All posts by Woodstock Whisperer

Attended the Woodstock Music and Art Fair in 1969, became an educator for 35 years after graduation from college, and am retired now and often volunteer at Bethel Woods Center for the Arts which is on the site of that 1969 festival.

Paul Williams Crawdaddy

Paul Williams Crawdaddy!

Remembering and appreciating Paul
May 19, 1948 – March 27, 2013
Rock journalism’s founding father
Paul Williams Crawdaddy

Paul Williams printed the first edition of his rock magazine Crawdaddy! in a Brooklyn basement on January 30, 1966. In it he wrote: You are looking at the first issue of a magazine of rock and roll criticism. Crawdaddy! will feature neither pin-ups nor news-briefs; the specialty of this magazine is intelligent writing about pop music….

Before Crawdaddy! if someone wanted to read a serious essay about the changing rock music scene, sources were difficult to find. Publishers catered to teens with the still-popular magazines like Seventeen.

Paul Williams Crawdaddy

Paul Williams Crawdaddy!

Swarthmore College

Williams had begun writing rock and roll essays while a student at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania. He wrote about Bob Dylan, Jim Morrison, David Crosby, and Brian Wilson among others.

In 1968 he served as campaign manager for Timothy Leary’s run for the governorship of California. Williams , Williams and Leary joined John Lennon and Yoko Ono at their Toronto “Bed-in For Peace”.  It was during that performance art piece that the song “Come Together” was written.  According to the Williams site: Paul’s voice can be heard mixed into the chorus on the original recording of “Give Peace A Chance.” Similarly, on The Doors “Unknown Soldier” he can be heard locking and loading a rifle.” 

Also according to the same site, “…he wasn’t only at Woodstock, he rode to the festival from New York City in the Grateful Dead’s limousine [click for more >>> Williams site]

By 1968 two new rock magazines had appeared: Rolling Stone and CREEM.

Paul Williams Crawdaddy!

Parting ways

Williams and Crawdaddy! parted ways in 1968 and Crawdaddy! suspended publication in 1969, but returned as Crawdaddy in 1970.

In 1979 the magazine changed its title to Feature but after only three issues it ceased publication.

Paul Williams reclaimed and restored the exclamation-pointed title in 1993. In poor health after a 1995 head injury in a bike mishap, the magazine stopped publishing in 2003.

On June 28, 2009, various musicians held a benefit concert for him at the Red Devil Lounge in San Francisco.

Paul Williams Crawdaddy!

Death

Williams died on March 27, 2013, at his home in California at age 64 from complications related that accident which had lead to early onset dementia.

 NPR article on Williams’s death; NYT obituary.

Paul Williams Crawdaddy!

BST Jerry Hyman

BST Jerry Hyman

Happy birthday
Blood, Sweat and Tears
Woodstock alum
BST Jerry Hyman
Dr Jerry Hyman and his trombone
BST Jerry Hyman

Brooklyn born

Jerry Hyman was born on May 19, 1947 in Brooklyn.  I suppose some other people were, too. And I suppose some of them became musicians.  I’m pretty sure that none followed the same path, though.

BST Jerry Hyman

Blood, Sweat and Tears

Jerry Hyman joined Blood, Sweat and Tears after their first album, Child Is Father To the Man in time for their second album, the 1968 Blood, Sweat & Tears.

He played trombone for them from 1968–1970, a time period that enabled him to play at the  Woodstock Music and Art Fair.

As broad and deep (and questionable) as the internet is, Jerry Hyman’s story is a seemingly well-kept one. And that’s fine.

BST Jerry Hyman

Accordian

Luckily, there is a long interview with him that is also linked to from Dr Jerry Hyman’s page [Dr Jerry]. Yes, I said “Dr” and that’s another part of the story.

Hyman’s first musical instrument was the accordion.  In my 1950s grammar school I remember that classmates that played an instrument often played the accordion. I suppose it was viewed as a portable keyboard before there were portable keyboards.

BST Jerry Hyman

Trombone

In any case, Hyman moved to the trombone, another less-than-popular instrument but one he had a facility for. It was that instrument that led him to salsa bands and believe me there aren’t many more fun events to be at than a party with a salsa band.

Jerry became friends with Dick Halligan, another trombone player, and Halligan offerd Hyman a spot in a new band, Blood Sweat and Tears. Hyman wasn’t ready for that scene and declined. He didn’t pass on the second offer.

Life became a much busier one. Besides attending the famous Woodstock Music and Art Fair, there were Grammys, hit records, hit albums, and touring. ““We traveled 250-plus days a year doing one-nighters.”

