In Memory Of Philip Smart: 1953–2014

I’m back from the funeral service and celebratory repast for Philip Smart, engineer and producer extraordinaire. What an incredible day (and evening) this was. There was no room inside the funeral home for all the people who wanted to be there. Bitter enemies and lifelong friends came together in harmony to celebrate the life of the late, indisputably great Philip Smart. Some came from Yard, some came from abroad. People drove, took the bus, took the train, walked, and did whatever they had to do, in order to pay their respects to Philip and his amazing family. It seemed as though everybody who’d ever booked time at HC&F, Philip’s studio, or played or sung on a session there, was in attendance. I saw people I haven’t seen in decades.

For those of you not familiar with reggae, as an engineer Philip Smart was a force in our field on a par with Bruce Swedien or Rudy Van Gelder. But Philip’s talent as an engineer and producer, great as it was, was dwarfed by the size of his heart. I cannot think of any figure in the music industry that was more beloved and respected by his peers. Philip treated every person he worked with exactly the same way; with dignity, respect, and humor, whether it was their first time in a recording studio or whether they were a platinum-selling artist. He had a deep and abiding love for all people, as well as great insight into character.

I worked with Philip on hundreds of sessions. I never saw him have a bad day, I never saw him give less than his best, and I never got the feeling that he wanted to be anywhere else, even though, like most engineers, he worked incredibly long hours for days at a time. He exemplified the maxim “Do what you love and you’ll never work a day in your life.”

Philip was very plainspoken, but he had a gift for telling people exactly what they needed to hear while saying it in a way that made them listen. He could communicate with everybody, from the rawest street rapper or DJ to the haughtiest record company suit. They all listened, and the smart ones learned.

Not surprisingly for such a great engineer, Philip was a great listener in conversation as well. Whenever you spoke to Philip, you had his attention, even if he was doing two or three other things at once, as he often was. I remember complaining to him one day about how unpleasant it was to record with the guitar plugged into a direct box. He asked me why, and I explained that the instrument responded differently to your touch when the first thing the signal encountered was a tube. Philip looked at me thoughtfully for a minute and said, “Yes, that makes sense. No one ever told me that before. I don’t play guitar myself so it isn’t something I would notice as a listener.”

The next time I walked into the studio, Philip proudly pointed to a tube preamp in his rack I hadn’t seen before. “Plug into this and tell me what you think.” I plugged the guitar into the preamp, Philip got levels in less time than it takes to write this, and he brought the guitar up in the monitors. We both grinned. It sounded wonderful. Philip said, “You really showed me something the other day. I thought about what you said about tubes and I remembered how we used them at Tubby’s. So I went out and bought this. It really makes a difference. Thanks.” That was Philip: as much as he had done, and as great as he was, he was always eager to learn and expand his palette. We used that preamp to record my guitar from then on.

Philip helped countless people finish their projects, cope with demands for last-minute remixes, and deal with emergencies of every description. If there was any way he could help you, he would, whether it meant staying a bit later to burn another CD, getting another client to move a session back an hour so you could squeeze a quick mix out of him, or even advising you about a problem you were having at another studio.

Philip’s love and understanding of people helped him get the most out of them in the studio. He had a real knack for coaching the inexperienced, or less than great, into giving a performance that was well beyond what you thought their limits were on hearing them for the first time. Philip always knew what to say to a struggling performer, and when. And, of course, once he’d gotten the best out of them, he would use his masterful engineering skills to make it sound even better. He had an eye for spotting potential in people and was great at bringing that potential to fulfillment.

If you worked in his studio as a musician or a singer, Philip looked out for you. He’d call you and say, “I have a new guy here who needs a guitar part. Can you come in tonight? I’ll make sure I talk with him about the business first so you don’t waste your time.” Then he’d call back later and say, “It’s OK, I talked to him. You can come in any time after 8 tonight, just tell me when you can get here.” If you got a call from someone you didn’t know, you could call Philip and find out who they were and how legitimate they were.

