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Searching
for Glory at the Cookin’ Cadenza
by
Bill Anschell
Summoning
the passion born from
sixty-five years of
hard living, Jimmy brought
the song--and our first
set--to a dramatic close. The
audience burst into
wild applause, but I
could manage only a
feeble smile. "Route
66" had
never really pulled
my heartstrings; instead
of succumbing to its
images of light Cowboy
romanticism, I'd always
seen a hot asphalt wasteland
splattered with decaying
armadillo roadkill. But
it was the byway of
choice for overzealous
lounge singers looking
to prove they could
infuse heavy emotion
into the purely mundane. Jimmy
had just done just that;
tragically, the audience's
reaction assured him
a bigger role in our
next set.
Jimmy's
triumph came on the
heels of three songs
belted out by the club's
former waitress, Bobbie,
who'd just served a
year in jail on a major
drug trafficking charge. Prior
to that Louie, Mike
and I had slogged through
four or five leaden
instrumental tunes.
A
curious cross between
Tom Jones and Johnny
Mathis, Jimmy was dressed
to the nines, trying
to revive a career that
had peaked fifteen years
ago at the Holiday Inn
Tiki Lounge. Every
morning he sang in the
shower, closed his eyes,
and saw an adoring public. Too
old to make Star Search
and too young to warrant
a last dying wish, he'd
gradually worked his
way down to the Cookin'
Cadenza, where our sorry
fates were now entwined. As
leader of the backing
trio, I was an accessory
to his criminal lack
of self-awareness.
On
the positive side, he
was eager to please. When
I asked if he wouldn't
mind plugging my new
CD during the next set,
he was delighted to
oblige. "Be
glad to, man," he
said through a gold-capped
smile. "Hey,
I'm really digging this."
CLANG! A
bell sounded loudly
in my head, ringing
in the 1,000th time
I'd had to confront
this particular moral
dilemma. Do
I lie and say I'm enjoying
it, too? Or
do I ruin his evening
by raining negativity
from my personal jazz
cloud of doom? "Likewise," I
say, then go have my
second beer.
"Over
here, man." It
was Louie, central figure
in this musical sideshow. He
was sitting on a barstool
clutching a glass of
scotch, gesturing with
his free hand. Over
the last year he'd undergone
an astonishing physical
transformation, swapping
about forty pounds of
fat from his stomach
for twenty pounds of
muscle in his arms. Only
his scraggly beard and
western attire were
unaffected. Well
into his forties, he
was at last looking
like the tough guy he
longed to be.
"You
know what I want to
do, man?” He
pointed at a curvy blond
in a summer dress, sitting
at one of the room's
twenty tables. I
want to #!@* that chick,
right here, right now. She'd
dig it too, man, believe
me. Yah-he-yah-he-yah-he-he-he." The
cadence was Louie's
nervous chainsaw laugh,
well-imitated among
the room's instrumental
warriors; the comment
was pretty standard
barroom chatter from
a man who had yet to
embrace a feminist perspective. I
nodded ambiguously.
Sometimes,
for variety, I'd spend
my break outside, leaning
back on the club's window,
looking across the street
at the darkened outdoor
market that was the
hub of Thomaston's daytime
tourism. Louie
would join me and point
down the sidewalk at
an approaching couple: "Dig
that chick in those
shorts, man. Don't
tell me she doesn't
want me, man, you know? Yah-he-yah-he-yah-he-he." Or
I'd go talk to Mike,
the obsessed bassist
who'd inexplicably relocated
from Tampa to play out
this drama full-time. Louie
would stroll over, put
his arms across our
shoulders, and ask, "Think
that #!@*! talking to
Bobbie wants to #!@*!
me? Yah-he-yah-he-yah-he-he."
Louie
owns the room that is
Thomaston's only jazz
club, and--insofar as
it has a clientele that
doesn't hate jazz, an
owner who tolerates
jazz, and an actual
piano--one of the only
ones in the South. Consequently
there's a semi-regular
migration of piano players
driving hundreds of
miles to Louie's place,
which rates highly on
the first two counts
and nominally meets
the third.
There's
a catch, of course. Louie
owns the club and Louie
is a drummer. You
play in Louie's club,
you play with Louie. Never
mind that he's about
75% deaf and has never
practiced in his life;
you suffer through the
gig, vow never to come
back, then give him
the benefit of the doubt
("Maybe
he's improved...")
three months later when
he invites you back. Where
else are you going to
play?
