Thursday, March 26, 2009

curse of the mole people



virgil vogel's "the mole people", 1956.

Arranged by John Pate and Riley Hampton. Engineered by Roger Anfinsen.

Written and produced by Curtis Mayfield; one year befor
e his 30th birthday.

Trivia for pigeon fanciers and trainspotters:

The Underground (subway) in Glasgow - originally opened to the public in 1897 - is widely referred to as 'The Clockwork Orange', owing in part to the one-time corporate colour of
Greater Glasgow Passenger Transport Executive. Confusingly, the paint used to decorate the carriages was officially coined 'Strathclyde PTE Red' as a result of political sensitivity - after the fact - to the city's major sectarian divisions. The third oldest subway system of its kind in the world, it operates on only two lines of track, an inner and outer circle, each running counter-clockwise and servicing just fifteen stations across the heart of the city.

Worryingly, many of those lesser stations operate on a single platform. It is all too easy to imagine oneself toppling - or being shoved - on to a live rail or, worse, directly in front of an oncoming train. It is not remotely a child friendly mode of transport, or one to be countenanced by the squeamish.

Parents cling to their offspring, chalky faces paralyzed with anxiety.

When I was a mere kid myself, the passenger seating consisted of bare wooden planking, and those narrow platforms were only dimly lit by naked sixty watt bulbs strung sparingly overhead on cables as substantial as rat chewed threads of skirting board insulation. The carriages were claustrophobic and unsanitary. A smell of piss and beer. One huddled into a corner and held one's breath. Avoided eye contact with the obviously inebriated and simply sat it out; rattling along through black tunnels rank with underground pockets of natural gas. Good times.

Another child farther along forced to give up his seat for an elderly weasel in an overcoat while a fat man sleeps it off splayed out on the bench with one unlaced shoe dangling.

The Tokyo Tube may pack them in like sardines - inert and upright, and red eyes streaming from the Sarin - but at least its trains are spotless.

CURTIS MAYFIELD: UNDERGROUND from "Roots" LP (Curtom) 1971 (US)

PURCHASE ROOTS REMASTERED ON RHINO

3 comments:

said...

Curtis, imho, is THE MAN!

Your driver said...

Yes, Yes, Curtis. I've been reading Jim DeRogatis' bio of Lester Bangs. Lester has slipped considerably in my estimation. He did not think much of Curtis.

ib said...

Yes. Lester had his foibles. But. What he may sometimes have missed through his scattergun allegiances, he more than made up for by way of honesty and testosterone fueled enthusiasm. Of course, I may well have gotten it wrong too - on occasion - to a similar or greater degree.