Saturday, October 4, 2025

I Was A Teenage New College Student

As a high school senior (Class of '84), the only college I applied to was New College of Florida.  From the 1960's until just a few years ago, it was an innovative school where students had opportunities to design their own education. Under the current governor (who likes to say that Florida is "where woke goes to die"), the college was essentially dismantled by a new state-appointed board who fired faculty members, discarded a dumpster full of library books, rewrote the curriculum, and remade New College in the image of Hillsdale, a conservative Christian school.  

Whether you view that as a victory or a loss is a matter of perspective, but it was an early win for the Project 2025 activists who are now deconstructing the federal government from within.  You don't come here for political opinions, and I'm not going to rage against the machine or mourn the New College that I knew.  Let's talk about the music.

Palm Court (pictured above) was where we held our parties, dancing among the Florida palms at the center of the dorms.  There's a low wall around Palm Court that was the right height for sitting (while drinking, smoking, chatting, and watching the dancers).  An informal party was called a "Wall".  The bigger parties were called PCP's (Palm Court Parties).  That was when they brought out the big speakers, the kegs, and the punch bowl spiked with acid.  MDMA wasn't outlawed until 1985, so we were "sorted for E's" (if not wizz).

Today I'm sharing a selection of songs that were often played at those parties in the mid to late 1980's.  Students made mixtapes, and someone would plug in an amplifier, a cassette deck and a pair of speakers.  Throw in a case of Busch, and you've got a Wall.

There was something special about hearing these songs in the Florida night, dancing under the trees with the smell of cheap beer, patchouli and clove cigarettes in the air.  Hearing these songs again now is interesting.  It was a time when the US and Russia were sworn enemies, and we never imagined our presidents becoming friends. Many of us feared that Ronnie was going to let the nukes fly (as he joked about in the sample used in "5 Minutes").  Apartheid still existed ("Free Nelson Mandela").  Gil Scott-Heron's intro to "B Movie" sounds surprisingly relevant to the current efforts of Project 2025 Project 1955. 

It's also interesting to look back to what we imagined the future of music might be back then.  A lot of the tracks are examples of (or influenced by) electro, an offshoot of hip hop and one of the roots of EDM.  This was back before the internet, so I didn't know at the time that we were listening to Arthur Russell ("5 Minutes") and the members of Tackhead (who backed Grandmaster Flash and other rappers on the Sugar Hill label).  Keith LeBlanc's "Malcolm X (No Sell Out)" was also popular at our parties.  Bill Laswell, Bernie Worrell and Nicky Skopelitis were listed on the sleeve of the Time Zone 12", so I did know that Material members were backing John Lydon and Afrika Bambaataa (and I recognized the "White Lines" bassline from "Cavern").  I really can't describe how amazing it was to hear "World Destruction", "Uncertain Smile" or "Bela Lugosi's Dead" at top volume in the open air on a warm night.  I invite you to Turn Your Watch Back and join me in a Time Zone...

18 comments:

  1. Turn Yr Watch Back, vol. 1 ("Mesopotamia" through "Bela Lugosi's Dead"): https://pixeldrain.com/u/qK6oRn9s

    Turn Yr Watch Back, vol. 2 ("White Lines" through "DMSR"): https://pixeldrain.com/u/AoYHd6as

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  2. The current state of the us government is like that of the reagan, only a thousand times worse
    The Gang Of Four sang in At Home He's A Tourist: Two steps forward (Six steps back) (Six steps back) (Six steps back) (Six steps back)
    That is 22 steps back if I counted them correctly.
    You could include so much (Wipers - When it's over). Thank you, but you made me (no, not you, you know who I mean) sad, right before I go to work.
    a bit like Marvin, in a Hitchhiker's Guide

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    1. I agree with you a thousand percent. It's the same conservative impulse to go "Forward -- into the past!" (as the Firesign Theater put it). But it's a past that never existed, an idealized version of a Golden Age that wasn't golden (or ideal) unless you were white, male, and "born again" (forgiven for all your sins -- past, present and future).

      To quote the Gang Of Four again, "Nostalgia, it's no good. Our future LIES in the past."

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  3. Thanks so much for the great rememberance & both these. They strike perfect chords for me. Wonderful.

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    1. Thought of you when I was revisiting these songs and thinking about the political environment (under Raygun as well as under Dolt 45).

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  4. I love the picture you painted, Jon.

    Florida was musically a few years behind the rest of the country when I lived there—but college kids always seem to find the good music. When I traveled a lot, the best record shops were usually near a college. Looking forward to this one.
    -Stinky

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    1. Thanks, man. One song that was surprisingly popular at our parties was "You Shook Me All Night Long". AC/DC seemed like strange company (on a mixtape with Talking Heads, New Order and Grandmaster Flash), but it also surprised me that "You Shook Me" was so danceable.

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    2. Own college party memory: We always went to this night club called Abe & Jake's on saturday nights, which started out as a clique of international students and whatever regular college town citizens. The music was pretty much all r'n'b and hip hop - with one exception.

