A song came on my MP3 player the other day, which reminded
me of one of my family’s classic pranks, from back in the early 80s. Let me set the stage…
Back then, it was our practice to keep in touch with our
departed friends via cassette tape. (Obviously, I mean “departed” as in “departed from our neighborhood,” as
opposed to “departed this life.”) Mostly, we sent tapes back and forth with our buddy Billy G, who had
moved to Georgia. It was a fun way of
keeping in touch and a way in which the recipient could hear from several people all at once.
So, my dad had a friend who lived in Worchester Mass, and
went by the name of “The Lob.” You may
remember The Lob from a previous post called “The Legend of the Rattler,”
where in an audio clip, Dad tells the story of a red-eye train trip he took
with The Lob, that left them falling down drunk... literally.
Dad decided that we should do a tape for The Lob, and since
he was providing the Barn and the beer, we were up for it. The Lob knew our neighborhood group from
when he came along on one of our Steelers/Browns trips to
Cleveland. Since he was basically a
50-year-old kid anyway, he fit right in.
Director’s DVD Commentary: “The Lob” is an old-time term for one’s junk. I have no idea how the guy came by the
nickname, (I suspect it was self-appointed), but I’m sure there are a
lot of people that know him by that name only.
I don’t remember all that we did on that tape, but I
remember two bits. In one, Dad simply
brought the tape recorder around to everyone and asked what we thought of The
Lob. That brought this exchange with
one of our teen-aged neighbor girls:
Dad: What do YOU think of The Lob?
Girl: I LOVE The Lob!
Dad said The Lob played that part over and over. I think the girl thought he was called The
Lob because of his tennis game.
The other bit took a bit more planning.
Remember back in the early 80s, when they had songs
out like “Stars on 45” or “Hooked on Classics?” They were made up of a bunch of song snippets all strung
together, usually with a disco beat behind them. “Hooked on Classics” was made up of famous riffs from classical
music.
I had a bunch of Doctor Demento compilation records and on
one of them, there was something called “Kazooed on Klassics,” by a group
called the Temple City Kazoo Orchestra.
Basically, it was 2 minutes of “Hooked on Classics,” done on kazoos. You may have even heard a part of it before…
it was used in “16 Candles” for a scene on a school bus. Anyway, it was fairly intricate, with
multiple parts all going at once, not unlike an orchestra.
We were including some goofy Doctor Demento stuff for the
Lob Tape when it occurred to me, due to my college radio training, that we
could make it sound like it was us
performing the song. I had a kazoo
myself, and with some audio sleight of hand, we were able to sell the story.
Dad went into a big introduction about how we got all the
kids in the neighborhood together to practice a song for him, and how we worked
so hard on it. Then to “introduce the
band,” we went around the room and Dad would ask, “Are you ready?”
The person would answer yes, and then give a toot on the
kazoo. Then he’d ask the next person,
we’d pass him the kazoo, and they’d give a toot, and so on.
After we’d all blown a note on Kazoo, bringing to mind a
whole Kazoo-tooting army, he counted us down: OK, 1….2…3!
(This is the real song, not “our version.” I love how the William Tell Overture goes
right into the Can-Can. Straaange
bedfellows.)
We recorded the song using a portable tape player, as
opposed to taping it internally with the stereo. That way, our vocalizations and exhortations could be heard
simultaneously with the song. And
because I was an “experienced radio DJ,” I knew how to have the needle on the
record ahead of time, so the needle plunking down on the record wouldn't come
across on tape. I was just praying it wouldn't skip. When the song ended, we
all erupted in cheers, as if we’d just given the performance of a lifetime.
We totally pulled it off. When we played it back, it really sounded like it was us playing the
song. Luckily, The Lob didn’t know us
well enough to know that we would have been completely incapable of playing
something that intricate, without months
of practice. (And who had time for that, when there was so much beer to
drink?)
Usually, when I made a tape for someone, I’d knock off a copy
for myself. Unfortunately, I didn’t do
that with The Lob Tape. I’d love to
hear it again, to see if it was as good as I remember.
Anyway, Dad said The Lob bought our act completely. He said he was touched that we’d put in that
much effort just to entertain him. I
kept asking Dad when he was going to tell him that it was actually a record,
but Dad wouldn’t tell him. Even now,
it’s 30 years later and he still
hasn’t told him about it. To me, a
prank isn’t a prank until the victim realizes it’s a prank.
Knowing Dad, he’s probably got a second part to the plan,
just waiting for the right moment…
And just so you don’t think we were picking on the guy, he
and Dad had a long history of pranking each other and sending joke
packages. This little con fit right in.
Da Lob is alive and well and still unaware.
ReplyDelete...of a great many things, I bet...
DeleteI know I've mentioned this a zillion times, but I really wish we'd known each other in high school. We'd have been great friends. And probably prom dates.
ReplyDeleteWhen I was packing to move a couple months ago, I came across a few cassette tapes of some funny stuff my friends and I did in junior high. I look forward to playing them when I finally finish unpacking--probably in 2025.
You would have fit right in.
DeleteI still have a whole bunch of tapes we made from that era. Both BillG and I were aspiring radio personalities, so we had our creativity running freely. Like I said, I wish I kept a copy of this one.