1. We know very little about this song and its musicians.
2. Likely personnel include: Richie Mayo (bass), Frank Perry
(guitar), Mel Barnet (tenor saxophone), Mike Marrow (drums), and Don Edmonds
(piano).
3. The band recorded “Crawlin’ (The Crawl)” on Varsity Music’s
Campus label in Philadelphia, 1957.
4. A few years later, in 1961, a band known as the Untouchables
re-recorded the song, bundled with “Benny the Beatnik,” on To-Da Music’s Rello
label. While the personnel aren’t fully known, the guitar player (Frank Perry)
for the Paramours appears to be part of this recording, and is given credit for
composing this second version. It ain’t no slouch, as they say.
5. The original version may have been responding to The
Stroll, which was both a teenage dance and an early rock ‘n’ roll song. In the
dance, a line of boys and a line of girls would face each other at opposite
sides of the room, akin to “reels” from other eras. One couple at a time, the
dance partners would meet in the middle and stroll down the two lines, dancing while
holding hands. The song, “The Stroll,” was first recorded by a Canadian band,
The Diamonds, and first released in December, 1957, on the Mercury label.
Ultimately, it’s a pop song, but owing to its rowdy saxophone, it reached #5 on
the R&B charts. The record, the recording, would enable the song and the
dance to occur simultaneously, a great triumph, perhaps, for connoisseurs of
coincidence.
6. Dictionaries, as we know them, tend to define “stroll” as
to “walk in a leisurely way” whereas “crawl” is typically cast as “dragging the
body along on hands and knees.” The former is pleasant whereas the latter is burdened
and grimy. (Ahem.) But that’s not all. The song is called “Crawlin’ (The Crawl),”
as if to insist upon some slangy distance, the parentheses, between the two
worlds. At the very least, “Crawlin’” is much less theoretical than “The Crawl”
and to some degree must represent the unscripted form of the experience.
7. As an aside, “paramour” is defined as “a lover,
especially a lover of a person who is married to someone else.”
8. Both versions of “Crawlin’ (The Crawl)” were re-released
in 2013, as part of an early rock revival on Jazzman Records in the United
Kingdom. Some Jazzman records emphasize the concept of burlesque, which their
choice of labels—Sleazy, Sin Street, Smutt, et cetera—amply confirms.
9. “Shakers?” you ask. “SHAKERS,”
I reply. Look into it.
10. In the end, here we have a suggestive song that’s
crawlin’, played by a group of lovers, recorded sixty years ago, with wailing
guitar and growling horn, and it’s no wonder that the band members have to
shout “yeah!” at intervals. In part, those shouts acknowledge the genesis of an
edgy translation, a code that instructs us to move.
Sources of Information:
YouTube comments
45cat entry for Untouchables
Wikipedia entry for “The Stroll”
45cat entry for The Diamonds
YouTube video for The Stroll
YouTube video for The Stroll
Free Dictionary entry for Paramour
Discogs entry for the Jazzman reissue
Discogs entry for the Jazzman reissue
4 comments:
You have left out a critical bit of information, and that is that you were born and raised in SHAKER HEIGHTS. That, one assumes, is where people are very high while shaking.
That, or it's where the well-heeled Shakers lived, up in Shaker Heights!
In the end, this must've had a subliminal effect -- agreed -- on my proclivities.
Subliminal.
Yeah, we had that in the joint.
When you had to take a tinkle, you could go use the subliminal.
----------------------------b.a.
The Stroll was very big.
Everybody Strolled.
It was acdance even guys could do.
Did you stroll?
Did Doug?
I can see Doug weltering, holding forth, ossifying, and cruising.
But strolling, man, I dunno.
Well, all right then.
If it's a dance that even guys could do (sic) then maybe I'll try the stroll.
[God damn it] implied.
Thanks for taking a look, etc.
----------------------------------------------------BA
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