I Was A Punk Before You Were A Punk: Pt. Two - Page 4

The three chords and a prayer approach to his best songs coupled with minimal production (there weren't even drums on "C'Mon Everybody!" it was Jerry Capehart (long time sidekick of Eddie's) beating on a taped up cardboard box), angst-ridden lyrics — "I'd like to help ya son, but you're too young to vote..." — the frustrations of working your ass off to afford a car so some snotty babe who won't give you the time of day hopefully might and trying to blow off a little steam on a friday night after grinding out the school work all week without getting busted by your folks: "Well, we'll really have a party but we gotta leave a guard outside, if my folks come home I'm afraid they gonna have my hide." All of these elements and the timelessness of his art all serve to lay down a virtual blueprint for the shape of punk to come.

After all, it's only a short step stylistically and ideologically from the frustration and understated rage inherent in his tune "Summertime Blues" to that of The Seeds' "Pushin' Too Hard" and The Stooges' "No Fun."

Eddie lived fast, he died young, left a good looking corpse and a helped pioneer a musical genre that despite various transformations and mutations has shown no signs of going away anytime soon.

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  • 1 - SFC SKI

    May 24, 2005 at 9:25 am

    Excellnt little history lesson, and Eddie Cochran is one of my favorites.

  • 2 - mike hollihan

    May 24, 2005 at 10:25 am

    Great post and followup to part one. May I pick a nit, though?

    The earliest rock'n'rollers weren't baby boomers, but the generation born in the opening days of WWII. As you note, Cochran was born in '38. The first rock'n'roll youth of the mid and late Fifties were kids during WWII. If you were 16 in '57, you were born in '41.

    The baby boom wasn't "tapering off" in the Fifties either, but well underway. The so-called "baby boom generation" includes folks born as late as '64. (I was born in '57 and can just barely remember Elvis and the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan show.)

    Sorry to be so pedantic, but common wisdom tends to smear and confuse the issues here and it bothers me.

  • 3 - Shark

    May 24, 2005 at 11:15 am

    Great stuff, Saxman. Might be valuable to turn some new fans onto Cochran.

    re: minor quibbles, etc.

    -- While the baby boom years can vary in designation, there seems to be a slight consensus for 1949 through 1964. (...and I believe it was some 49 million of us born in that time frame?)

    The "earliest rock music" in my experience can be found as early as 1936 with "Jangled Nerves" by the great Fletcher Henderson. Admittedly, it's not a guitar-based thingy, but the chords, the frenzy, the testosterone, and the rhythm are there. Check it out.

  • 4 - Shark

    May 24, 2005 at 11:20 am

    PS: It COULD be argued that American Punk officially began in 1953, when the following dialogue was uttered onscreen during the Marlon Brando film "The Wild One"


    Girl: What're you rebelling against, Johnny?

    Johnny: Whaddya got?




    YES!

  • 5 - Eric Olsen

    May 24, 2005 at 11:28 am

    another rockin' post HW, thanks!

    Re the baby boom issue: HW didn't call Eddie a baby boomer, he said the baby boom was tapering off through the '50s, which since the term "boom" implies an original impetus -- which was in this case the end of WW2, the euphoria and relief of victory, the G.I. Bill, booming economy, etc -- I don't think it incorrect, but certainly open to debate, that the boom tapered off through the '50s.

    The Baby Boom is '45 to '64, by the way: all those happy and horny military people returning home is what kicked it off.

  • 6 - Eric Olsen

    May 24, 2005 at 11:31 am

    Here's my take on "Summer time Blues," by the way.

  • 7 - sydney

    May 24, 2005 at 11:45 am

    YA thats a great song.
    Better versions by blue cheer and, more recently, Rush, though.

  • 8 - Eric Olsen

    May 24, 2005 at 12:05 pm

    I vote Eddie, then the Who

  • 9 - Marty Thau

    May 24, 2005 at 1:24 pm

    Good one HW. You left out one thing -- some of us were smoking pot back then in the day.That's when the drug thing actually began.

  • 10 - SFC SKI

    May 24, 2005 at 1:28 pm

    That's only the best known Eddie Cochran song, but not the best in my opinion.

  • 11 - HW Saxton

    May 24, 2005 at 1:47 pm

    HEY!Thanks to all of you who responded.
    It's much appreciated. Shark I've never
    heard the Fletcher Henderson piece.I'll
    investigate for sure. As some examples
    of music hitting on the Rock N Roll tip
    in the 30's/early 40's I'd throw these
    up for consideration: "Ding Dong Daddy
    From Dumas" by Benny Goodman.It swings
    like mad and it has a Gene Krupa drum
    break that would make Keith Moon envious
    as hell. Also Slim Galliard along w/bass
    player Slam Stewart did a song called:
    "Slim Slam Boogie"in 1939 that has Slim
    playing licks that sound just like Chuck
    Berry in spots or at least the T Bone
    Walker riffs the CB was so enamored of.

