From December 9th, 2020
Dear Vaulties-
here's
a re-run from the past couple of years, complete with the title change
and a few edits to render the accurate passage of time. Bear with it,
because this has become an annual fixture.
NOTE
: Every word of the following story is true (or rather remembered as
exactly as humanly possible given that nearly four decades have elapsed
since it happened), and if you find some of it offensive at this late
date, imagine being in my shoes at age fifteen!
December 9th, 1980-
It was the start of my tenth grade school day morning and I was
disgruntled (as usual) at being denied sleep and instead being herded
along with the rest of the cattle at Westport, CT's Staples High School
into yet another inane class.
The first item of regurgitation/education of the morning was English
with Mr. Dyskolos (not his real name; changed for reasons soon to be
apparent), a late-forty-something red-headed guy who then resembled what
Danny Bonaduce looks like today, who was also among the minute handful
of teachers whose classes would keep students awake because he was
genuinely interesting, did not talk down to the kids, and had not
allowed the thankless teaching system to beat him down and force him to
consider his job a mocking reminder of wage-slavery. (I'm the son of a
veteran high school teacher, so I speak with a working knowledge of such
things.)
As the students took their chairs we all noticed that Mr. Dyskolos's
usual laid-back manner seemed somewhat "off" that morning and after
nearly a minute of total silence while he stared into space as though
contemplating some cosmic truth or inevitability, he suddenly focused
himself, looked at us and said, as serious as a heart attack, "By the
look of you, you haven't heard what happened this morning. I'll just get
right to it. John Lennon, de facto leader of the Beatles, was shot dead
by some lunatic fan." Most of the class had indeed not heard about
Lennon's murder and those of us who hadn't, myself among them, were
stunned. But before the horrible truth could fully set in, Mr. Dyskolos
continued. "You kids probably know a lot about the Beatles from what
your parents or maybe your older brothers and sisters played for you,
but you can't even begin to imagine the worldwide pop culture impact
those guys had at the time. Obviously I was there for the 1960's and can
tell you firsthand what it was like, but I'm gonna spare you that
nauseating, self-indulgent trip down memory lane. I guarantee you that
all your other teachers are going to suspend actual teaching for the day
and drag you along for their reminiscences of their flower-power salad
days, but I'm not gonna do that to you. Instead, I'm gonna tell you a
few truths that you won't hear anywhere else in this school, or damn
near anywhere else, on what's gonna no doubt be a day of worldwide
mourning."
He leaned forward in his chair, his face a mask of utmost solemnity, and
uttered words that blew the minds of the roomful of privileged suburban
white kids (and me): "The Beatles sucked.
They were a bunch of marginally talented 'heads' who started out
ripping off the work of their black American influences and made a hell
of a lot of money for no good reason, killing real rock 'n' roll in the
process and unleashing legions of even less-talented imitators in that
godawful British Invasion nonsense. And then they went to India,
supposedly to gain 'enlightenment' or some other George
Harrison-inspired bee-ess, but if you ask me all it did was make their
music more annoying." To emphasize that point of criticism, Mr. Dyskolos
began making a nasal and high-pitched "neeeeeeer neeeeeer neeeeeeeeeee
neeeer" sound by way of approximating the tones of a sitar.
By this point in his diatribe you could have heard an amoeba fart.
Young eyes practically bugged out of their sockets and jaws had fallen
into laps. This was rock 'n' roll blasphemy in the extreme, and on the
morning of the senseless slaughter of a man held by most in the room to
be a hero of peace, love and great music, no less. Our worlds were
shaken to the core. And then Mr. Dyskolos continued, still looking
solemn, but his mouth betrayed a slight half-smile as he was very
obviously enjoying his class' speechless outrage.
"Then they put out that asinine White Album that had exactly two good
songs on it — 'Birthday" and 'Back in the U.S.S.R.,' and those two were
good because they sound like actual rock 'n' roll! — and they had the
fucking unbelievable nerve to include that 'Revolution 9' horseshit!
What the hell was that? (assumes comedic Liverpudlian accent) 'Noombuh
nine? Noombuh nine?' What a load of crap! I'm telling you kids right
here and now, remember how 'deep' that bullshit is when you decide to
give acid a try!" (NOTE: this was the first time I ever heard a teacher
curse when not discussing some of the content in THE CATCHER IN THE
RYE.)
Before he could say another word, Mr. Dyskolos was cut off and drowned
out by an aural assault of irate dissenting opinion, his every word
being tarred as the rantings of an anti-peace & love curmudgeon who
"just didn't get it." "Who do you think you are???" shrieked several of
my classmates. "The Beatles were the most important band in history!
John Lennon and Paul McCartney were two of the greatest songwriters who
ever lived! Are you crazy?" Dyskolos responded with a sneer that would
have done Vincent Price proud and uttered my favorite comeback heard in
all of my teenage years, whether I agreed with him or not: "What the
hell did they ever write that was worth a goddamn? 'We all live in a
yellow submarine?' Puh-leeeeze. The only reason you kids enshrine those
hacks is because of nostalgia filtered down from parents who were barely
your age when the Beatles showed up and absorbed by the general public
and your older brothers and sisters who used that garbage as a
soundtrack for when they'd sneak off to smoke weed in the back of a
'bitchin' van. Which also explains how anybody could ever find the
stomach to listen to those Doors assholes! Face it, kids. For some of
what are supposed to be this country's brightest young minds, you sure
are a bunch of programmed parrots!" And when one of the students blurted
out that John Lennon was a symbol of "give peace a chance," our sage
teacher batted that one aside with "You've obviously never heard about
the time when Mr. Give Peace A Chance went to some club and hung out
with a Kotex stuck to his forehead," a then-shocking truth that only
elicited more teenage keening.