Philip was a great guy to call if you needed a musician or a singer. You’d explain to him what you were looking for and he’d know who was available and how well they were likely to do in any given situation. Philip hooked people up with gigs that ended up lasting for years. Of course he never took a dime for any of this. If you worked with Philip, permanent access to his knowledge and wisdom came as a package deal. If he couldn’t talk to you at any given moment, you’d get a call back within a few hours with an answer.

If you were a female, you were safe at HC&F, no matter what hour of the day or night you were there, or who was in the studio with you. Philip had tremendous respect for women and didn’t allow any foolishness on his premises.

Philip didn’t have any patience with artists or producers who didn’t want to pay either. Once I got stiffed by an artist for whom I’d done a whole album at HC&F. When he found out, Philip got as angry as I’ve ever seen him get. Anger in this case meant that his face flushed and he raised his voice somewhat, but he was emphatically not pleased.

“Naah mon! What him a deal wid? That’s not happening. Not in my studio. There’s a label and a budget here. I’m calling his record company right now. How much him owe you?” I told him. Philip got the A&R man for the project on the phone almost immediately, and explained what had happened. He told the A&R man the price the artist had agreed to pay me per song and vouched for how many songs he had recorded with me playing guitar on them. Philip had the track sheets and read them right off to him over the phone. Of course, Philip’s word was all the documentation required. I had a check for the full amount by FedEx the next day. I won’t have to explain to many of you how rare it is for an engineer to intervene on behalf of a musician with the record company. But that was Philip. He lived what he believed.

So many people called Philip uncle, because if you knew him, that’s how he treated you: like a family member. Doing a session at HC&F was like visiting your favorite relative, no matter how tough or clueless the client, Philip made it fun and we always laughed. On the way to the service, I kept remembering sessions I had done; they played through my mind like a sports highlight reel, without one bad memory. No one who worked with Philip Smart will ever forget him. RIP Philip. It was an honor to have known you.

 

Why Do You Have So Many Guitars? Part II

This post originally appeared on my MySpace page, now dormant. I have slightly edited it for inclusion here.

Instrument Make and Model: Klira Bass Guitar

Color/Finish: Brown Sunburst

Arrival Date: 1968

Departure Date: 1972

Price Paid: $80

The Klira was my first electric instrument, and the first instrument I bought with my own money (not counting the harmonica I used my mother’s Green Stamps to buy a few years earlier). My best friend at the time, Marc Lydiard, had a rock band that rehearsed up the street, and their bass player was leaving because he was graduating high school. Marc offered me the job, but I needed an instrument! I worked a paper route for two months to get the money to buy a bass and an amplifier. It was the only time in my life I have voluntarily risen before 6 a.m. Of course the band broke up before I could join it, but we started another one, Synopsis, that played Doors and Vanilla Fudge songs. Depending on the song, I switched off between the Klira bass and the Harmony guitar now resplendent in its psychedelic model-paint finish. (See the next installment for more about this instrument, coming soon to this space!)

I played both instruments through a Gibson Thor bass amplifier, a justly obscure model that weighed a ton. Somewhere I also acquired a Goya fuzzbox with a treble boost, which I mostly used with the guitar. (It was the sixties, and psychedelia was very popular in West Simsbury, so occasionally I plugged the Klira into it too. Its microphonic pickups screamed like a pigeon caught in a push mower, and my bandmates quickly convinced me that it was a more appropriate effect for guitar.) I can’t remember what it sounded like but it must have been nightmarish.

Synopsis only played one gig, a benefit for the American Indians, and it was a complete disaster. Not only did I want to actually play in public and become a rock star, I desperately wanted to impress Alison Sarvis (a cool hippie girl in my class who helped organize the benefit), with the fact that I was in a band. Alison was a tall, craggily pretty brunette in jeans and turquoise jewelry who swore, made out with boys, and did drugs. She was brighter than she let on, although she did badly in school.