    But the earliest best cut I can think of
    that rocks like muthaf****r is called:
    "Guitar Boogie" by The Mississippi Jook
    Band.This band is essentially the Graves
    Brothers (Roosevelt and Uaroy)with the
    addition of the Delta piano king Cooney
    Vaughn on a few cuts. It is raucous and
    fully formed stomp down party music full
    of Rockin' N Rollin' riffs & hi-energy,
    as can be noted by some of their song
    titles:"Bar B-Q Bust","Hittin The Bottle
    Stomp","Alligator Crawl" and "Dangerous
    Woman". Truly rockin'! It's easily the
    earliest most prototypical Rockinroll I
    have ever heard.

    I could also add Milton Brown, Bob Wills
    Shelly Alley,Adolph Hofner and host of
    other Western Swing cats as examples of
    proto rock n Roll but that's another
    post. Again thanks to all who read this.








  • 12 - HW Saxton

    May 24, 2005 at 2:05 pm

    PS: I neglected to mention that the MJB
    cuts were recorded back in 1936.It's for
    sure the earliest rock n roll recordings
    I know of.

  • 13 - godoggo

    May 24, 2005 at 11:46 pm

    Comment #1: "the country was slowly and surely headed into another depression"? That can't be right.

    Comment #2: I was deeply disappointed the first time I looked into the promise of a "Free Punk" in the Red Devil ads.

    Comment #3: If my name were HW Saxton, I would have gone Hessian all the way.

  • 14 - godoggo

    May 25, 2005 at 12:23 am

    FREE PUNKĀ 

    We have laid the common punk beside our fat punk to give you some idea of why we like our fat punk so much better. It has a bigger head on it that when you light it will make it much easier to ignite your item.

  • 15 - Shark

    May 25, 2005 at 10:42 am

    Saxman, thanks yet again: you're a wealth of obsure musical info! I'll have to check out those I've never heard of!

    And mentioning: "...Milton Brown, Bob Wills, Shelly Alley, Adolph Hofner and host of other Western Swing cats as examples of proto rock n Roll..."

    ---gets you a mention in my will! That's some of the greatest music EVER made, imho.

    PS: I'm such a fan, I made a pilgrimage to Milton Brown's grave. (check out the Texas background -- out in the middle of a beautiful nowhere).

  • 16 - HW Saxton

    May 25, 2005 at 2:28 pm

    Mr Shark, Yer a gentleman and a scholar.
    Thanks for the pic of Milton's gravesite
    it's an excellent shot.Is that anywhere
    near where the wreck happened?

    I love the desolation and emptiness of
    Texas.Especially out in West Texas. It's
    so vast and the sky is huge.I like the
    minimalist aspect of the beauty of wide
    open spaces.Hard to explain in words but
    I think you understand what I'm trying
    to say.

    I love Western Swing as well.It's a very
    overlooked/underappreciated link in the
    history of R'n'R music.Moon Mullican was
    hammering out R'n'R (for all practical
    purposes)in the late 1940's and banging
    out something real damn close to it with
    Cliff Bruner's band in the late 1930's.

    On a closing note:Is there anything left
    of the Crystal Springs Ballroom?. I made
    a pilgrimage to the Longhorn Ballroom on
    a trip to Dallas once. I didn't dig the
    Big 'D'. Too many yuppies,strip malls,
    East Coast types trying to be Texans etc
    etc. But Ft. Worth was really cool. Much
    more laid back & funky, the overall vibe
    was just much cooler. Thanks again for
    the pic man.
    Best Regards,
    Harold






  • 17 - Temple Stark

    May 31, 2005 at 12:49 am

    Blogcritics' editors liked this one. It's a pick of the week. Congrats. Put the news up proudly on your site.

    Here's a link to the rest of this week's picks where we say why we chose 'em.

  • 18 - John Waghorn

    Aug 24, 2005 at 9:48 am

    Can anyone give me the chrods to EDDIE COCHRAN Somethin-Else

    Thanks

  • 19 - Gary Brimer

    Nov 22, 2005 at 2:04 pm

    For HW Saxton...
    I too am looking for remnants of the old Crystal Springs Ballroom. I live in FW and could go by if i just had the address...I know it was around Roberts Cutoff and White Settlement...

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