FANFARE July 2016 | Page 44

1966 Year before the Music died The Sixties were a decade of sensory overload that changed the cultural landscape forever. If you can remember them, you weren’t there. Charlie Parry wasn’t, but he enjoyed picking over the pop music embers of the highpoint year of 1966. T he decade exploded on to the world eight miles high over the frozen wastes of the Urals at Sverdlovsk , when a gigantic black bat was blasted out of the sky by Red rocketry. America’s U2 spy plane had been overflying the Soviet Union for half a decade, to a chorus of denials from the White House. But after shot-down pilot Gary Powers was parade before the world’s press, the Russians thundered angry warnings to the West. Within months work was started on the Berlin wall. And at one fraught session of the United Nations, Communist leader Nikita Khrushchev even took off his shoe and banged the podium, as he fulminated against Western imperialism. But Nikita Sergeyevich had little to say about a spot of cultural imperialism, when British jazzman Kenny Ball purloined a popular Russian folksong, to score a transatlantic hit with Midnight In Moscow. It was the last salvo of traditional bands. The Fifties had ended with the Drifters’ hormonal plea to Save The Last Dance for Me . . . as the menacingly melodic beat of the Shadows’ instrumental hit Apache, signalled the electronic guitar band was coming of age. The times were a’ changing as The Beatles led the Sixties revolution in popular music. Often referred to as “the good old days”, both by those who lived through them, and those who wish they had, it was the decade that reinvented pop music culture. The early years saw a transatlantic symbiosis in which the totally new youth phenomenon of juvenile eroto-hysteria known as Beatlemania conquered America. Coming the other way was a tsunami of 42 eclectic creativity unmatched ever since. It included the overwhelming, blues-based host of Tamla Motown, the West Coast close harmonies of the Beach Boys and Phil Spector’s wall of sound, and studded in between were the plaintiff riffs of the likes of Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan and Simon and Garfunkel. The year 1966 saw an album chart full of what are now regarded as classic, seminal releases. From The Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators, to Simon and Garfunkel’s Sounds of Silence, ’66 bo