{"id":30825,"date":"2013-07-25T15:49:44","date_gmt":"2013-07-25T15:49:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/alternativejonestown.com\/?page_id=30825"},"modified":"2026-02-21T15:04:45","modified_gmt":"2026-02-21T23:04:45","slug":"kevin","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/?page_id=30825","title":{"rendered":"Songs (Largely) in the  Key of Life"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright\" style=\"border: 0px;\" alt=\"Album cover for He's Able\" src=\"..\/..\/..\/images\/jtr11\/03-01-he's-able.jpg\" width=\"200\" height=\"196\" border=\"0\" \/>(This article is excerpted and adapted from <a href=\"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/07\/Brian-Kevin-2010.pdf\">&#8220;Songs Primarily in the Key of Life&#8221;<\/a>, <\/em>Colorado Review<em> (Vol. 37, No. 2, Summer 2010, 68-101). The original essay was accepted as the author\u2019s MFA thesis in creative nonfiction at the University of Montana. Brian Kevin can be reached at\u00a0 <a href=\"mailto:brikevin@gmail.com\">brikevin@gmail.com<\/a>.)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>One of my favorite records lately is a light funk-gospel album recorded in 1973 by the world\u2019s most infamous suicide cult.\u00a0 It\u2019s a twelve-song collection, a mix of old spirituals, gospel-inspired originals, and a couple of late \u201960s Top 40 hits, all performed by a full choir and an eight-piece blue-eyed soul outfit with a hot brass section.\u00a0 On the record jacket, the album\u2019s title is printed in austere white lettering: <em>He\u2019s Able<\/em>.\u00a0 The name comes from the chorus of an old revival-tent anthem, a sultry little call-and-refrain number that leads off the record\u2019s B-side.\u00a0 It\u2019s the kind of song you might hear one Sunday morning in the Deep South, the kind that\u2019s sung in a sunlit place where the women carry fans and the air is heavy with hallelujahs.<\/p>\n<p>On the album\u2019s cover photo, we see the choir standing on the far side of a small pond, ninety or so people bunched along the shore, facing forward, small and individually indistinct against a wooded background. The women wear plain aqua-blue gowns, and the men are in black pants with light blue oxfords and dark ties. Racially, they\u2019re a mixed bag, about equal numbers black and white. I count no fewer than fifteen afros, hovering like halos around dark, smiling faces.<\/p>\n<p>Although the photo shows the full chorus, not all of the choir members actually sing on the album \u2013 just a couple dozen. Their voices were multi-tracked in the studio, then played back on top of one another in order to give the impression of a fuller chorus.<\/p>\n<p>There are several small photos on the back of the jacket, including another shot of the choir, this time crowded onto a wooded path. Their arms are raised above their heads in what looks like praise but could just as easily be surrender. In another photo is a young white man, handsome in a suit jacket and tie, his black hair parted neatly to the side and glistening slightly with pomade. He stands at a lectern with his eyes cast downward, his right hand resting casually along its wooden edge. The look on his face is serene and coolly regal, like that of a general before his troops. He\u2019s clutching an object that\u2019s half-cropped out of the photo and difficult to identify. If we look very closely, we can see that it\u2019s a pair of dark sunglasses.<\/p>\n<p>Beneath the photo is a caption: \u201cOur choir consists of people from all walks of life. We are dedicated to one common cause \u2013 making the humanistic teachings of Jesus Christ part of our daily lives. Our inspiration is a lifestyle demonstrated by our pastor, James W. Jones.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><em>He\u2019s Able <\/em>is out of print. Has been since 1978, when most of the singers and musicians featured on it killed themselves in the jungles of Guyana by drinking cyanide-laced Flavor Aid in what has come to be known as the Jonestown Massacre.<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\">* * * * *<\/p>\n<p>Only about twenty-five kids made it onto the <em>He\u2019s Able <\/em>record album. We can see them in a series of photos on the back of the record jacket, a gaggle of multiracial children between four and twelve years old. They\u2019re wearing earphones, facing a set of area mics, standing and squatting and grinning wildly in the manner of an elementary school class photo. The setting is a Los Angeles recording studio called Producer\u2019s Workshop. Long-since closed, the studio was a low-rent, ground-floor affair, wedged next to an X-rated theater on a dicey stretch of Hollywood Boulevard. Its youngest sound engineer in 1973 was a twenty-year-old techie named Bob Schaper, whose lack of seniority got him assigned to man the boards during the half-dozen Saturdays of cut-rate, after-hours sessions that resulted in <em>He\u2019s Able<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Schaper still recalls the pandemonium the night the kids\u2019 choir came in to record <a href=\"http:\/\/blogfiles.wfmu.org\/LG\/He_s_Able\/01.Welcome.mp3\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">\u201cWelcome.\u201d<\/a> Producer\u2019s Workshop was a real geek\u2019s lair, a cramped and cluttered dungeon with a nonetheless killer recording set-up. It was ornamented humbly with ashtrays, carpet squares, and LP covers. The studio lacked room for even a couch or a coffee maker, much less a thirty-child chorus, so between takes, the kids would fan out across the tiny complex in search of sleeping space. They sprawled in cabinets, hallways, and bathrooms, piling up on every available surface like the cigarette butts overflowing the ashtrays.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThere were just so many bodies,\u201d Schaper says, innocently. \u201cEverywhere I looked there were children\u2019s bodies.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>This is an unfortunate turn of phrase, as it inevitably calls to mind the more than 300 children who were fed potassium cyanide when Peoples Temple self-destructed. It\u2019s a common problem when discussing the Temple: Even in a context that ostensibly avoids the topic of Jonestown, the 918 people who died there linger behind every conversation like the barely heard remnants of a root language. It\u2019s difficult to talk at length about the church, its members, or its history without stumbling blindly into some sort of grisly double entendre. But this difficulty is also a central part of what makes <em>He\u2019s Able <\/em>such an enigmatic artifact.