For some reason Alison was one of the few people my age who did not automatically write me off as a hopeless nerd. I think she liked my sincerity, as well as the fact that I was too timid to be as obnoxious as most of the males my age were. Her friendliness, as female friendliness so often does, planted the seeds of yearning for a closer affiliation, although I had no real clue as to what such an affiliation would entail, or how to go about cultivating it.

I did once walk several miles to her house to visit her during vacation. Alison’s mother, Mrs. Dolby, and brothers were much wilder than she was. (The idea that she had a different name from her brothers and mother was hard enough to digest. No one my parents knew had ever been divorced.) The brothers were really half-brothers, products of an earlier marriage. Neither marriage had lasted. Although I was familiar with the concept of half-brothers from my extensive study of English history, I had never actually met any. Nor had I ever met a family where people with different last names lived under the same roof.

Every time Mike Dolby, the oldest one, got out of jail he would celebrate by getting blitzed at the same club, get busted for crashing into things or cars in the parking lot, and go back to jail. He did this for years and years, at the same nightspot in Tariffville. It changed names several times, and yet every time I went back to Connecticut and read the Simsbury news in the Hartford Courant, it seemed that there was an item about Mike Dolby being arrested in the parking lot for drunken driving. It was a family tradition.

When I went to visit Alison, her mother gave me a warm, somewhat offhand welcome, despite the fact I had showed up without warning. I was invited to stay for lunch. While watching Mrs. Dolby prepare the meal, I noticed that she kept the butter in a kitchen cabinet instead of the refrigerator. Rather shocked, I asked her why and she pointed out that if the butter was left out of the refrigerator, it would stay soft and could be spread immediately on the white bread they toasted in copious quantities. The traditional New England belief in delayed gratification was not big in the Dolby household.

I wasn’t sure whether the thousands of microbes that had to be growing on the butter or the lack of nutrition in the white bread they proudly served me was more unsettling. (We ate only Pepperidge Farm Whole Wheat because it was more nutritious. My mother would have cut off her hand before opening a loaf of Wonder Bread.) It was clear that not everyone lived as we did. It didn’t stop me eating the toast, though. I rationalized that the intense heat probably killed whatever germs were waiting to leap off the bread and give me bubonic plague. Besides, I was a teenager, I was hungry, and it tasted good.

In the normal course of events, I would never have dared to speak to Alison, except that we had both worked on the junior high school’s underground newspaper together. This daring and revolutionary journalistic endeavor consisted of two to four mimeographed pages surreptitiously printed on the school machine and then stapled together by hand. Marc, being obsessed with the Zen of cool and sharing a fondness for illegal behavior and substances with Alison, already knew her and dragged me along, as he tried to do with everything, good or bad, that he did.

I knew my parents, who were politically very active, wouldn’t mind if I got busted for writing something. I could tell them I was trying to emulate Tom Paine. It also seemed like something at the cutting edge of cool that I might actually be able to do. (My brown shoes with laces, white socks, loose pants, and sober shirts, combined with my terror of alcohol, drugs, and petty mischief otherwise condemned me to terminal unhipness.)

I never got around to committing any illegal acts, but I did write articles for the paper. As I remember it, the primary topics were the Vietnam war (we were, of course, opposed), cool bands (all the usual psychedelic suspects), feminism (Karin Norton’s contribution: Karin was another beautiful brunette who became a friend later, and was way ahead of just about everyone I knew, including me, on this issue), and the right for students to smoke in school. Unfortunately (or not), I don’t have any examples of my first endeavor into journalism. I can’t even remember the name of the paper.

I do remember one of Karin’s opening sentences in one of her feminist diatribes: “One thing that really pisses me off…” I was amazed that she would say something this crude in print. Of course, we were an underground newspaper, but still, this was not the sort of reasoned philosophical argument I was used to seeing. Nobody ever swore (meaning saying “damn”) in my house, except when discussing Richard Nixon. I was appalled, but intrigued, at Karin’s courage and audacity. And her writing was direct, well reasoned, and forthright. Between Karin, Alison, and Marc, I was beginning to realize that there were other ways of doing things than those I had been brought up to believe in.

Which brings me back to the story. Prior to the gig, I had entertained triumphant fantasies of our rapturous reception, instant status among my peers, an end to the sneers and taunts of upperclassmen, and the wonder and amazement in Alison’s eyes as she witnessed my emergence as a Superman of rock from the phone booth of mundane high school existence. Maybe she would want to go steady!

It was the first time that the music business would disappoint me, but far from the last. To be polite about it, we were awful. The other guys in the band, who were supposedly more experienced than I was, froze with nervousness when confronted by a jury of their peers. Guitarist Greg Allen, Marc’s good friend who had moved away the year before, came all the way back from Newtown just to sit in on our big psychedelic version of “Shotgun,” the climax of our set. Marc had assured me that Greg was the best guitarist he had ever seen, and that with him aboard, this song could not fail, no matter what happened before it.

Greg tried his best. He riffed madly and at length, to absolutely no response. Then I took a bass solo. I summoned every ounce of my feelings for Alison—my muse, my bad, but not too bad, dream girl—and attempted to channel them, to turn them into glowing lightning bolts of devotion aimed directly at her heart and soul. This, after all,w as what music was for: the declaration of undying love to the object of your devotion, for the world to hear. Wasn’t it? Few are more romantic than those who know nothing of romance.

Unfortunately, I played an F when I meant to play an E, and panicked. My fingers wandered aimlessly around the fretboard. I felt nauseous, like the stage of the Eno Memorial Hall had opened into an elevator shaft gaping at my feet. I couldn’t figure out how to stop, but I couldn’t think of anything coherent to play either. The song fell as flat as if it had been… shotgunned. Almost everybody, including  Alison, went outside while we were playing and smoked cigarettes. Nobody clapped. Nobody.

About the only way the gig could have gone worse was if we had closed the show. The other band, Burnt Suite, came on after us and absolutely killed. Everybody came running back in as soon as they started playing their awesome Creedence Clearwater Revival covers. Even as competitive as I was, I had to admit that they sounded great and I thoroughly enjoyed their set. As a result of the gig, Alison ended up dating Billy Florian, their lead guitarist. The resulting trauma nearly ended my musical career before it started.

Synopsis rehearsed for a while longer and played once more, at a private party at Marc’s house that his older brother gave while his mom was away. We had gotten better. And this time we actually got eight bucks each, my first professional gig. But since our audience consisted of ten or fifteen couples under blankets and cushions making out with each other under the glow of a couple of black lights, our performance was met with the same indifference that we had endured at the Eno. It was shortly after this that we gave up.

After Synopsis broke up, I decided I was more interested in the guitar than the bass, and stopped playing it. My junior year in prep school, I auditioned for a group in town named Granite that was already up and running. Despite initially forgetting to plug my amp in, and enduring five minutes of terror until somebody else figured out what the problem was, I played well and got the gig. Soon we were playing church functions, school dances, and battles of the bands, and getting paid for it. I was a working musician at the age of sixteen.

Granite’s bass player, Kim Goldich, was unlike anyone I had ever met. One of the few Jews in an overwhelmingly WASPy world and from a family that was even more left wing than mine. Kim was ballsy, outspoken, passionate, fiercely dedicated to music, and brilliant with tools of all kinds. (He built an entire PA system from scratch for one of our later bands.)

He and I really hit it off at the first rehearsal, and I invited him over to visit the next weekend. He brought with him “Chuck Berry’s Golden Decade,” a two-album set of nonstop classics, most of which I had never heard. By the end of the day, we were friends for life.

