Early Fleetwood Mac: Bob Welch, Mick Fleetwood, (back row), John McVie
and Christine McVie
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“It’s the same kind of story that seems to come down from long ago...”
With news of Bob Welch’s death last week, I
was transported back to 1974. That’s when I first heard his former band,
Fleetwood Mac, while living in the theoretically sleepy Vermont
village of Huntington Center with my young daughter
Jennie and a part-collie named Red Cloud. Our small red cabin in the woods was
up a steep, twisting dirt road at the foot of a 4,083-foot-high mountain called
Camel’s Hump. Local people were wary then of counterculture types, like me, who
came to the area seeking a back-to-the-land existence in their midst.
Undaunted, we newcomers were busy letting our freak flags fly, in the parlance
of the 1960s.
First, Jennie and I planted a circular
vegetable garden intended to evoke the shape of a yin-yang sign. I was always
consulting the I Ching, so everything around me simply had to be fraught
with relevant symbolism. As someone who had grown up in cities and suburbs, I
also was keen on exploring nature and began to examine every weed in bloom
around the cabin. With a newly purchased wildflower guide and a compendium of
medicinal herbs, I was able to identify each plant before determining if it had
any healing properties. Bunches of them were soon hanging from a rough-hewn
wooden beam in my rustic kitchen.
Before long, I was experimenting on
friends. Got a headache? I would happily pinch off a few dried comfrey leaves to
brew a strong tea, watching with immense satisfaction as the patient/victim
sipped the foul-tasting concoction, tempered only by a spoonful of honey. After
a while, visitors would deny their ailments rather than submit to my bitter
cures. Undeterred, I plunged onward through the herbal frontier. The same
friends who feigned good health to avoid my potions were sometimes a bit
superstitious. One guy surveyed the dangling herbs in the kitchen. "Be
careful or the townsfolk might burn you as a witch," he advised, arching
an eyebrow as if he half-believed it himself.
Herbs hung up to
dry
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Witch or not, I often smoked the most magic
weed of all when my daughter was not with me. High much of the time, I couldn't
always distinguish between what was real and what was drug-induced. But, beyond
any psychedelic, mysticism became a fact of daily life in the vicinity of
Camel's Hump, which looks less like a ruminant than a craggy human face gazing
up at the sky.
This majestic visage spoke to me late one
night via the Live Earl Jive Show on Montreal’s FM radio station CHOM in kind of
liturgical chant with organ accompaniment. "Behold the mountain of the
Lord," the sylvan deity proclaimed, later commanding: “See that ye do all
things according to the pattern shown you on the high mountain."
Years later, I learned that this dispatch
from the heavens actually was a song by the Incredible String Band, a Scottish
folk-rock group partial to music with spiritual messages. In those days, FM
radio was subversive, geared to offering sounds that would “feed your head,” as
Jefferson Airplane defined the spirit of the era in Grace Slick’s “White
Rabbit.”
The Live Earl
Jive a.k.a. Vaughn Filkins
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It's the same kind of story that seems
to come
down from long ago/ Two friends having
coffee
together when something flies by their
window/
It might be out on that lawn which is
wide,
at least as half of a playing field/
Because there's
no explaining what your imagination can
make
you see and feel
Seems like a dream/ They got me
hypnotized
Now it's not a meaningless question to
ask if they've
been and gone/ I remember a talk about North Carolina
and a strange strange pond/ You see the
sides were
like glass in the thick of a forest
without a road/
And if any man's hand ever made that
land then
I think it would've showed
Seems like a dream/ They got me
hypnotized
They say there's a place down in Mexico where a
man
can fly over mountains and hills/ And he
don't need an
airplane or some kind of engine and he
never will/
Now you know it's a meaningless question
to ask if
those stories are right/ 'Cause what
matters most is
the feeling you get when you're
hypnotized
Seems like a dream/ They got me
hypnotized
This body means nothing/ You just float
around
Yeah, that’s when they got you
hypnotized
“This body means nothing.” Yes and no. At
65, Welch was reportedly in poor heath – something involving spinal surgery –
and shot himself at his home near Nashville.
But the death might be viewed as a way to escape into peaceful nothingness from
a body wracked with pain. How can any of us ever know what we would decide
until faced with only dire choices? There’s an I Ching hexagram that
resonated for me – someone in pursuit of tranquillity – when I periodically got
it after tossing the requisite three coins in 1974. The title is “Keeping
Still, Mountain.” One passage observes: “Keeping his back still, so that he no
longer feels his body.”
His brief stint with Fleetwood Mac (1971 to
1974 ) was the band’s most authentic, grassroots-yet-transcendent period. He
quit for a variety of reasons, before embarking on a solo career full of ups
and downs. Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks replaced him, leading the group
in a more flashy direction toward show-business success. In a 2003 newspaper
interview, Welch said: "Music is
disposable now. It doesn't have the emotional impact anymore." With several
worthy exceptions, I tend to agree.
Bad feelings must have prevailed in the
aftermath of Welch’s departure from Fleetwood Mac. Yet, it’s unthinkable that
he was excluded from their 1998 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
No matter why, that’s an awful thing to do to a man who invested so much heart
in vinyl releases such as Future Games, Bare Trees and Heroes
Are Hard to Find. I can’t forgive them for denying recognition to an artist
who brought so much heart into the life of a total stranger trying to find
herself at a cabin in the woods.
Although I now live elsewhere, my
perception of that sojourn has been affirmed. Hearing the Incredible String
Band’s tribute to “the mountain of the Lord” may have been no coincidence. I’ve
since learned the Abenakis of Vermont had a different name for Camel’s Hump:
Ta-wak-be-dee-esso, which means Resting
Place. A Native-American friend once told me the
tribal elders believe this is where, after fashioning the Earth, the Great
Creator chose to spend all of eternity as an alpine formation overlooking his
magnificent handiwork.
While it’s all still a mystery to me, I
continue to know that what matters most is the feeling you get when you’re
hypnotized.
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