Monday, March 10, 2014

The Old Boy Raises One In Honor Of Mike Smith

Today marks the sixth anniversary of the induction of the Dave Clark Five into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame.  To commemorate the occasion, I am posting an e-mail I wrote to my three kids and Momma Cuandito on March 8, 2008.

THE OLD BOY RAISES ONE IN HONOR OF MIKE SMITH

Hello Boys & Girls,

Imagine you are 16 years old, a high school junior. You grew up in the Chicago area.  When you were a 13 year old eighth grader you had the rug pulled out from under you when your family moved from Chicago to Iowa four months before you were to have graduated from the school you had attended since the first day of first grade.  Now, as a sixteen year old you are asked to move to North Dakota, a place your family used to ridicule when you lived in Chicago.  You do not want to relocate again.  You hated moving the first time.  You are being asked to start all over again.  You still miss Chicago.  In North Dakota you will be even farther away.  You think to yourself "Why not just shoot me now?"

When you get to North Dakota it is the third week of January, 1964.  The temperature is fifteen below.  Your new school has only four sports for boys, none of which is baseball or tennis, the only two sports you were pretty good at.  You are not a recluse but you are shy.  Your dream is Notre Dame, but you are only a junior.  Can that dream sustain you for a year and a half?  It seems like an eternity.  You need something in your life besides studying.

Fast forward two weeks.  There is a band from England that everyone is talking about.  They call themselves the Beetles, or as you find out later, the Beatles.  No one in North Dakota had ever heard of them before you arrived there.  Now their music is all over the rock stations of Minot, Regina and Winnipeg.  This is the one thing that you can experience with your new classmates on at least an even keel.  They know nothing more about the Beatles than you do.  In fact, as an avid listener to Chicago Top 40 radio since you were in fifth grade, you probably know a little more about music than most of them do.  This is cool.  Maybe living on the tundra won't be so bad after all.

You wonder what the Beatles look like every time you hear I Want To Hold Your Hand on the A.M. radio.  It is on the air all the time!  There is definitely a mysteriousness about them.  You listen to their music, but there are no published pictures of them, at least not in the Minot Daily News.  The fact that these guys are from England adds to the intrigue.    On February 9, 1964, the Beatles appear on the Ed Sullivan Show, a Sunday night variety show.  They open the show by singing All My Loving, Till There Was You and She Loves You.  The girls in the audience are screaming and crying throughout.  There are subtitles identifying each of the Beatles to the television audience because, in a way, they all resemble each other; it's hard to tell them apart.  When John Lennon is identified the screen reads underneath his name, "Sorry girls, he's married."  Ed Sullivan advises the audience that if they behave themselves, he will bring the Beatles back on later in the show.  No one in the audience or in television land really cares about the other guests on Ed's show.  They just want more Beatles.  Finally at the end of the show, Ed keeps his promise (as if he were ever not going to bring the boys back on), and they close the show with I Saw Her Standing There and the number 1 song in the country, I Want To Hold Your Hand.

During the next week, there is absolutely no one in school or on the radio who isn't talking about the Sullivan show and the Beatles.  Now more Beatles songs are being played, as people learn that the Beatles have been releasing records in the UK for the last two years.  Until now, those songs never made it to the US airwaves.  Industrious radio music programmers discover that, although the Beatles sound nothing like the Four Seasons or the Beach Boys, the two most popular American groups on the pop charts at that time, there were other British bands whose sound was akin to that of the Beatles.  The American teens crave the British sound, and the programmers are only too happy to oblige.

The UK band which most people associate with the Beatles as being the leaders of the British Invasion is the Rolling Stones.  That perception is certainly justifiable, as the Stones have stood the test of time and have been labeled by some as the "World's Greatest Rock And Roll Band."  However, in February and March, 1964, at the dawning of the British Invasion, when American teens craved as much Brit music as possible, there were actually two other bands who were the Beatles' main competition in the US more so than the Stones.  (The Rolling Stones did not have a Top 40 hit on the Billboard charts until July 1964, with Tell Me.)  One of those two other bands was the Searchers, like the Beatles another Liverpool band, who allegedly (according to some DJs) claimed that they were the equal of, if not better than, the Fab Four.  The Searchers' debut on the Billboard charts was in March 1964 with Needles And Pins.  History has proven that any claim by the Searchers of equality with the Beatles was only in their dreams.  For one thing, unlike the Beatles, the Searchers did not write their own material.  (Interestingly, the late great Sonny Bono co-wrote Needles And Pins.)  Also, the Searchers had only one top ten hit during their eight year existence, Love Potion Number Nine, which peaked at number 3 in early 1965.

