Wednesday, September 18, 2024

The Cricket of Abbey Road A Micro Memoir Regarding the Beatles Album

 




Early October 1969

        The Beatles Abbey Road album was released on September 26, 1969.

With my saved cash from various entrepreneurial ventures I rode my green stingray, with white banana seat, from my mobile home at the Cable Line Meat Market trailer park to Kmart which rested along US33 in Dunlap, Indiana. Dunlap, as was known by the more mature generations, was more commonly known as Concord by the younger generations of which I, at age fourteen, inhabited.

    A frequent visitor of the record section at Kmart, I knew the route to the section of 45 RPMs and 33 and 1/3rds. I don’t remember the sticker price of the album. But I know that it was less than five dollars. The sticker on the “shrink wrap” surrounding the album had a sticker which read “suggested retail price”. Kmart’s price was less than the “suggested” price. That was an early lesson in marketing…give people the impression that you are giving them a break on the price, and you will sell more. As if the Beatles needed any such gimmicks!

   Purchasing the album, of which I had been looking forward most of the summer, riding my bike back to the trailer park, I immediately set the vinyl record on the spindle, flipped the switch and watched as the mechanical workings of the phonograph player drop the album, the needle-arm moved over and gently sat the needle into the groove. Yes, it was very much a ritual for me.

    I played the album daily. My favorite song being “She Came in Through the Bathroom Window”*. My least favorite being “Come Together”. Oh, for sure, the instrumentation on the song is great. But the Lennon-esque lyric, a la “I Am the Walrus”, discouraged my intellect. Well, enough French for this writing. Anyway and overall, the album was, and continues to be, great.

   It was, perhaps, during the first week in October, as I was playing the album, I noticed that my grandmother, with whom I lived, was searching around the home with a broom and small carboard box. At first, I thought she was looking for cobb webs lurking in corners or under furniture. But no, she was not brooming anything into the box. Curious, I asked “What are you doing? What are you looking for?

“Don’t you hear it?” she responded.

Perplexed, I asked “Hear what?”

“The cricket…there’s a cricket in here somewhere.”

I paid attention to the noises in the room. After a short bit, it occurred to me, and I said “The cricket is on the recording.”

“No, this is a real cricket. I hear it clearly” she insisted.

I went to the phonograph, I gently lifted the needle from the vinyl, the sound of a chirping cricket stopped.

My grandmother stopped, a baffled look upon her face. I sat the needle upon the vinyl. The chirping resumed. I removed the needle, the chirping stopped.

A bit of embarrassment upon her face, she stepped over to the phonograph and looked at the spinning record. I dropped the needle again, the chirping resumed.

“Well, I ain’t never heard nothin’ like that on a record!” she spoke in her Campbell County Tennessee accent pronouncing the preposition “on” such that it sounded like “own”.

My grandmother was impressed!

The recorded chirping sounded “live” to my grandmother!

This vinyl-captured chirping is found on the “b” side of the album as “You Never Give Me Your Money” segues into “Sun King”.

I report this incident as an accolade to George Martin and the Beatles for their precision and expert talent in making recordings. Fooling my grandmother took some talent!

 

*Yes, I acknowledge Paul could write some lyrics detached from decipherability, but at least they were recognizable words.