Tag Archives: the octopus’s garden

Is Your Site (not your blog) Run By WordPress? Perhaps it Should Be

WordPress – The celebrated blog platform, favored by search marketers for its amazing degree of customization and built-in optimization, comes in two flavors:

  1. Hosted by wordpress.com: Gets you started as quickly and easily as the perhaps more well known hosted, and Google owned, Blogger.
  2. The WordPress platform provided by wordpress.org: The downloadable version of WordPress which, while needing to be hosted by your own server or service, is infinitely customizable.

While other blog platforms exist, most notably the TypePad and Movable Type solutions offered by Six Apart, WordPress offers a fairly simple CMS and a rich plugins enabling customization for everything from video to eCommerce.

Therein lied an opportunity. In 1994, I founded a music website until recently known as The Octopus’s Garden. It was (is), in many ways, an exercise in web design and optimization as well as an outlet for my passion for music. Unfortunately, theoctopussgarden.com was obtained long before I had the chance (now by a squatter) so I picked up the obscure rareexception.com. Long story short, the site became my test bed for SEO. How does one effectively design a site with an unusual, unrelated domain name? Largely, I had to depend on fewer, key foundations of SEO: content, structure, and keywords.

I received early praise for my analysis of the Death of Paul McCartney from some prestigious personalities around the world, while establishing the site as the source of the original translations of Don McLean’s American Pie. More recently, the history of Billy Joel’s We Didn’t Start the Fire and a study of the lyrics to Hotel California have drawn attention from college professors and students alike.

Unfortunately, while the site has been a success in which I can be proud, I could never break through a series of traffic benchmarks I had set for myself.

Until I tried WordPress.
Huh?

How does a blog platform serve a traditional website? It was years ago when I first met NetConcepts’ Stephan Spencer and learned of the idea. It seems Stephan, long a fan of WordPress and SEO, designed netconcepts.com entirely in WP. Truth be told, I don’t recall if I misheard him, nor whether or not it’s still the case (let alone really ever was), but I was intrigued by the idea. So much so that years later, I’ve finally had a chance to redesign and relaunch the The Octopus’s Garden as, appropriately, the Rare Exception, entirely in WordPress. While this isn’t a tutorial in WordPress, here’s a rough how to:

  1. Download WordPress from wordpress.org and install it on a hosted server (don’t use the hosted version of WordPress that you get from the .com – download it)
  2. In Settings, change the Reading setting for ‘Front Page Displays’ to a static page
  3. Make sure to use Permalinks – a good custom structure the eliminates the dates is /%category%/%postname%/
  4. Design the Page template to have the look and feel you want for your home page
  5. You want to remove the Archive (which lists posts by date) and rename the sidebar widgets to serve a site rather that a blog (“Popular Posts” works for a blog – “Popular Pages” is more appropriate)
  6. Post templates are the other pages in the site – you can give them a slightly differently look and feel
  7. Most importantly, you want to remove the dates from the posts so that they appear as static pages rather than time dependent opinions
  8. I like retaining the Comments but a more appropriate naming convention might be “Discussion”

Now, perhaps the most important part of this article, the Why Bother?
It works. On that change alone I’ve seen a 3X increase in organic search traffic. 3-4 times as many bots crawl the site at any moment and the introduction of Comments, as a form of feedback, enables readers to dynamically participate in the debate about classic music rumors and mythologies. In turn, the pages are dynamically updated while ensuring they remain unique from other instances of the content that have mysteriously appeared on other sites throughout the past 15 years.

Using Yahoo Pipes, I’ve enabled dynamic updates to RSS subscribers, leveraging that ongoing comment-based discussion. WordPress creates two distinct feeds, one for posts (which becomes moot when your site doesn’t have posts like a blog), and another for comments (should subscribers want to receive updates on comments). By blending the two feeds as one, I deliver to my subscribers all of the comments, as updates made to the site; reengaging my audience to stay apprised of other opinions about PID or Pink Floyd and the Wizard of Oz. Consider how the same can be done of your products or services, enabling customer feedback as a form of retention.

3X as much traffic merely using WordPress to host a website. Don’t misunderstand me, it takes some minor programming skills to customize the templates, let alone the time required to simply make such a significant overhaul, so it isn’t without its costs but the ROI is significant. You also need a series of plugins for optimizing the title tags, XML sitemaps, site search, and mitigating spam – all told I have close to 40 plugins helping customize the Rare Exception. That said, the structured URLs, dynamic nature of blog platforms, and various methods for updating users (and bots), easily enabled by WordPress, are challenging projects for a typical website CMS or eCommerce platform.

Buddy Holly – Rave On

First published in 1996-ish to accompany an article I had written about the lyrics to Don McLean’s American Pie for the first website I created in 1996, The Octopus’s Garden. Republished here for the sake of an archive of that article.

FEBRUARY 3, 1959: “Clear Lake, Iowa (UPI)- Following an appearance before 1000 fans at Clear Lake last night, they chartered a plane at the Mason City Airport…and took off at 1:50 AM for Fargo, North Dakota. Their four-seat single engine plane crashed minutes later…”

The following was taken from “BUDDY HOLLY…A Biography in Words, Photographs and Music” by Elizabeth and Ralph Peer, II. 1972

SEPTEMBER 7, 1936: Lubbock, Texas – Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Holley announce the birth of their fourth child, Charles Hardin. They nickname him Buddy. Buddy Holley. Buddy Holly.

For 30 months of your life, you knew him: between 1957 and 1959, static-y portables jived with his unique vocal style. You sauntered down the street trying to imitate that now legendary hiccup, wordless singing, and painless stretching of one syllable over several notes.

For 30 months of your life, you waited to view one of his famous (to some, infamous) gyrating live sessions. Buddy Holly got it on. Without powerful Dylanesque lyrics, without bizarre electronic devices, Buddy Holly touched his fans – often with a gentle, melodic hand – sometimes with a scorchingly vital guitar flash.

All that ended in a tragedy which has been eulogized by musicians from Don McLean to the deeply entrenched Everly Brothers. All that started 22 years before in Texas.

Buddy’s early years are of interest – not so much for what they reveal about him but for what they reveal about the taproots of American Rock. These early years are characterized by Buddy’s seemingly innate interest in and talent for music.

His parents moved to Lubbock, Texas in the early 20’s. They raised their three older children, Lawrence, Travis and Patricia, during the worst years of the depression. Mr. Holley found work as both a carpenter and a tailor in this Texas panhandle town of 70,000 where cotton storage sheds are still the only buildings visible above the dusty, flat countryside. The Holley home was a supportive one, where honesty and hard work were valued. This was a religious Baptist family who attended church regularly. Early exposure to religious music undoubtedly influenced young Buddy. And his household was a musical one.

Although far from wealthy, the Holleys made sure there was money enough for a fiddle, guitar or accordion for their children. Family singing was frequent, with Mrs. Ella Holley playing piano accompaniment.

Larry, Buddy’s older brother, remembers when the three brothers entered a local music contest. Larry (fiddle) and Travis (accordion) had some skill…but five-year old Buddy was just learning to play his own small violin. Still, they let Buddy “play” along – after carefully greasing his bow to prevent the screeching that might ruin their chances of winning.

What the future would offer Buddy Holley could have been predicted that day. He walked away with the five-dollar prize.

