A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 46: “Brown-Eyed Handsome Man” by Chuck Berry
Episode Date: August 19, 2019Episode forty-six of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs looks at “Brown-Eyed Handsome Man” by the Chuck Berry Combo, and how Berry tried to square the circle of social commentar...y and teen appeal. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a ten-minute bonus episode available, on “Rock and Roll Waltz” by Kay Starr.. (more…)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
A History of Rock Music in 500 songs by Andrew Huck.
Episode 46
Brown-eyed Handsome Man by Chuck Berry.
When we left Chuck Berry, he had just recorded and released his third single,
Roll over Beethoven, the single which had established him
as the preeminent mythologizer of rock and roll.
Today, we're going to talk about the single,
that came after that, both sides of which were recorded at the same session as Beethoven.
Specifically, we're going to talk about a single that is as close as Barry got to being outright political.
While these days, both sides of his next single,
Brown-eyed handsome man and too much monkey business, are considered rock and roll classics.
Neither hit the pop charts in 1956 when they were released.
That's because, although they might not seem it at first glance now,
both songs are tied in to a very different culture
from the white teen one that was now dominating the rock and roll audience.
To see why, we have to look at the R&B tradition which Barry grew up in,
and in particular we want to look once again
at the work of Barry's hero Louis Jordan
and the particular type of entertainment he provided.
You see, while Louis Jordan was a huge star
and had a certain amount of crossover appeal to the white audience,
he was someone whose biggest audience was black people,
and in particular, black adults.
The teenager, as a separate audience for music,
didn't really become a thing in a conscious way
until the mid-50s.
Before the rise of the do-what groups, R&B music and the jump band music before it
had been aimed at a hard-working, hard-partying adult audience,
and at a defiantly working class audience at that,
one that had a hard life,
and whose reality involved cheating partners,
grasping landlords, angry bosses,
and a large amount of drinking when they weren't dealing with those things.
But one mistake that's always made when talking about marginalised people
is to equate poverty or being a member of a racial minority with being unsophisticated.
And there was a whole seam of complex, clever, ironic humour
that shows up throughout the work of the jump band and early R&B musicians,
one that is very different from the cornball humour
that was standard in both country music and white pop.
That style of humour is often referred to as hip or hep humour,
and the early master of it was probably Cab Calloway,
who was also the author of a Hepster's dictionary,
which remained for many years the most important source
for understanding black slang of the 20s through 40s.
Calloway also sang about it.
To be hip, you got a sturdy heart to get it from your hip to dictionary jive
And you're a killer jive, don't you slip, you're a dill of jive, don't you quit
It's a thriller when you dig your jive with all the cats in town
Now, Joe you slide, you give his one to use it live, beef to the stud on your ride
This style of humour, specific to the experiences of black people
was also the basis of much of Louis Jordan's work,
and Jordan was clearly influenced by Calloway.
You only have to look at songs like,
Open the Door, Richard.
I met old Sikh standing on the corner the other day.
That cat show was booted with liquid.
He was what?
He was abnoxicated.
He was what?
He was inebriated.
He was what?
Well, he was just playing drunk.
Well, all right, good.
He sure was salted with the bartender.
Or what's trying to make him buy another drink?
Zeke told the bartender ain't no need of me buying no drinks
when everybody else is buying them.
I'm going to drink to everybody's health till I ruin them on.
Or what's the use of getting sober when you'll only get drunk again?
I got me a pint about half past four.
Felt so good till I went out and got me some more.
I got me a quart.
About half past five.
Boy, that was so nice
I didn't know what I did alive
So what's the use of getting sober
When you're going to get drunk
Obviously, the experience of being drunk
Is one that people of all racers have had
But the language used there
the specific word choices
roots Jordan's work
very firmly in the African-American cultural experience.
Jordan did, of course, have a white audience,
but he got that audience
without compromising the blackness
of his language and humour.
That humour disappears almost totally
from the history of rock music
when the white people start showing up.
