scarcely have ignored an event of "Sergeant Pepper's" magni­ tude. But "Satanic Majesties" was a special record for a special time. In practice it was good, in principle very dangerous. While "Satanic Majesties" was still in the works, the Beatles released" All You Need Is Love," and the Stones countered with "We Love You," a better-conceived and more powerful song. Now the bt'st track on "Beggilrs Bilnquet" is "Street Fighting Man," which is infinitely more intelligent thiln "Revolu­ tion." I sense an unvvorthy effort to expose John ilS callow. (Cilliowness is part of his chilrm anyway.) It may be that anything the Beatles do, the Stones can do better, but it never pays to work on someone else's terms. In this case, there is a special risk. What has made the Stones the Stones, more than anything else, is il passionilte, thrusting ego. The Beatles' identity is collective, but the Stones are Mick Jagger. The Beatles' magic inheres in their glittering surface, the Stones' in Jagger's genius for vis­ ceral communication. Yet in this album, as in "Satanic Miljesties," Mick is-the only word for it is "leashed." "Parachute Woman" ilnd "Stray Cat Blues" do show traces of the old self-assertion, but in both of them bad production has made the lyrics nearly impossible to catch. In the other songs thilt have an ''I'' at all, it is weak, even pilssive--"Take me to the station,/ And put me on a train./I've got no expecta­ tions/To pass through here again," or "But what can a poor boy do/'Cept to sing for a TOck-and-roll bilnd? /Guess in sleepy London town there's just no place for a street fighting man "-or else, as in "Sympathy for the Devil," it belongs to a stock charac­ ter. Most of the songs are impersonal artifacts. The "Factory Girl" is just described, not loved or sneered at. "Salt of the Earth" is positively alienating, in the Brechtian sense. What Ciln it mean for Mick Jagger to toast the workers? ]s he being sarcastic? Is the song just il musical exercise? Or is he making a sincere, if rather simple-minded, political statement? Like the Beatles, the Stones play with forms: "Prodigal 50n," flawless folk blues (another political statement?); "Dear Doctor," a rather overdone parody of country music; "Jig-Saw Puzzle," proof that Jagger (or Richard) can write lyrics exactly like Dylan'S. My response to these songs is purely cerebrill. "Street Fighting Man" is my filvorite, because it really gets down to the ambiguous relation of rock and roll to rebellion. It does with politics what early rock did with sex. (Are they deliberately using the tradition, or unconsciously re-creating it?) The lyrics of the old songs had to be bland enough to be played on the radio, but the beat and ilrrangements that emphasized a phrase out of context here, a double-entendre there got th'e message across. Taken together, the words of "Street Fighting Man" are in­ nocuous. But somehow the only line that comes though loud and cleM' is "Sumnwr's here, and the time is rigbt for fighting in the streets." Then, there's the heavy beat and all that chaotic noise in the background. So Mick leaves no doubt where his instin~ts

The Stones versus the Beatles 237236 The 19605

are. (And he didn't fool the censors, either; the single of "Street Fighting Man" was virtually boycotted by AM stations, though "Revolution" was played constantly.) But what can a poor boy do--if he wants to make some bread-'cept to sing for a rock and roll band? There it is. Rock is a socially acceptable, lucrative substitute for anar­ chy; being a rock and roll star is a way of beating the system, of being free in the midst of unfreedom. And I know Jagger understands the ironies involved and has no illusions about himself. (Which isn't to say he's cynical-I suspect that his famous cynicism has always been more metaphor than fact.) Still, there was a time when he applied equal energy to having no illusions about other people. It's the direct link between subject and object that I miss.

Apparently, the Stones, too, are worried that all is not right; I hear they're plan­ ning an American tour in the spring. Whether that decision stems from a desire for artistic renewal or from nervousness about declining sales doesn't matter. It's won­ derful news. The Stones were never meant to be studio recluses. They need to get out and face the people.

The Beatles have also found it necessary to define themselves politically. But unlike the Stones, they have little insight into their situation. Instead, they have taken refuge in self-righteousness, facile optimism, and status mongering (revolution isn't hip, you'll scare away the chicks). Not that I believe the Beatles have any obligation to be political activists, or even political sophisticates. There are many ways to serve mankind, and one is to give pleasure. Who among the Beatles' detractors has so en­ riched the lives of millions of kids? No, all I ask of the Beatles is a little taste. When Bob Dylan renounced politics, he also renounced preaching. "Revolution," in con­ trast, reminds me of the man who refuses a panhandler and then can't resist lectur­ ing him on the error of his ways. It takes a lot of chutzpah for a millionaire to assure the rest of us, "You know it's gonna be alright." And Lennon's "Change your head" line is just an up-to-date version of "Let them eat cake"; anyone in a position to fol­ low such advice doesn't need it.

We may as well facE' it. Deep within John Lennon, there's a fusty old Tory strug­ gling to get out. Yet I think "Revolution" protests too much. It had been obvious for a while-ever since all the Beatles grew beards and/or mustaches and George announced "WE"re tired of that kiddie image"-that they're suffering growing pains from the who-am-I-ilnd-where-ilm-I-going-and-how-do-my-money-and-my­ fame-fit-in vilriety. When they were four silly kids jumping around on a stage, making tons of money was a rebellious act-they were thumbing their noses at the Protestant ethic. But once Leonard Bernstein had certified them as bona-fide artists they began in the eyes of society to deser"e all that money. They could no longer accept it as part of the lark. It's no accident that the Maharishi was not only a be­ liever in transcendental meditation but a believer in the virtue of material things. And would John hilve needed to write "Revolution" if on some level he hildn't felt a little defensive? He can see that all those student revolutionnries ilre sufficiently well-off to do more or less what he's done, if on a less spectacular scale-that is, to find a personal solution within the system-yet, they've chosen a far less comfort­ able route. 1 notice thilt in the album version of "Revolution" he has put the ambivalence right into the song: "Don't you know that you can count me out-in?" And he admitted to a Rolling Stone reporter thilt if he were black, he might not be so "meek and mild." Good.

Everybody hilS to grow up, but few people have done it as lilte and publicly as Lennon. Though Dylan also went through a protracted ildolescence in front of a mass

audience, he at least battled the media for every scrap of his private life. John takes us through illl the changes-LSD, religion, politics, broken marriage, love affilir. 2 In the context of this openness, the nude pictures of him and Yoko ilre very touching. I'm sure he didn't analyze what he was doing-isn't everyone undressing these days?­ But he certainly gets my most-inspired-whim-of-the-vear-award. What makes the pictures beilutiful is that the bodies aren't beautiful; by choosing to reveal them, John is telling his fans that celebrities aren't gods, that people shouldn't be ashamed of their bodies just because they're imperfect, that e\'en a BeatIe can love a woman who isn't a pinup. When I think of both of them looking so vulnerable, I don't resent "Rev­ olution" so much. How can I expect someone to be right all the time?

About the new album. To get it over with, here's what I don't like:

1. Calling the album "The Beatles" and pilckaging it in a white cover. Everyone's going back to the basics, and it's getting boring. The right cover should have been John ilnd Yoko, clothed.

2. The slowed-dmvn version of "Revolution." Aside from the lyrics, the song was fine: good, heavy hard rock. You could even dance to it. Why do it at half the speed? So that we can hear the words better? .

3. "Revolution 9." Though I know nothing about electronic music, it sounds to me like the worst kind of pretentious nonsense. Friends who are more knowl­ edgeable than I am concur.

4. The album is just a bit too in-groupy. It pilrodies Bob Dylan, Tiny Tim, the Beach Boys, fifties gospel, rock, blues, and music-hall songs; a whole song is devoted to discussing the Beatles' previous work; and one of the songs on the record alludes to another. But it's all done so well that this is a minor criticism.

Otherwise, this album is very satisfying. The Beatles have always blended senti­ mentality with irreverence. Lately, the sentimentality has become fantasy and the ir­ reverence a whimsical disregard of linguistic conventions. Whether or not it has any­ thing to do with their politics, "The Beatles," even more than "Magical Mystery Tour," belongs to a private world. And what doesn't work in life works fine as art. By "private" 1 don't meiln exclusive; the BeatIes' world is one anybody can get into. "The Beatles" is a terrific children's album-much better than Donovan's "For the Little Ones"-yet there is nothing prohibitively childish about it. The songs are funny (es­ pecially "Piggies" ilnd "Why Don't We Do It in the Road?"), moving ("l'm So Tired" and "Julia"), clever ("Rocky Raccoon"), singable ("Ob-Ia-di, Ob-Ia-dil" and "Back in the U.s.s.R."). For sheer fun with language, none of the lyrics quite come up to "lAm the Walrus," but the general level is high. A special treat is Ringo Starr's first song, "Don't Pass Me By." It's beautiful, especially the verse that goes, ''I'm sorry thilt I doubted you,!l was so unfair./You were in a car crash,! And you lost your hair." Ringo, you keep us all Silne. The Beatles might still be with the giggling guru if you hadn't turned up your nose at the curry. "Don't Pass Me By" makes up for all George

2. Lennon discussed these topics at great length in a famous interview published in Rolli!lg Stolle following the Beatles' breakup. See lann Wenner. LCII11011 Rl'lllel1lbers: The Rollillg Stow [Ilter!';"",s (New York: Popular Library, ]Q71). This interview is also important in that Lennon

goes to great lengths to debunk what he already saw as the dominant myth of the sixties as " period dominated b\ an ethos of "peace and love." For another contemporary debunking

(albeit an allegorical one), see the "fictional review" by J. R. Young reprinted in chapter 49.

239 238 The 1960s

Harrison's Indian songs, plus "The Fool on the HilL" The screaming teenager in me wants to know how your Beatie museum is coming along, and sends her love to Maureen and the kids-and to you.

Further Reading

Eisen, Jonathan, ed. Tire Age of Rock: Sounds or tire American Cultural Rel'o{utio/l. New York: RandoJll House, 1969.

MacPhail, Jessica Holman Whitehead. Yesterday's Papers: The Rolling Stones in Print, 1963-1984. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Pierian Press, 1986.

See also chapters 38 and 41.

Discography The Beatles. 1'171' 8mtles. Apple, 1968. The Rolling Stones. A(temzntlr. Decca, 1966. ____. Tlreir Sat/mic Mn;esties Request. Decca, 1967. ____. Beggars Banqllt'f. Decca, 1968.

43 .. If You're Goin' to San Francisco ...

Psychedelic rock provided rock critics with more evidence (in addition to the work of Dylan and the Beatles) for their belief that rock music had become a form of "art" Taking its cue from a hodgepodge of elements derived from early 20th-century modernism, psychedelic rock was particularly enamored of notions of the unconscious derived from Freud. Symbolist poetry of Rimbaud and Baudelaire, filtered through Beat writers, such as Jack Keroauc and Allen Ginsburg; "stream of conscious­ ness" writing as practiced by James Joyce and Virginia Woolf; existential­ ist philosophy as espoused by Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus; visual imagery drawn from surrealism and expressionism; and Eastern philoso­ phy: all were cultural threads that the counterculture and psychedelic music drew upon. The first flowering of psychedelic rock occurred in San Francisco, also one of the geographic centers for the Beat movement, and where liberal politics and the lack of a "blue-blood" social hierarchy con­ joined to encourage artistic experimentation.

The lyric style of psychedelic rock, while drawing on the literary in­ fluences just noted, was filtered most directly through Dylan's work of

If You're Goin' to San Francisco ...

1965-66. In musical terms, psychedelic rock drew from many sources, most notably from the emphasis on improvisation found in blues, jazz, and South Asian classical music, particularly that of the North Indian, or Hindustani, tradition. The earliest songs recognized as psychedelic, such as the Byrds' "Eight Miles High" or the Beatles "Tomorrow Never Knows" (both recorded early in 1966), combined surrealistic lyrics with drones and modal improvisation influenced by Indian classical music. "Tomorrow Never Knows" used musique concrete (recorded sounds manipulated with a tape recorder), a technique borrowed from avant-garde art music, to create an "otherworldly" effect, a technique soon adapted by many other bands! Dissonance and atonality were other musical elements derived from avant-garde jazz and classical music that came to connote the "psychedelic" within the rock music context

Psychedelic rock, as it developed in the San Francisco Bay Area, London, Los Angeles, and elsewhere, was connected to local hippy sub­ cultures through large outdoor concerts and other, more experimental, performance practices. These performances incorporated multimedia approaches from the avant-garde and included light shows, projections, and film. In San Francisco, many of these events were connected to mass "dosings" of LSD. in which much of the audience ingested the hallucino­ gen. Author Ken Kesey (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest) and his gang of cohorts, the Merry Pranksters, were important organizers of many of these events, dubbed the "Acid Tests."2 The "Human Be-In," a public concert held in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park in January 1967, brought these happenings into public awareness. The three-day-Iong Monterey Pop Festival (held in June 1967)3 demonstrated some of the commercial potential of such gatherings and impressed even the "straight" press with how peaceful the participants were.

The San Francisco psychedelic rock scene was one of the first popular music movements ever to receive attention by the mass media before many people had heard the music or before much of it had even been recorded. The first group to record, the Jefferson Airplane, was also the first to achieve commercial success; after an initial album, The Jefferson Airplane Takes Off (1966) failed to attract many buyers, the second. Surrealistic Pillow (1967) sold several million copies and, much to the surprise of the group and its followers, generated two Top 10 singles, "Somebody to Love" and "White Rabbit."

The Airplane. with their backgrounds in folk music and blues; their modal harmonies and dissonant. contrapuntal textures; and their charis­ matic female vocalist, Grace Slick, were only the most public face of

1. The f\.1others of Invention were probably the pioneers in the lise of mlls;quc Ct1llcrcte in

popular music. sine" their Frrnk O"t' was released prior to Rrl'oh'cr (the BeatIe'S' album containing "Tomorrow Ne"er Knows"). Despite this, it is sate to say that the Beatles did the most !<) expOSE' the public (and other pop musicians) to this practice. See Richard Goldstein's review of ReI'ole'e,., reprinted in chapter 41J.

2. This scene was memorably recorded by Tom Wolfe in his Electric Kool-Aid Acid 7;,,1. 3. And commemorated in a documentary by D. A. Pennebaker, MOllterey Pop.

241 240 The 1960s

the San Francisco scene. The colorful names of other San Francisco bands caught the fancy of the national media: the Grateful Dead, the Quicksilver Messenger Service, Moby Grape, Country Joe and the Fish, Big Brother and the Holding Company. Of these, the Grateful Dead enjoyed the most sustained success and influence, surviving as primarily a concertizing unit until leader Jerry Garcia's death in 1995.

The entry on psychedelic rock that follows is an article by Ralph J. Gleason. Gleason was the jazz and pop music critic for the San Francisco Chronicle from the 1940S through the 1960S and one of the first established critics to write about rock music with the seriousness previously accorded jazz. Gleason became an advocate of the San Francisco bands and cofounded Rolling Stone with Jann Wenner in 1967. Gleason's essay portrays the Grateful Dead circa 1967 and reflects on the development of their style and the San Francisco psychedelic scene in general.

DEAD LIKE LIVE THUNDER

Ralph}. Gleason

San Francisco has become the Liverpool of America in recent months, a giant pool of talent for the new music world of rock.

The number of recording company executives casing the scene at the Fillmore and the Avalon is equaled only by the number of anthropologists and sociologists studying the Haight-Ashbury hippy culture.

Nowhere else in the country hasa whole community of rock music developed to the degree it has here.

At dances at the Fillmore and the Avalon and the other, more occasional affairs, thousands upon thousands of people support several dozen rock 'n' roll bands that play all over the area for dancing each week. Nothing like it has occurred since the heyday of Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman, and Tommy Dorsey. It is a new dancing age.

1he local band with the greatest underground reputation (now that the Jefferson Airplane has gone national via two LP's and several single records) is a group of young minstrels with the vivid name, The Grateful Dead.

A Celebration Their lead guitar player, a former folk musician from Palo Alto named Jerry Garcia and their organist, harmonica player and blues singer Pig Pen (Ron McKernan) have

SOl/rer: Ralloh J. Gleason, "Dead Like Live Thunder," SnIl Francisco Chroniclc, March 19,1967. San Francisco Chronicle (1H65- ) [Staff produc"d copy onlyl by Ralph]. GI"ason. Copvright © 1967 by San Francisco Chronicle. Reproduced with permission ot San Francisco Chronicle in the format Textbook via Copyright Clearancp Cpnter.

If You're Gain' to San Francisco ...

been pictured in national magazines and TV documentaries. Richard Goldstein in the Village V"ice has referred to the band as the )\lost exciting group in the Bay Area and comments, "Together, the Grateful Dead sound like live thunder."

Tomorrow The Grateful Dead celebrate the release of their first album on the Warner Brothers label. It's called simply "The Grateful Dead" and the group is throwing a record promotion party for press and radio at Fugazi Hall.

The Deild's illbum release comes on the first day as their first single release, two sides from the album-"Golden Road" and "Cream Puff War."

The Dead, ilS their filns cilll them, got their exotic name when guitilrist Garcia, a learned and highly articulate man, was browsing through a dictionary. "It just popped out ilt me. The phrase-'The Grateful Dead.' We were looking for a name at the time and I knew that was it."

The Grateful Dead later discovered the name was from an Egyptian prilyer: "We grateful dead praise you, Osiris.... "

Garcia, who is a self-taught guitarist ("my first instrument was an electrical gui­ tar; then I went into folk music and played a flat-top gUllar, a regular guitar. But Chuck Berrv was my influence l ") is at a loss to dl.'scribe the band's music, despite his expressiveness.

The Gratl.'ful Dead draws from at least five idioms, Garcia said, including Negro blues, country and western, popular music, even classical. (Phil Lesh, the bass player, is a composer who has spent several years working with serial and electronic music.)

"He doesn't play bass like anybody else; he doesn't listen to other bass players, he listl.'ns to his head:' Garcia said.

Pig Pen, the blues vocillist, "has a style that is the sum of several styles," Garcia pointl.'d out, including that of country blues singers such as Lightnin' Hopkins, as well as the more modern, urban blues men.

"When we give him a song to sing, it doesn't sound like someone else, it comes out Pig Pen's way." Pig Pen's father, by the way, is Phil McKernan, who for years had the rhythm and blues show on KRE, the predecessor of KPAT in Berkeley.

Bill Sommers Iusually known as Bill KreutzmannJ, the drummer, is a former jazz and rhythm and blues drummer. "He worked at the same music store I did in Palo Alto. T was teaching guitar and he was teaching drums," Garcia said. He is especially good at laying rhythms under a solo line played by the guitars. Bob Weir, the rhythm guitarist, "doesn't play that much slraight rhythm," Garcia said, "he thinks of all these lovely, pretty things to do."

The Dead (thev were originillly known as the Warlocks) have been playing to­ gether for ll\'er two years now. They spend at least five or six hours a day rehearsing or playing or "just fooling around," Garcia continued.

"We're working with dynamics now. 'loVe'\'(' spent two years with loud, i1nd we've spent six months with deafening' I think we're moving out of our loud stage. We've learned after these past two years, that what's really important is that the music be groovy, and if it's groovy enough and it's well played enough, it doesn't have to be too loud."

Dance Band The Dead's material comes from all the strains in American music. "We'll taKe an idea and develop it; we're interesIPd in form. We still feel that our function is i1S a dance band and that's what we like to do; we like to play for dancers. We're trying to do new things of course, but not arrange our material to death. I'd say we've stolen freely from eVE'rywhere, and we have no qualms about mixing our idioms.

242 The 1960s

Vou might hear some traditional style classical counterpoint cropping up in the middle of some rowdy thing, you know!"

The eclectic electric music has won the Dead its Warner Brothers contract, of­ fers of work in films, a dedicated group of fans who follow them faithfully and the prospect of national tours, engagements in New York and elsewhere. But Garcia, who is universally loved by the rock musicians and fans, is characteristically calm about it all. ''I'm just a student guitar player," he concluded, "I'm trying to get bet­ ter and learn how to play. We're all novices."

Further Reading

Dodd, David G., and Diana Spaulding. The Grate/ill Dead Reader. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000.

Gleason, Ralph J. The Jeffersoll Airplalle and the Sail FrallCisco SOl/ud. New York: Ballantine Books, 1969.

Lesh, Phil. Searching for the Sound: My Life with the Grateful Dead. New York: Back Bay Books, 2006.

Meriwether, Nicholas G., ed. All Graceful Illstruments: The C011lexts of the Grateful Dead Phenomenon. Newcastle, Engbnd: Cambridge Scholars Press, 2007.

O'Oair. Barb<lra. Trolll'le Girls: The Rollillg Siolle Book of Women in Rock. New York: Random House, 1997.

Perry, Charles. The Haight-Ashbunr A History. New York: Wenner Publications, 2005 [1984].

Tamarkin, Jeff. Got a l~e1101l/tioll' The TurllulCl1t Flight o!Jefferson Airplalle. New York: Atria Books, 2003.

Unterberger, Richie. Eight Miles High: Folk-RocV< FlI~<;ht fl'OlIl Hlll~,?!lt-Ashbuni to Woodstock. San Francisco: Backbeat Books, 2003.

Wolfe, Tom. The Electric Koo/-aid Acid Test. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1968.

Discography

Big Brother and the Holding Company. Chmp Thrills. Columbia, 1968. Country Joe and the Fish. Electric MlIsicfor the Millli alld Bod\f. Vanguard, 1967. The Grateful Dl'ad. The Gmtciit! Dead. Warner Brothers, 1967 --_. Anthelll of the 51111. Warner Brothers, 1968. ___. Lit'e Dead. Wilmer Brothers, 1970. Jefferson Airplane. Surrealistic Pillow. RCA Victor, 1967. --_. After Bathill,'; at Baxter's, RCA Victor, 1967, Moby Grape. Mobli Crapco Columbia, 1967, Quicksilver Messenger Service. Happy Trails. Capitol, 1969,

r 44- The Kozmic Blues of Janis Joplin

Although she first gained prominence as the lead singer with the San Francisco psychedelic band Big Brother and the Holding Company, Janis Joplin's (1943-70) fame soon superseded her band's. She departed Big Brother in 1968. following a successful year that included a critically acclaimed performance at the Monterey Pop Festival, a major recording contract with Columbia records. and a pop hit with the single "Piece of My Heart." The career of this dynamic. blues· influenced singer was riddled with contradictions: Joplin was labeled the first "hippy poster girl," yet claimed by progressive writers as a proto-feminist for her assertive performing style. extroverted public persona, and status as a bandleader.

