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INTO THE ADVENTURE
There’s no contesting the fact that Steve,
Paul, and Ralph Colwell and Herb
Allen lived adventurous lives. As musicians, they toured in the farthest
corners of
the world, performing from the White House to the Super Bowl, from
Watts to
Carnegie Hall. Yet millions who have seen them know little or nothing
of the
astounding story of their lives.
The Colwells, city boys from San Marino, California, strummed and
sung their
way onto bluegrass and country stages at ages fourteen, twelve,
and ten. They were
picked up as performers by radio and TV stations in the Midwest
and startled the “old
boys” by winning the Renfro Valley Hillbilly Band Contest in
Kentucky. Soon they
were regulars on radio and TV programs in Southern California, and
are said to have
been the youngest trio under contract with a major label, Columbia
Records.
Herb Allen was a child prodigy. He conducted the Seattle Baby Orchestra
at age
four, became an accomplished keyboard player and percussionist,
and had his own
dance band in high school. He was a student of classical piano
and was accepted
by the prestigious Oberlin School of Music.
After high school graduation, Allen launched into an adventure
that would catapult
him into the theaters of post-World War II Europe. He was young,
the
Colwell Brothers even younger, and the eyes of the world were
on their generation.
In the decade that followed, through an extraordinary mix of
decision, courage,
and commitment, the world became their stage.
The Colwells and Allen preceded the baby boomer generation by
ten to twenty
years. They were not old enough to fight in World War II and
were too old to be
drafted for the Vietnam War. (The fourth Colwell brother, Ted,
eight years younger
than Ralph, served in Vietnam.) Allen was called up during
the Korean War, but
received a deferment. Steve, Paul, Ralph, and Herb were part
of the so-called “
quiet generation,” not expected to stir things up very much.
As it turned out, they
were anything but “quiet.”
In the ‘40s and ‘50s, they left careers, sweethearts,
and family behind and set sail
for the far corners of the world. Their adventures and experiences
uniquely prepared
them to ride the whirlwind of the 1960s.
Youth dominated the headlines of the sixties with marches, sit-ins,
protests, and
great new music. No one over thirty could be trusted. Traditions
and mores that
had bound society for centuries were shaking loose. American youth
were gripped
by a new idealism, much of it inspired by John Kennedy’s challenge, “Ask
not what
your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country.” This
new idealism
drew thousands of young people to take up the challenge of Modernizing
America, the theme of mid-decade student leadership conferences at
Michigan’s
Mackinac Island where Up with People was born.
The Colwells and Allen arrived at the first Michigan conference
in 1964 after working in Europe, Asia, and Africa for more than a
decade. They had played and sung in areas of tension and crisis in
dozens of countries. No one at the conference was aware of how much
sweat, grit, fatigue, and sacrifice had gone into those globe-spanning
years. This is the story of their roots, of the passion behind the
birth of Up with People, and living proof of the power of music.
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