Legacy Writing 365:199

If only Lynne and I weren’t a mere thirty-five years old, we might have spent the Summer of ’69 this way:

We might have stayed up all night secretly talking on the phone by stretching the cords as far as possible toward our bedrooms. I could usually get away with this because of where our second phone was situated, but the princess phone Lynne used had to cross the hall from her parents’ bedroom to hers. The base was stuck in the hall, and the curly cord to the handset snaked under Lynne’s bedroom door. When Elnora (her mother) woke up from her pre-bedtime nap on the couch and walked down the long, dark hallway to go to bed, she’d trip on the phone, cussing as she caught her balance by grabbing the walls, while the handset would be jerked from Lynne’s grip and slam against her closed bedroom door. This was my cue to hang up, sneak our phone back to its stand, and go to bed, while in her house, Lynne would immediately jump into bed and pretend she’d forgotten to hang up the phone before falling asleep hours before. I doubt Elnora was fooled.

Mark Lindsay in the magazine photo I pretended not to be insanely jealous that Lynne owned.

I remember the closet in Lynne’s parents’ bedroom as being huge, and tucked into one corner were several brown grocery bags full of romance novels that Elnora and her friends passed among them. That summer, while Lynne mooned over pictures of Mark Lindsay and his pony tail, I was devouring one or two romance novels a day. If she got bored, Lynne would reread her Archie, Casper, Richie Rich, and Little Lulu comic books. Sometimes she could talk me into walking to town–it wasn’t much of a town, but we still found plenty of mischief to get into.

The one constant was the radio. Whether it was our transistors, my parents’ big console stereo, or the radios in the cars that took us to and from each other’s houses, we always listened to WVOK-AM out of Birmingham. (When it signed off at night, we became contortionists with our transistors to our ears trying to pick up WLS out of Chicago.) Taking a look at the old WVOK Tough Twenty Surveys, the mix of music amazes me. In one afternoon, we might hear the Beatles, Aretha Franklin, Herman’s Hermits, Tom Jones, the Grass Roots, the Archies, Dionne Warwick, Ray Stevens, Simon and Garfunkel, the Bee Gees, Henry Mancini, Marvin Gaye–we were the market for the music of anybody we might find on the pages of Tiger Beat, 16 Magazine, and Teen Beat. WVOK’s morning show was hosted by Joe Rumore who played oldies and sometimes music with a country influence between Sweet Sue and Golden Eagle Table Syrup ads. By the time we were fully awake and on the phone or being chauffeured to the swimming pool, Don Keith was DJing, and later in the afternoon, we’d listen to the melodic voice of DJ Dan Brennan.

It was also Dan Brennan who introduced WVOK’s Shower of Stars shows. Every one of these that Lynne and I were taken to by her mother and/or sister in Birmingham, we managed to find someone who could get us backstage. I have so many autographs from those shows. And when Lynne was old enough to drive us herself, we collected a few not-for-the-blog stories along with our autographs. We had a blast. We saw Tony Orlando when Dawn was just hastily assembled backup vocalists so he could tour after his first hit record. We saw Neil Diamond before he was uncool and then cool again. We saw Bobby Sherman, who we cared nothing about, and Pat Paulsen, the first comedian to run a satirical campaign for president (imagine–if he’d beat Nixon–Smothers Brothers in the cabinet instead of those thugs we ended up with!), and the Carpenters–who wouldn’t want to remember getting to hear Karen Carpenter sing in person? Most especially, we saw our favorite bands, Paul Revere and the Raiders and the Grass Roots, which is what branded us teenyboppers by the boys we knew, who were into much cooler music. Whatever. It was all about the crushes, and our walls were plastered with our idols’ faces like the young teens who loved Sinatra and Frankie Avalon before us, Wham!, New Kids on the Block and Hanson after us, and Bieber today. Long may you pop your bubblegum and sing along, ‘tweens and teenyboppers.

12 thoughts on “Legacy Writing 365:199”

  1. I am reading a book you might like, this entry reminds me of it I Think I Love You … by Allison Pearson. There’s a great interview with David Cassidy in the back – and the premise is good.

  2. Oh my parents had The Smother’s Brothers comedy albums and I used to love to listen to them, to this day I can recite huge chunks. I actually got to see them in St Pete … and they were still awesome

  3. WE THOUGHT WE WERE THE COOLEST PEOPLE ON THE PLANET. Well, OUR planet. We did have fun. My mother was really cool to take to those. I think she enjoyed it. I am not sure my sister did.

    1. It was torment for your sister, but she endured it for us. Your mom was right there cheering us on.

      On OUR planet, we’re still cool. And thirty-five. When we’re not seven, twelve, fourteen, sixteen, twenty-five, etc.

  4. Never went to a concert as a kid. Never had the money to, but LOVED listening to the radio. And since I lived in Niles, then Grand Rapids, Michigan, it was WLS all the way. Wolfman Jack, late at night when I couldn’t sleep. AM radio was soooo much more diverse than the stations are now. Carole King, Three Dog Night, Bobby Sherman, Santana, The Beatles, The Carpenters, The Jackson 5, Gladys Knight and the Pips…all those guys you mention above and more. There wasn’t any of that “white music/black music” bs. As Billy Joel so famously said, “It’s all rock’n’roll to me.”

    I MISS AM radio.

    1. It slays me to look at those ticket prices–$4.50 and $5.50 at the door, less if purchased in advance. Can you imagine? Justin Bieber is going to be in Houston in October. I just looked up ticket prices for a seat equivalent to what I had at most Shower of Stars shows. I can see Justin Bieber for the bargain price of $3,213.00. And lucky me, I can buy up to two tickets at that price (each!). THAT IS INSANE.

    2. I went to high school in Illinois and every morning when I was getting ready to go to school I would listen to Animal Stories on WLS with Uncle Lar and Little Tommy … during the Larry Lujack show. WLS was a great station …

  5. Hello Becky:
    Just ran across your website and really enjoyed the photos from the WVOK Shower of Stars shows. Would it be possible to get copies of those photos for my website. Thanks so much.

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