And there are only two exceptions.
to this. There are the coasters, whose lyrics by Jerry Lieber, managed to perfectly capture
that cynical adult humour of the old-style jump bands, even when dealing with teenage frustrations
rather than adult ones, and we'll look at how successfully they do that in a few weeks' time.
The other exception is, of course, Chuck Berry, who would repeatedly cite Jordan as his
single biggest influence. As we continue through Barry's career, we will see time and again
how things that appear original to him are actually Barry's take on something Louis Jordan did.
Barry would later manage to couple Jordan's style of humour to the adolescent topics of school,
dancing, cars and unrequited love, rather than to the more adult topics of jobs, sex, drinking and
rent. But crucially, at the time we're looking at, he was not yet doing so. At the session in
April 1956, which produced Roll over Beethoven, drifting heart, too much monkey business,
and brown-eyed handsome man, there were still relatively few signs that Barry was appealing to a
white adolescent audience. Very few signs does not, of course, mean that there were no signs.
Barry would have been able to see who it was who was turning up to his live performances,
but it seems to have taken him some time to adapt his songwriting to his new audience.
Even Roll over Beethoven, which was, after all,
a song very specifically aimed at mythologising the new music,
had referred to these rhythm and blues, rather than to rock and roll.
Barry was almost 30, and he was still in a mindset of writing songs for people his own age,
for the audiences that had come to see him play small clubs in St. Louis.
Indeed, the record industry as a whole still saw the teenage audience as almost an irrelevance.
Other than Bill Haley and Alan Freed, very few people really realised how big that audience was.
The combination of disposable income and the changes in technology that had led to the transistor radio and the 45 RPM single
meant that for the first time teenagers were buying their own records and listening to them on their own portable radios and record players
rather than having to listen to whatever their parents were buying.
1956 was the year that this new factor stopped being ignorable,
and Barry would become the poet laureate of Teenage America,
the person who, more than anyone else,
would create the vocabulary which would be used by everyone who followed
to write about the music and the interests of white teenagers.
But at this point, Barry's music was very much not that,
and both too much monkey business and brown-eyed handsome man address very, very adult concerns.
Brown-eyed handsome man, in particular, loses a lot of its context when heard today,
but is an explicitly racialized song.
He was sitting in the witness stand.
The judge's wife followed the district attorney.
She said, free that brown-eyed man.
If you want your job, you better free that brown-eyed man.
Now it's worth a worth
at that opening
in some detail.
Arrested on charges of unemployment is, first of all, a funny line.
But it's also very much the kind of trumped-up charge that black people, especially black men,
would be arrested and tried for.
And then we have the judge's wife getting the man freed
because he's so attractive.
This is a very, very common motif
in black folklore and blues mythology.
For example, in Back Door Man,
written by Willie Dixon for Howling Wolf,
and released on chess a few years after the time we're talking about,
we have the following verse.
This is a hugely common theme,
in the blues. You hear it in various versions of Staggartly, for example. Later this would become,
thanks to these blues songs, a staple of rock and pop music too. You get the same thing in
Maxwell's Silver Hammer by the Beatles, or Frank Zappa's The Illinois Enema Bandit,
but stripped of its original context there, both those songs have a reputation, at least partly
deserved for tastelessness and misogyny. But when this motif first came to prominence,
it had a very pointed message. There is a terrible stereotype of black men as being more
animal than man, and of both having insatiable sexual appetites and being irresistible to white women.
This is, of course, no more true of black men than it is of any other demographic, but it was used to
fuel very real moral panics about black men raping white women, which led to many men being lynched.
The trope of the women screaming out for the man to be set free in this context is very, very
pointed, and is owning this literally deadly negative stereotype and turning it into something
to boast about. And then there's this verse.
Jackie Robinson, the first black man to play for a major league baseball team,
had only started playing for the Dodgers in 1947 and were still playing when Barry recorded this.
Robinson was a massively influential figure in black culture,
and right from the start of his career, he was having records made about him,
like this one by Count Basie.
