Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers (photo by Mary Ellen Matthews) |
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“It’s always been my contention that the music that was happening during the Fifties has been one of the finest things that ever happened to American music, and I loved it,” Frank Zappa once explained. “I could sit down and write a hundred more of the Fifties-type songs right now and enjoy every minute of it.” So he did, long before creating The Mothers. With singer Ray Collins, he composed “Memories of El Monte,” an affectionate tribute to doo-wop, for Cleave Duncan, the former lead singer of the Penguins (“Earth Angel”). But Zappa and Collins also played against the sentiment inherent in the song.
“Memories of El Monte” opens with the narrator pining for the woman he once loved, and the memories they shared dancing to classic R&B at El Monte Legion Stadium. The first half of the song is pure doo-wop: "Remember the dance / I held you so tight / The Five Satins were singing 'In the Still of the Night'." Cleave Duncan sings those lines with a resigned wistfulness, as if his romantic aspirations had suddenly turned to sorrow. “Now I’m alone / I’m sitting here crying,” he continues. But midway through, he rouses himself from his despair and recalls the songs that made those dances at El Monte so grand. He lists the tunes as if he were scanning a jukebox full of favorites in his head: “You Cheated, You Lied” by The Shields, “You’re a Thousand Miles Away” by The Heartbeats, Marvin and Johnny’s “Cherry Pie,” Tony Allen & The Champs’ “Nite Owl.” Then in a moment of pure magic that brings the past and present together, he becomes Cleave Duncan of the Penguins singing “Earth Angel.”
Zappa and Collins cleverly worked sections of these tunes into the song, making them all sound like choruses from the same number. This brilliant bit of arranging makes the listener aware of how important a song’s hook is in making us pine for the past. In this way, “Memories of El Monte” strips away the song’s nostalgic qualities, leaving only the beauty of the melodies it conjures up.
“Memories of El Monte” opens with the narrator pining for the woman he once loved, and the memories they shared dancing to classic R&B at El Monte Legion Stadium. The first half of the song is pure doo-wop: "Remember the dance / I held you so tight / The Five Satins were singing 'In the Still of the Night'." Cleave Duncan sings those lines with a resigned wistfulness, as if his romantic aspirations had suddenly turned to sorrow. “Now I’m alone / I’m sitting here crying,” he continues. But midway through, he rouses himself from his despair and recalls the songs that made those dances at El Monte so grand. He lists the tunes as if he were scanning a jukebox full of favorites in his head: “You Cheated, You Lied” by The Shields, “You’re a Thousand Miles Away” by The Heartbeats, Marvin and Johnny’s “Cherry Pie,” Tony Allen & The Champs’ “Nite Owl.” Then in a moment of pure magic that brings the past and present together, he becomes Cleave Duncan of the Penguins singing “Earth Angel.”
Zappa and Collins cleverly worked sections of these tunes into the song, making them all sound like choruses from the same number. This brilliant bit of arranging makes the listener aware of how important a song’s hook is in making us pine for the past. In this way, “Memories of El Monte” strips away the song’s nostalgic qualities, leaving only the beauty of the melodies it conjures up.
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One summer night, a guy came in to buy the new Lou Reed double album, Metal Machine Music, on 8-Track for his car. Since it had just arrived that day, I had yet to hear the record and knew little of its content. Within an hour, the customer returned, somewhat perplexed that the tape was defective. "I started playing it in my car and all I could hear was this loud, shrieking noise," he told me. Assuming that the tape was dragging along the playback heads due to poor spooling (a common occurrence among defective 8-tracks), I gave him another one and off he went. But he was back again within the hour with the same complaint. We didn't have an 8-track player in the store so I couldn't figure out what he was referring to. So I went and opened one of the albums in front and put it on the store turntable. What I subjected the store to next was a huge blast of feedback from Reed's guitar – in fact, what was to be four sides of pure feedback – that more than explained the customer's confused state. (The look across the store of frozen contortion on the customers and staff in that moment is an image I still treasure.) Obviously expecting a worthy sequel to Sally Can't Dance, the customer wasn't exactly dancing with joy when I told him that since the tape wasn't defective, I couldn't exchange it. But what I didn't realize, as I was trying to explain store policy to this baffled consumer, was that I hadn't yet taken Reed's opus off the turntable and the store was going apeshit around me over the wall-to-wall shrieking. By the end of the night, after the customer had long retreated, Lou Reed found himself removed from the New Release bin to somewhere in the back of the store not far from where the air conditioner kept us from melting.
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Besides the neatly veiled but anti-nostalgic "Reelin' in the Years," from Can't Buy a Thrill (1972), the band produced a number of deceptively perverse songs that miraculously found their way onto the radio. "Show Biz Kids," with its funky, catchy melody, takes a well-aimed shot at the Hollywood rich and poor – not to mention their own fans. Listen closely, and "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," which borrows its seductive jazz melody from Horace Silver's "Song for My Father," is really about a transvestite. Likewise "The Fez," with its exotic dance rhythms, is actually a lighthearted advisory about wearing condoms. "Any World (That I'm Welcome to)" is a sly critique on social alienation with a melody so beguiling you can sometimes hear the song playing, as I once heard it, in the most conventional places – like a supermarket. Subversion and its secrets sometimes come in the form of a Trojan horse. But we have grown so used to seeing and hearing rebellion in its loudest, most demonstrative forms, we tend to miss the kind that sneaks in our door. As for Steely Dan's curmudgeonly view of human nature, it comes disguised as popularly accepted music.
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– Kevin Courrier is a freelance writer/broadcaster, film critic and author (Dangerous Kitchen: The Subversive World of Zappa, Randy Newman's American Dreams, 33 1/3 Captain Beefheart's Trout Mask Replica, Artificial Paradise: The Dark Side of The Beatles Utopian Dream). Courrier teaches part-time film courses to seniors through the LIFE Institute at Ryerson University in Toronto and other venues. His forthcoming book is Talking Out of Turn: A Collection of Reviews, Interviews and Remembrances currently being assembled on Blogger.
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