Often described as the "the best white blues singer of all time," she clearly modeled her style after blues and R&B singers in contrast to the more "folk"·influenced vocal approach favored by other popular white female singers of the era (with the obvious exception of Grace Slick. with whom she was often compared). These influences also con­ trasted with the effort by some of the San Francisco bands to distance themselves from African American sources! The perception of her per­ formances as completely uninhibited was reinforced by her hard-living, hard-drinking image, which she emphasized on stage and in interviews. Another contradiction surfaces in the contrast between this "one·of­ the· boys" image and the image of Joplin as a "victim," an image pro­ moted by the tales of suffering outlined in many of her songs and by reports of her personal life. 2 Regardless of these aspects of her per­ sona, her brief recording career, which included four albums released between 1967 and 1971. displays increasing vocal refinement from the all-out, larynx-shattering performance of "Ball and Chain" on Cheap Thrills with Big Brother and the Holding Company (1968; also captured in the film Monterey Pop, 1967), to the carefully nuanced buildup in her

1. For exan1ples of this "anxiety of (African American) influence," see the following: the

exchange between Cleason and Nick Grovenites in Rollini< Stone over white bluesman Mike Bloonlfield's "cultural authenticity"--Glcilsol1, I'Perspectives: Stop This Shuck, Mike Bloomfield,"

RS, May 11, 1'168, p. \0; and Gravenites, "Gravenites: Stop This Shuck, Ralph Gleason," RS, May 2.",1968, P 17: Ed Ward's review of Till" IVorst of tile JeffrNm Airplalle (R"llinS Slnnc, Februar]'4, 1q71): and many of Gleason's comments and questions in Tile Jeffersnn Airplone ond tile San FlCln­ cisco Sound. Tn the piece reprinted here, Joplin betrays her 0\,\111 anxieties about seeming to be /()O

influenced by black singers. 2. These aspects of Joplin's persona are brilliantly addressed by Ell"n Willis in "Janis Joplin,"

Bei<illllini< 10 Sec tile USM: Sex, Hope, alld Rock-and-Roll (Hanover, N.H.: Wesleyan University Press and University Pre,s of New England, 1(92), 61-{\7 First published in 1976.

243

245 244 The 1960s

most commercially successful recording, "Me and Bobby McGee," recorded shortly before her death in 1970 and released posthumously in 1971 on Pearl.

The article that follows charts the broadening awareness of joplin and her reception in New York early in 1968 shortly before her split with Big Brother and the Holding Company. This portrayal of joplin by Nat Hentoff is based on an interview in which Joplin discusses her influences, the connection between "soul" and race, and her approach to performing. Hentoff's role in the criticism of rock music resembles that of Ralph j. Gleason's in that Hentoff was well known initially as a jazz critic in the 1950S, and the "oral history" of Bessie Smith in chapter 7 is excerpted from a volume coedited by him. Hentoff's relationship with jazz musicians was less adversarial than that of many white critics, sharing close personal relationships with musicians otherwise known for their irascible personalities, such as Charles Mingus. Hentoff moved into writ­ ing about other forms of popular music somewhat earlier than Gleason, however, writing a well-known profile of Bob Dylan in 1964 and conduct­ ing one of the most-celebrated interviews of Dylan late in 1965.3 Clearly, Hentoff had a gift for earning the trust of musicians who were wary of journalists. His empathy for joplin is clearly apparent in the profile that follows.

WE LOOK AT OUR PARENTS AND ...

Nat Hentoff

fhe only girl in the group (Big Brother and the Holding Company), Janis Joplin has 'xploded the increasingly mandarin categories of rock music by being so intensely, ;0 jovially herself. HE'r singing with that unit is a celebration-hE'r voice and body wrIed with larruping power that leaves her limp and this member of her audience eeling that he has been in contact with an overwhelming life force. Part of that force s an open sensuality, with no tinge of coyness or come-on. It's not that she is beau­ iful by ordinary standards (a phrase that makes her wince). Rather, she brings ail of lerself into a pE'rformance. "The sex thing they keep trying to lay on me," Miss oplin says, "is always in the receiver's head, which is wherE' it should be. If 1 turn m anyone that way-great! Because that's what it's all about."

The triumphs of Janis Joplin began last June when she lifted a huge audience at Iw Monterey International Pop Festival to a standing ovation. The glory of her aban Ion has continued to draw open-mouthed attention as she and the group travel more nd more widely from their San Francisco base, most recently having touched here t Generation, a nt'W rock cpllar room in Greenwich Village. TIle hosannas from he most flinty of the rock critics sound like hyperbole until you see her-"the best

.1. Mildem";,,''',, (I '1M); and "The Playboy Interview: Bob Dylan," Playboy (March 1966).

oure,,: Nat Hentoff, "We: L.ook at Our Parents and ... ," Nell' York Times, April 21, 1968, sec. 2, 'po 17, 19. Copyright ~"1968 by tht' New York Times Co. Reprinted with permission.

The Kozmic Blues of janisloplin

rock singer since Ray Charles"; "the best popular stylist since Billie Holidav, and certainly the most impressive woman on the rock scene"; "the major female voice of

her generation." The best single description of Janis Joplin I've seen appeared in Cashbox, not

usually a source of memorable metaphor: "She's a kind of a mixture of Leadbel1y, a steam engine, Calamity Jane, Bessie Smith, an oil derrick, and rot gut bourbon funneled into the 20th century somewhere between El Paso and San Francisco." Not entirely complete: her drink of preference is Southern Comfort, not bourbon, and that choice also indicates the gentleness at the core of her corybantic devotions.

Having seen her at Fillmore East on Second Avenue a few weeks ago, 1 wanted to know more. MorE' than the biological facts-born in Port Arthur, Texas; a dropout from four colleges; a singer of country music in Texas and blues in San Francisco; a drifter until she found a molten center of gravity in Big Brother and the Holding

Company two years ago. We met in the darkly uninviting bar of the Chelsea Hotel, where she stays when

she is in New York. Her long hair is brown, her eyes blue-gray, her figure trim, and her hands are always moving. When she's not wielding a microphone, her voice is soft but not guarded; and her face, as on stage, is a kaleidoscope of swiftly changing emotions. 1 asked her, because I was concerned, how long her voice can hold out since she spends it without stint in performance. "1 was worried about that for a while," she grinned, "and so for a couple of weeks, I consciously held back-like maybe a third of what I could do. And it was l1otltin:.;' I'm not doing that anymore. Maybe 1 won't last as long as other singers, but I think you can destroy your now by worrying about tomorrow. If 1 hold back, I'm no good 11mI', and 1 think I'd rather be good sometimes than holding back all the time. I'm 25 and, likE' others of my genera­ tion and younger, we look back at our parents and see how they gave up and com­ promised and wound up with very little. So the kids want a lot of something now rather than a little of hardly anything spread over 70 years."

She frowned, "But that's what 1 think. I'm still not used to being asked about my opinions, I'm still not used to all this attention. Nobody gave a damn about me before the Monterey FestivaL Look, I'm not a spokesman for my generation. I don't even use acid. I drink." She laughed. "ThE' reason I drink," she had had enough of the genera­ tion talk, "is that it loosens me up while the guys are tuning their instruments. 1 close my eyes and feel things. If 1 were a musician, it might be a lot harder to get all that feeling out, but I'm really fortunate because my gig is just feeling things." She laughed, again. ''I'm really lucky. It doesn't always happen the way I want. It's \lot al­ ways a supreme emotional experience, but when everything is together-the bilnd, me, the audience, it's boss' It's just like magic. I don't think I could ever feel that way about a man. It seems to bE' the kind of feeling a woman would like to ha\'p about a

man. I hope 1 do someday." New York had gotten in the way of that boss feeling for a while. "At first," she

shook her head in exasperiltion, "this city sE'emed to have made us all crazy; it \,,<'as dividing the unity of the band" Miss Joplin hadn't received quite the drink she'd or­ dered and I waved to the waiter. Slowly, grumblingly, he ilcceded to tIle request. "The first three weeks here," she went on, "we all got superaggressivE', separate, sour. Something like that waiter thE're. San Francisco's different. I don't mean it's perf;>ct, but the rock bands there didn't start becausE' they wanted to make it. They dug get­ ting stoned and playing for people dancing. Here they want to MAKE it. What we"ve had to do is learn to control success, put it in perspectivE' and not lose tl1(' essence of what we're doing-the music. Well, we played a gig in Philadelphia recently, and the minute we walked offstage after the first set, it all fell back into place. We all looked

247 246 The 19605

at each other, like 'T{emember me?' We all remembered what it was all about. We're learning how to handle New York."

San Francisco had been a saving place for her. "In Texas, I was a beatnik, a weirdo, and since Twasn't making it the way I am now, my parents thought I was a goner. Now my mother writes and asks what kinds of clothes a 1968 blues singer wears. That's kind of groovy, since we've been on opposite sides since I was 14. Texas is O.K. if you want to settle down and do your own thing quietly, but it's not for outrageous people, and I was always outrageous. I got treated very badly in Texas." She smiled grimly. "1l1ey don't treat beatniks too good in Texas."

Janis Joplin didn't get into music until she was 17, when hard, basic blues changed her from being a painter. "It was Leadbelly first. I knew what it was all about from the very front. I was right into the blues." She moved into a bluegrass band in Austin, dug Bob Dylan and Woody Guthrie, but the blues were always her base. She went to San Francisco to stay in 1962, and sang in folk clubs and bars until she joined the Holding Company.

I told her that she was the first white blues singer (female) I'd heard since Teddy Grace who sang the blues out of black influences but had developed her own sound and phrasing. She'd never heard of Teddy Grace, also a Southern girl, but she beamed. "God, I'm glad you think that. I keep trying to tell people that whites have soul too. There's no patent on soul. It's just feeling things. I sure loved Otis Redding, and Bessie Smith before him, but I don't think I copy anybody much. I've got coun­ try in my music too, but what changed things was singing with an electric band. All that power behind you-that pulsating power. I had to react to what was behind me, and my style got different. You can't sing a Bessie Smith vocal with a rock band, so I had to make up my own way of doing it."

Do you categorize yourself at all? I asked. Would you call yourself a jazz singer? "No, I don't feel quite free enough with my phrasing to say I'm a jazz singer. I sing with a more demanding beat, a steady rather than a lilting beat. I don't riff over the band; I try to punctuate the rhythm with my voice. That's why Otis Redding is so great. You can't get away from him; he pounds on you; you can't help butfeel him. He was a man! Still is! Categories? I regard myself as a blues singer but then I regard my­ self as a rock singer. Actually, I don't feel there's any separation now. I'm a chick singer, that's what I am."

We had another drink. "You know how that whole myth of black soul came up? That only they have soul?" She wasn't asking, she was telling. "Because white people don't allow themselves to feel things. Housewives in Nebraska have pain and joy; they've got soul if they'd give in to it. It's hard. And it isn't all a ball when you do. Me, I never seemed to be able to control my feelings, to keep them down. When I was young, my mother would try to get me to be like everybody else. 'Think before you speak.' 'Learn how to behave yourself.' And I never would. But before getting into this band, it tore my life apart. When you feel that much, you have superhorrible downs. I was always victim to myself. I'd do wrong things, run away, freak out, go crazy. Now, though, I've made feeling work for me, through music, instead of de­ stroying me. It's superfortunate. Man, if it hadn't been for the music, I probably would have done myself in."

She looked tired, not so much from present feeling as from an all-night record session the night before. Being made for Columbia, the album, due this spring, will be the first to fully reflect-she hopes-what Big Brother and the Holding Company are all about. (A previous, poorly recorded set, made much earlier, was issued despite the group's vehement protests.) "Making this record hasn't been easy," she said. "We're

limi HendriX and the Electronic Guitar

not the best technicians around. We're not the kind of dispassionate professionals who can go into a studio and produce something quick and polished. We're passion­ ate; that's all we are. And what we're trying to get on record is what we're good at-

insisting, getting people out of their chairs." "What also makes it hard for John Simon, who's producing the album, is that

we're kinda sloppy at the same time as we're happy. Last night he was trying to get something done and said 'Come on, who's the head of this band?' There was a pause because, well, no one is. We vote on things. We're democratic. But I think we're get­ ting what we want into the recording." She sighed. "We've got complete control over

this one, and if it's no good, it's our fault." Janis leaned back, smiled again. "Like I said, it's hard to be free, but when it

works, it's sure worth it."

Further Reading Dalton, David. Piece of My Heart: A Portmit llf Janis Joplin. New York: Oa Capo Press,

1991. Echols, Alice. Scars (1f Sweet Paradise: The Life alld Times of Tallis J(1plill. New York: Holt

Paperbacks, 2000. Joplin, Laura. Love, Jallis. New York: Villard, 1992. Reynolds, Simon. The Sex Revolts: Gellder, Rebellion, ,md Rock'n'roll. Cambridge, Mass.:

Harvard University Press, 1995. Willis, Ellen. "Janis Joplin," in Begilming to See the Light: Sex, Hope, and Rock-alld-RolI,

61--67. Hanover, N.H.: University Press, of New England, 1992.

Discography Big Brother and the Holding Company. Clzeap Thills. Columbia, 1968. ___. Li,'eat Winterlalld '68. Columbia Legacy, 1991\. aplin, Janis. I Got Dem 01' Kozmic Blues Agaill Mama! Columbia, 1969. ___. Pearl. Columbia, 1971. ____. Rax of Pearls. Sony Legacy, 1999.

45. Jimi HendriX and the Electronic Guitar

Like janis joplin, Jimi Hendrix (1942-7 0 ) first achieved prominence through a form of highly amplified blues merged with psychedelic rock. Hendrix's path to that point, however, followed a very different trajectory from Joplin's: An African American raised in Seattle, Hendrix toured as a sideman for R&B artists, such as Wilson Pickett and Little Richard, before he moved to London, where he launched his solo career. While clearly

249 248 The 1960s

steeped in the blues, Hendrix made the most significant contribution of any guitarist of his generation toward conceiving of the electric guitar as an electronic instrument, rather than merely an amplified guitar. Distor­ tion no longer occurred as a by-product of turning up an amplifier: Hendrix made sustain and feedback an integral part of his technique, and he pioneered the use of electronic devices, such as fuzztones and wah­ wah pedals (he may not have been the first to use these, but he was the first to incorporate them fully as more than gimmicks).

Again, like Joplin, Hendrix first came to the attention of American au­ diences during the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival. Early commentaries (in­ cluding those about this festival) all center on his highly theatrical stage performance, which involved playing the guitar behind his head and with his teeth, licking it (all techniques used by earlier blues and R&B musi­ cians, such as T-Bone Walker), lighting it on fire, and finally destroying it (in a gesture perhaps adapted from the Who's Peter Townshend). The highly sexualized performance of a black man in front of a white band and (mostly) white audience also attracted attention and evoked some uncomfortable contradictions within the counterculture, which (as I dis­ cussed earlier) was almost entirely white despite a professed ethos of inclusion.'

Hendrix's compositions drew on blues and R&B, but also on psy­ chedelic innovations in sound and recording, as well as on Dylan's ap­ proach to lyrics; as such, he was an innovator and synthesizer with few previous peers among rock musicians.' Hendrix freely acknowledged his indebtedness to Dylan, both in interviews and by recording Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone" (at Monterey Pop) and "All Along the Watch­ tower" (which Dylan later said he preferred to his own version). His per­ formance of the "Star Spangled Banner" was a highlight of the Wood­ stock festival; Hendrix used his guitar wizardry to simulate exploding bombs and sky-diving aircraft, turning the U.s. national anthem into an antiwar protest song. Some of his comments to interviewers and his abandonment of the Jimi Hendrix Experience (which was two-thirds white) toward the end of his career revealed that Hendrix was wrestling with the relationship of his music to his identity as an African American. 3

He died in September 1970 in his sleep from an accidental overdose of barbituates.

1. For a fuller discw;sion of these issues, see Steve Waksman, l11,tnlll1ellts of Desire: Tlie Electric Gllitnr (/11.1 tlie Shnping oflvll/sienl Experience (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999), 167-206.

2. See Greg Tate's comments in his interview with George Clinton (rtybolf il1 thc R//ttcnnilk: bsays on Ctmtelllpornry Alllerica [New York: Fireside/Simon and Schuster, 1992), 39-40, 92-93).

3. Again, see Waksman, l11str1111lCllts oj Desire. for a discussion of Hendrix in thc context of thc black arts movement; and Samucl A. Floyd, The Power of Black lvI//sic: Interpreting /Is Hfstoryli·(llll Ali-fca to tlie United States (New York: Oxford University PrpS', 1995), for a discussion that includes Hpndrix within a broader, theoretically informed conception of "black music."

Jimi Hendrix and the Electronic Guitar

The critical response to Jimi Hendrix during his life featured much debate about whether the highly theatrical performances early in his career were a "gimmick" or not. Also common in the press were comparisons to Eric Clapton and Cream, who achieved prominence at roughly the same time with the same trio format and who also featured long, blues-based im­ provisations. While all writers conceded the quality of Hendrix's guitar playing, many criticized his singing and his ability as a lyricist. The English music press viewed him as part of the London scene (as indeed he was for several years), and this article from the British music maga­ zine, Melody Maker, provides a good example of that perspective, The article also shows Hendrix in transition from the flashy theatrics of his trio and reveals his awareness of earlier criticisms. Like so many articles from this period (and after), this article raises the opposition of art to mass culture. Because the author accepts the terms of this opposition, "showmanship" of the kind associated with Hendrix must result from an artistic compromise-appealing to teenyboppers-rather than from continuity with previous African American approaches to performance.

SECOND DIMENSION: JIMI HENDRIX IN ACTION

Bob Dawbarn

Jimi Hendrix-like Eric C1apton, the Nice, the Pink Floyd and many others-is faced with one major problem.

He is trying to produce music with claims to permanent value, yet the outlets for that music are the mass media which, as yet, seem unable to distinguish between a Jimi Hendrix or a Donald Peers.

This means that a Hendrix must continually compromise in order to conform to the patterns demanded by his means of communication.

To stay in business he must make singles, he finds he is forced into acts of show­ manship to get his music across, he must make use of publicity machines geared to the needs of teenyboppers.

Before his Albert Hall concert last Tuesday he told me: "1 just hope the concert turns out all right. We haven't played in a long time and we concentrate on the music

now. "As long as people come to listen rather than to see us, then everything will be

all right. It's when they come to expect to see you doing certain things on stage that you can get hung up."

Jimi dislikes miming on TV. "If you play live, nobody can stop you or dictate what you play beyond setting a time limit."

A good example was his recent appearance on the Lulu show when he surprised everybody in the studio by suddenly shifting from "Hey Joe" into "Sunshine Of Your Love" as a tribute to Cream.

"It was the same old thing," explained Jimi, "with people telling us what to do. They wanted to make us play 'Hey Joe.' I was uptight about it, so I caught Noel's and Mitch's attention and we went into the other thing.

SOlll'CC: Bob Dawbarn, "Second Dimension: Jimi Hendrix in Action," Melodylvlnker, March 1, 1969,

pp.14-15

251 L~U The 19605

"I dream about having our own show where we would have all contemporary artists as guest stars. Everybody seems to be busy showing what polished perform­ ers they are and that means nothing these days-it's how you feel about what you are doing that matters.

"r just cross off people who are just in it for their own ego scene instead of trying to show off another style of music."

Jimi "dmits that he feels a little restricted by the Trio format. "It restricts everybody-Noel and Mitch, too," he said. "Now and then]'d like to

break away and do a bit of classic blues. Mitch wants to get into a jazz thing and Noel has this thing with Fat mattress and wants to go on an English rock thing-how about Anglo Rock. A patriotic blues-rock music."

As a performer, Hendrix seems to be going through a period of change at the mo­ ment leaning towards extended performances.

Personally, I find his playing has great impact when disciplined by a four minute track. The longer things on the "Electric Ladyland" album don't always come off, his ideas seem to get diffused. But this is no doubt a time of transition.

Nobody is better at conveying an atmosphere in a few phrases-there was the menace of "Purple Haze," the raw, immensely masculine "Hey Joe," the blues influ­ ence of "Foxy Lady." And listen to the way guitar and voice complement each other on something like "51st Anniversary." Or the way he shows blues can be utterly con­ temporarv on "Voodoo Chile."

"You have to make people identify with the music," explains Jimi. "You make a record in the hope that the public may want to buy it, so you have to make it pre­ sentable in some way. They have to have an identification mark.

"The trouble is that a single has to be under six minutes-it used to be under three, which was a real hang-up. It's like you used to be able to give them just one page of a book, now you can give them two or three pages-but never the whole book.

'T11e music is what matters. If an audience are really digging you on a show, then naturally you get excited and it helps. But a bad audience really doesn't bother me that much because then it is a practice session, a chance to get things together.

"I always enjoy playing, whether it's before ten people or 10,000. And I don't even care if they boo, as long as it isn't out of key.

"I don't try to move an audience-it's up to them what they get from the music. If they have paid to see us then we are going to do our thing.

"If we add a bit of the trampoline side of entertainment then that is a fringe ben­ efit but we are there to play music. If we stand up there all night and play our best and they don't dig it, then they just don't dig us and that's all there is to it."

Jimi is rather underrated as a songwriter-the imagery of the lyric of "The Wind Cries Mary," for example, could not have been written by anyone else.

''I've not written too many heavy things recently," he told me. "Most of what I have done will come out on the next LP in the late summer. [don't trY tll make a thing about my songs when I put them on record. I try to make them honest and there doesn't seem too much point in talking about them.

"The people who listen to them are the ones who will know whether they are successful or not."

One of the things Jimi seems to be cutting out of his personal appearances is playing guitar with his teeth.

"The idea of doing that came to me in a town in Tennessee," he recalled. "Down there you have to play with your teeth or else you get shot. There's a trail of broken teeth aJl over the stage.

)imi Hendrix and the Electronic Guitar

"It was another way of letting out things and you have to know what you are doing or you might hurt yourself. The trouble was audiences took it as something they must see or they don't enjoy the show. So 1 don't do it much any more. We don't do too much of anything any more, except play music."

Jimi says it is usually the lyrics that attract him to a song. "Maybe a lyric has only five wordS and the music takes care of the rest," he said.

