Note: This is a performance clip from a TV
special, something I normally don’t mess with, but after watching it I knew I
wouldn’t feel good in the morning if I let this one go. It’s from 1972, and
that alone should explain everything that’s about to happen. Here we go…
We start out with
a blurry image of what might be the drummer, followed by blurry images of
anonymous hands playing a piano and tuning a guitar. Are we standing in line at a methadone clinic? (To be fair, the
blurriness is probably the degraded quality of the film and not the result of
some artistic director proclaiming “we must open with blurriness!” and then
taking a defiant drag on a clove cigarette.) Then we get a shot of one of those
Troll dolls (you know, those old-school asexually naked things with fuzzy hair)
stuck on the end of a guitar, and I start to get nervous.
Then we pan over
to the person holding that guitar, and I’m not trying to pass any judgment, but
based on the facial reactions, he’s clearly stoned out of his mind, or at least has severe focus issues. But it’s
all good, because we soon cut to somebody singing the opening bit of the song,
and you forget all about drug usage because this singer’s hair is quite
stunning. I’m not sure what he was going for with that look, but I hope he found
it. Then we zip over to another singer, I have no idea how many of them we
might meet, and this one is wearing an even more expressive hairdo, one that
Cher would later use during that part of her career when she wore a thong
whilst straddling a big gun on a battleship.
Okay, we’ve got
another vocalist, this one upping the hair challenge by sporting a mustache
that could rake the leaves off your front lawn. Oddly enough, he can’t help but
giggle during his lyric delivery, which I take as another sign of recreational
inhalants, but many of the women in the audience take as a cue to start
screaming in worship. Since I was only 7 at the time of this video, I’ll just
assume there were things going on that I was clueless about as I played with my
G.I. Joe and watched Saturday morning cartoons.
Mustache Man
starts playing with the crowd, throwing in some “wooh!” noises, encouraging
folks to scream some more so that it drowns out the song, which is kind of sad
because he really has quite a nice voice. (But I think he knows that.) He
throws in a cryptic Tiny Tim bit of flourish, then he passes the vocal torch to
yet another singer, this one wearing a startling mini-vest thing that looks
like something you would put on your Streetwalker Barbie Doll and not on your
G.I. Joe. (Unless Joe was raised in Venice Beach.)
This vest causes
the music to really ramp up, and we cut to the audience to see how they are
enjoying things so far. I would say that they mightily approve, especially the
one woman who appears to have just had a spontaneous orgasm. We head back to
the stage, where all 140 lead singers are posing in a head-to-toe camera angle,
letting us know that the Theme of the Day is overly-tight slacks that highlight
your crotch. Just to make sure we understand this theme, the Cher-Hair Guy
grabs the waistband of his pants and pulls them even higher, helpfully letting
the world know that he hangs to the left.
We get some more
audience reaction shots, and I do believe that this has now become some type of
religious ceremony, with folks raising their hands to Jesus, or at least
signaling to the traveling beer vendor that they are a bit parched. Brief
re-visit to the stage, then we’re back in the audience, where everyone has been
inspired to rhythmically clap with a frenzy that would cause psychologists to
widen their eyes in alarm.
Stage again,
where the camera appears to be zooming in toward the Mini-Vest Guy, a
development that forces me to take another swig of vodka as reinforcement
against what might happen. Mini-Vest proceeds to wiggle his hips in a manner
that I would think is ill-advised, but based on the audience reaction, there
was apparently nothing sexier in 1972 than somebody shifting from foot to foot
like they have seriously got to pee. (This also might explain how Nixon managed
to get re-elected in 1972. He always
looked like he had bladder issues.)
Then some of the
280 lead singers start raising their hands in the air, officially transitioning
us from a mere concert into a frenzied praise celebration. (I guess everybody
is quite happy about those tight pants.) The Cher-Hair Guy is the most invested
in this bit, flailing his arms like there were some vicious jalapenos in the
bean dip, and causing Mini-Vest Guy to glance at him like “does it always have
to be about you? Didn’t we discuss
this on the bus coming here? And stop pulling on your pants, we get it, you
have a penis.” Or something like that. I wasn’t there and nobody forwarded the
meeting minutes.
Another quick
shot of the audience, reminding us that none of the women in 1972 yet had
access to the hair-styling products that would later allow Farrah Fawcett to
dominate the planet, and then we focus back on Mini-Vest. He’s now whipping one
arm downward like he’s in the final stretch of the Kentucky Derby. (This
doesn’t appeal to me in the least, probably because I already had no intention
of sleeping with someone who considers vests an aphrodisiac, but judging by the
euphoric reaction of the women (and a few of the men) in the audience, they are
clearly prepared to be ridden across the finish line. I guess you had to be
there.
And I guess the
cameraman relishes the fact that the audience is on the verge of massive sexual
satisfaction, because he happily records more shots of people clapping and
waving their hands as they approach the Big O, or find salvation in the Lord,
or both, whatever it is that they are doing that resulted in the creation of
disco music a few short years later. No wonder plaid polyester suits became all
the rage about this time. If a man in a mini-vest can help you find your
g-spot, anything can happen.
And that’s how we
wind down the video, with the 360 lead singers doing their thing, an apparently
mesmerizing bit that totally enraptured thousands of people before cable TV was
invented and allowed people to find peace and sexual redemption without leaving
their homes. There’s a final shot of the audience members thrusting their hands
in the air in a manner that would later become required movements by people
attending mega-churches where nobody knows your name, and then we close out
with Mini-Vest on the stage warbling the last bits of the song.
Then the 480 lead
singers leave the stage and search the phonebook for chiropractors who can help
their testicles re-descend after being confined in restrictive pants at the
prayer circle…
Click Here to Watch
This Video on YouTube.
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