Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: Books and Bistro (Page 77 of 92)

What’s that? You say you want a revolution?

How young they look! Dapper pink suits and stripey bell-bottom pants. Of course, in those days, ruffled-front shirts were de rigueur, particularly for rock-and-roll bands.

The magazine came in yesterday, ordered as part of a research project. It was ordered based on an article inside, but it was the cover that caught my attention.

It’s a time-capsule, all right. I looked the boys over and – seeing the youthful face of John Lennon – thought what a loss his death represented. The shame of it is, it took until later for me to remember that George was gone, too, the victim of a health bullet.

The LOOK magazine is dated September 13, 1968. Came in the mail almost exactly 45 years after its cover date. It was a big year for Beatle fans, which might have been translated as a big year for the Beatles, but even then it was the beginning of the end.

Here’s what was going on in that year: the release of the so-called “White Album.” The group was at what later turned out to be the peak of their popularity. They were coming off of the success of Sgt. Pepper’s. Critically acclaimed. Popular success. Hit songs followed from that white-jacketed double album titled only with embossed lettering of the band’s name.

That much, I’ve known for years. Here’s what the research project arrival turned up for me due to a curiosity that spurred a little (off-the-clock) investigating. (I do projects on the side to help pay the bills. So sue me.) Seeing the Fab Four and noting the coincidence of the cover date and today’s date bonked that gotta-find-out button. For years (okay, up until a few minutes ago) I thought the album cover was all-white because it was to replace the “Two Virgins” photograph in which John and Yoko posed naked. Not like Miley Cyrus Arty-Twerky naked. Just standing there, showing-your-business naked.

That is what my good friend Mike told me.

Ahhh, Mike. It wasn’t like that.

Just found out that the album you were talking about was an independent thing. Also released in 1968. It turns out the white album wasn’t a censor-thing at all. A guy named Richard Hamilton DESIGNED it that way. (Would have loved to have heard him sell that idea. Yeah, he says. Totally white. Name? Sure. It’ll say classy. Embossed. Turn it at an angle and you can read The Beatles.” You’ll love it.)

Ahhh, Mike. Come on. You’re a PHD now. Lennon fan then. Thought you would’a had that one figured out.

This one I’ll give you. As I recall, we both thought the later album Let It Be was the last Beatles album. It turns out – if not technically – in all other respects the White Album was the last hurrah. Maybe that was even beyond the finish line. Many of the White Album songs were recorded independently. The band members didn’t even see each other during the recording. Ringo wanted it to be released as two separate records. When he didn’t show a couple of times, Paul McCartney filled in on drums. Two songs worth.

That’s one you didn’t tell me about.

The White Album was released just weeks after this LIFE magazine profile. The band was on top of the world. The band was – internally – lost beneath the waves.

Retrospection is a heck-of-a thing. Especially when it is has never been easier to grab up and listen to older music.

Oh, and here they come. Those long, lost memories. White Album. Hey Jude. First slow dance. Ever. Becky – the most beautiful girl in the entire high school – and my hand is on her hip for one of the longest songs ever commercially released. And I can dance with her until it is finally over.

I’m telling you now… for me, that song never ended. Naaaaaah-na-na, Na-na-nah-nah, Hey Jude.

No dance floor here, but – Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main, Broken Arrow OK!

Whose news?

Just got off the telephone with a reporter from one of the TV stations. Phone interview. You know what it means when TV questions come ‘round without a cameraman. Yep. She knew I had a Radio Face.

The kind of looks that go over better on FM car radio.

I answered her question, which was put to me as, “I wonder what your thoughts are on that.”

Since her call was not related to any breaking news event, I figure it pretty much amounted to stirring up some local gossip. I wanted to decline, but – many of you have been around me long enough to know – I have a hard time keeping the trap shut when someone asks for my ‘thoughts.’

Without a lead-in question put to me, I usually start with something like, “Well, you didn’t ask for my opinion, but…” and then I offer up a load o’ bunk. (Blarney, if you prefer…)

She asked, though.

I told her that I didn’t speak for anyone on Main Street but myself, and that others probably would disagree with me. The whole time I’m prattling along, I’m thinking – How can a phone interview benefit a TV reporter? She might be taping my voice, but what will she do? Put up a silhouette-head and a graphic at the bottom of the screen: By telephone. That’s what TV does when a phone update comes in from the reporter in Nicaragua. Put up a still-photo of the reporter and the words: By telephone (because, otherwise, we wouldn’t know how that voice was magically flying up from South America).

The phone interview made me think of Jim Goss at KRAV-FM when he headed up the New MIX-96 (it was ALWAYS new…for years). He was the news director who sat across from me at some convention/dinner, squeezed a lemon into his tea and bounced a seed off my forehead. (Never had THAT happen before. Or since.)

