Beyond the Song

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Beyond the Song Page 1

by Carol Selick




  Beyond the Song

  © 2021 Carol Selick

  All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  To request permissions, contact: carolselickmusic.com

  ISBN 978-1-09838-369-5

  eBook ISBN 978-1-09838-370-1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Printed in the United States of America

  Acknowledgments

  To Nina, Stevie, Dani, Marsha, as well as Melanie and Bonnie, who left us too soon, thank you for your friendship.

  A beyond enormous thank you to my incredibly skilled editor Gayle Wurst, Princeton International Agency for the Arts, LLC, who guided me through this project with patience and vision.

  A big thank you to my dear departed friend Gail Shapiro-Scott who loved to read and was one of my biggest supporters. I will always be grateful for your enthusiastic encouragement.

  Thank you to songwriter Rose Marie McCoy, whose spirit I felt guiding me during this project. I will always treasure the time we spent together, writing songs at 1650 Broadway. Thank you for sharing your talent, your laughter, and above all your friendship.

  A big thank you to my aunt, Marion Crosby, whose book I Will Fear No Evil, gave me invaluable insights into my family history.

  Appreciation and gratitude to my parents who stood by me during my growing pains and whose love never wavered.

  Love and gratitude to the two men who encouraged and believed in my creativity - my dear departed husband, Wally Selick, and my present husband, Gordon James.

  Imbedded in my memory, deep within my soul

  Are feelings coming out of me, I buried long ago

  Tunes rewinding endlessly on vinyl plates of gold

  Timeless, ageless feelings neither young nor old

  Hidden dreams awaken me like an old forgotten song

  And images so vivid, invite me to sing along

  Lovers beg, “Please dance with me. Let’s give love one more try.”

  But I can still remember why I had to say goodbye

  I need to find some meaning for the steps I dared to take

  And have trust that my journey was not a big mistake

  Changes came so quickly, now I turn around

  My life has come full circle, and what was lost is found

  Contents

  1 NEW YORK CITY, 1971

  2 THERAPY

  3 COLLEGE DAZE

  4 CROSSING THE LINE

  5 ALL ROADS LEAD TO CALIFORNIA

  6 THE FALL

  7 SEASON OF THE WITCH

  8 PICKING UP THE PIECES

  9 THREE’S A CROWD

  10 REVOLUTION

  11 BEZERKLEY

  12 HONEY, LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL

  13 CROSSING THE GREAT WATER

  14 KEY CHANGE

  15 DRIFTING

  16 WEEKENDS

  17 DEMO

  18 REUNIONS

  19 BUSTED

  20 JAILHOUSE BLUES

  21 WAKE-UP CALL

  22 GUILT TRIP

  23 COUCH DREAMS

  24 MOVING ON

  25 INSPIRATION

  26 ANYBODY WHO’LL LET ME

  27 WEARY WOMEN’S BLUES

  28 ROSE MARIE McCOY

  29 LET ME BRING OUT THE ANIMAL IN YOU

  30 1650 BROADWAY

  31 VALENTINE SURPRISE

  32 ERIC

  33 MIDDLE OF THE ROAD

  34 MUSIC BIZ

  35 JUST GONNA THINK ABOUT TODAY

  36 STORM CLOUDS

  37 I’M A WOMAN

  38 PRINCE CHARMING

  39 TIME FOR ME TO GO

  40 EPILOGUE

  1

  NEW YORK CITY, 1971

  When I was just a little girl, my Daddy said to me,

  “A man’s gonna come and love you some,

  That’s your Daddy’s prophecy.”

  But it keeps on a-worryin’ me,

  Oh Lord, it keeps on a-worryin’ me.

  I stood on the corner of 72nd and Columbus Avenue feeling like a human want-ad. I had a copy of the Village Voice in one hand and an unlit cigarette in the other. I was out of matches. And then I heard a voice behind me. “Looking for an apartment?”

