The group that first epitomized the notion of
“blue-eyed soul,” The Rascals,
achieved their third #1 Billboard pop chart hit with their socially conscious
anthem, “People Got to be Free,” in August 1968. But just when the New Jersey
quartet had reached its zenith, changing musical tastes and internal tensions
led to a decline in popularity so precipitous that they never had another Top
20 hit.
A prior post of mine considered the group during the brief Broadway run of their
concert-career review, Once Upon a Dream.
But “People Got to be Free” represented a particularly fascinating moment both
for the band and the popular music scene in that tumultuous year.
In January 1968, the Tet offensive heightened concerns that the Vietnam War was a futile exercise in
bloodletting. The assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F.
Kennedy that spring blighted hopes for a less racially divisive, more
egalitarian society. Later in August, when Chicago police cracked down on
protesters at the Democratic Convention, it confirmed radicals in their worries
about the government’s incipient authoritarianism (and conservative concerns
that the center could not hold).
Just
how supercharged the atmosphere was that month can be seen in another hit
released then, the Rolling Stones’ “Street Fighting Man.” Deejays (and many listeners)
missed the handwringing when Mick Jagger sang, "But what can a poor boy
do, 'cept sing in a rock and roll band." Instead, they focused on a lyric
that appeared to promise an army of clenched fists: “the time is right for
fighting in the street."
In
contrast, The Rascals (now a long way from their initial name, The Young
Rascals) yielded a record whose buoyant production matched its exultant lyric. It
was almost like a protest record without the anger. Felix Cavaliere’s vocal
exuded optimism from the first syllable, promising that the instinct for
freedom was both universal (“all the world over”) and, similar to what an
American founding document declared, self-evident (“it’s easy to see”).
Moreover, Cavaliere, vocalist Eddie Brigati, guitarist Gene Cornish and drummer
Dino Danelli, always eager to expand their aural palette, overlaid everything
with a brassy horn section. When they promised in the song’s closing spoken
words, then, that “the train of freedom” was “about to 'rrive any minute, now,”
triumph—both for the progress of freedom and the group—seemed unstoppable.
Atlantic
Records execs begged to disagree. "'You can't put this record out,"'
Cornish remembered them saying, according to an essay on the Jersey boys by Joe Russo and Kevin Phinney that was included on CD retrospectives years later.
"'Why not?' 'Because you're not black. You are free.' We said, 'Who's
talking about just being black? We're talking about freedom of speech, artistic
freedom, freedom of religion. People got to be free."'
The
group may have believed in riding “the train of freedom,” but more important
for their creative purposes, they were still riding the train of success from hits such as "Good Lovin'," "Groovin," "How Can I Be Sure," and "It's a Beautiful Morning." The
record company yielded. "People Got to Be Free" went on to spend five
weeks at #1 on the U.S. charts, eventually being covered by Dionne Warwick,
Johnny Johnson and the Band Wagon, Martha Reeves and the Vandellas, and Keb’ Mo.
The Rascals were at the zenith of a cultural moment. The moment wouldn’t last. It
never does.
To
their great credit, the group announced it would not appear in any concerts
unless half the bill consisted of blacks. It was a noble stand in a rock ‘n’
roll industry where audience tastes would soon calcify along racial lines (and,
indeed, it probably cost the quartet some lucrative dates in the South).
More
worrisome, the group began to take itself a mite too seriously, to Make
Statements. They weren’t just content to sing one song about freedom, but to
follow it up with an entire album, Freedom
Suite. Their new, jazzier compositions stretched the envelope of the tight,
three-minute song format in which they excelled. For many fans, tiring of both
the preacher and the greater attention demanded of their eardrums, the envelope
broke.
In
one sense, the year before, when they jettisoned both their matching Edwardian
jackets and the “young” from their name, the Rascals had recognized the dangers
ahead. “Flying too high can confuse me,” Brigati had cautioned his lover in the
passionate lament, “How Can I Be Sure.”
"We were going so high up, we lost control,”
recalled a bitter Cavaliere nearly 40 years later in an interview with Gary James for the Web site Classic Bands. “Everything was happening
too quickly. The money. The parties. The women. The kids screaming. The
constant pressure to produce. Orgies in the back seat. It was sickening. I was
very disillusioned."
The rumors that songwriting partners Cavaliere and
Brigati were squabbling turned out to be true. The hits petered out, and by
1971 so were Brigati and Cornish. The following year, the group issued its last
album under that name.
Marvin Gaye’s What’s
Going On, released at the same time that the Rascals were crumbling, was,
in effect, the last echo of the great decade for protest music. Their dream of
a shared musical culture was dying, along with the lack of self-consciousness
that rich performers could bring to commenting on dire social conditions no
longer closely within their ken.
But the influence of The Rascals didn’t die. The “blue-eyed
soul” they pioneered would be taken up
in the years ahead by the likes of Hall and Oates, Rare Earth, Tower of Power, the
Average White Band, Steely Dan, Boz Scaggs,
and Michael McDonald. Moreover, their success in blending motley influences,
black and white, impressed itself on the man who would work tirelessly to
reunite them 40 years later, Steve Van Zandt, as well as the latter’s “Boss,”
Bruce Springsteen.
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