It went zooming across the left field wall, yeah boy.
Yes, yes, Jackie hit that ball.
And when he swung his bat, the crowd went wild
because he knocked that ball a solid mile, yeah boy.
Yes, yes, Jackie hit that ball.
It's almost impossible to state how important Jackie Robinson was
to black culture in the immediate post-war period.
He was a huge example of a black man breaking a colour barrier, and not only that, but
excelling and beating all the white people in the field.
Robinson was probably the single most important figurehead for civil rights in the late
40s and early 50s, even though he was, at least in his public statements, far more interested
in his ability to play the game than he was in his ability to affect the course of American
politics. While obviously Robinson isn't mentioned by name in Berry's lyric, the description
of the baseball player is clearly meant to evoke Robinson's image. None of the men mentioned in the
song lyric are specifically stated to be black, just brown-eyed, though there are often
claims which I've never seen properly substantiated that the original lyric was brown-skinned
handsome man. That does, though, fit with Barry's repeated tendency to slightly tone down politically
controversial aspects of his lyrics. Johnny B. Good originally featured a coloured boy,
rather than a country boy, and in Nadine, he was originally campaign shouting like a southern
democrat, rather than a southern diplomat. But while the men are described in the song in deliberately
ambiguous terms, the whole song is very much centered around images from black culture and images
of black men, and especially black men in contexts of white culture, usually high culture,
from which they would normally be barred. Much as his idol Jordan had done earlier,
Barry is repackaging black culture in a way that is relatable by a white audience,
while not compromising that culture in any real way.
The flip side, brown-eyed handsome man, is also interesting.
Too much monkey business is much more directly inspired by Jordan,
but is less obviously rooted in specific black experiences.
But at the same time, it is absolutely geared to adult concerns
rather than those of teenagers.
Well, too much more
business, too much more
spending for me to be involved in.
Well, at least six of the seven verses dealt with adult concerns.
Over the seven verses, Barry complains about working for the US mail and getting bills,
being given the hard sell by a salesman, having a woman wanting to settle down with her and get
married, having to go to school every day, using a broken payphone, fighting in the war,
and working in a petrol station. With the exception of the verse about going to school,
these are far more the concerns of Louis Jordan, and of records like The Drifters' Money,
Honey, or the records Johnny Otis was making, than they are of the new white teenage audience.
While both brown-eyed handsome man and too much monkey business made the top five on the R&B chart,
they didn't hit the pop top 40, and Roll over Beethoven had only just scraped into the top 30.
It was plain that if Barry wanted to repeat the success of Mabelene, he would have to pivot
towards a new audience. He couldn't make any more records aimed at black adults. He needed to start
making records aimed at white children. That wasn't the only change he made. The brown-eyed handsome
man single was the last one to be released under the name the Chuck Berry combo. There are at least
two different stories about how Barry stopped working with Ebby Hardy and Johnny Johnson.
Berry always claimed that his two band members were getting drunk all the time
and not capable of playing properly.
Johnson, on the other hand, always said instead
that the two of them got tired of all the travelling
and just wanted to stay in St. Louis.
Johnson would continue to play piano on many of Barry's recordings,
though from this point on he would never be the sole pianist for Barry,
as many sources wrong reclaim he was.
From now on, Chuck Berry was a solo artist.
The first fruit of this newfound solo stardom was Barry's first film appearance.
Rock Rock Rock is one of the more widely available rock and roll films now,
thanks to it having entered into the public domain.
You can actually even watch the film through its Wikipedia page,
which I'll link in the show notes.
It's not, though, a film I'd actually recommend watching at all.
The plot, such as it is, consists of Tuesday Weld wanting to buy a new dress for the prom,
and her dad not wanting to give her the money, and an evil rival for Weld's boyfriend's attentions,
who you can tell is evil, because she has dark hair, rather than being blonde like Weld,
trying to get her in trouble.
