Gary Pig Gold:
June, 2004
Gary
Pig Gold Meets
The Man Who Invented The Sixties
"I
have a dream that one day every valley shall be exalted, every
hill and mountain shall be made low, the rough places will
be made plain, and the crooked places will be made straight."
(Martin Luther King, Jr., Washington D.C., August 28, 1963)
"From
Dallas, Texas, the flash - apparently official - President
Kennedy died at 1:00 p.m. Central standard time, 2 p.m. Eastern
standard time, some thirty-eight minutes ago."
(Walter Cronkite, CBS Television, November 22, 1963)
"Houston,
this is Tranquility Base. The Eagle has landed."
(Neil A. Armstrong, Apollo 11, July 20, 1969)
"There
are SEVEN LEVELS."
(Paul McCartney discovers "the Message of the Universe,"
August 28, 1964)
Now,
if veteran rabble-rousing, uber-networking, visionary ("Blacklisted")
journalist Al Aronowitz's lifetime of achievements may be
remembered for but one solitary event, may I posit it be for
what he managed to pull off in the immediate hours following
The Beatles' concert debut at Forest Hills Tennis Stadium,
Queens, New York, one dreamy midsummer 1964's night.
For
it was within mere minutes after the final shrieks of and
around "Long Tall Sally" wafted skyward that our
story begins, with the Fab Four safely ensconced back upon
the sixth floor of Manhattan's grande olde Hotel Delmonico
as a greenroom full of various folkies and followers (including
the Kingston Trio, Peter Paul and Mary, plus the ubiquitous
Murray the K) sat all but ignored down the hall. Somehow though,
into that inner sanctum high atop the Beatle-manic corner
of Park and 59th was snuck none other than Bob Dylan, a bottle
of cheap wine, and a fateful envelope's worth of herbal libation.
Ladies
and gentlemen, life as we knew it was about to abruptly cut
from stark black and white to rich, fully-dimensional stereophonic
day-glo from that momentous moment hence.
You
see it seems Bob, misreading a certain "I Want To Hold
Your Hand" refrain as "I get high" as opposed
to "I can't hide," had been convinced to confront
those four lyrical Liverpudlians he'd previously dismissed
with that cruelest of epithets - "Bubblegum!" --
and in the process, to break the trans-oceanic ice as it were,
he decided to introduce his fabulous new pals to the hitherto
non-rockin' accoutrement known as, yep, Marijuana.
Following
introductions quickly if not exactly politely proffered between
America's greatest living songwriter and the World's most
Fabulous Band, Ringo (designated "Royal taster"
for his comrades) went first and, oblivious to the proper
pot-etiquette, proceeded to inhale the entire inaugural joint
himself. Watching with sheer wonder as their drummist slowly
melted onto the carpet in fits of laughter, John and manager
Brian excitedly lit themselves up next, only to be followed
by Paul and George who, interestingly enough, proceeded to
follow one another throughout their maze of Beatlesuites for
the remainder of this most historic of evenings. That is,
until a typically profound McCartney suddenly called forth
for pen and paper as he announced to all left standing around
him, "I have discovered the Meaning of Life!" Something
to do with the Universe, it seems, and seven levels
..
Suffice
to say it wasn't just the Cute Beatle's consciousness which
was forever altered that night, but the very course of rock
and roll, the music business as a whole soon enough after,
and as a result just maybe Western Civilization Itself, dammit!
And it is in my wisened opinion that the singular man we all
have to thank for that, for Rubber Soul, for "folk-rock"
itself and, really, for loading Dylan into his station wagon
and dragging him into the Delmonico to set all of these historic
balls into motion in the first place, is none other than a
dear, sweet man I've recently had the pleasure to have known
named Al Aronowitz.
FACT: With all apologies due Ralph J. Gleason, Al Aronowitz
was the first widely-published man to ever take what we now
regrettably take for granted as rock and roll "seriously."
His Pop Scene columns four decades ago in The New York
Post, not to mention a litany of legendary Village
Voice and
Saturday Evening Post features, brought to widespread
attention such figures as the fledgling Brill Building songsmiths,
teen tycoon Phil Spector, and of course Bob and those Beatles
to boot (i.e.: the best-selling Aronowitz Summer of 64
Saturday Evening Post cover story of JPG&R I still
fondly recall as the first living-color magazine on the band
to ever penetrate my previously rock-free household
because
the boys looked so handsome in their top-hats and walking
sticks on the cover, I can still hear my mother swoon). Even
prior to that above-mentioned hot August night at the Delmonico
though, Al was busy forging crucial artistic bridges between
hitherto insurmountable cliques and cultural divides. To cite
but one cataclysmic example, it is so plain to see how Al's
introducing Allen Ginsberg to a fresh-from-Minnesota Dylan
eventually helped Beat meet Beatles, as it were, and in all
the most ingeniously genre-busting of ways.
Aronowitz
was also right there on hand at the post-premiere party for
A Hard Day's Night in London, as a wickedly soused
Lennon motioned a very young, green Keith Richard(s) and Brian
Jones over to his table
only to conspiratorially sneer
that "there's something wrong with yez, isn't there?
There's one of ya in the group that isn't as good as the others.
Who is it? Find out, tell yourselves, and get rid uv 'im.
Keith glanced uneasily over at Brian. John, as it turns out,
was as right - not to mention prescient - as ever.
And
you bet, Al captured it all. For unsuspecting Saturday
Evening Post readers the world over.