  I turned around. He was older than me and definitely not my type with his professional, straight look and short brown hair. But he had a sweet smile and his round, wire-rimmed glasses revealed soft blue eyes.

  “How did you know?”

  “I saw the paper. Do you need a place to make some calls? I live right up the street.”

  “Why not?”

  It wasn’t the first time I’d gone with a stranger to his place, and the July heat of the city was getting to me.

  We exchanged names on the way to his apartment. Marvin Silverman—lawyer, liberal, almost thirty, and climbing. Carol Marks—hippie, singer, twenty-two, and drifting.

  “Far out, you have a nice place!” It was on the third floor of a classic brownstone very close to Central Park.

  “Thanks. It’s small, but I like the neighborhood.”

  I walked toward the bay windows in the living room where a telescope was mounted on a tripod. There were no curtains or blinds. I wondered what that was about, but didn’t want to ask.

  “What’s that building across the street?”

  “That’s the Dakota. A lot of famous people live there like John and Yoko.”

  “I love New York! I can’t wait to move here!”

  “Where do you live? On the Island?”

  “No way! I live in Jersey with my parents, but that’s only temporary.”

  I fumbled in my bag for a cigarette and started to feel nervous.

  He was pretending to be hipper than he really was. He probably got stoned on the weekend and came to work on Monday wearing a three-piece suit. It’s as if he climbed to thirty and didn’t know whether to lead those behind him or follow those in front. I was glad that I didn’t have an identity problem. I did have an apartment problem, though, and couldn’t get side-tracked by this weekend hippie.

  Ten calls and five lewd propositions later, I was still without a place. I thanked Marvin for the use of his phone.

  “Next time you’re in the city, give me a call. Maybe we can do something.”

  “Sounds good, Marvin.” I knew what “do something” meant. I threw his business card in my bag, the purple woven one I’d bought from a street vendor in Berkeley the day I’d left California, and ran down the stairs to meet my friend. I hoped she’d had better luck than me finding a place.

  I rushed to catch the Broadway uptown bus, and by the time I got off at 86th Street, Marvin Silverman had completely left my mind.

  I was meeting Nina at Professors, a typical uptown neighborhood bar. People dressed down and the prices climbed up. Its inhabitants were considered native New Yorkers. That meant they’d lived in the city for at least one year, but not necessarily in the same apartment.

  “Any luck?” I asked Nina. I knew what her answer would be by her tired look and the pile of cigarette butts in the ashtray. Even her curly red hair looked droopy.

  We’d been friends since eighth grade and had managed to stay in touch throughout college. We’d rebelled in different ways. Nina was very serious when it came to politics. She sometimes asked her friends, “Are you political?” If someone answered, “a little,” she wo
uld ask, “Can you be a little pregnant?”

  Nina also had a fun side and we laughed a lot. Like the time we were hanging out in my bedroom at my parents’ house and my father knocked on the door. He walked in wearing my mother’s blue and green paisley tent dress. It was 1968, and bell-bottoms were all the rage. “Do you see how silly you girls look wearing bell bottoms?” Dad asked with a straight face. “Just as silly as I look wearing a dress.” Nina and I were hysterical. In a couple of years, Dad would change his mind about bell-bottoms and the Vietnam War.

  Three rounds of sodas and one heaping ashtray later, Nina and I headed out of the bar to Port Authority. Sitting on the downtown bus, I remembered meeting Marvin.

  “I met a really nice guy today,” I informed Nina.

  “Oh yeah?” she kidded me.

  “No really, he let me use his apartment to make phone calls.”

  “I bet that’s not all you made.”

  “You have a dirty mind! Look! He gave me his card and asked me to call him the next time I was in the city.” I started digging around in my bag. “I can’t find it!” I exclaimed hopelessly, looking up at Nina sitting by the window, skeptically arching her eyebrow at me. “Hey, wait! This is his street! Let’s get off the bus—let me run up and say hi.”

