Silly Love Songs and the Occasional Politics of Popular Music
Posted: November 8, 2009 Filed under: Special People | Tags: Bob Dylan, change, Concentrated wealth, Folk music, Henry Rollins, Ice T, Janis Joplin, Joan Baez, John Lennon, philosophy, poetry, politics, populism, Protest, Stephen Foster, The Beatles, the Blues, Tupac Shakur Leave a comment »Just trying hard to blend in, are we? Hardly.
Silly Love Songs and the Occasional Politics of Popular Music
© 2009 Craig Chereek, all rights reserved
Each of The Beatles brought their own contributions critical to the band’s identity. Paul McCartney made them melodic and emotionally available, George Harrison made them deep, clever and true, Ringo made them everyman, fun, and danceable, but it was the words of John Lennon that made the Beatles vitally important, critical even. It is indisputable that the culture and the time would have been much different without them.
WE would be.
In hindsight, whether you agreed or not, his politics were consistent and compelling. But lot’s of people’s are, and even if you ever learn of them, you are unlikely to pay their views any mind. Why were John’s views different? Why did they have such an impact? He sang of Revolution, but that’s hardly revolutionary. I submit it was because he was outrageous on purpose. What that purpose was may not have been clear even to him, but we can hear the echoes of its consequences today, far beyond the music.
He was outrageous enough to make you listen to him, almost as much as to keep himself entertained in what he surely must have found to be a very square world. When he said the Beatles were “more popular than Jesus,” he may have been decrying the fall from popular focus of the humanism Jesus symbolized, he may have been crowing like a rooster, he may have been poking fun at how the members of a mere musical group could be sought out for their serious opinions on current events and what world leaders were saying. He may have been doing all three, but with that single sentence he doubled the number of people who would recognize his name the next time they heard it, and he ensured that each would at least consider his next quote, if only to find fault. It may have been unintentional, but it hardly matters, the effect was the same either way.
In a matter of months, The Beatles had re-inserted a hip populism back into popular music that, for the most part, had just recently been re-excluded from the cultural vernacular. The steady produce coming from the radio at the time rattled NO cages. “A Do Run Run” is not an attack on anybody, and is unlikely to change the human condition very much. “Up on the Roof” is just what it was designed to be: catchy and comfortable. Although few songs are more pop-perfect, I submit musical lyrics have a higher purpose, a catalytic social function that only lyrics can perform as well.
Whether it be to answer a call to arms, or to support Andrew Jackson’s latest political campaign, beginning in America no later than “Yankee Doodle Dandy”, the lyrical call to do the honorable thing is an old tradition. The protest lyric has long been been one of the truest arrows in the progressive quiver, and from Stephen Foster through Henry Rollins, has long shaped public debate. But only in spurts, as the emergence of protest music inevitably provokes a swift reaction from those at whom the protest is aimed, usually the rich and powerful.
By following the repeated rise and fall of protest lyrics, we can see the cycle of populism/and what could be called “depopulism” through the popular music that has grown in its strength to shape the American consciousness ever since since the player piano gave way to radio. But the peoples music, local and regional traditional music, was at first left out as unfit for high minds, and so the ancient populist lament of the unfairness of the many suffering for the enrichment of the few has been disproportionately under-represented in early popular music, that is, codified and packaged music.
The first tape recording of the American populist view was but an academic exercise intended to save American folk music for posterity at a time when the smart people selling packaged music wouldn’t touch its subjects with a stick. William Jennings Bryant’s failed campaign and Teddy Roosevelt’s failed Bull Moose Presidential bid had left smoking craters in the populist movement within living memory, that battle had been fierce, and the folk music and the blues that had produced its anthems were thought to be endangered species, surely to pass from the stage when it’s current, ear-trained practitioners passed on. When Alan Lomax was first taping American blues, it was in the same spirit that impelled museums to send expeditions out looking for the last Dodo.
For the lyrical content was not the focus of the effort to collect the songs, it was more of an anthropological study, focused on the songs only as artifacts of a passing people, much like creation myths, baskets or pottery. An earlier collection called “The Child Ballads,” provided the model (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_Ballads).
There are no protest songs in Big Band music, whose lyrical message was crafted to be innocuous if not non-existent, nor in the music of it’s immediate successor, be-bop jazz, and so it was despite the lyrics that America’s native hill and flatland folk music first came to market as a novelty at a time when big bands ruled the airwaves and the charts.