Since I really wasn’t interested in the bass any more, I ended up giving the Klira to Kim,who was unhappy with his current instrument, a Vox teardrop bass with a built-in fuzztone and a tuning oscillator. Unable to afford a new bass, in typical Kim fashion he decided he would build his own in spite of the fact that he knew nothing about how to do it. The Klira died a noble death as he disassembled it for parts, many of which resurfaced on his new instrument, which was more functional than it had any right to be. Although he did play his creation for a while, eventually he bought a Fender bass like everyone else did and life went on.

Alison eventually went out to the Southwest to work with Native American tribes on reservations. Kim and I went to college and continued to play in bands together. Shortly thereafter I lost touch with everybody else I’d grown up with in West Simsbury, including Marc Lydiard, except my cousins. (Karin Norton would reappear briefly in my life at a later date.)

Why Do You Have So Many Guitars? Introduction and Part I

This essay, the first of a LONG series, was first published on my MySpace site, in a slightly different form. I will be reprinting them here as time permits.

Inspired by Rebecca Angler

Introduction

Every so often, someone asks me how many guitars I own. Usually, I answer with some sort of flippant response, like “not nearly enough.” Occasionally, I devote a bit more thought to the question, and try to remember how many guitars I actually have. This often takes a minute or even longer, much to the chagrin of the questioner, who was hoping to hear a simple answer like “five” or “ten” within a couple of seconds of asking the question. There are, at any given moment, quite a few guitars scattered around my apartment in various bags and cases. And I never remember what number I come up with. I always have to count them up in my head before I can respond.

A while ago, Rebecca Angler, a young woman who works in the same office I do, asked me this question as we were getting into the elevator together. Rebecca is very earnest and focused. And something about the way she asked it made me sorry I had ever been glib about it. She really wanted to know. For some reason, it felt like the first time anyone had ever asked me the question.

So I thought I would dash off a little essay listing all my guitars and what musical contexts I used them in. I figured it would take an hour or two to write. I’d send it to her. And Rebecca would know more than she ever wanted to about guitars. Problem solved.

But it turned out not to be that simple. I’ve been playing the guitar, or stringed instruments related to the guitar, since 1967. That was forty-seven years ago, and I have been playing music since 1963. That’s fifty-one years. I’ve been serious about it ever since I started. And like most musicians who’ve been playing that long, I’ve had a lot of instruments go through my hands. Like people, some leave no lasting impression, some are repellent, and some become friends for life.

As I started to write, I realized that each instrument was important to me. In some cases it’s because I aspired to own it and was finally able to achieve my goal. Sometimes it’s because one of my heroes plays a similar model. In other cases, it’s because I’ve used the instrument on recordings I’m proud of, or while playing with musicians I admire. Some instruments just ask me to take them home, at a time when I can afford to do so. And some instruments are like old girlfriends that didn’t work out, for whatever reason.

I also realized that, in writing about my instruments, I am writing a kind of autobiography, at least of my life as a working musician. Each instrument came to me at a certain point in my life, and I acquired them for reasons that seemed important at the time. And those that I no longer own left for compelling reasons as well.

Another part of the story is the people who have worked on, or modified my instruments, including me. Guitarists often customize their instruments, for sonic reasons, cosmetic reasons, or both, and I am no exception. I have also been fortunate enough to have some of the finest guitar repairmen work on my instruments, and I firmly believe that something intangible has been transmitted into the instruments as a result.

Instruments, though non-verbal, have their own stories. A guitar is made from living things, and I believe that on some level it still remembers. I also think that some of myself has been transmitted into the instruments too, especially the ones I’ve played the most. Certainly I’ve been sweating into some of them for years. As you may have guessed, I also believe in spirits and things that we cannot see or understand.

(Not all musicians share these views about instruments. My friend Val Douglas, for example, one of the deepest musicians who ever lived, disagrees with me completely.) Part of the reason that I feel this way is because of my experiences with music and my instruments. I don’t expect you to agree with me; I only ask you to listen.