That was the real meat of it but the back and forth ranting went on for
the class's full hour, with order barely being restored with the ringing
of the bell marking the rotation to the next class. Each of my
classmates and I zombied off to the next class and swiftly discovered
that Mr. Dyskolos had been correct in his auguring. Indeed, each and
every teacher I had to endure for the rest of the day derailed the
planned curriculum in favor of rose-colored reminiscences of "a more
innocent time" full of free love, "the people getting together, man!"and
how the Beatles were the troubadours that saw them through all of it
and changed to reflect the time. That was all well and good in theory,
but not for hours on end as heard from speakers of wildly varying levels
of eloquence (to say nothing of interest), with lunch being the day's
only respite from what was essentially the same story only with the most
minor of variations. When the day finally ended I headed downtown to do
my volunteer teaching of a cartooning class at the local YMCA and the
journey allowed me some time to process the events of the day and the
"truths" imparted.
I'd grown up liking the Beatles quite a lot but didn't own any of their
albums on vinyl thanks to their many hits being available in endless
rotation on some of the nascent stations that played what would come to
be known as "classic rock," and as the seventies ended I avoided the
agonizing repetition of disco and such by listening to the excellent
oldies station WBLI out of Long Island, a radio entity that served to
plant the seeds of my passion for pre-1970's rock that was either
primitive and raw or bizarre and very much off the beaten path. WBLI
played some of the standard Beatles hits, but they also threw stuff like
"Devil in Her Heart," "Dig A Pony" and "Rain" (nowadays my favorite
Beatles tune of all) into the mix and showed me just how much the
classic rock stations played the same Fab Four songs over and over and
over and over and over again, ad nauseum, and taking into account the
espoused theory — voiced with absolute certainty of its veracity — that
myself and my fellow students may have been a bunch of programmed
drones, I began to wonder if Mr. Dyskolos had in fact done his young
charges a favor by showing none of the rote reverence extended to the
favorite sons of Liverpool by all who drew breath. He had effectively
"killed our idol" on the day when one would expect nothing but 100%
adherence to the party line, and that greatly intrigued my punk
rock-influenced sensibilities.
As I pondered these thoughts, I wandered past Westport Record and Tape,
one of the town's most accessible record stores, and greeted Jean, the
sweet southern proprietor. I asked her if the shooting of John Lennon
had affected her sales that day and she said, "Honey, look over at the
Beatles and John Lennon sections. Whadda you see? Tumbleweeds 'n' cattle
skulls, that's what! Folks came in and cleaned the place out like they
were a bunch of vinyl-eatin' locusts! On sales of Beatles and Lennon
records alone, I could close early today." And it was true. Every single
Beatles/Lennon platter had vanished into the Westport ether, bought up
by fools who believed those perennial best-sellers (okay, maybe not
SOMETIME IN NEW YORK CITY) would become instant collector's items.
Later that night as I lay there in my bed staring up at the white stucco
ceiling, I listened to my cassette tape of SERGEANT PEPPER'S LONELY
HEARTS CLUB BAND (the only Beatles album I owned at the time) and
experienced it in a way that I never had before. I'd listened to it
about two dozen times since acquiring it a couple of years previous, but
now it served as a poignant grave marker for my favorite member of the
Beatles and its words took on a whole new timbre. No one would be
"fixing a hole" in Lennon and ensuring he would live to see sixty-four
and beyond. He would not be getting better and there would be no more
good mornings for him. Yet tragic though it was, this was just another
day in the collective life, and that life would go on without John
Lennon (though obviously not "within").
I remember the hue and cry when Elvis Presley, the so-called King of
Rock 'n' Roll, gave up the ghost and people acted as though the world
had come to an end, and I frankly didn't get it. I liked some of Elvis's
music, but it didn't really speak to me in the way that the Beatles had
and I now chalk that up to the Beatles happening during what could
arguably be considered the most pivotal period of the twentieth century,
a time that redefined much of American culture and into which my
generation was born. We didn't grow up with Elvis, whose music helped
set the template of rock 'n' roll, but we did come along during the rise
of the Beatles and reached early sentience while under the influence of
their sound. We couldn't know at the time just what their contribution
meant, but we did know that we liked it. Obsessive poring over the
minutia of the whys and wherefores of their lives, art and careers would
come later. At that point in our young lives love was indeed all we
needed, and in the wake of the plastic disco era and what small impact
punk had in the U.S. at the time, that wasn't a bad thing.
So today marks the fortieth anniversary of John Lennon's senseless
slaughter and for me the day that it happened becomes ever more remote,
so I figured I'd jot down my experience of it before age robs it of what
clarity remains. If any of you have tales of that day, please write in
and share.
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