To the amazement of most, America loved it. Woody Guthrie, Burl Ives and The Weavers adopted the forms to write new songs, and ascended the Monday through Saturday pulpit for the small farmer, the working man, the poor, and the dispossessed.
But folk music, which is by definition protest music, is most definitely not the music of the rich, it is their unsworn enemy, and the rich recognized it quickly. Networks, record companies and radio stations were even then rarely owned by the poor. NBC worked very hard to drive protest down with Mitch Miller and his ilk, CBS tried to beat it to death first with Arthur Godfrey (who outsmarted them), and then with Art Linkletter and his like, but it kept coming back to life, like all necessary things. The message from the media was, what could you possibly have to protest? You have televisions, soap operas, comedies, game shows, and Ted Mack’s Amateur Hour, don’t you? Just leave the big questions to the Big People, and you’ll be fine. Though it has served them poorly, it is a message the rich have been loathe to abandon. Perhaps they believe it, but we who are not, know better.
Every time protest came back into the lyrics, as in the earliest rockabilly of Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis and Elvis Presley, the protest was tediously pared back by its marketers to mere romantic hedonism. “Rhythm and Blues” became acceptable only once pared of it’s class-consciousness, Rock and roll was only tolerated once shorn of its race-consciousness.
Yet protest came back, with the folk revival of the ’60′s But by now the media knew it’s playbook well.
Surf songs, especially the instrumentals, were the bullets fired back by the American media moguls. In England, the label that released The Beatles had no idea they weren’t doing more of the same. Cute lads, happy harmonies, love songs: bread and circuses. When John’s lyrics turned them out to be secret populists and unrepentant utopians, a “harmless” version of the same was inevitable, and so we get the identical formula repeated over and over but without any lyrical protest, hence Herman and the Hermits (sorry Peter), Chad and Jeremy, The Dave Clark Five, Peter and Gordon, and The Monkees. There is the carrot of great wealth (and American visas) to dangle, and then even the Rolling Stones suddenly abandoned Muddy Waters for: you guessed it, a romantic hedonism.
Rock and Roll has learned it’s lessons well, too, so plain speech in protest music is being abandoned for the double-entendre. The lyrics of Bono are not as provocative on their face as his spoken vision, while even classic 60′s stations make a religion of romantic hedonism, and stay the hell away from protest music. Janis Joplin is fine, Country Joe and the Fish are evidently not.There are no private radio stations anymore, concentrated wealth has lobbied the FCC effectively to price Ma and Pa broadcasters completely out of the market. If your songs are not picked for one of the three big media holding companies’ playlists, you are not played over the air anywhere, they control them all.
Artists like Michael Jackson or Brittany Spears can wear, say, snort, drink, screw or do anything but sing a protest lyric, and their albums will be promoted to be pre-release platinum. That means they have shipped a million copies of their album before anyone outside the label has even heard it. Why? First, because they are incredibly gifted entertainers, and second, because their lyrics have been found politically acceptable. There are only so many minutes on the playlist, this is a “must play,” and gee, that’s funny, there’s no room here for anything else. Funny how that works. How many artists have made the transition from “Indie” to “Big Time” since the FCC has relaxed it’s rules on media consolidation?
Protest can never be prevented, but it can be diluted, and it can be discouraged. There is a pattern here. It was the love songs of Joan Baez that got the heavy rotation, a tiny part of her repertoire. Bob Dylan’s “Lay, Lady, Lay,” a love song, got heavy promotion, his “Everything is Broken” received little. The Paul McCartney’s get knighthoods and the John Lennon’s get shot. Gangsta Rapper Ice T (“Cop Killer”) tones down his tune, moves uptown and gets a recurring role on Law and Order, Tupac Shakur gets shot. Marvin Gaye could get play for his protest lyrics only after a decade of the Supremes’ love songs opened the door for him to FIRST become a star with his love songs. And then he was shot. In modern lyrics, anybody, anything and everything can be debased, and any sin elevated to a virtue, that is evidently just fine, just don’t threaten concentrated wealth.
And that, Sir Paul, is what’s wrong with silly little love songs: they insulate the status quo.
EDEN AHBEZ lives.
