Robbie Robertson – from the autobiography Testimony (2016) –
Chapter 12 p. 158
IN THE SUMMER of 1965 we had booked
a gig at Tony Mart’s big dance club in Somers Point, New Jersey. Tony’s was a
hot spot, a popular club that sometimes had three bands playing on separate
stages over the course of the evening. A big round bar sat in the middle of the
club, handy for a refill no matter where you were standing. Tony himself was an
unusual club owner, a real character.
A bit stocky, no-nonsense, and
Sicilian born. Anthony Marrota spoke broken English and hardly ever smiled. He
ran his “circus” with a strong hand, wandering through the crowds while yelling
order at bartenders and bouncers. Every once in a while he’d walk by the center
stage we were playing on and call out, “Hey, turna downa the jukebox!” We took
this to mean we were playing too loud for an early-evening crowd.
On the first weekend we were there,
you could tell the audience was into our type of music. Conway Twitty and some
of his original band were in residence too, which was a nice surprise. When we
went on, the place came alive. By Saturday night the club was so packed you
couldn’t move. Tony Mart pushed his way through the crowd and called up to us, “Hey,
turna upa tha jukebox!” and gave a little grin.
After the first two weeks, Tony
asked us to come back for two more weeks later in June. It was very unusual for
us to play two stands so close together in one spot like that, but we were glad
to plant our feet for a while. And lo and behold, our old road manager, Bill
Avis, showed up in Somers Point too, managing a band of lesbians calling
themselves the Female Beatles.
In between dates in Somers Point, we
would head up to New York City to meet with production companies that had seen
us play and were interested in signing us. We listened to songs they thought we
could record, but none of them really connected….The acoustic folk setting was
thriving in New York. You could feel it goring in Toronto’s Yorkville district,
but Greenwich Village was the epicenter of this world.
John Hammond (Jr.) asked me to come
hear him play at the Gaslight Club. He talked up Dave Van Ronk, Fred Neil and a
couple other guys he thought were very soulful folk singers. The Gaslight had a
sign out front announcing the next act that would be performing there –
Mississippi John Hurt. I told him about our jam with Sonny Boy Williams, and he
said, “Sonny Boy one or two?”
One afternoon John came by the
Forest Hotel to collect me for a trip downtown to a hip record store,…then he
hit the breaks and said, “Oh, man, I forgot something. A friend of mine is
recording around the corner and I promised him I would stop by….”
Before long we were on the elevator
in the Columbia Records building heading for Studio A. In the control room
people were listening to the playback of a song they had just cut. John said
hello to a man in round wire-rimmed glasses with shoulder-length grayish hair.
“Robbie, this is the great music
manager Albert Grossman,” Sitting in the corner silently was Dion of Dion and
the Belmonts. Then John went over and gave a big greeting to his friend who was
recording. He turned to introduce me.
“Hey, Bob, this is my guitar-player
friend Robbie, from Canada. This is Bob Dylan.”
You could barely see his eyes
through the dark glasses he wore, but there was high voltage in the room coming
from his persona.
Bob said hello,a nd then to John. “You
want to hear something.”
“Yea, I’d love to.”
Bob teased. “You sure you want to
hear this? You never heard anything like this before.”
Albert Grossman and the record
producer nodded in serious agreement.
“It’s called ‘Like a Rolling Stone,’
Bob said with a little smirk.
Bob was right – I’d never heard
anything like this before. The studio lit up with the sound of toughness, humor
and originality. It was hard to take it all in on one listen….
By then we’d begun our second stand
at Tony Mart’s club in New Jersey, and on our nights off we would slip over to
the Wonder Gardens club in Atlantic City, where we caught some of the best
jazz-organ combos going. Jimmy Smith played there, and we also saw Brother Jack
McDufff, whom Garth appreciated for his unusual style. Shirley Scott, “Queen of
the Organ,” was a favorite of mine, with her husband, Stanley Turrentine, on
sax. Most of these jazz organizats played a Hammond B2 with bass pedals, which
meant they could play a lead part with their right hand on the upper keyboard
and chords or counterparts (and sometimes lead) with the left hand on the lower
keyboard. At the same time they’d be changing sounds and controlling the speed
with both hands while playing the bass part with their feet. The whole thing
was a remarkable balancing act. And of course the grove and texture of the B3
was sexy cool. It made you want to order Cutty Shark and soda. Garth played a
whole other kind of organ, the incomparable Lowrey. Different sound, different
touch all together from the Hammond B3, and you could bend the notes like a
horn or guitar, which completely baffled a lot of listeners. So great when
Garth would kick into a free-for-all jam by himself, with those bass pedals in
full effect. Gave you the shivers.
One night after we finished playing
Tony Marts, Garth began telling me about some ideas and effects he was experimenting
with. He was always devising new modes of ‘hot rodding’ the Lowrey organ and
its Leslie speaker to create brilliant new sonic wonders. As he described his research
and discovery approach, most of it went over my head, but the results were
undeniable. The sounds that came out of Garth’s keyboards or wind instruments
had originality stamped all over them. Garth experimented endlessly, like a
Harry Partch or Les Paul. He never stopped wanting to expand on his technical
abilities inside or outside the instrument. None of the rest of us Hawks was so
inclined.
Some people wanted to know how a watch works, and other people just want
to know what time it is.
Quite regularly on our days off I
would head up to New York City, sometimes crashing out with our Canadian pal
Mary Martin, who had taken a job working for Albert Grossman’s management
company. She was always so supportive and would try to turn us on to new music
that was happening, like John Sebastian’s new group, the Lovin’ Spoonful.
Sometimes one or two of the other Hawks would join me on these excursions into
the city, but it soon became evident that I was the one most drawn to the
metropolis….
Of all the groups that played Somers
Point in the summer of 1965, Tony Mart’s personal favorite was Levon and the
Hawks, though it was sometimes hard to tell whether he like the swampy sound of
our music or the ringing of the cash registers.
Towards the end of our stint, our
relationship with Tony had grown warm, almost familial. He hired us to finish
out the season, which proved ideal for future recording sessions and continued
access to the city. Everyone in the band seemed to be in a good place during
those days.
The only dark cloud that passed over
us that summer (other than the enduring stress of the drug bust in Canada) was
when we got word that our dear Sonny Boy Williamson II had passed away from
tuberculosis, and that the beautiful dream we had of recording together had
died with him.
Soon after I got a message from
Albert Grossman’s office, asking me to come up to the city on our next day off
to meet with Bob Dylan. I’d only met him briefly with John Hammond when they
were recording “Like a Rolling Stone.” I asked the guys if they knew any of Bob’s
music. I wasn’t that familiar with it myself, though I remembered a song he’d
done a few years back called “Oxford Town.” It rang true, and the tone of his
voice really stood out for me. Richard offered that Bob’s record of “Subterranean
Homesick Blues” reminded him of Chuck Berry’s “Too Much Monkey Business.”
“Yea,” I said, “That staccato
rhythmic phrasing is reminiscent.”
Albert Grossman’s office set up for
me to meet with Bob the following Monday. I couldn’t help but wonder what this
was all about.