Wow, this thread has got me digging into the old memory banks. Back in the 50's my Uncle Mel owned a tavern along US 23 in southern Ohio. This was the route used by Kentuckians and other Hillbillys looking for work in the steel mills and factories in northern Ohio. In 1955 Uncle Mel spent a month in the hospital. My dad, a construction worker who was temporarily out of work, offered to help out my aunt by bar-tending the morning shift. He would take me along (5 years old - we didn't have kindergarten in our school district) as there usually wasn't much business until about 4pm when guys got off work. The juke -box was always playing and I was always listening. Most of the music was country - Red Foley, Marty Robbins, the "Hanks" (Williams, Snow and Thompson), but a few 45's with the "new" music. I remember Pat Boone singing "Ain't That a Shame" and someone whose name I can't remember singing "The Ballad of Davy Crockett" (Davy was big-time back then - I had a coonskin cap and flintlock pistol that were my favorite toys and often wore them in the bar.)
The "rock" song that I still vividly remember however was "Rock Around the Clock" by Bill Haley and the Comets.
How can I remember all that but can't recall when I had my last dentist visit?
DE
I want to read my own water, choose my own path, write my own songs