"1 don't mean my lyrics to be clever. What I want is for people to listen to the music and words together, as one thing. Sometimes you get wrapped up in the words and forget the music-in that case I don't think the song can be completely successful.

"Generally, 1 don't do other people's songs unless they really say something to

me." Jimi laughed when I said I thought I could detect church music influences in

some of his things. "Spiritual music, maybe," he said. "But if you say you are playing electric church

music people go 'gasp, gasp' or 'exclaim, exclaim.''' "The word church is too identified with religion and n1.usic is my religion. Jesus

shouldn't have died so early and then he could have got twice as much across. "They killed him and then twisted SO many of the best things he said. Human

hands started messing it all up and now so much of religion is hogswash. "So much of it is negative-Thou Shalt Not. Look at sex. It's been screwed

around so much I'm surprised babies are still being born. "Don't get me wrong. I'm not trying to stop people going to church. Hut as long

as I'm not hurting anybody else I don't see why they should tell me how to live and

what to do."

Further Reading Chenoweth, Lawrence. "The Rhetoric of Hope and Despair: A Study of the Jimi HendriX

Experience and the Jefferson Airplane." American Quarterly 23 (1971): 25-45. Cross, Charles R. Room Full of Mirrors: A HioSl"aphy of jimi Hmdrix. New York: Hyperion,

2005. Murray, Charles Shaar. Crosstown Traffic: Ji1l1i Hendrix and The post-War Rock 'N' Roll

Revolution. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1991, Waksman, Steve. Instruments of Desin': Thc Electric Guitar and tile Shaping or Musical

Experience. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999. Zak III, Albin J. "Bob Dylan and )imi Hendrix: Juxtaposition and Transformation 'All

along the Watchtower.''' joumal of the Americall Musicolo:;;ical Society 57 (2004):

599-644.

Discography The Jimi Hendrix Experience. Are You E:qJerienced. Track Records, 1967. ___ . Axis: Bo/d as Love. Track Records, 1967. ___. Electric Lady/and. Reprise, 1968. ___. Band of Gypsies. Capitol, 1970.

253

46. Rock Meets the Avant-Garde Frank Zappa

Frank Zappa's (1940-93) persona presents an imposing conundrum: im­ mensely talented and witty to his fans, unbearably obnoxious to his de­ tractors. After an involvement in a diverse range of musical activities and genres, Zappa formed the Mothers of Invention, signed a recording con­ tract with Verve Records (known primarily as a jazz label), and recorded Freak Out! (released in August 1966), one of the first, if not the first, album to be organized around a concept, rather than simply presenting an assemblage of songs (the other contender for this distinction is the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds, released in May 1966). Freak Out! was also one of the first rock albums to feature classical avant-garde approaches to composition, electronics, and sound - in fact, even describing the album as "rock" demonstrates the breadth of that generic label. Other artists, primarily the Beatles, received more attention for their incorporation of such techniques, primarily because their music was heard by a larger au­ dience, but none pursued the use of such experimentation within a rock context as zealously as Zappa.

Zappa's use of parody also stands out in the context of the time: He seemed simultaneously to belong to the counterculture and to mock it. Although it is doubtful that a figure like Zappa could have emerged at any other time and found an audience even as large as the one he had (mean­ ing that he owed something to the social context of the time, and, hence, to the counterculture), the parodic aspects of his music and his separa­ tion from the counterculture became more obvious with the release of successive albums. His incorporation of an avant-garde classical perfor­ mance approach also became more aggressive over time, as did his guitar pyrotechnics. While not really part of the (mostly British) progres­ sive- or art-rock genre per se, Zappa's concern with integrating art music approaches to rock overlaps to some extent with that of such progressive rock bands as King Crimson and Yes.

This 1968 article captures Frank Zappa's role in his band, the Mothers of Invention, as analogous to that of a conductor of a classical music en­ semble and comments upon and provides examples of Zappa's ironic ver­ bal style. The description of Zappa as a modernist is apt, particularly with regard to his disdain of the audience; his attitude seems to personify the modernist credo-"if it's popular, it must be bad." Nevertheless, the tone of general approval in the article reveals the increasing acceptance of such high-art notions within the public discourse of rock music. At this

252

Rock Meets the Avant-Garde

moment, the rock audience, writ large, was understood to have room for highly intellectualized parodies of itself.

ZAPPA AND THE MOTHERS: UGLY CAN BE BEAUTIFUL

Sally Kempton

It is 1 A.M. on a Friday night and the Mothers of Invention are recording part of the soundtrack for their forthcoming movie. Ian is playing the harpsichord and Bunk is playing the flute. They huddle together in a cluster of microphones, Bunk leaning over Ian's shoulder to read the music propped up on the harpsichord stand. Bunk wears a goatee and a matching moustache, and his long thick hair is gray (in the stu­ dio light it looks like a powered [sic] wig). Resembling a figure in an old etching, he bends closer to Ian, his flute poised, and Ian straightens his back and places his fin­ gers on the harpsichord keys. Poised like musicians at a nineteenth-century musicale, they wait for a signal to begin. One feels they are waiting to playa Mozart sonata.

Inside the control booth Frank Zappa, wearing a T-shirt bearing the legend "Herzl Camp, Garner, Wisconsin," is fiddling with knobs on the control board. "You're going to have to do the parody notes more staccato, Ian," he says through the intercom.

"You want a little bebop vibrato on that too?" calls Ian. "Yeah, a little bebop a go go," says Frank. Dick Cunk, the engineer, flips the

"record" switch. "OK, for fame and stardom," says Frank. "You ready?" Ian and Bunk begin to play a series of dissonant, rhythmic, oddly beautiful

chords. The people in the control booth listen intently. "This is going to be a nice soundtrack," someone says. Frank Zappa is bent over a music sheet, writing out the next piece. "Yeah," he

says. "This is one the folks can enjoy listening to at home." Frank Zappa is an ironist. He is also a serious composer, a social satirist, a pro­

moter, a recording genius, but his most striking characteristic is his irony. Irony per­ meates his music, which is riddled with parodies of Charles Ives and Guy Lombardo, of Bartok and the Penguins and Bo Diddly and Ravel and Archie Shepp and Stravin­ sky and a whole army of obscure fifties rhythm and blues singers. [t permeates his lyrics, which are filled with outlandish sexual metaphors and evocations of the culture of the American high school and the American hippie.

Irony is the basis of his public image. In pursuit of absurdity he has had hlmself photographed sitting naked on the toilet. His latest album is titled We're Only ill It for the Money. And he has appeared on television speaking in well-rounded periods about music and society and The Scene, all the while emanating a kind of inspired freakishness. Zappa's is the sort of irony which arises from an immense self-consciousness, a distrust of one's own seriousness. It is the most modernist of defense mechanisms, and Zappa is an almost prototypically modernist figure; there are moments when he seems to be living out a parody of the contemporary sensibility.

And now he and his group are teenage idols, or anti-idols, and Zappa's irony, which, because it is so often expressed through contemporary cliches, is the most

Source: Sally Kempton, "Zappa and the Mothers: Ugly Can Be Beautiful," Village Voice, January ll, 1968, pp. 1, 10.

255 254 The 19605

ilccessible pnrt of his musicill idiom, turns on audiences and milkes the Mothers, in addition tLl everything else, a splendid comedy act. Until recently Zappa's voice, the paradigm California voice, could be heard on the radio doing "greasy teen-age commercials" for Hagstrom Guitars. During the Mothers' live appearances he sits on a stool, his expression deadpan above his bandillero moustache, and occasion­ ally he will lean over and spit on the floor under the bilndstand, saying to the audience: "Pigs!"

"Actually, we don't turn on audiences," he said the other day. "Not in the sense that other groups do, anyway. I think of that sort of thing as the strobes going and everybody dancing and love-rock-at-the-Fillmore bullshit-if anybody felt like that about us it'd be for the wrong reasons. Last week we were playing in Philadelphia and we got seven requests, so we played them all at once. It was fantastic. Sherwood was playing the sax part to one song: the whole thing, even the rests. It was really great. But nobody knew what we were playing. They couldn't even tell the songs apart. Half the time, when we're really doing something, the audience doesn't know what it is. Sometimes the guys in the band don't know."

But the Mothers' first album sold a quarter of a million copies and the second has done almost as well. And when they played a long stretch at the Garrick last summer they were beset by loyal groupies. Perhaps the groupies sensed the presence of a gov­ erning intelligence, perhaps they simply dug perversity. In any case, the Mothers have an audience.

Frank Zappa is twenty-seven years old. He was born in Baltimore and began playing drums in a rock-and-roll band in Sacramento when he was fifteen.

"It's almost impossible to convey what the rand b scene was like in Sacramento," he says. "There were gangs there, and every gang was loyal to a particular band. They weren't called groups, they were called bands. They were mostly Negro and Mexican, and they tried to get the baddest sound they could. It was very important not to sound like jazz. And there was a real oral tradition of music. Everybody played the same songs, with the same arrangements, and they tried to playas close as possible to the original record. But the thing was that half the time the guys in the band had never heard the record-somebody's older brother would own the record, and the kid would memorize it and teach it to everybody else. At one point all the bands in Sacramento were playing the same arrangement of 'Okey Dokey Stomp' by Clarence Gatemouth Brown. The amazing thing was that it sounded almost note for note like the record."

Zappa was lying in bed, eating breakfast and playing with his three-month-old baby. He lives with his wife, Gait and the baby, in a long basement apartment in the West Village. The apartment has a garden and its walls are papered with posters and music sheets and clippings from magazines; there is a full-length poster of Frank in the hall and a rocking chair in the living room with a crocheted cover that says "Why, what pigs?"

Frank was in bed because he had been up all night before, recording. "The reason 1 can stand New York is because Tspend all my time here or at the studio," he said.

"Mostly at the studio," said his wife, smiling. "Let's see, my life," he said. "Well, when I was sixteen my father moved us to a

little town out in the country. That was terrible, Thated it. 1 was used to Sacramento, yOLl see. 1 was the strangest thing that ever hit that high school They were so anxious to get rid of me they even gave me a couple of awards when! graduated. After that my father wanted me to go to college. I said no, I was interested in music, I didn't want to go to college. So I hung out at home for awhile, but there was nobody to talk to, everybody else being at college, so I finally decided I should go too. That was very ugly. I stayed for a year. In the meantime I had shacked up with this girl and married

Rock Meets the Avant-Garde

her. We stayed married for five years during which time I held a number of jobs" (he listed the jobs). "Then in 1963 we were living in Cucamonga and there was a record­ ing studio there which I bought for $1000, also assuming the former owner's debts. He had hundreds of tapes, among them such big hits as" (he named three or four ob­ scure songs) "and 1 took the tapes and the equipment and began fooling around. About that time I got divorced and moved into the studio. I spent all my time exper­ imenting; a lot of stuff the Mothers do was worked out there."

A year later the studio was torn down to make room for a widened road, but by that time he had gotten the Mothers together. "We were playing at local beer joints for like six dollars a night. T finally decided this would not do, so I began calling LIp all the clubs in the area. This was in 1965, and to get work you had to sound like the Beatles or the Rolling Stones. You also had to have long hair and due to an unfortu­ nate circumstance all my hair had been cut off. I used to tell club managers that we sounded exactly like the Rolling Stones. Anyway we finally got a booking in a club in Pomona, and were something of a hit. It was more because of our act than because of our music. People used to go away and tell their friends that here was this group that insulted the audience.

"Then M-G-M sent someone around to sign us to a contract. Their guy came into the club during a set of 'Brain Police' and he said, 'Aha, a protest rhythm and blues group: so they paid us accordingly. The fee we got for signing was incredibly smaIl, particularly considering the number of guys in the group."

Nowadays, of course, Zappa runs something of an empire. He has an advertis­ ing agency ("mostly to push our own products, at least so far"), and a movie coming out which someone else shot but for which they are going to do the soundtrack The movie is a surrealistic documentary called "Uncle Meat"; it is shot in a style Zappa refers to as "hand-held Pennebaker bullshit," and it will be edited to fit the music.

"Then we're going to do a monster movie in Japan-Japan is where they do the best monster work. And we're starting our own record company. We'll record our own stuff and also some obscure new groups."

It was time for him to go to the studio. The Mothers have rented Apostolic Stu­ dios on Tenth Street for the entire month of January. "One hundred and eighty hours-not as much time as the Beatles use, of course, we can't afford that"-and that is where Zappa spends most of his time. He puts on a brown leather greatcoat, pulls a red knitted cap over his ears, and sets out, talking about his music as he walks.

"Stockhausen isn't really an influence:' he says. "That is, I have some at his records but I don't play them much. Cage is a big influence. We've done a thing with voices, with talking that is very like one of his pieces, except that of course in our piece the guys are talking about working in an airplane factory, or their cars.

"It was very tough getting the group together in the beginning. A lot of guys didn't want to submit to our packaging. They didn't like making themselves ugly, but they especially didn't like playing ugly. It's hard getting a musician to play ugly, it contradicts all his training. It's hard to make them understand that all that ugliness taken together can come out sounding quite beautiful."

The studio, when he arrived, was nearly deserted, except for Mother Don Preston, who sat at the organ wearing earphones and playing a piece audible only to himself. "Can you run a playback on the violins?" he asked when Frank came ill.

"Sure:' said Frank. "We recorded this thing last night. I found some violins in a closet and I gave them to three of the guys. None of them had ever played a Violin before. They were making all these weird sounds on them, and then in the middle I got them to add some farts. It's a concerto for farts and violins."

257 256 The 1960s

But instead of playing back the violin thing, Dick put on a tape of "Lumpy Gravy," one of the Mothers' new records, an instrumental piece, framed at the beginning and end with cocktail music, and interspersed with quiet, hollow, surreal voices talking behind a continuous hum of resonating piano strings. The music has overtones of Bartok and Ives, but by some stylistic alchemy it ends by sounding like nothing but Zappa. It is an impressive record. Three or four people had drifted into the control room while it was playing, and after it was over someone said, "I love that piece."

"Yeah, but will the kids go for it," said Frank. "It's good to have it out," said Don, "so people will know what you can do." "No, no," Frank said. "It's good to have it out so I can take it home and listen to it."

Further Reading Ashby, Arved. "Frank Zappa and the Anti-Fetishist Orchestra." The Musical Quarterly 83

(1999): 557-606. Koste!anetz, Richard. The Frank Zappa Companion: Four Decades of COl1ll/lelltary. New

York: Schirmer Books, 1997. " Lowe, Kelly Fisher. The Words alld Music of Frank Zappa. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2006. Watson, Ben. Frank Zappa: The Negative Dialectics of Poodle Play. New York: St. Martin's

Press, 1995. Wragg, David. "'Or Any Art at All?' Frank Zappa Meets Critical Theory." PopUlar Music

20 (2001): 205-22.

Discography The Mothers of Invention. Freak Ollt' Verve, 1966. Zappa, Frank. and the Mothers of Invention. Lumpy Gravy. Verve, 1967. ____. We're Only in Ufor the Malley. Verve, 1968. ____. Weasels Ripped My Flesh. Bizarre Records, 1973.

47. Pop/Bubblegum/Monkees

Although the emergence of rock criticism during 1966-67 led to an unprecedented amount of writing about popular music, this writing fo­ cused on only a portion of the popular music circulating at the time. Omitted from rock criticism was "pop": music that continued the tradition of teen idols, of schlock-rock, of "middle-of-the-road," "easy listening" pop, resembling nothing so much as the popular music that antedated rock 'n' roll. While rock music and the counterculture were attracting ever-increasing amounts of media attention, it is important to

Pop/Bubblegum/Monkees

remember that Frank Sinatra ("Strangers in the Night"l, Nancy Sinatra ("These Boots Are Made forWalkin'''l, Frank and Nancy Sinatra ("Some­ thin' Stupid"l, and Sgt. Barry Sadler ("The Ballad of the Green Berets") all had Number One pop hits during the years (1966-67) in which rock criticism emerged.

Among acts catering to young consumers, the Monkees were by far the most successful. A made-for-TV group, the Monkees were modeled on the Beatles, and their television series, which began broadcasting in 1966, adapted aspects of the humor and cinematic style of the Beatles' early movies. The Monkees' music represented (at least initially) an at­ tempt by some of the best professional songwriters (many of them holdovers from the Brill Building) to write in the style of the "new rock.'"

Robert Christgau is probably best known to readers as the primary pop music critic and editor for the Village Voice, a position he held from the early 1970S until 2006. Christgau was one of the few "new rock" critics to grapple with the phenomenon of the Monkees or, for that matter, with unabashedly commercial music in general. Christgau is concerned, in these essays and others written around the same time, that rock be a "popular art." When he states, as he does here, that "good rock is largely a matter of production and publicity," or when he compares the Monkees' latest single release favorably to the Beatles' because of its superior commercial performance, he is implicitly confronting the grow­ ing critical orthodoxy that artistry in rock music must be opposed to commercialism. 2

from ANY OLD WAY You CHOOSE IT: ROCK AND OTHER POP MUSIC, 1967-1973

Robert Christgau

June, 1967. The Monkees are four young men who star in an adolescent TV comedy of the same name and make records that rise to the top of the charts like jellyfish. They were chosen (from a hirsute field of 437) not for musical ability but for

1. For an attempt to view the Monkees as a representation of the counterculture, rather than its antithesis, see Aniko Bodroghkozy. Gma1'c Tube: Sixties Telc1';,;on Rnd the YiJuth RelJclliol1 (Durham, N.C: Duke University Press, 2001), 66-75. For a contemporary mainstream account,see "Romp! Romp':' Newsweek, October 24,1966,102.

2. A particularly good example of Christgau's ecumenical approach may be found in his "Rock Lyrics Are Poetry (Maybe):' in Ti,e Age of Rock: Sounds of the American Cultural ReI'oll/liDI1, ed. Jonathan Eisen (New York: Random House, 1969),230--43 (first published in Cheelah in December 1967), in which he discusses the work of Dylan and other "heavy rock" artists "Jon!';' side the more overtly commercial work of Simon and Garfunkel and the Mamas and the P"pas.

Source: Robert Christgau, A/11{ Old WOlf You Choose It: Rock and Othrr Po!, Music, 1967-197.1 (New York: Cooper Square Press, 2(00), pp. 38--39, 47--41'. Originally published in June 1967 and December 1967 in Esquire. Reprinted by permission of Robert Christgau.

258 The 19605

exuberance and irreverence, qualities salient in the chaps who were in those very suc­ cessful Richard Lester movies. You remember.

You'd better, because the Monkees, conceived as a haircut on A Hard Day's Night and Help', find themselves sole inheritors of the great Beatie tradition. The originals have abdicated, withdrawing from teeny idolatry into their music, which is popular but personal and exotic. Young fans, confused, miss those nice noppy Englishmen they fell for three years ago, and the Monkees provide a wholesome American sub­ stitute (with an Englishman added for remembrance). They're not too handsome, not too pretentious, and every week tbey do silly things for thirty minutes, not counting commercials. At the moment the kids seem to love them.

For similar reasons, serious rock fans hate them. They know the Monkees are to­ gether by happenstance, that they are not too irreverent, too precocious, too sexual­ too anything. They know they are lousy singers and can hardly play their instruments. They note that Micky Dolenz was once "Circus Boy" and forget that Mike Nesmith has had a respectably bumpy folk-rock career. And they conclude that the music stinks.

It doesn't. It's not great, but it is good, better than much of what makes top ten-an important test if rock is truly a popular art. The group's second album, More of the Monkees, is hard to criticize objectively. Do I hear that dishonest edge in a funny, raucous song like "Your Auntie Grizelda" because it's there l)1' because I ex­ pect it to be? Who can tell? With a couple of horrible exceptions, the songs sound OK, testimony to the truth that good rock is largely a matter of production and pub­ licity. "Mary, Mary," which Nesmith wrote and produced, is very successful. He is their clearest talent and a bit of a real rebel. One would hope that he and not Dolenz will dominate the group. Something may come of this yet.

But whatever it is, it won't be the Beatles.

Deccmber, 1967. !tis time for a progress report on the Monkees, who tooka big gamble by releasing analbum and a single at about the same time as the big fellas from England. The album, Hmdqllarters, has not done as well as Sgt. Pepper, but "Pleasant Valley Sunday" blw "Words" is two-sided top ten, whereas" All You Need Is Love" is one-sided.

My original analysis of the group pitted Mike Nesmith (struggling singer, hence good) against Micky Dolenz (ex-child actor, hence bad). As it turns out, the real bad­ die seems to be the other ex-child actor, Davy Jones, a repulsive showbiz type, cute as a push button. The rest? Peter Tork is an anxiety-prone phonv, Dolenz a likable oaf with a strong voice, and Nesmith still the most talented of the four, which may not be saying much. His "You Just May Be the One" and "Sunny Girlfriend" are by h~r the best songs on Headquarters and would sl)und good anywhere.

The Monkees began, if you'll remember, as poor vocalists and no musicians at illl, but now, as a note on the album proclaims, they are Doing It Themselves, This means they are venturing live performances. I saw them at Forest Hills, and they stank. That crisp studio sound was weak and ragged on stage, and their Act (they tell the press that the kids won't go for "four dots" anymore) was unbelievably (l)rny. The kids screamed, of course, but the stadium was far from full, and the 01lEo' lonelv rush at the stage quickly stymied by a bored and overstaffed security force. Good signs.

Further Reading Bodroghkozy, Aniko. Gro01'e Tllbe: Sixtin; Tcle1'isio1l and tile YOlltl1 Rcl>rllio1l. Durham,

N.C.: Duke University Press, 2001. Christgau, Robert. "Rock Lyrics Are Poetry (Maybe)." In 1'11,. Age of R"ck: SOllnds or the

A1I1e,.iC<l1l Clllt",."ll'czlol"tioJl, edited by Jonathan Eisen, 230--43. New York: Random House, 1969. First published in Cheetah in December 1967.

I

The Aesthetics of Rock 2591

Emerson, Ken. Alil'alfs Magic in the Ai,.: The BOlliI' and Brilliance of the Brill Bllilding E/"ll. New York: Viking, 2005.

Stahl, Matthew. "Authentic Boy Bands on TV? Performers and Impresarios in The Monkees and Making the Band." Popular Mllcic 21 (2002): 307-29.

