[On December
10, 1949, Antoine “Fats” Domino recorded “The Fat Man,” his first
recording at New Orleans’ legendary J&M
Recording Studios and one of the first rock ‘n roll recordings ever made.
So this week I’ll AmericanStudy 50s musical icons—share your own thoughts on
them and any other musical icons and moments for a hard-rocking weekend post!]
On the straightforward and subtler sides to the beloved eulogy to 50s music.
Like I imagine many teenage boys in the nearly five decades since its
release, I memorized the lyrics to Don McLean’s “American Pie” (1971) during my
high school years. Partly that had to do with one very particular moment in the
song, and just how much every teenage boy can associate with watching that
certain someone dance with a certain someone else in the gym and knowing that the
object of one’s romantic interest is instead “in love with him”—and how much we
thus all felt at times like “a lonely teenage bronckin’ buck.” But partly it
seems to me that McLean’s song captures and allegorizes a more general part of
teenage life, the life and death significance that we place on music,
relationships, friendships, social status, all those potentially fleeting
things we care about and worry about and love and hate with such force.
As this piece on McLean’s official website indicates, McLean intended the song as a tribute both to
his own turbulent teenage years and to the even more turbulent American moment
with which they coincided—a moment that began (for McLean and in the song) with
the February 1959 death of Buddy Holly (among other
popular artists) in a plane crash and would
conclude a decade or so later with American society and culture in one of our
most fractured states. His song thus became an anthem for two seemingly
unrelated but often conjoined narratives: “The Day the Music Died,” the story of one of the most tragic days in American cultural history; and
the decade-long loss of innocence that is often associated with the 1960s and all the decade’s tragedies and
fissions. These aspects of McLean’s song are contained in every section: the February
1959-set introduction, the increasingly allegorical verses, and the far more
straightforward chorus.
But there’s another, and to my mind far more ambiguous, side to that chorus
and to McLean’s song. The question, to boil it down, is this: why do the chorus
and song focus so fully on Buddy Holly, rather than (for example) on his fallen
peer Ritchie Valens? Holly is generally cited as far more influential in rock and roll history, but at the time of the crash he had only been prominent for a year and a
half (since his first single, “That’ll be the Day” [1957]); Valens, while
five years younger, was on a very similar trajectory, having recorded his first few hits in the year before the
crash. Moreover, while Holly’s sound paralleled that of contemporaries such as Bill Haley, Valens’ Latino American additions distinguished him from his rock and roll peers. So it’s difficult not to
think that an Anglo-centric vision of America has something to do with McLean’s
association of “Miss American Pie” and “good old boys” with Holly rather than
Valens—an association that, aided no doubt by McLean’s song (if complicated a
bit by the hit film La Bamba [1987]), American
narratives too often continue to make.
Crowd-sourced
post this weekend,
Ben
PS. So one more
time: what do you think? Other musical icons or moments you’d highlight?
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