by Tommy James
ME,
THE
MOB,
AND THE
MUSIC
ONE HELLUVA RIDE
WITH TOMMY JAMES
AND THE SHONDELLS
TOMMY JAMES
WITH MARTIN FITZPATRICK
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Manufactured in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Control Number: 2009050162
ISBN 978-1-4391-2865-7
ISBN 978-1-4391-4264-6 (ebook)
Insert photo credits: All photos courtesy of the author except photo on p. 4, top left, courtesy of Karin Grasso, and photo on p. 7, lower left, courtesy of Carol Ross Durborow.
To my loving wife, Lynda
—Tommy James
To Kate
—Martin Fitzpatrick
CONTENTS
Prologue
Chapter One: Tuning Up
Chapter Two: Hanky Panky
Chapter Three: Say I Am
Chapter Four: I Think We’re Alone Now
Chapter Five: Gettin’ Together
Chapter Six: Mony Mony
Chapter Seven: Crimson and Clover
Chapter Eight: Crystal Blue Persuasion
Chapter Nine: Ball of Fire
Chapter Ten: Draggin’ the Line
Acknowledgments
ME, THE MOB,
AND THE MUSIC
PROLOGUE
May 21, 1990.
The day began with me rushing off to Chicago to do a concert promoting the release of my new album Hi-Fi and the single “Go.” It was my first studio album in nearly ten years. I was to meet Ron Alexenburg, the head of Aegis Records, and my manager, Carol Ross, at Newark Airport to catch a flight to Chicago. The band had already gone ahead, and we were all pretty excited about starting the nineties off with a new project. A host of radio stations and press were going to be there. Because Chicago had launched so many of our past successes, it seemed the perfect city to begin our tour. As my wife, Lynda, and I were about to leave, the phone suddenly rang. I was in a rush and kind of annoyed when I answered. It was my accountant, Howard Comart. In a very subdued voice he said, “Morris is asking for you. If you want to see him you’d better get up here right away.”
“Oh my God, Howard, I’m dashing out the door to do a show in Chicago. I’ll be back first thing tomorrow morning and I’ll come right up.” There was a pause. Howard said, “Well, okay.” But there was a tremor in his voice. I gave him my hotel number in Chicago and told him to keep me posted.
When I got to the airport, I told Ron and Carol the situation, and it cast a shadow over our otherwise joyful morning. The Godfather of the music business, Morris Levy, was dying of cancer. We all had a feeling of disbelief because none of us had ever thought of Morris as anything but invincible. In his sixty-two years, he had created and controlled one of the biggest independent music publishing companies; managed and was partners with the most famous rock and roll disc jockey, Alan Freed; owned the most famous jazz club in history, Birdland; and owned one of the most successful independent record labels of the fifties and sixties, Roulette Records, which also was my record label for eight years.
Morris and I had been exchanging messages through Howard, our mutual accountant, for several weeks, almost like two kids passing notes back and forth in school. I knew he understood how saddened I was by the whole thing and that despite everything, I genuinely cared about him.
When we got off the plane at O’Hare, I was suddenly filled with the old excitement; a sold-out show, in Chicago, to promote a new record. It felt good to feel this again twenty-four years after first signing with Morris and Roulette. Our road manager met us at baggage claim, a limo was waiting outside, and we loaded up and headed for the hotel. The rest of the day went pretty smoothly, the sound check and all the backstage stuff. But all I kept thinking about was Morris. Lynda kept checking our messages at the hotel hourly.
The show went great; the audience went crazy, dancing in the aisles, standing on their seats screaming for more. We played a combination of the hits and the new stuff, but even on stage I was preoccupied. We ended the show with “Mony Mony,” like we had done ten thousand times, and did the usual encore. Like always I was hot, sweaty, and out of breath when I came off stage. Carol and Ron met me by the stage door and we all walked back to the dressing room. I had an interview to do with a young radio guy from a local pop station. There was a lot of whooping and hollering around me as I sat down to catch my breath in front of the dressing room mirror. The DJ started asking me questions and I could see the cassette player rolling. The interview had begun. I started off with how great it was to be back in Chicago, then Lynda suddenly came into the room holding a piece of paper. She said, “I’m sorry to interrupt, Tommy, but Morris Levy died.”
There was just silence. All day long I had been thinking about what I was going to say to him, and now I’d never get the chance. I’d heard stories of how emaciated he had become and had imagined what I would feel seeing him like that, but it didn’t matter now because I would never see him again.
At that point my interviewer said, “Excuse me, Tommy, can I ask you a question?” I nodded and he said, “Who is Morris Levy?”
Wow, who is Morris Levy? I looked at him in astonishment and realized this kid couldn’t be more than twenty-one or twenty-two years old.
“How much time do we have?”
“As much time as you want. I came for an in-depth interview.”
“Well, you’re going to get one. Is that tape recorder still running?”