By the time he was eight, Buddy was studying piano and violin. He played piano for about nine months, then switched to steel guitar. But his heart was really captured by the acoustic guitar. After twenty steel guitar lessons, Buddy changed to the acoustic…at last he came to his instrument. Larry says the acoustic guitar was a “natural” for Buddy. He played it by ear, often memorizing a difficult song after only hearing it once. Although his formal music education was short,Buddy was familiar with many kinds of music. He was thoroughly imbued with the blues and country sounds he heard on the radio.

Early morning school bus rides would find Buddy singing “Love sick Blues”in the Hank Williams style, Mrs. Holley recalls. Years later, Buddy said, “In the old days, I remember hearing records of Hank Williams and Jimmie Rodgers. Those fellows were a great inspiration for the whole country field.” Bob Willis and Hank Thompson were also favorites.

In the fall of 1949 Buddy met Bob Montgomery, a fellow seventh-grader at Hutchison Jr. High, who also played guitar and sang country songs. They began playing together, patterning themselves after other country harmony groups like Johnny and Jack, the Louvin Brothers and Jim and Jesse. Billing themselves as “Buddy and Bob,” they played junior high assemblies and local radio shows. Their sets were basically country, beefed up by harmonies and their own guitar accompaniment.

Their classmates (including Jerry Allison, who later became one of the original Crickets) remember with childish glee one particular assembly. With Buddy on mandolin and Bob on guitar, they sang “Too Old to Cut the Mustard,” – which they dedicated to an elderly spinster teacher at their school.

As they grew up so did their music. Bob’s interest in bluegrass made Flatt and Scruggs important to their development. And their radio was a window to the music outside Texas. The boys often listened to rhythm and blues shows such as those of Sam Lewis from Louisiana and Gabe Mouth Page from Arkansas. They seldom missed their country favorite son “WSM’s Grand Ole Opry” or “The Louisiana Hayride.”

Buddy and Bob became Lubbock’s leading performers. Between1950 and 1952, they performed at local clubs and high school talent shows,sometimes adding a bass and, less frequently, drums. Harmony duets still predominated their style, with Bob usually singing lead. When Buddy occasionally would sing lead, you’d hear a more upbeat tempo, a less country sound…and another forecast of things to come.

By the time Buddy and Bob entered high school, they were widening their audience by appearing at youth clubs and centers as far away as Carlsbad,New Mexico and Amarillo, Texas. Lubbock’s “Cotton Club” and “Bambaloo Club,” the Union Hall in Carlsbad and Amarillo’s “Clover Club” all featured “Buddy and Bob” performing music they now dubbed as “Western and Bop.”

Local radio stations also gave impetus to Buddy and Bob’s career. KDAV, the nation’s first all-country radio station, held a weekly “Sunday Party,” patterned after the highly successful “National Dance Barn” show on Chicago’s WLS. Buddy and Bob were frequent guests. In fact, their popularity grew so much they were given their own half-hour program each Sunday.

Their repertoire remained basically country with Bob Montgomery still singing lead. But as 1954 progressed, Buddy began to sing more blues and “bop” numbers on the show. Although Montgomery was the principal composer during their partnership, Buddy also began to write.

Two of these three songs were “Heartbeat” and “Love’s Made a Fool of You,” both recorded several years later.

At every opportunity, meaning whenever they had saved up enough money,the boys would cut demonstration records. They used Nessman Studios in Wichita Falls, Texas, Jim Beck’s Studios in Dallas, and later Nor VaJak Studios in Clovis , New Mexico. Generally, they invited local musicians, including Larry Welborn (bass) and Sonny Curtis (guitar), to join them during these sessions.

They sent their “demos” to record companies, hoping they’d be offered a recording contract. “We thought if you got a record contract, “Montgomery remembers, “you were automatically rich. We had seen the country artists come through here in their Cadillacs with Tennessee license plates and we thought all you had to do was get on a record and you had it made.”

But it wasn’t a keen-earned record company that brought Buddy his first real break. It was that good old local radio station, KDAV. In addition to airing the “Sunday Party,” KDAV also sponsored live country and early rock ‘n’ roll concerts in Lubbock. The station often chose the “western and bop” duo to open the shows, which headlined stars like Ferlin Husky, Marty Robbins, Porter Wagoner…even Elvis. And Buddy met them all. One of these performances played a crucial role inthe advancement of Buddy’s career.

On October 14, 1955, Bill Haley and the Comets starred in a show at the Fair Park Auditorium with Jimmie Rodgers, Hank Snow and “Lubbock’s own Buddy, Bob, and Larry.” Eddie Crandall, Marty Robbins’ manager, booked the show.

Crandall was impressed by Buddy’s performance. He spoke to Pappy Dave Stone, the owner of KDAV, and asked for some of Holley’s demos. The records ended up in the hands of Paul Cohen, head of Decca Records’ Specialty Division. And from those hands came the contract offer. In January of 1956, Buddy received it…made out to BUDDY HOLLY. Bob Montgomery was not included; Buddy didn’t want to sign. Montgomery himself talked Buddy into taking advantage of his opportunity. Heeven traveled to Buddy’s first Nashville session…but he never played or sang.

Holly did three sessions in Nashville during 1956 (January, July and November). Buddy’s backup men varied during these sessions. Larry Welborn no longer played with Buddy so Don Guess, another Lubbock boy, played bass. Drummer Allison, still in high school, sat in for only one session. The first two sessions had Sonny Curtis playing lead guitar and Grady Martin on rhythm. Martin and Boots Randolph, who also played on some tracks, were two of Nashville’s most respected session men. But they were not Holly’s own backup group.

At just about that time, RCA Victor Records bought Elvis Presley’s contract from Sun, his original label. Decca, looking for their own Elvis,thought it best for Holly to begin recording with professional session men – not his own group. In fact, not even Holly was to play. Buddy was to cut only vocals.

From the first two sessions, Decca released only one single – “Blue Days Black Nights/Love Me.” Reviewed favorably in the trade press,the record did not do well in the marketplace. The disc did not succeed partially because Holly and the Decca-selected backup group could not create the tightness inherent in the union of Holly’s voice, his guitar and his own group of musicians.

On the last Nashville session, Holly’s own group, The Three Tunes, did play but they were “green,” according to Curtis. “We didn’t understand a thing about recording.” The seventeen and eighteen-year-old kids did upset Cohen on more than one occasion. None too happy with the group, the boys recall, “Decca would turn on the knob and let us have a couple of tries at it.”

After the last Nashville session, Decca released “Modern Don Juan/You Are My One Desire.” The trades loved this one too but again the public wasn’t buying. By then, Buddy’s relationship with Paul Cohen was less than amicable. He knew Decca would not renew his contract. As Jerry Allison puts it, “I think everybody just dropped it. It was the ‘I won’t call if you won’t call me approach.’”

Buddy went home with no recording contract, but leaving a large number of unreleased cuts including “Rock Around with Ollie Vee,” “Ting-A-Ling,” “Baby, Won’t You Come Out Tonight,” and “That’ll Be The Day.” Discouraged,but dedicated, he continued to record with amateur equipment in his garage.