Imagine
a treadmill that, due
to some peculiar defect,
stops or even goes into
reverse every few seconds
without warning. Imagine
trying to have an extended
and meaningful workout
on it. Now
imagine an attentive
audience scrutinizing
your every move, looking
for art. That's
what it's like to perform
with Louie on drums: the
tempo slides about haphazardly,
leaving no secure landing
place for any soloist
who dares go airborne. There's
a real camaraderie among
pianists who have survived
the experience; a game-winning,
back-slapping bonding
founded on the belief
we're all somehow stronger
for the pain.
But
at the same time there's
something magical and
utterly unexplainable
about Louie's club. It's
a fundamental truism
in jazz life that most
rooms booking jazz--especially
dinner clubs--are really
looking for antiseptic
background music. The
minute the band starts
to play as if it cares,
customers complain and/or
the management panics. But
where the typical clubowner
warns the band in advance
to "keep
it down," Louie
will punch his pianists
on the shoulder, gleefully
exalting, "Go
crazy--you know, fists
and elbows, man. Yah-he-yah-he-yah-he."
Louie
wants to bash, and he
wants the band to bash
with him. And
for some reason the
clientele--the well-heeled,
mainstream American
tourists who litter
the otherwise beautiful
streets of Thomaston
during the day--they
love it! Why? There's
no simple explanation,
and visiting performers
describe it to their
hometown peers in wonder. There
may be no other place
in the country where
this brand of clientele
responds in this manner
to this music--music
that is not only undiluted
and unapologetic (the
jazz artists' dream),
but also lurchingly
horrible (Louie's personal
contribution).
Is
it the food--a seafood-laden,
moderately-priced menu? Hint: the
last two dishwashers
became head chefs in
short order. The
service, maybe--a warm
southern hospitality
that smoothes over the
other defects? Guess
again--the employees
turn over faster than
the diners and steal
from Louie almost as
often as he shortchanges
them.
Searching
for an explanation,
frustrated by the sheer
illogic of it all, I've
even--in my most desperate
moments--considered
giving credit to Louie
himself. Is
it possible, I wonder,
that--in spite of his
musical and personal
shortcomings--he's a
man of integrity, dedicated
to supporting and nurturing
an art form that needs
his help? "NO
WAY, YOU ASSHOLE," my
sane self replies.
Louie
is a thug. He's
left other cities--where
he ran other clubs--in
the dark of the night,
pistol in hand, creditors
in pursuit. He's
stiffed more musicians
than could fill two
big bands. I
operate under the assumption
that the day he knows
his creditors have found
him, he'll invite me
down for my longest
stay ever--say, two
weeks. On
the fourteenth day--payday--I'll
show up to find the
furniture on the sidewalk,
and no sign of Louie
or his wife, Bonnie,
who is the club's hostess.
I'm
thinking about Bonnie
as Louie, Mike and I
saunter back up to the
stage. She's
an intelligent, pious,
and attractive woman
whose addiction to Louie
ranks among the gig's
top mysteries. He's
often described to me
their between-set physical
doings on his office
desk, and in the same
breath bragged of his
barely disguised infidelities. The
latest chapter is a
woman upstate in Douglasville,
single mother and enough
of a fate-teaser that
she periodically threatens
to visit the club--disguised
in a wig--just to push
the threshhold.
From
the bandstand I survey
the room. The
audience has thinned
considerably from the
near-capacity sixty
or so of the first set. It's
a weeknight and it's
raining out, so we're
not likely to get a
lot of newcomers. At
this point about thirty
people remain, most
of them scattered among
the small round tables
on the main floor. A
few are on the balcony,
generally a refuge for
those not interested
in the music.
Then,
with an impending sense
of doom, I turn my attention
to my nemesis, an unwieldy
colossus known disaffectionately
as The Whore. It's
the eighty-eight key
nightmare that's my
appointed vehicle, and
I tentatively plunk
out a few notes as a
driver might test bad
brakes before a long
trip. Some
keys go down and don't
come back up, others
won't go down at all,
and still others hit
two notes at once. All
of these defects, though,
pale before the greater
Out-Of-Tune condition,
which casts the entire
musical experience in
a hellish backdrop of
throbbing dissonance.
One
Atlanta pianist I know
expresses his feelings
about inferior instruments
by urinating in them
at the end of the gig. He
played here at the Cookin'
Cadenza several years
ago; in all probability,
his sentiments flowed
freely afterwards. In
The Whore's case, it
could hardly have made
things worse.