Posted: October 1, 2009 Filed under: Special People | Tags: ahbe, Angeles Crest, Buddha, eden ahbez, Einstein, Franklin Roosevelt, Genius, Lao Tsu, Love, Lyrics, Mohammad, Nature, Paramahansa Yogananda, Professor Hubble, true seeker, vegetarian, Will Rogers, Woody Guthrie, Zoroaster 1 Comment »
ahbe with his son, zoma near their home in Tujunga Canyon, In the Angeles National Forest. c 1951. Photo courtesy http://www.shadowboxstudio.com/ahbefiles/ahzomamed.htm
In the late 1940′s a fellow named Eden Ahbez hit the Entertainment scene on the tails of a song he had written, called “Nature Boy”. Eden told me he gave it to Nat King Cole’s guitar player outside the mens room of a club in the San Fernando Valley, and went home. Other versions say it was his manager. Either way, Nat had a #1 hit with it.
It isn’t every day a one-hit songwriter rises as a media darling, but Eden was a different type of songwriter. He was curiously-deeper than merely a vegetarian eccentric with a bamboo flute and a knack for iambic pentameter. He became a talk-show regular. The press made a caricature of him, silly Mr. Natural, but any who knew him (most called him “ahbe” – pronounced Ahh-bee), knew better. They saw right away, he was all heart, and he was the real deal.
His song “Nature Boy” became history’s all-time best-selling and most-played song, the goldest of the gold. Everybody put it on their album, it became an instant standard.
The royalties were enormous, although Eden received nothing at all from the song until the early seventies, and none of it’s earlier earnings. The iconic Capitol Records Building in Hollywood was built with the proceeds from “Nature Boy”. Frank Sinatra closed his “Colgate Hour” with it in living black and white every Sunday night for a year. To put the phenomenon in perspective, The Beatles once had four songs on the Billboard charts at the same time. At one time Eden’s song held four places at the same time, by four different artists: Nat King Cole took it to #1 and kept it there for eight weeks, Frank Sinatra’s version went to #7, Sara Vaughn’s made it to #8 and Dick Haymes’ was in #11; all with the same song, ‘Nature Boy.”
Others reaped the rewards. Another man might have become bitter, but Eden never let on, and he kept right on.
The success of the song opened the door, but it was Eden’s personality that made him a favorite, and that drew the controversy, too. He was just so unapologetically right, perhaps the unsure felt wrong, and therefor somehow wronged. People loved him, people hated him. He was called a phony, he didn’t mind, he was called a plagerist, and that hurt.
Immaculate, radiant, dressed in his flowing robes or crisp white peasant clothing and his sandals, with his long gold hair and wispy beard, and with his obvious sincerity, he was riveting, he was fun, he was thoughtful. He read daily and with understanding, and was from an era where conversation was a valued art. He called Paramahansa Yogananda a friend, and he called Jesus, Franklin Roosevelt, Lao Tsu, Einstein, Woody Guthrie, Mohammad, Professor Hubble, Will Rogers, Buddha and Zoroaster his friends, too, he loved them all.
Eden was a slender waif, soft-spoken and intense, like a candle, no wind. He was a very good listener, he knew when to laugh, his laughter was infectious, and it was frequent. He’d listen to you, maybe find a way to get you to laugh at what you’d said, and it wasn’t so bad any more. He was welcomed into the lives of most he met, including some of the stars whose TV shows he appeared on, and by their friends. He and his song were loved by the creative, the artistic and the spiritual of the world (and the romantic, too), but he intimidated the industrialist and the “suit and tie” crowd with his beatnik sensibilities, directness, innocence, simplicity and more importantly, the implied lack of interest in their material values.
As a result, the main-stream reviewer, even today, tends to dismiss him almost nervously (http://www.spaceagepop.com/ahbez.htm), when in fact Eden himself was probably more important to modern culture than even his song. The song was a throwback to a more mystical era, but “ahbe” was a seminal harbinger of a new archetype, a precursor to the ’60′s counter-culture. One of the times that Life Magazine put him on it’s cover, it captioned him as “the First Hippie”. If true, it was only in the very best of ways.
Above all, Eden Ahbez was a true seeker who found the path and walked it with open arms.
Among the things he is known to have said (from http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/e/eden_ahbez.html):
“I am a being of Heaven and Earth, of thunder and lightning, of rain and wind, of the galaxies.”
“Now Heaven and Earth are older than the temples, and older than the Scriptures.”
“The earth is my altar, the sky is my dome, mind is my garden, the heart is my home and I’m always at home- yea, I’m always at Om.”
“We’re not earthly beings any more… we’re cosmic beings.”
“Some white people hate black people, and some white people love black people, some black people hate white people, and some black people love white people. So you see it’s not an issue of black and white, it’s an issue of Lovers and Haters.”
