Mosquitos are out in force tonight. Blood is being shed as I
try to focus and get something down. At the end of my blood splotched arm sits
my cell phone. Lying there on the glass table top the black rounded rectangle
is playing the Lucy Kaplansky station on Pandora. Of course I could play the very same station
on the tiny stereo speakers on my laptop but that would be too complicated
right now. Far enough away from the
house the Wi-Fi gets kind of dicey. I still have unlimited data so I am going
to use the 4G. I want to make sure I get uninterrupted sound right now. Buffering is a mood breaker.
Hearing the monaural mix playing out of the tiny iPhone
speaker brings me back to a different time.
If I close my eyes I am in such a different place. Suddenly eight year old myopic me is heading
down south to visit my grandmother. With
that car nearly flying we were headed to Horry County. Bouncing in shorts in
the front of an old American boat of a car I am listening to the radio. Funny the
delivery of sound then and at this moment have certain similarities.
Sometimes I remember riding in the middle of the front seat
of a Ford Galaxy 500 travelling down U.S. 301.
Some distance south of the Mason-Dixon Line the telephone poles with
their faint green glass insulators fly by.
The old man might be talking about safety, he hated old three lane
highways and railroad crossing without warning lights. My brother and sister
might be squabbling. It might have been
1963, the car might have been a Galaxie and I might have been seven but we were rolling. One thing was sure my brother was longing for
some serious southern fireworks.
But I am not really remembering anyone else in the car. Also
it not so much the sights of the green world flying by I remember. What I have pulled from storage because this
little speaker is playing beside me is a dashboard image. I am looking at the
chrome knobs and buttons of that a.m. radio that sat dead ahead of me when I
rode in the center spot.
Through a tiny speaker on the dash came my favorite songs,
the sing along tunes that would be played repeatedly on Top 40 stations until
we got down below Richmond. Songs like Puff the Magic Dragon and I’m Henry the VIII would come on. At the
first strum I would know the song and then I got to sing at the top of my lungs
much to the chagrin of my much older siblings in the car. Sometimes Barry McGuire’s Eve of Destruction would come on and the
old man would twist the dial and change the station. Damn commie music. There
are some other phrases that might have flown out right then but I shall opt not
to remember those now.
It was important to get as much of this music as I could
early on in the trip. Once you got south of Richmond all you got were farm
reports, the price of tobacco and the like or serious twang. Today that hard
old country twang, think George Jones singing White Lightning or anything in the Jim Reeves catalog would be
music to my ears, not so much then. Sometimes on that tinny speaker the further
down you went there were trading shows. In
a thick old time North Carolina accent can’t you just hear Bob in Wilson (home
of Parker’s Barbeque) who has a set of barely used white walls asking if
anybody would want to trade for a full sized bed and a chest of drawers?
But what I remember is the music or the news came out of
that centered little speaker. No matter what else happened in that car we all
had one ear open and focused on what the radio waves were bringing us. The
windows were down and the air was hot. In
1964 the old man wasn’t ready to pop for air conditioning even if it might have
been an option. The people in the back seat wanted the sound turned up because
of the roar of the air going by on that old U.S. highway drowned out the radio
if it was set too low. The people in the
front seat, the more senior members in the car were not of like mind.
,
Was it there my radio ear was created? I spent the next several
decades listening for the next cool song, the next thing that would spark my
aural imagination. I don’t know but I
remember begging whoever was sitting next to me in the passenger seat to turn
the knob to see if we could catch one of those songs I loved before it was too
late.
2 comments:
Saw PP&M live at the Blue Angel in NY around 196?. Was in serious lust with her blond hair. Peter, I think, broke a guitar string.....no one cared, because Mary & Paul (?) stayed on stage, kibitzing with the audience while the string was replaced. AWESOME!!!!!
That sounds really great
Elba Plastic Pots
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