All dates since January 1, 2000 have
seemed unreal to me. I was born near the middle of the last century (1952) and,
although intellectually I know this to be silly, to this day it feels to me as
though the current year should be written Nineteen-something-or-other.
I still sometimes hesitate when dating a check or document lest I start the year with
the wrong two digits.
Though I seldom can put a specific date
to recollected conversations, I can assign January 1, 1970 to one, simply
because the date was the reason for it. After the turbulent 1960s, a new decade
seemed to offer a fresh start. (It really didn’t: culturally the “1960s” as we
usually think of them continued another four years; they transitioned into the cultural
“1970s” over the course of 1974 as former hippies swapped their headbands for
disco shoes.) “1970” itself had a futuristic ring to it on that day, which
probably prompted the dinner conversation with my dad, mom, and sister about
the far distant year 2000 when not just a new decade but a new century and
millennium would arrive. I remarked that I would be 47 – older than my dad in
1970. This seemed so ludicrous that we all laughed at the notion. My dad said
he didn’t think he would last that long. (He did: he died on July 12, 2000 at
74.)
Age 47 and the year 2000 both arrived on
schedule of course. While I didn’t laugh at the latter event it nonetheless
still felt ludicrous. Tomorrow will be 23 (!) years later yet. Perhaps the
reader can imagine just how ludicrous that
feels. So, for Auld Lang Syne I’ll fire up the Wayback machine to recall life
23 years before 2000 on January 1, 1977.
The radio played a bigger part in my
life then than it does today, so it likely was playing. Playlists are easy to
recreate since the Billboard 100 offers a week by week cheat sheet going back
decades on which songs were popular when. The top 10 in the US for the week of
1/1/77 were:
1. Tonight's
the Night (Gonna Be Alright)
Rod Stewart
2. You Don't Have To Be a Star (To Be In My Show)
Marilyn McCoo & Billy Davis Jr.
3. The Rubberband Man
The Spinners
4. You Make Me Feel Like Dancing
Leo Sayer
5. More Than a Feeling
Boston
6. Sorry Seems To Be the Hardest Word
Elton John
7. I Wish
Stevie Wonder
8. Dazz
Brick
9. Car Wash
Rose Royce
10. After the Lovin'
Engelbert Humperdinck
OK, there have been better Top Ten lists
before and since – but there have been far worse, too. I didn’t own any albums containing
any of those songs (in that era I preferred the likes of AC/DC and Bob Seger),
but wouldn’t have changed the radio channel if any of those numbers played if
it meant crossing the room. I might have in my car for a couple since that just
meant pushing a selector button.
My personal life was in a fun phase in
‘77, which is appropriate for age 24 in the most hedonistic decade of the past two
centuries. My very special lady was a strawberry blonde named Angela. 46 years
later it still feels wrong to post a pic without her permission, so I won’t, though
she does figure in a nonfiction short story on one of my other blog sites. (We
broke up in ‘79 – it was her idea.) My car was a 1973 Ford Maverick (nothing like
the current Ford with that name) of which I was fond. It served me reliably
wherever I drove it. Two years earlier this included a circuit around the
continental US. I have only one photo of it, strangely enough, and that just by
chance because I photographed a cat. I lived at home with my parents, which is
normal for single 24-year-olds today. It wasn’t actually rare then, but in 1977
it did tend to encourage the judgmental question “Why?” (The reason was money,
of course; I bought a cottage a few years later, which otherwise wouldn’t have
been possible.) I was healthy, young, strong, and stupid. I wasn’t stupid on
the surface. I was bookish (then as now), intellectual, and well-educated in
the liberal arts. I was stupid deep down. The full effects of that wouldn’t
show up for some years, however, so in 1977 I was blissfully unaware of it.
Rod Stewart
2. You Don't Have To Be a Star (To Be In My Show)
3. The Rubberband Man
The Spinners
4. You Make Me Feel Like Dancing
5. More Than a Feeling
Boston
6. Sorry Seems To Be the Hardest Word
7. I Wish
8. Dazz
9. Car Wash
10. After the Lovin'
1973 Ford Maverick in background |
All in all, 1977 was quite a good year. I’d be happy to experience it again, either exactly as it played out the first time around or, better yet, with the classic “If I knew then…” advantage.
The Clash
– 1977
In your comments it saddens me that there is not one reflection on the 1000's of brave young men and women who sacrificed their lives and lived sacrificially in two wars and 9/11 so that we all could reflect on experiences of the last 70 years.
ReplyDeleteI have witnessed/participated in the dedication of four war memorials, WW2, Korean War, Vietnam War and 9/11.
Those are how our society should be judged and not so much music, art, automobiles, etc. Without our Veterans sacrifices none of that would exist. God Bless the USA
I’m writing lightly in purely personal terms, of course, but it is never out of place to acknowledge that the ability to do that is bought by those who defend it. Your comment does that. I do appreciate those in our armed forces, both present-day and long past, who took on the job and all too often paid a high or ultimate price. Hey, I even once thanked the Roman Legions in a Memorial Day blog for holding the line long enough for Western civilization (if not the Empire) to survive: https://richardbellush.blogspot.com/2011/05/sad-sack.html. So much more so the veterans who are with us today.
DeleteI had a lot of growing up to do -- which I knew, though I mis-weighted what aspects were most important.
ReplyDeleteThe best music wasn't always on the radio (AM anyway) and most of the time away from the top of the Billboard list. Also that year there was: Fleetwood Mac Dreams, Steely Dan's Peg, Running on Empty by Jackson Brown, Chuck Mangione's Feel So Good, and many other AOR artist.
ReplyDeleteYes, that is usually the case, though I did appreciate the mixed genres on AM Top 40 stations (to which most people tuned at least sometimes) back in the day. They played the top 40 regardless of genre. Now the niche stations dominate what remains of the radio market, which is understandable but yet another sign of our fractured culture. But I like my niches too.
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