• AARP Jukebox
  • Tour the Country with Tony Bennett
  • What is your music IQ?

More Music

Music

This blogger, Richard Gehr, is not an employee of AARP. The opinions expressed in the blog are not necessarily the opinions of AARP and AARP assumes no liability for the content posted by Mr. Gehr or any other participant

"Are you one of the faithful?" a very smiley woman inquired as I sat down beside her. Four years ago I was at B.B. King's in Times Square, where Carmaig de Forest and I had come to attend poet-singer Rod McKuen's first New York show in many years. I didn't quite know how to answer her at the time, but by the end of McKuen's show it became clear that he was the figurehead of a particularly devoted cult of middle-aged fans. The show itself was a fascinating mixture of kitsch and craft. McKuen, then sixty-nine, read from his best-selling book of poetry, including the ubiquitous Listen to the Warm. He sang "Seasons in the Sun," of course, as well as his moving translations of his own idol, Jacques Brel. And he had the crowd in stitches with patter that consisted largely of double (and sometimes single) entendres.

The experienced washed over me in a sentimental flood as I read Claire Dederer's terrific account of a recent McKuen performance [via House of Mirth] in Palm Springs. Dederer begins by writing, "This is not going to be one of those articles where I reread the maligned work and discover that lo, it is actually pretty good. Because I did, and it's not." But she does come to an upbeat conclusion:

"The boys in their berets are drinking lattes and singing along to every word. A 60ish, hard-living woman is waving her fist in the air, rock concert style. Two more 60ish, hard-living women have literally fallen out of their chairs. As far as I can tell, Palm Springs is a town full of old people, and drunk people, and gay people, and people doing our best to go to seed. Here we all are in this room, and Rod McKuen is making us believe in love and art."

I also bought Rod McKuen Takes a San Francisco Hippie Trip as an unironic Xmas present for my father not long after its late-sixties release. That record's strangely out of print but you can still buy his camp and thoroughly cool Beatsville.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

Disclaimer: You are fully responsible for the content that you post, and AARP assumes no responsibility for the messages or content of others. We also reserve the right to remove or edit postings because of length or other reasons in our sole discretion. Please do not post commercial messages. Please behave respectfully to other members of this blog community. We reserve the right to delete or edit comments that may be inflammatory, abusive, off-topic, obscene, sexually explicit, use excessive foul language, are of a personal nature, or are otherwise inappropriate. You agree that AARP, its affiliates and sublicensees can use your comment and derivative works based on your comment on this blog and in any other media. Please do not post personal contact information and do not impersonate other members of this blog community or anyone else. We reserve the right to change these rules at any time.