Russell Buddy Helm
Now that I am seventy six years old my mind is taking inventory all on its own initiative, so I wake up about 8:20 in the morning with a song going through my head like some AI sub routine; faithfully reproducing a song from my past just behind my eyeballs as if I were still behind the drumset.
This morning it is Robert Palmer singing: “You might as well face it you’re addicted to Love”
This was the beginning of chic blue eyed soul music. It was produced in England. America didn’t have the cultural equanimity to come out with such a slick production Plus Robert Palmer was a suave dude. He didn’t look like a typical rock star: he wore a dark suit with a white shirt and a fore-in-hand knotted tie like he was a corporate executive. His hair was perfect but there was still the air of rebellious spirit.
But the thing that really sold this song and sent it up the charts was the video. Specifically the women in the video. The all-woman band consisted of ultra hot European models that all dressed and appeared to be identical: tall with legs forever, pulled back hair so tight it made their perfect faces taught with restrained passion. They all moved together even though it was obvious they were not really playing their respective instruments. It was the typical set up; Drums, Bass, Guitar, Keyboards and Robert up front with a microphone on a stand and his professional look.
They were thin and emotionless as they went through the motions of swaying back in forth in unison but not together like traditional groups. They were unattached in their own individual worlds while the song cooked in this nasty but polished groove. Robert didn’t have to acknowledge the women. He didn’t really even look at them.
It spoke of a time of sensuality grown up, looking for its equal on the world stage. Hot and sophisticated. Not yet New Age, definitely not punk but an aloof ethic that was more seductive than any other song on the charts. I could go on like Lester Bangs at Creem magazine but the thing that hit me was the chemistry of their skimpy minimalist tube dresses, The material was black and sheer. So sheer that as they moved in their disinterested lasciviousness, their private torsos were betrayed by the bright rock video lighting. They all looked identical too.
The song was good; a first class mix. But the women sold the video. It was beginning of pulp rock and it really worked. So today that is what I am listening to in my Juke box of a brain.
7:36 AM my juke box brain kicked in once again. This time it was Huey Piano Smith’s “Won’t you let me take you on a Sea Cruise.”
If we were to take a time machine back to the Crescent City in the early 1960’s we might see a skinny teen sitting on the stone window sill of the Preservation Hall Jazz Museum working on his plate of red beans and rice while listening to the last generation of genius jazz musicians playing tunes like “St. James Infirmary”. That could have been me.
Now “Sea Cruise” would not be categorized as a jazz tune, it had a huge sound effect of an ocean liner fog horn blaring in the middle of the tune, but it carries a lot of the jazz traditions. The drummer might have been Earl Palmer, or maybe even Zigaboo Modalisque, records were not organized too much. But the feel of the track survives. It swings like a house on fire. The swinging groove, which is a hold over from traditional jazz mixed with the urgency of straight up and down rock n roll made this song a gigantic feel good classic.
Since the culture of America was coming out of the segregation era, Sea Cruise was escaping the anonymity of being a “Race Record” Which was a dirty trick the record labels pulled by not putting the artist’s face on the record sleeve if they were of color. The white kids up north would buy it unknowing that they were condoning the exploitation. Only when Papa Ray Charles and other artists came north to perform did the white kids participate with integration to see their favorite recording artists.
The song might have been produced by the great Alain Tussaint. A lot of gold records came from that era. The money never made it into the pockets of the artists, but the music saved America anyway. We learned how to swing and share a good time.
The musical hook in the track is a baritone saxophone grabbing a descending melody line with a growling tone that every sax player since then refers to.
“Got the Boogie Woogie like a knife in the back.” is still a pretty good description of the effect of this music

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Insights from Buddy Helm’s Literary Works
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How Drumming Influences Mental Clarity
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The Rhythmic Philosophy of Russell Buddy Helm
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