Saturday, January 05, 2008

Just an old-fashioned smut song



When I was about 12-years-old I was hanging out one afternoon in the home of a kid up the street. We were in the family rec-room and were playing assorted records on the stereo.

“Hey, I know what,” he said, suddenly rising and going over to extract from a case some aged looking ‘albums’. Those of you who weren’t around at the time should know that for venerable 78s, albums were exactly that, albums. Bound book-like things that held a dozen or so wax records. While the 78 had long fallen into disuse by even that time, most households still had their old collections that could be played on a three-speed turntable.

He rummaged through one of the albums until he found what he was looking for.

“This is it,” he said, and deposited the disk, owned by his parents, on the player and adjusted the speed to accommodate it. What I heard ushering forth from the scratchy disk was a woman’s voice. A woman’s voice singing songs unlike any others I had ever heard.

There were just two songs on the record, an A and B side. On the A-side was a little ditty called ‘Davey’s Dinghy’ and on the B was a slightly less metaphorical offering called ‘Loretta the Sweater Girl.’

He was playing ‘dirty songs’. Dirty songs right there on a record. These, you must accept, were very innocent times and, while the songs would now pass muster on a kiddie-oriented sitcom in these days, at that time the lyrics were shocking indeed.

“Ship ahoy, sailor boy. Don’t you get too springy. The admiral’s daughter waits down by the water. She wants to ride your dinghy.”

Or, from Loretta the Sweater Girl,

“The bombardier threw off his hat, saying he couldn’t miss with targets like that.”

Nudge-nudge. Wink-wink. That’s exactly what they were. Nuance, innuendo and double-entendre without a profanity in the lot. To us, however, they were as depraved and as decadent as the gates-of-hell; hence hugely alluring. I felt just a little more grown up that afternoon. I was listening to ‘adult’ smut on a thing called a ‘blue’ record.

The most famous ‘blue’ recording artiste of the day, and the author and singer of those songs and many others was one Ruth Wallis. This only comes to mind because I read in the obit section of my newspaper that Ruth had passed away in her home at South Killingly, Conn. at the venerable age of 87. I felt an obligation to make note of Ruth’s passing because I doubt that you’ll see much more about her elsewhere.

And today it seems amazing that she was once hustled back on an airplane that landed in Australia and all her vile recordings were deposited with her. The Aussies were not about to accept that kind of ungodliness on their pristine shores. She was also, by the way, banned in Boston, and banned in the Irish Republic.

Ruth's glory days were in the 1940s and '50s, before Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor and George Carlin opened up society to a bit more frankness about our sexuality and everything else. Ruth, however, had no truck with social commentary. She just wanted to have fun by singing some dirty old songs late in the evening when people had consumed too much beer after the barbecue and mistakenly assumed they were doing something very sophisticated.

And, considering the filth that passes for song lyrics on ordinary airplay these days, the renderings of Ruth seem nothing more than quaint by this point in history.

Rest in Peace, Ruth, and may you be raising a chuckle in St. Peter with a few, good old-fashioned bawdy choruses. He likes a good laugh.

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17 Comments:

Blogger Ellee Seymour said...

It reminds me of the saucy seaside postcards which we don't see any more these days. There is a huge difference between nudge-nudge-wink-wink naughtiness and smutty stuff which leaves nothing to the imagination.

2:20 PM  
Blogger meggie said...

It always amazes me how 'puritan' Australia could be at times. All a false front, as if to cover for the lowly & often gross beginnings of the society! I say that with no insult intended- my own great great & maybe even greater -grandfather was deported here for supposedly stealing money from a widow. I am glad there is more honesty about these days, re the false modesty.
Oh & the stealing too!

2:40 PM  
Blogger Dreaming again said...

We've been watching the old movies with our teenagers. My sons are #1 surprised at some of the frankness of the black and whites and #2 delighted by the imagination of the writers of the black and whites #3 being allowed to have some imagination left to them.

3:16 PM  
Blogger CS said...

It made me think of a friend showing me her older brother's copy of the Stone's album Sticky Fingers, with the blue jeans that had a working zipper on the front.

5:21 PM  
Blogger Janice Thomson said...

I laughed when I read this Ian - I remember getting severe heck from Mom because at 12 I was waltzing around the house singing Patti Page's Boys' Night Out - course I had no idea what " the boys were out after" or what "the girls were out after too" but man did I ever get it for singing it.

9:05 PM  
Blogger heartinsanfrancisco said...

I've never heard of Ruth Wallis, but when I was seven, Kathy Cherubini, who knew my parents, was known to tell "dirty jokes" at adult gatherings.

One day, I cornered her and begged her to tell me one.

She said, "A boy fell into a mud puddle." I knew I had been shamed, and I also realized that I wasn't quite as sophisticated as I'd believed.

10:05 PM  
Blogger jmb said...

This is hilarious when you think about it. Did you even know what the innuendo meant or did you just know that it was not "nice"?

10:31 PM  
Blogger dinahmow said...

Ah! Ruth Wallis.No, her death did not make the news here.
To some of us, a breath of sophistication and change in the New Zealand of the 50s.
I don't remember how we came to have one of her records in the family collection, but I know I spent some pocket money buying another when I found it in a sale. (That sort of "smut" would not have been available in mainstream outlets.)
Talented and brave enough not to be silenced by bigots.
Thanks for the obit.

10:37 PM  
Blogger laughingwolf said...

oscar brand was a winner, too... then there was one by a woman named rusty, and something about knockers, and 'ladies, you're not bouncing!' ;) lol

11:14 AM  
Blogger Heidi said...

Just dropping by to say hi! Hope u have a great week.~
btw ..I don't recall any of those songs ;(

7:37 AM  
Blogger Jazz said...

They wouldn't even rate a parental advisory now....

Even the AC/DC song: Give the dog a bone, seems sort of quaint nowdays.

8:29 AM  
Blogger Tai said...

Our sense of moral outrage at things like lyrics has changed SO much over the years...although I have to say that I saw part of a Britney concert on tv a while ago and was amazed to find myself shocked at some of the 'antics'.
It bugged me to think that people were taking their 13 year old daughters to see Britney mimic fellatio on stage. Creepy.
The nudge-nudge stuff seems so much more naughty, in a way.

8:40 AM  
Blogger Wenderina said...

The good old days of imagination. Now it's just the in your face mode. I certainly don't want to return to the days of hypocrisy and pretense (loved the old twin beds in the I love Lucy show), but a little more mystery, grace, and even "nudge nudge" would be a nice refreshing change. At least people needed to THINK about what they were listening to.

8:59 AM  
Blogger SHES10-8 said...

I remember Loretta the Sweater Girl, my friend, Don Carson, purveyor of all things old and nautical, purchased some old 78s from a thrift store and called me over to his one room "all things OLD" shack and played it for me on an antique RECORD PLAYER, you know a "Hi Fi". I (Queen of all music Big Band) LOVED it! I was hoping to find a mp3 or a wav file of it.

Great stuff, your blog!

7:14 PM  
Blogger Unknown said...

My mom had the same record and we played it constantly. I accidentally sat on it when I was 12, I am 51, and I have casually been looking for that record ever since when I visit antique or record stores.
Great memories.

8:34 PM  
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4:32 AM  
Blogger Louella Bryant said...

Oh that Saucy Redhead. I remember the Admiral's Daughter as I lay awake while my parents entertained their friends with her recordings. I was probably nine and Ruth is still with me.

7:25 AM  

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