Newport Folk Festival 1965

It was a steamy Asbury Park Saturday night, in the Summer of 1965. The small club where I hung out and occasionally sat in on acoustic guitar with a group of musicians who called themselves The Solipse Singers (and who later became the eclectic - and iconic, in the minds of some - band The Insect Trust) had no air conditioning. But because the club was in a basement, it was a little cooler. The dank overlay of spilled beer and stale cigarette smoke somehow made it tolerable.

Sometimes, I wonder whether a young Bruce Springsteen might have stopped by on one of those hot Saturday nights. It was Asbury Park after all, and not far from the boardwalk. I'll have to ask him, the next time I see him. Yeah, right.

"Like A Rolling Stone" was on the radio all the time that Summer, and Bob Dylan's transition to electric guitar in the studio was complete. Although we didn't know it at the time, a group called The Hawks was playing at a bar in nearby Somers Point, and would join Dylan after Newport as "The Band". We too were done with folk music, and more than ready to inject some good old rock and roll into our folk sound.

After the group's last set, we packed up and toked up and some of us ended up at at Nancy's house, and everyone thought that it might be a good idea to go to the Newport Folk Festival. Bob Dylan was scheduled to appear at the Sunday evening concert, which was more than enough for us. 

 Nancy suggested that we take my 1956 Ford, and I said "Sure!" By now, it was 2AM Sunday. I would be surprised if all of us had more than twenty dollars between us, but things were far less expensive then, and we didn't really concern ourselves with such trivial considerations. We were going to see Dylan at Newport.

The Insect Trust., circa 1970

The Insect Trust., circa 1970

I don't remember much about the drive, other than Nancy spotting a car ahead of us with the license plate "FEET", which (along with the drugs we had ingested) caused protracted laughter and hilarity, from Milford all the way to the other side of New Haven on the Connecticut Turnpike.

Shortly after sunrise, we entered the Festival grounds, which I remember as not being paved. It was overcast, and already steamy, but the salt air smelled much better than the club did the night before. Somehow we got inside the gate. I don't remember paying any admission. Times were different then. 

We must have eaten something, but I don't remember what it was. What I do remember is the Chambers Brothers playing "People Get Ready" at the morning gospel session. We wandered around, stopping at workshops that interested us, until it was time for the afternoon concert.

Finding the front row unoccupied, we were settling in to the sounds of Richard and Mimi Farina when the skies opened and a brief but intense torrent of rain hit. There was no time or place to escape to, so we all just got wet. Very wet. And actually, it felt pretty good, and cooled everything off, in a good way.

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Butterfield Blues Band. Elvin Bishop, Mike Bloomfield, Paul Butterfield. 

Butterfield Blues Band. Elvin Bishop, Mike Bloomfield, Paul Butterfield. 

After the rain ended, the Farinas continued. And then it was the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. The drugs had worn off, but the music kicked in and we were transported by it. Nancy said "Isn't that Dylan in the polka dot shirt?", pointing to a cluster of musicians at the side of the stage, behind the speakers as the Butterfield Band concluded it's set.

"Yeah, it is," I said. They were assembling for a brief sound check for that evening's performance. So we got to see the rehearsal of the legendary evening concert - the one that Elijah Wald so perfectly captured in his fine book, "Dylan Goes Electric". Dylan had assembled members of the Butterfield Band as a backing group, which included Mike Bloomfield and Elvin Bishop - two outstanding guitar players. I remember All Kooper being there as well, on keyboard. 

The sun came out just as they launched into "Maggie's Farm" and we were blown away. I remember some booing in the audience (there allegedly was more booing at the evening performance), but none of it was from our row. We couldn't make out all the words, but the sound and the attitude was exactly what we were looking for. Dead on. 

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We hung around for the rest of the afternoon workshops and activities, but we felt the adrenaline from the Dylan sound check beginning to run out and we made our way back to the car, and, eventually, home.

So I can always say that I was there when Dylan went electric - just not at the evening concert. But it was every bit as transformative for this bunch of young musicians as it would have been had we stayed around - maybe more. 

 

Snowmageddon: The Final Mile

I spent at least two hours over the course of yesterday cleaning up after Saturday’s blizzard. Pretty standard stuff: driveway, stairs, walkway, sidewalk. (Tremendous props to my neighbor and her Ariens.)

The problem is that I live in a house on the corner of a busy street, and the plows always choose my corner to deposit huge mounds of plowed, compacted snow right at the end of my sidewalk.

This time, the mound was at least five feet tall.

