Music for the Shop Rat
William Sundwick
It was a lark. Something to do during college term break. I
had just returned from a “career-service” internship experience in Washington,
D.C. And, frankly, I was curious about what an auto assembly line was like. It
was the defining social construct of my hometown -- Flint, Michigan -- but I
had never seen one in action.
So, I signed up for a tour of the plant located directly
across the street from the new townhouse my parents had just bought. It was
their last address before leaving Flint forever, for Florida retirement. Odd,
you may think, that this new townhouse development was built across the street
from one of Flint’s premier General Motors manufacturing facilities, but there
was a tall board-on-board fence separating it from the traffic noise of Van
Slyke Road, blocking the view of the acres of factory occupying the equivalent
of 20 adjacent city blocks.
In 1967 Flint was reaching peak “civilization,” still proud
of its GM connections (indeed, General Motors was founded there in 1908). To
see the lifeblood of my city close-up seemed an obligation, since I had already
been talking up Flint with college friends in Kalamazoo.
I found myself overwhelmed by what I saw – and heard –
inside, during the two-hour tour. It was a choreographed musical!
I had not been brought up with popular music. All music heard
in my parents’ house was classical, especially violin and string orchestra.
That was my father’s requirement. He was a failed violinist in his youth. Now he
was an engineer, the head of process engineering at another GM plant in town.
It was perhaps that violinist’s artistic sensibility,
combined with the process engineer’s dedication to efficient production methods,
that led me to my profound aesthetic awakening after visiting that mammoth industrial
facility.
I attribute my lifelong love of hard blues/rock music to the
experience. Truly, this is the only style of music that fits the gritty,
monotonous, obsessive life of the shop rat. I do not mean to imply that all
assembly line workers loved that music – but, to me, the genre perfectly
captures the spirit of the line. And, when done well, provides the seeds of an
uplifting release from the grim drudgery of any job.
Those brightly colored Chevrolet Impalas marched down the assembly
line in precisely timed formation, randomly distributed body styles and
trims, based on an unseen production manifest. The shop rats’ responsibility
was to put those cars together, unceasingly over an eight-hour shift, five days
a week, each having a strictly defined small piece of the job.
And with the crashing noise of the stamping presses
precisely timed, there was an unmistakable rhythm to the spectacle. Watching hundreds
of workers below us, from an observation deck, all doing their repetitive
ballet – it was real artistry. And, incredibly taxing, physically and mentally.
When their shift was over, the urge to escape would be overpowering. At home,
or at a local bar, as Ben Hamper relates in his seminal memoir of life on the
assembly line, Rivethead. (Hamper
worked in the same Van Slyke assembly plant in the ‘70s and ‘80s, then part of
GM’s Truck and Bus Division). To a shop rat, music was likely an important part
of that escape. As it was for me – but, the release I sought was from a
different sort of stress.
Hamper had a dysfunctional psychological sense of destiny –
he was a third generation Flint (and GM) shop rat, literally following in his
father’s and grandfather’s footsteps. I was first generation Flint and would
never rely on an hourly rate factory job for income. I think I knew this,
rationally, even in 1967. Yet, that tour of the Van Slyke plant showed me a
world that I must have felt inside me. At each job station along the line, the
task was to rivet, weld, or lift, one part of the overall vehicle, and only
that one part. I feared It was the same as most jobs in life.
I had resolved at this point in my college career to be a
history major, with English minor. Teaching was my chosen field – but I was
uncertain whether I could advance directly to grad school. Draft deferments did
not extend to graduate work. It was 1967.
Would I ever be able to do more? How much responsibility
could I really handle?
So, I felt a great deal of stress about my future. It was
something I could not control. But I had music. Not the classical music of my
childhood, but angry, revolutionary music. The music of marginalized people who
had no control over their futures. People like Ben Hamper, the “Rivethead.”
I had already collected some LPs since I had been at
Kalamazoo College. Mostly Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, and the like. My favorite
album at the time was Aftermath by
the Stones. It seemed dark to me. Paint It Black was
perhaps my favorite song. But, on the album, not featured as a single, no air
play, was another: Going
Home. This song may have captured the beat of the assembly line better than
any I knew then.
The cars are no longer made in Flint. Music was never made
there. Detroit, on the other hand, did produce music! As far back as the 1940s,
long before Motown, John
Lee Hooker landed in that city during the Great Migration from Mississippi.
He personified “Detroit
Blues,” invented while he worked in a Ford plant. Music never left Detroit.
Iggy Pop came from nearby
Ann Arbor in the 1960s, same era as MC5. Even as late as the 1990s, Detroit was still
producing artists like Jack
White. I didn’t know these musicians in 1967, but there were the Stones (and
other early “British
Blues”), seemingly representing a similar industrial culture.
Throughout my life, I’ve been compelled to return to the
anxiety, and bitterness, of the 19-year-old on that plant tour. It was important.
More music, along the same lines as the styles I liked then, has come into my
life since, but with modifications and improvements, much like cars have
changed and improved over a similar time span.
Those Chevy Impalas, and the trucks that Ben Hamper assembled,
were for the people. The music was as well. Workers were drawn to the assembly
line because of good pay and benefits. Rock musicians were drawn to their
calling because of its demand pricing. Fewer opportunities were available to either
than to the privileged who could get an education and move away from places
like Flint. Here there were majestic and powerful machines, like those rock
drum riffs. The leitmotiv of amplified lead guitar was like the “dumpster
hockey” Hamper and his colleagues wasted time playing when the line slowed or
stopped. The angry lyrics of the front man were the profanity-laced banter of
the shop rats.
The psychic need to escape, without the means. Hamper
ultimately departed the shop only due to disability – he went directly from the
rivet line at Van Slyke to a mental outpatient facility, permanently laid off, found
shooting hoops in a cameo in Michael Moore’s film, “Roger and Me.”
I never experienced that sort of release with music, but in
some ways, when listening to my iTunes playlists while working out at my gym, I
feel like the Rivethead at that mental health clinic. Perhaps there never was
an escape from Flint?
A high school friend from the '60s sent me a correction to an assertion that "music was never made here" [in Flint] -- he reminds me of Terry Knight and the Pack: " You said in one place that Flint didn't produce music. Well not artists of the quality of Bob Segar from Detroit or Paul Simon from Saginaw, but we did have Terry Knight who sang with Terry and the Pack in the mid 60s, before he went on to produce Grand Funk Railroad." He was what I call "pop" -- but I still remember the song "I (who have nothing)"
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