In writing recently about my Little League baseball career,
I was reminded of my time in Karlsruhe, Germany, where I played at the American
base there, the Paul Revere Village. It is also where I attended school, and I
have been looking through my one yearbook from that time, Der Kavalier ’67.
I am by nature obsessively nostalgic, and I think this is
largely because I had an interesting time growing up. In the past few days I
have actually been on a few ‘Karlsruhe AHS’ or similar sites, posting a comment
on one, and emailing a hopeful acquaintance from the past through another. This
acquaintance was one of a number who wrote messages in my yearbook – the tradition
at the end of an academic year – and she was an older student who used to hang
out with me and others at the ‘yellow building’: one of the Army apartment blocks
opposite the school where we all used to meet in the morning and smoke. I was
12 and hung out with the older students, by and large. I was also a ‘cool-head’,
an appellation I even autographed on my own photo and which was applied to me,
I am nostalgically proud to say, in a number of those wonderful messages.
I say ‘wonderful’ because I was struck by the thoughtful,
hopeful and articulate thoughts for my future, especially those from friends my
age. More articulate I’m sure than I was at that time. Again, it was a
tradition, but one which on reflection I read now as very positive, purposeful –
and intelligent. There are many references to the ‘yellow building’, being a ‘cool-head’
[obviously a group of us concerned with our appearance] and ‘purple day’. I was
into fashion and wanting to dress differently to others, especially the many
Ivy League Americans at school [I would read magazines focusing on London hippie/psychedelic
fashion, very much in vogue, as well as English slang – and this is hilarious: I
do recall a magazine printing a glossary of ‘Beatles’ words, and one was narked, which was damned unusual if you
were a yank, and so a few of us used this for a time, feeling now genuinely ‘cool’.....].
American schools do not have school uniform, but on ‘purple
day’ there must have been a relaxation on what was allowed to be reasonably worn
because I went to school in the most amazing purple corduroy flared trousers
with a fluorescent yellow nylon shirt, both bought in Karlsruhe [I have no idea
how my conventional American parents will have allowed that, but they did]. On
that day at least, I was more than cool - I was far out!
One of my favourite teachers at that time was my English teacher, Ronald R Voeller, and he signed my yearbook with the following: May you continue to explore the newest in fashions and suaveness. Now how special is that?! Naturally, I had to look up the word ‘suave’ in the dictionary, but I thought that was the neatest thing to say at the time, and I now fully appreciate what he was doing with that expression way back then. Indeed, another teacher also wrote a fascinating comment in my yearbook. This was my German Language teacher Gertraud Schlegel, and I spent a lot of time standing outside her class for my talkativeness [not in German either....] and she wrote, with considerable foresight for my ability to appreciate this in the future, these lines from Goethe: What is the best government? That which teaches us to govern ourselves. It could seem a sarcastic comment on my lack of discipline, and there may have been a minute element of that, but here was a teacher who I’d like to think saw I had some ability to progress and mature and understand important ideas in the future. As with later teachers, these two and others at this quite ordinary but also excellent High School, clearly had their positive influence on my future career as a teacher.
This is a music blog so if you’ve got this far in reading
you could be wondering about the relevance. Here it comes. I have always loved
music and have written elsewhere about probably my earliest genuine
appreciation which was my own second-hand hearing of my older sister’s listening
to rock’n’roll [Orbison, Presley, Vincent, Mineo et al] as well as for me just
after, The Beatles. Living in Germany was a time of musical transition [personally
and globally] and therefore the development of my own tastes. I first learned
to play the guitar whilst in Karlsruhe. A friend who had his own band and of
course an electric guitar taught me my first two routines: the bass line for The House of the Rising Sun over which
he would play the chord sequence and sing [and what a great unplanned symmetry
today in my reviewing Eric Burdon’s latest!], and then as I progressed – a relative
term - the chord sequence to Gloria
[EAC] which was quite tricky as it was a quick run.
In fact I lie: the first chord I learnt to play was G – that’s
with the thumb and middle finger on respectively the bottom and top E strings
on the third fret. That was easy!
Sadly, I can’t remember my guitar friend’s name. His band
would play at the AA Club [I think that’s what it was called, standing for the
American Association] and it was a youth club where we would also eat our
school lunch which was, naturally, hamburgers! The coolest song to play then,
which his band did, was the Kingsmen’s Louie
Louie, and that was because apart from its cool garage riff it had the
dirtiest lyrics [the subject of an FBI investigation no less] – well, they are
indecipherable on the record and certainly sound lewd, especially to the aural
appreciation and reinvention of adolescent
youth. Amazingly, I can’t recall any other covers his or other bands at that
time played, though I’m sure The House of
the Rising Sun had to be one of them.
