A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 9: “How High The Moon” by Les Paul and Mary Ford
Episode Date: December 3, 2018Welcome to episode nine of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs. Today we’re looking at Les Paul and Mary Ford, and “How High The Moon”. Click the full post to read liner no...tes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. (more…)
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A History of Rock Music in 500 songs
By Andrew Hake
Episode 9
How High the Moon
By Les Paul and Mary Ford
To be a truly great guitarist
You need to have an imagination
You need to be inventive
And you need to have a sense of musicality
Some would also say
that you need to have a lot of dexterity
and to be able to move your fingers lightning fast.
Maybe also have long fingers
so you could reach further down the neck.
But let's talk about Django Reinhardt for a bit.
We mentioned Django, a little bit,
in the episode on Bob Wills and Ida Red.
We talked, in particular,
about how he was making music
that sounded very, very similar
to what the early Western swing musicians were doing.
We're not going to talk much
about Django in this series, because he was a jazz musician, but he was very influential on a few of the
people who went on to influence rock, so we're going to touch on him briefly here. He never played an
electric guitar, but he still influenced pretty much every guitarist since, either directly or indirectly.
And this was despite having disadvantages that would have stopped almost anyone. One point we haven't
made very much yet, but which needs to be made repeatedly, is that the people in most of these
early podcasts were crushingly, hellishly, poor by today's standards. Poverty still exists, of course,
to far too great an extent, but the people were talking about here lived in conditions
that would be unimaginable to almost all of the listeners to this podcast, and Reinhart had it
worse than most. He was a Romani traveller, and while growing up, his greatest skill was stealing
chickens. Real, proper, poverty. But he became a professional musician, and it looked like he might
actually become well off. And then his bad look got worse. His caravan caught on fire,
and in trying to rescue his wife and child, he suffered such extreme burns that one of his
legs became paralyzed, and more importantly for Reinhardt as a musician, he lost the use of two of
his fingers on his left hand. He had to re-teach himself to play the guitar, and to use only two fingers
and a thumb on his left hand to play. Remarkably, he managed well enough to do things like this.
Reinhardt influenced many guitarists, and one American guitarist in particular became a friend of
Reinhart and said that he and Reinhardt were the only two guitarists in the world at that time
who were actually serious about their instrument. He was another jazz man, with a similar
style to Reinhardt, but one who had a more direct influence on rock and roll. War Kisha, Wisconsin,
is not the most rock and roll town in the world. It was a spa town before the water started to dry up,
and about the most exciting thing that ever happened there
is that Mr Sears, the founder of Sears and Roebock,
retired there when he got too ill to work anymore.
It's a bland, white-bred, Midwestern town
in a state that's most notable for dairy farming.
Yet it's also the birthplace of the only man
who is in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
and the National Inventors Hall of Fame,
and who probably did more than any other individual
to make the guitar a respected lead instrument.
Almost every moderately known guitarist
eventually gets a signature model named after them,
and most of those sell a small number of instruments
before being discontinued.
But one man has a signature model
that's so popular that other guitarists get their signatures
alongside his.
When you buy a Jimmy Pipp,
or Mark Knopfler or Slash or Eric Clapton's signature guitar.
There are two names on there, the name of Paige or Clapton or whoever.
And the name Les Paul.
Les Paul was a remarkable man whose inventions are far more widely known even than his name.
You'll almost certainly have seen musicians playing guitar and harmonica at the same time,
using a harmonica holder.
Les Paul invented that as a teenager, making the first one out of a coat hanger.
I guess if you were a teenager in Waukesha in the 1920s, you'd have little better to do with yourself
than invent cotanga harmonica holders too.
But Les Paul was, first and foremost, a guitar player, and he became a semi-professional musician
by the time he was 13.
The choice of the guitar was one that was actually made by his mother.
She explained to him, if you play the piano, you got your back turned to the audience.
If you play the drums, you've got to carry all that stuff around. It's not musical.
If you play a saxophone, you can't sing and talk at the same time.
In his words, she whittled it down to guitar in a hurry.
His mother, indeed, seems to have been a remarkable woman in many ways.
If you read any interviews with Les Paul, he barely ever goes a few sentences without saying something
about how much she did for him.
That's one of the defining characteristics
of Les Paul's life, really,
his admiration for his mother.
There were two more things that characterised him, though.
The first was that pretty much dead on
every ten years he would have some major health crisis
that would put him out of commission for a year.
