When Be-Bop Bopped In The Doo Wop Night-With The Classics Til Then In Mind
Til Then Lyrics
doo-doo-doom) (doo-doo-doom)
(doo-doo-doom)
(rep-reddah-rep)
(doo-doo-doom) (doo-doo-doom) (doo-doo-doom)
(rep-reddah-rep)
(rep-reddah-rep)
(doo-doo-doom) (doo-doo-doom) (doo-doo-doom)
(rep-reddah-rep)
[Intro continues behind each verse]
Till then, my darling, please wait for
me
Till then, no matter when it may be
One day I know I'll be home again
Please wait (till) till then
Till then, no matter when it may be
One day I know I'll be home again
Please wait (till) till then
Our dreams will live though we are apart
Our love will always stay in our hearts
Till then, when of the world will be free
Please wait for me
Our love will always stay in our hearts
Till then, when of the world will be free
Please wait for me
Although there are oceans we must cross
and mountains that we must climb
I know every gain must have a loss, so pray that our loss is nothing but time
I know every gain must have a loss, so pray that our loss is nothing but time
Till then, we'll dream of what there
will be
Till then, we'll call on each memory
Till then, when I will hold you again
Please wait till then (ooh)
Till then, we'll call on each memory
Till then, when I will hold you again
Please wait till then (ooh)
Sure I have plenty to say about early
rock ‘n’ roll, now called the classic rock period in the musicology hall of
fame. Yeah, I know I have already talked some ears off, maybe yours, about how
hard-pressed Mississippi plantation workers (semi-slaves the way the pay-out
came down at the end of the year)
gathered around on some sweaty Saturday night to hear Big Bill, Big Jack, Big
Little, or Big somebody belt the blues out of some whiskey bottle in some broken
down juke joint, and left enough of an impression that that dark boy in the
corner, kind of shy but very inquisitive about that beat took it north-ward and
put it in an electric outlet and you could see the audience, the woman audience
part, swaying that sway that meant they got it, got that rif (and maybe said thanks
that shy young brother in their own swaying way). I know too that I have left
some ears kind of staggered after mouthing off about who Jesse Lee and Billy
Bob, a couple of plain ordinary good old boys maybe heard a far off echo of
that electrified music and started riff-ing on their own in places like Memphis
and Mobile waiting to be discovered as the next be-bop daddy musical white
negro (Norman Mailer’s term, hipster term, not mine but it fits) all young and
hungry, ready to play for free, or nickels just to get out of the small town
Saturday night and jump.
So yeah I have talked some, some about
the big broad trends coming out of the mid-century muck (mid-20th
century just so you know) and within that say I have spent a little time, not enough,
considering its effect on us on the doo-wop branch of the genre. Part of the
reason for the “not enough,” once I thought about it was that obviously back in
those mid-1950s jail-breakout days I did not (and I do not believe that any
other eleven and twelve-year olds did either), distinguish between let’s say
rockabilly-back-beat-drive rock, black-based rock centered on a heavy rhythm
and blues backdrop, and the almost instrument-less (or maybe a soft piano or
guitar backdrop) group harmonics that drove doo-wop. Even now that stuff is
better left to the aficionados and musical intelligentsia, the guys who make
dough putting the stuff in some boxed-in historical perspective.
All I knew, all any of us knew when our
knees started to tremble, maybe wobble is better, to the new beat that came out
of some Mother Africa from whence we came, was that it was not my parents’
mannered Tin Pan Alley by-the-numbers music, not close. Get this too as a
selling point it did not hurt that they, those same parents, got nervous, very
nervous, anytime it was played out loud in their presence. Forever “turn it
down” (or father “turn the damn thing down”) raced along with each song.
Fortunately, some sainted, sanctified, techno-guru developed the iPod of that
primitive era; the battery-driven transistor radio. No big deal,
technology-wise by today’s standards, but get this you could place it near your
ear and have your own private out loud without parental scuffling in the
background. Yes, sainted, sanctified techno-guru. No question.
What doo-wop did though down in our
old-time working-class housing projects neighborhood, and again it was not so
much by revelation as by trial and error, is allow us to be in tune with the
music of our generation without having to spend a lot of money on instruments
or a studio or anything like that. Strictly built for po’ boys like us. First
of all where the hell would we have gotten the dough, when we were stretched
grabbing nickels and dimes, stealing really okay, from Ma’s pocketbook just to
keep the juke-box at Sandy’s Diner going, for such things when papas were out
of work, or were one step away, and there was “max daddy” trouble just keeping
the wolves from the door. Bills and repo men the bane of every family’s
existence. (Worse, worse though when papas could not take it anymore and just
split, long-gone daddy split with or without some barroom frill or got nasty
drunk with the paycheck and left Ma with empty Friday night envelopes and
nothing to stave off the collectors.)