BST Jerry Hyman

Redirection


From the outside such a life my seem like one happy glorious continuous party and likely one of those adjectives was sometimes true, but such a life takes its toll and if one has the strength it takes a strong will to walk away.

“I think I had had enough,” he says. “I had seen the experience for what it was. I had learned about, shall we say, the art of artifice. It was time for me to follow my heart and my nose. That was a grand experience because it enabled me in essence to get here.”

BST Jerry Hyman

 Dr. Jerry Hyman

After BS & T, Jerry worked in a Pennsylvania antique shop and later LA studios.

Then Bell’s palsy hit. Three times in 10 years. The disease prevented him from playing the trombone.

Luckily he hurt his back and went to a chiropractor. Luckily because as hesitant as he was at first to try methods outside the traditional medical school science, the treatment he received helped.

In 1983 he was graduated as a doctor of chiropractic from the Cleveland Chiropractic College-Los Angeles.

BST Jerry Hyman

Helping musicians

In the early 2000s he began working with musicians whose muscle pain issues he could relate to.

While attached to the life that LA offered, he and his wife Carol wanted something different. After searching they found New Hampshire in 2002, its coast, its art scene, and a way of life that appealed.

In  2017 to they moved to Brevard, North Carolina where he currently practices and Dr Jerry Hyman, chiropractor, helps heal.

For him, the Woodstock Music and Art Fair was a long time ago (“…shortly after the first Crimean War, yes?“) and royalties from his music don’t seem to know he moved.

As Jerry Hyman says, ‘Vive Bene, Spesso L’amore, Di Risata Molto’

BST Jerry Hyman

Roaring Lion Jimmy Soul

Roaring Lion Jimmy Soul

If You Want To Be Happy
Roaring Lion Jimmy Soul
Jimmy Soul (YouTube grab)
Roaring Lion Jimmy Soul

Blog side-effect

One of the interesting things about writing a blog that often involves hits of the mid-20th century is that a bit of research turns up facts that few if anyone knew at the time.

Roaring Lion Jimmy Soul

James Louis McClease

James Louis McCleese was born on August 24, 1942 in Weldon, NC. He was preaching by age 7 and performing as a teenager.

Frank Guida, the man who helped bring Gary US Bonds to fame, decided that Jimmy Soul, the name his congregation knew him as, could do as well.

He gave Jimmy the song “If You Want To Be Happy.” It had been a song Guida offered to Bonds, but Bonds declined.

On May 18, 1963 Jimmy Soul’s “If You Want To Be Happy” hit Billboard’s #1 spot.

Oh 1963! That pre-Beatle year. A year that began with “Telstar” at #1 (the Tornadoes were from the UK) and ended with “Dominique” (The Singing Nun was from Belgium) [Jeanine Deckers].

Roaring Lion Jimmy Soul

Soul Fame

It brought Soul fame.

The interesting piece that turns up is that Frank Guida’s song is a take-off (copy?) of a much earlier song: “Ugly Woman.”

Roaring Lion Jimmy Soul

 Rafael de Leon

Roaring Lion Jimmy Soul, Roaring Lion Jimmy Soul

 

Rafael de Leon (“Roaring Lion”) was born on Trinidad, the same place that Guida was stationed during an Army stint and absorbing a style of music  he came to love.

In 1934 de Leon released “Ugly Woman.” (Lion is also the singer of “Mary Ann.” (You KNOW this song…”All day all night Mary Ann, Down by the seaside sifting sand.”).

If you want to be happy and live a king’s life

Never make a pretty woman your wife

If you want to be happy and live a king’s life

Never make a pretty woman your wife

All you gotta do is just as I say

And then you would be jolly, merry and gay

That’s from a logical point of view

Always love a woman uglier than you.

Roaring Lion Jimmy Soul

Long and short

Roaring Lion had a long successful career and died in 1999 at the age of 91. (Best of Trinidad article)

Jimmy Soul’s song may have been like Roaring Lion’s, but Soul’s career and life was not.

After the success of “If You Want To Be Happy” Soul had no more. He eventually joined the Army. Soul died on June 15, 1988 at the age of 45. (Apparently, there is some confusion surrounding that date…see 45 cat Forum article.)

Surprisingly to me, the song has managed to stay afloat despite its irrational criticism of women. Perhaps our racism regarding “their” Calypso music and that it’s all fun for “them” persuades us that it’s a harmless song.

Roaring Lion Jimmy Soul