Finally we get to the purpose of my little tribute...  The other UK band which, for that crazy time of the initial stages of the British Invasion, gave the Beatles some competition, was the Dave Clark Five.  The DC 5 was a five-man band from Tottenham, a London Suburb.  Their sound was distinct from the Beatles for a couple of reasons.  First, they featured an organ and a sax, neither of which was in the Beatles' format.  Instead of guitar solos for the song breaks, the DC 5 songs' breaks would often have an organ or sax solo.  Secondly, all four of the Beatles sang, but with respect to the DC 5 their lead vocals were handled almost exclusively by Mike Smith, the organist.  There was no mistaking Smith's voice, whether on a rocker or a ballad;  gruff, soulful and sincere. The DC 5 actually hit the Billboard charts with Glad All Over exactly one week after the famous Ed Sullivan Show in February 1964.  Although the DC 5 did cover some other artists' songs (as did the Beatles), most of their songs were written by members of the group, particularly drummer/founder Dave Clark and Mike Smith, thus putting them a cut above the Searchers.  Besides Glad All Over, other big hits for the band included Bits And Pieces, Can't You See That She's Mine, Because and Over And Over.  The number one thing which made these songs hits was not the members' musicianship.  (They were not in the Beatles' league either as songwriters or as musicians.)  It was Mike Smith's singing ability.  Only a very small handful of singers at the time were better, in my view.  Ed Sullivan thought enough of the DC 5 to invite them to be on his variety show approximately twenty-seven times, more than any other music act in the history of that show.

***

I found out on March 6 that Mike Smith died on February 28, 2008.  He had been paralyzed as a result of a fall from a security fence on his property in southern Spain in September 2003, and except for a very few days, had lived his life in a hospital since his accident.  Throughout his four and a half year ordeal, he remained upbeat beyond imagination.  He had many friends throughout the world both in and out of the music business, including Peter Noone (the "Herman" of the sixties Brit band Herman's Hermits) and Bruce Springsteen.  Mike Smith also kept a web page which you can find by Googling his name.  One of the saddest things about Mike's pasing is that the DC 5 is scheduled to be inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame on March 10, and he had hoped to make the trip to NYC for the induction.  It's hard to believe that someone who had such horrible luck in the last years of his life could not have at least survived another ten or eleven days.

When you get to be an old codger like me you take notice when some things that may have formed you in your youth all of a sudden disappear.  Some examples.  I still remember exactly where I was on December 8, 1980 when I found out that John Lennon had been killed.  Last year when I was in Libertyville I took a walk down my old street, Cook Avenue, only to discover that the house in which I grew up was bulldozed so the new property owner could build a McMansion on the lot.  My high school class, the Class of 1965, did not receive a yearbook, and according to sources I trust, we are the only class in the history of the school to have that ignominious distinction.  The room I lived in junior year in Dillon Hall is no longer sleeping quarters, but instead is now part of a very large study lounge.  MHT, where I taught for eleven years, is closing its doors at the end of the current school year.  Now Mike Smith, a guy whose music I loved, is in that big concert hall in the sky.

If you read all of this you are a real trooper.  Maybe some of this explains why I am a pack rat.  In any event, I plan to hoist one in honor of Mike Smith the next time I quaff a cold one, and if some of what I wrote here made sense to you, I hope you'll do the same.  Thank God for your good health, and while you're busy planning for the future, appreciate the present.  Some day the present will become the past, and it 's not always easy to hold onto those memories you want to keep.

I love you all.  The Old Boy            

1 comment:

  1. Dad,
    I liked re-reading this.
    I wish you would write about more memories on your blog. Those are my favorite posts.
    Jill

    ReplyDelete