I bought my first personal music at the PX [Post Exchange] on
the army base – this was the Sears and Roebucks equivalent when residing away
from the States. These were all singles. I’m sure I didn’t buy any albums until
I moved to England later in 1967. So I’m now getting to the absolute relevance
of this long post, but the nostalgic reverie took over some while ago. I will
in fact end by simply listing the singles I’m confident I bought there, though
I will just now mention The Electric Prunes I
Had Too Much To Dream Last Night, because it does have a real significance:
it was the psychedelic record that altered forever the music I and many others would
gravitate to; it led to the second of the two fights I had as a teenager, both
of which I lost badly, but thankfully quickly [I wasn’t a tough guy – hell, I
wore purple flared corduroy trousers with a yellow shirt], and it is the basis
for a poem I wrote about the music and that experience which will follow this
list of singles. In compiling, I worked on the principle that any singles
without a centrepiece were the earliest and therefore from Germany: then I
realised some with the donut hole were early purchases from England. The surest
evidence is that they had to be 1967 or before, but I haven’t checked to be
absolutely sure. They are listed as they came out of the singles box, unless
more than one by the same artist/s in which case I have grouped them [as well
as a long posting, this really is a nerd’s exercise!]:
Germany Singles [and
Collectibles]
The Marketts – Out of
Limits
The Pyramids – Penetration
The Platters – With This
Ring
Manfred Mann – Do Wah
Diddy Diddy
Johnny Rivers – Seventh
Son
The Kinks – All Day
and All of the Night/I Gotta Move
The Kinks – I Need
You/Set Me Free
The Kinks – Tired of
Waiting For You/Come On Now
The Righteous Brothers – A
Man Without a Dream
Nini Rosso – Der Clown
[!]
Walter Wanderley – Call
Me [and immediate above, genesis of my eclectic tastes....]
The Beatles – Yellow Submarine/Eleanor
Rigby
The Beatles – Paperback
Writer/Rain
The Music Machine – Talk
Talk [hugely influential garage]
Bobby Herb – Sunny
Freddy Cannon – Beachwood
City
Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tich – Hold Tight!
The Box Tops – The Letter
The Buckinghams – Don’t
You Care [gorgeous]
The Buffalo Springfield – For What It’s Worth [first protest/political song]
Simon & Garfunkel – A
Hazy Shade of Winter/For Emily Whenever I Can Find Her [15 cents]
The Mamas & The Pappas – Look Through My Window
The Mamas & The Pappas – Dedicated To The One I Love
The Mamas & The Pappas – Monday, Monday
Syndicate of Sound – Little
Girl
Charlie Ryan – Hot Rod
Lincoln
The Outsiders – Respectable
Tommy James and The Shondells – I Think We’re Alone Now
Shadows of Knight – Gloria
The Spencer Davis Group – I’m A Man [what a bass line]
Blues Magoos – (We Ain’t
Got) Nothing Yet/Gotta Get Away [reviewed on this blog]
The Turtles – Happy Together
The Silkie – You’ve
Got To Hide Your Love Away [great Beatles cover]
The Impressions – I’m
So Proud/I Made a Mistake [three black GIs sang ISP a cappella, and brilliantly, to my older sister at the local
swimming pool in Karlsruhe. She was wearing a black bikini with a net join in
the middle. Very risqué at the time. And she had/has red hair. I used to have
so much fun being taken around as a chaperon/little-kid-brother-safety-net for
her in those days!]
The Electric Prunes – I
Had Too Much To Dream Last Night [hugely influential psychedelia]
I Had Too Much To
Drink Last Night -1966
(Karlsruhe, Germany)
1.
I was in Karlsruhe
when Lenny and
Walt Disney died
but with England winning the World Cup
the Germans seemed
otherwise preoccupied.
2.
In Girl on a Motorcycle
Marianne Faithfull unzipped the front
of her black leather top
half-way down her bare chest
and drove a motorcycle along
the main street of Karlsruhe, the
wind sneaking in on her breasts
like me into the film underage
but overwrought with thoughts
of sexual unrest.
3.
I’d just pushed the jukebox buttons and
I Had Too Much To
Dream Last Night began to play
when the weedy guy with glasses kept yapping
and I told him to go away
but he wouldn’t
so I threw him over the table and he
challenged me to a fight.
Once outside he put up his fists like a boxer
and kept hitting me in the mouth
and my head began to sway
but when I gave up he shook my hand
like we were gentleman
this ugly kid who was taught boxing by his dad
or Cassius Clay.
Nostalgia and music are such perfect partners. I still remember so many significant moments because of the musical memories attached. I really enjoy these remIniscences, Some Awe- keep them coming! Oh and I don't think I have ever been a cool head. I think that may be a life's work...!
ReplyDeleteI played Baby Ruth ball there in 63 & 64. class of 66. Made a living w/music for 20 some years on the radio( the old man of R & R ) I always said " you loved them then and remember them now "
ReplyDeleteGood of you to stop by and leave a comment. Trust you are still enjoying the music!
ReplyDelete