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« on: December 16, 2010, 12:10:39 am » |
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John Cougar Mellencamp R.O.C.K.I.N.G. In The U.S.A. by Timothy White
Illinois Entertainer, March 1986
It was the strife-torn winter of 1966, and black teenagers protesting racist segregation were mounting a second wave of rioting in the Watts section of Los Angeles that would leave two dead and dozens seriously injured, but half a nation away, on the tiny stage at the Rok-Sey Roller Rink in Seymour, Indiana, rock 'n' roll remained the great equalizer.
John Mellencamp, 14, dressed in a Nehru jacket, tight pants and riding boots, was howling out his untempered interpretation of "Harlem Shuffle," the 1965 Mercury hit by Wayne Cochran, Miami's "White James Brown." Beside the puggish white youth stood tall, slim Fred Booker, the 17-year-old product of one of Seymour's 28 black families, who shared co-lead singer credit with Mellencamp in Crepe Soul, their eight-man dance band. As John wound up his frenzied star-turn, Booker leapt into James Brown and the Famous Flames' "It's A Man's Man's Man's World," throwing off a cape ala Soul Brother No. 1 as he mimicked the master's patented sideways shimmy.
"The rest of the country might have been go- ing to hell racially," says the now 34-year-old John Cougar Mellencamp, reminiscing in the cozy kitchen of his secluded ranch house outside of Bloomington, Indiana, "but Booker and I, we were doing just fine together—and the Crepe Soul was pulling in a hundred dollars a week! One night at a bar we played, there was even a black-white knife fight between two guys in the crowd, but as far as we were concerned, there was musical harmony and no hassles whatever, it was my first band, and soul music had been my first love since my daddy gave me a radio in high school as a present."
As a result, he adds, "We didn't do the Beatles or any of that stuff, but I must have sung 'Soul Man' a million times. We broke up after two years of playing my Uncle Joe's roller rink and college frat houses. In fact, I wasn't really in another steady, dependable band until I formed the one I'm playing with right now."
The catalyst for these fond memories is the new single, "R.O.C.K. In The U.S.A.," from Mellencamp's million-selling Scarecrow album. Or, rather, the video of the song that John has just directed with producer Faye Cummins, the team responsible (in association with feature director Jonathan Kaplan) for the "Lonely 0l' Night" and "Small Town" videos from his latest LP.
"See, before we went into the studio to record the material for Scarecrow," explains the mus- cled, intense Mellencamp, "I had the band rehearse more than a hundred of the classic old garage-rock and R&B dance singles of the 1960s, from James Brown's "Cold Sweat" to "Mickey's Monkey" by the Young Rascals. And in each case, we discovered that they caught fire because they broke rules and allowed individual strengths and quirks to stick out. In other words, rock 'n' roll works best when it doesn't judge or exclude, only when it's open to letting everybody contribute."
As Mellencamp discussed these notions and recollections with Cummins, he slowly fleshed out visions of a simpler, freshly experimental era. Logically, his thoughts strayed to the video landscape of 1965-1966, when network TV was largely lily-white. Indeed, but for "The Sammy Davis, Jr. Show" broadcasting Friday evenings on NBC, the most reliable places to encounter black talent were the innovative crop of post—"American Bandstand" pop music variety shows, particularly the daytime "Where The Ac- tion Is" and Thursday night "Shindig" on ABC, and NBC's "Hullabaloo" every Monday even- ing.
"These days, everybody takes the musical variety of MTV and the other video stations for granted," says the smirking Mellencamp with a raspy sigh, "but back then, seeing Martha Reeves and the Temptations and Shangri-La's On TV shows meant especially for young people was a major-league breakthrough. And the presence of black acts and white acts performing together seemed real natural."
And so, the idea of recreating that juncture in video history took hold. With "R.O.C.K." as its soundtrack the video segues from John's spoken memories into contrasting, kinescope shots of a fledgling black vocal group of the period (played by John's backup singers. Pat Peterson and Crystal Taliefero, and their friends) and a strug- gling white instrumental group (John's actual band in vintage costume). At the close, the two parallel pop fantasies join together.
"One of the keys to the success of getting that old TV look was finding an actual kinescope," says John. "Before the invention of videotape, they'd put this sewing machine-sized contraption in front of a studio monitor to make a permanent transfer of the live show they were broadcasting, and because they had to film it directly off a TV set the quality was always grainy and fuzzy. We located a kinescope in South America, and this is the first time it's ever been used for a music video.
"As usual with my career," he notes, bursting into laughter, "I had to find the right tool to do the bad job, so I could eventually do the good job."