      Once a night, the club would blast "You Shook Me All Night Long"

      ...unfortunately, it was to announce the end of the night, as this was the signal to pick up your shit and go. After that song, lights on and an army of bouncers with interlocked arms pushing you gently but firmly towards the door. There was no "sorry, I forgot my jacket over there" stuff ("come back tomorrow for it"), as by 1.45 they wanted to be absolutely sure that everybody was out in the street, so as good law abiding bar owners by the 2 AM deadline the bar/club was well and totally closed.

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    3. The tradition at a bar I frequented was to play VAN HALEN'S Happy Trails when it was "Hotel/motel time--you don't have to go home--but you can't stay here!"

      It drove home that humans are animals that can easily be conditioned to head toward the door with an audible stimulus. Regulars started moving toward the door when it played.

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  5. Great stuff. I know someone who was teaching there a few years after you graduated and know it was a very special place before it was brutalized. I'll spare you both my politics and academic bullshit here, but I'm holding on tight to Delroy Wilson--"Better Must Come."

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  6. Thanks for the great story Jonder, it really paints a vivid picture of days gone by. As for the music, excellent selections!

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  7. Excellent playlist, Jonder, and a far cry from the most popular choices on the jukebox at the first college I went to. No wonder I dropped out after six months, got a job then went travelling! Although to be fair, the jukebox hadn't improved greatly a few years later when I returned to college...

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    1. I have tried (without much success) to remember the singles that were on the jukebox at New College while I was a student. One of them was "Why" by Herve Villechaize and the Children of the World. I still remember the lyrics, but I was today years old when I learned that Paul Kantner wrote them. Ha!

      https://www.discogs.com/master/1479640-Children-Of-The-World-Why

      Another single included one of my favorite triple song titles, "Flash Flash Flash" by the Vibrators. And we had Stanley Franks' brilliant Canadian glam single, "S'Cool Days". Thanks, Khayem!

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  8. They called it Kristallnacht. Books from libraries, shops, everywhere, and art (entartete Kunst). These were burned publicly. Now it is done clumsily but as effective.
    What worries me is the indifference with which it all happens. As in Russia (The Great Example) or China the following sayings are mantra:
    You know what best to think, you know what best to say, you know what best to feel.

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  9. That's a nice evocative write up Jonder. I'm in the mood for something like this. Feeling that it is all too much to handle in these weird times. Thanks a lot.

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  10. Very cool organic scene you came from Jonder! I had the top clubs but the neighborhood joint Al's (now converted to condos) was quite a place on an Uptown golf course and the only bar in our town! At any rate they had "Whiter Shade Of Pale" playing nightly on the jukebox along with 'Touch of Grey' were definitely both played a ton! Well, yes, the Orange Turd because he was so badly ostracized dismantled our organic progress due to no cooperation. The one issue for me was our loss of freedom to choose had we signed the WHO thang and once that was properly rejected, that was all I wanted. The other niceties that RFK, Jr. has done like ban ALL the red dyes not just the one Biden had put on which took 50 years since when the red dye in Captain Crunch Berries cereal made me swell so bad at night I woke up and couldn't breath and was rushed to the hospital in the middle of the night narrowly avoiding death...was nice to see that addressed after 50 years. Beyond that you can't do much when people are poisoned in the mind. It doesn't help that our suppliers at work became victims (along with our company) of 50% tarrifs on expensive steel products and if not that both countries have the 50% anyways to you guys got me there. We'll see the outcome.

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  11. My folks moved out of NYC and down To Boca Raton, FL in 1973. Fleeing the crime and chaos ... .. I was a Sophomore in High School and music got me through that period. Truc Of America, Crack The Sky, Be Bop Deluxe - saw then in venues between Fort Lauderdale to Miami. First concert Alice Cooper ( Suzi Quatro opened) at the Sportatorium - https://floridamusictours.com/things-to-do/sportatorium/. God awful sounding venue. I left for Northern California in late 1978, the drinking age was 18 in the Sunshine State, quite the shock on the west coast where it was 21. Florida went 21 in the mid '80's. - and passed the law in a classic "Florida" manner - "On July 1, 1985, Florida implemented the drinking age becoming 21, while “grandfathering” those who turned 19 at Midnight". Slow to load page - http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1985-06-30/news/8501260348_1_drinking-age-drinking-laws-alcoholic-beverages. .. Fridays and Saturday nights were split between cruising the beaches during Spring Break and parties at older friends Condos. We would show up with a six pack each and a LP to play on the host's turntable. I recall buying the Ramones S/T debut at Peaches and bringing it to one of these gatherings. It lasted less than 2 songs before getting yanked and replaced by either Grand Funk or the Doobies. Kids yelling "who brought this shit here?" I left with my tail between my legs and so rattled I left the LP at the party. A couple of weeks go by and I run into the host at the Food Court in the Mall. "Hey Man...that record you brought..it's actually pretty good". HA ! That was Florida in a nutshell for me.

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    1. Floriduh keeps getting Floridumber. I turned 18 in '84, and I remember the grandfather law.

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