I realize that I should include some technical notes for my readers who are not musicians. Perhaps I should begin by saying that guitarists (particularly electric guitarists) tend to feel about their instruments the way car nuts feel about cars. Certain makes and models (for example, Fender Stratocasters and Telecasters and Gibson Les Pauls and 335s) are seen as prestigious. Others, like the Ibanez Iceman or the Peavey T-60, are less fashionable, but have their loyal adherents. And some of the greatest guitarists take perverse delight in going against perceived wisdom by squeezing the most out of cheap and/or wacky brands (David Lindley, Buddy Miller, and Ry Cooder are famous examples).

The type of instrument a guitarist plays is often a personal statement in the same way that buying a car is a personal statement. Many of the early electric guitar designs were, in fact, inspired by car designs, and some of the original designers had prior experience in the auto industry. A guitarist sporting a pink instrument with custom inlay is making a statement, just as the car nut driving a silver 2006 Lexus with a red leather interior is saying something. The functionality of the instrument can be incidental.

Also, like car nuts, guitar players like to customize their instruments. This can be for reasons of appearance, functionality (sound and playability), or both. Over the last thirty years, an entire industry has emerged, supplying guitarists with replacement parts and accessories purporting to improve the sound or functionality of the instrument. I am no exception, having spent hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars on parts and modifications in the quest for better sound. (These  statements are all also applicable to guitar amplifiers, the other half of the electric guitar, but that is another essay.)

Popular modifications include changing the pickups (which are essentially specialized microphones attached to the guitar that “pick up” the sound of the instrument and send it on its way to the amplifier) and modifying the guitar’s wiring to get more sounds out of it. Also, some parts of the guitar, like the tuning keys and the frets (the wires you see on the neck of the guitar), are subject to wear and need to be replaced periodically.

Like many pop culture objects these days, guitars are also collectible. As such, they are worth more to the collector if they have all their original parts. The fact that many of the most valuable ones were put together with a screwdriver on an assembly line by factory workers, rather than by master craftsmen performing arcane rituals handed down from their ancestors on priceless hardwoods, seems to make little difference. And the fact that in many cases improved versions of the original parts are available is equally irrelevant.

I am lucky enough to own four of these collectible instruments. As I tell people who compliment me on having them, “It’s no mystery; old guitarists have old guitars!” I bought all of them when they were simply used guitars, not pricey collectibles, And I have devalued all of them significantly by trying to make them sound better and/or more playable. My children will probably never forgive me for trashing their
inheritance.

So, on to the guitars! The story of each instrument is prefaced by a heading indicating the make and model, the color, the year it came into my life, the year it left if it went elsewhere, and how much I paid for it. I either can’t remember or am too embarrassed to admit how much I’ve spent on maintenance and modifications, so don’t ask me. If I could remember, I wouldn’t tell. Here’s the first story:

Instrument Make and Model: Homemade Bass Guitar

Color/Finish: Red

Arrival Date: 1967

Departure Date: 1967

Price Paid: $0

Although I had a middle-class upbringing in rural Connecticut, like many musicians from less privileged backgrounds, I made my own instrument from available materials before I obtained one of commercial manufacturer. My father, an insurance company worker, was also an excellent amateur carpenter, During the weekends, he built things: altars, benches, chairs, tree houses, bookshelves, toys. He never charged anyone for them; I doubt that it occurred to him that he could. They were made for the church, his children, or the household. He was always drawing plans, going to the lumberyard and the hardware store, and measuring, sawing, drilling, staining, and assembling. I spent a lot of my childhood watching him work and accompanying him on his trips.

I had watched him build things ever since I could remember. What he did seemed miraculous to me. He never volunteered much information about what he was doing, but was always willing to answer my questions. When he judged I was old enough, he bought me a small red toolbox along with a hammer, a hand drill, a couple of screwdrivers, and a small saw. Then he patiently taught me how to use them, and installed a small vise next to his large one on his work bench (which he had also built himself) so we could work side by side.