CHAPTER ONE
Tuning Up
I was born Thomas Gregory to Belle and Joseph Jackson, on April 29, 1947, at Good Samaritan Hospital in Dayton, Ohio. Nothing special, really. Just one of a few million baby boom kids born that year, born on the cusp of a new age.
Dad was in the hotel business, a roustabout who could manage the books, tend the bar, or fire the bellhops. He was five foot eight, quiet, heavyset, and balding. Mom worked as his assistant or sometimes on her own as a legal secretary. She was Dad’s opposite: tall, stately, and prematurely gray. She was straight talking, articulate, and would often use a three- or four-syllable word when a good old-fashioned grunt would do. We had one of those mock portraits of two dogs, an Airedale and a boxer, standing next to each other dressed like people. It was a mirror of my mom and dad right down to the tilt of their hats.
We moved to an apartment on La Salle Street in South Bend, Indiana, and that is the first place I really remember. Living in South Bend in the early fifties meant driving a Stud
ebaker (after all, they were made there, and my uncle Don was on the design team), rooting for Notre Dame (when the Fighting Irish were actually mostly Irish), and being brought up Catholic. The neighborhood we lived in was close-knit and blue-collar. I guess you could say we were all upper lower middle class. And whenever I went out to play, there were always hordes of kids. There never seemed to be just one or two. My folks worked hard because they had to in order to get what they wanted out of life, and since I was an only child, most of their world revolved around me. I always got the best they could give me.
As far back as I could remember it was just the four of us. Oh, did I mention music?
Mom used to tell me the only way she could quiet me down as an infant was to turn the radio up. As soon as I heard music, I would stop crying and listen. It seems like I had my ear in a loudspeaker of one kind or another my entire life. In fact, my first concrete memory is of the family radio, a huge Philco console with a mahogany finish that was twice as tall as I was. It had knobs and dials on it as big as doughnuts. But I always managed to boost myself up and tune in my favorite stations. And of course, there was my record player.
Ah yes, my first record player. It was a 78 r.p.m. kiddy model with an old-fashioned diaphragm attached to the tone arm, which acted as a speaker. The thing was virtually indestructible and could have easily doubled as a murder weapon. It had steel needles that looked like carpenter’s nails and always seemed to need replacing after every fifth spin.
My record collection was an odd assortment of “Little Golden Records” for kids interspersed with the pop hits of the day I heard on the radio. I had collected everything from Sammy Kaye to Yosemite Sam. My poor folks were forced to listen to an endless loop of “Mona Lisa,” “Mule Train,” and “The Three Billy Goats Gruff.”
In 1951, when I was four years old, my grandfather gave me an official Arthur Godfrey ukulele, complete with an authentic chord-maker attachment so I could sing and play along with my records. The attachment was hooked to the fret board, and by pressing one button or another I could make a particular chord. Eventually my curiosity got the best of me and I started peeking under the chord maker to see how the strings were being manipulated. As soon as I realized how the chords were made, I got rid of the attachment and made my own chords. It was my first big career move.
The radio, my ukulele, record player, and record collection were my cohorts and confidants. Music was already the center of my life.
Later that year, my mother enrolled me for piano lessons at the local conservatory. During my first recital, I was spotted by a modeling agency and asked to model clothing for a U.S. Rubber “Style Show” at the Indiana Country Club in South Bend. They were enacting a Life magazine advertisement depicting a typical American family wearing various ensembles of rubber wear. I was to be the kid in the cowboy suit with, of course, rubber boots. I had to walk down a runway and then freeze like a mannequin. The only problem was that it was way past my bedtime. I yawned through the entire show even when I was supposed to be as still as a picture. The audience was in stitches. It was the first time I was on stage, and I loved it.
In 1956, my father took a job managing a small hotel in Monroe, Wisconsin. It was a big move for us, especially since we were required to live in the hotel. For me, it seemed like a nightmare leaving the old neighborhood, my school, and my friends. I even had to give my dog away. None of us knew if this was going to work, but for the sake of moving up in the world we tried it.
We drove to Monroe and pulled up, not too optimistically, in front of the Eugene Hotel. It was a three-story brick building on a corner of the downtown square. When we walked into the lobby, it became clear that the Eugene was not exactly state-of-the-art resort quality. The lobby furniture was badly frayed and worn. There was an antique switchboard with old-fashioned candlestick telephones. We were all a little overwhelmed.
After we settled in, the first thing I did was explore my new home, and the first place that caught my attention was the bar. It was downstairs from the lobby and just off the dining room. I cannot begin to tell you how exciting being alone in a bar is to a nine-year-old. It was like being the only kid in an amusement park. I remember it being dark and cool and having a strange, sweet odor of Coca-Cola and floor wax. When I threw the light switch, I could see a beautiful, long mahogany bar. I loved the glistening bright colors of the half-filled liquor bottles against the mirror. To my right were a pinball machine and a stand-up bowling game played with a metal disk. To my left… THE JUKEBOX.
