***Out In The 1950s Be-Bop Doo
Wop Night- When Lady Jack Doo Wopped
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Sure everybody who counted in the 1950s
red scare cold war night, meaning if you must know, teen-agers, sullen downcast
corner boy teenagers just waiting for something to break open and let them
breathe a little or even over-the-top yah-yah teens with plenty of spending money
and nothing to spend it on flipped out when one Frankie Lymon blew a doo wop fresh
breeze over the land. The land that counted, the teen-age land. Oh sure Elvis got
all the young girls and their older sisters all wet and slinky, Bo Diddley
worked his ass off sweating up the rock in rock ‘n’ roll and Mister Chuck Berry
was letting everybody know (and you know by now who everybody was) that Mister
Beethoven's time had passed. But a lot of that was over the heads of kids, projects
kids, who did not have dough for musical instruments. So when Frankie and his cohorts
blew into town with, really, nothing but voices and harmonics to wow the girls we
were in very heaven. Not the least impressed and inspired was corner boy Jack
Fitzgerald. Lady Jack, who got a strange new lease on life, got long gone daddy daddy bopped in
that fetid red scare cold war 1950s night when that fresh breeze hit town. Let
me tell you.
**********
Jack Fitzgerald thought about it for
a while, a long while, before he approached the other guys, the other corner
boy guys, junior varsity division, but not in that division when it came to
singing, singing harmonic rock stuff, yes, doo wop stuff. They were ready to
turn big time, well, local big time anyway. And here is where Jack’s thinking
was headed, but wait a minute, maybe some things should be mentioned first.
Well, first when the word corner boy comes on the horizon most people think
about young male teenage boys, white or black, hell, Hispanic too if you lived
in the cities, the big melting-pot cities not cities like Clintondale, a
strictly white-bread city, mainly Irish like Jack, with a mix of Italians, or
as Lenny, Lenny Smith, one of Jack’s corner boys liked to say Eye-talians. All
very much Catholic, very high-roller Roman Catholic, not those off-shoot
Orthodox guys who split early on from the real church and got crazy with their
ritual stuff. Maybe a few protestant white-breads too left over from the days
when Clintondale produced presidents, ran revolutions, and caused holy hell for
old mother, England.
But whatever the ethnic identity
code, teenage boys clad in white tee-shirts (no vee-necks need apply those are
for old grandpa guys, old grandpa railroad guys maybe), blue jeans, work boots,
but they better be black engineer boots, with buckles, at least they had better
be if you want to be a corner boy in Clintondale, and yes, hanging watch fob
chain (no, not to tell the time, what is time to a corner boy, but just in
case, just in case something comes up and a chain could come in very handy) and
yes, for those who could afford such things (or had the guts to “clip” them), a
tight waist-sized leather jacket, black, against the New England colds, and the
offshore winds that blew up, blew up out of nowhere. And Jack, Lenny and Jack’s
other corner boys, Benny, Bobby, Billly, Sean, and Larry were, like Jack
thought, junior varsity division copies, minus the singing, of that Clintondale
corner boy world.
Oh yah, except they, Jack’s they,
didn’t have a corner. See, there was no mom and pop variety store, no
bowl-a-whirl bowling alley, no Bop’s pool hall, no Bijou movie house, no Doc’s
drugstore; you name it no, in all of the Acre section of Clintondale. So boys,
corner boys or not, being inventive, or trying to be “squatted’, squatted out
in the back section, the section down by the old-time sailors’ graveyard, of
the old Clintondale North Elementary School where they had all just graduated
from the sixth grade (called locally, in the neighborhood, the Acre school and
everybody knew what school you were talking about). And nobody, no Jimmy’s
Smith’s corner boys (Lenny’s older brother), no Acre Low-Riders, the
motorcycle-riding corner boys, better come near, or else. Yes, or else,
although Jack sometimes worked up a sweat thinking what kind of hell would
occur if those older guys decided they wanted to stake a claim to that back
section. And definitely no girls, no stick girls, no stick twelve-year old girls
unless of course, Jack and The Guys (the name of their budding doo wop group,
junior division looking to go big time if you didn’t know) were harmonizing and
the girls, the shy and bossy alike, started coming around like lemmings from
the sea when the boys started their thing. And that was where the problem was.
No, not what you’d think, as Jack
continued thinking about his dilemma. Girls were starting to be okay, very
okay, mostly, even when the boys were not doo wopping, if you could believe
that, because in fifth grade, just a year ago, generic girls were barred,
barred no questions asked, from hell’s little back acre. No, what was on Jack’s
mind was break-out. Breaking out of the Acre. And even twelve-year old Jack,
twelve-year old corner boy Jack, knew that the only way he, and Lenny and the
others, were going to break out was by riding the doo wop wave.
The only ways that he could see to
ride that wave, was one, by getting a girl singer to give a better balance to
the now getting too harsh voice-changing age harmonics. But a girl, one girl,
meant trouble and Jack knew deep in his young bones that there would be trouble
because the only one who qualified, voice-qualified, looks-qualified, and well,
just wanted-her-around qualified, was Lonnie Callahan, Sean’s year older
sister. But a bunch of boys, corner boys and one looker spelled trouble,
watch-fob chain trouble.
And two, maybe worst trouble, the
guys needed an original song, and just then an original song with a girl’s name
in it like that longing for Deserie stuff by the Charts, My Juanita
by the Crests, Aurelia by the Pelicans, Marlena by the Concords, Linda
by the Empires, and Barbara by the the Temptations or some other good
girl name song that girls couldn’t get enough of and were buying doo wop 45s of
like crazy. See all the names Jack and the Guys thought of were girls who they
were, individually, looking to make points with and so some girls were going to
get the short end of the stick. And short end of the stick meant they would not
be coming like lemmings to the sea to listen to Jack and The Guys do doo wop in
the Acre be-bop night. So you can see Jack’s problem. Good luck brother because
the road to perdition awaits.
No comments:
Post a Comment