The other was his lifelong devotion to learning,
which meant that he used those health crises
as an opportunity to learn something new.
love of learning could be seen from his very early days. When he was just learning the guitar,
the singing cowboy star Gene Autry came to town. Gene Autry was a star of Western music,
the very biggest star in the country, and his music was a cleaned-up, politer version of the kind of
music Bob Wills played.
I'm back in the saddle again. Out where a friend is a friend, where the long.
Longhorn cattle feed on the lowly gyps and we back in the saddle again.
Riding the range once more.
Toten my old 44 where you sleep out every night and the only law is right.
Back in the saddle.
Les and his friend went to every show in the residency and after a couple of nights,
Gene Autry stopped the show in the middle of the set and said,
Something strange has been happening here.
Every time I play an F-cord,
and only when I play an F-cord, there's a flash of light.
What's going on? How is this happening?
It turned out that Les Paul had been wanting to learn
how Ortery made that chord shape,
so he'd been there with a pencil and paper,
and his friend had a torch,
and every time he played the chord Les Paul wanted to learn,
the torch would come on,
and Les would be trying to sketch the shape of Ortery's fingers.
Autry invited Les Paul onto the stage,
showed him how to make the chord,
and had him play a couple of songs.
A few years later, when Ortree moved from radio to films,
he suggested Les Paul take over his radio show.
So Les Paul was always fascinated by learning,
and always trying to improve himself in his equipment.
And once he decided to be a guitarist,
he also decided to electrify his guitar,
a full decade before electric guitars became a widespread instrument.
He explained that when he was starting out,
he was playing at a hot dog stand,
using a homemade microphone for his voice and harmonica.
The microphone was made out of bits of an old telephone,
and it was plugged into his mother's radio.
People who were listening liked his performances,
but they said they wished the guitar was as loud as his voice,
so he took his dad's radio too
and connected it to a record player needle,
which he jammed into the body of his guitar.
Once electric guitars started being manufactured,
Paul started playing them, but he never liked them.
The electric guitars of the late 1930s were what we'd now call electroacoustics.
They were acoustic guitars playable as such,
but with pickups.
There were two main problems with them.
Firstly, they were very prone to feedback,
because the hollow body of the guitar would resonate.
And secondly, most of the sonic energy from the strings
was going into the guitar itself,
so there was no sustain.
Paul came up with a simple solution to this problem,
which he called the log.
The log was almost exactly what the name would suggest.
It was a plank, to which were nailed some pickups,
strings, and tuning pegs.
On the front was attached to the front of a normal guitar,
not anything that would actually resonate,
just to make it look like a proper guitar.
But basically, it was just a lump of wood.
Les Paul wasn't the first person to build a solid-body electric guitar,
but as he put it himself later,
there may be some guy out there in iOS says he built the guitar in 1925 for all I know,
and he may have.
I only know what I was doing
and I was out there weaving my own basket
and there wasn't anybody else around
and it had to be done.
He perfected the solid body guitar
during the first of his years of illness.
He'd been running an illegal radio station
accidentally stuck his hand in the transmitter
and not only got an electric shock
but had a load of equipment fall on him.
By the time he was well enough to work again
he had the idea perfected.
He took his solid body guitar idea
to Gibson in 1941, but they weren't interested. No one was going to want to buy a solid guitar.
It wasn't until Leo Fender started selling his guitars in 1950, that Gibson realized that it might
be worth doing. But by then, Les Paul had become one of the most famous guitarists in the country.
Even before he became hugely famous, though, he'd been one of the best guitarists in the country.
In 1944, when the guitarist Oscar Moore was unable at the last minute to play at jazz at the Philharmonic,
the first of what would eventually become the most famous series of jazz concerts ever.
Les Paul was drafted in at short notice,
and the live recordings of that show are some of the greatest instrumental jazz you'll hear,
at a time when the borders between jazz, R&B, and pop music were more fluid than they became.
Listen, for example, to this excerpt from blues.
one, two and three.
Unking saxophone player there is Illinois Jeket,
the man we talked about in episode one of this podcast,
who invented R&B saxophone.
The pianist there was also pretty great.
He was, in fact, a pianist who was already regarded
as one of the best in the business,
even before he started to sing,
and who later had two further separate careers
under his more familiar name,
one in R&B, in which he inspired a generation
of singers like Charles Brown and Ray Charles, and one in pop,
where he became one of the great ballad singers of all time.
He's credited on the track we just heard as Shorty Nadine, for contractual reasons,
but you probably know him better as Nat King Cole.
Listening to that, you can hear musicians performing at a time when jazz and R&B and rock and roll
were all still sort of the same thing.
before they all went off in their different directions.
And it's hard not to wish that that cross-fertilisation had continued a little while longer.