It was a magnificent Wurlitzer from the late forties that played only at 78 r.p.m. and looked like a tiny cathedral. It was dome-shaped and framed with tubes of multicolored fluorescent lights and small tubes of bubbles going up each side. God, I loved it. I did not know at that point what my folks thought of the place, but I was sold.
The first thing I did was examine the titles to see which ones I knew. Like most jukeboxes of the mid-fifties, the titles represented a knock-down, drag-out between two generations. Perry Como’s “Hot Diggity” was right beside “Long Tall Sally” by Little Richard. Patti Page was rubbing elbows with Gene Vincent. “Papa Loves Mambo” was next door to “Heartbreak Hotel.” My next major discovery was of equal importance: the reset button and the volume control on the back of the jukebox. I had it made.
Of course I had it made only until the bar opened at four in the afternoon. When the bartender came in to start his shift, one of his first duties soon became turning the volume back down to a human level. This usually increased his volume and he could often be heard swearing as far away as the lobby. I guess you could say we had creative differences. Although living in a hotel was a bizarre and dysfunctional arrangement, we all tried to make the best of it.
The town itself was hard to dislike. Monroe was a small town with a provincial feel to it that made it almost like a village. The downtown area had a grassy square with park benches and flowers built around a Victorian-style courthouse, a great ornate structure with rooks and turrets, and a huge clock tower. It was always busy with people crisscrossing on their way to work or to shop at the local stores. The Eugene Hotel sat on the southwest corner of this square and from my bedroom window I had a panoramic view.
My favorite places on the square soon became a soda fountain and hamburger joint called the Old Fashioned and the Monroe Music shop. That was where the older kids hung out and that was where the music was. Even though I was only ten years old, I loved sitting with the teenagers at the Old Fashioned eating French fries with ketchup in the wooden booths carved with hearts and initials. And always in the background, rock and roll.
If you wanted to buy records, Monroe Music was the only game in town. I was in that store at least three times a week, spending my allowance, and watching my stack of 45s grow as fast as I did. I loved vinyl. I still do. All those labels like Dot, RCA, Capitol, Cadence, Mercury, and Roulette had such distinctive patterns and color schemes. As I watched them spin on my turntable, they were like candy to me. I could almost taste them. I memorized all the info found on each record the way some kids memorized the stats on the back of baseball cards.
In September of that year I started fourth grade and was able to make a lot of friends. One Friday afternoon, our teacher, Mrs. Thurber, let us have show and tell, and while other kids brought in jackknifes and rock collections, I brought my ukulele to class and performed “Singing the Blues” by Guy Mitchell. It was the first time I played for anybody other than family, and Mrs. Thurber actually asked me to bring my ukulele every Friday to sing and play for the class.
It was only a week later that Elvis Presley made his first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. Elvis’s performance that Sunday night was the most exciting thing I had ever seen. A light went on in my head. I knew that this was what I wanted to be and this was what I wanted to do. I and a million other kids suddenly found a new career possibility: rock star. And why not?
Later that night as I stood in front of the mirror with my ukulele, I fe
lt as dorky as a kid with short pants and knee-high argyle socks. If I was going to be like Elvis, then something had to change, and two things were obvious. I needed a guitar and big hair. I didn’t know if there were any other requirements, but I figured this was a good place to start. I combed my hair into something as close to Elvis’s pompadour as I could and hoped time and Brylcreem would do the rest. If I could just find a way to avoid the barbershop. Sure enough, when I went to school the next day, everybody was talking about Elvis. Any kid with enough hair had it greased back high along the sides of his head, and the aroma of Butch Wax permeated the air.
As if on cue, probably because of Elvis’s appearance, two guitars appeared for sale in the window of Monroe Music. I could see them from my bedroom window and they tantalized me to distraction. The following morning my breath was steaming up the store window even before it opened for business. There they were; two Stella acoustic guitars. One cost $17.00 and the one with the extra coat of lacquer cost $24.95. I begged, whined, and pleaded, and my mom finally gave in and bought me the $17.00 special.
When I got the guitar home and opened the case, I could not believe it. I had a guitar. I gently took it out of the case and ran my fingers along the wood. I just wanted to caress and stroke it. I loved the feel of it and the smell of it. I adjusted the strap and eased it reverently over my shoulders until I could feel the weight of the guitar across my back. I strode majestically to my usual spot before the mirror and saw myself for the first time. I was alone in the universe. Yet at the same time I felt like a soldier in some new army and the guitar was my rifle.
Of course, it might have helped if I knew how to play the damn thing, but at that moment who cared about such minor details? All that mattered was that I had a guitar just like Elvis. I promised my mother that I would take lessons and learn how to “really play,” but after two or three sessions with my music teacher, I realized this was not working. He wanted me to learn scales. Gene Vincent didn’t play scales. Chuck Berry didn’t play scales. And Elvis sure as hell didn’t play scales. Scales were things on fish. I wanted to rock.