Something Wicked This Way Comes: Annivyrsary 1962

ISSUE #188

Pretend it’s 1962. Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring hits The New Yorker in June. In a month, heavy smog descends upon London; the first Walmart rears its head in Arkansas. Another month, and Marilyn Monroe is dead. The New York Times prints the first record of the term “personal computer.” The world could collapse any day now.

As we race to escape the threat of annihilation, AT&T puts a satellite in space. Telstar is launched on the tenth of July to beam television across the oceans—the first commercial tool of its kind. By September, it airs cartoons like The Jetsons, and Kennedy promises a man on the moon.

It was this satellite that was honored in “Telstar,” the first record by a British group to hit #1 in the States—months and months before the Beatles had landed. To this day, no #1 sounds anything like it. It earnestly celebrates our cosmic future. It’s entirely instrumental. It’s experimental pop from the deeply depressed—Joe Meek, a man who was closeted and blackmailed until his life ended tragically in suicide.

The world teetered on the edge. That’s why love is life or death in every song from that time. Music in 1962 was about our desperate heartbreak. We were frantic, fraying from loves lost and all our crushed hopes, still reeling from life spans that grew ever longer and speed-of-light images that held all the power. As lovers, we wanted forever—right now.

Information accelerates; we crave stability. Reactionary communities continue to shield the thoughtless and misguided from tech’s whirling carousel. Faster and faster, we lock our doors. Faster and faster, we fund more police. Faster and faster, we close off our hearts—but still there’s the TV, the TikTok, the cloud.

But looking backwards is never the answer. There’s never refuge in nostalgia. It’s the lesson of Inherent Vice, a film which ends in Chuck Jackson's "Any Day Now." Forever means the future, we often forget. Not the past. Not the present. The foggy unknown.


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The Earwyrms Canon, Pt. VII: Groove

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Beach House