<\/p>\n<p align=\"center\">* * * * *<\/p>\n<p>Far and away, my favorite track on <em>He\u2019s Able <\/em>is <a href=\"http:\/\/blogfiles.wfmu.org\/LG\/He_s_Able\/04.Walk_A_Mile_In_My_Shoes.mp3\">\u201cWalk a Mile in My Shoes.\u201d<\/a> It\u2019s the record\u2019s first cover, a hot-buttered soul spin on the Joe South country rock tune that reached #12 on the pop chart and eventually fell into Elvis Presley\u2019s Vegas repertoire. This kind of dabbling in the Top 40 canon was common in Peoples Temple liturgy. Their typical songbook looked like a cross between a Baptist hymnal and a playlist on the oldies station, accommodating, for example, Burt Bacharach\u2019s \u201cWhat the World Needs Now\u201d and Bob Dylan\u2019s \u201cBlowing in the Wind.\u201d Still, it\u2019s not the song choice that makes this track a winner. It\u2019s the singer.<\/p>\n<p>Melvin Johnson was twenty-five years old and living on the streets in San Francisco when a shoestring cousin brought him to Peoples Temple in 1969. He\u2019d spent most of his young adulthood behind bars, with stints as a pimp and a drug dealer between incarcerations. With a daughter in foster care, a set of parole papers, and nothing to lose, Johnson gave himself to the church. He became a constant presence at the San Francisco temple, volunteering as a driver for the Temple\u2019s bus fleet and eventually joining the choir. He found a job driving cab, and he saved his paychecks while members in the Temple communes signed theirs over to the church. Most importantly, Peoples Temple gave Johnson a family again. By the time he was singing on <em>He\u2019s Able <\/em>in 1973, Melvin Johnson had married long-time Temple member Wanda Kice. And not only was his daughter back in his life, he had three new stepsons too, from Wanda\u2019s previous marriages.<\/p>\n<p>But the singer who pours himself into the mic on \u201cWalk a Mile in My Shoes\u201d is no work-a-day churchgoing family man, no meek Sunday-morning Joe. From the second he lets loose with his first melodic moan \u2013 a velvety <em>oooh yea-eah-eah <\/em>\u2013 you can tell that this is a brother who\u2019s been there. Somebody who\u2019s worn a pair of shoes you might think twice about stepping into. Johnson\u2019s got pipes, channeling a non-falsetto Al Green when he sings lines like:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>Well, I may be common people but I\u2019m your brother<\/em><br \/>\n<em>and when you strike out and try to hurt me, it\u2019s hurting you.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>As a listener, you just can\u2019t help but buy it. You can\u2019t help but think that this is a guy who believes every word he\u2019s singing, that the lyrics mean more to him than they did to Joe South or Elvis. Even Johnson\u2019s breathy vocalizations come from someplace deeper than those of any polished radio crooner. The band is cooking too, and musically, this rendition gives the others a run for their money. It\u2019s a straight-up specimen of authentic soul, and it banishes for a time even the hint of a thought about Kool-Aid or cults or bodies piled up in the jungle.<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s what\u2019s ultimately so impressive about the church-choir proto-funk on <em>He\u2019s Able<\/em>. You put it on bemused, expecting some sort of haunting historical document. Then you press play, and the music comes at you like a confetti explosion, all crashing piano chords and fret-shimmying electric guitar. And you don\u2019t hear a group of religious fanatics whose zealotry will culminate in the Jonestown Massacre. You don\u2019t hear a cult at all \u2013 just a great gospel-rock band and choir who sound like they\u2019re having a hell of a time.<\/p>\n<p>Which is kind of a big deal, when you figure that there are stacks of Peoples Temple literature out there devoted to drumming up just that kind of empathy. Since Jonestown, dozens of books, articles, documentary films, and even theatrical plays have attempted to fix their audience\u2019s gaze beyond the Jonestown suicides, banishing the image of the cult in favor of portraying real people with real motivations. It\u2019s just a tough cerebral move to make, blocking out all those corpses in order to understand the Temple members as something other than sinister zombies or tragic sheep \u2013 as passionate, fallible, well-intentioned individuals.<\/p>\n<p>But put on the record and play a couple of tracks, and with the right kind of ear, you understand it instantly. All that good intention, all that humanity that struggles to make itself known in the books and the movies, you can hear it plain as day in the first up-tempo boogie-oogie piano scale; you can hear it in the tinny snare rolls of an overeager drummer, you can hear it in the cool, throaty <em>mmm hmmms <\/em>and <em>oh yeahs <\/em>of a riffing soloist. It\u2019s all right there \u2013 everything that drew these people in, everything they wanted to accomplish, everything they failed at. It comes out of your stereo speakers like a sunbeam through a stained-glass window. And it sort of breaks your heart.<\/p>\n<p><em>(A special section on <\/em>He\u2019s Able<em> \u2013 including the music, lyrics and perspectives on the album \u2013 appears <a href=\"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/?page_id=30925\">here<\/a>.)<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>(This article is excerpted and adapted from &#8220;Songs Primarily in the Key of Life&#8221;, Colorado Review (Vol. 37, No. 2, Summer 2010, 68-101). The original essay was accepted as the author\u2019s MFA thesis in creative nonfiction at the University of Montana. Brian Kevin can be reached at\u00a0 brikevin@gmail.com.) One of my favorite records lately is [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":0,"parent":30925,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-30825","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/30825","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/6"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=30825"}],"version-history":[{"count":20,"href":"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/30825\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":133919,"href":"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/30825\/revisions\/133919"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/30925"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/jonestown.sdsu.edu\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=30825"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}