The musical Hair opened on Broadway on this date 50 years ago, back in 1968. I grew up listening to this album and most of the songs feel like they are ingrained somehow in my DNA. Hailed as the American tribal love-rock musical, it was a groundbreaking show with songs that permeated the culture and helped define the era. Aquarius certainly feels like that time and that year.
And what a year 1968 was, here and around the world.
There were the tragic assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr and Robert F. Kennedy in April and June.
In a stormy election season, the 1968 Democratic Convention was an eight-day violent skirmish in the streets of Chicago between police and protesters. Ultimately, Richard Nixon was elected president.
Here and around the globe, student anti-war protesters filled the streets and sometimes, as in the cases of Columbia University and Howard University, took over and occupied buildings.
North Korea captured the American surveillance ship the USS Pueblo and held its crew prisoner for 11 months. North Korea released the crew but kept the ship. It is now an exhibit Victorious Fatherland Liberation War Museum in Pyongyang.
There was the Tet Offensive and the My Lai Massacre in Viet Nam.
You had the Prague Spring that results later in the year with the Russians marching into Czechoslovakia to exert their control.
Before the opening of the 1968 Mexico Olympics, students protested in the streets that the money spent by the country for the Olympics would be better put to use in much needed social programs. The protesters were surrounded by the army and fired on, killing over 200 students and injuring over 1000 more.
The Olympics themselves were memorable with Bob Beamon soaring to an unfathomable record in the long jump. And, of course, there was the iconic image of Tommie Smith and John Carlos on the podium for the medal ceremony for the 200-meter run. Bare-footed with their heads cast downward, both raised gloved fists in the Black Power salute.
That would be enough for most years– maybe most decades. But there was even more that I don’t have time to go in here that make it one of the most chaotic and super-charged years in our history.
And among all that, the subversive sound of Hair played on. Well, it’s been fifty years and the world seems to have rotated back to find us in a similar time of chaos.
Some things never change, I guess.
So, for this week’s Sunday morning music I thought something from Hair would be fitting. So many great choices but here are a couple of better known selections, both of which became hits for artists that covered them in the following years. The first is Easy To Be Hard which was hit for Three Dog Night. The second is the title anthem which was #1 hit for The Cowsills.
Give a listen and have a good Sunday.
Nothing ever exceeded the original Broadway score — it takes about two chords of any of those songs to bring it all back.
You’re right about the original cast album being the best. There’s an authenticity in it that subsequent versions lack. And about two chords is about all it takes to bring it all back instantly.
That was the year I started high school. It pretty much set my personal philosophy coming of age as I did at the end of the 60’s and the start of the 70’s.
It sometimes seems we’ve come full circle in the 50 years that have gone by…
Yes, I definitely feel that sense of full circle. If that is the case, it will be interesting, to say the least, to see what this year brings.
On Sun, Apr 29, 2018 at 11:29 AM, Redtree Times wrote:
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You nailed the best songs! Easy to Be Hard was the song of my teenage childhood — I sat with my ears close to the speaker listening over and over and over to those emotional lyrics, and that amazing voice. Imagine my surprise, decades later, when I became close friends with the vocalist, Lynn Kellogg, whose voice was etched into my teenage soul! Found a couple classic videos with Lynn that you might enjoy :)) Dawn