He continued to cut demos, this time in Clovis, New Mexico at Nor VaJak Studios, owned and operated by Norman Petty. An independent producer and artist in his own right, Petty already had several pop hits to his credit, including “Lisbon Antiqua” and “Almost Paradise.” Although Petty’s musical orientation was toward pop, he made studios available to rock ‘n’ roll artists. Buddy Knox recorded the well known “Party Doll” in those studios.

Buddy Holly re-recorded the classic “That’ll Be The Day” in those studios,too. The demo emerged from a complicated, somewhat haphazard meeting of several performers gathered at Petty’s studio to cut demos with Gary Tollet, a young, unknown artist.

Tollet happened, incidentally, to have pretty solid connections at Roulette Records. Promises in the wind? Jerry Allison wasn’t sure, but when he was offered the session’s drum spot, he made sure Buddy Holly was on guitar. After Tollet’s session, “That’ll Be The Day” and “Lookin’ for Someone to Love” were waxed with Holly on guitar, Don Guess on bass and Allison on drums. Tollet even sang background vocals for Holly. Promises in the wind? Not this time.

These tapes were sent to Roulette. The company liked Holly’s songs but not his group. They felt they didn’t need another artist like their current rock ‘n’ roll stars, Buddy Knox and Jimmy Bowen. They were interested in Knox recording “That’ll Be The Day,” and Bowen cutting “Lookin’ for Someone to Love.”

But Buddy Holly wanted to record his own songs with his own group, now called the Crickets.

Petty suggested sending the demos to Peer-Southern, a New York publishing house where he’d placed some of his own compositions. This time,the wind was heavy with promises.

Peer-Southern gave the demo to Bob Thiele at Brunswick Records, a subsidiary of Decca. Thiele liked what he heard – so much that Brunswick decided to use it as a master. “That’ll Be The Day,” recorded by The Crickets,was released in June, 1957. By September, rock ‘n’ roll addicts from America to Britain knew all the words.

Hit singles always need a little help from their friends. Petty and the promotional staffs at Peer-Southern and Brunswick helped. But all the help in the world doesn’t make it a hit. Buddy Holly and the Crickets made that record.

This unique sound was created by the simplest of recording techniques,double tracking. Double tracking uses two tape recorders. The basic cut is laid on one tape. That tape is then played back while a second recorder picks up the first tape plus any studio additions. Double tracking allowed Holly to sing harmony to his own lead vocals and also play both lead and rhythm guitar. The current reign of the 16-,even 32-track tape, renders the layered Holly sound particularly remarkable.

“Words of Love,” by Buddy Holly, was released as a single on Coral Records,another subsidiary of Decca, at about the same time. The decision to release Holly as a solo artist was Petty’s. He saw in Holly a potential for super stardom. The strategic attempt at double exposure paid off later, although Buddy’s first solo effort failed. The song was quite successfully covered by The Diamonds, fresh from slot one with “Little Darlin’.” It was later recorded again by a little-known British group…The Beatles.

Meanwhile, “That’ll Be The Day” was making history. Audiences begged for a first-eye look at the group that made it. During the fall of 1957, The Crickets were part of an 80-day tour that included Fats Domino and the Everly Brothers. Jerry Allison explains, “We weren’t interested in money or percentages at the time. We wanted to go on the road and pick.”

The previous spring and summer found Holly and The Crickets, now Jerry Allison (drums), Joe B. Mauldin (bass), who replaced Don Guess soon after the second waxing of “That’ll Be The Day,” and Niki Sullivan (rhythm guitar),back in Petty’s studios. While on tour they also recorded with Petty(now their personal manager) at Tanner Air Force Base in Oklahoma City. These sessions, recorded for their first album, “The Chirping Crickets,”produced innumerable now-classic cuts.

Their songs were often modified during session – improvisation was a key to the Holly sound. “Oh Boy!,” Holly’s second hit with The Crickets,was originally titled “All My Love.” At the session, it became “Oh Boy!.” The lyrics were also changed, considerably altering the meaning of the song. “Peggy Sue,” Holly’s first solo success released on Coral, was cut at the same sessions. Originally titled “Cindy Lou,” it became “Peggy Sue” because Peggy Sue was Allison’s girl.

By December, 1957, both “Oh Boy!” and “Peggy Sue” ruled the charts. Two guest appearances on the Ed Sullivan Show followed. Allison remembers best a phase of the Crickets’ career that came between these two shows. “The most exciting time for me was the New York Paramount Show. The Everly Brothers took us out to get outfitted in fancy clothes. They said, ‘Hey now you’ve got to quit wearing those funny clothes….So we shucked our t-shirts and moccasins.”

With millions of records selling overseas, large audiences awaited Buddy Holly and The Crickets. In early February they joined Paul Anka and Jerry Lee Lewis for a short Australian tour. The show was a smash. In March, Buddy Holly and The Crickets hit England for a 25-day tour, booked as part of a variety show. Again, the tour was a tremendous success. Melody Maker, England’s well known music publication, praised The Crickets delivery: “Country and Western fans need look no further than the best selling “Peggy Sue” – and Buddy Holly is every bit as good on the disc. And for the rock ‘n’ rollers “That’ll Be The Day,” “Oh Boy,” “Rip It Up” and soon are given plenty of punch.

During their English tour, Brunswick released “Maybe Baby.” “Oh Boy,” “Maybe Baby,” and “Think It Over” were all chart-makers for The Crickets while “Rave On,” by Holly, was his second hit of four releases as a solo artist for Coral.

After the English trip, The Crickets continued to tour the U.S., leaving a string of hits in their wake. “Early in the Morning” (Bobby Darin) and “It’s So Easy” were among many. Although not released until late spring of ‘58, most of these cuts had been recorded between December 1957and February 1958. Sullivan having left the group, Buddy asked Tommy Allsup to play guitar at his sessions. Allsup proved an excellent addition so Holly stopped over-dubbing his own lead. By June of 1958, Allsup was touring with the group.

After a tour in 1958, the group played New York’s Brooklyn Paramount. Buddy took the opportunity to meet with his publishers, the Peer-Southern Organization. He met someone else, too: Maria Elena Santiago, a pretty, young Puerto Rican girl who worked for the publishing house. The whirlwind romance led to their marriage in Lubbock two weeks later.

Maria Elena recalls, “After our second date, he asked me to marry him. It was unbelievable to me that all of a sudden he asked me to get married.”

After careful consideration and discussion with her aunt, who warned her of the peripatetic lifestyle of a performer, Maria Elena accepted. Buddy’s parents came to New York to meet her. They all returned to Lubbock in early August.

The young couple was wed in the Holley home on August 15, 1958, in a simple ceremony performed by Buddy’s minister, the pastor of the First Baptist Church of Lubbock.

After their honeymoon in Acapulco, Buddy and Maria moved to an apartment near New York City’s fabled Greenwich Village. Buddy felt that remaining in the city was best for his career.

Although he continued to perform and record with The Crickets, relationships changed. The group no longer traveled together.

Although marriage did not change Buddy fundamentally, it did instill in him a certain seriousness, a greater sense of responsibility. He became displeased by the group’s behavior. And The Crickets admit they were “sort of out of hand.” Allison recollects: “We’d get drunk in the morning and stay drunk all day, ’cause in Texas you didn’t get to drink – it was dry at the time. Finally, Buddy said, ‘Now guys, we’re getting a little older; we got to take this more seriously. You guys drink too much. It’s obnoxious and I hate it.’”

