Roll out the barrel, weāll have a barrel of fun.
Roll out the barrel, weāve got the blues on the run.
Zing! Boom! Ta-rarrel!
Sing out a song of good cheer.
Nowās the time to roll the barrel,
For the gangās all here!
Okay. Maybe not Top 40 Hit Parade material, but occasionally the tune to this polka rolls through my head, and Iām whisked back to the 1950s when the song was first introduced to me. Songs and musical scores have a way of sparking memories, donāt they. Hopefully pleasant ones.
This one conjures images of my father in a striped coat, white pants, and a straw hat, standing third in a line of barbershop quarteters, belting out his āba-ba-oo-ah-oo-ahā bass notes to round out what was harmonic bliss to my seven-year-old ears. Their precision and blend on songs like āRoll Out The Barrelā thrilled me and instilled a lifelong love of music deep inside.
Today, I write historical novels. (Check out mikehmizrahi.com). When Iām between projects, I enjoy writing Substack with history and culture as the predominant theme. For me, music and history are inexorably intertwined. Not just how the music defined the times, but also how it contributed to the shape of my life.
Soā¦
Iād like to explore together the impact that songs and musical pieces from the 50s, 60s, and 70s, or any other era, have had on meāand you. A sharing of personal histories, if you will.
YES, that means Iād like to hear from you!
āMusic gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything.ā ā Plato
I lasted only six months as a declared music major in my junior year of college, but Iāve been playing the guitar ever since. Each of my three siblings were also infected with the bug, my older brother Morrie becoming one of the countryās foremost classical guitarists and lutenists until his untimely death at age thirty-seven. But it was my father who branded a love of music on each of our souls.
Hardly a Sunday passed by without Dean Martin, Bing Crosby, and Al Jolson crooning in the background as we piled our bagels high with cream cheese, white fish or lox, tomatoes, and cucumbers. While the boisterous conversationāor arguments half the timeāfought with the music for my attention, I usually found solace in the songs.
In the afternoons, my older brothers would share the music of Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, Little Richard, and folk artists like the Limeliters, Woody Guthrie, the Kingston Trio, and later, Bob Dylan. This propelled me into a rock band in the 60s that secured my place as one of the cool kids in high school. Very important distinction back then.
Music was everywhere, and it all started with my father. Rehearsing with his quartet in our den, performing at parties and community events. For all his weaknesses (and who doesnāt have a few, right?), Dave Mizrahi was a bigger than life kind of man. The life of any party, charismatic, and a very talented stage actor in our community theater.
Iām thankful for the love of music he left for us. Thatās why I chose such an obscure song as āRoll Out The Barrelā to kick this off. I wish I could proudly write about the rest of his legacy, butā¦
How about you? Please send me a couple of comments about how a song, or score, or some musical interlude unleashes a particular memory for you. Can you tie it to some historic event? Iād like to feature some of your memories in future posts, so let me know if I have permission.
Mike,
Do you remember this one?
Note: Mike and I attended the same junior and senior high schools.
Theme from a Summer Place...closed each Friday's Sports Night when the ASB President announced that it was "the last dance of the night."
Every girl hoped that their current crush would ask for this dance. Even if it was the first time you'd been asked to dance all night, it held high esteem in the world of middle school romance.
Not gonna lie. It still makes me swoon a bit when I listen to it. The power of melody to whisk you away to a different time and place...
I remember Summer Place... struck terror in my teenage heart. What I most remember is the profound impact the Beatles made on my teenage life when I really need it, and on my dear friend throughout JHS and HS. He was not only a superb guitarist with a tremendous memory for song lyrics and chords (something my dyslexic brain struggled to do well). My favorite memory was how adept my friend was at forging the autographs of all four beatles... we could have made money, but no, he just autographed our notebooks, bookcovers (ask a kid today what a book cover is!), and math papers... which cost him a point on a test that ended up making the difference in his end of year grade. Singing We Can Work it Out (Try to See it My Way) made no difference... while the lousy math grade stood, it no longer matters in life; but the Beatle song and the perfect autographs are enduring