Ha! I say HA!!
I don't remember how long it took for Simon and I to start clashing, but I doubt it took very long. On the surface, we were very different: a white kid from the suburbs of Syracuse and a black kid from Jamaica, Queens. But there were similarities, too. We were both sensitive, we both thought of ourselves as witty, and we were both basically lonely, insecure individuals. Simon didn't have a girlfriend at the time, and he wanted one; I had two girlfriends in rapid succession--with an unfortunate overlap of about a half hour, and a potential third on the periphery--but was still standing (barely) on shaky ground.
You know what sounds I was into. Simon favored far mellower fare, including Renaissance and his favorite group, America. Decades later, I finally recognize the appeal of these artists; at the time, it was wallpaper to this burgeoning punk. Simon, in turn, thought my music was noise. There wasn't a lot of common ground there.
It got worse, actually.
Becky and Simon started dating, which was okay with me; I really did wish Becky well, especially given how poorly I'd treated her. It took me a while to appreciate how much of a dick I'd been. Story of my life. I always think I'm in the right at the time, and rarely realize until much later, in retrospect, how much I contributed to any random clusterhug. I like to think I've matured, a little bit, somewhere along the line.
But not when I was eighteen. Not yet. I was still a clueless schmuck at eighteen.
The stereo in our dorm room belonged to Simon. I don't recall now whether I was forbidden from using it, or if I was allowed to use it occasionally provided I was more delicate and careful with it than I generally was with anything else. Either way, I was using Simon's stereo one day, listening to my freshly-purchased new copy of My Aim Is True by Elvis Costello. Tina was listening to the LP with me--although no longer really a couple, we were still spending (too much) time together--and I was perhaps a bit too clumsy with the stylus. Simon claimed I'd damaged the cartridge, I denied it, and I left the room in a huff. When I returned, I discovered that Simon's aim was also true; my Costello LP had been snapped in half.
I saw red.
Simon was at the other end of the hall, talking to our Resident Assistant. I yelled, and charged down the hall full-steam, intent on doing to Simon what he'd done to My Aim Is True. The RA grabbed me and pinned me against the wall, as Simon scowled at me. It would not be our only physical confrontation, but I'll spare you the dreary details. He was right, and I was right; he was wrong, and I was wrong. It took me years to accept my own culpability in all of this.
I made plans to move out, preferably to another dorm entirely, but it was easier said than done. Frustrated, I gave up on the notion of new digs. That meant Simon and I had to figure out a way to coexist.
I saw Simon sporadically during the rest of my time in school. Sophomore year, Simon came to my dorm room, furious about something he thought I'd said about him; this time, I really was innocent, so I invited him in to talk about it, and we made a cautious peace. A couple of years later, after I'd graduated but still lived in town, Simon visited my apartment once, and the exchange was friendly and basically good-natured.
My perception of the group America remains permanently tethered to my memory of Simon. I hated their records. I may or may not have been okay with (or, more likely, indifferent to) either "A Horse With No Name" or "Ventura Highway" when they occupied my radio in 1972, but I had no use for "Muskrat Love," "Lonely People," or "Tin Man." I don't remember hearing "I Need You" until Simon played it for me, and its lyrics We used to laugh/We used to cry/We used to bow our heads and wonder why were like nails on a chalkboard to my ears. Now, I bow my head and wonder why. All these years later, I can't explain why I was so dismissive of this music.
Even within my willful stance as a teen misanthrope, I had to concede that America's song "Sandman" was possessed of a simmering, surly spirit. And, no matter how much I claimed to hate America, I had to admit that "Sister Golden Hair" was just brilliant.
This was an unenlightened period in my young life. For example, I thought the Beach Boys were hopelessly square. RAWK! I thought anything mellow had to be the sound of capitulation to the mundane, the boring. I held fast to an underdeveloped mind-set cast somewhere between Annie Hall and Never Mind The Bollocks, Here's The Sex Pistols.
Yet I loved pop music. I liked ABBA, I liked the Bay City Rollers, I loved Herman's Hermits. Loving Shaun Cassidy's hit version of Eric Carmen's "Hey Deanie" at the same time that I was getting into the Clash isn't necessarily a contradiction--it's ALL pop music--but I was a contradiction, and so sure of my conflicting convictions.
Will you meet me in the middle
Will you meet me in the air?
Will you love me just a little
Just enough to show you care?
Well, I tried to fake it
I don't mind sayin'
I just can't make it
"Sister Golden Hair" is everything you could want from an AM pop radio hit. It sounds bright and sunny, catchy as hell, while conveying a sense of yearning and regret. I understand regret: I still look back and wish I'd been better. Even within the maelstrom of sullen teendom, as I blithely made blunders and committed sins that I should have known enough not to do, as I dug in my heels to hate a band my roommate and former friend adored, I grudgingly--no, willingly--accepted the wonder of "Sister Golden Hair."
It's been more than forty-five years since I met Simon, and more than forty since we last had any contact. I remember my behavior, and it makes me cringe, the time between notwithstanding. I suspect I learned some lessons in the process, though I wish I could have learned these lessons a bit more quickly and efficiently.
If, in fact, I've learned them at all.
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Oh hell, Carl, ALL teenage boys are like that at 19. Glad you came around to how great America was (is?). The band, that is
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