That wasn’t the end…not yet. The group agreed to cut out the drinking, even move to New York City. They’d work it out, they decided.

Meanwhile, Holly’s relationship with Norman Petty grew strained. Their association was a close one. In fact, Petty often contributed lyrics and bridges to Holly’s original material, as well as producing his records.

But Petty was not happy about Buddy’s marriage. He feared that it would cause Holly to lose female fans, should they find out about it. So Petty suggested that Maria Elena be known as the group’s secretary. As September and October passed, the relationship worsened. However Holly and Petty continued to work together.

They recorded “Reminiscing” and “Come Back Baby” in Clovis with the late King Curtis on tenor sax. “Moondreams” and “True Love Ways”were recorded with the Dick Jacobs Orchestra in New York – the first time The Crickets incorporated strings. But the association between The Crickets and Petty continued to degenerate.

In mid-October, after a mid-western tour, the group decided to terminate their association with Petty. Allison and Maudlin arrived in Lubbock several days before Buddy. After meeting with Petty they decided instead to continue working with him and let Holly go solo. Buddy wanted independence. He told The Crickets they were welcome to rejoin him if they changed their minds.

Holly was not happy with the turn of events…but he was confident that the decision was right. He and Maria Elena returned to New York. No more tours until the turn of the year was his plan. Far from idle, he continued to write and record. “Raining in My Heart” (Felice and Boudleaux Bryant) and “It Doesn’t Matter Anymore” (Paul Anka) emerged during this period of semi-hermitage.

Buddy was full of ideas and plans for the future, including an album of Ray Charles material and a trip to England. He also wanted to help other young artists, among them Waylon Jennings, who accompanied him on his last tour, and Lou Gardino, a young artist who recorded Holly’s”Stay Close to Me,” one of his last songs.

In late January, Buddy began a General Artists’ Corporation tour, “The Biggest Show of Stars of 1959.” He asked Jennings, Allsup and drummer Charles Bunch to accompany him. Maria was expecting (she later lost the baby) and she did not join Buddy.

The show included Ritchie Valens, the 17-year old Mexican-American whose song “Donna” was the nation’s biggest; J.P. (The Big Bopper) Richardson,a 27-year-old ex-Texas D.J., whose “Chantilly Lace” was a top chart contender;and Dion and the Belmonts. The entire group traveled by bus under conditions far from comfortable.

On Monday, February 2, the show played Clear Lake, Iowa. Buddy chartered a small plane for himself, Allsup and Jennings instead of riding the bus to the next stop in Moorehead, Minnesota. They hoped to arrive early enough to have their suits cleaned. Plans were changed at the last minute when Richardson and Valens took Jennings’ and Allsup’s places.

Allsup remembers: “I was the one who chartered the plane, but I flipped a coin with Ritchie Valens – he kept bugging me all night that he’d never flown in a little plane. He won the toss.” When the Big Bopper came down with the flu, Jennings gave his seat to him.

Tragic irony touched Holly’s death. On the night of the crash, Allison and Mauldin were trying to reach him, hoping they could get back together as a group.

Ever hear Don McLean’s American Pie?? If you find this interesting, you’ll be shocked to find out what that song is all about.

American Pie – The analysis and interpretation of Don McLean’s song lyrics

First published in 1996-ish, what follows is an article I wrote out of a passion I had for the tune and lyrics, for a music history class. The republishing, here, is to retain, as an archive, the history of that publishing; it was the first of a few music related articles I used in the creation of my first website The Octopus’s Garden. No longer online, that domain was later replaced with a site I called RareException, an effort also relegated to history when I found myself first employed at Yahoo! As it happens, my passion for this song was imprinted on my life thanks to my young love affair with high school theater; as a Junior at Portage Northern High School, the performing artists of the graduating Senior class sang this, a cappella, during their graduating performance. Little did I know then that the impression it left would be indelible, drawing me decades later to Austin, TX, the live music capital of the world, where the story of Buddy Holly’s impact on Texas music can be found in the Texas History Museum. The following is in its original form…

 

A long, long time ago…

      “American Pie” reached #1 in 1972, shortly after it was released. Buddy Holly, unfortunately, died in 1959 while other aspects of the song hint even further back.

I can still remember how That music used to make me smile. And I knew if I had my chance, That I could make those people dance, And maybe they’d be happy for a while.

    Sociologists credit teenagers with the popularity of Rock and Roll, as a part of the Baby boomer generation, they found themselves in a very influential position. Their shear number were the force behind most of our country’s recent major transitions. McLean was a teenager in 1959 and he begins by simply commenting that the music had an appealing quality to him as well as the millions of other teens. McLean also had an intense desire to entertain as a musician. His dream, to play in a band at high school dances, was the dream of many young boys who wanted to make people dance to Rock and Roll.

But February made me shiver,

Buddy Holly died on February 3, 1959, in a plane crash in Iowa during a snowstorm. Its rumored that the name of the plane was: American Pie.

With every paper I’d deliver,

    Don McLean’s only job besides being a full-time singer/song writer was being a paperboy.

Bad news on the doorstep… I couldn’t take one more step. I can’t remember if I cried When I read about his widowed bride

Holly’s recent bride was pregnant when the crash took place; she had a miscarriage shortly afterward.

But something touched me deep inside, The day the music died.

The same plane crash that killed Buddy Holly also tragically took the lives of Richie Valens (”La Bamba”) and The Big Bopper (”Chantilly Lace.”) Since all three were so prominent at the time, February 3, 1959, became known as “The Day The Music Died.”

So…

(Refrain) Bye bye Miss American Pie,

    **Don McLean dated a Miss America candidate during a pageant and broke up with her on February 3, 1959. (Unconfirmed interpretation)

So its probably…

    Just a reference to the plane, “American Pie” that crashed.

I drove my Chevy to the levee but the levee was dry, Them good ol’ boys were drinkin’ whiskey and rye Singing “This’ll be the day that I die, This’ll be the day that I die.”

Driving the Chevy to the levee almost certainly refers to the three college students whose murder was the subject of the film ‘Mississippi Burning.’ The students were attempting to register as black voters, and after being killed by bigoted thugs their bodies were buried in a levee. Them good ol’ boys being:

Holly, Valens, and the Big Bopper, They were singing about their death on February 3. One of Holly’s hits was “That’ll be the Day”; the chorus contains the line “That’ll be the day that I die.”

(Verse 2) Did you write the book of love,

    “The Book of Love” by the Monotones; hit in 1958.”Oh I wonder, wonder who… who, who wrote the book of love?”

And do you have faith in God above, If the Bible tells you so?

    **In 1955, Don Cornell did a song entitled “The Bible Tells Me So.” It was difficult to tell if it was what McLean was referencing. Anyone know for sure?There is also an old Sunday School song that goes:”Jesus loves me this I know, for the Bible tells me so” McLean was somewhat religious.

Now do you believe in rock ‘n roll?

    The Lovin’ Spoonful had a hit in 1965 with John Sebastian’s “Do you Believe in Magic?”. The song has the lines: “Do you believe in magic” and “It’s like trying to tell a stranger ’bout rock and roll.”

Can music save your mortal soul? And can you teach me how to dance real slow?

    Music was believed to “save the soul” and slow dancing was an important part of early rock and roll dance events. Dancing declined in importance through the 60’s as things like psychedelia and the 10-minute guitar solo gained prominence.McLean was asking many questions about the early rock ‘n roll in an attempt to keep it alive or find out if it was already dead.

Well I know that you’re in love with him ‘Cause I saw you dancing in the gym

    Back then, dancing was an expression of love,and carried a connotation of commitment. Dance partners were not so readily exchanged as they would be later.

You both kicked off your shoes

    A reference to the beloved “sock hop.” (Street shoes tear up wooden basketball floors, so dancers had to take off their shoes.)

Man, I dig those rhythm ‘n’ blues

Before the popularity of rock and roll, music, like much elsewhere in the U. S., was highly segregated. The popular music of black performers for largely black audiences was called, first “race music,” later softened to rhythm and blues. In the early 50s, as they were exposed to it through radio personalities such as Allan Freed, white teenagers began listening, too. Starting around 1954, a number of songs from the rhythm and blues charts began appearing on the overall popular charts as well, but usually in cover versions by established white artists, (e.g.”Shake Rattle and Roll,” Joe Turner, covered by Bill Haley; “Sh-Boom, “the Chords, covered by the Crew-Cuts; “Sincerely,” the Moonglows, covered by the McGuire Sisters; Tweedle Dee, LaVerne Baker, covered by Georgia Gibbs). By 1955, some of the rhythm and blues artists, like Fats Domino and Little Richard were able to get records on the overall pop charts.In 1956 Sun records added elements of country and western to produce the kind of rock and roll tradition that produced Buddy Holly.

I was a lonely teenage broncin’ buck With a pink carnation and a pickup truck

    “A White Sport Coat (And a Pink Carnation), “was a hit for Marty Robbins in 1957. The pickup truck has endured as a symbol of sexual independence and potency, especially in a Texas context.(Also, Jimmy Buffet does a song about “a white sport coat and a pink crustacean.”:-) )

But I knew that I was out of luck The day the music died I started singing…

Refrain

(Verse 3) Now for ten years we’ve been on our own

    McLean was writing this song in the late 60’s,about ten years after the crash.

And moss grows fat on a rolling stone

It’s unclear who the “rolling stone” is supposed to be. It could be Dylan, since “Like a Rolling Stone” (1965) was his first major hit; and since he was busy writing songs ex-tolling the virtues of simple love, family and contentment while staying at home (he didn’t tour from ‘66 to ‘74) and raking in the royalties. This was quite a change from the earlier, angrier Dylan. The “rolling stone” could also be Elvis Presley, although I don’t think he started to pork out by the late sixties.

he-he!

It could refer to rock and rollers, and the changes that had taken place in the business in the 60’s, especially the huge amounts of cash some of them were beginning to make, and the relative stagnation that entered the music at the same time.

Or, it could refer to the Rolling Stones themselves, many musicians were angry at the Stones for “selling out.” I discovered that John Foxx of Ultravox was sufficiently miffed to write a song titled “Life At Rainbow’s End (For All The Tax Exiles On Main Street).” The Stone sat one point became citizens of some other country merely to save taxes.

But that’s not how it used to be When the jester sang for the King and Queen

The jester is Bob Dylan, as will become clear later. There are several interpretations of king and queen: some think that Elvis Presley is the king, which seems rather obvious. The queen is said to be either Connie Francis or Little Richard. See the next note.An alternate interpretation is that this refers to the Kennedys — the King and Queen of “Camelot” — who were present at a Washington DC civil rights rally featuring Martin Luther King. (There’s a recording of Dylan performing at this rally. The Jester.)

The third interpretation is that the jester could be Lee Harvey Oswald who sang (shouted) before he was shot for the murder of the King (JFK).

In a coat he borrowed from James Dean

    In the movie “Rebel Without a Cause,” James Dean has a red windbreaker that holds symbolic meaning throughout the film (see note at end). In one particularly intense scene, Dean lends his coat to a guy who is shot and killed; Dean’s father arrives, sees the coat on the dead man, thinks it’s Dean, and loses it. On the cover of “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan,” Dylan is wearing just such a red windbreaker, posed in a street scene similar to movie starring James Dean. Bob Dylan played a command performance for the Queen of England. He was *not* properly attired, so perhaps this is a reference to his apparel.

And a voice that came from you and me

    Bob Dylan’s roots are in American folk music,with people like Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie. Folk music is by definition the music of the masses, hence the “…came from you and me.”

Oh, and while the King was looking down The jester stole his thorny crown

Likely a reference to Elvis’ decline and Dylan’s ascendancy (i.e. Presley is looking down from a height as Dylan takes his place). Consider that Elvis was is the army at the time of Dylan’s ascendancy and a common Army marching song sings, “Ain’t no use in looking down, ain’t no discharge on the ground”. The thorny crown might be a reference to the price of fame. Dylan has said that he wanted to be as famous as Elvis, one of his early idols.

or…

    Lee Harvey Oswald being the jester who ended the reign of JFK and “stole his crown.”

or…

A third interpretation is the quote made by John Lennon and taken out of context indicating that John felt The Beatles were more popular then Jesus. John and The Beatles took the crown from Christ.

The courtroom was adjourned, No verdict was returned.

    This could be the trial of the Chicago Seven.

but its more likely to be…

    The fact that no verdict was returned for the assassination of JFK because the assassin was killed so the court was adjourned.

And while Lennon read a book on Marx,
Or it could be be…
And while Lenin read a book on Marx,

    Someone has to introduce Vladamir Lenin, the father of Marxist communism, to the ideology of Karl Marx.

I love the play on words here…

      Literally, John Lennon reading about Karl Marx; figuratively, the introduction of radical politics into the music of The Beatles.  (Of course, he could be referring to Groucho Marx, but that doesn’t seem quite consistent with McLean’s overall tone. On the other hand, some of the wordplay in Lennon’s lyrics and books is reminiscent of Groucho.)  The “Marx-Lennon” word play has also been used by others, most notably the Firesign Theatre on the cover of their album “How Can You Be In Two Places At Once When You’re Not Anywhere At All?” The Beatles “Here, There and Everywhere,” for example. Also, a famous French witticism was “Je suis Marxiste, tendance Groucho. ” (I’m a Marxist of the Groucho variety).

The quartet practiced in the park

      There are two schools of thought about this; the obvious one is The Beatles playing in Shea Stadium, but note that the previous line has John Lennon *doing something else at the same time*. This tends to support the theory that this is a reference to the Weavers, who were blacklisted during the McCarthy era. McLean had become friends with Lee Hays of the Weavers in the early 60’s while performing in coffeehouses and clubs in upstate New York and New York City. He was also well acquainted with Pete Seeger; McLean, Seeger, and others took a trip on the Hudson river singing anti-pollution songs at one point. Seeger’s LP “God Bless the Grass” contains many of these songs.

And we sang dirges in the dark

      A “dirge” is a funeral or mourning song, so perhaps this is meant literally…or, perhaps, this is a reference to some of the new “art rock” groups that played long pieces not meant for dancing. In the dark of the death of Holly.

The day the music died. We were singing…

Refrain

(Verse 4) Helter Skelter in a summer swelter

    “Helter Skelter” is a Beatles song that appears on the “White” album. Charles Manson, claiming to have been “inspired”by the song (through which he thought God and/or the devil were taking to him) led his followers in the Tate-LaBianca murders. Is “summer swelter” a reference to the “Summer of Love” or perhaps to the “long hot summer” of Watts?

The birds flew off with the fallout shelter Eight miles high and falling fast

    Without a doubt this refers to the Byrds who helped launch David Crosby to super stardom. The Byrd’s song “Eight Miles High” was found on their late 1966 release “Fifth Dimension.” They recorded this song when some of the groups members were considering leaving (some of the groups members actually left the group because they refused to flyin an airplane). A fallout shelter was sometimes referred to as the fifth dimension because of the 1950’s fascination with sci-fi and the futuristic appearance of a fallout shelter. This was one of the first records widely banned because of supposedly drug-oriented lyrics.

But…

      Another idea considers The Beatles‘ “Helter Skelter.” A line from the song reads, ‘I’m coming down fast but I’m miles above you.’ The similarity is pretty obvious.

It landed foul on the grass

    One of the Byrds was busted for possession of marijuana.

The players tried for a forward pass

Obviously a football metaphor, but about what? It could be the Rolling Stones, i.e., they were waiting for an opening that really didn’t happen until The Beatles broke up.With regard to the next idea, the players maybe other musicians who received the opportunity to shine when Dylan was injured.

With the jester on the sidelines in a cast

    On July 29, 1966, Dylan crashed his Triumph 55 motorcycle while riding near his home in Woodstock, New York. He spent nine months in seclusion while recuperating from the accident. This gave a chance for many other artists to become noticed (see the next interpretation).

Now the half-time air was sweet perfume

Drugs, man.Well, now, wait a minute; that’s probably too obvious (wouldn’t want to make it easy). It’s possible that this line and the next few refer to the 1968 Democratic National Convention. The “sweet perfume” is probably tear gas.

It could be the fact the since Dylan was temporarily out of the picture, the future looked bright for many artists. The Stones, for example, may have been given a brief chance.

While sergeants played a marching tune

      Following from the second thought above, the sergeants would be the Chicago Police and the Illinois National Guard, who marched protesters out of the park where the Convention was being held and into jail.Alternatively, this could refer to The Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.” Or, perhaps McLean refers to The Beatles’ music as “marching” because it’s not music for dancing.

Or, finally, the “marching tune” could be the draft.  **(What did the Stones release in ‘66??)

We all got up to dance Oh, but we never got the chance

The Beatles’ 1966 Candlestick Park concert only lasted 35 minutes. But at this point The Beatles were not “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” (1967)Or, following on from the previous comment, perhaps she was considering the hippies who were protesting the Convention. They were known for playing their own folk music.

‘Cause the players tried to take the field, The marching band refused to yield.

      Some folks think this refers to either the 1968 Democratic Convention or Kent State. If the players are the protesters at Kent State, and the marching band the Ohio National Guard…This could be a reference to the dominance of The Beatles on the rock and roll scene. For instance, the Beach Boys released “Pet Sounds” in 1966 — an album that featured some of the same sort of studio and electronic experimentation as “Sgt. Pepper” (1967). The album sold poorly because of The Beatles.

The other Beatles reference here refers to the Monkees. The Monkees were merely actors (or players), they were not a true band but a fabrication attempting to replicate The Beatles. The players tried to take the place of the Fab Four but the band wouldn’t step down.

Or finally, this might be a comment that follows up on the earlier reference to the draft: the government/military industrial-complex establishment refused to accede to the demands of the peace movement.

Do you recall what was revealed, The day the music died?

    **Check for any controversies released on Feb3, 1959.

We started singing

Refrain

(Verse 5) And there we were all in one place

    Woodstock.

A generation lost in space

      Some people think this is a reference to the US space program, which it might be (the first moon landing took place in ‘69); but that seems a bit too literal. Perhaps this is a reference to hippies, who were sometimes known as the “lost generation,” partially because of their particularly acute alienation from their parents, and partially because of their presumed preoccupation with drugs (which was referred to as being “spaced-out.”)Being on drugs was sometimes termed — being lost in space because of the TV show, “Lost in Space,” whose title was used as a synonym for someone who was rather high… I keep hoping that McLean had better taste.

With no time left to start again

      The “lost generation” spent too much time being stoned, and had wasted their lives. Or, perhaps, their preferences for psychedelia had pushed rock and roll so far from Holly’s music that it couldn’t be retrieved.

So come on Jack be nimble Jack be quick

    Probably a reference to Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones; “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” was released in May 1968.

Jack Flash sat on a candlestick

    **The Stones’ Candlestick park concert? (unconfirmed)Jack Flash is also a cockney slang term for pharmaceutical heroin. If you know how to use heroin, you understand the reference.

‘Cause fire is the devil’s only friend

    It’s possible that this is a reference to the Grateful Dead’s “Friend of the Devil.”An alternate interpretation of the last four lines is that they may refer to Jack Kennedy and his quick decisions during the Cuban Missile Crisis; the candlesticks/fire refer to ICBMs and nuclear war.

And as I watched him on the stage, my hands were clenched in fists of rage; No angel born in hell, could break that Satan’s spell

      While playing a concert at the Altamont Speedway in 1968, the Stones appointed members of the Hell’s Angels to work security (on the advice of the Grateful Dead). In the darkness near the front of the stage, a young man named Meredith Hunter was beaten and stabbed to death — by the Angels. Public outcry that the song “Sympathy for the Devil” (because of “satan’s spell”) had somehow incited the violence and caused the Stones to drop the song from their show for the next six years. This incident is chronicled in the documentary film “Gimme Shelter.”It’s also possible that McLean views the Stones as being negatively inspired (he had an extensive religious background)because of “Sympathy for the Devil,” “Their Satanic Majesties’ Request”and so on. This is a bit puzzling, since the early Stones recorded a lot of “roots” rock and roll, including Buddy Holly’s “Not Fade Away.”

And as the flames climbed high into the night, To light the sacrificial rite

    The most likely interpretation is that McLean is still talking about Altamont, and in particular Mick Jagger’s prancing and posing and “climbing high” while it was happening. Or the bonfires around the area could provide the flames. The sacrifice is Meredith Hunter.(It could be a reference to Jimi Hendrix burning his Stratocaster at the Monterey Pop Festival, but that was in 1967 and this verse is no doubt set in 1968.)

I saw Satan laughing with delight

    If the above is correct, then Satan would be Jagger.

The day the music died He was singing…

Refrain

(Verse 6) I met a girl who sang the blues

    Ms. Janis Joplin, the lady of the blues.

And I asked her for some happy news But she just smiled and turned away

    Janis died of an accidental (accidental my ass!)heroin overdose on October 4, 1970.

Or…

    The girl might be Roberta Flack. Its rumored that she wrote, “Killing Me Softly (with his song),” in response to this lyric in his song.

I went down to the sacred store Where I’d heard the music years before

    There are two interpretations of this: The “sacred store” was Bill Graham’s Fillmore West, one of the great rock and roll venues of all time. Alternatively, this refers to record stores, and their long time (then discontinued) practice of allowing customers to preview records in the store. (What year did the Fillmore West close?)It could also refer to record stores as “sacred” because this is where one goes to get “saved.” (See above lyric “Can music save your mortal soul?”)

But the man there said the music wouldn’t play

      Perhaps he means that nobody is interested in hearing Buddy Holly et. al.’s music? Or, as above, the discontinuation of the in-store listening booths.

