Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Musical Memories – With Pictures!


This is what pretty much every day has looked like for the past several weeks -- clear skies, sunshine, and dry, dry weather. The streetside hanging baskets in St. John's Wood are clearly loving it, with their copious blossoms, but then, the council keeps them watered.

The weather app on my phone says there's a 50/50 chance of rain today, tomorrow, and each day through next Monday. If the odds are right, we should get some precipitation soon. This is so far our driest month of the entire year, with just 1.8 mm of rain -- I would be thrilled to get almost anything. We need a couple of days of slow soaking.

Given our discussion of ABBA and pop music a couple of days ago, I've been thinking about early musical memories. I remember hearing ABBA's "Dancing Queen" on the radio quite a bit as a child -- for some unaccountable reason, my nine-year-old ears heard the lyrics as "the air is clean" -- but of course I'd remember music at that age. What about earlier?


Here I am in what used to be called "nursery school," now known as pre-school, in 1970-71. I'm standing next to the teacher, Mrs. Dahm, holding her hand. Apparently I was big on holding hands back then. The mother of one of the girls in my class -- Kim, on the far right -- told me years later that I'd always hold Kim's hand on the way into school. Seems a bit clingy.

At this point I went to a private Presbyterian school in Tampa, close to where my mom worked at the university. I wasn't quite four years old when I started there, because I had a November birthday, which meant I was younger than most of my classmates for my entire school career.

In 1970, my mom was driving a dark green Ford Mustang with a black interior, and this is where I remember hearing some of my earliest pop music -- riding to and from school in her car. I associate several songs with that Mustang -- Neil Diamond's "Sweet Caroline," the Beatles' "Hey Jude" and "Let it Be."

I also remember going to my friend's house -- he's in the photo above, standing two kids away from me, with the red-striped shirt -- and his mother serving us grilled cheese sandwiches. I don't even remember his name now -- Gregory? Gary? Geoffrey? -- but his mother was very pretty and looked like Anita Bryant. I distinctly remember hearing Don McLean's "American Pie" while at his house, and probably not for the first time, given that it was a huge hit that year.


Just for good measure, here's my kindergarten class, from 1971-72. I love how someone made me wear a clip-on tie but didn't bother to tell me to tuck in my shirt. At least I didn't have to wear a bow-tie or a double-breasted suit. My teacher was Mrs. Fisher. Of course the musical memories I'm describing could have come from this year as well, because we were still tooling around in Mom's Mustang.

When I switched to the elementary school in my suburban hometown, north of Tampa, for first grade, I began taking the school bus, and my exposure to pop music on the car radio diminished. In my house, we rarely listened to the radio when I was little, and my mom's idea of a good record was Brahms or the music from "Victory at Sea." I don't think she even owned a pop or rock album, unless you count the cassette of "Bridge Over Troubled Water" that a friend made for her. (She rarely if ever played it. I swiped it years later.) My dad was more tuned in, but strangely I don't remember being exposed to much of his music until after he and my mom divorced in 1974 and he'd take my brother and me to his apartment every weekend. We'd listen to 8-track tapes in his Volkswagen -- Bread, the Fifth Dimension, Simon & Garfunkel, Donovan, Melanie.

I heard music at the house of some friends down the street, the Betzes -- songs like "The Lord's Prayer," which I've already written about, and "Billy, Don't Be a Hero," and "Seasons in the Sun," which I found weird and scary. (Why was he singing about dying?!)

Eventually our school buses had radios installed, and we listened to Q-105 on the way to and from school. That's when my musical memories really begin to flesh out with more variety. At first it was "Oh What a Night" by The Four Seasons, and "Let 'Em In" by Paul McCartney and Wings. As I got older we eventually moved into the years of the Bee Gees and "Saturday Night Fever."

Anyway, that's what I was hearing as a kid. What about you? What are your earliest musical memories?

8 comments:

  1. My ABBA recollection is watching them win Eurovision with "Waterloo" with my future wife and in-laws.

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  2. I had older brothers who both loved different music, I found Neil Young very early on, my other brother was into Motown, it was always a great mix.

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  3. My earliest musical memories were mostly Elvis Presley until The Beatles came along and my sister became a fan, but we didn't listen to radio much and though there were musical shows on TV on Saturdays we didn't watch those either. All my classmates did and knew ALL the words to ALL the songs and ALL the steps to ALL the latest dances. I spent my time climbing trees and reading books when I wasn't running around at the beach like a five year old. I was a very "young" teenager with no interest in clothes or makeup at all.

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  4. Being much older than you I don't remember much music until my teens. We didn't have a car until I was 10 and I doubt it even had a radio. TV when I was 14. First record I bought was Cathy's Clown, and a friend and I used to listen over and over to " Rubber Ball" by Bobby Vee...the only record we had at the time I guess! We would have been about 15 then.

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  5. Radio Luxembourg deep into the night and even Radio Caroline - long before BBC Radio caught up with the world. My very first single was "Return to Sender" and later with my three brothers we got our first album -"With the Beatles" which I listened to over and over again till I knew all the songs on it by heart.

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  6. Our age difference shows in the music we remember. Maybe the first LP I bought was David Bowie's Pin Up. The first 45 rpm single could have been T Rex's Metal Guru.

    My birthday is October, so like you, I was always the youngest in the class, and I don't think that was a good thing. Apparently I was 'ready' for school at four 4 years and 3 months old.

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  7. I am 10 years older than you so my "first" music was a little different, although I did enjoy all those you mentioned. My Dad didn't have a car, let alone a car radio, so I used to listen to the wireless, then later a transistor radio at home.
    My first music purchase was a Monkees' single. Can't remember exactly which one now but I used to save up my pocket money each week to buy every single they produced!

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  8. No music in my home but at 16 I discovered Radio Luxemburg under the bed covers with a little radio.. I didn't listen to music as a young housewife and mum but talk programs, but listened a few years later.. so know all the 60's and 70's songs.

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