Stark, Steven D. GlllCd to tile Set: Tile 60 Telc7'ision ShOlLlS a1ld E1'ents Tlwt Made Us WlJo We Are Todl/Y. New York: Free Press, 1997.

Discography The Monkees. The MOllkees. Colgems, 1966. ___. i\~ore of the MOllkees. Col gems, 1967.

llcildquilrte/"s, Colgems, 1967. ____,. Pisces, AI/III//"iIlS, Cal'/"ic[ll"ll Li fOlies Ltd. Colgems, 1967. ____. Head. Cl,lhems, J968. ____. Allthology. Rhino/WEA, 1998.

4 The Aesthetics of Rockto

An important part of a history in documents about popular music is the way in which writing about popular music changed over time. Prior to the 19605, one period in particular stands out for the amount of print ex­ pended on popular music: The late 1930S and early 1940S witnessed the birlh of several publications devoted to jazz, precisely at the moment when debates about "authenticity" and "commercialism" in jazz were becoming more common. The aesthetic and historical issues in the mid­ 1960s were similar in many respects. As I mentioned earlier, music criticism devoted to rock blossomed parallel to a shift in the seriousness of the audience for popular (especially "rock") music. Several new publications appeared in response to these changes in reception. Crawdaddy! led the way early in 1966 and was quickly followed by RoIling Stone in 1967 and Creem in 1968. In addition to these, several older, more established publications published articles by critics that discussed popular music in a tone previously reserved for classical music and jazz (some of these articles appeared earlier in Part 3). The Village Voice earned the distinction of being the first established publication to hire a member of the counterculture, Richard Goldstein, as their rock critic in 1966. Other publications followed suit: Cheetah hired Robert Christgau in 1967; the toney New Yorker broke down in 1968 and hired Ellen Willis, one of the first female rock critics. Meanwhile other notables of rock criticism, such as Greil Marcus, Jon Landau, and Dave Marsh, were

261 260 The 1960S

getting their start at one or the other of the above-named countercultural publications.'

Compared to the previous generation of critics and to mainstream publications, such as Time and Newsweek, these countercultural writers brought with them a new sensibility. What follows are articles that explicitly address the notion of rock aesthetics-in other words, what is it that makes rock music good or beautiful? And how does the specificity of late sixties' rock demand a different approach to answering these questions compared to other types of music?

The first entry in this chapter consists of the introductory editorial to the first issue of Crawdaddy!, by that magazine's founder, Paul Williams, then a 17-year-old freshman at Swarthmore College. Here, Williams explains the rationale for a new type of publication devoted to the criticism of rock.

GET OFF Of Mv CLOUD

Paul Williams

You are looking at the first issue of a magazine of rock 'n' roll criticism. Crawdaddy! will feature neither pin-ups nor news briefs; the specialty of this magazine is intelli­ gent writing about pop music. Billboard, Cash Box, etc., serve very well as trade news magazines; but their idea of a review is: "a hard-driving rhythm number that should spiral rapidly up the charts just as (previous hit by the same group) slides." And the teen magazines are devoted to rock 'n' roll, but their idea of discussion is a string of superlatives below a fold-out photograph. Crawdaddy! believes that someone in the United States might be interested in what others have to say about the music they like.

This is not a service magazine. We fully expect and intend to be of great use to the trade: by pushing new 45s that might have otherwise been overlooked, by aiding radio stations in deciding on their playlists, by giving manufacturers some indication of response to a record other than sales, by providing buyers with critiques of new LPs so that they'll have some idea what they're getting before they buy, and, most im­ portant, by offering rock 'n' roll artists some sort of critical response to their work. But we are not a service magazine.

1. FClI" a more in-de'pth account of the development of rock criticism. see Gendron, From Montmartre t(l the Mudd Club: Popular Music artd thr Al'rmt-Garde (Chicago: University of Chicago Pr.-ss, 20(12) (Gendron discusses the debates about jazz aesthetics in the early 19405 as well); Steve lones end Kevin Featherly, "Re-Viewing Rock Writing: Narratives of Popular Music Criticism," in Steve lones, ed .. Pill' M",;;c Ilrld tlie Press (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2002), 19-40; ,md otlwr esseys in Pop Music Illld the Press. Richard Meltzer, another critic who began with Crn7l'dnddyl, outhorc'd e book with the title of this section, The Aesthetics of Rock (New York: Sonwthillg Else Press, 1970).

SOllree: P"ul Willi",ns, "Get Off of My Cloud [editorial]," Crawdaddy! February 7, 1966. Reprinted in Paul Williams, ed., The Crawdaddyl Book: Writings land Images)from The Magazirte of Rock (Milwaukee: Hal Leonard Co, 20(2), 10-11.

The Aesthetics of Rock

The aim of this magazine is readability. We are trying to appeal to people inter­ ested in rock 'n' roll, both professionally and casually. If we could predict the exact amount of sales of each record we heard, it would not interest us to do so. If we could somehow pat every single pop artist on the back in a manner calculated to please him and his fans, we would not bother. What we want to do is write reviews and articles that you will not want to put down, and produce a magazine that you will read thor­ oughly every week. And we think we can do it.

The second entry in this chapter is an early article by Richard Goldstein that takes Marshall McLuhan's ideas about the effects of electronic media on communications as its point of departure. One of the first attempts to articulate why rock music demanded a new way of listening and a new context for evaluation, this article aligns rock with McLuhan's "cool media," which, according to McLuhan, counteract the serial, unitary logic of hot media (such as print) with an "intuitive mosaic of instantaneous communication" (McLuhan uses television as an example of the latter).' Goldstein's innovative move here is to apply McLuhan's often-quoted statement, "the medium is the message" to rock music in the service of developing a type of criticism specific to it. Part of the urgency of this pro­ ject for Goldstein stems from a reaction to the modernist tendency to dis­ miss pop because of its inescapable association with commerce.

POP EVE: EVALUATING MEDIA

Richard Goldstein

The most disturbing thing about Marshall McLuhan's "Understanding Media" to most readers of this column will be its insistence that those who attempt to impose standards upon the"cool" electronic media based on their aesthetic experience& wi th the printed word are cultural illiterates. They are as far from understanding radio, television, cinema, or mixed media discotheques as non-literate cultures are trom comprehending the scope of literature.

Many of those absorbed in criticizing these new media "are typically book­ orientated individuals who have no competence in the grammars of newspaper or radio or film but who look askew and askance at all non-book media," according to McLuhan. Such critics would be hard pressed to understand why "Death of a Sales­ man" could be an "evening of exalted theatre" (to quote Jack Gould of the Times) and still be mediocre television, while a series like "1 Spy," with no literary aspirations, can use the spontaneous and informal qualitie& of television to maximum advantage.

What McLuhan's oft-quoted and oft-vilified statement-"the medium is the message"-means to criticism is that no longer can aestheticians separate form from content. McLuhan differentiates between "hot" media, which provide a maximum

2. See Marshall McLuhan, Undcrstl11lr1ing Media: Tirc Extmsi"ns of Man (New York: Signet

Books, 1964).

Source: Richard Goldstein, "Pop Eye: Evaluating Media," Village Voice, ]uly 14,1%6, pp. 6~7

Reprinted with permission by the author.

263 262 The 1960s

amount of information to one specific sense, and "cool" media, which provide low definition images and invite the audience to fill in the gaps.

To tell a professor of literature that Marvel Comics are artistic extensions of the comic book form is probably futile because few professors choose to consider the possibility that the cartoon-which McLuhan calls a "cool" pictorial form-----ean be artistic. To speak of the New Journalism is useless because, many critics will main­ tain, reporting facts in a mosaic rather than a sequential fashion cannot possibly be artistic.

To tell the connoisseur that a happening is a "cool" or participational approach to theatre is an impudence. To discuss seriously recent exhibits such as the USCG show, which combined throbbing light, oscilloscopic patterns, flashing color sparks, and electronic music to create an intimate "psychedelic" art-experience is self-defeating. Such approaches will be considered irrelevant to the real stuff of art by those whose academic backgrounds have enabled them to "appreciate" only the hot techniques in painting, music, and especially the printed word.

McLuhan refers to the "ancient book" and places our literary standards in oppo­ sition to the newer pop arts. "Genteel art," he claims, "is a kind of repeat of the specialized acrobatic feats of an industrialized world. Popular art is the clown reminding us of all the life and faculty that we have omitted from our daily routines.... The highbrow, from Joyce to Picasso, has long been devoted to American popular art because he finds in it an authentic imaginative reaction to official action."

Pop aestheticism has found its maximum support among the young intellectuals because its emergence as a meaningful experience can best be appreciated by those who have been nursed on the 24-inch flickering box. For the great majority of our youth, pop culture becomes a pervasive reality long before the age of artistic dis­ crimination. McLuhan tells us that "every American home has a Berlin Wall" be­ tween it's youthful and adult occupants.

The dichotomy between classic and pop, between hot and cool, between high and low art forms, is especially apparent in the area of popular music. Adult intellec­ tuals may never be able to comprehend why Bob Dylan is worshipped by legions of pubescent "teeny-boppers" and, at the same time, considered a major American poet by many serious students. These parochial critics face a practically insurmountable obstacle in their unwillingness to accept the fact that a poet can work in a medium such as rock 'n' roll-that this is an age of electronic troubadours.

They reply that rock 'n' roll cannot possibly be artistic because it is self-limiting in form, because it is not musically complex, because it has traditionally been com­ mercial and therefore anti-artistic. When we mention that rock 'n' roll is musical tele­ vision, that it is the language of the streets and increasingly of the campus, that it comes closest to being a universal means of communication, we are met with impa­ tient snickering from those who inhabit the other side of the wall.

Just as reprehensible as the Widespread ignorance of the classics among the young is the Widespread ignorance of the current among adults. Yet, many of those churning out words and music to feed the sensibilities of our youth are becoming particular about the product they produce. A sure sign of this new sense of potential is the trend toward censorship of pop music by radio officials. Pop, we are told, is warping the tastes of our young. We are confronted with songs about pre-marital sex, the drug experience, war and peace, poverty, and lack of communication, and many, many shades of love. The basic ltalian sound which came out of Philadelphia in the late 50's-the sound of Fabian, Frankie Avalon, and Connie Francis, among others­ has nearly disappeared from popular view. [n its place we have more variation in pop-sounds than ever before.

The Aesthetics of Rock

From the Negro ghettos of the North comes soul, with its gospel flavor. And from the South comes the Chuck Berry heritage of "hard" rhythm-and-blues. Far re­ moved from the basic soul approach is the Motown sound, from Negro Detroit. It fea­ tures a smooth, driving beat, reliance upon heavy orchestration, and a syrupy vocal quality. The lyriCS are repetitive and rarely present any poetic ideas; the beauty is in the "sound."

The surf-sound from California presents us with loud, direct harmonies and sub­ ject matter that is materialistic and happy. By wav of contrast, the California folk sound--exemplified by the Mamas and the Papas and new groups from the San Francisco Bay Area-is spiritual and often "psychedelic."

Psychedelic music-the most controversial sound---emphasizes melodic ambi­ guity, a free association approach to lyrics, and many electronic and atonal touches. It encompasses performers like the new Bob Dylan, Simon and Garfunkel, Bob Lind, and groups such as the Lovin' Spoonful, the Byrds, the Yardbirds, and the Fugs."

Jazz-rock, a new hybrid, has enabled groups like the Ramsey Lewis Trio, the Blues Project, and the Alan Price Set to experiment with sound-stretching. Folk-rock is, by now, an almost meaningless generalization since it labels the diverse work of the protest writers, the balladeers, and almost anyone who accompanies himself on a guitar. But any number of folk purists have made the electronic discovery that the big beat can be ethnic. Joan Baez has just recorded a rock album; three years ago, she parodied rock regularly in her concerts.

The English Renaissance did much more than add a broad "a" to pop music; it brought to the fore a number of angry young troubadours who sing, almost obses­ sively, of the struggles between the poor and the rich, young and old, boss and worker. The Rolling Stones, the Animals, and the Kinks specialize in scathing put­ downs. They sing Clifford Odets with an echo chamber.

And, of coursE', there are the Beatles. Their ascendancy covers almost every style mentioned above. They initiated Baroque-rock-making the classical style an inte­ gral part of their sound rather than the flourishing touch it has always been to rock 'n' roll. They are widely credited with awakening an interest in Eastern music and in­ strumentation which goes under the lamentable name of Raga-Rock. In their latest releases, the Beatles too seem to be drifting in the direction of electronic feedback and atonal rock and roll.

There are hacks working in pop music, but there is mediocrity on both sides of the wall. Rock 'n' roll may not be the most flexible form, but it is the one most with us today and the form most of our youth chooses to participate in. True artists are al­ ways aware of the limitations in their form. But they must receive an intense satis­ faction in the realization that they are reaching a wider, more receptive, and more di­ versified audience through rock 'n' roll than ever before. And they are making money at it.

Their craft-rock 'n' roll-needs a critic. McLuhan complains that our educa­ tional apparatus educates principally with regard to the printed word. We learn to tell Dostoevsky from Spillane, but we know nothing about the flicks. We learn to tell Rembrandt from Keane, but we know nothing about advertising. We learn to deal

3. This is an early description of "psychedelic" music and differs considerably from later appraisals. Some of the other descriptions also diverge considerably from estimations that were current at the time and that were to become prominent shortly thereafter (e.g., Motown and Southern Soul).

264 The 1960s

with classical music and legitimate theater but we know nothing about the sights and sounds which bombard us perpetually in the name of pop.

And pop is not mere entertainment; it is anything but passive and conventional. Television, radio, advertising and cinema have radically changed the perceptions of every man on any street. The question now is how to deal with pop-how do we screen the fallout from Madison Avenue? How do we evaluate our responses to the electronic waves racing through our living room? How do we tell what is noise and what is good, even artistic, rock 'n' roll?

A pop critic needs his eyes, his ears, a typewriter, and an impressive German vocabulary. But most important, he needs his youth. Understanding media is hardly enough; we must learn to evaluate as well. And, in rock 'n' roll at least, the child may be father to the man.

Further Reading Gendron, Bernard. Between Montmartre and the Mudd Club: Popular Music and the Avant-

Garde. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002. Jones, Steve, ed. Pop Music and the Press. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2002. Meltzer, Richard. The Aesthetics of Rock. New York: Da Capo Press, 1987 [1970]. Lindberg, Ulf, Gestur Gudmundsson, Morten Michelsen, and Hans Weisethaunet. Rock

Criticism from the Beginning: Amusers, Brllisers, and Cool-Headed Cruisers. New York: Peter Lang, 2005

49- Festivals The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

While stadium concerts featuring several bands had been occurring since at least 1964, the Monterey Pop Festival in the summer of 1967 inaugu­ rated a new era in which a "rock festival" spanned several days and some­ how managed to connote antimaterialism within what were still basically capitalist enterprises. The decade ended with two major festivals. Wood­ stock, held in August 1969, was widely viewed as a successful event by the national media, and attendance became a kind of retroactive litmus test for hipness (if not hippieness). The idea of the "Woodstock Nation" gained widespread currency among hippies and media observers and be­ came a metonym for the "new age" of peace and love that many hoped the change in lifestyles would bring.

Less than four months later, however, the Altamont "festival" (actually a one-day event) brought such fantasies to a crashing halt.

Festivals 265

Organized at the behest of the Rolling Stones as the finale of their tour late in 1969. the concert took place near the San Francisco Bay Area and featured local bands, such as the Grateful Dead, the Jefferson Airplane, and Santana. The Hell's Angels were hired as security and were at least partially responsible for the feelings of paranoia that many audience members remember as characterizing the event.'

Some of the most thoughtful accounts of Woodstock discuss the contra­ dictions between the peace-and-love ethos projected by the event and the effort required by entrepreneurs to produce that effect. At the same time, few writers could resist an optimistic interpretation of Woodstock, still believing in the "reality of a new culture of opposition" that was ba­ sically antimaterialist.' ). R. Young's "fictional" review of the album, Woodstock, released almost a year after the festival, brings out some of the self-delusion involved in the counterculture at the level of interper­ sonal relationships; in other words, even if the counterculture managed to resist the lures of materialism, status and prestige were stilt impor­ tant, even when acquired nonmaterialistically. Many of Young's other fictional reviews address issues of conformity and the persistence of prehippie values within the counterculture. 3

REVIEW OF VARIOUS ARTISTS, WOODSTOCK

J. R. Young

Bill hadn't been to Woodstock that August weekend the summer before, although Plattsburgh, his home, was less than 300 miles due north on the Northway. He'd gone drinking at Filion's Friday night, and when he awakened terribly hungover the next afterno()!1, as did most of his 18-year-old buddies, it was too late to make the trip

1. It is interesting !l) compare the films from all three of these events: MOlllerey POf' and Woodstock both seem in sympathy with the hippy milieu. Woodst,'ck, in particular, coordinated as it was with the rd"ase of a triple-album (perhaps the first of its kind), ran over three hours in

length, 111C'<lning that cDJl:;urnption of both the albun1 and nlovie required feats of endurance similar to thuse lleeded to survive the original event. Gillllll" Shellf", on the other hand, is a different story altogL'!lwr: Begun as a documentary of the Rolling Stones "triumphal" 1969

American tour as the "undisputed" greatest rock 'n° roll band in the world (now that the Beatie's

were no longer t()llrini'~l the harrovvlng footage of Altamont turns the movie into a tragedy. Both

the cinematic accounts of Woodstock and Altamont emphasized certain elements of those eve-nts

that downphlyed the r(lllge of iHJdiencp rt'i'Ktions. 2. See Andrew Kopkind, "Woodstock Nation," in Jonathan Eisen, ed., Tltc Age of Rock 2: Sir!Jts

and SOIl/ills 0/ tltr ,~lIIenCIllI Culluml Rel'oll/lIolI (New York: Random House. 1970),312-18. Originally published in I1nrd Tillles in 1969.

3. See, for example, J. R Young, r('view of the Grateful Dead, LiZ'e Dend (\<Varner Brothers 183Cl), Rollillg 510111', February 7, 1970; and J. R. Young, review of Crosby, Stills, Nash, Young, Taylor, .nd

Reeves, Deja Vu (Atlantic SO noo), Rollillg Stone, April 30, 1970.

Source: Record review of Woodslock (Cotillion SO 3-5(0), by J. R. Young from Rollillg 5101le, July~, 1970. © 1970 Rolling Stnn" TTC. All Rights Reserved. Reprinted by permissioo.

266 The 19605

down to Bethel. You couldn't have convinced anyone in the months that ensued, howevE'r, that not only was Bill not at the Music and Art Show in the alfalfa fields, but that hE' hadn't illso played some integral part in the whole proceeding-a dope run­ ner for the Airplane, perhaps ("Hey, Bill, you got a bomber?" Grace, resplendent in white, tits high and firm, asked him standing behind the giant platform as the Who finished up their set with the sun edging orange up the mountain from its resting place), or a candy bar for Jerry Garcia. Bill believed, too, and if pressed he had a whole Abbie Hoffman Rap about the" actuality" of being there not actually being the important thing, but only a minor side trip.

"I live in Woodstock nation," Bill told people when the topic came up, "If you can dig it. I mean how many were actually there. You don't know. We'll never know. But it doesn't make any difference. The Woodstock actuality has become a media trip. That's where it's at. More cameras, writers, and that kind of shit than at Kennedy's funE'raJ. Like the people on the outside probably know more than those who were ilctually there. What it's come down to is Woodstock Nation, and Woodstock Nation, man, is in your head if you want it to be."

Probilbly. But Bill still knew a whole lot about the Music Show itself, and took great pilins to seek out said information. He had clippings, articles, ads, the illustri­ ous Life Magazine Special Edition, Rolling Stone's Woodstock, the Village Voice issue, and now in la te spring had seen the movie three times at four bucks a throw, and also had the album committed to memory. His head, in fact, was a living monument to the whole Woodstock thing, even down to the little things. Somehow Bill had found someone who had some of the infamous "brown acid." He paid ten bucks for the tab so that he could find out "what was going down." True to form, he took it the second time he saw Woodstock.

"Miln, tl1i1t brown acid at Woodstock WilS a real bummer," he told assorted freaks at ilssorted gatherings. "A real bummer. Knocked me out for hours. Paranoia personified."

As time passed, Bill became more assertive in such situations. No one now both­ ered to question him directly as to whether he had been there, but merely what was it like. Bill went along with them because he felt he really knew what it was like.

"Cocker was crazy, man, beautiful. And Alvin Lee, wow." "Were there really a lot of naked people," a far out chick asked handing him a

joint. "like cunt and cock and everything?" "Well," Bill would smile, "you saw the movie didn't you?" "Yeh." "What else do you want to know?" "Par out." Woodstock was now the new American Dream, a pipe dream, how it had been

those three glorious days of sun and rain, mud and music, and the 500,000 patriots whose ranks were growing day by day, patriots of Woodstock "flying their freak flags high," Groupies, the Dope, and good ol' Rock & Roll, and the national anthem, un­ derstood for the first time by Hendrix and his buzz saw guitar. It was all coming home to rest now, and Bill, like many, was proud to stand up and be counted for his own People, for Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness, for his Country. Woodstock Nation was a reality.

So it was, until one night at a party in West Chazy when the conversation once more found its way to Woodstock as it always did whenever Bill happened to show. Bill dropped facts and recollections amidst the circle of listeners who sat rapt about him like Leary dropped acid. They all shook their heads at the good dope being pilssed and ilt the general incredulity of the whole Woodstock affair. But they

Festivals 267

believed. That is, all but one believed, and this one hairy ragamuffin of hipdoill lay back against a sofa, hitting on his own kief, and coolly taking in Bill's polished expo­ sition. He listened for a long time. At some point, indiscernible to the rest of the gath­ ering, he apparently had heard enough.

"Hey, man," he said, leaning his well-coiffed head into the circle. "Did you ever understand what happened down front just before the Band went on?"

Bill looked up and smiled. "No, I wasn't there when that happened. I must have been somewhere else.