  I recognized the brownstone and ran up the steps leaving Nina waiting on the sidewalk. Why was I even bothering? Was I flattered that an older man had shown interest in me?

  When I rang the doorbell Marvin opened the door wearing a half-buttoned shirt and a confused look on his face.

  “Gee Marv, I didn’t mean to bother you. It’s just that I lost your card and I was passing by and—”

  “Yeah kid, that’s okay. I just can’t talk to you now. Give me your number. I’ll call you up sometime.”

  I scribbled my number on the back of a matchbook and caught up with Nina who was already halfway down the block.

  “I’ll probably never hear from him again. He wasn’t my type anyway, too straight,” I told her but I secretly wanted him to call.

  It seemed like Nina and I were spending most of our time in Port Authority. It was the dirtiest gate to the city, a haven for every degenerate and vagabond. I took a deep breath and boarded the Suburban Transit bus back to the burbs.

  I was twenty-two, had dropped out of college, moved to California, run out of money, and moved back home. I hated riding on any kind of public transportation. It was sort of a phobia. I had a lot of fears, like being stuck in an elevator—or worse, a subway. Sometimes I had trouble eating in restaurants. But nothing was going to stop me from living in the city. My one goal was to make it in the music business and New York was the place to be. I was taking my music seriously, practicing my songs every day on the French Provincial piano at my parents’ house that I’d unfortunately branded with a cigarette burn. Carole King, Laura Nyro, and Carly Simon were my idols and I was determined to follow in their footsteps.

  My mother, a junior high social studies teacher, described my life as “the Perils of Pauline.” My father, a self-made businessman, just thought I was lazy. Both were relieved I hadn’t found an apartment in the city. They were waiting for the day when I would wake up and come to my senses. They told the relatives that I was finding myself and wondered when they had lost me. They’d told me many times that I was a follower and that my friends were the reason I’d dropped out of college, wore bell bottoms, smoked cigarettes, and wanted to live in the city with no cross-ventilation in the middle of July.

  “Carol! Telephone!” I heard my mother shout the next evening. She put her hand over the receiver and whispered, “It’s a boy.”

  “Carol, this is Marvin. You know, we met on the corner of 72nd Street?”

  “You really did call! I thought you were just giving me the brush.”

  “I wouldn’t do that—I’m a lawyer, remember? We always keep our word. What are you doing Friday night? You want to go to dinner and a movie?”

  “Are you asking me on a date?”

  “No. I don’t go on them anymore. I’m being spontaneous.”

  “Far out, Marvin! I’ll be there.”

  He was my first older man and I was ready for him! I’d always been drawn to stories like My Fair Lady, Pygmalion, and Gigi, where older, more worldly men influenced younger, naïve women and then they fell in love.

  Getting ready to go to Marvin’s, I looked in the mirror and ran my fingers through my hair. Nearly black, contrasting sharply with my light, freckled skin, it was long and wavy in winter, but frizzy in summer. I’d given up trying to straighten it and just let it go à la Janis Joplin. I’d read that she ironed her hair on an ironing board. Since I rarely ironed my clothes, I decided that wasn’t an option.

  It was liberating not to worry about my hair, and so was not wearing a bra. Liberated women everywhere were giving them up and burning them. Besides, I was thin enough to get away with it. The Indian print tops I wore with my jeans looked fine without one. I felt perky, sexy, and hip.

  I checked myself out in the mirror. My lips were small and I never bothered with lipstick. I picked up my eyeliner, the one makeup I always used and underlined my hazel-green eyes with black pencil on the lower lids. One of my college boyfriends had described my eyes as sideways exclamation points. Of course, he was stoned at the time.

  “This is the first apartment in New York that hasn’t given me claustrophobia,” I announced, sitting on the couch at Marvin’s. The kitchen was small, but the living room was large with high ceilings and two bay windows. I hadn’t seen the bedroom yet. The telescope was still pointed towards the undraped windows. I had to ask.