But it didn't, and it would be easy to imagine that as a result, Les Paul,
who was absolutely a jazz musician, would make no further contributions to rock and roll
after his popularising the solid-body electric guitar.
But we haven't even got to his real importance yet.
Yes, something he did,
that was even more important than the Les Paul guitar.
It started when his mother told him she'd enjoyed something she heard in play on the radio.
He'd replied that it wasn't him she'd heard, and she'd said,
Well, all those electric guitar players sound the same.
If you want to be a real success, you want to sound different from everyone else,
at least different enough that your own mother can recognise you.
And over the years, Les Paul had learned to listen to his mother.
She'd been the one who'd got him playing guitar, and she'd been the one who'd told him to go and see Bob Wills,
the day he'd ended up meeting Charlie Christian for the first time.
So he went and spent a lot of time working on a sound that was totally different from anything else,
spending days and weeks alone.
He stopped working with his trio and started working with a young country singer who renamed herself Mary Ford,
who Jean Autry had introduced him to, and who he soon married.
and he eventually came up with a whole new idea.
This episode is primarily about Les Paul,
because he was such an astonishing force of nature.
But it's worth making clear that Mary Ford was very much an equal partner in their 16 years together.
She was an excellent singer,
far better than Les Paul was,
and also a pretty good guitarist herself.
On their live dates, she would play rhythm guitar,
and often the two would do a comedy guitar duel,
with her copying everything Les Paul played.
She was a vital part of the sound
and of the sonic innovations the records contained
because one of the things they did for the first time
was to have her sing very close to the mic,
a totally different technique than had been used before,
which gave her vocals a different tone,
which almost everyone imitated.
But that wasn't the only odd sound on the records.
It sounded like Les Paul was playing two or three guitars at the same time,
playing the same part, and sometimes he was playing notes that were higher than any guitar could play.
And sometimes, when Mary Ford was singing, it sounded as if there were two or more of her.
This was such an unusual sound, that on the duo's radio and TV appearances, they made a joke of it.
They pretended that Paul had invented a Les Paul Veriser, which could duplicate everything,
and that, for example, he could use the Les Paul Verizer on Mary, so there'd be multiple Merries, and she could,
could get the vacuum cleaning done quicker. It was the 50s. But of course what Paul was actually
doing was overdubbing, recording one guitar part and then going back and recording a second over it.
He'd been fascinated by the idea for decades, and he'd first done it as an experiment when he was
still with the trio. He'd wanted to rehearse a song on his own, but with the arrangement the
rest of the band played, so he'd recorded himself playing all the parts, using a disc cutter
and playing along with previous takes. This didn't give good results until the introduction of
magnetic tape recording in the very late 40s. When you recorded directly to a disc, there was so
much surface noise and recording quality was so poor that no one would even think of recording
overdubs. But in 1945, American soldiers brought back a new technology from Germany as spails-of-war,
high-fidelity tape recording. With magnetic tape, you could record sound, with orders of magnitude less
noise than by cutting the disc. And Bing Crosby, who often worked with Les Paul, was the first
person to see the possibilities of this new technology. In his case, for pre-recording his radio shows,
so they didn't have to go out live,
which meant he could record them in batches
and have more time to spend on the golf course.
Les Paul was far more technical than Crosby though,
and far more aware of what could happen if,
for example, you had two tape recorders,
or if you ran one slow
so that when you played it back at normal speed,
everything sounded sped up,
or a dozen other obvious tricks that occurred to him
but had never occurred to anyone else.
So on those Les Paul and Mary Ford record,
literally every instrument was Les Paul on the guitar.
The bass was Les Paul's guitar slowed down to half speed.
The percussion was his guitar.
Everything was his guitar.
So now we come to How High the Moon itself.
This is a song that originally dated back to 1940.
The Benny Goodman band had the first hit with it,
and indeed Les Paul had recorded a version of it in 1945 with his trio.
That was right before his first.
experiment with tape recording started. Shortly after the first results of those were released,
in 1948, there was another one of those every decade health problems. In this case, Mary Ford was
driving the two of them from Wisconsin to L.A. She was from California, and not used to driving
in winter weather. She hit a patch of ice, and the two of them went off the road.
Les Paul spent hours in ice water with multiple bones broken
before anyone could get him to a hospital.
For a while, it was believed it would not be possible to save his right arm.
And then, for a while after that,
the doctors believed they could save it,
but it would be permanently fixed in a single position if they did,
as his elbow would be unfixable.
He told them to try their best,
and to set it in a position with his hand over his navel,
because if it was in that position, he could still play guitar.