What happened?" "I don't know. 1 was sitting about 50 yards out." The kid leaned back out again. Bill eyed him for a moment, and then continued on from the point where he had

disengaged. He had his stuff down. Seconds later however, the kid again poked his head inside the circle. "What happened, man, when that weird rumor.... " "About Dylan showing up?" Bill cut him off in stride. "No, man, that WilS a media hype. No, the rumor just before Creedence Clear­

water went on about the latrines?" Bill looked at the kid again, and didn't answer for the longest time. And then it

was only a reticent shrug. "Well, where, man, did you take a dump after that? Where'd you spend most of

your time?" Everyone turned and looked at Bill, but Bill had nothing to SilY, no one to look at,

nowhere to go. "I mean," the kid went on, driving his point home, "when I arrived, the can situa­

tion,and that strange tale, well, it was weird. Right? You do remember that, don't you?" "Sure .. but. ... " "Did you fork out any bread to get in?" "No," Bill answered, looking down at the flickering candle, "but. ... " "Did you get back to Leon's down the.... " "Groovy Way?" "Wrong direction, man, wrong direction." There was a silence, a certain moment of embarrassment because now everyone

knew. Bill didn't look up. "You're right, though," the kid finally said, "the movie was pretty far out. But it

wasn't like being there. Nothing was like being there." A second silence followed, and then the kid turned to the far out chick. "Hey, you got anything to drink or eat, man? This is your place, isn't it?"

"Yeh," someone echoed, and in seconds the crowd was on its feet, eager to be up and away. Everyone but Bill. He was still on the floor staring into the flame. The rest of the gang trooped to the kitchen.

"Look, man, it was clear he hildn't been there if you'd been there." "And you'd been there," the girl said. "Yeh. Anybody who had would have known immediately he was shucking l15.lt

was obvious, if you knew." "Sure, maybe, but dig where it's at. Two wrongs don't necessarily make a right,

as my grandmother used to tell me, if there were even two wrongs. You know what I mean?"

"But, look. He'd been sold il bill of goods, man, a product that had little to do with anything but money, and that's what he was selling. What, I'm supposed to feel

269 268 The 1960s

bad for coming down on him for fucking around with us? He's an asshole, it's that simple. I mean, like he really believes it. and that's weird."

"Apparently you believe it too. Perhaps more so than Bill. But then you were there. You are Woodstock Nation, and if it's come down to this, then that's sad. That's why there will never really be a Woodstock Nation. You won't let anybody live on your land. You were there. Bill wasn't. Bang, bang. Sad. It's too bad you didn't re­ member what Dylan said."

"What?" "'Those dreams are only in your head.''' She turned and walked away. At the

door she paused and looked back at the kid, and smiled. "'I'll let you be in my dreams, if I can be in yours.'"

The following account of Altamont by George Csicsery explores the cultural ramifications of the event. Many hip commentators of the time viewed Altamont as the symbolic and literal "end of the sixties" and a "loss of innocence," an interpretation that grew stronger in retrospect. in the following article, Csicsery discusses how Altamont revealed that the counterculture's emphasis on peace and love had not excised fear and violence but, rather, had displaced it so that it was perceived as existing only in the rest of society. The question forced to the surface here is how separate a subculture can really be.

ALTAMONT, CALIFORNIA, DECEMBER 6, 1969 George Paul Csicsery

In the beginning there was rock 'n' roll. The Beatles came and made it good with love and the bluebird of Paradise. But even while the children lifted their faces to the sun, Mick Jagger coiled himself around the tree of flesh, offering a sweet bite of chaos. Saturday, the children swallowed that bite, after chewing and tasting their alliance with evil for nearly a decade.

Until Saturday, evil was value-free, something to dig for its own sake. A lot of people who thought they were children of chaos dropped out of their sugar-coated camp trips Saturday to see the core of their religion at work.

Altamont. like the massacre of Song My, exploded the myth of innocence for a section of America. As the country grows more sophisticated, it learns to confront its own guilt.

The media projected WOODSTOCK. A great people event put on by the younger generation to celebrate its freedom. Traffic jams creating technological time-space motion transcending normal blurb time events. Birth, death, dope, violence, groovy teenyboppers dancing-an instant consumer package of life. Look at all the hippies, America. They're grooving while the rest of you schmucks have to watch it on TV, because you're too uptight. The media needs hippies now more than ever, to show there is still someone in America who can dig on a scene.

Source: George Paul Csicsery, "Altamont, California, December 6, 1969," in Jonathan Eisen, ed.,

Tlte Age of [,ork 2: Sights and S,'unds of tlte American Cultural Revolutitm (New York: Random House, 1970), Pl'. \45~4R. Used by permission of the author.

Festivals

But this time it didn't work. The helicopters could not feel that something more than a happening with three hundred thousand people was going on below. Alta­ mont was America. Years of spreading dope, hair, music, and politics came together and reflected nothing less than the whole trip.

Those who expected the illusion of their own inherent goodness to last forever are still freaked. Others who pay less attention to the rhetoric of a cultural revolution say they had a good time. Putting it all together reads like America's pulse NOW. After all we not only make beautiful music, love, and beadwork; we pay our pigs to exterminate Black Panthers, we fry Vietnamese in their own homes, and we elect Spiro Agnew to govern our lives.

Altamont was a lesson in micro-society with no holds barred. Bringing a lot of people together used to be cool. Human Be-Ins, Woodstock, even a Hell's Angel fu­ neral, were creative communal events because their center was everywhere. People would play together, performing, participating, sharing, and going home with a feel­ ing that somehow the communal idea would replace the grim isolation wrought on us by a jealous competitive mother culture.

But at Altamont we were the mother culture. The locust generation come to con­ sume crumbs from the hands of an entertainment industry we helped create. Our one-day micro-society was bound to the death-throes of capitalist greed. The freeway culture delivered the crowd, separate, self-contained in Methedrine isolation, to an event where they could not function as private individuals. The crowd came from a country where everything is done for you. Welfare state-relax, work, and pay your taxes. We'll take care of the war in Viehlam and the war at home.

Yeah, but nobody made sure the machine would function at Altamont. Three hundred thousand people sucked on a dry nipple because it was free. Everyone tried to get to the same place all by himself, and since everyone made it there was no pie. The pie was watching yourself at the spectacle, watching the spectacle watching you at the spectacle doing your own thing watching.

America at Altamont could only muster one common response. Everybody grooved on fear. One communal terror of fascist repression. The rest was all separate, people helping, people walking, people eating, people standing in line to shit. The revolutionaries were there too. Everybody related to people freaking out as well as the mother culture relates to Yippies. Here they were running through the crowd naked, stoned, h'ampling on our thinning privacy.

They expressed our own lack of control, our desire for space, for the freedom to live out our own body lives. But the crowd reacted with blind hatred, paranoia press­ ing them forward to get a better look at their own private crush on his satanic majesty.

But it wasn't all a freakout. Back up the slopes of Altamont Speedway, as in the secluded suburbs and woods of America, people kept to the illusions of better dope and more space. The loners, couples, and communes saw nothing, heard nothing and cared less about the crowded valley of fear. Most of them say they had a good time, but few escaped the heavy vibes from below.

Around the stage, at the epi-center, the Angels lost control. Their violence united the crowd in fear. Even people who had no fear of the Angels grew tense from a re­ pressed feeling of panic that swirled around the stage. Mostly it was a fear of being trampled that was intensified by fights and people who did freak out. Since the Angels were the only group there who were together enough to organize th..ir violence they became a clear focus of crowd hatred. Thousands of times we've blamed pigs for less while holding the myth of right-wing Anarchist sacred. Marlon Branda, freewheelin' agent of chaos, another of Saturday's toppled camp heroes.

270 The 1960S

The Angels protected Mick, their diabolic prince, well. He escaped without seri­ ous injury. Later on KSAN they too defended their actions on the grounds that their private property was violated. " ... ain't nobody going to kick an Angel's bike and get away with it ..." The official cover-up came Ronald Reagan style from the Stones' Manager Sam Cutler. When asked about the Angels' violence he answered "... regrettable, but if you're asking for a condemnation of the Angels ... "

It was over. No explanation was needed, only a feeble plea for someone in America to clean it up. The stirrings of a young but growing movement to salvage our environment. The job of cleaning up Altamont, or America, is still up for grabs. America wallows in the hope that someone, somewhere, can set it straight. Clearly nobody is in control. Not the Angels, not the people. Not Richard Nixon or his pigs. Nobody. America is up for grabs, as it sinks slowly into Methedrine suffocation with an occasional fascist kick to make her groan with satisfaction.

Further Reading Bennett, Andy, ed. Remembering Woodstock. London: Ashgate, 2004. Eisen, Jonathan, ed. The Age of Rock 2: Sights and Sounds of the American Cultural Revolu­

tion. New York: Random House, 1970. Makower, Joel. Woodstock: The Oral History. New York: Doubleday, 1989. Mayes, Elaine. It Happened ill Monterey: Modern Rock's Defining Momellt. London: Britannia

Press, 2002.

Discography MOllterey International Pop Festival. Razor and Tie, 2007. Woodstock: Musicfrom thc Original Soundtrack alld More. WEA International, 1970.

Videography The Complete Monterey Pop Festiml. Criterion, 2002. The Rolli'lg Stones-Gimme S/zelter. Criterion, 2000. Woodstock-3 Days of Peace & Music. Warner Home Video, 1997.

The 1970sPOlrt 4

50. Where Did the Sixties Go?

Histories of popular music often describe the late 1960s-early 1970S as a time of "splintering," when the supposedly monolithic counterculture audience divided itself among an ever-growing assemblage of genres. According to this view, middle-class, college-educated listeners gravi­ tated toward singer-songwriters, art rock, and what remained of impro­ visation-oriented blues and psychedelic rock, while younger, middle­ and working-class listeners favored the emerging genres of heavy metal and hard rock. At the same time, Top 40 music for early teens grew increasingly disconnected from all the above, ending the brief conver­ gence of the most experimental rock and soul with mainstream pop. Such generalizations are true up to a point, but they obscure divisions that already existed, as well as commonalities that persisted. Earlier large-scale divisions among and within white pop, black pop, and coun­ try continued, but in new forms, while fissures appeared in the critical firmament. New bands, such as Led Zeppelin, for example, appealed to many readers of Rolling Stone, but elicited the approbation of critics on Rolling Stone' 5 staff.'

The music industry did seem to recover from its bewildered re­ sponse to the anarchic eclecticism that had surfaced between 1965 and 1969. Top 40 radio more and more featured bubblegum groups and one­ off novelties, while some of the most challenging funk, soul, and rock faded from mass circulation. This is not to say that all one could hear on Top 40 were the Archies, the Partridge Family, and the 1910 Fruitgum Company; hits by Aretha Franklin, James Brown, Sly and the Family Stone, Santana, the Rolling Stones, Janis Joplin, and many others were still played heavily for several years into the 1970S. Nevertheless, "soul" radio, FM progressive, and AM Top 40 all diverged during this period. "Easy listening" pop, the holdover from pre-rock 'n' roll popular music,

1. See the ~,chang~ in [,,,Iling Stone (part of which is reprinted in chapter 56) of reviews and

letters about L~d Zeppelin's first two albums in The Rolli//S Stone Record Review (New York:

Pocket Books, 1911). Originally published in Rollins Stone on March ]5, 1969, and December 13,

1969.

271

273 272 The 1970S

continued to fade, although chestnuts, such as "Theme from Love Story" by Andy Williams (from 1971), surfaced occasionally.

While many saw the end of the 1960s as representing the end of the counterculture, quite a few of the musical predilections of the late 1960s continued. Bands like the Beatles (and the solo efforts of former Beatles once the band split up); the Band; the Grateful Dead; Led Zeppelin; the Allman Brothers; Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young; and many others shared an emphasis on technical virtuosity and either formal complexity or improvisational ability (or both), while featuring lyrics that displayed psychedelic influences and expressed utopian sentiments. Although all these bands might-only a short time later-be categorized according to different genres, this was not necessarily apparent to listeners at the beginning of the 1970S.

The continuities between the late 1960s and early 1970S illustrate the difficulties with periodization schemes organized by decades. When one thinks of that cultural-historical moment known as the 1960s in terms of how the subculture of white, Western youths, usually referred to as "hippies," intersected with larger political and economic patterns, a strong case can be made for the persistence of "the 1960s" until 1972 or 1973. In this scheme, the end of the 1960s is marked by (take your pick) the failed u.s. presidential campaign of George McGovern, the oil crisis of 1973, the Watergate scandal of 1973-74, or the reconsolidation of the recording industry. The musical counterpart to these various crises and scandals was the near-banishment of hard funk and deep soul to black radio and of countercultural rock to "progressive" FM by the mid-1970S.

The continuing and almost subliminal emphasis on technique derived from "high art" music within many evolving genres of rock music forms a large part of the context for the excerpt by Lester Bangs included here, in which Bangs advances an aesthetic that opposes the virtues of rock 'n' roll to those of "artiness." For Bangs, the artless simplicity of Iggy and the Stooges represents an antidote to the pretentiousness of the "heavy" rock bands, with the Stooges' music synthesizing desirable qualities taken from both free jazz and the garage bands of the mid-1960s, both of which Bangs applauds for their acceptance and creative use of noise. A particularly influential aspect of this account is how the Velvet Under­ ground emerges as an important link between the proto-punk of the 1960S and the Stooges. Both free jazz and the Velvet Underground (and hence the Stooges) reveal affinities for the New York avant-garde aesthetic of the 1960s, sharing the avant-garde's enthusiasm for confronting and shocking the audience. 2

To support his argument, Bangs presents a synopsis of rock music from the mid-1960s to 1970 when this article was written. Bangs adds

2. Bangs .'xpands furtlwr on the lTlevance of the Vplvet Underground for revitalizing 1970s rock in "Dead Lie the Velvet Undergn)lInd," Cree", (Miw 1971): 44-49,64-67.

Where Did the Sixties Go?

crucially to previous accounts of a rock aesthetic by enlarging the frame of reference to include jazz and by recognizing the connection between the influence of ex-folkies and the attitudes of purism and of disdain for sim­ ple rock 'n' roll that wielded a large influence over late 1960s' rock.' Bangs became one of the most important theoreticians of punk rock, and this ar­ ticle serves as an early statement of the values that found fruition in the musical developments of the mid- to late 1970s. The major forum for the dissemination of Bangs's views was Creem magazine, a publication whose aesthetic tone was set primarily by Bangs and his colleague, Dave Marsh, beginning in 1970. Creem draped its proto-punk philosophy in pro­ letarian garb, appearing as a populist alternative to Rolling Stone, which largely valued the continuation of a 1960s, countercultural aesthetic. In Creem's scheme of things, the main culprits in the decline of rock were Elton John, James Taylor, Led Zeppelin, and Chicago-i.e., bloated, "professional" entertainers. 4

OF POP AND PIES AND FUN

Lester Bangs

The first thing to rt'member about Stooge music is that it is monotonous and simplis­ tic on purpose, and that within the seemingly circumscribed confines of this fuzz­ feedback territory the Stooges work deftly with musical ideas that may not be highly sophisticated (God forbid) but are certainly advanced. The stunningly simple two­ chord guitar line mechanically reiterated all through" 1969" on their first album, for instance, is nothing by itself, but within the context of the song it takes on a muted but very compelling power as an ominous, and yes, in the words of Ed Ward which were more perceptive (and more of an accolade) than he ever suspected, "mindless" rhythmic pulsation repeating itself into infinity and providing effective hypnotic counterpoint to the sullen plaint of Iggy's words (and incidentally, 19 writes some of the best throwaway lines in rock, meaning some of the best lines in rock, which is basically a music meant to be tossed over the shoulder and off the wall: "Now I'm gorma be twenty-two/I say my-my and-a boo-hoon-that's classic-he couldn't've picked a better line to complete the rhyme if he'd labored into 1970 and threw the I Ching into the bargain-thank Cod somebody making rock 'n' roll records still has

3. Andre"\\' Chester nl<H.ie a near-Clltltelllporaneous attetTlpt to articul;lh:' (l rock aesthetic, th'l!. while \rvritten for a more academic readership, llE'\'ertlleless shares much with Beings in his recog­ nition that value in rock music is not synonym0us ,-,\-'ith value In classical music. See Andre\\'

Chester, "Second Thoughts on a Rock Aesthetic: The Band," Nc'" Lefl RCl'inl' 62 (I Q70): 7S-R2 4. For more on how the writings of (r('em and of Bangs, in ,'articular, prefigure the value, that

would dominate punk, see Bernard Gendron, "Punk before Punk," in Bclli'CCII Monlmarl,." 17l1ii the Mudd Club (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2(02), 227-47

Source: Lester Bangs, "Of Pop and Pies and Fun," from P'ycholi, Reneliolls nml Carburelor Dung, ed. Greil Marcus, pp. 3Q-46, copyright © 1987 by The Estate of Lester Bangs. Used bv permisqion of Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Randolll House, Inc.

275 274 The 19705

the good sense, understood by our zoot-jive forefathers but few bloated current bands, to know when to just throw down a line and let it lie).

Now t!lere', a song just packed with ideas for you, simplistic and "stupid" though it may seem and well be. A trained monkey could probably learn to play that two-chord line underneath, but no monkeys and very few indeed of their cousins half a dozen rungs up on the evolutionary ladder, the "heavy" white rock bands, could think of utilizing it in the vivid way it is here, with a simplicity so basic it's al­ most pristine. Seemingly the most obvious thing in the world, I would call it a stroke of genius at least equai to Question Mark and the Mysterians' endless one-finger one­ key organ drone behind the choruses of "96 Tears," which is one of the greatest rock and roll songs of all time and the real beginning of my story, for it was indeed a com­ plex chronology, the peculiar machinations of rock 'n' roll history from about 1965 on, which ultimately made the Stooges imperative.

Part Two: Brief History Lesson I used to hate groups like Question Mark and the Mysterians. They seemed to repre- . sent everything simpleminded and dead-end ish about rock in a time when groups like the Who and the Yardbirds were writing whole new chapters of musical prophecy almost monthly; certainly we've never known music more advanced at the time of its inception than the likes of ''I'm a Man," "Anyway Anyhow Anywhere," "My Genera­ tion" and "Shapes of Things." The Yardbirds I especially idolized. Eventually, though, I wised up to the fact that the Yardbirds for all their greatness would finally fizzle out in an eclectic morass of confused experiments and bad judgments, and hardest of all to learn was that the only spawn possible to them were lumbering sloths like Led Zeppelin, because the musicians in the Yardbirds were just too good, too accomplished and cocky to do anything but fuck up in the aftermath of an experiment that none of them seemed to understand anyway. And similarly, the Who, erupting with some of the most trail-blazing music ever waxed, got "good" and arty with subtle eccentric songs and fine philosophy, a steadily dilating rep, and all this accomplishment sailing them steadily further from the great experiment they'd begun.

So all these beautiful ideas and raw materials were just lying around waiting for anybodll to pick them up and elaborate them further into vast baroque structures that would retain the primordial rock and roll drive whilst shattering all the accumulated straitjackets of key and time signature which vanguard jazz musicians had begun to dispose of almost a decade bef"re. By now jazz was in the second stage of its finest experimental flowering, in that beautiful night of headlong adventure before the stale trailoff workaday era which has now set in. The Albert Avler who is now spoon­ ing out quasi-cosmic concept albums cluttered with inept rock ripoffs and sloppy playing was then exploding with works like Spiritual Unity', free-flying Ozark-tinged "Ghosts," and Archie Shepp had not yet passed from Fire Music into increasingly vir­ ulent Crow-Jim nihilism. Jazz was way out front, clearing a path into a new era of truly free music, where the only limits were the musician's own consciousness and imagination, a music that cut across all boundaries yet still made perfect sense and swung like no music had ever swung before.

Clearly, rock had a lot of catching up to do. We could all see the possibilities for controlling the distortions of Who/Yardbirds feedback and fuzz for a new free music that w,'uld combine the rambling adventurousness of the new free jazz with the steady, compelling heartbeat of rock, but the strange part was that no­ body with these ideas seemed to play guitar or any of the necessary instruments, while all the budding guitarists weaned on Lonnie Mack and Dick Dale and

Where Did the Sixties Go?

Duane Eddy and now presumably ready to set out for the unknown were too busy picking up on the sudden proliferation of borrowed, more accessible forms that came with the sixties renaissance. Christ, why go fuck with screaming noise when there were Mike Bloomfield's and George Harrison's newest ideas and all that folk rock to woodshed with?

About this time it also began to look like a decided majority of the rising bands were composed of ex-folkies, as opposed to previous waves whose roots had lain in fifties rock and R&B but never crossed paths with the college mobs of coffee house banjo-pickers, who almost unanimously, from Kingston Trio frat sweaters to hip Baez/Lightnin' Hopkins "purists," looked down their noses at that ugly juvenile noise called rock 'n' roll which they all presumed to have grown out of into more esthetically rewarding tastes (or, in other words, a buncha fuckin' effete snobs).

Well, I never grew out of liking noise, from Little Richard to Cecil Taylor to John Cage to the Stooges, so 1 always liked rock and grabbed hungrily at the Yardbirds/Who development, expecting great things. Meanwhile, all these folkies who grew out of the jolly Kennedy era camaraderie of "This Land Is Your Land" sin­ galongs into grass and increasing alienation were deciding that the rock 'n' roll stuff wam't so bad: it, not they, was getting better (I'm sure I'm simplifying this a bit, but not much, I fear, not much). So thev got electric guitars and started mixing all the musics stored in their well-educated little beans up together, and before we knew it we had Art-rock.

Some of the groups that came out of this watershed were among rock's best ever: the Byrds, the early Airplane, etc. But the total effect, I think, was to set the experi­ ment begun by those second-string English bands back by at least two years. You kept listening for something really creative and free to emerge from all the syntheses, but in the end it mostly just seemed competent and predictable. Raga-rock and other such phases with marginal potential came and went, and the Byrds did a few far-out but seldom followed-up things like "Eight Miles High," while the Stones kept on being great following the trends like the old standbys they had already become. The Airplane hinted at a truly radical (in the musical sense) evolution in After Bathing at Baxter's, but the most advanced statement they could seem to manage was the Sandy Bull-like standardized electric guitar raga of "Spare Chaynge." Clearly something was wrong. Rock soaked up influences like some big sponge and went meandering on, but no one in the day's pantheon would really risk it out on the outer-edge tightrope of true noise. 1967 brought Sgt. PepFer and psychedelia: the former, after our initial acid-vibes infatuation with it, threatening to herald an era of rock-as­ movie-soundtrack, and the latter suggesting the possibility of real (if most likely un­ conscious) breakthrough in all the fuzztone and gwping space jams. Even local bands were beginning to experiment with feedback but neither they nor the names they followed kl1E'W what to do with it.