If my parents were home, there was music on in the house, mostly classical and easy listening, with a smattering of jazz on the weekends. No rock and roll! My mother said it was bad music played by worse musicians. My father kept relatively quiet about it, but didn’t care for it much either.

The transistor radios my brother and I received for Christmas in 1964 changed all that. Finally we had a tiny listening environment we could program ourselves. We eventually found our way around the dial to the local top 40 radio station, WDRC, 1360 AM “Big D.” The British Invasion was in full swing and the natives, led by Motown, the Young Rascals, and a thousand garage bands, fought the invaders furiously for chart supremacy. It was a wonderful time to discover popular music. I thrilled to the chart countdown every week, rooting for my favorites, groaning when they didn’t reach number one or were displaced by something corny. Marvelous new records, sneaking into my otherwise hermetically sealed universe bubble through the three-inch speaker or, after bedtime, the tiny one-ear headphone, suggested possibilities far beyond the scope of my weekly trips to the Simsbury Public Library.

“He sounds like he’s going to the bathroom,” my mother commented when she overheard me, entranced, listening to Wilson Pickett scream and grunt his way through “Land Of 1000 Dances” while I sat on the flagstones set into the sparse Connecticut grass.

I had no rejoinder. What could I say to her? This wasn’t singing like the Metropolitan Opera my parents listened to religiously. Or like the singing in the Episcopal Church that made it possible for me to live through the services we attended every Sunday. It wasn’t even like the Louis Armstrong and Fats Waller records my parents played on Friday nights and Saturday mornings, although it was closer. For Wilson Pickett, as he insisted proudly, “Ninety-Nine And A Half Won’t Do!” For a kid who couldn’t even pick out his own clothes without careful supervison and redirection, the independence and total lack of inhibition Wilson Pickett’s music exuded was hard for me to process consciously. But I loved him and admired him tremendously in a way I did not dare to admit to a living soul.

After two years of being glued to the radio, I could stand it no longer. Young people all over the world were making music and it was aimed at other young people, not designed to please or placate parents. Kids at school were bringing in records to show off. Some were even buying instruments and starting bands. Rock groups were a hot topic of discussion in the cafeteria before school and at lunchtime. Kids debated their merits with a passion formerly reserved for sports teams. I wasn’t much of an athlete but I could read liner notes, remember song titles and band names, and listen to the radio with the best of them.

Every weekend when I went into downtown Simsbury with my father, the record bins at Hall’s Furniture, Hoffman’s Pharmacy, and Acme Department Store were full of new releases. The cover designs, the outfits the groups wore, the song titles, grew wilder and wilder. Rock bands started turning up on TV variety shows. My mother was horrified by most of them but at least she allowed me to watch.

I started asking for records as presents at Christmas or my birthday. The first one I received was “Beach Boys Today,” a fine record but not quite what I had in mind. My grandmother used to visit us regularly and was fond of bringing presents for my brother and I. Much to my surprise, she happily sought out the Dave Clark Five’s “Over And Over” (which fascinated me because of the triplet drum rolls and the harmonica solo) upon request.

I saved my allowance all summer and bought “Rubber Soul” by the Beatles, which had just come out. I paid $2.99 for the mono version (stereo was a dollar more and I only had a portable mono record player) and brought it to my best friend Ellen’s birthday party the next day. It was a transcendent event. There were girls there and I had the new Beatles album before anyone else did, making me the coolest kid in the room. Everyone was very excited that I had it; Ellen put it on right away. I had never been the coolest kid in the room; the thought that such a thing was possible had never occurred to me. I leaped around the room joyously as the album played straight through. Other kids danced too. My parents never danced. This was all very new and exciting.