And in the streets the children screamed

    “Flower children” being beaten by police and National Guard troops; in particular, perhaps, the People’s Park riots in Berkeley in 1969 and 1970.It is possible that this refers to the Vietnamese children. Life magazine was famous for publishing horrifying photos of children in Vietnam during the Vietnamese War.

The lovers cried and the poets dreamed

    The trend toward psychedelic music in the 60’s?Or again the hippies who were both great lovers and poets who would then be crying because of the difficulties of their struggle and dreaming of peace.

But not a word was spoken The church bells all were broken

    It could be that the broken bells are the dead musicians: neither can produce any more music.

And the three men I admire most The Father, Son, and Holy Ghost

Holly, The Big Bopper, and Valens — or — **Hank Williams, Presley, and Holly

    (check this) –or — JFK, Martin Luther King, and Bobby Kennedy — or — or simply the Catholic aspects of the deity. McLean had attended several Catholic schools.

They caught the last train for the coast

    Could be a reference to wacky California religions, or it could just be a way of saying that they’ve left (or died — western culture has used “went west” as a synonym for dying). Or, perhaps this is a reference to the famous “God is Dead” headline in the New York Times. Some have suggested that this is an oblique reference to a line in Procol Harum’s “Whiter Shade of Pale,” but I’m not sure I’d buy that; firstly, all of McLean’s musical references are to much older roots: rock and roll songs; and secondly, I think it’s more likely that this line shows up in both songs simply because it’s a common cultural metaphor.

The day the music died

      This tends to support the conjecture that the”three men” were Holly /Bopper/Valens, since this says that they left us on the day the music died.

And they were singing…

Refrain (2x)


There were supposed to be four people on the plane. There was only room for three. The fourth person lost the coin toss — or should I say won the toss. His name is Waylon Jennings. Jennings was the bass player for Holly’s band at the time. Some people say that Holly had chartered the plane for his band, but that Valens and/or Richardson was to replace Jennings who was sick that night.

About the “coat he borrowed from James Dean”: James Dean’s red windbreaker is important throughout the “Rebel Without a Cause,” not just at the end. When he put it on, it meant that it was time to face the world, time to do what he thought had to be done, and other melodramatic but thoroughly enjoyable stuff like that. The week after the movie came out, nearly every clothing store in the U.S. was sold out of red windbreakers. Remember that Dean’s impact was similar to Dylan’s: both were a symbol for the youth of their time, a reminder that they had something to say and demanded to be heard.

Some figure that if Holly had not have died, then we would not have suffered through the Fabian/Pat Boone era… and consequently, we wouldn’t have “needed” the Beatles (I have strong arguments opposing that opinion). Holly was quickly moving pop music away from the stereotypical boy/girl love lost/found lyrical ideas, and was recording with unique instrumentation and techniques…things that Beatles would not try until about 1965 (although I still credit the Beatles with all the musical revolutions). Without Holly’s death, perhaps Dylan would have stuck with the rock and roll he played in high school and the Byrds never would have created an amalgam of Dylan songs and Beatle arrangements.

I want to invite you to join me in such discussions live and together.

Join me online here

The relationship between John Lennon and the number 9

First published in 1996-ish for the first website I created in 1996, The Octopus’s Garden. Republished here for the sake of an archive of that article.

“Number 9, Number 9, Number 9, Number 9, Number 9…“
Another of the Beatles recurring themes involved songs written by John Lennon. It seems that Lennon had a fascination with the number nine that was only overpowered by his love for Yoko.

Songs and Albums

    • “One After 909
    • “Revolution No. 9
    • “#9 Dream”

Ironically, this song was a part of Lennon’s ninth solo album which was released in the ninth month of 1974. The song even peaked at number 9 in the charts. AND…. A verse in the song has nine syllables, “Ah, bowakawa, pousse pousse.”

  • His album, Mind Games, contains nine letters in its title
  • Another of Lennon’s album names contains nine letters. The album was his dedication to classic rock and was entitled: Rock ‘n’ Roll

Dates

  • John Lennon was born on October, 9 1940
  • Some even say he was born at 6:30pm. 6 + 3 + 0 = well you figure it out.
  • His son was also born on the ninth
  • When John Lennon was shot, on December, 8th 1980, it was already December 9th in his hometown of Liverpool, England.

Miscellaneous

  • Liverpool has nine letters
  • When an engineer said “Revolution number nine” to begin the recording of the song by the same name, John loved the sound. He was lucky that it had been recorded. John looped the recording over and over again throughout the beginning of “Revolution No. 9
  • Nine letters make up the most important phrase of one of John’s most important antiwar songs. All we are saying, is give peace a chance.
  • John Ono Lennon and Yoko Ono Lennon’s combined names contain nine O’s
  • John’s elementary school bus number happened to be 72. 7 + 2 = 9 (We know its a stretch)
  • He even lived in apartment 72 in New York. Yet another 9.
  • McCartney, his best friend through most of his life, is spelled with 9 letters.

The Meaning of The Twelve Days of Christmas

First published in 1996-ish for the first website I created in 1996, The Octopus’s Garden. Republished here for the sake of an archive of that article.

One of our fondest Christmas carols, that which sings of lords leaping and turtle doves, may have little known roots in the Christian faith. As much as Christmas remains, fundamentally, a religious holiday, grown up around the Christian recognition of the birth and celebration of Christ, we can ramble countless carols steeped in the religious holiday from “Oh Come All Ye Faithful” to “Silent Night.” But that just wouldn’t do for the Rare Exception. What carol’s story would come as a surprise to most and of interest to all?

The Twelve Days of Christmas

For the hundreds of years between 1558 and 1829, following King Henry VIII’s departure from the Roman Catholic Church, the English Anglican Reformation succeeded in suppressing the Roman Catholic faith in England. Catholics were not permitted to, among many things, openly practice their faith or hold real estate on its behalf. It was in this early example of censorship and repression that the twelve days emerged, from the celebration of the birth of Jesus on December 25th through the feast of the Baptism of the Lord on January 6th.

Consider then that “my true love” is not a boyfriend or girlfriend but God and that the gifts given are those bestowed upon baptism.

  • The partridge in a pear tree is Jesus Christ.
  • Two turtle doves are the Old and New Testaments.
  • Three French hens represent faith, hope and love.
  • Four calling birds are the four gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke & John.
  • Five golden rings refer to the Torah or Law, the first five books of the Old Testament.
  • Six geese a-laying are the six days of creation.
  • Seven swans a-swimming embody the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit – Prophesy, Serving, Teaching, Exhortation, Contribution, Leadership, and Mercy.
  • Eight maids a-milking are the eight beatitudes.
  • Nine ladies dancing are the nine fruits of the Holy Spirit – Love, Joy, Peace, Patience, Kindness, Goodness, Faithfulness, Gentleness, and Self Control.
  • Ten lords a-leaping clearly the ten commandments.
  • Eleven pipers piping stood for the eleven remaining disciples.
  • Twelve drummers drumming symbolize the Apostles’ Creed’s twelve points of belief.