Meanwhile, rumblings were bl'ginning to be heard almost simultaneously on both coasts: Ken Kesey embarked the Acid Tests with the Grateful Dead in Frisccl, and Andy Warhol left New York to tour the nation with his Exploding Plastic Inevitable shock show (a violent, sadomasochistic barrage on the senses and the sen­ sibilities of which Alice Cooper is the comparatively innocuous comic book refl...c­ tion) and the Velvet Underground. Both groups on both coasts claimed to be utiliz­ ing the possibilities of feedback and distortion, and both claimed to be the avatars of the psychedelic multimedia trend. Who got the jump on who between Kesey Rnd Warhol is insignificant, but it seems likely that the Velvet Underground were defi­ nitely eclipsing the Dead from the start when it came to a new experimental music.

277 276 The 1970S

The Velvets, for all the seeming crudity of their music, were interested in the possi­ bilities of noise right from the start, and had John Cale's extensive conservatory training to help shape their experiments, while the Dead seemed more like a group of E'x-folkies just dabbling in distortion (as their albums eventually bore out).

By the timE' the Velvets recorded "Sister Ray," thE'Y seemed to have carried thE' Yardbirds/Who project to its ultimate extension, and turned in their third album to more "conventionally" lyrical material. Also, their two largely experinlE'ntal albums had earned them little more than derision (if not outright animosity) among critics and the listening audience at large. Their music, which might at first hearing seem merely primitive, unmusicianly and chaotic, had at its best sharply drawn subtleties and outer sonances cutting across a stiff, simplistic beat that was sometimes ("Heroin") ('ven lost, and many of the basic guitar lines were simple in the extreme when compared with the much more refined (but also more defined, prevented by its very form and purposes from ever leaping free) work of groups like the Byrds and Airplane. I was finally bE'ginning to grasp something.

Sixties avant-garde jazz is in large part a very complex music. The most basic, classic rock, on the other hand, is almost idiotically simple, monotonous melodies over two or three chords and a four-four beat. What was suddenlv becoming appar­ ent was that there was no reason why you couldn't play truly free music to a basic backbeat, gaining the best of both worlds. Many jazz drummers, like Milford Graves and Sunny Murray, were distending the beat into a whirling flurry that was almost arrhythmic, or even throwing it out altogether. So if you could do that, why couldn't you find some way of fitting some of the new jazz ideas in with a Question Mark and the Mysterians type format?

It was also becoming evident that the nascent generation of ex-folkie rock stars, like the British beat and R&B groups which preceded them in '64, were nE'VE'r going to get off their rich idolizE'd asses to even take a fling at any kind of free music. They simply knew too much about established musical forms which the last three decades of this century should make moribund, and were too smug about it to do anything else. So thE' only hope for a free rock 'n' roll renaissance which would be true to the original form, rescue us from all this ill-conceived dilettantish pap so far removed from the soil of jive, and leave some hope for truly adventurous small-guitar-group experiments in the future, would be if all those ignorant teenage dudes out there learning guitar in hick towns and forming bands to play "96 Tears" and "Wooly Bully" at sock hops, evolving exposed to all the eclectic trips but relatively fresh and free too (at least they hadn't grown up feeling snobbish about being among the intel­ lectual elite who could appreciate some arcane folksong), if only they could some­ how, some of them somewhere, escape the folk/Sgt. Pepper virus, pick up on nothing but roots and noise ilnd the possibilities inherent in approaching the guitar fresh in the age of multiple amp distorting switches, maybe even get exposed to a littlE' of the free jazz which itself seemed rapidly to be fading into its own kind of anachronism, then, just mUII[Je, given all those ifs, we might have some hope.

Well, maybe the gods were with us this time around, because sure enough it hap­ pened. On a small scale, of course-the majority of people listening to and playing rock were still mired in blues and abortive "classical" hybrids and new shitkicker rock and every other conceivable manner of uninventive!y "artistic" jerkoff. But there were some bilnds coming up. Captain Beefheart burst upon us with the monolithic IhJllt MI1;;k Replica, making history and distilling the hest of both idioms into new styles un­ dreamed of, but somehow we still wanted-something else, something closer to'the me­ chanical, mindless heart of noise and the relentless piston rhythms which seemed to represent the essence of both American life and American rock 'n' roll.

Where Did the Sixties Go?

Bands were sprouting and decaying like ragweed everywhere. The MC5 came on with a pre-records hype that promised the moon, and failed to get off the launching pad. Black Pearl appeared with a promising first album-no real experiments, but a distinct Yard birds echo in the metallic clanging cacophony of precisely distorted gui­ tars. Their second LP fizzled out in bad soul music.

Part Three: The Outline of Cure And, finally, the Stooges. The Stooges were the first young American group to acknowledge the influence of the Velvet Underground-and it shows heavily in their second album. 1llE' early Velvets had the good sense to realize that whatever your ca­ pabilities, music with a simple base was the best. Thus, "Sister Ray" evolvE'd from a most basic funk riff seventeen minutes into stark sound structures of incredible com­ plexity. The Stooges started out not being able to do anything else but play rock-bottom simple-they formed the concept of the band before half of them kllE'W how to play. which figures-probably just another bunch of disgruntled cats with ideas watching all the bullshit going down. Except that the Stooges decided to do something ab(lut it. None of them have been playing their instruments for more than two or three years, but that's good-now they won't have to unleam any of the stuff which ruins so many other promising young musicians: flash blues, folk-pickin', Wes Montgomery-style jazz, etc. Fuck that, said Asheton and Alexander, we can't play it anyway, so why bother trying to learn? Especially since even most of those styles' virtuosos are so fuck­ ing boring you wonder how anyone with half a brain can listen to them.

Cecil Taylor, in A. B. Spellman's moving book Four Lil'es in the Bebop BusrrJe;;;;, once told a story about an experience he had in the mid-fifties, when almost every club owner, jazz writer and listener in New York was turned off to his music because it was still so new and so advanced that they could not begin to grasp it yet. \Vell, onE' night he was playing in onE' of these clubs when in walkE'd this dude off the strE'et with a double bass and asked if he could sit in. Why not, said Taylor, even though the cat seemed very freaked out. So they jammed, and it soon became apparent to Taylor that the man had never had any formal training on bass, knew almost nothing a hout it beyond tilE' basic rudiments, and probably couldn't play one known song or chord progression. Nothing. The guy had just picked up the bass, decided he was going to play it, and a very short time later walked cold into a New York jazz club and bluffed his way onto the bandstand. He didn't even know how to hold the instrument, so he just explored as a child would, pursuing songs or evocative sounds through the tan­ gles of his ignorance. And after a while, Taylor said, he began to hear something com­ ing out, something deeply felt and almost but neVE'f quite controlled, veering be­ tween a brand-new type of song which cannot be taught because it comE'S from an unschooled innocence which cuts across known systems, and chaos, which playing the player and spilling garhle, sometimes begins to write its own songs. Something was beginning to take shape which, though erratic, was unique in all this world: Quite abruptly, though, the man disappeared, most likely to freak himself into obliv­ ion, because Taylor never saw or heard of him again. But he added that if the cat had kept on playing, he would have been one of the first great free bassists.

The Stooges' music is like that. It comes out of an illiterate chaos gradually taking shape as a uniquely personal style, emerges from a tradition of American music that runs from the wooly rags of backwoods string bands up to the magic promise eternally made and occasionally fulfilled by rock; that a band can start out bone-primitive, un­ tutored and uncertain, and evolve into a powerful and eloquent ensemble. It's hap­ pened again and again; the Beatles, Kinks, Velvets, etc. But the Stooges are probilbly

278 The 1970S

the first name group to actually form before they even knew how to play. This is pos­ sibly the ultimate rock 'n' roll story, because rock is mainly about beginnings, about youth and uncertainty and growing through and out of them. And asserting yourself way before you know what the fuck you're doing. Which answers the question raised earlier of what the early Stooges' adolescent mopings had to do with rock 'n' roll. Rock is basically an adolescent music, reflecting the rhythms, concerns and aspirations of a very specialized age group. It can't grow up-when it does, it turns into something else which may be just as valid but is stiU very different from the original. Personally I be­ lieve that real rock 'n' roll may be on the way out, just like adolescence as a relatively innocent transitional period is on the way out. What we will have instead is a smaU is­ land of new free music surrounded by some good reworkings of past idioms and a vast sargasso sea of absolute garbage. And the Stooges' songs may have some of the last great rock 'n' roll lyrics, because everybody else seems either too sophisticated at the outset or hopelessly poisoned by the effects of big ideas on little minds. A little knowl­ edge is still a dangerous thing.

Further Reading Bangs, Lester. "Dead Lie the Vl'1vet Underground." Creem (May 1971): 44-49, 64-67. Chest"r, Andrew. "Second Thoughts on a Rock Aesthetic: The Band." New Left Review 62

(1970): 75-82. Reprinted in On Record: Rock, Pop. and the Written Word, ed. Simon Frith and Andrew Goodwin, 315-19. New York: Pantheon, 1990.

Gendron, Bernard. "Punk Before Punk." In Between l....lontmartre lind the Mudd Club, 227-47. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002.

Discography Albert Ayler Trio Spirilllal Unity. Esp Disk Ltd., 1964. Captain Beefheart. Tmllt Mllsk Replica. Captain Beefhear!, Reprise/ Ada, 1969. Jefferson Airplane. After Bat/ling lit Baxter's. RCA, 2003. Question Mark & The Mysterians. Feel It! The Very Best of Qllestion Mark & The

Mysterians. Varese Sarabande, 2001. The Stooges. The Stooges. Elektra/WEA, 2005. ___._. FilII HOllse. Elektra/WEA, 2005. Velvet Underground. The VclI'c1 Underground [of Nico. Polydor/Umgd, 1967. ___. White Ligllt/White Heat. Polydor/Umgd, 1967. ___. Peel S/ml'll/ illld Set'. Polydor/UMGD, 1995. The Who. Thirty Year, of MilXillllllll R[ofB. MCA, 1994. The Yardbirds. Grmtcot I-lit,;, Vol. 1: 1964-1966. Rhino/WEA, 1986.

51", The Sound of Autobiography Singer-Songwriters, Carole King

From the ashes of the folk revival rose the very antithesis of Bangs's "cure"-the singer-songwriter genre. While Bob Dylan's early work up through Blonde on Blonde forms the obvious prototype for this genre, one can look back further and find an even earlier model in Woody Guthrie, who wrote his own songs, accompanied himself on guitar, and presented a ro­ mantic image of poetic individualism, albeit without the strong autobio­ graphical currents that run through Dylan's work, While Dylan acknowl­ edged Guthrie as his major influence, we should not forget the blues and country musicians (especially a figure such as Hank Williams who wrote songs with strong autobiographical connotations) who also embodied many of the qualities just ascribed to Guthrie.

Among the many musicians influenced by Dylan, two, in particular, were important for setting the stage for the singer-songwriter movement: Joan Baez (b. 1941), who, while not known primarily as a songwriter, projected a strong image of personal sincerity as she accompanied her­ self on the guitar and was the most successful of the early 1960s' folk singers; and Paul Simon (b. 1941), whose earnest, melodic anthems (which were not without a sense of humor), performed in partnership with Art Garfunkel, struck a strongly resonant note with collegiate audiences.

In the early work of Dylan and Simon, lyrics focused on personal is­ sues in a realistic way, and songs therefore took on strong autobiograph­ ical associations. After hearing Simon sing "Kathy's Song" (on Simon and Garfunkel's Sounds of Silence, late 1965), one would not be surprised to learn later that Simon wrote the song about a young woman named Kathy with whom he was involved during a sojourn in England (as the story has emerged from the biographical literature on Simon). When Simon and Garfunkel were accompanied by a band, the arrangements grew not out of riffs, as in the blues-rock or psychedelic rock of the mid­ to late-1960s, but, rather, out of the accompaniment patterns played by Simon on the guitar. The same tendency was true of the singer­ songwriter genre in general, since band arrangements were based on the guitar or piano part played by the singer-songwriter who was accompa­ nying herself or himself. These patterns were rhythmic arpeggiations, known as "fingerpicking" on the guitar (the style has no specific desig­ nation when originating on the piano), In terms of politics, singer-song­ writers might espouse antiwar and (especially) antimaterialist views, but they tended to eschew the affiliation with specific causes that was char­ acteristic of the 1960s folk revival.

279

281 280 The 1970S

The most prominent musicians associated with the singer­ songwriter genre came from diverse backgrounds. Carole King (b. 1940) had honed her songwriting craft in the Brill Building, writing for rhythm and blues artists, such as the Drifters and the Shirelles in the early 1960s, and for bubblegum, rock, and soul artists like the Monkees, the Byrds, and Aretha Franklin in the late 1960s. Joni Mitchell (b. 1943) and James Taylor (b. 1948) wrote and performed music with clearer ties to the folk revival, while Carly Simon (b. 1945) betrayed more mainstream pop and Broadway show tune influences. Yet all these artists released influ­ ential albums between 1970 and 1972 that were recognized as introduc­ ing a new "introspective," "intimate" quality into "rock" music.' They were solo artists primarily, employing other musicians as necessary to amplify their own accompaniments. And their lyrics were heard as some­ how referring to their own lives: Critics frequently introduced biographi­ cal elements into articles and reviews as important information that might explain the meaning of the songs. Many writers also recognized that a relatively high number of women were involved in the singer­ songwriter genre and frequently attributed this to the "gentler," "prettier" quality of the music.'

We already encountered Carole King as one of the creative forces be· hind the girl groups in chapter 28. The following article recounts King's early career and transition from a behind·the-scenes songwriter to a popular performer in her own right in the wake of the massive success of her album Tapestry (1971). The tone and topic of this piece could not form a stronger contrast with the preceding article by Lester Bangs. All the major ideas that dominated writing about singer·songwriters in the music press may be found here: the emphasis on autobiography, the "softer" sound, and the "mature" tone of the music that positioned it as the antidote to hard rock. The author, Robert Windeler, notes the new prominence of female singers who write their own material as a preamble to discussing King's success, but then quickly moves to stress how she shuns the accoutrements of fames; her love of privacy and dislike of interviews; and, of course, her domesticity-as her pro­ ducer Lou Adler states at the end of the article, "She's a Laurel Canyon

I. Th"t tlwsp "ttributps h"v(' b('(>n wid ply accepted as exemplifying the genre can be seen from

" recent blurb in tht> Spring 2002 TiIlIC-Li!,' music c"talog:

During thellJf:'()s, th<lllk~ in Iargt:' pnrt to Hllb Dylan, singers st<lrtl'd believing they should write their own tn.1h'rii'lL Tht., sin~('r-~~lllgwrih'r movement was born, and it has influenced rock c\'er since. This TIME-LIFE MUSIC series gllthcr..:; hits from the Singer-Songwriter era: ~incl'rE', sl'llsitivl', deeply personal songs,

perfofllwd hy til(' artists who -.:n.·ated t]wm

2. See, for exmnple, N(w! Coppage, "Trollbadettes, Troubadoras, and Troubadincs ... or ..

WhM's a nict> girl like yOll doing in" business like this?" Stereo Pcpicw (September ](72): 51'-61. Two years lztter, TillIe feCltufl'd an article on the same subject (\\Tith a focus on Joni Mitchell) as

thdr cover storv. "Rock 'n' Roll', Lt'ading L"dy," Ti111e, Dt'cl'mber 16, ]974,63-66 (the titlt' on the

cover is "Rock WOl1wn: Songs of Pride (lnd Passion").

The Sound of Autobiography

housewife."3 All this highlights how neither the mainstream press (represented by Stereo Review, the publication where this article orig­ inally appeared) nor the publications most associated with rock criti­ cism (there are remarkably few articles from this period on female singer-songwriters) could accommodate the new musical roles af­ forded to women by the singer-songwriter genre.

CAROLE KING: "You CAN GET TO KNOW ME THROUGH My MUSIc"

Robert Windeler

The unquestioned queen of the singer/songwriter phenomenon that has already led to some quieter sounds and more thoughtful lyrics in the music of the 1970's is Carole King. (The question of kingship remains highly debatable and must be taken up an­ other day.) And where Carole has led, others have followed. In fact, the disc jockeys and record buyers of the United States haven't had such an array of female voice5 to choose from since the days when Patti Page, Jo Stafford, and Rosemary Clooney were singing about sand dunes on Cape Cod, jambalaya and crawfish pie in New Orleans, waltzes in Tennessee, and pyramids along the Nile, and that was so long ago that it only cost a nickel a song to hear Teresa Brewer on the jukebox. However, there is a crucial difference between now and those earlier times: most of today's women write their own material.

Carole King was a successful songwriter for a dozen years before she released, at the age of thirty-two, her second solo album as a performer. The record was called "Tapestry," and the songs on it do weave a highly subjective view of life. They have also kept Carole King and half a dozen other singers at the top of music surveys ever since. "Tapestry" at last count had sold more than 5,500,000 copies in this country alone and has long since surpassed the movie soundtrack of Thc Sound of Music, the original Broadway-cast recording of My Fair Ladl/' and Simon & Garfunkel's "Bridge over Troubled Water" as the best-selling record album of all time. Carole won three Grammy Awards at the 1972 ceremonies of the Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences in Hollywood. Such artists as Peggy Lee, Barbra Streisand, and James Taylor sing Carole King songs, as do Blood, Sweat and Tears and Dionne Warwicke, but so far no one sings You'vc Got a Friend, I Feel the Earth Mopc, or Where You Lead as suc­ cessfully as Carole herself does.

Sh~ is a near-recluse who is married for the second time and the mother of three. She didn't attend her triple-win Grammy ceremonies because she was still nun;ing her latest baby. When not rehearsing, performing, or recording, she keeps house in Laurel Canyon, West Hollywood, and still considers herself a writer rather than a perfDrmer.

Carole's long climb to the top has been dazzling, but she is most reluctant tD talk about it. She likes her three dogs, her privacy, and most other musicians. She di~ljkes interviews, and even the very rare one she grants will have to take place after a whole

3. This description is strangely reminiscent of the profile of Areth" Franklin given in chap leT 37.

Source: Robert Windeler, "Carole King: 'You Can Get to Know Me Through My Music:" Stm'<7

Review (May 1973): 76~77. Reprinted bv permission of Wright's Rpprints.

282 The 19705

long list of other more important things get done, such as taking empty soda bottles to the recycling center. cI1w young woman who stuns audiences whenever she appears on tour, and sits at the piano nearly mesmerized by her own music, says Simply "I want my music to speak for me. You can get to know me through my music." Music indus­ try insiders have been doing just that since 1959 when she wrote (ironically, with her ex-husband) Will )~'u Still Love Me TimlOrrow?, a Shirelles hit then and a standard now.

She was bom in New York, went to high school in Brooklyn, attended college in Manhattan (City) and Queens (Queens), married her high-school sweetheart, and had two children (her third was not born until November 1971). Carole and her husband­ collaborator, Gerry Goffin, had a string of hits, including a song they wrote and pro­ duced for their maid, who billed herself as Little Eva when she performed her employers' Loco-Motion. Goffin and King survived rather than participated in the brasher sounds of the 1960's, and created songs in their own style for Aretha Franklin (Natural Womou), the Drifters (Up on the Roo!>, and others. cI11e marriage did not survive, however, and in 1968 Carole left New York for Los Angeles. "I needed to get together a new identity," Carole says. "Tt's very hard to maintain a marriage writing together." But the Goffins found they were occasionally able to collaborate after their breakup.

As early as 1961, Carole had auditioned as a recording artist, doing a demon­ striltion record of her own It Might O~ Well Rain Until September, which was eventually recorded by Bobby Vee. And Atlantic Records' president Ahmet Ertegun says he re­ memhers "this little Jewish girl constantly hanging around begging me to let her make a record." But Carole didn't really get the chance to record until she joined with guitarist Danny Koolch and a drummer in a Los Angeles group called the City in 196R. James Tilylor <'ame to LA., and Kootch, who had worked with him in New York, introduced Taylor to Carole. Taylor played guitar in jam sessions with the City, and they produced a nice, straightforward sOlmd that was slightly ilhead of its time.

Tilylor asked Carole to play piano on his second album, "Sweet Baby James," which introduced the phenomenal Fire and Rain. Carole then approached Lou Adler, producer of "Tapestry" and founder Ihead of Ode Records, Carole's label, to help her do a solo record. She had known him in the late Fifties and early Sixties when she was under contract to Colgems Music Publishing and he was their West Coast manager. Although a fan of Carole's who had often tried to persuade her to record, Adler was still busy with the Mamas and the Papas, so he turned her over to a friend, John Fishback, who produced her first illbum. "Caroh> King: Writer," as it was called, contained twelve King songs and ten lyrics by Gerry Goffin, who also mixed the recording. "Writer" sold all of eight thousilnd copies, mostly to friends and bns in the business who had been collecting her old demos and tapes all those years anyway. But the album was critically acclaimed, ilnd Adler, one of the boy wonders of the music business since his Dunhill dilys, took personal charge of Carole's second, third, and fourth albums.

Taylor, Kootch, ilnd Charles Larkey (a bass player with a group called Jo Mama and Cilrole's current husband), played on her first album and all subsequent ones. Cilroll' began touring with Taylor, at first just playing the piano for him, then doing an occasional solo, finally as second act on the bill (with .10 Mamil opening the show). She electrified iludiences, but the album remained il dud commerciallvc Adler, who speculates that it was because "Writer" was soft-sell and had more of a-jazz feel than "lilpestry," which milnilged to be commercial without compromising Carole's bilsic musical integrity, said, "Nothing discourilged me. I'm a fan and in love with her."

Suddenly it was Carole King, performer, and she, for one, was scared. "As a writer it's very safe and womb-like," is Carole's view, "because somebody else gets the credit or the blame." She WilS nervous about performing live, and credits the la­ conic country-tinged singer I composer Tilylor with teaching her how to relax. As for the singer Isongwriter phenomenon she finds herself such an importilnt pilrt of, "It's

The Sound of Autobiography l~::S

a question of everything moving in cycles. In the Sixties, after President Kennedy's death, everything got very 'anti.' 111e Beatles in all their glorious insolence were the start of <1I1ti-heroism, anti-romanticism. Now the cycle has gone back to romanticism. People got sick of the psychedelic sound and wilnted softer moods."