“The greatest thing you’ll ever learn is to love and be loved, just to love and be loved.” -Nature Boy © Golden World Enterprises.
Nature Boy has been recorded and released by at least 1035 different artists since 1948. I personally have about 15 favorites, There are record collectors who specialize in the different versions of the song. I offer here a slower version than the usual. I just recently stumbled on it, the opening bass solo alone is worth the nickle. I think it captures well Eden’s mood later in his life, when I met him in his late ’60′s, and can be heard at: http://jenshyu.bandcamp.com/track/nature-boy. Eden would have liked this one.
Eden’s story has as many versions as the Bible, depending on who you ask. See: http://blogs.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendId=140040885&blogId=333818657
Eden was finishing a book when I knew him in the late 70′s and early ’80s. Joe Romersa http://www.shadowboxstudio.com/edenahbez.htm (who worked with Ahbe ten years later), tells of talking with him about his book during that period. I suspect his manuscript, like all else he cherished, was in his van with him, when he was struck and killed in a highway accident in the California desert . I sure would like to know where it went. There are some 2” studio masters tied up somewhere, too. Anybody help?
I have heard of a people who believe nobody is ever dead as long as someone alive remembers him with love. I remember ahbe- Eden Ahbez lives.
GENIUS
Posted: September 22, 2009 Filed under: Special People | Tags: Basketball, Dick Fosbury, Genius, High-Jumping, Jerry West, Los Angeles, philosophy, Staples Center Leave a comment »(c) 2009 Craig Chereek, all rights reserved
Two complimentary flavors of genius, one which finds a BETTER WAY altogether, and one which does what others do, but does them WAY BETTER.
Dick Fosbury – a better way
Track and Field legend Dick Fosbury is a genius of the first sort, a rebel whose inspiration grew from his dissatisfaction with current methods. (some of this is adapted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Fosbury) …In the middle 1960′s Dick completely revolutionized the high jump event, inventing a head-first technique, now known as the Fosbury Flop. His method was to sprint diagonally towards the bar, then curve and leap backwards over the bar …Fosbury continued to refine his technique, developing a curved, J-shaped approach run. This allowed him to increase his speed, while the final “curved” steps served to rotate his hips. As his speed increased, so did his elevation. Fosbury made little-to-no use of his arms at take-off, but the next generation of Floppers would add an arm pump.
“Fosbury’s key discovery was the need to adjust his point-of-takeoff as the bar was raised. His flight through the air described a parabola: as the bar went up in height, he needed more “flight time” so that the top of his arc was achieved just as his hips passed over the bar. To increase “flight time,” Fosbury moved his takeoff farther and farther away from the bar” (and the recently adopted raised-foam pit) as the height went up. “… By way of comparison, classic Straddle” (itself a refinement of the traditional “Barrel Roll”) “jumpers plant their take-off foot in the same place every time, less than one foot away from a line parallel with the bar, no matter the height. Photographs of Fosbury attempting heights above 7 feet show him taking off nearly four feet (over one meter) out from the bar.”
A fine multiple exposure giving a stop-motion quality to one of his jumps can be seen at http://www.insidethegames.com/_images/crops/Dick_2520Fosbury.jpg.
The Track and Field community scoffed, asking how much higher he might someday jump if he ever mastered the “right” technique, by which they meant the straddle method everyone else was using.
But Fosbury was not deterred, and got the last laugh at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City, where he flopped his way to the gold medal and set a new Olympic record …displaying the potential of the new technique. (see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Id4W6VA0uLc). Four years later, in Munich, 28 of the 40 competitors used Fosbury’s technique. By 1980, thirteen of the sixteen Olympic finalists used it. Of the 36 Olympic medalists in the event from 1972 through 2000, 34 used “the Flop.”
Today his high jumping technique is accepted as the gold-standard. His genius not only added 6” to his jumps, his technique added 6″ to everybody’s jumps. He invented so true a true game-changer that Javier Sotomayor’s long-standing World Record in the high jump (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IclEQA48IOE&feature=related), set using Dick Fosbury’s “flop,” is over 8 feet high, and no serious high jumper competes today using any other technique.
In 2000, Fosbury told Sports Illustrated, “I had no inkling I would revolutionize the event, it was all intuition.” Fosbury spends a week each summer teaching his technique at a track camp for high schoolers in Lewiston, Maine. He enjoys sharing his skills with a new generation of jumpers. “All sorts of mysteries seem beyond us,” Fosbury says. “I feel obligated to help people understand they don’t have to be stuck.” Genius.