It is said that this catechism for Catholics presents Christ as a mother partridge which feigns injury to decoy predators from her helpless nestlings. The only flaw we find in the legend is the premise that Catholics created the carol out of repression from their Christian countrymen. What cause would other English Christians have to stamp out references to Jesus Christ and the Ten Commandments in such a way that Catholics in particular couldn’t mention them? The song would be no more born of English Catholics than any Christian of the time. More to the point, while this history is widely circulated online, there is little evidence to support the premise with one of the oldest references, in fact, alluding to a fictitious nature.

Alarming though is that if untrue, the dual meaning is representative of a religions’ molding a culture to suit its needs. During the Christmas holiday, the story of the deal meaning proliferates the 12 Catholic Days throughout Catholic churches, presented as fact. History rewritten to suit religion? I, for one, prefer not to consider the truth in this case but to remain… faithful, and enjoy the spirit in which the history is enlightened.

The Twelve Days of Christmas remains a classic which continues to grow in popularity with each year that passes. The “price of The 12 Days of Christmas“, which has been tracked by PNC for the past 24 years, increased 8.1% in 2008. Led by the exorbitant cost of swans which increased 33%, your acquisition of 8 maids a-milking and a few french hens would run well over $86,000. What of the apparent recession of 2008? The cost of Five Golden Rings fell 11.4%.

Who is Neil Diamond’s Sweet Caroline?

First published in 1996-ish for the first website I created in 1996, The Octopus’s Garden. Republished here for the sake of an archive of that article.

We have all done it, some more than others; standing in a bar one evening, arm in arm with friends, singing along to Sweet Caroline.   I happen to be in the “more than others” group having spent almost every Thursday of my college life at The Vine Tavern in Tempe, AZ; on tables leading the chorus.  With my introspection on Hotel California, American Pie, and other great classics, I’m disappointed in myself that it never occurred to me to ask, “Who was Sweet Caroline?”

The song, performed, and it should be no surprise written, by American music icon Neil Diamond was released on September 16, 1969.  Besides appearing on countless greatest hits, karaoke, and compilation albums, the original release was on the album of the same name.

Where it began, I can’t begin to know when
But then I know it’s growing strong
Oh, wasn’t the spring, whooo
And spring became the summer
Who’d believe you’d come along

Hands, touching hands, reaching out
Touching me, touching you
Oh, sweet Caroline
Good times never seem so good
I’ve been inclined to believe it never would

And now I, I look at the night, whooo
And it don’t seem so lonely
We fill it up with only two, oh
And when I hurt
Hurting runs off my shoulder
How can I hurt when holding you

Oh, one, touching one, reaching out
Touching me, touching you
Oh, sweet Caroline
Good times never seem so good
Oh I’ve been inclined to believe it never would

Ohhh, sweet Caroline, good times never seem so good

Diamond revealed, in a 2007 interview, that the inspiration behind the song was daughter of former U.S. President, John F. Kennedy, Caroline.  Having seen a photo of Carolines in a news magazine, Neil Diamond was inspired with the lyrics.

In the fall of 1969, Neil Diamond performed Sweet Caroline on several television shows leading to still popular covers from the likes of Andy Williams, Frank Sinatra, Bobby Goldsboro, Elvis Presley, Ray Conniff, and Waylon Jennings.  More, the song has been redone in country, reggae, and even punk.  Caroline herself reportedly asked to have the song performed at her fiftieth birthday party.

Having reached #4 on the Billboard charts and attaining platinum status, Sweet Caroline has even become a sports rally cry with fans around the world belting out the song with passion (though some in Boston and New York aren’t too happy about it)

Puff the Magic Dragon – Marijuana References in the Song Lyrics

First published in 1998-ish in a collection of music oriented articles I wrote for my first website, The Octopus’s Garden. Republished here for the sake of an archive of that article.

Rumors abound that the Peter, Paul, and Mary children’s hit Puff the Magic Dragon is all about drugs, particularly marijuana yet The band claims it is simply about losing the innocence of childhood. Leonard Lipton, a friend of Peter Yarrow, wrote a poem while he and Yarrow were students at Cornell. He had just turned 19, and was writing about the loss of childhood. It took him only a few minutes to type the poem once he arrived at Yarrow’s house (no one was home; so he helped himself to the typewriter) – and he forgot about it when he left the building shortly afterward:

Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea
And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called honah lee,
Little jackie paper loved that rascal puff,
And brought him strings and sealing wax and other fancy stuff. oh

Peter Yarrow wrote the song in 1958 before he joined the group. He wrote it after coming home and seeing a poem with words about the dragon. A few years later when this became a hit, Yarrow found Lipton and gave him half the songwriting credit. Lipton, who was a camp counselor when Yarrow found him, gets extensive royalties from this. Supposedly, Lipton based some of the words to his poem on an Ogden Nash poem called The Tale Of Custard The Dragon.

Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea
And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called honah lee,
Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea
And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called honah lee.

Together they would travel on a boat with billowed sail
Jackie kept a lookout perched on puff’s gigantic tail,
Noble kings and princes would bow whene’er they came,
Pirate ships would lower their flag when puff roared out his name. oh!

The original poem had a verse that did not make it into the song. In it, Puff found another child and played with him after returning. Neither Yarrow nor Lipton remember the verse in any detail, and the paper that was left in Yarrow’s typewriter in 1958 has since been lost.

Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea
And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called honah lee,
Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea
And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called honah lee.

A dragon lives forever but not so little boys
Painted wings and giant rings make way for other toys.
One grey night it happened, jackie paper came no more
And puff that mighty dragon, he ceased his fearless roar.

In an effort to be gender-neutral, Yarrow now sings the line “A dragon lives forever, but not so little boys” as “A dragon lives forever, but not so girls and boys.”

His head was bent in sorrow, green scales fell like rain,
Puff no longer went to play along the cherry lane.
Without his life-long friend, puff could not be brave,
So puff that mighty dragon sadly slipped into his cave. oh!

At the end of the song, Puff goes back into his cave, symbolizing the loss of childhood innocence.

Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea
And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called honah lee,
Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea
And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called honah lee.

We’ve heard a rumor that the title was the nickname for a gunship used in the Vietnam War and that the song was banned in Singapore and Hong Kong because they thought it contained drug references. Some of the alleged drug references in this include the little boy’s name, Jackie Paper, which stood for rolling papers, the “autumn mist,” which was marijuana smoke, and the “land of Hanah Lee,” which was the Hawaiian town of Hanalei, famous for its marijuana plants. Yarrow insists it had nothing to do with drugs and he didn’t even know about pot in 1958. The drug rumors were fueled by an article in Newsweek magazine about hidden drug messages in pop music.
In the 2000 movie Meet The Parents, there is a debate over the meaning of this.

The first concerts of Peter, Paul, and Mary (in 1961) consisted of a solo set by each of the men, followed by a dozen songs sung as a trio. From the beginning, “Puff” was part of the trio’s repertoire. In 1962, one of Lenny Lipton’s friends heard the song in a Peter, Paul, and Mary concert and told Lipton that he had heard his poem. Peter Yarrow eventually tracked Lipton down to tell him what he did with the poem — although the song was performed for over a year, it wasn’t copyrighted until it was recorded by Peter, Paul and Mary for their second album, Moving, in early 1963.

In order to show the stupidity of calling this a drug song, the band sometimes performs “The Star Spangled Banner” at concert and pauses periodically to explain how the previous lines could describe drugs or drug-induced hallucinations.