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More on Boomers, Rock, and Walt Mossberg
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For those arriving late to this dispute: In an earlier item ("
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FDR: Father of Rock 'n' Roll"), Chatterbox wrote that "boomer math
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contradicts the boomer mythology that it was the baby boom that first absorbed
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rock 'n' roll into the mass culture." Chatterbox's proof was that the first
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rock 'n' roll records that reached a large, mainstream audience--Bill Haley and
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the Comets' "Rock Around the Clock" and Elvis Presley's "Heartbreak
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Hotel"--were released in 1955 and 1956. The oldest baby boomers in 1955 and
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1956 were 9 and 10, respectively--too young, Chatterbox reasoned, to be buying
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rock 'n' roll records.
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Walter S. Mossberg, who writes the Wall Street Journal's "Personal Technology" column,
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wrote in to dispute this last point. (Incidentally, the link to Mossberg's
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column that Chatterbox posted earlier doesn't work for people who don't
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subscribe to the Journal's online edition; Chatterbox has now
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substituted a link that will work for everyone, free of charge.) Mossberg
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explained that he was born in March 1947, and that he was buying rock
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'n' roll records at the age of 9, which of course would have been in 1956.
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Chatterbox replied that he could easily picture Mossberg (with whom Chatterbox
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formerly worked at the Journal 's Washington bureau) as a smart-alecky
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9-year-old but that he doubted many other members of Mossberg's cohort were
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similarly precocious. Chatterbox then invited 52- and 53-year-olds to enlighten
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Slate's " Fray" as to whether,
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like Mossberg, they were buying rock 'n' roll records at the age of
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nine.
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Fray postings immediately started pouring in from people who said that yes,
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they are about Mossberg's age, and yes, they were buying rock 'n' roll records
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starting in the mid-1950s. So Chatterbox will now yield on this point--while
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noting this doesn't really undermine Chatterbox's larger point that FDR is an
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unacknowledged founding father of rock 'n' roll. (For the details, see the
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first item.) Baby boomers were part of the record-buying public that
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made rock 'n' roll an art form for the masses (as opposed to one for blacks and
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a few white hipsters) in the mid-1950s. Chatterbox continues to doubt, however,
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that boomers represented a majority of that public until the 1960s.
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Please note the important distinction between listening to rock 'n'
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roll music (Chatterbox, born in 1958, was listening to the Beatles well
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before he was 9) and buying rock 'n' roll records (Chatterbox didn't buy
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his first record--LP or single--until long after the Beatles' 1970 breakup).
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Several Fraygrants (click here and
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here
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for examples) missed this distinction. Here's Fraygrant Sharon
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Saunders:
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I plugged (!) the family radio into the wall by my bed, turned it low and
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listened past my bedtime to the real thing, LaVerne Baker, Little Richard, the
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Cadillacs, the Coasters--just about every black group, every doo-wop group
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around, plus Dion and the Belmonts (fellow Bronxites). Not only did we listen
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to it, but us little kids actually stood under the lamppost and sang a
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cappella.
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But, except in the highly attenuated sense that Saunders was boosting the
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ratings of radio stations that were playing LaVerne Baker and Little Richard
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and the Cadillacs and the Coasters, she wasn't really putting money into these
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groups' pockets (or, as was more often the case, these groups' record labels'
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pockets)--as she would have been doing had she bought their records
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after hearing them on the radio.
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That said, it must be conceded that several boomer Fraygrants did go
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out and buy the records well before their teen years. (Click here and
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here
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and here for a
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few examples.) "When 45s were king, pre-teens with limited finances were buying
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them by the crateful," explains Duffy Hawes.
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Here's Jill Tso:
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I, too, was born in 1947 and bought rock 'n' roll records when I was in
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the fourth grade. One of the first 45s I purchased was Jerry Lee Lewis' "Great
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Balls of Fire." My father had purchased a custom hi-fi and I played the 45 so
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loud and danced all afternoon. When he came home and heard the lyrics, he broke
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the record in two. I was crushed and resented him for many years. Last year, I
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finally realized why he thought "Great Balls of Fire" was terrible for his
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grade-school-aged daughter to be listening to. I had never associated the title
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and lyrics to the vernacular use of the word "balls." Duh!
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Indeed, one boomer Fraygrant--Sharon
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Smith--goes so far as to recall that she owned her very own copy of "Rock
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Around the Clock" (though she's a little vague about whether she purchased it
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when she was 9 or 11 years of age):
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I was born in October 1946, five months before Mossberg, and grew up in
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San Francisco. On the last day of sixth grade in June of 1958, Miss Barnett
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(one of the greatest teachers the world has seen) let us have a party. She
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brought a record player, we brought our 45s (my contribution was "Rock Around
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the Clock"), and two dozen 11- and 12-year-olds danced for two hours! How had
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we learned? A year of watching American Bandstand every day after school
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and practicing in front of the TV.
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Chatterbox will give the final word to Mossberg, who has shown himself to be
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a gracious victor in this argument:
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Everybody, including me, concedes that the older non-boomer teens played
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some role in the adoption of early rock, even though ultimately these
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kids didn't get it and we boomers did. And you're correct that boomer
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propaganda never allows for this possibility. Your only mistake was totally
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writing off the mystical power of 9-year-old boomers in the '50s. But how were
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you to know? Born in 1958! You can't even remember black-and-white TV or those
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first transistor radios that one of the
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Fray
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people
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mentioned [ahem, actually, Chatterbox can remember
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these things, but that's a small point] ...
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I honestly think this 9-to-12-year-old age group's discovery of rock and
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roll, against the wishes of our parents, cemented into us older boomers two
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lessons that were behind much of what happened in the '60s:
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Question authority
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Age matters
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Because of rock, we had a lot in common with each other that neither our
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parents nor our older siblings or older friends shared. It was the start of the
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feeling, right or wrong, of generational bonding, and of boomer exceptionalism,
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which Gen-Xers so despise ... I can still vividly remember the day I went to
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buy my first 45 rpm record, using my own funds. And I wanted something like
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"Maybelline" by Chuck Berry or maybe "Wake Up Little Susie" by the Everly
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Brothers. But my father forced me to buy a lame, horrible pop tune
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called "Melodie D'Amour
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" by the Mills Brothers or the Ames
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Brothers or some lame brothers. I never let him do that again, and I never
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forgot that lesson about the way authority figures can screw you.
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(Interestingly, my dad and I later developed a great relationship, and he swore
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he couldn't remember the incident. But it was etched in my mind.)
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