Mellencamp is referring, of course, to his lavish mistakes of the past. They were engineered by one Tony DeFries, head of the manipulative MainMan Organization that introduced Davey Jones AKA David Bowie to the public in 1972 as painted android Ziggy Stardust. DeFries' second attempt at pop legerdemain was "Johnny Cougar," a Bowie-Springsteen clone the declin- ing svengali fashioned in 1976 from the raw materials a scared and swindle-weary Mellen- camp submitted.
"I've done every dumb thing a person can possibly do in pursuit of becoming some sort of damned rock 'n' roll star," says Mellencamp. "The Chestnut Street Incident album that DeFries got MCA Records to put out was a total flop, every bit as bad as the jungle-animal last name he snuck onto the album jackets and stuck me with. Plus, he left me with The Kid Inside, a record never to be released, and left MCA holding the bag with a million-dollar contract."
John, who was then married and virtually broke, found a reputable attorney, signed with Rod Stewart manager Billy Gaff's Riva Records and retreated to London to record A Biography, which yielded a #1 smash in Australia with the song "I Need A Lover." When that track reached America on his third LP, John Cougar, Pat Benatar recorded it and made it the most-played single in the nation, ensuring both her stardom and John's second chance at professional respect- ability. "Finally," he allows with an amused shrug, "I had no other option left but to just be myself."
And that new direction of Mellencamp's has made all the difference in the world. Huddling in the studio with Steve Cropper, the renowned Stax/Volt guitarist-songwriter-producer, Mellen- camp crafted 1980's Nothing Matters And What If It Did, his self-avowed last shot at recognition. It spawned two modest hits with "This Time" and "Ain't Even Done With The Night." The followup album, American Fool, completed the comeback in 1982 when it became the bestselling record of the year on the strength of "Hurts So Good" and "Jack And Diane."
Most significant of all, John had awoken to the fact that all the grist he needed for his own rock 'n' roll mill was right in his own southern Indiana backyard. He wrote songs about his personal follies and bedevilments, about the tiny burg in which he was raised, and the humble hopes of the citizens who populate it. In short, he literally won the hearts of millions on 1983's UH-HUH LP with "Crumblin' Down," "Pink Houses" and "Authority Song." And Mellencamp's Scarecrow album and accompanying tour are continuing to celebrate those basic strivings and values.
"A way of life that all of the people around me grew up with—the heritage of small family farms—is swiftly being eroded," says Mellen- camp, now happily remarried and the father of three. "The title song of the record, 'Rain On The Scarecrow,' is about hearts being broken by bank foreclosures on farms, and the disconnection from a sense of pride and purpose that is crucial for any wage-earner. But the album deals with the per- sonal heritage of my own dreams, too.
"In a way, 'R.O.C.K.' was written to distill all those great songs of my teenage years and com- bine them into one grateful tribute to the people and things that preserved my far-fetched hopes for myself. Also, the group has been through it all with me, and I've recently realized that every night on the Scarecrow tour, we've accidentally manag- ed to fuse elements from all the different kinds of music—soul, R&B, some jazz, and no-frills hard rock—that've literally kept them going."
Anyone who hasn't been exposed to the Mellen- camp band, from the incisive rhythm section of bassist Toby Myers and drummer Kenny Aronoff, to the keen guitar interplay of Mike Wanchic and lead Larry Crane, is in for a stunning treat. Backup singers Pat Peterson and Crystal Taliefero lend their own deft R&B coloration to Mellen- camp's raucous vocals, and John has added keyboardist John Cascella and the violin of Lisa Germano to accent and deepen the overall sound.
For his encore, Mellencamp contributes an ex- hilarating amalgam of Sixties car radio gems. And John says he's taken steps to guard against the frustrating, in-concert sound system snafus that prompted him to offer a full refund to 20,000 ticketholders at his December 6, 1985, Madison Square Garden date (only half the crowd cashed their's in) before launching into two more hours of solid, blow-off-some-steam rocking.
"That was an emotional decision—both the re- fund and the resumption of the show. But, hey, I'm an emotional guy, right?"
Clearly he is. And however grateful John Cougar Mellencamp may be for the rock he was reared on, doesn't he feel just a little bit foolish that he nearly opted not to put "R.O.C.K. In The U.S.A." on the new album?
"Okay, okay," he admits, his broad face red- dening slightly, "it was one of those absolute last- split-second decisions. I was only including it on the cassette and CD copies of Scarecrow as a bonus party track, but my manager loved the energy of it and I thought, 'Yeah! What the hell!' Then, when I decided to release it as a single, I got so charged up I insisted on doing our own country-soulful version of "Under The Board- walk," another of my old favorites, for the B-side. - "I guess," he concludes, grinning slyly, "that every decision I make is an emotional one."
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