“Music is probably the one real magic I have encountered in my life. It’s pure and it’s real. It moves, it heals, it communicates and does all these incredible things.”
— Tom Petty (1950 – 2017) American singer, songwriter, and guitarist.
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Leadville, Colorado, came to mind. 1976. Or was it ’77? Me, Oscar Elliott, and others from Mount Pleasant. We were in the middle of a motorcycle sabbatical through the Rockies.
The same trip where we topped Monarch Pass and crossed the Continental Divide. Elevation 11,312 feet. Which was the first time I rode a motorcycle over the Continental Divide. And the first time I rode one on snow-covered roads. With snow still steadily falling.
The song playing on my Pandora today brought back those memories. The same tune was playing on the jukebox in the bar at the back of that restaurant where we we ate supper that night in Leadville. The one next to the motel where we were staying the morning we woke up to find the city and our bikes covered in snow. The song was “The Y’all Comeback Saloon” by the Oak Ridge Boys.
Funny how music works that way.
As a kid, it amazed and amused me when my Uncle Bill, mom’s little brother, told stories about how he and his Navy buddies spent time listening to music. “When a song came on the radio,” he told me with a smile, “the objective was to describe the car we owned at the time, the exact place where we were when we heard the song, and the name of the girl we were with when we heard it. Any additional information was optional at the storyteller’s discretion.”
As a writer and journalist introduced to the news business through the art of photography, the adage, “a picture is worth a thousand words,” makes a great deal of sense to me. But it’s also apparent that any wordsmith worth the paper their thesaurus is printed on can likewise argue for a thousand words expressing as much as one photo.
As a lifelong music lover, however, I will concede the power of both words and images to the magic of music when it comes to shaking memories loose in the lost caverns of our past.
My mother introduced me to that musical enchantment with a collection of 78 r.p.m. records from her Kentucky high school days. I remember Saturdays, her playing records and singing along with them as she completed weekly house cleaning rituals. Glenn Miller, Tommy Dorsey, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Patty Page, Eddie Arnold, and Hank Williams, Sr.
As a grade-schooler in the 1950s, that genetic appreciation for music led me to saving my weekly 25¢ allowance to spend on records at Richardson’s White’s Auto Store in Mount Pleasant. Elvis Presley, Ricky Nelson, Fats Domino.
High school and college band memories from the 60s are infused with John Phillip Sousa marches. “King Cotton ” and “The Washington Post” performed at goodness knows how many football games.
At the same time, my car radio was always tuned to KLIF in Dallas during the day. Making radio music memories at night cruising the streets or watching the moon rise over the city lake required tuning to WNOE in New Orleans.
Viet Nam era music by The Box Tops, Creedence Clearwater Revival, or Country Joe and the Fish still remind of the PA systems at drag strips filling pauses in racing action. Music for changing spark plugs at Interstate 20 Raceway in Tyler on Saturday night one weekend, and the next, listening for the next round of class call to the Dallas International Motor Speedway staging lanes.
Even work memories are bookmarked by music. Let me hear “Crazy” by Patsy Cline, and I’ll tell you about the night Johnny Garner and I sprayed a late-night paint job on a big truck at Sandlin’s Body Shop in Mount Pleasant with the radio keeping us awake.
And should I hear George Strait’s “Does Fort Worth Cross Your Mind,” you might have to endure my memories of good times with a dear friend 30-plus years ago at Joe T. Garcia’s Mexican Restaurant.
Long-time American Bandstand host Dick Clark, whose name is synonymous with music, is credited with saying, “Music is the soundtrack of our lives.”
Maybe that’s why mom always appeared as though she was in a different world, lost in time while vacuuming or folding laundry.
It might also be why you can catch me at home on any given evening after work. Sitting and strumming a few chords on a guitar. Singing. Smiling. Remembering that time that me and …
—Leon Aldridge
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© Leon Aldridge and A Story Worth Telling 2025. Excerpts and links may be used, provided full and clear credit is given to Leon Aldridge and ‘A Story Worth Telling’ with appropriate and specific directions to the original content.
Aldridge columns are featured in these publications: The Mount Pleasant Tribune, the Rosenberg Fort Bend Herald, the Taylor Press, the Alpine Avalanche, the Fort Stockton Pioneer, the Elgin Courier, The Monitor in Naples, and Motor Sports Magazine.