Finally I could stand it no more. Being on the sidelines was unbearable. I wanted to play music, not just listen to it. My grandfather, an amateur musician, had left us a few odd instruments after his death a year earlier. My brother got a xylophone and a zither. I got a tenor banjo and a chromatic harmonica. Nothing was less rock and roll in 1967 than a tenor banjo, and only Stevie Wonder played chromatic harmonica. I played the tenor banjo in my Sunday school folk group, which was better than nothing, but this clearly was not the answer.

One of my babysitters, Charles Blakeslee, had a Hagstrom bass that he had just bought so that he could start a band. At my mother’s request he brought it over so I could see it. It was beautiful. I had never held anything like it. It had a spectacular blue finish that looked like a blue hot rod, gleaming chrome, and lots of knobs and switches. Charles didn’t bring the amp, but I didn’t care. I held the bass until my parents came back, trying to figure out how to play it. I broke the low E string trying to tune it an octave higher than it was supposed to go, much to my horror, but Charles was very cool about it. He said he had a spare set in the case.

Once I had held an actual rock and roll instrument, my fate was sealed. I needed an electric bass of my own. But I didn’t dare ask my parents for one. I couldn’t imagine how much they cost, but anything so beautiful had to be expensive. Plus you needed an amp to go with it. And my parents didn’t like the music people played with it.

We were by no means poor, but my parents were very careful with money. They had suffered through a depression and a world war. The basement was full of canned goods, K and C rations, and shelves of bottled water in case of emergency. Any major purchase was the occasion for much discussion, even if it was something we needed. I could usually coax a small toy out of my father on our weekly visits downtown if I tried hard, but anything substantial had to wait until Christmas or my birthday. I was too young to get a job. What to do? The status quo was not an option.

Then I had a flash of inspiration. When my father needed something, he went down into the basement, drew plans, bought the materials, and built it. Sometimes it took months, but he always succeeded. Maybe I could do the same! But I was in a hurry, plus I didn’t think I could build a rounded guitar body and I didn’t know the first thing about electronics. I looked around my room. Did I have a wooden box I could rework? Sadly, there was nothing. Or was there?

There in the corner was the red metal tool box my father had given me a few years before. It contained a small hammer, a hand drill, , a ruler, a small saw, some chisels, and screwdrivers. I hadn’t done much with it, since he let me use his tools whenever he wasn’t working with them. It was sitting in the corner. It wasn’t wood, but it was a box! I picked it up, tapped it, and it resonated.

Seized by rock & roll fever, I removed the tools, drilled holes in the toolbox, attached a piece of wood to it for a neck, and ran copper wire around a couple of nails at each end for strings. It looked absolutely ridiculous and my workmanship was very sloppy. But it did work. I couldn’t get enough tension on the strings to tune it into the guitar register, but it did sound quite a bit like a bass.  So a bass it would be.

I tuned the copper strings to A and D by referencing my violin, drew some fret markings on the neck with my carpenter’s pencil, and started played it along with my Yardbirds and Beatles records. I figured out where the notes were pretty quickly. It wasn’t that much different from a violin. This was something I could do! I wasn’t just a listener any more. It was very exciting, even if nobody else ever found out about it. In fact, secrecy was a good idea because I had just vandalized a perfectly good toolbox. My family abhorred waste, so for the next few days I hid the toolbox bass under my bed.

All went well for a few days, until I got so carried away with playing my new instrument that I didn’t realize my father had walked in on me without my notice. A laconic person who loved music but was completely unable to play it, he reacted calmly to my construction when he discovered it. I could tell he was surprised, but the punishment I expected for defacing his present never came. In retrospect, I think he may have been proud.

I tried to hide this peculiar instrument from my mother, who disapproved of rock music, without success. But apart from a few snippy remarks when she first saw it, she remained neutral, an unusual stance for her. I expected to get in trouble for damaging my tool box, but never did. As a parent myself I can really appreciate their enlightened response to what must have seemed very odd behavior. I can’t remember what happened to this instrument, but I did get a bigger toolbox at Christmas to replace the one I modified.