Thankfully, they managed to save even the elbow.
But as a precaution, he spent his time in hospital drawing up plans for a synthesizer,
ten years before Robert Mogan invented his,
because he figured he could play the synth with one arm.
When he got better, he and Mary Ford recorded a new version of How High the Moon,
but at first the record label didn't want to release it.
That record sat unreleased for 18 months until 51,
because Jim Conkling at Capital said that there'd been 75 recordings of the song before
and none of them had been a hit.
Conkling thought this was because the lyrics don't make sense,
but Les Paul was insistent that no one was going to listen to the lyrics anyway.
It doesn't matter what Mary sang or if it was done by the four nosebleeds,
it didn't make any difference,
because that wasn't what made the record.
It was the arrangement in the performance.
And he was right.
The version by Les Paul and Mary Ford was an absolute phenomenon.
It spent 25 weeks in the Billboard Pop charts,
nine of them at number one.
And, while it was at number one,
another Paul and Ford track was at number two.
Even more astonishingly,
it also made number two on the rhythm and blues charts.
Remember, that was a chart.
that was specifically aimed at the black audience,
and between 1950 and 1955,
only five records by white performers made the R&B charts at all,
mostly very early rock and roll records.
How high the moon might easily seem an odd fit for the R&B charts?
To 21st century ears, it's hard to imagine anything more white-sounding.
But what it does absolutely share with the music
that was charting on the R&B charts at the time,
and the reason it appealed to the R&B audience
is a delight in finding totally new sounds.
The R&B charts at the time
were where you looked for experimentation,
for people train new things.
And also, there's that rhythm on the record.
This is entirely a record that's driven by the rhythm.
It's not quite dance music,
not like the jump bands,
and there's only guitar and vocals on it,
something which would be absolutely out of the ordinary
for rhythm and blues records at the time
with their emphasis on piano and saxophone.
But what there is in that guitar playing
is personal expression
and R&B was all about individual expression.
Les Paul was doing something
which was qualitatively different
both from jazz and from R&B
and so it's not surprising
that he ended up crossing over from one market to another
but in doing so he also invented the way the guitar was to be used in rock and roll music.
There's a lot of Western swing about what he's doing on how high the moon, unsurprisingly.
But while the rhythm guitar is keeping to the same kind of rhythms that the Western swing people would use,
the lead guitar is much more aggressive and forceful than anything you got in country or Western music at the time.
It's playing jazz and R&B lines. It's playing, in fact, the kind of thing
that a saxophone player like Illinois jacquette might play,
full of aggressive stabs and scrunks.
And more than that, he invented the way the recording studio
would be used in rock and roll.
Before Les Paul and Mary Ford's early records,
the recording studio was used solely
as a way of reproducing the sound of live instruments
as accurately as possible.
After them, it became a way to create new sounds
that could not be made live.
One thing we're going to see over and again in this series
is the way technological change, artistic change and social change
all feed back into each other.
The 1950s was a time of absolutely unprecedented technological change in America,
and people went from, in the beginning of the decade.
Listening to recordings played at 78 RPM, made of breakable shellac,
often on wind-up grammophones,
to listening to high fidelity 45-on.
RPM singles and long-playing records, which could, shockingly, last more than four minutes aside.
Radio went from being something that had to be listened to as a family, because of the size of the
radiogram, to something a teenager could listen to in bed under the blankets on a transistor radio,
or something that you could even have on in your car. The combination of these changes made music
into something that could be personal as well as communal.
Teenagers didn't have to share the music with their parents.
All of that was still to come, of course,
and we'll look at those things as they happened during our history.
But how high the moon was the first and best sign of what was to come
as the 1940s gave way to the 1950s,
and music entered a totally new age.
Les Paul kept playing the guitar into his 90s,
interviewed in his late 7.
When his arthritis was so bad, he only had movement in two fingers, with all the others so stiff they just had to stay where he put them.
He said he played better than he had when he had ten fingers, because he'd had to learn more about the instrument to do it this way.
In the end, his arthritis got to the point that he could no longer move any fingers on either hand,
so he'd just let his fingers stay where they were, but would move his whole hand to play single notes and bar chords.
He could lift his fingers up and down, just not move the knuckles, but he could still play.
This is him on his 90th birthday.
So it turns out you don't even need the two fingers Django had left.
Not if you have the kind of mind that gets you into the rock and roll Hall of Fame and the Inventors Hall of Fame.
Les Paul died, age 94 in 2009.
A history of rock music and 500 songs is written produced and performed by Andrew Hickey.
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including a mixed cloud stream of all songs excerpted in this episode.
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