KRAV had shelled out to acquire the latest weather tool – Color Weather Radar – I think it was called. Those folks had a good news operation back in those days, and I was envious of their budget.

Didn’t understand the ‘color’ part on radio, though. During the forecast, in good weather, the newscaster might remark, “All clear on Color Weather Radar – fifty mile scan, showing up as scattered green ground-clutter on the radar screen.”

Rain might be described in vivid detail: “Showers are moving in to the Metro-area. Light to moderate rain. That’s blue on Color Weather Radar with touches of darker green showing up west of Skiatook.”

Unless the rain was coming down in darker-green-colored drops near Skiatook, I don’t think any of our listeners (I was working at a down-the-block competitor) – none of them gave a hoot about what color showed up on his expensive TV screen.

I was still envious. He had radar and I had Jim Giles giving forecasts from his home studio. I think it was located in his bedroom walk-in closet. He could have been in Nicaragua, for all I know. He sounded like he was standing next to me.

Technology.

Might have told Mr. Goss what I thought about his Color Weather Radar audio-radio-visuals, but he never “wondered what my thoughts were on it.”

The TV reporter did, as I mentioned. So, if you happen to catch the evening news and a report about Broken Arrow, look on the screen for blue in the lighter areas with touches of darker green.

That’ll be me, running my trap under the radar.

The sidewalk in front of the shop is still intact, so – Come Visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 S. Main Street, Broken Arrow OK!

Tagged in this post…

It was almost a hundred years ago and a young man was half-a-world away from his family’s farm. No one from Cass County Missouri had ever ventured so far away. Around his neck he had tied a cord and dangling on that was a round piece of metal about the size of a poker chip.

He hoped no one would ever have to take it in hand and read the letters stamped on it, because – if that happened – nothing else would ever matter. In the center of the disk were the letters U.S.A. Following the curve of the edge, his name was stamped into the metal.

John W. Huston.

My grandfather.

After a year-and-a-half, I’m finally getting around to the office, still sorting odds and ends from the move. Nailed up a couple of pictures that had been buried under a junk pile. Found a box and opened it up.

I’ve since sold the glass showcase, but the items in this box were displayed there at the old location, and pretty much forgotten about until this evening. What a mish-mash of stuff. The sort of treasure that pirates might hoard in a chest – if the ship that sported its Jolly Roger was confined to Skiatook Lake and the raiding of garage sales.

Looking over the items, I was trying to figure out where they’d come from. I recognized my sister’s Mickey Mouse watch. It broke and she was going to toss it. I was going to repair it. It’s still not working. A cardboard pressed recording of Richard Nixon’s nomination acceptance speech from August 8, 1968. I think I walked into his campaign’s local office (for some reason I was collecting election bumper stickers), and walked out with a “Nixon’s the One” 33 1/3 rpm Auravision recording.

Then, there was the metal disk with the hole punched in it. Looked it over for a couple of seconds, trying to remember what it was. Flipped it over and saw his name.

I’ve held it before, but the history of it never really struck me. In four years time it will be one hundred years old, and that long ago – this thing now in the palm of my hand was around the neck of a 23-year-old Missouri boy who would manage to survive his time in France. After the Great War he would come back to the US wearing the dog tag and eventually put it in a box.

He’d get married and have kids and they’d give him grandchildren – one of whom would wind up in a bookstore in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. I remember sitting on his lap as a little kid – him asking me what I wanted to be when I grew up.

Bookstore owner, I told him. (That’s a bald-faced lie. I actually answered that I wanted to play for the New York Yankees. “Gonna start in the minor leagues?” he’d asked. “Nah,” I replied. “Just wanna play baseball for the Yankees.”)

Well.

A lot of years have passed since that discussion. Regrettably, my naiveté hasn’t improved much since that conversation with Grandpa Huston. Too trusting. Always expect the best from people. Believe what people tell me. I’ll admit that I’ve been taken advantage of and have been disappointed at times. Sometimes folks say things to me that turn out not to be true. I’m surprised every time it happens.

But I’m not so naïve as to think that I’d be sitting in front of this keyboard in a bookshop in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, if it wasn’t for the man who left the farm and went to France and faithfully wore his dog tag and served his country, and then married that pretty telephone operator in Parsons who placed his call back home.

Thanks, Grandpa – for everything. Wish I’d had the chance to sit across the table from you. Maybe ask you a little bit about France and the big war.

Holding this little piece of metal tonight makes me feel as though I met you again for the very first time. I’m thinking there may be a spot in the shop where I can treat it with a little more respect. I’m thinking it has a lot more miles on it than I do and I’m happy to keep it safe – even out of my treasure box.

The other token in the image? A mystery coin that I found in the front yard about the time I was young enough to talk Yankees with my Grandfather. But that’s a whole ‘nother story!

Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main, Broken Arrow, OK!

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