I'd
done what I could to
make it a playable instrument. After
the first night, I warned
Louie that if he didn't
have it tuned, I'd commit
suicide. The
tuner miraculously showed
up the next day despite
having been repeatedly
stiffed by Louie. Later,
he stopped by the piano,
where I was celebrating
its brief remission
by playing a sensitive
ballad--a sort of bonding
ritual between two partners
in an arranged marriage. "You
know this is a total
piece of shit, right?" he
said, pointing at my
bulky bride. "I
give it one hour, maybe
two."
Tonight--three
days later--it had completely
re-established its original
horrid equilibrium. Fortunately,
by now I had attained
Indifference, a state
of mind sought by all
seasoned Cookin' Cadenza
performers. Like
other spiritual disciplines,
it required commitment
and effort, but in return
helped pave the road
to inner peace.
With
each return visit to
the club, I found myself
able to reach Indifference
more easily. My
mantra was simple--"It
doesn't matter, this
isn't music, it doesn't
matter, this isn't music"--and
my transition was facilitated
by consuming mind-altering
Budweiser in large quantity. Soon
I could close my ears
to my own ugly sounds,
shut out the overbearing
bass, and ignore the
hurky-jerky drums, losing
myself in the sheer
physicality of it. I'd
sweat, drink more beer,
shake the cramps out
of my overwrought hands,
then do it again. Much
later, exhausted, I'd
collapse onto the sagging
mattress that was Louie's
guest quarters; half
a twin bed occupying
three quarters of a
closet-sized room. Seven
hours later I'd wake
up, inexplicably eager
for more.
"I'm
Old Fashioned," I
called out to Mike,
at once choosing the
song and asking if he
knew it. He
gave me his usual tortured
look, a forlorn shrug
of acknowledgement indicating
that, yes, he could
play "I'm
Old Fashioned" if
absolutely necessary,
but, no, it would not
be THE ONE he dreamed
of night after night,
THE SONG wherein he
would finally play THE
SOLO. That
elusive improvisation
would be a virtuoso
bass concerto without
compare--heartfelt,
complex, loud, and epic. All
mortals present would
feel its power, and
in the course of five
minutes his twenty years
of desperate practicing
would at last be justified.
But,
no, this would not be
that. This
would just be him playing
a lot of notes at high
volume for a long time,
in anxious preparation
for that promised mystical
moment. Consequently
I would, as ever, be
utterly unable to hear
myself, an innocent
bystander in the ongoing
Bass - Drum war. The
combatants were well-matched,
and the result was almost
always a draw, with
moderate carnage. Mike
could play louder--all
he had to do was turn
up his amp--but Louie
had the advantage of
being deaf. Louie
could play worse--it's
all he knew--but Mike
was oblivious to anything
except his own sound. Beneath
the din, I watched my
fingers playing notes
that I hoped were right
on an instrument that
made them all sound
wrong anyway, and was
secretly glad I couldn't
hear myself. It
was, after all, a path
toward yet deeper Indifference.
Three
minutes into "I'm
Old Fashioned," I
had achieved the desired
mind-body split. As
my fingers silently
and hopelessly improvised,
I revisited my earlier
train of thought. Coming
up to the bandstand
I'd been thinking about something interesting;
what was it...it was...oh
yeah, Louie and Bonnie. Louie's
little affair in Douglasville. He'd
pulled me aside on our
first break the previous
night and filled me
in.
"Man,
did I ever tell you
about the chick I'm
#!@*!-ing right now?" He
was sitting on the barstool
next to mine, and had
hooked his arm around
my neck to draw me closer. My
feet didn't reach the
ground and I nearly
toppled into his lap;
he didn't notice. "She's
the reason I quit smoking,
man, after twenty-five
years, so you know she
ain't exactly ugly,
if you know what I mean. Yah-he-yah-he-yah-he-he."
WHOOOMMM! A
loud, low growl jolted
me back to "I'm
Old Fashioned." It
was Mike, using his
bass to get my attention. "Excuse
me," it
bellowed on his behalf, "I
believe it's my turn
to solo now. I
can't help but notice
that you failed to properly
invite me to begin. I'd
like to think it's not
because you don't like
my soloing--I practice
six hours a day and
have enormous technical
facility, as you know. But
the other alternative
is that you simply weren't
paying attention, which
I find equally disquieting. If
you're bored working
with me, just let me
know and I'll call in
a substitute. Otherwise,
I'd very much like to
begin my solo now, please,
and by way of preparation
I'm turning up quite
loud."
I
looked over at him and
noted, as usual, that
not a hair was out of
place. He
wore a tie and vest,
and had the controlled
elegance of a ballroom
dancer. I
smiled weakly and nodded,
then began to focus
on accompanying him. My
task for the next several
minutes would be to
stake out a rhythmic
compromise between Louie's
random slippage and
the more consistent
passage of time that
Mike and I both clung
to in our heads. Mike
looked at me thankfully,
and launched into his
customary series of
pyrotechnics. I
returned to my reverie.
"So
she's got this kid,
right?" Louie
continued. "He's
like, maybe, eight or
nine, and she doesn't
want him to know that
I'm in her room #!@*!-ing
the #!@*! out of her,
right? Yah-he-yah-he-yah-he-he. You
know, I say he'll be
#!@*!-ing his own little
schoolmates soon anyway,
and it doesn't really
make a difference anyway. But
this is, like, really
important to her, you
know? And
the only thing that's
going to give it away
is that I'm coughing
all the time. So
I'm always trying to
hold it back, man, but
that's impossible.
"And
that's when I decided
to quit. You
know those couple of
heart attacks I had
didn't do it, man. But
this chick's #!@*! was
so fine, I was ready. At
the time I was smoking
about five packs a day,
and I decided I'd--just
for the hell of it--for
my last week I'd just
smoke as much as I could. You
know, like why not? And
what I found was that
I COULDN'T SMOKE MORE,
MAN! I
mean, I had a cigarette
in my mouth at every
waking moment, and I
couldn't smoke more
than I was already doing,
just couldn't do it. Yah-he-yah-he-yah-he-he." This
last point cracked him
up. He
spun his stool around
and started slapping
his knee. I
did what he wanted,
which was to ooh and
ah in a respectably
manly, grunting kind
of way.
I
wasn't totally faking
it, either. Louie
was a cheat, a sneak,
and--above all--a terrible
drummer. But
he lived his life with
a certain intensity
and fearlessness that
I admired. I
couldn't help myself,
and this was a treason
I dared not share with
any other musician or
sensitive human being.
"So
anyway, man, here's
the part that's gonna
kill you. Every
Tuesday, Bonnie and
I drive up to Douglasville. We
get a hotel room and
everything, you know,
and it's like a vacation
for her. She
loves it."
BAM! I
jerked to back to attention
as Mike, in the heat
of his solo, arms flailing,
accidently knocked over
a microphone stand. The
mike crashed to the
floor and angrily announced
its own death over the
sound system. Mike
shook his head tragically--once
again, the elements
had conspired to suppress
his genius--and looked
to me for help. I
sympathetically bailed
him out, coming back
in with the melody,
flagrantly disregarding
our actual place in
the tune.
There
was a reason I took
quick action: the
ever-present threat
of a drum solo. Louie
seized any open space
to launch an extended
sensory assault that
was as animated as it
was unmusical. It
was also virtually identical
every time: his
head would bob up and
down furiously, and
he'd weave from drum
to cymbal to drum with
his entire body. At
some supposed pinnacle
he'd play on a set of
pots and pans suspended
from a nearby rack. Then
he'd return to the drumset,
settle into some approximation
of a beat, and look
our way, eyes filled
with terror. No
one had ever told him
how to end a solo, and
he was temporarily at
our mercy, begging us
to rescue him. The
audience would read
the passion on his face
and applaud wildly.
We
quickly ended the song,
and it was my job to
pick our next one. Unknown
to Mike, I had a pretty
good sense of which
pieces held the potential
to spring his Epiphany,
and I made a point of
avoiding them. Unfair
though it may have been,
I valued my Indifference
far too much to let
the onstage melodrama
get deeper, let alone
transcendent. "Willow
Weep for Me," I
called, avoiding his
tragic gaze.
Then,
just as a reality check,
I spent a couple of
minutes trying to play
well. Every
now and then I'd manage
to avoid enough of The
Whore's sore spots to
sound like I was playing
a real piano, and occasionally
I'd be audible above
the onstage and offstage
fray. But
it just wasn't worth
it. It
entailed enormous effort
for minimal payback,
and, certainly, no one
in the audience seemed
to notice. If
anything, my look of
concentration was likely
to be mistaken for concern,
whereas my Indifferent
smile conveyed that
all was well in this
unfathomable music we
played.
We
weren't far into the
next song, "Lover
Man," when
Louie started waving
one of his arms frantically. There
were potential customers
milling around the front
door, and Bonnie was
at the bar, trying to
fix a problem with the
cash register. "Bonnie!" he
yelled, "Bonnie!," and
he angrily pointed at
the entrance. I
had mixed feelings,
beyond my usual incredulity. On
the one hand, Louie's
horrible rhythmic sense
got even worse when
he was disrupted like
this. On
the other hand, with
one of his four limbs
otherwise engaged, his
din was reduced by a
quarter. Bonnie
ran to the door, composed
herself, and greeted
the customers; the music
went on.
Watching
her--and feeling sorry
for her--took me back
to Louie's story. "When
we get to the hotel
we take our time, have
a nice meal and everything,
and then I 'go to the
gig,' right? Because
Bonnie believes I have
a gig up there, and
that's why we're there
to begin with. So
she waits in the hotel
while I go to this gig,
which is really just
me #!@*!-ing this chick
at her house.
"Now
here's the intense part. I
get to this girl's house
at maybe 9:00 or so,
and we go at it hard. You
know, like really hard. Yah-he-yah-he-yah-he-he. And
she's exhausted and
falls asleep, man it's
never failed. Now
she wants me to spend
the night there--you
know, they always do--but
she wants me out before
her son wakes up. But
I have to be back at
the hotel around 1:00
with Bonnie cause I
was supposed to just
be at a gig.
"So
what I do is, at about
midnight I set her clock
for six, and I wake
her up and say I gotta
leave now. She
sees the clock and goes
back to sleep. Then
I set it back to midnight,
and I get my ass out
of there, and I'm back
with Bonnie at the hotel. Everybody's
happy, man, and I'm
getting it on both sides. Yah-he-yah-he-yah-he-he. I've
got it worked out pretty
well.
"I'm
actually kind of starting
to have a moral problem
with it though, man. Shit,
I shouldn't be telling
you that." It
was a tender moment;
a sensitive confession
followed by awkward
silence. I
ordered another Budweiser
to break the spell;
it was either that or
belch as loud as I could.
"Stompin'
at the Savoy," I
called, trying not to
let Mike see the defiant
smile I couldn't fight
back. He
sighed loudly, pursed
his lips, then tried
to exact revenge by
deliberately playing
the worst possible notes. AS
IF IT WOULD MATTER! Louie
was bashing away, unhearing,
and I refused to let
on that I heard or cared. After
a minute or so Mike
had to give up; sulking,
he went back to his
accustomed loud and
busy self.
This
was our final trio tune
prior to the dreaded
vocal numbers, and having
successfully denied
Louie a solo thus far,
I charitably decided
to set him loose. I
looked at Mike and we
both dropped out, setting
the stage for Louie's
usual histrionics. But
he was oblivious, one
hand bashing away to
a now imagined band,
the other gesturing
into the audience at
Frank, a bassist on
break from his hotel
gig up the street. As
Frank approached the
bandstand, I concentrated
on reading Louie's lips. "Check
out that chick by the
bar," he
was saying. "Think
she wants me to #!@*!
her? Yah-he-yah-he-yah-he-he."
Frank
pointed at Mike and
me, and Louie quickly
realized he was about
to forfeit a pass at
the elusive spotlight. Soon
the head was bobbing,
the body weaving, and
the din heightened. With
small gestures hidden
from the audience, Mike
and I played air drums
along with Louie's unimprovised
solo, a little piece
of choreography we'd
recently begun performing
together. We
stopped when the bobbing
head began to periodically
turn our way, consumed
with its usual look
of terror. I
secretly cherished this
moment, when tough guy
Louie became a hooked
fish, flailing away
at his drum kit, now
and then struggling
to meet our gaze, eyes
bulging. We
returned his frenzied
look blankly at first,
playing with him, stretching
it out just a little
longer, until finally
we took pity on him
and finished the tune. The
eighteen people in the
audience, sensing that
something meaningful
had probably just happened,
went wild.
As
bandleader, it was my
dubious privilege to
acknowledge the enthusiastic
and undeserved applause. "How
about another hand for
Mr. LOUIE JOHNSON ON
THE DRUMS! YEAH! LOUIE
JOHNSON! THOMASTON'S
OWN LOUIE JOHNSON! LET'S
HEAR IT FOR LOUIE!" Frank
smirked from the audience,
having played with Louie
often enough to feel
my pain.
In
a jazz group, the bassist
and drummer have a special
and essential relationship. They
work cooperatively to
lay down the beat, and
their success as a team
depends on their ability
to adapt to one another's
internal pulse. Making
a musical partnership
work with Louie is like
making marriage work
with an unmedicated
psychopath. Despite
generally good intentions,
Louie acts at every
moment to destroy the
relationship. His
time shifts about spasmodically,
pushing and pulling
his unwitting partner
to, fro, over, under,
up, and down with unpredictable
force at irregular intervals.
It's
a hopeless scenario,
and each bassist has
his own unique way of
coping. Some
play with the utmost
simplicity, not wanting
to contribute further
to the turmoil. Others
try to lock pace with
Louie's stutter-step,
much as misguided citizens
throughout history have
embraced the notions
of deranged but charismatic
leaders. Others
play randomly, treating
Louie's arhythmic spewings
as a postmodern backdrop
for existential commentary. Mike,
of course, turns up
as loud as possible,
plays a lot of notes,
and curses fate that
his gifts might go forever
undiscovered. Frank
is one of my favorites;
shunning any potential
codependency, he ignores
Louie altogether, pretending
nothing is wrong. Sometimes,
playing with Frank,
I'm shocked to hear
something akin to music
emanating from the bandstand.
So
it's to Frank that I
direct my introduction
of Jimmy. I've
got one eyebrow inconspicously
raised to signal that
he might just want to
head on back to his
own gig, an innocuous
background music situation
that has thus far left
his psyche relatively
untraumatized. "How
about a big hand for
our newest member, vocalist
Jimmy Thomas!" On
cue, Jimmy takes a Vegas-like
half-trot to the stage,
grabs the mike from
me, and launches into
the usual irrelevant
stage patter. Before
counting off our first
song he shadow-boxes
a few jabs at an invisible
opponent and winks at
two women sitting at
the nearest table. All
told, there are fourteen
people now left in the
audience.
He
calls all the masterworks
from the timeworn Lounge
Lizard songbook. First, "Kansas
City"--the "Route
66" of
the Heartland. Same
chords, same inane shuffle
beat, same key, and--unfortunately--same
crowd reaction. Small
but mighty, the audience
expresses its approval
with hoots and hollers. The
Cookin' Cadenza's jazz
mystique has been shattered,
and I'm less than pleased. I've
driven five hours, slept
in subhuman conditions,
and joined a team of
musical misfits, all
for the sake of what
turns out to resemble
a bad wedding gig.
Meanwhile,
I can see the wheels
turning in Jimmy's head. "They
like me, really like
me," he's
thinking, and visions
of his glory days race
through his head. The
time the Holiday Inn
ran his name and photo
in the employee newsletter;
the night Henry Kissinger
was in the Tiki Room
audience and asked him
to sing Happy Birthday
for Mrs. Kissinger;
and--his most treasured
memory--the night Tiny
Tim, in town for a sixties
revival gig, joined
him on stage, ukelele
in hand. Surely
the Cookin' Cadenza
gig, as a steady, would
promise no less.
So
he sticks with the tired-and-true. Now
we're playing "Stormy
Monday," yet
another take on the
same worn out blues-wannabe
formula. Mike
has exhausted his usual
means of expressing
disgust. His
normally angry bass
has become pathetic,
like a spoiled child
sobbing quietly after
an ignored temper tantrum. I'm
feeling pretty beat-up
myself, wondering whether
Louie would stiff me
for the entire week
if I were to quit on
the spot.
Jimmy's
growing role can only
hasten the demise of
this one-time jazz mecca--that
much I'm sure of. And
the writing, by all
appearances, is on the
wall: He
sang one tune last set,
three already this set...tomorrow
we could be wearing
matching polyester suits
and doing choreographed
dance steps.
"Stormy
Monday" comes
to a close; same cliched
ending, same ridiculous
emotional posturing. Mike
and I turn to Jimmy
as one, wondering what
other three-chord horrors
he might add to the
evening's wretched repertoire. Jimmy
smiles at me, winks,
and asks, "Do
you know 'Who Can I
Turn To?'" This
is a stunning development;
a beautiful ballad that
has no more in common
with the previous bile
than Louie has with
Max Roach. "Well,
yeah," I
say. "You
don't ... do this as
a shuffle, do you?"
"Of
course not, man, come
on--it's a ballad. E
flat."
This
is a dangerous situation
for me: with
my normally protective
Indifference worn threadbare,
I involuntarily allow
myself to care. Mike,
a full-scale casualty
by now, accepts the
Jimmy's musical cease-fire,
and when I construct
a delicate introduction
he's right there with
me, volume toned down
to a level of civility. Louie
comes in, playing lightly
with brushes in an apparent
effort to exercise taste. When
Jimmy starts singing,
he's crooning instead
of shouting, and he
sounds pretty good,
really.
The
entire melody proceeds
in this most unlikely
manner: four
musicians on the Cookin'
Cadenza stage making
an earnest effort to
create something beautiful. Jimmy
rounds off the final
phrase and turns to
me, whispering "You
got it, man." Something
inside makes me defer
with a nod to Mike,
wanting to reward him
for his good behavior,
disregarding my fears
that this could easily
turn out to THE SOLO;
ready, even, to endorse
it. But
he nods back at me,
vaguely smiling, and
looks away, leaving
me no choice. I
dig deep into The Whore,
trying to plumb its
wretched body for whatever
sweet spots are to be
found.
And
even The Whore decides
to behave. I
concede to myself, unbelievably,
that this is becoming
one of my best Cookin'
Cadenza moments ever,
right in the midst of
what had appeared to
be the Apocalypse. I
feel almost giddy, weak
from what I've been
through, ecstatic about
where I am. The
audience is listening
attentively and I'm
about a minute into
my solo when I hear
a strangely soothing
voice begin to speak.
"Ladies
and gentleman," the
voice begins, "I
want to share with you
a wonderful experience
I had last week." Something
is not quite right: the
voice has the artificial
warmth of a television
commercial, perhaps
for Kodak film, managed
health care, or life
insurance. I'm
momentarily distracted
from my solo by the
image of three golden
kids playing with a
golden poodle in a golden
field, all smiles and
hugs. It
is disturbing.
"Last
week, ladies and gentleman,
I decided to take a
journey. I
wanted to look at my
life--think about the
things that really matter."
WHAT
IS GOING ON?!! My
concentration is now
defeated and the lofty
musical moment behind
me--clearly it's time
to shift gears. Still
playing, I look up to
discover that the speaker
is Jimmy, holding the
microphone close to
his chest, head bowed,
eyes closed. I
keep soloing, but now
it's just fingers wiggling. I
feel cheapened, my once
heartfelt music transformed
into a fuzzy underscore. I
desperately need to
recapture Indifference.
"I
drove for hours into
the beautiful countryside: fields,
meadows, and not another
human being around. I
found a cottage, very
plain: no
tv or telephone. Just
me and my music." He
sounded as if he might
at any moment begin
to sob.
"Before
I left, ladies and gentleman,
I bought a new CD from
my dear friend, Phil
Anscull; my good friend
who you're hearing even
as I share this with
you." He
stepped toward me and
held the mike above
the piano for effect,
then gathered it back
and pressed it into
his chest again. With
his free hand, he reached
into his pocket and
produced a copy of my
CD. He
framed it for the audience,
in the manner of detergent
and cereal commercials.
And
then I understood. He
was selling my CD--and
selling it hard--because
he thought I could help
him get the gig. I
was furious, and I had
no idea how to cut him
off. Louie
and Mike were looking
at me quizzically, but
we all kept on playing. Jimmy
kept pouring it on extra
thick, totally blind
to the fact that he
was making us all look
like buffoons.
"The
music on this CD, ladies
and gentlemen, is transforming. I
sat in my little cottage
in the woods, closed
my eyes, and just listened. It
was profound, and it
changed my life." Jimmy,
of course, had never,
ever, heard my CD, or
for that matter even
met me prior to tonight.
As
if things at this point
aren't troubling enough,
it suddenly dawns on
me that from Louie's
perspective, the entire
scenario probably looks
like an orchestrated
scam. During
our break I've asked
the singer to plug my
CD, and to do it within
the performance, so
a captive audience will
have little choice but
to listen. The
audience will assume
the club is endorsing
my product, but I'm
the one who will get
the money, and I've
never asked for permission. I
look at Louie; his eyes
are now fixed straight
ahead, his face expressionless.
"This
CD is art of the highest
order. It's
jazz, America's great
indigenous music. And
it's being played by
my great friend, right
here, my..."
CRASH! Louie's
cymbal exploded with
sound, destroying whatever
mercantile spell Jimmy
was casting. All
eyes were on Louie,
who stood up and shook
his fist at a young
couple seated alone
in the balcony. Then
he threw a shoe at them;
they ducked, laughing,
and it bounced off the
back wall, landing at
their side. The
shoe wasn't Louie's;
it belonged to the young
man. He
had apparently dropped
it on Louie's cymbal
as a comment on the
ongoing idiocy.
Now
none of us knew what
to do, and no leadership
was emerging. There
was an uncomfortable,
frozen moment, then
the remaining customers
started moving for the
exit, eyes averted. There
was no point in our
continuing to play,
but we quietly stayed
on the bandstand, waiting
for a sign. Jimmy
moved first, shaken
by the reality of what
had happened, his dream
of a career comeback
shattered. "I
was just trying to help
you man, you know that,
right?" He
desperately grabbed
my arm. "I
really want to play
here, I just really
like it here. You
all are so cool, and
you play your butts
off. I
want to keep working
here." He
was pleading with me,
tugging on my sleeve,
visibly upset.
I
had no immediate response,
because looking over
his shoulder I could
see Louie heading my
way. He
was walking quickly
and purposefully with
a determined expression
on his face. I
didn't expect physical
violence, but I knew
it was a possibility. So
was gunfire. The
frightening reality
was that Louie was capable
of doing just about
anything, to Jimmy or
to me. I
hunched defensively
as he drew near, adrenalin
flowing.
"Come
here, man," he
said, grabbing my arm
and pulling me off the
stage. "I
want to tell you something." He
reached his arm around
my neck, and pulled
my head in toward him. He
leaned over to speak
directly into my ear,
breath smelling of whiskey. He
was red-faced and agitated. I
closed my eyes and prepared
for the worst. He
spoke in a quiet gutteral
tone, spitting on me
with each consonant.
"Did
you see that chick in
the balcony, man? She
didn't have nothing
on under that dress,
man! I
was looking up at her
and I was in God's Country,
man, I swear it. Yah-he-yah-he-yah-he-he..."
I
nearly fell to the floor
in relief. For
a minute, Louie was
my hero. I
felt like I should explain,
apologize, be his buddy,
punch his arm, make
my own comment about
some other chick wearing
some other dress somewhere
else. But
I just didn't have it
in me; I was too tired
and too confused. At
the same time, I wasn't
about to betray the
fact that I--despite
all my unapologetic
football-watching, meat-eating,
and occasional politically
incorrect jokes--didn't
find his macho shit
all that funny. Now,
more than ever, it just
wasn't worth it. So
I got my coat off the
piano bench and headed
off to my sleeping quarters.
The
rain had stopped, and
Thomaston's deserted
streets gleamed with
reflected light. Everything
was silent and I walked
quickly, past the outdoor
market, past all the
bars, past the urine-soaked
parking lot where the
horse-drawn carriages
paused during the day. I
turned onto Louie's
street, where he and
Bonnie subletted the
back portion of one
of the city's beautiful
old mansions.
Not
surprisingly, the iron
gate was locked shut. As
usual, pulling myself
up and over the top,
I nearly lost my manhood
on one of the wrought
iron spears. I
fell to the ground on
the other side, landing
in a small puddle, cursing
tomorrow's dry cleaning
bill that would eat
away at my minimal wage. The
landlord's dog, small
and loud, woke from
its coddled poodle dreams
and smelled another
of Louie's jazz musicians,
scourges of the neighborhood. He
followed me all the
way to Louie's door,
loudly venting his disapproval.
Inside
Louie's house I slowly
climbed the stairs,
stopped briefly in the
unkempt bathroom, crossed
the hall to my closet-sized
bedroom, threw off my
clothes, and sank exhausted
into the sagging half-mattress
that was my bed. I
fell asleep before I
could even relive the
evening's trauma. The
next thing I knew it
was morning, the sun
shining through the
blinds into my eyes,
my back aching, my breath
rancid with last night's
beer. And
I knew it before I even
thought it: for
some demented reason,
unfathomable as always,
more disturbing than
ever, I was eager for
more.
Epilogue:
Jimmy didn't
get paid but still
dreams of returning.
Mike hasn't
taken THE SOLO yet,
but continues to desperately
prepare for it.
Frank remains
safely ensconced in
his hotel gig.
The
Whore hasn't
been tuned in months
and is starting
to smell bad.
Louie's
playing hasn't improved. He
still drives with
Bonnie to Douglasville
every Tuesday, and
has yet to join a
sensitivity group.
Bonnie remains
a great mystery. She
may or may really
believe that someone
in Douglasville actually
would pay Louie to
play drums. She
prays a lot.
Copyright
1998, Bill Anschell
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