  “What’s with the telescope, Marv? Are you into astronomy?”

  “You might say I’m into sociology. I like to check out the people in the apartments across the street. Everyone does it in New York.”

  “Oh. So you let them study you, too? There are no drapes on your windows.”

  “Sometimes. It doesn’t matter. No one knows who I am.”

  I tried to hide my nervousness. I was in a strange man’s apartment in the middle of a strange city. I reminded myself it was nothing compared to all the hitchhiking I’d done in California a couple of years ago, back when the Manson murderers were still on the loose.

  “I really should be a good boy tonight, Carol.”

  “What do you mean, Marv? I thought you were a man.”

  “I should take you out to dinner and a movie.” And then he kissed me.

  What happened next was every girl’s fantasy from the first time she practices kissing her favorite movie star’s face in her pillow. The faces change and the movie stars become rock stars and radicals. But the plot is the same and every Gothic novel describes the hero and heroine’s all-consuming passion.

  The speed of our attraction felt like two magnets rushing without question to be one. Of course, in Gothic novels, it always took at least half an hour to get your clothes off, thanks to laced corsets and rows and rows of buttons. But it was 1971 and women went braless, men wore no jockey shorts under their jeans, and clothes were meant to be thrown on the floor.

  “Oh, Marvin!” I screamed and Marvin exploded in a fit of laughter. We were positioned like two trapeze artists getting ready for the final jump. The bed was not very high but the risk of falling was tremendous.

  “Why did you start laughing? I was almost there!” I couldn’t decide if I was hurt or angry.

  “That voice! It was so loud it startled me.”

  “I told you I was a singer. And I always bring my voice to bed with me.”

  “Sorry, Carol.”

  But this was no time for talking. We both remounted our imaginary trapezes, took a few low rides, and started pumping.

  I could hardly wait to tell my friends all about it. “Nina, it was the best! And he couldn’t believe I’d been celibate for four whole months! I think it d
id something to his male ego. He’s definitely not my type, but he’s got money and he wants to show me around the city—if we ever get out of bed!”

  We were hanging out at our friend Stevie’s college apartment in New Brunswick. Stevie wasn’t her real name, Marilyn was. I never asked her why she picked Stevie for a nickname instead of Mary, but there were a lot of things I didn’t understand about her. Like why she called her latest painting “Early Morning Blues Sculpture.” I never could figure out why she had stopped seeing her cute astrologer boyfriend, the one who told me that I had divine discontent, to be with a married, forty-something professor. Maybe she liked the challenge, or maybe she’d just listened to too much Janis Joplin. With her platinum blonde Marilyn Monroe haircut and blue-violet eyes, she certainly didn’t have any problem attracting men.

  I stopped to take a gulp of coffee. This wasn’t the first time I’d sat at Stevie’s old Formica kitchen table swapping stories about the night before. Instead of housewives trading recipes, we were independent women sharing our sex lives. Women our age all over the country were holding their own roundtable discussions. The men we slept with would have blushed if they knew how thoroughly we scrutinized their sex techniques, no pubic hair left unturned.

  After a couple of months, our “morning after” coffee klatches started to influence the “night before.” Nina confessed that the last time she’d had sex with her boyfriend she thought she’d heard the sound of coffee percolating. At first, she thought Daniel, an ex-acid rock guitarist who had found peace by playing country music, had the hiccups. Then she realized her mind had started editing, rewriting a blow-by-blow account of the evening’s events. She vividly reenacted how Daniel had screamed her name at the crucial moment. Afterward, he denied it, blaming his questionable utterance on a sore throat from smoking too much pot. He said two people had to be very serious before they called out to each other in bed and he was positive that married people stopped using each other’s names after the first year of marriage. By then they were too busy fantasizing.

  “He was just getting scared,” I told Nina. I secretly envied her ability to hold on to men for longer than six months. My record was three months, but who was counting?

 

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