Jerry West – way better
Jerry West is of a second sort of genius, a subtler sort, and he was one of the best basketball players of his era (bolt down the inbox, Marge, there’s a flood of email a’ comin’ from angry Bob Cousy fans!), an example of the practice, practice, practice school of genius.
(Much of this is adapted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_West) ”Jerry Alan West was born into a poor household in Cheylan, West Virginia. His main distraction was shooting at a basketball hoop which a neighbor had nailed to his storage shack. West spent many years shooting from every possible angle, ignoring the mud of the shoddy backyard, his mother’s lashes whenever he came late for dinner, and playing with gloves when the court was covered with snow.” After leading the 1959 University of West Virginia Mountaineers to the NCAA title game, and the 1960 US Olympic basketball team to a gold meal, he joined the Lakers and became a 14-time All-Star, leading them to the 1972 NBA Championship against the Milwaukee Bucks.
He was not the Lakers’ first real star, bespectacled center George Miken got the dynasty rolling when they were still in Minneapolis, but like Moses, he retired before making it to the promised land: Los Angeles. Even the gifted play of a young phenom Elgin Baylor could not sell tickets in Minneapolis in 1959. But with the 1960 moving of the franchise and the arrival of Jerry West (and Announcer Chick Hearn), the Lakers (and the NBA) became profitable.
The college game ruled radio (and the new Los Angeles Sports Arena) at the time, but the fledgling TV game was catching on. Jerry’s style of play was so dynamic, and he was just so fun to watch that before long, the Arena was full. nobody ever again doubted that the Lakers were here to stay. Attendance was up all over the league when the Lakers were the visiting team, too.
He did the same things others did so much better than his opponents that it is his profile in flight which graces the NBA logo. Jerry (aptly nicknamed “Mr. Clutch,” by Chick) played his whole career with the Lakers, the last few seasons with a painful series of injuries.
After his playing days, Jerry stayed on, as a special assistant, then became their assistant coach, then head coach for three years, and finally their long-time general manager, earning the reputation as the best evaluator of young talent in the league. Among his finds were a 6′-9″ guard named Magic Johnson, and a serious high-schooler with a very serious skill-set named Koby Bryant…
Jerry was good to his people. For example, another of his players, talented young forward Mitch Kupchak, blew up his knee after playing for the Lakers for just 26 games, and after several surgeries and painful comeback attempts (one of which contributed to an NBA Championship), the injury finally ended his career. Jerry kept him around, put him in the front office with him, teaching him the business, and Mitch is doing fairly well (2009 NBA Champs!) in Jerry’s old General Manager’s post today. The Business degree Mitch got from UCLA while still playing didn’t hurt his chances any. either.
Kurt Rambis, he of the Superman glasses, was a fan-favorite and a classic overachiever for the “Showtime” Lakers, usually throwing in the first long pass that ended in a behind-the-back no-look pass by Magic to a fast-breaking finger-roll by James Worthy or a fall-away sky-hook by Kareem. Jerry kept Rambis in the Laker family after his playing days were over. He became a scout, an assistant coach, head coach and then Assistant General Manager. Kurt recently accepted the job as new Head Coach of the Minnesota Timberwolves, replacing Jerry’s old friend (and former Boston Celtic great) Kevin McHale. Yes, Jerry West took good care of his people, and they have thrived in his care. Jerry not only did the right things the right way, he has a desk-drawer full of NBA Championship rings and an Olympic Gold Medal that says he does them better, too, way better.
I met Jerry once. One summer morning (in what now seems like a prior life), as I was doing electrical labor, wiring commercial kitchens in the dust, the heat and the noise that was the as-yet-unfinished L.A. Staples Center Arena, my foreman came by and told me we were going to meet at lunchtime down on the arena floor. When we got there, Jerry was there to greet us with the Lakers Girls, some Lakers, and a catered lunch. Then he told us he was gonna carve each of our names in stone on the wall. He did, too, you can see mine there today, in black Granite, there on the right as you enter, there with those of the other 400 some-odd Union men who built that place. You really can’t miss it, you can’t get in without walking past it. I never heard of anybody doing a thing like that before, but when Jerry West looked you square in the eye, and thanked you personally, you got the sense he was just like that to everybody, how else would a man act? That is a very rare type of genius, the kind that quietly confirms for people that they, too, are better, way better, and that flavor of genius is perhaps the most precious of all.