I took it on this morning and won, so that the kids walking home after school today won’t have to walk in the street like they did early this morning. It took me about twenty minutes and was exponentially more difficult than the two hours I spent shoveling yesterday.

So I hope they’re grateful, but suspect they’ll walk in the street anyway.

Snowed In

It’s noon, and there’s already a foot of snow on the ground here since midnight. Another foot or so is predicted over the next twelve hours.

There is some good news. It’s very cold and dry outside with blizzard-y wind, so the snow at this point is light and fluffy and some of it is drifting into areas I won’t need to shovel. Still, there will be a lot of work to do later this afternoon and tomorrow.

I’m hoping it stays cold like this, minimizing the chances for power outages from heavy snow knocking down power lines, because that really sucks. Every electronic device is plugged in, and chargers have been topped off.

The only thing missing today is an afternoon of playoff football like we had last Saturday. That will have to wait until tomorrow when all of this is over.


Mid-January

April may be the cruelest month, but January is my least-favorite month.

I live near Boston, in a house built in 1941, so during the cold weather months I’m always checking the furnace’s water level and whether or not the space heater is on in the garage (to insure the water pipes don’t freeze and burst like they did a couple of years ago).

Walking is my primary form of exercise, but most days in January are not fun for walking outside. So I’m forced to walk at a mall or a big-box store like Costco. This is kind of fun most of the time, since retail has always been in my blood, but when it has to happen more than once or twice a week it gets old very fast.

These are surreal times.

The hope that existed early on during the Covid-19 pandemic that things would return to the way they were before the outbreak - the Before Times - has vanished. There is concern about new variants of the virus. The breakdown of social norms over the past five years worsens, and we retreat deeper into our own personal protective chambers.

It’s more and more difficult to imagine things getting better anytime soon. In fact, it feels like they’re going to get worse. But I remain hopeful. And baseball is just a couple of months away.

So to occupy my indoors time, I treated my Martin D-18 to new strings and a thorough cleaning and polishing. Now that I’ve built up some calluses again, my fingers are starting to remember songs, riffs and melodies, especially Bob Dylan songs from the mid-to-late 1960s, like My Back Pages and Desolation Row, when I engage with my guitar and with these songs, memories of the times that were changing then flood back, and that suggests other songs.

I’m good.


The Falling Man

I’ve never been able to get over the horror of seeing people jump out of upper-floor windows in The World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, when death by smoke and fire was their only other alternative.

Although several images of falling people were captured live, the networks had no stomach for re-running the footage, and rarely mentioned it. Today, unfortunately, that story would lead the broadcast, and be re-run endlessly.

Over the past twenty years, books and articles have documented that horror, but nothing has made it any less disturbing.

My Facebook Suspension Became A Life Sentence, And I’m Okay With That

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Facebook has deactivated me permanently, and I’m okay with that.

There is the occasional twinge while trying to avoid doing the work I’m supposed to be doing because i can’t check in on what certain of my friends are up to on Facebook, but that’s offset by the large amount of free time and headspace I now have during the day that I hadn’t had before the banishment.

I still have no idea what triggered the ban, and I really don’t care anymore.

The most regrettable casualty of my life sentence was my book’s Facebook page. It was fun interacting with people who have enjoyed my book over the years, and those who had just discovered it for the first time. And now that is gone, without the opportunity to say goodbye to them. But by this time, most of them know where to find me online

Life goes on and there are other (and better) ways to connect with like-minded people these days.


I’ve Moved On From Facebook

At the top of my gmail inbox this morning was a message from Facebook, informing me that they had disabled my account because I’d posted something that violated their Community Standards.

There was no indication what the offending post was, but this has happened to me several times since I opened my Facebook account many years ago. I had the option to have Facebook review the offense and I reflexively pressed the “Review” option as I had done many times before.

Then I had second thoughts. Regardless of the outcome of their review, I’m out. I’ll find other ways of keeping up with my friends and promoting my book.

I’m @FredCHarris on twitter, and fred_c_harris on Instagram.

And I’ll be spending a lot more time here.

Charlie On The MTA

I was waiting for a Green Line train at Park Street Station this morning, and noticed an informational sign on the platform that seems perfectly appropriate. I always knew there was more to the story of The Kingston Trio’s greatest hit.

Park Street Station is over 100 years old and certainly shows its age, but Alewife Station is less than half that old and is literally falling apart - especially the garage, large parts of which have been fenced off. The parts of the garage that remain available for parking do not inspire confidence that your car will not have been crushed by the prematurely crumbling roof.

Infrastructure, baby…