She counts herself fortunate to have "happened to be there at the right time." And Carole characterizes herself as not being success-motivated. "I wilnt to play music, but I have no particular desire for the limelight itself."

"I have always written more in the direction of my friends and family," she says. "1 like to touch them with my songs; touching a mass of people is a whole other trip-it is a high-energy trip and it's very exciting, but it's another trip. I don't want to be a Star with a capital S. 111e main reason I got into performing and recording on my own \vas to expose my songs to the public in the fastest way. I don't consider myself a singer."

Carole's husband Charles is several years her junior (Carole is quite hung up on being 34, an advanced age for a pop heroine, and wishes she were a good deal younger). She lives with him, her two daughters by Goffin, who are now eleven and thirteen, and the Larkeys' own child in her white frame house in Laurel Canyon.

When she writes a song (now often serving as her own lyricist), Cilrole has a general idea about what she wants, discusses it with Adler, and then sits down with the mu­ sicians selected, illways including Taylor and her husband. "We play it a couple of times and we learn it just by listening because we are all so close," she says. "Then it's only a question of polishing and refining it, until it has a degree of spontaneity about itbut is still tight."

Carole's third and fourth albums, "Music" and "Rhymes and Reasons," have come ilnd gone. Although "Music" did not come close to the sales total for "Tapestry," it sold 1,200,000 copies, hardly an embarrassment in an industry in which $1,000,000 in sales is recognized by a gold record award. The ilcceplance she's received as a com­ poser is whilt keeps her going as il perfnrmeL And it is in writing that she really ex­ presses herself, as in her poignilnt Child of Mille (which Anne Murray and others have also recorded), a song written to and rejoicing in her daughter. If others like to listen­ and tnday's incrmsingly sophisticated and honest audiences apparently do-that's fine too.

"But she's still bilsically a writer," SilyS Lou Adler. "The performing part is amaz­ ing to her. All of those artist trips don't interest her at all. She's a Laurel Canvon housewife. She's always been writing ilnd thinking in much the same way; the only differencE' is that now, with a different kind of music listener, she's being heard."

Further Reading Emerson, Ken. A!<Pa1js Magic ill the Air: Tile B01111' alld Brilliollce of the Brill Buildillg EI'Il.

New Ylll'k: Viking, 2005. Hoskyns, Barnev. I-!r'tcl Colifol'llio: The Tl'I/c'LifL' Adl'Clltllrc~ of Cro~htl, Stills, Nash,

YOUllg, Mitchell, Taylor, Br()l('lIe, R(lll~t(/dt, GcffPl1, fhe Eagle~, 01/11 Their MOllY Fliclld~. Hoboken, N. J.: John Wiley & Sons, 2006.

Discography Browne, Jackson. For Euc7'Yl1Iol1. Asylum, 1973. King, Carole. Tt71l('~try. Ode, 1971. Simon, Carly. Rdlecliml~: Carl1j 5il1l011 's GrCl1te~t Hit~. Arista, 2004. Simon ilnd Carfunkel. The Best of Simoll & Garfllllkel. Sony, 1994. Taylor, Jilmes. Sii'ect BallY JOllle~. Warner Brothers, 1970.

285

52. Joni Mitchell Journeys Within

Although never attaining quite the same level of commercial success as James Taylor and Carole King, joni Mitchell (b. 1943) became an archetype for future singer-songwriters. Like Taylor, she recorded her first album in 1968, but unlike him, she was already known to the surviving remnants of the folk music audience through recordings of her early work by artists such as Tom Rush, Dave van Rank, and Ian and Sylvia. Judy Collins's Top 10 hit with her version of Mitchell's "Both Sides Now" (968) added to aware­ ness of Mitchell as a songwriter. Mitchell did not experience a similar level of success herself, however, until 1974 with her sixth album, Court and Spark, and the first single from it "Help Me.'"

Mitchell's music was distinguished from the start by unusual guitar tunings that produced unique and complex harmonies; in addition to being a skillful performer on guitar, piano, and dulcimer, her elaborate vocal ornamentation of her already complex melodies revealed a techni­ cal ability far beyond that ordinarily associated with folk music.' Her fourth album, Blue (1971), exhibited the growing influence of jazz, an in­ fluence that would peak with her association with Charles Mingus from 1979, entitled Mingus. Mitchell continues up to the present to be reluc­ tant to repeal herself musically.

Of all the early 1970S' singer'songwriters, Joni Mitchell best exemplifies what might be called the "autobiographical effect": the impression that the songs are directly relaying events from her life (along with her psy­ chologically acute reflections upon them). This quote from a review of Blue in Rolling Stone typifies this perception of Mitchell's work: "Her primary purpose is to create something meaningful out of the random moments of pain and pleasure in her life."3 This is not to say that her lyrics are without humor; nevertheless, the main persona that emerges in her work from Song to a Seagull (1968, sometimes called Joni Mitchell) through Don Juan's Reckless Doughter (1977) is that of a restless roman­ tic torn between adventurousness and stability. And as noted by the

1. For an excellent account of her early G1I"l't'r, see William Ruhhn'mn, "Joni Mitchell: From Blue to Indigo," Go/dmiJl!'. Februarv 17, 1'J9S; ""printed in The /0111 Mitchell COIlJI"lIlioll: Four Decade, of Ctll/imcllll1ry (N,'\\' York: Schirmer Bo"ks, 20(0), 21-40.

2. I'"r anillys,>, of Mitchell's ml"ic, set' Lloyd Whitesell, "Harmonic Palette in Early joni Mitchell," P0I'"lllr !I·ll"i,., 21, no. 2 (May 20(2); 17:l~94; and jeffrey Pepper Rodgprs, "My Secret Plore; The Cui"'r Udys5<>v of joni Mitchell," in The fo"i Ivlildlell COI1lI'"niml, 21'J-:1O.

3. Timothy Crouse, "Review of Rille." Rollins Siolle, August 5, 1971; reprinted in Tile Rolling Shille Ileeord Rel'in", VollI",e /I, by the editors of Roil/liS Stone (New York: Pocket Books, 1974), 471.

?R4

joni Mitchell journeys Within

interviewer in the piece that follows, the words "free" and "freedom" probably occur more often than any others in her lyrics from this period.

The following conversation with the Israeli folksinger, MaIka, comes from the height of her fame in 1974. Mitchell touches on the auto­ biographical nature of her work and on the importance of introspection and analysis, but also gives a nuanced view of the interaction of these autobiographical elements with values that she shares with musicians working in other genres.

JONI MITCHELL: SELF-PORTRAIT OF A SUPERSTAR

Maika

MaIka: YOl/'re Oil tlJr rOl1d perforl11illg I1gl1in. Will/ the silence of tW(1fl/1I years' Joni Mitchell: J like to retire a lot, take a bit of a sabbatical to keep my life alive and

to keep my writing alive. If I tour regularly and constantly, I'm ahaid that my ex· perience would be too limited, so 1 like to lay back for periods of time and come back to it when 1 have new material to play. I don't like to go over the old periods that much; I feel miscast in some of the songs that 1 wrote as a younger woman.

Maika: How do youfed, tl1en, u/ltmllislening to Llour records? Joni: I don't enjoy some of the old records; 1 see too much of my growing stage; I've

changed my point of view too much. There are some of them that I can still bring life to, but some that 1 can't. Let's take the Lndies (1f II/(' Call1/on album; there are good songs on there which I feel still stand up and which I could still sing. TIlere's a song called "The Arrangement" which seemed to me as a forerUlUler and I think has more musical sophisticalion than anything else on the album. And the Bluf' album, for the most part, holds up. But there are some early songs where there is too much nalvete in some of the lyrics for me to be able now to project convincingly.

MaIka: Your /lalile has f'ce/l lillked 10 S(11lle li(1werflll people in the business, {allles Till/1M Il/ld Gmhalll Nl1sh, for illslallce. Do l!ou{t'f'I tl1t11 YOla frif'llds llaw helped your CI11'eer inllnyway'

Joni: 1don't think so, not in the time that James and I were spending together anyway. He was a total unknown, for one thing-maybe 1 helped his career? ... But [ cia think that when creative people come together, the stimulus of the relationship is bound to show. The rock and roll industry is very incestuous, you know; we have all interactf'd and we have all bt'en the source of many songs for one another. We have all been close at one time or another, and 1 think that a lot of beautiful music came from it. A lot of beautiful times came from it, too, through that mutual under­ standing. A lot (If pain too, because, inevitably, different relationships broke up.

Maika: But iSII'1 there a certailll1J1l(1Zmt ofdall;;;er, luhen 1/0/1 SII!TUl/lld ljOUrse!f luitli I/Il/si­ cil1W; alld troubadollrs doillg tlte ,l1i/le killd o( work liO/I arc doill;;;, thl1t ljOl1 renlhi creat" YOIIr UU'IT special world alld arc 1/01 so o/''''' 10 lullal's happenillg ill Ihf' resl or tlze world?

SOlll'ce: MaIka, "joni Mitchell: Self-Portrait of" Superstar:' Madml1's, june 1974. Rqninted 11\ Stacy Luffi!" ed., Till' lOl1i Mitchell CO"'!'aJllOIl; FOllr Decades OfCo)/l1llcI1lary (New York; Schirmer Books, 2(00), 66-74.

287 286 The 1970S

]oni: A friend of mine criticized me for that. He said that my work was becoming very "inside." It was making reference to roadies and rock 'n' rollers, and that's the very thing I didn't want h) happen, why 1like to take a lot of time off to travel some plJce where I have my anonymity and I can have that day-to-day en­ counter with other walks of life. But it gets more and more difficult. That's the wonderful thing about being a successful playwright or an author: you still maintain your anonymity, which is very important in order to be sompwhat of a voyeur, to collpct your observations for your material. And to suddenly often be the center of attention was ... it threatened tlw writer in me. The performer threatened the writer.

MaIka: MallY [if your sonss arc biogmphiml-do yOll think tllI/t the change il1 your lifestyle /1011' has affected yOIl r songs?

]oni: I don't know. I had difficulty at one point accepting my affluence, and my success and even the expression of it seemed to me distasteful at one time, like to suddenly be driving a fancy car. I had J lot of soul-sE'arching to do as 1 felt sonlE'how or other that liVing in elegance and luxury canceled creativity. I still had that stereotyped idea that success would deter creativity, would stop the gift, luxury would make you too comfortable and complacent and that the gift would suffer from it. But I found the only way that [ could reconcile with my­ self and my art was to say this is what I'm going through now, my life is chang­ ing and 1 am tl)O. I'm an extremist as far as lifestyle goes. [ need to live simply and primitively sometimes, at least for short periods of the year, in order to keep in touch with something more basic. But I have come to be able to finally enjoy my success and to use it as a form of self-expression, and not to deny. Leonard Cohen has ,1 line that says, "Do not dress in those rags for me, I know you are not poor," and when I heard that line [ thought to myself that I had been denying, which was sort of a hypocritical thing. I began to feel too sepa­ rate from my audience and fro[11. my times, separated by affluence and conve­ nience from the pulse of my times. I wanted to hitchhike and scuffle. I felt maybe that I hadn't done enough scuffling.

Maika: On your /lPW albul/l, Court and Spark,for the first time you've recorded a song that iS/I't [lOllI'S, "T'clstcd." Why did .'1011 decide to record "ol71etiJing tilat i" not your OZ(ll1 ?

]oni: Because I love that song, I always have loved it. I went through analysis for a while this year, and the song is about analysis. I figured that J earned the right to sing it. I tried [() put it on the last record, but it was totally inappropriate. It had nothing to do with that time period, and some of my friends feel it has nothing to do with this album either. It's added like an encore.

MaIka: I hope 1'111 /lot e/lcroaehi/lg 011 YOllr primcy, but why the analysis /lOW7 Joni: I fPlt I wanted to talk to someone about the confusion which we all have. I

wanted to t,llk to someone and I was willing to pay for his discretion. [ didn't expect him to have any answers or that he was a guru or anything, only a sounding bonrd for a lot of things. And it proved effective because simply by confronting parJdo"es or difficulties within your life several times a week, they seem to be not so important as they do when they're weighing on your mind in the middlt' of the night, by yourself, with no one to talk to, or someone to talk to who probably will tell another friend, who will tell another friend, as friends do. I felt that [ didn't want to burden people close to me, so r paid for profes­ sional help. And I went thrOlIl!;h a lot of changes about it, too. It's like driving

joni Mitchell Journeys Within

out your devils-do you drive out your angels as well? You know that whole thing about the creative process. An artist needs a certain amount of turmoil and confusion, and I've created. out of that. [t's been like part of the creative force---even out of severe depression sometimes there comes insight. It's sort of masochistic to dwell on it, but you know it helps you to gain understanding. I thil1k it did me a lot of good.

MaIka: When I listen to ym/l' s'1I1gs ] notice tl/(/t there are certain the1lles tI/(/t keep a~)J'em'­ ing: Ollt' theme that comes III' often is loneliness.

Joni: I suppose people have always been lonely but this, [ think, is an especially lonely time to live in. So many people are valueless or confused. I know a lot of guilty people who are living a very open kind of free life who don't really bE'­ lieve that what they're doing is right, and their defense to that is to totally ad­ vocate what they're doing, as if it were right, but somewhere deep in them they're confused. Things change so rapidly. Relationships don't seem to have any longevity. Occasionally you see people who have been together for six or seven, maybe 12 years, but for the most part people drift in and out of relation­ ships continually. There isn't a lot of commitment to anything; it's a dispos­ able society. But there are other kinds of loneliness which are very beautifut like sometimes I go up to my land in British Columbia and spend time alone 11l the country surl'l'unded by the beauty of natural things. There's a romance which accompanies it, so you generally don't feel self-pity. In the city when you're sur­ rounded by people who are continually interacting, the loneliness makes you feel like you've sinned. All around you you see lovers or families and you're alone and you think, why? What did I do to deserve this? That's why [ think the cities are much lonelier than the country.

MaIka: Another theme r think is predominant in YOllr sOl1gs is loue. ]oni: Love ... such a powerful force. My main interest in life is human relation­

ships and human interaction and the exchange of feelings, person to person, on a one-to-one basis, or on a larger basis projecting to an audience. Love is a peculiar feeling because it's subject to so much ... change. The way that love feels at the beginning of a relationship and the changes that it goes through and I keep asking myself, "What is it?" It always seems like a commitment to me when you said it to someone, "J love you," or if they said that to you. It meant that you were there for them, and that you could trust them. But know­ ing from myself that I have said that and then reneged on it jn the supportive-in the physical-sense, that [ was no longer there side by side with that person, so I say, well, does that cancel that feeling out? Did I really love? Or what is it? [ really believe that th€ maintenance of individuality is so necessary to what we would call a true or lasting love that people who say "I love you" and then do a Pygmalion number on you are wrong, you Imow. Love has to encompass all of the things that a person is. Love is a very hard feeling to keep alive. It's a Verv fragile plant.

MaIka: 1son/climes fiJld myself C/1UlIing Jieople that sccm to be able to handle lout', J'cople who !lapcfolll1d af01'1l1lllafor marriage. YOIl were 11/arried at Ol1e IJoil1t yourself; IlOro do YOllfeell1bout marriage 1l0W?

]oni: I've only had one experience with it, in the legal sense of the word But there's a kind of marriage that occurs which is almost more natural through a bonding together; sometimes the piece of paper kills something. I've talked to so many people who said, "Our relationship was heautiful until we got

288 The 1970S Sly Stone 289

married." If I ever married again, I would like to create a ceremony and a ritual that had more meaning than I feel our present-day ceremonies have, just a de­ claration to a group of friends. If two people are in love and they declare to a room of people that they are in love, somehow or other that's almost like a mar­ riage vow. It tells everybody in the room, "I am no longer flirting with you. I'm no longer available because I've declared my heart to this person."

Maika: Do yOIl til ink YOII'1I get lIlarricd again.' Joni: I really don't know. I wouldn't see a reason for marriage except to have chil­

dren, and I'm not sure that I will have children, you know. I'd like to and 1 have reillly strong maternal feelings, but at the same time I have developed ilt this point into a very transient person and not your average responsible human being. I keep examining my reasons for wanting to have a child, and some of them are re­ ally not very sound. And then I keep thinking of bringing a child into this day and age, ilnd what values to instill in them that aren't too high so they couldn't follow them and have to suffer guilt or feelings of inadequacy. I don't know. It's like I'm still trying to teach myself survival lessons. 1 don't know what I would teach a child. I think about it ... in terms of all my talk of freedom and everything.

Maika: Freedom, and in particillar tile wllrd 'free," is allotller tlll'lnc in YOllr mllsic. What docs frcedom meall to yOll'

Joni: Freedom to me is the luxury of being able to follow the path of the heart. I think that's the only way that you maintain the magic in your life, that you keep your child alive. Freedom is necessary for me in order to create, and if I cannot create, 1 don't feel alive.

Maika: Do yOIl ever f/11'isio/l or fear that the well of creath1itJ/llIigllt dry lip? Joni: Well, every year for the last four years I have said, "That's it." I feel often that

it has run dry, you know, and all of a sudden things just come pouring out. But I know, I know that this is a feeling that increases as you get older. I have a fear that I might become a tunesmith, that I would be able to write songs but not poetry. I don't know. It's a mystery, the creative process, inspiration is a mystery, but I think that as long as you still have questions the muse has got to be there. You throw a question out to the muses and maybe they drop something back on you.

Maika: Sittingfrolll the olltside, it seellls that as a crcati!'c persoill/oll have attained qllite a Int: you havc all avenlle in which to express .110111' talellt, affillencc, recognition. What lilT .110111' aims now?

Joni: Well, I really film't feel I've scratched the surface of my music. I'm not all that confident about my words. Thematically 1 think that I'm running out of things which 1 feel are important enough to describe verbally. I really think that as you get older life's experience becomes more; I begin to see the paradoxes re­ solved. It's almost like most things that I would once dwell on and explore for an hour, I would shrug my shoulders to now. In your twenties things are still profound and being uncovered. However, I think there's a way to keep that alive if you don't start putting up too many blocks. I feel that my music will continue to grow-I'm almost a pianist now, and the same thing with the gui­ tar. And I also continue to draw, and that also is in a stage of growth, it hasn't stagnated yet. And I hope to bring all these things together. Another thing I'd like to do is to make a film. There's a lot of things I'd like to do, so I still feel young as an artist. I don't feel like my best work is behind me. I feel as if it's still in front.

Further Reading Luftig, Stacey, cd. Ti,e loni Mitchell Companion: FOllr Decade, of CO/1//1/clltary. New York:

Schirmer Books, 2000. O'Brien, Karen. [lmi Mitchell: Slwdows alld Light. London: Virgin, 2001. "Rock 'n' Roll's Leilding Lady." Ti/1/e, December 16, 1974: 63-66. WhiteselL Lloyd. The Music of loni Mitdlcll. New York: Oxford University Press, 2008.

Discography Mitchell, Joni. Song to a SCI/gull. Warner Bros./WEA, 1968. ___. Blue. Warner Bros./WEA, 1971. ___. Court alld Spark. Elektra/WEA, 1974. ___. Dmz [uall's Reckless Daugliter. Elektra/WEA, 1977. ___. Hits. Warner Bros./WEA, 1996.

Both Sides Now. Warner Bros./WEA, 2000. The Very Best of Singers and SOllgH'riters. Time Life Records, 2003.

_Sly Stone5 "The Myth of Staggerlee"

The phenomenal popularity of Aretha Franklin, the ongoing success of James Brown along with the grittiest practitioners of Southern Soul, and the continued ubiquity of the pop-oriented productions of Motown at­ tested to soul music's continued relevance to a broad cross section of the u.s. audience in the late 1960s. However, the activity and popularity of many of the first wave of soul practitioners declined after 1968• Producer /songwriters Holland-Dozier-Holland, who had been responsi­ ble for the bulk of the hits for the Supremes and the Four Tops during the peak 1964-67 period left Motown, while Stax, following the death of Otis Redding, underwent administrative reorganization and became increas­ ingly inconsistent in both artistic and commercial terms (by 1975, the company filed for bankruptcy).

Nevertheless, soul music was far from finished; instead it split in two directions: a "sweet" soul style taking its cue from Motown and balladeers, such as Curtis Mayfield, and a "funky" soul style, taking its cue from James Brown, the "Southern Soul" practitioners, and Aretha Franklin. The discussion of funk rightfully began in chapter 35 with the ex­ cerpts from James Brown's autobiography. Brown's innovations and their adoption by other artists in the late 1960s also had an explicit political

290 The 1970S

component, since these musical innovations coincided with a shift in African American politics from the integrationist stance of the civil rights movement (associated with the rise of soul music) to the more radical stance of the black power movement, a shift heralded by Brown's record­ ing, "Say It Loud, I'm Black and I'm Proud" (1968).' These shifts were dis­ cussed in Part 3 in conjunction with artists like Aretha Franklin and songs such as "Respect."

Concurrent with the developments in Brown's band, other bands created their own forms of funky soul music, including Booker T. and the MGs, the Bar-I<ays, the Meters, and Charles Wright and the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band. In an important contrast to earlier rhythm and blues and soul performers, these bands were self-contained, writ­ ing their own material and producing all vocal and instrumental parts. The first band to absorb Brown's rhythmic approach and extend it was Sly and the Family Stone. The San Francisco Bay Area-based aggrega­ tion joined Brown's rhythmic and textural innovations with a fragmented doo-wop vocal style featuring rapidly alternating voices and with as­ pects of psychedelic rock, a fusion evident in their first successful single, "Dance to the Music" (1968). The psychedelic influence (particu­ larly that of Jimi Hendrix) was felt by other funk bands as well, most notably Funkadelic ("Maggot Brain," 1971) and the Isley Brothers ("Who's That Lady," 1973).

Sly and the Family Stone played a significant role in another important development in funk: The role of the bass expanded as Larry Graham of Sly and the Family Stone created an innovative thumb-popping technique par­ ticularly evident in an early 1970 release, "Thank U Falettin Me Be Mice Elf Agin." Brown's new bass player, William "Bootsy" Collins, was another cru­ cial influence on subsequent bassists in recordings such as "Sex Machine" and "Superbad" from 1970-71.

