The Liberal Media Fell for Iranian Misinformation Hook, Line, and Sinker
So, About That Letter Tyler Robinson Penned to His Trans Lover...
Supposedly, This Is the Person Who Saved Tulsi Gabbard's Job
OpenAI Faces Investigation Over Allegations That ChatGPT Helped Mass Shooter Kill Two Peop...
It’s ‘Shoot The Messenger Week’ As Jen Psaki Slams Local Media Holding a...
Do The Podcaster's Even Matter? New Polling Suggests That They Don't
US Oil & Gas Just Totally Embarrassed CA Dem Tom Steyer After He...
Victory Over Death
Welcome Home: Artemis II Astronauts Return After Historic Moon Orbit
Trump: 'No Nuclear Weapon' Is 99 Percent of Iran Deal Talks
Disgruntled Worker Charged with Arson After Allegedly Burning Down $500M Warehouse Over Pa...
Ex-Staffer Says That Rep. Eric Swalwell Sexually Assaulted Her
'Ketamine Queen' Gets 15 Years in Prison After Supplying Ketamine Linked to Matthew...
Democrat Politician Who Targeted Easter Churchgoers Also Attacked July Fourth Celebrants
Why America Leads the World in Innovation
OPINION

Bye, Bye Phil Everly

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Bye, Bye Phil Everly

One mark of a good song is that it makes Billboard's top 10 list. An even greater indicator is its staying power; whether it is remembered decades after it was a hit. Perhaps the highest accolade is whether the artist influences other musicians. All of these standards were met by the singing duo the Everly Brothers, one of whom, Phil, has died days shy of his 75th birthday.

Advertisement

At age 16 I was a disc jockey for a suburban Washington, D.C., radio station. I hosted a weekend music program called "The Top Fifty Show." The Everly Brothers were always at or near the top of my list.

Phil and Don Everly squeezed into the public consciousness for only a few years between 1957, the year before Elvis Presley left a gaping hole in pop music when he entered the Army, and the arrival of The Beatles, who more than filled that void beginning in 1964. The brothers' music survives, not only in its own right, but because of its influence on other acts, including The Beatles, The Beach Boys, Linda Ronstadt, Simon and Garfunkel and Bob Dylan.

The music was danceable, the lyrics understandable and the sentiments memorable. My generation "invented" rock and roll. While some of it was sexually suggestive, it avoided coarse language and left much to young imaginations. Not all of us, including me, understood at the time what Fats Domino meant when he sang "I found my thrill on Blueberry Hill."

Wonderfully handsome with good stage presence and great hair, Phil and Don expressed in their music what was in the hearts of many teenagers. "All I Have to Do is Dream" is about a guy who loves a girl and can always be with her in his dreams.

Advertisement

Related:

DEATH MUSIC

Two of my favorites remain "That's Old Fashioned" and "Wake Up Little Susie," because they appealed to a moral code that has not been followed in many years, especially in popular music and culture.

In "That's Old Fashioned," Don and Phil sing:

"It's a modern changing world, everything is moving fast;

But when it comes to love, I like what they did in the past.

I'm the kind who loves only one, so the boys say I'm old-fashioned.

Let then laugh, honey, I don't mind.

I've made plans for a wedding day for you and me.

That's old-fashioned, that's the way love should be."

Phil didn't practice what he sang. He married three times and struggled with drugs, but the standard remains a good one in an age of singers whose performances would be shameful to most people alive in the '50s.

In "Wake Up Little Susie," the brothers sang about a boy and girl on a movie date. They fall asleep in the car and when they wake up at 4 a.m., the boy fears they may be in trouble with her parents:

"What are we gonna tell your Mama

What are we gonna tell your Pa?

What are we gonna tell our friends

When they say, "Ooh la la!"

There is also this:

"The movie wasn't so hot

Advertisement

It didn't have much of a plot

We fell asleep, our goose is cooked,

Our reputation is shot."

Who worries about reputation today? What followed in the '70s, '80s and '90s was music containing foul lyrics, explicit sex, hatred of parents, gangsta rap about killing the police, misogyny. I doubt that those who listened to it will proudly play the music of their lives for their grandchildren as my generation can.

From an Everly Brothers song that wasn't a hit comes a lyric that those who love the Everly Brothers might say fits Phil's passing:

"There'll be a day you'll want me only

But when I leave, I'll be a long time gone..."

That day has arrived. While Phil may be gone, his and Don's music endures. What artist could ask for more?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement