Sunday, June 15, 2008

Back In the High Life (Again)

On a wide set of bookshelves in a little-used loft area of my parent's house in San Antonio, there is a VHS cassette labeled "1987 NBA Finals: a Great Win Lakers!" It's a recording of Game 6 of that series, in which the Lakers closed out the Celtics to win the championship. I haven't popped this artifact into a VCR in probably close to 20 years. But from June of 1987 to some time in 1988, the tape got quite a bit of play at the Newman household.

Aside from demonstrating my predisposition for awkward wordy titles, the tape is significant because it is the one pro basketball event in my life that preceded my relationship with the Spurs. It's strange that it exists: for a short time, when I was 10 years old, I was a huge Lakers fan. It was my first taste of the NBA, and I remember being completely engrossed.

The game was amazing, but what really got me, what forced me to rewatch the tape so many times over the next few months, was what they played after the game. If this year's Finals end tonight--and they could, the Lakers are down 3-1 to the Celtics--you'll see a video montage of highlights set to one of this year's most popular songs. Usually it's hard to describe how much these suck. Maybe that's too strong an evaluation, but I have honestly never seen another one that really excites me or makes me want to watch it over even once--and that includes the Red Hot Chilli Pepper's video for the Spurs 2003 Championship. But in 1987 the montage commemorating that year's Finals was, for me, the height of the art form:

Steve Winwood.

"Back in the High Life Again."

I'm sure if you know this song, it is immediately obvious to you how incredible the montage must have been. You aren't wrong. It is full of glitz and class, and creates a sensation of accomplishment and uphoria; it's the sound of someone at the slow motion zenith of their life pursuit.

It didn't hurt that the highlights from that series still stand as some of the jazziest and most entertaining in any Finals since. But really. That song.

It's rare that you think of something as awesome as this video that isn't already on youtube. But unfortunately that is the case in this instance. This clip of the Top 10 plays of that series are the closest thing I can find to it.

I'm also including the actual music video for this classic hit song. Try turning the volume on the highlights all the way down and playing both of these at the same time. Maybe you'll have a small idea of the just what made me love this game so much as a 10 year old.





UPDATE: holy crap, it worked.

3 comments:

Adam10 said...

Wow. Jason you really hit the nail on the head with this last posting. Just seeing Kareem's goggles transported me back to fifth grade in the 1987. Where my sporting hero was one Kirby Puckett of the World Series Champion Minnesota Twins. Nostalgia is what we are contemplating here.. but damn it is there anything more beautiful than remembering and feeling the tingle of innocence.. when we watched men on the television play sports and wonder how they do what they do, what they must be thinking.. then the inevitable trip out to the hoop or the baseball diamond ready to place yourself in their shoes. That mixture of Steve Windwood and the Lakers highlights really do create a classic composition. Something about the 80's I think we forget is that even with the brashness and excessiveness and fashion and love of material things... things like sports seemed more worth-wile...not really more passionate, but more simple, more grit, more dreamy... I don't know... Paul Pierce is really making a place in the history books himself right now... I think he would have been a good fit on the 87 Celtics. Much love. Adam

Unknown said...

This is the best blog of ever! It's pretty awesome how the highlight reel and the "Back in the Highlife" song mesh up so well. Still, we will have to track down the actual montage and rescue it from its crumbling, decaying mortal VHS coil with a digital rendering we can post. Much props. Much much props.
T

Jason said...

Thanks for the interest, guys. I agree, Adam, that we were kids in a pretty good time for sports. I think back so fondly about how the production wasn't quite as slick, and the players seemed a little more like regular guys. I wonder how or if things are different for kids today. For one thing, we didn't see any cheesy montage after the game last night.

And thanks T. I'm glad you like the blog; I'm looking forward to continuing it. And yes, I had the same thought. Let's find a way to transfer that tape to digital. It'd be a good contribution to the youtube universe.