You get something of an idea of the quality of the film by the fact that its writer was also its producer,
who was also the composer of the incidental music and the title song.
That was co-written by Milton Subotsky, the film's producer,
who would go on to much better and more interesting things
as the co-founder of Amicus films,
a British film company
that made a whole host of cheap but enjoyable horror and science fiction films.
Oddly enough, we'll be meeting Subotsky again.
How important the plot is can be summed up by the fact
that there is a 15-minute sequence in this 70-minute film
in which Weld and her friend merely watched the TV.
The programme they're watching is a fictional TV show,
presented by Alan Freed,
in which he introduces various rock and roll acts,
and this is where Barry appears.
The song he's singing in the film is his next single,
You Can't Catch Me,
which had actually been recorded before Roll over Beethoven.
But the story of the song's release
is one that tells you a lot about the music business in the 1950s
and about how little the artists understood
about what it was they were getting into.
As a cluster made, twas a flight divil with a powerful moor and some hideaway wings,
pushing on the button and you will care of a scene, now you can't get, baby you can't,
but if you get too close, you know I'm gone like a cool.
As we discussed last week, when talking about Fat Stomino, it wasn't normal for R&B acts to put out albums,
and so it was a sign of how much the film was aimed at the white teenage audience
that his soundtrack album was considered at all.
It seems to have been Alan Freed's idea.
Freed was the star of the film, and the acts in it.
People like Laverne Baker, The Moon Glows, Johnny Burnett, and Frankie Lyman and the Teenagers,
were for the most part people he regularly featured on his radio show,
along with a handful of bland white novelty acts
that were included in the misguided belief
that the teenage audience wanted to hear a pre-teen kid
singing about rock and roll.
But of course, freed being freed,
what that meant was that the acts he included
were from record labels that would drive him
or with which he had some kind of financial relationship.
And as they were on multiple different labels,
this caused problems when deciding who got to
put out a soundtrack album.
In particular, both the Chess Brothers,
whose labels had provided the flamingos,
the Moonglows, Anne Berry,
and Morris Levy,
the gangster who controlled the career
of Frankie Lyman and the teenagers,
the single biggest act in the film,
wanted the right to put out a soundtrack album
and profit from the publicity
the film would provide.
All of them were
business associates of Freed.
Freed managed the moon,
and had been given writing credit on songs by both the Moonglows and Berry in return for playing
them on his radio show, while Levy was himself Freed's manager and had been largely responsible for
getting freed his unchallenged dominance of New York Radio.
So, they came to a compromise.
The soundtrack album would only feature the three chess acts who appeared in the film, and would
include four songs by each of them, rather than the one.
song each they performed in the film, and the album would be out on chess. But the album would
include the previously released songs that Freed was credited with co-writing, and the new
songs would be published, not by the publishing companies that published those artist's songs,
but by one of Levy's companies. Chugberry was tricked into signing his rights to the song
away by a standard Leonard Chess tactic. He was called into Chess's office to
receive a large royalty check, and Chess asked him if, while he was there, he would mind signing
this other document that needed signing, only could he do it in a hurry, because Chess had an urgent
appointment. It was six months until Barry realised that he'd signed away the rights to
You Can't Catch Me, and 28 years before he was able to reclaim the copyright for himself.
In the meantime, the rights to that one Chuck Berry song made Levy far more money.
than he could possibly have expected, because of this one line.
In 1969, John Lennon took that line, for the Beatles song, Come Together.
Rather than go through the court, Levy and Lennon came to an agreement.
Lennon was going to make an album of rock and roll covers, and he would include
include at least three songs to which Levy owned the copyright, including You Can't Catch
Me. As a result, even after Levy finally lost the rights to the song in the early 1980s, he still
continued earning money from John Lennon's cover versions of two other songs he owned, which would
never have been recorded without him having owned You Can't Catch Me.
You Can't Catch Me was a flop and didn't even make the R&B charts, let alone
the pop charts. This even though its B-side, Havana Moon, would in a roundabout way end up being Barry's
most influential song.