Yet
long after the Stones, not to mention the Sixties, began burning
themselves inside out, Aronowitz continued to prowl the sidewalks
of Greenwich Village, keeping eyes and especially ears wide
open as he hung and howled amongst the veterans (Johnny Cash),
the recently established (John B. Sebastian), the new kids
down the block (a young Richard X. Heyman, who Al once commissioned
to assemble an opening act for Sly and the Family Stone) and
of course all the contritely contrary-as-ever who were shamelessly
being ignored by the Rolling Stones - I'm speaking
Jann as opposed to Jagger - of the day (I refer most notably
to that once-promising Vanguard recording artist Patrick Sky,
who Aronowitz bravely helped find a home for that still-incendiary
1973 Songs That Made America Famous album, one of your
humble columnist's favorite American recordings EVER). Al
also somehow found time to keep his Beatle bonds alive as
well, taking our sweet George bowling on Broadway late one
night, then conveniently stepping into fresh doggie-do just
before crossing the threshold into John and Yoko's West Village
walk-up for the very first time (John responded by taking
an utterly appropriate Polaroid double-exposure of Al as he
apologetically stunk up the room. "Look at this,"
cried the photogenic ex-Beatle Chief. "The two different
faces of Al Aronowitz!")
Then suddenly our hero seemed to vanish altogether off the
very face of the Earth -- not to mention the pages of rock's
hepper periodicals -- as "folk" sorrowfully gave
way to "singer/songwriter," Nixon rued the airwaves,
Patrick Sky accepted a grant from the Irish government to
become an Aeolian pipe maker and, perhaps not so coincidentally,
Al's old pal Bob dissolved altogether into the bit parts of
big-budget Peckinpah westerns.
But
why? "I was driven crazy by my unjust firing from the
Post when my column was one of the most popular features
in the paper," Aronowitz recalls, "by the treachery
of the American Newspaper Guild and by my colleagues whom
I had helped so much." The death of his wife and subsequent
plunge into the clutches of non-recreational drug use followed
and, he says today, "so began a long period of time when
editors stopped taking me seriously, a fact that continues
until this day. In other words, my writing got a little crazy
and even when it wasn't, editors still refused to print me.
Why? Ask them! "
Then,
thank God or Al Gore or whomsoever, along came the Internet
at just about the same time Our Al was getting his life, not
to mention his voluminous-and-then-some archives, back in
order. Duly invigorated and in no small part inspired by the
liberating autonomy of the www, Aronowitz was promptly reborn
as The Blacklisted Journalist and, domain name duly secured,
began posting his vast wealth of work in monthly installments
right up there at www.bigmagic.com/pages/blackj "It was
only when I could do an end run around the blacklisting that
editors had imposed on me by putting my material on the Internet
that I discovered I could get readers, something all writers
crave," the man proudly relates. "It was my achievement
of a reading audience that brought me back to sanity."
Today,
after a decade spent defiantly republishing his gems on the
web, when he was afraid his good words would otherwise languish
unread or, worse still, disappear altogether (it was through
a tiny backpage ad in the New York Press circa 1996
that I first became reacquainted with that entity henceforth
known as The Blacklisted Journalist), Al has now compiled
his Greatest Hits, so to speak, across the 615 history-packed
pages of Bob Dylan and The Beatles: Volume One of The Best
of the Blacklisted Journalist. The result is, without
a solitary doubt, Required Reading for anyone and everyone
who considers themselves fans, followers, students, or those
just plain curious of the Golden Age of Popular Music, and
how the players - Dylan and the Fabs especially - met, influenced,
and eventually actually interacted with one another during
those halcyon-indeed daze. Thanks in no small part whatsoever
to the Herculean efforts of the man who, in his very own only
slightly jocular words, may try to pass it all off by claiming
"I was just a proud and happy shadchen, a Jewish
matchmaker, dancing at the princely wedding I arranged."
"I
recognized Dylan and The Beatles as immortals, and I wanted
to cop some immortality for myself," Aronowitz now admits.
"I knew that bringing Dylan and The Beatles together
would have exactly the result that it had. The result is that
contemporary popular music changed for the better. Otherwise,
every generation creates its own heroes."
"Whether
subsequent heroes will enjoy the same immortality that Bob
and The Beatles attained, I am unqualified to predict. All
I know is that Bob Dylan and The Beatles are hard acts to
follow."
Oh, and by the way, if the gala Bowery Poetry Club launch
party for Volume One of The Best of the Blacklisted Journalist
is any indication whatsoever, the master shadchen's talents
are alive and very very well: Entertainment was provided by
a band comprised of David Amram's wholly Kerouac-worthy "spontaneous
bop prose" backed by Hayes Greenfield's Coltrane'd sax
and, to top it all with that classic decorum-be-darned Aronowitz
touch, Babukishan Das, the Bengali Baul who's become one bonafide
Indian pop star. The ears truly boggled!
So
then, for your own numbered and signed edition of Al Aronowitz's
book -- including, right there on page 395, that priceless
Lennon double-exposure of the author himself - simply send
a United States Postal Money Order for $17 plus $3 shipping
and handling to:
THE
BLACKLISTED JOURNALIST, BOX 964, ELIZABETH, N.J. 07208
Or,
if you want the book shipped to you via Priority Mail, send
a money order for $25. Remember: No checks accepted!
Click
here to
order a copy of the book and
tell 'em Gary the Pig sentcha, ok?
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