National Post

Berry truly out of this world

- Chris Richards

Even if Chuck Berry never sang all of those beautiful words about V8s, jitneys, limousines and Coupe de Villes, it was obvious that he was making a new kind of car music. His songs started like engines. A guitar riff would stutter like a crankshaft, then the beat would kick in, and suddenly everything smelled like motor oil and hormones.

This new vroom- vroom music was dubbed rock ’ n’ roll, and its founding father — who died in Missouri on Saturday at 90 — made it with an electric guitar, a surplus of charisma and the knowledge that teenage hearts have always pumped desire. And so Berry instantly became one of civilizati­on’s finest songwriter­s, offering marvellous­ly detailed accounts of anticipati­on, possibilit­y and mobility — social, sexual and the like.

That meant lots of odes to fast girls and faster cars, but ultimately, Berry was teaching America’s post-war babies how to best live in a democracy. You had choices. Having “no particular place to go” meant you could go anywhere.

Berry was zooming toward reverie most of the time. In 1958, he invites Carol to “climb into my machine so we can cruise on out” to a juke joint specializi­ng in a new kind of euphoria. In 1957’s Rock and Roll Music, he takes his flame “across the tracks” to listen to the delirious thump of that still-unshakable backbeat.

Berry was driving the rest of us in the direction of ecstasy, too — often on a smooth ribbon of beautiful blacktop. In the unflinchin­gly patriotic Back in the U.S. A ., his narrator returns from a trip overseas and practicall­y drops to his knees to kiss “the long freeway.”

He occasional­ly found paradise on foot. Over the jingle- and- bounce of School Days, Berry recounts eagerly bolting out of a classroom and casually strolling onto a dance floor, a sacred place where everyone is “feeling the music from head to toe.” It’s one of his many tutorials on how to let the rhythms of rock ’n’ roll take full possession of your body. Or maybe he’s just explaining what this music seems to do to our hips against our volition.

Either way, Berry wasn’t singing to his peers — he was just shy of 30 years old when he embarked on his recording career in 1955, but while he considered himself more of a businessma­n than a medium, neither his age nor his entreprene­urship dimmed the magic of the music he made in the first 10 years of his career.

In his durable rock history book, Awopbopalo­obop Alopbamboo­m, Nik Cohn wrote that Berry’s music taps directly into “the Teen dream myth that’s right at the heart of all pop.” And we still haven’t outgrown it.

That’s because mobility and desire still occupy such massive swaths of the American psyche, and pop music proves it.

We’ve enjoyed a glorious pile- up of lusty car songs in Berry’s wake — from Prince’s Little Red Corvette, to Bruce Springstee­n’s Pink Cadillac, to the traffic jam of luxury cars that populate the great rap songbook.

Even the misadventu­res aboard Parliament- Funkadelic’s fabled Mothership seem to echo Berry’s vision- ary machine music. During You Can’t Catch Me, Berry imagines evading the police on the New Jersey Turnpike in a “brand new airmobile” that takes flight with the push of a button. “Bye- bye, New Jersey,” he sings. “I’ve become airborne.”

Berr y never s ounded more sly and imaginativ­e than he did in that aerial moment, but it was Johnny B. Goode, his signature slab of self- mythology, that was chosen for the l ong ride across the final frontier. In 1977, NASA etched the song onto golden discs, loaded them onto the Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 exploratio­n probes, and sent his music off into space.

It’s currently headed into deep space, no particular place to go.

Like the rest of Berry’s music back here on Earth, it can’t stop moving around.

BERRY WAS ZOOMING TOWARD REVERIE MOST OF THE TIME.

 ?? JAMES A. FINLEY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? The legendary Chuck Berry performs at a concert celebratio­n for his 60th birthday in 1986.
JAMES A. FINLEY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES The legendary Chuck Berry performs at a concert celebratio­n for his 60th birthday in 1986.
 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Prince’s Little Red Corvette is one of the many car songs to come along in Chuck Berry’s wake.
CHRIS O’MEARA / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Prince’s Little Red Corvette is one of the many car songs to come along in Chuck Berry’s wake.

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