We'll talk about just how influential that song was in a year or so.
Barry knew he had to pivot and fast.
He wrote a new song, rock and roll music,
which he thought could maybe have the same kind of success as Rollover Beethoven,
but used the more currently popular term rock and roll,
rather than talk about rhythm and blues as the earlier song did.
But while he demoed that,
it wasn't a song that he could be certain would directly get
right into the head of every teenage kid in America.
For that, he turned to Johnny Johnson again.
For years, Johnson had had his own theme song at the Cosmopolitan Club.
In its original form, the song was based on honky-tong train blues
by Mead Lux Lewis.
Johnson's own take on the song
had kept Lewis's intro
and had been renamed Johnny's Boogie.
Johnson suggested to Barry
that they take that intro
and have Barry play the same thing
but on the guitar.
When they did, they found that
when he played his guitar,
it was like ringing a bell,
a school bell, to be precise,
and that gave Barry the idea
for the lyric.
The teacher is teaching the golden rule.
School day was the pivot point.
The song with which Chookberry turned wholly towards teenage concerns and away from those of adults.
The description of the drudgery of life in school
was not that different from the descriptions of working life
in too much monkey business,
but it was infinitely more relatable
to the new young rock and roll audience
than anything in the earlier song.
And not only that,
the slow trudge of school life
gets replaced in the final verses
with an anthem to the new music.
School Day became the biggest selling single on the R&B charts,
knocking up by Elvis off the top,
and made number five on the Billboard Pop Charts.
It charted in the UK, which given Chess's lack of distribution over here at that point,
was a minor miracle, and it stayed on the Billboard pop chart for an astonishing six months.
School Day was successful enough that Barry was given an album release of his own.
After-school session was a compilation of tracks Barry had released as either the A-side or B-sides of singles,
including School Day, brown-eyed handsome man, too much monkey business, and Havana Moon,
but not including You Can't Catch Me or the other songs on the Rock Rock Rock compilation.
It was filled out with a couple of generic blues instrumentals,
but was otherwise a perfect representation of where Barry was artistically right at this turning point.
And that shows even in the title of the record.
The name After School Session obviously refers to School Day
and to the kids in the song going to listen to rock and roll after school.
ended but it was also a tip of the hat to another song one which may have inspired the
lyrics to school day in much the same way that mead looks Lewis had inspired the music
a B C D EF G H I J Kelle just listen to them yell school is out can't you tell
when they leave the school room they go to the candy store
turn on the radio and clap their hands while their favorite band
Swing out, swing out that's the start of the after-school swing session, the jump, jump, jumping session.
I'm a lucky kid to your symphony said, talking about the kids around the town.
I have learned my lesson.
Even at his most up-to-date, Chuck Berry was still paying homage to Louis Jordan.
School Day was the point where Chuck Berry went from meddling rhythm and blues star to major rock and roll star,
and his next 12 records would all make the Billboard pop charts.
1957 was going to be Chuck Berry's year,
and we'll hear how in a few weeks' time,
when we look at another Louis Jordan-influenced song
about a kid who played the guitar.
A history of rock music and 500 songs
is brought to you by the generosity of my backers on Patreon.
Each week, Patreon backers will get a 10-minute bonus podcast.
This week's is on Rock and Roll Wants by K-Star.
Visit patreon.com slash Andrew Hickey to sign up for as little as a dollar a month.
This podcast is written, narrated and produced by me, Andrew Hickey.
Visit 500Songs.com.
That's 5000.0.000.
numbers, songs.com, to read transcripts and liner notes, and get links to hear the full versions
of songs excepted here. If you've enjoyed the show and feel it's worth reviewing,
please do leave a review on iTunes, or wherever you get your podcasts, but more importantly,
tell just one person that you like this episode. Word of mouth, more than any other form
promotion or reward is how creative works get noticed and sustain themselves.
Thank you very much for listening.