Greil Marcus's piece on Sly Stone (b. 1944) documents how Sly's stylistic blend satisfied a particular need within the white counterculture, as well as within the soul music audience. In Marcus's words, the music of Sly and the Family Stone "fill[ed] a vacuum" in which "the racial contradictions of the counterculture" were worked out. 2 Marcus's overriding concern, here as in the rest of Mystery Train (the book from which this essay was taken), is to illuminate how Sly articulates "shared unities in the American imagi­ nation" through the connections between his music and certain American myths.3 In this case, Marcus relates Sly Stone's public persona to the myth of Staggerlee, the archetypal "bad man." Marcus spends much of the

1. The fullest (ond most ('nterlaining) account of funk ttl dall:' fnay be found in Rickey Vincent,

FlIl1k. The Mtlsie, Ihe I'col,le, alld ti,e Rlltjlhrlf or lire Olle (New York: SI. Martin's Grifiin, 1996). 2. Creil Marcus, MLlstery 'li''';'': rllulgr, ,,{AllltriCll ill ROlk ',,' Roll Music. 3rd rev. ed. (New York:

Plume, l1475\1440), 64. 3. Ibid., p. xvii.

Sly Stone 291

chapter discussing Sly's dystopian album, Riot (1971), a recording that un­ derscored the self-destructive nature of Sly's attachment to the Staggerlee character.

By the time of Mystery Train, Marcus was already well known to readers as a critic for Rolling Stone and its close competitor, Creem. In addition to exemplifying Marcus's music criticism, which displays an unusual talent for making music come alive with prose, the essay that follows conveys vividly the history of an extraordinary wave of black pop­ ular music during the early 1970S. In providing a broader context for the understanding of Sly Stone's brand of funk and the reception of Riot, Marcus details the relationship of black popular music of the time to so­ cial changes; to the emergent black cinema known as "blaxploitation"; and to political developments. such as black nationalism as embodied by the Black Panther Party, all of which are tied together by their connection to the myth of Staggertee.

from MYSTERY TRAIN: IMAGES OF AMERICA IN ROCK 'N' ROLL MusIC

Greif Marcus

Sly versus Superfly The best pop music does not reflect events so much as it absorbs them. If the spirit of Sly's early music combined the promises of Martin Luther King's speeches and fire of a big city riot, Riol represented the end of those events and the attempt to create a new music appropriate to new realities. It was music that had as much to do Witll the Marin shootout nnd the denth of Ceorge Jackson as the earlier sound had to do with the pride of the riot the title track of this album said was no longer going on.

"Frightened faces to the wall," Sly moans. "Can't you hear your mama call? The Brave and Strong-Survive! Survive!"

I think those faces up against the waH belonged to Black Panthers, forced 10 strip naked on the night streets of Philadelphia so Frank Rizzo and his cops could gawk and laugh and make jokps about big limp cocks while Panther women, lined up'with the men, were psychologically raped.

A picture was widely published. Many have forgotten it; Sly probably had not. This again is why l\iol was hard to take. If its spirit is that of the death of George Jackson it is not a celebration of Jackson, but music that traps what you feel when you are shoved back into the corners of 10lwliness where vou really have to think about dead flesh and cannot play around with the satisfactions of myth.

TIle pessimism of Riot is not the romantic sort we usually get in rock 'n' roll. Optimistic almost by definition, pop culture is always pointing toward the next thing and sure it is worth going after; rock 'n' roll is linked to a youthful sense of time and a youthful disbelief in deilth. Pop culture pessimism is illmos! always self-indulgent; not

S,'/m': Grei] Marcus, "Sly Stone: The Myth of Staggerlee," from lv1y"lfly 7;.,,;'1: hI/age, ,,(AII/('Ilal ;11 Rock ',,' Roll Music, 3rd rev. ed. (New York: l'Iume, an imprint 0; Dutton Signet, ,1 division of f'(>nguin Books USA, Inc., Ii 97511(40), pp. 7R--BJ, 84-86. © 1975, 1'J97 by Greil Marcus. Used bv permission.

292 The 19705

without the p(1Wpr to movp an audipnce, but always leaving the audience (and the artist) a way out. In retrospect, records mil de in this spirit often seem like reverse images of narcissism. Rio/ is the real thing: scary and immobilp. It wears down other records, turn­ ing thpm into unintpntional splf-parodies. 111e negative of Riot is tough enough to make solutions seem tri\'ial and alternatives false, in personal life, politics, or music.

Rock 'n' roll may matter becausp it is fun, unpredictable, anilrchic, a neatly pack­ agpd and amazingly intense plurality of good times and good ideas, but none save the very yOlll1gest musicians and fans can still takp their innocpnce for granted. Most have si I11ply seen and done too much; as the Rolling Stones have been proving for ten years, you have to z('ork for innocence. You have to win it, or you end up with noth­ ing more than a strainpd na·lvpte.

Because this is so pop needs an anchor, a reality principle, especially when the old ideas-thp joy of the Beatles, the simple toughness of the Stones-have run their coursp and the music has begun to repeat its nlPssages without repeating their im­ pact. Rock 'n' roll may escape cOtwpntional reality on a day-to-day level (or remake it, minute-to-minute), but it has to have an intuitive sense of the reality it means to escape; the audience and the artists have to be up against thp wall before they can climb over it. When the Stones made "Gimmie Shelter," they had power because their toughnpss had taken on complexity: they admitted they had doubts about finding pven something '1S simple as shelter, and fought for it anyway But because the band connected with its audience when they got that across, and because the music that did it was the best they ever made, the song brought more than shelter; it brought life, providpd a metaphor that allowed the Stones to thrive when Altamont proved toughness was not the point, and gave them the freedom to go on to sing about other things-soul survivors, suffocation, a trip down a moonlight mile.

Riot matters bpcause it doesn't just define the wall; it makes the wall real. Its sen­ sibility is h<lrd enough to frame the mass of pop music, shuffle its impact, jar the lis­ tener, and put an edge on the easy way out that has not really been won. It is not ca­ sual music and its demands are not casual; it tended to force black musicians to reject it or live up to it. Some months after Riot was released-from the middle of 1972 through early llJ73-the impulses of its music emerged on other records, and they took over the radio.

I don't know if I will be able to convey thp impact of punching buttons day after .Jay and night after night to be met by records as clear and strong as Curtis Mayfield's 'Superfly" and "Freddie's Dead," the Staple Singers' "Respect Yourself" and the ltopian ''I'll Take You There:' the O'Jays' "Back Stabbers," War's astonishing "Slip­ )ing into Darkness" and "The World Is a Ghetto," the Temptations' "Papa Was a {olling Stone," Johnny Nash's "I Can See Clearly Now," Stevie Wonder's "Supersti­ ion," for that m<ltter the Stones' Exile 011 Main Street (the white Rio/)-records that vere surroundl'd in memory and still on the air as recent hits, by Marvin Gaye's leadly "lnnrrCity Rlues," by the Undisputed Truth's "Smiling Faces Sometimes ('fell jes)," by the Chi-Ljt~'s' falsetto melancholy, by Riot itself. Only a year before such liscs would have b~'en curiosities; now, they were all of a piece: one enormous an­ wer record. Each song added something to the others, and as in a pop explosion, the ountry found itself listening to a new voice.

To me, the Temptations took the prize. Imagine-or simply remember-the chill f driving easily through the night, and then hearing, casually at first, then with in­ ~I'('st, and tllPn with compulsion, the three bass patterns, repeated endlessly, some­ (here between the sound of the heart and a judge's gavel, that open "Papa Was a oiling Stone." The toughest blues guitar you have hmrd in years cracks through the uilding music like a curse; the singer starts in.

Sly Stone 293

More than one person I knew pulled off the road and sat waiting, shivering, as the song crept out of the box and filled up the night.

Four children have gathered around their mother to ask for the truth about their father, who has beell buried that very day. They don't know him; he was just another street-corner Stagolee. So they ask. Was he one of those two-faced preach­ ers, mama-"Stealing in the name of the Lord?'" A drunk? A hustler? A pimp? "Vith another wife, more kids? They slam the questions into their mother, and all she can give them is one of the most withering epitaphs ever written, for them, as well as for him "When he died, all he left us was alone."

Some thought "Back Stabbers" hit even harder. It moved with a new urgency, heading into its chorus with an unforgettable thump; it was like hearing the Drifters again, but the Drifters robbed of pop optimism that let them find romance even in the hard luck of "On Broadway" The O'Jays sounded scared when they climaxed the song with an image that was even stronger than the music: "1 wish somebody'd take/Some a' these kllives outta mv back!"

Stevie Wonder reached numb~r one with "Superstition"-his first time on top in ten vears. It was the most ominous hard rock in a long whilp, a warning against a be­ lief in myths that no one understood; Wonder made the old chicka-chicka-boom beat so potent it sounded like a syncopated version of Judgment Day

All these records were nervous, trusting little if anything, taking Riot's spirit of black self-criticism as a new aesthetic, driven (unlike Riot) by great physical energy, determined to get across the idea of a world-downtown or uptown, it didn't matter-where nothing was as it seemed. These black musicians and singers were cutting lose from the white man's world to attend to their own business-and to do that, they had to tell the truth. And so they made music of worry and confine­ ment that, in their very different way, the Chi-Lites took to even greater extremes.

The Chi-Lites-like all the artists discussed here-had been around for many years, but they broke into the Top 40 in the seventies, with a dark chant called" (For God's Sake) Give More Power to the People." Stylistically, this was an old kind of record, but it was a new kind of politics; instead of a demand, or an affirmation, it was a plea, and a desperate one at that. The Chi-Lites' persona was open and vulner­ able, the antithesis of machismo (something they explicitly dismissed with the great "Oh, Girl"). Other hits-"A Lonely Man," "Have You Seen Her," and "The Coldest Day of My Life"-undercut the high-stepping burst of mastery on which Wilson Pickett and so many other black artists of the sixties had based their carpers; the Chi­ Lites made Pickett;s old bragging music sound fake. Pickett had told his audience that ninety-nine and a half won't do and made them belie\'e it, but the Chi-Lites seemed ready to settle for a lot less--or to beg for something else altogether. The key to any black singer is in that old catch phrase about the way you talk and the way vou walk; the Chi-Lites spoke softly and moved with great care.

This new music was a step back for a new look at black America; it was a finger pointed at Staggerlee and an attempt to freeze his spirit out of black culture. On many levels-direct, symbolic, commercial, personal-this music was a vital, conser­ vative reaction to the radical costs Sly had shown that Staggerlee must ultimately exact. And since Stack was roaming virtually unchallenged in the new black cinema, this musical stance amounted to a small-scale cultural war.

All the new black movies-fwm Hi/ Mall to Trollble Mall to De/roit 9000 to C1COpll­ tra JOllcs-were cued by the reality behind one very carefully thrown-away line from

*A referencp to Paut Kelly's sinl(le of the same name, which, alonl( with lerry Ilutler's "Only

the Strong Survive," had opened up the new territory the Tempts were exploring.

294 The 19705

Tlte Godfiltlter (a movie, it is worth remembering, that attracted millions of black Americans, even though it had no black characters, let alone any black heroes).

"They're animals anyway," says an off-camera voice, as tbe Dons make the cru­ cial decision to dump all their beroin into the ghettos. "Let them lose their souls."

The Mafia may have missed the contradiction in that line, but Francis Coppola certainly did not; neither did the black men and women in the theaters. They suffered it; in Lady SllIgs the Blues, Diana Ross was stalking screens all over the country show­ ing just what it meant. The audience had a right to revenge.

And so the fantasy went to work again. If that line had opened up the abyss, the old black hero shot up from the bottom and pushed in the white man instead. Stack slipped through the hands of the white sheriff, won his fight, got his girl, and got away.

5uperfly summed up the genre; perhaps its first scene did, more than it was meant to. The hero, cocaine dealer Priest (played by Ron O'Neal, who looked uncomfortably like a not-very-black Sean Connery) stirs in the bed of his rich white mistress. Some black fool has made off with his stash. Priest chases him through the alleys, up the side of a building, and traps him in a tiny apartment. There, in full view of the man's family, Priest beats him half to death.

Still, Priest is nervous. Hustling's all the Man has left us, he tells his parh1er, who thinks that's just fine; Priest wants out of the Life, but the invisible whites who run the show want him in-or dead. He bets everything on one last big deal. He turns on the pressure; one of his runners, Freddie, can't take it, and he panics and gets himself killed. Another man, a sort of father figure (who started Priest out peddling reefers when just a lad) is talked into the game, and he too loses his life to Priest's bid for freedom. Priest's partner weighs the odds and sells him out.

Moving fast, Priest penetrates the white coke hierarchy, takes out a first-class Mafia contract on Mr. Big to cover his bet, unmasks Mr. Big as a queer, and, with his money and his strong black woman, gets away clean. He turned up one movie later as a crusader for social justice in Africa, where life was simpler.

It was a fairy tale; but like most of the Staggerlee movies, Superfly had a sound­ track by an established soul singer, and in this case Curtis Mayfield's songs were not background, but criticism. (Mayfield had appeared in the picture singing in a dealers' bar, grinding out an attempted parody of his audience-but they thought it was a cel­ ebration.) His music worked against the fantasy, because to him one incident in the movie counted for more than all its triumphs: Freddie's dead. "Pushin' dope for the Mall ' " he sang, incredulous and disgusted. The movie hadn't e\'en slowed to give Freddie an epitaph, but Mayfield clearly ainwd his song at the hero as well.*

Supcrpy had a black director, Gordon Parks, Jr.; there was a surface ghetto real­ ism, and there were touches of ambiguity, but the movie had Hollywood in its heart, and thilt was enough to smother everything else. Most of the pictures that followed simply shuffled Supcrfly cliches, but they kept coming.

One movie was different, but it never found its audience, not among blacks, or whites either. Acl'OSS 110tl1 Street (directed by Barry Shear, who earlier made Wild III ti,e Streets, the most paradoxical youth exploitation picture; written by Luther Davis) looked enough like all the ()thers to make it easy for nearly ail critics to dismiss it. The film

*lnterf'stingly, these lyrics were not in the movie, even though the backing track was. Mayfield

held "If until tl", film was in the theaters, then wrote the wlll'ds, released tlw record, and so took

nn thl' picture on his own turf: the radio, You could say he chickened oUl, and yOll could also say he \,vas very smart.

Sly Stone 295

was almost unbelievably violent, which gave reviewers license to attack it. It began with the same cliches everyone else used, but intensified them mercilessly. It pumped so much pressure into the world of the new black movies that it blew that world apart.

Three black men-Jamaica, Superflake, and Dry Clean-murder a pack of black and white Mafia bankers and make off with the week's take for all of Harlem. They don't steal because they hate the mob; they steal because they want the money. A Mafia lieutenant-played by Tony Franciosa-is sent out to bring back the money and execute the thieves, knowing full well he can forget his future if he fails. Anthony Quinn plays a bought cop caught in the middle. He has to take the case straight to make his pension, and a new black cop is keeping an eye on him, but he has to do it without losing his payoff-or his life-to the Mafia hirelings who control his district: a black man who runs a taxi company and looks like Fats Domino risen from the swamp of evil, and his bodyguard, a Staggerlee who watches over the entire film with the cold eyes of someone who sold his soul to the devil the day he was old enough to know he had one.

You paid for every bit of violence, perhaps because the film refused its audience the pleasures of telling the good guys from the bad guys, and because the violence was so ugly it exploded the violence of the genre. It wasn't gratuitous, but it wasn't "poetic" either. Every character seemed alive, with motives worth reaching for, no matter how twisted they might turn out to be; every character (save for Taxi Man and his gunman) fled through the story scared half out of his wits, desperate for space, for a little more tin1e, for one more chance.

The thieves speed away from the litter of corpses, divide up the money, and go into hiding. SuperfJake is too proud of himself to stay holed up; good times are what it was all for, right? His best hustler's clothes--tasteless Sly Stone, but gaudy-have been hanging for this moment. Down at the best whorehouse in Harlem Superflake has a dozen women and he's bragging.

Franciosa picks up the scent, and with Taxi Man's Staggerlee at his side, his eyes glazing over with a sadism that masks his own terror, he rips Superflake out of the whorehouse bar. '''''hen Quinn finds Superflake crucified, castrated, and skinned alive, you realize that along with no heroes, this movie may offer no way out. It was made to take your sleep.

Jamaica and Dry Clean pass the word and panic; they know that Superflake had to finger them. Dry Clean shoves his money into a clothes bag from his shop and hails a cab for Jersey. The driver spots the markings on the bag, radios back to Taxi Man, and delivers Dry Clean straight to Franciosa at 110th Street-the border of Harlem and the one line the movie never crosses. Dry Clean breaks away; FranC'iosa traps him on a roof, ties a rope to his leg, and hangs him over a beam, d~ngling him into space. Staggerlee holds the rope; his eyes show nothing as he watches the white man torture the black. If Dry Clean talks, they say, they won't kill him; he is so scared he believes them. He talks, and the rope shoots over the side.

Jamaica and his girl meet in his wretched apartment (there is a little torn-out pic­ ture of Martin Luther King taped to the wall, a gray reminder of some other time) to plan an escape, or a better hideout. And in one of the most extraordinary scenes in any American movie, a death's-head reversal of every warm close-up you have ever seen, Jamaica begins to talk-about green hills and a blue sky; about quiet, rest, peace of mind; about going home. He has only killed nine men to get there. His facE' is scarred by smallpox; his eyes try hard to explain. Jamaica goes on; you don't hear him; the camera stays in tight. Every few seconds his whole face shudders, seems al­ most to shred, as a ghastly, obscenely complex twitch climbs from his jaw to his tem­ ple, breaks, and starts up again.

296 The 1970S

It is the visual equivalent of that last song on Riot, "Thank you for talkin' to me Africa," another reach for a home that isn't there. Like Sly's music, the scene is un­ bearably long, it makes you want to run, but each frame like each note deepens the impact, until everything else in the world has been excluded and only one artistic fact remains. Jamaica's twitch traces the fear of every character in the movie; it is a map of the ambiguities the other movies so easily shot away; and in this film, it is most of all the other side of Staggerlee's face, which never moves.

Finally, Franciosa, Quim1, and their troops converge on the abandoned tenement where Jamaica and his girl are hiding. Taxi Man gets word of the showdown. "Wanna watch," says Stilggerlee. "No," says Taxi Man. "I know how it's gonna turn out."

A bullet cuts through the girl's forehead and pins her to the wall behind Jamaica. She stays on camera, standing up dead, a blank ugliness on her face. When Jamaica turns to see her you can feel the life go out of him, but he keeps shooting. Franciosa is killed; the cops take over. Jamaica flees to the roof with his gun and his bag of money, still firing. He kills more. Staggerlee, sent to cover for Taxi Man, watches from another rooftop. Jamaica falls, and in the only false moment in the picture, flings his money down to children in a playground. Staggerlee sets up a rifle, takes aim on Quinn, who has proved himself too weak to be worth the mob's time, and kills him.

In one way, then, this movie was like all the others: Staggerlee wins. But this time, the audience was not given the benefit of any masks; they had to take him as he came, and they were not about to pay money to see that.

Further Reading Milreus, Greil. Mystery Train: Images of America in Rock 'n' Roll Music, 3rd rev. ed. New

York: Plume, 1990. ___. "Muzak with Its Finger on the Trigger: The New Music of Sly Stone." Creern 3

(April 1972). Selvin, Joel, and Dave Marsh, eds. Sly and tile Family Stolle: An Oral History. New York:

Avon, 1998. Vincent, Rickey. Funk: The Music, the People, and the Rhythm of the One. New York:

St. Martin's Press, 1996.

Discography Milyfield, Curtis. Superfly· Custom, 1972. Sly & the Family Stone. Anthology. Sony, 1990. ___. Stand! Sony, 2007. ___. There's a Riot Gain' On. Sony, 2007. ___. Dance to the Music. Sony, 2007. Soul Hits oft/Ie 70s: Didn't 1t Blow Your Mind!, Vol. 10. Rhino/WEA, 1991.

54- Not-so-"Little" Stevie Wonder

Stevie Wonder (b. 1950) blended funk, jazz, reggae, rock, African and Latin rhythms, and electronic experimentation with old-fashioned song­ writing craft to create a fusion that made him the most popular black musician of the early- to mid-1970S.

Wonder's career has superficial similarities to that of another Motown artist, Marvin Gaye. Like Gaye, Wonder's music became notice­ ably more eclectic and his lyrics more personal and political as his career progressed, Unlike Gaye, who came to Motown in his early zos, Wonder's first success came at age 13: Billed as "Little Stevie Wonder," his novelty instrumental hit, "Fingertips, Pt. z" in 1963 hit the top of Billboard's pop chart. By the late 1960s, Wonder was recording jazz-influenced ballads like "My Cherie Amour" (1969) and uptempo songs with an almost manic vocal intensity, such as "I Was Made to Love Her" (1967). This variety only hinted at the transformation in style that would occur after his 21st birth­ day in 1971. In a development that paralleled the release of Gaye's creative breakthrough What's Going On (1971), Wonder signed a new contract with Motown that gave him vastly increased artistic autonomy. The albums that followed- Where J'm Coming From (1971), Music of My Mind and Talking Book (both 197Z), lnnervisions (1973), FulfiJlingness' First Finale (1974), and Songs in the Key of Life (double album, 1976) -all displayed an increased social awareness and utopianism in his lyrics, as well as an adventurousness as a performer of both the synthesizer and conventional instruments (he played almost all the instruments on the albums just listed). Wonder's use of the synthesizer was particularly innovative, since he introduced many experimental timbres and tech­ niques to popular music.

The following profile and interview by Ben Fang-Torres appeared early in 1973, when it became clear that Talking Book was becoming an unprece­ dented critical and commercial success for Wonder. This article, as did others from this period, addresses the notion that Wonder's audience has expanded to include a greater number of white, counterculturallis­ teners without losing his core fan base of African Americans.' The publi­ cation of this interview in Rolling Stone is at least partly responsible for the focus on Wonder's "new audience." This article-interview also

1. For a Jenf;thy profile of Wonder from two yeilrs lilter thilt rehilbilitiltes this theme, iltbei! in a paternalistic manner, see Jack Slilter, "A Sense of Wonder," New York Tillles !\;lni<azille, February n, 1975, IB, 21-23, 26-32. In one telling pilssilge, Slilter compares the effect of Wonder's synthesis to

that of Bob Dyliln in the mid- 1960s (pp. 30-32).

297