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It is not black and it is not a Torpedo model, but otherwise, it is exactly like Dad's "Black Beauty" |
In the summer of
1941, when I was five years old, my parents went to a dance at the Hotel
Lubbock. I don’t know the occasion, but
it was not a usual thing for my parents to go to a dance, much less one held in
a fancy hotel. Dry land dirt farmers just didn’t have that
kind of money.
My job, for the
evening, was to watch over my little brother and sister, and make sure they
stayed in the car. We had no baby
sitter, probably for economic reasons, so the three of us stayed in the back
seat of the car, parked across a brick side street from the hotel. Mother came out every thirty minutes or so to
check on us. The evening was pleasant
and the car windows were rolled down. Jerry
and Carol were asleep, but I was awake—I had a job to do. Besides, I was too excited to sleep. I could hear the music from the balcony of
the hotel and see fancy people up there, dancing, talking, smoking, and
laughing.
For the first time in my life, I listened to
real music performed by a live band and not shrunk down and squeezed through a squeaky
little radio. The “Sons of the Pioneers”
were playing and I remember Along the
Navajo Trail, Cool Water, and Tumbling Tumbleweeds, all wafting down on the
warm, summer air for my entertainment.
That was over seventy years ago and I still remember the clear, silky
voice of Bob Nolan singing those classic lyrics and perfectly enunciating every
word. When the others joined him for
choruses, the harmony was flawless. I
will be forever thankful I didn’t have to stay home that night.
About three
years later, Dad got a new car—at least it was new to us—a 1941 black Pontiac,
two-door “Torpedo” style with a built-in factory radio and wide chrome stripes
down the middle. Cars were important to
Dad—he named this one “Black Beauty.”
One night, as we were driving, we listened to music on the
radio. At the time, radio stations played programs, not records, so I’m sure we were hearing the Grand Ole Opry. It could have been the Louisiana Hayride.
I think it was the Opry because Eddy Arnold sang a song and I don’t remember
him singing on the Hayride. When he
finished, I remember Mom saying, “There will never be another Eddy Arnold.” Another wasn't needed. Eddy Arnold was a fixture on the landscape of Country Music for over sixty years, releasing hit songs in every decade through the nineties.
Country Music had
character back then. The music was earthy,
plaintive, and passionate--the lyrics were simple, honest, and heartfelt. The stories were about life and life was hard
in the country during and after the depression.
These songs were sung by farm boys, fresh from the fields and close to
the soil. Names like Webb Pierce, Lefty
Frizzel, Hank Thompson, Slim Whitman, Don Gibson, Furlin Husky, Carl Smith and Jim Reeves
joined Eddy Arnold and Hank Williams on the radio, singing songs such as Back Street Affair, More, More, More of
Your Kisses, The Wild Side of Life, and Don’t Let the Stars get in your Eyes. In 1952, Kitty Wells became the first
female solo artist to top the country charts.
Miss Kitty's song, It Wasn’t God who Made
Honky-Tonk Angels, answered and rebuked Hank
Thompson’s Wild Side of Life.
I can write reams
about this subject, and I will, but not here and not now. This began as a lead-in to my thoughts on the
CMA Award Show I watched last night.
What those people did may have been music, but it was not country.
The show
originated in Nashville. It was
dark, so it was difficult to tell, but the concert must have taken place in an NFL Stadium strung with
high intensity strobe lights, and mined with explosive devices. For whatever reason, the male singers were
kept in near-darkness, with a tiny spot flashing on the side, or sometimes the
back of their head. When these guys
reached a dramatic point in their songs, fireworks exploded, strobe lights
flashed and steam blew out hidden vents, obscuring everything onstage. Any
music that might accidentally have been played was lost in the confusion.
The female
singers were, by contrast, well lighted; otherwise we could not have seen their
fantastic anatomies. Most were almost
dressed in something short and tight and low cut, and I loved it, but it wasn’t
country. The skirts were so short that
the beautiful ladies could not possibly hit a high note without exposing their
assets. Wardrobe malfunctions were not
necessary--the blouses were cut so the top, the bottom, and most of the rest of
their breasts were out there in full view.
Only the points of interest were concealed.
The climax of the
evening seemed to be a performance by a new country duo—the Florida-Georgia
Line or some such silly name. A guy with a muscle shirt, long shaggy hair, and
grotesque jailhouse tattoos (of which he seemed inordinately proud) beat on the face of
an electric guitar, jumped around, and screamed something untranslatable into
the mike. An insane drummer with
matching unkempt locks went nuts in the flashing, strobe-lighted, white-smoked
foreground. As the camera panned the
crowd during this performance, it was easy to see that George Strait was visibly
shaken. So was I.
As you may have
guessed, I came from a more conservative group of country fans. I think Brooks and Dunn or the Everly
Brothers are proper names for Country Duos and the Florida-Georgia Line is geography. I think Willie Nelson, on a stool with a worn
out guitar, singing songs from his And
Then I Wrote album is a wonderful concert. I think Dolly Parton, in a cowboy
shirt stuffed absolutely full of boobies, is plenty sexy. I think Hank Williams, Willie Nelson, Dolly
Parton, and Kris Kristofferson are on a poetic level with Shakespeare. I think Hank, Johnny Horton, Buddy Holly, Patsy
Cline, Elvis Presley and Jim Reeves all died too young.
As is obvious
from the CMA Awards Show, Country Music is no longer confined to remote
honky-tonks filled with lonesome people feeling the joys and struggling with
the pains of life. It is no longer beer
joint music, created and performed by and for beer joint people. Madison Avenue has discovered Country Music
and a mob of marketing gurus have descended to capitalize on this un-tapped
resource, and show these bumpkins how to peddle their product.
Country Music, as
I know and love it, is on the way out.
It is changing and becoming unrecognizable. It has gone the way of shiny black
torpedo-shaped cars, with lots of chrome. Our world is not a better place because of this progress.
Long ago, Hank Williams
stood on the stage of the Ryman Auditorium with just his guitar. He wore a white cowboy hat, sequined western
suit, polished cowboy boots. He pushed
back his hat, touched his guitar and, with a shy grin, sang, The silence of a falling star lights up a
purple sky….and as I wonder where you are, I’m so lonesome I could cry.
Me to, Hank. I could just cry.
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Hank burned himself out, feeling guilty because music was easy for him and other folks had to work so hard just to get by. He died in the back seat of a '52 Cadallic at age 29. |