365 Day Song Challenge: Day 15 – “You Can Call Me Al”

Day 15. A song your parents played on road trips when you were young

“You Can Call Me Al” — Paul Simon

paulsimonchevy“Young” is a relative term. I’m 43 years old, and I still feel young. I’m assuming that the creator of the challenge meant “when you were a kid” but it’s vague enough to allow for some license.

I’m going to use that license, because, although we did a lot of road trips when I was a kid, I never remember us listening to music. My parents were not “The Wheels On The Bus”-type people (thank God). On top of that, we did a lot of overnight driving. The “if we leave at midnight the kids will sleep and we won’t have to listen to them” mentality. Of which I wholeheartedly approve as an adult.

When I was really young—the time when we did the most driving—we were still in the era of AM radio in the car. (Cue “AM Radio” by Everclear.) By the time we got to the era of the Power Wagon, and the capability to play tapes, most of those really long trips were a thing of the past (and a good thing, too, given the Power Wagon’s other “amenities”). So, as a kid, I got nothin’.

This is where the license comes in.

In 1988 I went on a student exchange to Australia, where, as it happens, we also did a lot of road trips. I saw a bunch of New South Wales from the back seat of a Holden Premier station wagon (which actually did have power and did have a tape deck). So I’m focusing on those.

In preparation for the exchange, I had taped a lot of albums, one of those being Paul Simon’s Graceland(with his first greatest hits album, Greatest Hits, Etc., now long out of print, on the B side). For one reason or another, we started listening to that tape every time we went somewhere.

I stayed in Kiama, NSW, which was some sort of weird focal point for exchange students. While I was there, we had at least six or seven students from other countries just in my class. I’m not sure why that was. One of those, a guy from Denmark named Janus became a close friend, and he began to spend a lot of time with my family, joining us on many of those trips.

Now, we were pretty goofy as it was, but when “You Can Call Me Al” would come on, the goofiness went to 11. During the song, we played air guitar, air bass, air trumpet (mimicking the moves from the video as much as you can while sitting in a back seat), air pennywhistle, air bongos… Anything “air.” Which must have looked really weird to anyone who saw us.

Cascading notes, starting on that last paragraph:

  • I do remember one trip when we didn’t do “air bongos”: my host sister was stretched across three of us in the back seat, and her legs became our bongos. We bongoed the crap out of those legs. The song was on, she was there; as far as I’m concerned, she asked for it.
    • Yes, she was stretched out across our laps. We were packed in there. This was the 80’s, seatbelt use wasn’t what it is today, and we were in the middle of nowhere on a two-lane highway in NSW. Oh, and my host father was a NSW State Policeman.
      • The fact that he was a NSW State Policeman didn’t mean we wouldn’t die if there was an accident, but it did mean we weren’t likely to get in trouble should we get pulled over.
        • We lived to tell the tale.
        • We did not get pulled over.
        • Four levels of bullets is too many. Any decent editor or web designer will tell you that.

And now, here’s something we hope you’ll really like:

One comment

  1. Pete · January 16, 2014

    Actually was listening to this mp3 in the car the other day on the way home, and always remember the glass dropped through the non-table/bongo support. Good times…

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