Musings
I was 13 in 1959. In the late 50s and early 60s a type of rock 'n roll held sway known as doo-wop. Its roots were on the street corners of New York and Philadelphia. Doo-wop's features included three major chords, close harmony from trios to quintets that always included both a deep bass and a falsetto, and a beat so strong, obvious, and relentless that not even the rhythmically-challenged, such as I, could possibly miss it.
In other words, doo-wop was the perfect response to the raging hormones that cried out for you to hold a girl in your arms without being whacked on the head by a teacher, a parent, or your date, for indecency. It was physically impossible to be unable to dance to doo-wop. You held your partner and simply swayed in time to a beat that had the regularity of a systolic cadence (even as your actual heart was speeding up precariously as a whiff of perfume drifted by).
May heaven bless (and rest the souls of) the great groups such as The Penguins ("Earth Angel"), The Five Satins ("In the Still of the Night"), The Jive Five ("Cry, Cry, Cry"), The Mellow-Kings ("Tonight, Tonight"), and The Skyliners ("This I Swear Is True"). There were the more upbeat songs, of course (Dion and the Belmonts' "Runaround Sue," and "Donna the Prima Dona" are fine examples) but even then the Lindy meant you were in fairly continuous contact with your partner. (By the time I got to college it was, counter-intuitively to me, becoming the norm to dance without touching.)
Ah, there was something to be said about that predictable, obvious-as-a-ham- sandwich beat. Life was simple. There was a total of 7 channels on our television.
I could name all the major auto makers and every model they made. There were only 16 major league baseball teams, and my friends and I could name the starting lineups of every one. You didn't go to malls or mega-stores. You went to the eponymous Frank's Grocery, Paul the Tailor, Valerie's Bakery, and Hank the Shoemaker. Radio was AM, and there were four powerful stations playing top-40 hits. The DJs—Allan Freed, Murray the K, Scott Muni, Dan Ingram, and the rest—were fixtures, and often hosted live shows at Palisades Park.
Yeah, I know, the past always looks better than it was. Billy Joel sings, "the past wasn't always that good, and the future isn't as bad as it seems." But I wasn't squired around to soccer practice. We played stickball in the street, because there was a neighborhood of kids. I learned about street-level competition, prejudice, bullies, and friendships. I read a lot of books because a video game or play station was science fiction. When our sneakers developed holes in the soles, we stuck cardboard in them from our fathers' laundered shirts.
I went to a public grammar school that used to be a cheese factory in a low-income neighborhood—my neighborhood. But the teachers knew their stuff (I can still name every one of them) and we learned how to conjugate verbs, diagram sentences, appreciate music, regard art, and employ common courtesy. We also played to win or lose, there was no concern about self-esteem, and people were proud to win spelling bees, essay contests, and basketball games.
There was a beat to those times that you couldn't ignore, a tempo to life that vaulted you forward with some measure of regularity and expectation. We weren't as protected as today's kids, but we were somehow freer.
I mean, when The Channels sang "The Closer You Are," you held tight, knew roughly where you were headed, and savored the moment. I can still recall the perfume. And I'm still captivated by the beat.
ORTIYKMWOYBNT-O Department
ONLY READ THIS IF YOU KNOW ME WELL OR YOU'LL BE NEEDLESSSLY TICKED-OFF DEPARTMENT
We live about 20 minutes from Newport, so we're there frequently for dining, events, meetings, etc. Consequently, we keep Newport Bridge tokens in all of our vehicles.
My wife complained that her tokens weren't working, because when she tossed them in the bin and proceeded at the toll booth, the "not paid" light was illuminated and a buzzer sounded. She borrowed tokens from my car, and reported that those weren't working, either.
"That's crazy," I said, "I use them all the time with no problem."
The next week my wife was determined to show me that the tokens were defective, so we drove over for dinner. At the bridge, she dutifully slowed and carefully tossed her token... ... ... .into the garbage container about three feet short of the actual token bin. Unsurprisingly, the light and buzzer alerted us we were having our license plate photographed, yet again.
"You see," she said, "it's like throwing money away."