Sure, some kids, some kids like my
corner boy elementary school boyhood friend Billy, William James Bradley, were
crazy to put together cover bands with electric guitars (rented occasionally),
and dreams. Or maybe go wild with a school piano a la Jerry Lee Lewis, Little
Richard, or Fats Domino but those were maniac aficionados. I remember one time
Billy was so hopped up on the fame game that in the height of the Elvis craze
when all us other boys were busy growing side-burns and perfecting our sneers
(sneers meant for some young thing, in our neighborhood and in that time
meaning stick girls who had not gotten their forms yet, to wipe off into the
sunset) he tried to hop on the Bo Diddley bandwagon. Hop on that bandwagon
until one cruel school talent show night he learned the hard facts of the
racial divide in a northern white housing project by one of the older boy
rednecks and returned to Elvis-land with the rest of us. Billy, never say die
Billy, also trying to break out with a Bill Haley and the Comets routine which
worked okay around the neighborhood where all the girls went nuts but got him
nowhere when a regional new talent show came through town and he was all geared
up to win except the suit jacket his mother had jerry-rigged for the occasion
fell apart about half way through his performance. Yeah, Billy had it bad.
Even Billy though, when the deal went
down, especially after hearing Frankie Lymon and The Teenagers was mad to do
the doo-wop and make his fame and fortune on the cheap. (No need for
instruments, cheapjack jackets or racial taunts.) The cover art on a doo wop
compilation I once reviewed in an old time rock and roll series made that poor
boy and girl point beautifully. No not some Karl Marx brotherhood of man thing
or Adams Smith all ships rising if one guy rises. Nothing that heavy, please.
The cover showed a group of young black kids, black guys, young guys who looked
“from hunger” too like us and who looked like they were doing their doo wop on
some big city street corner (maybe Brooklyn, maybe the old days Bronx, maybe
uptown Harlem Saturday night). And that made sense reflecting the New York
City-derived birth of doo-wop and that the majority of doo-wop groups that we
heard on the AM transistor sister radio were black. But the city, the poor
sections of the city, white or black, was not the only place where moneyless
guys and gals were harmonizing, hoping, hoping maybe beyond hope, to be
discovered and make more than just a 1950s musical jail-breakout of their
lives. Moreover, this cover art I speak of also showed, and showed vividly,
what a lot of us guys were trying to do-impress girls, impress them on the
cheap with some harmonies and moonlight and maybe a little side chatter too
(and maybe visa-a-versa for girl doo-woppers but they can tell their own
stories).
Yes, truth to tell, it was about
impressing girls that drove many of us, Billy included, Christ maybe Billy most
of all, to mix and match harmonies. And you know you did too (except remember
girls just switch around what I just said). Yah, four or five guys just hanging
around the back door of the old South Adamsville Elementary School on hot
summer nights, nothing better to do, no dough to do things, maybe a little
feisty because of that, and started up a few tunes. Junior corner boys with no
corner because, well, because true corner-dom required a drugstore, a mom and pop
variety store, or maybe if you were lucky a pizza parlor to be real corner boys
and we did not have such institutions within five miles of our isolated
peninsula projects. Billy, who actually did have some vocal musical talent (he
did a very servable Bo Diddley although no way did he have that Afro-Carib beat
down being as I later tried to figure out just a tad too white to have immersed
his soul in that milieu and also did, if not a son of Bill Haley act if you
don’t count the clothes flying off, then close very good job), usually sang
lead, and the rest of us, well, doo-wopped. (Sha-sha-do-be-doo, okay just in
case you thought I was kidding.) We knew nothing of keys and pauses, of time,
notes, or reading music we just improvised. Worked on stuff kind of by osmosis
or something and over the course of a summer we started to jell a little (And
to keep in that jell mood I kept my changing to a teen-ager, slightly off-key
voice on the low, on the very low.)
Whether we did it well or poorly, guess
what, as the hot sun day turned into humid night, and the old sun went down
just over the hills, first a couple of girls, then a couple more, and then a
whole bevy (nice word, right?) of them came and got kind of swoony and moony.
And swoony and moony was just fine. And we all innocent, innocent dream,
innocent when we dreamed, make our virginal moves. But, mainly, we doo-wopped
in the be-bop mid-1950s night. And a few of the songs previously mentioned in
that reviewed CD compilation could be heard in that airless night. The stick
outs: Deserie, The Charts; Baby Blue, The Echoes; Till Then,
The Classics; Tonight (Could Be The Night), The Velvets. And of course Why Do Fools Fall In Love although Billy
did not make any mistake this time since he had seen Frankie and his boys on American Bandstand and so did no imitation.
As for the girls as summer turned to
school times on certain humid hot late August nights you could hear a mix and
match of young male and female voices like they too had imbibed Billy’s dream,
had seen that fame and fortune coming their way and they wanted in on it, if
for no other reason than to get out of the projects. Or maybe I dwell too much,
after the fact project too much, and they just wanted to bathe in the
jail-break night we all knew was coming with the new rock dispensation.
Yah, I know everybody wants to know
what happened to Billy since the name does not instantly come to mind when one
thinks of the legends of classic rock, or doo wop bop. Well, Billy was wired
for that success that always eluded him and after a while, after a few too many
failures, bad moves or poor judgment he lost interest in being the president of
rock and roll and turned to a life of small-time crime (even there he could not
breakthrough since that life was just as “rigged” as everything else if you
were not connected), got caught a few times and then I lost contact where he
was and what he was doing. Whatever it was he still made many a project kid,
including this kid, feel good for a couple of summers crooning out the tunes
and bringing the girls around. Thanks Billy, thanks a lot.
Yah, bop the doo wop
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