Shine On, And I’ll Head for The Light

Midwest Midnights, Calcutta Auctions + A Gunfighter's Smile Beams Down The email had come from an old friend, one I didn't think about much - but they'd thought about me quite a bit over the years. That he'd shown me kindness during a difficult period spoke volumes for the kind of decency I was raised with - and it made the ghosts I'd come home to chase that much more daunting. The ghosts were the things I'd never seen, hadn't felt. Things that had to be experienced to be released… It was the last way I wanted to spend my weekend. Sometimes, though, the only way out is through. And then this email arrived. Sitting in a Starbucks with tears streaming down my face, listening to a song demo called “Turning Home,” about the very thing I was doing. Sometimes the blood-letting is just that: one small nick in the surface, and the dam gets burst. My friend had just come from the funeral of John Leininger, an old timer at the Shaker Heights Country Club. My friend had gone out of respect, their lockers being close together… and the familiarity of growing up with “Mr. L” having never been lost to him. Mr. L. My mother's best friend's husband. With a rolling laugh, a sense of play and kindness. The perfect Santa Claus without the red suit, beard or girth. The kind of man who would tickle you and tickle you, until you collapsed squealing and squirming, knowing the giddiness he incited was good for your soul. Mr Leininger, whose wife had an outrageous sense of humor and a lemon yellow car with a racing stripe and an old English letter “M” for Marllyn just to mock its very suburbanity. Plus the three daughters who were the spectrum of the '60s evolving into the '70s: the cheerleader/princess, the gypsy/bohemian, the hippie/nature girl. I worshipped the whole family. Even Fang, the cat, who died in the midst of winter and lived in their deep freeze until the spring thaw allowed for a proper backyard burial. It was a house with high ceilings, lots of books, more laughter, a slot machine and a kitchen filled with exotic things to a kid. Laughter, and lots of it. White wine - Chablis, as I recall - in huge jugs. Leather sofas. Chinese take-out. Quick-firing political one-liners. An expectation I could keep up. It was the intellectual pinball that makes the precocious think they can hold their own with the grown-ups, to know no fear when confronted with older people, to believe they belonged. It was thrilling in its right-here right-now way. And now, Mr. L was gone. Passed like his wife, like my parents into the vastness. Reckonings are not neat, tidy things. They're like giving pigeons firecrackers and waiting for the feathers to fly. Just peck, peck SPLAM! Thus far, it was proceeding apace, and all I'd managed to do was get to Chagrin Falls and find a park bench to sit and watch the water rushing over the stones and rocks, heading for the falls and crashing down onto even more rocks and stones below. Geese upside down, looking for food beneath the surface; children rushing and chasing each other and the wind. Serenity everywhere, but inside me. Is what it was. The only way out is through. Things you know - even when you don't want to. And that night, the annual altar call for the not-so-young Northeastern Ohioans to remember who they were when they were shiny: Michael Stanley + the Resonators at Tower City, the giant tent on the Cuyahoga River. He'd play all the hits that they'd want to hear, and they'd be 17 or 23 again, rippling with promise, alive in the notion of what their dreams might become. On the shuttle over to the venue, they were out in force: recounting their lives and adventures based on certain songs, different shows. They spoke of the man who's more myth in Cleveland than mortal, as if he were their dear, dear friend. But Michael Stanley, especially on a night like this, is so much more. He's the alchemist who can melt the years, the crappy jobs, the dead ends that people thought were chances. Back when, he was an alchemist, too. The songs capturing the zeitgeist of a certain kind of young. The lightning bolt of the apex of youth. Maybe it was “Rosewood Bitters,” about being so rootless, songs are one's only anchor. Or perhaps it was bite-the-heart-that-breaks-your's “One Good Reason.” Or the pained “Lover,” with its tear-stained aimless driving confession “God bless the man who put the white lines on the highway…” I loved the book-ended acrimony of “Midwest Midnight” and “Let's Get The Show On The Road,” two indictments of what the music business can do to a young man “with a will to believe and his songs on his sleeve,” warning “nobody told you that you would get old/ Strung out like some avenue whore.” I couldn't know those would be relevant, that my future would lie amongst Silver Eagle tour buses, lost nights and songs. It was a fascinating take, made all the more riveting by the snarl with which these cautionary tales were delivered. No, for me, it was a song about some kind of love affair beyond propriety: “Spanish Nights.” The phrases turned figure 8s of construction that were breath-taking - “for passionate people, these are desperate times/ Desperate measures call for passionate crimes” and “She holds on, holds on to St. Christopher// She shines on, and he heads for the light…” Marking time in a plaid skirt shortened as short as humanly possible, I clocked in at an all-girls school where boys were an every other weekend school dance and pre-debutante ballroom class proposition. They weren't a mystery, they were just… there. Who cared? Even when they liked you. But “Spanish Nights” was different. Beyond “the breeze aint moving nothing, but the blue hotel lights” and “living underneath hotel law,” there was something else playing out here. This was a woman who possessed a man, so wholly, so completely, he'd lost his compass, his north star and could only breathe the water of whatever this was, resigned to the impossible fate of drowning in what can't be. I was transfixed. Whatever it was she was doing, I wanted to understand… I wanted to possess someone like that. I wanted to be the sort of woman who was every possibility, every option, indeed, every road to travel. But where does one begin? Chagrin River Road, of course. Following the curves, sweeping across the battered blacktop at a speed slightly faster than what was legal, taking in the oaks, maples and willows weeping. The answers weren't obvious, but you could feel them as the tires of a 72 Mustang gripped the road and heldyou to terra firme with a sticky authority. Window down, you could smell the fading of the day, the hay, the leaves fallen. “She shines on…,” you'd think, pressing the gas pedal down. “Shine on…. Shine on…” Years would pass, but that song would drift back. The beaus and loves beyond reach - an outlaw comic, a preacher's son, a saddle maker, an heir, a shooter, a worldclass piano player, Grammy winners and restaurateurs - and still the wafting lines would appear. What was… what wasn't. The boys who always remembered. The opportunities past. The girl who couldn't quite, for reasons that didn't add up completely. “Head for the light…” Onstage, Michael Stanley's set was shoot to thrill. Tempo hits crashing into each other, a breathless overview of a thirty year love affair punctuated with a few ballads. With “Lover,” and “Rosewood Bitters” with a sit-in-with-the-band auction winner, “Spanish Nights.” This was a genuflection of faith and reflection. The band swinging hard for the moment, the fans clinging hard to what was. Somewhere in the crowd, I went back… to a private event, 350 kids at the Crawford Auto Aviation Museum, close enough to the stage to truly study what was happening up there, to watch with eyes too big, to take it in with the detachment of a young critic in training. A steel gray quiana dress with little straps draped over whatever little there was to be draped, that promise of one day being an adult. The mid-heels, the shining face, the crossed arms. It wasn't stand-offish, it was a whole other kind, an almost more formal sort of curiousness. When the big number - Frankie Miller's “Strike Up The Band” - hit, with its audience rave-up call'n'response, I was down front, part of the chant. It went back and forth, back and forth… until I felt fingers curling around my wrist, a gentle tug telling me to step up to the stage. They were pulling  a few girls from the crowd “to be part of the moment;” Michael Stanley was pulling me from the crowd. Now why he did that? It's hard to say. To break the string of observation… To put someone “in” the moment in a more direct way who was by choice distanced… maybe he liked my dress. It was hard to say, but I understood what needed to happen: I turned back towards my friends, thrust my first in the air to punctuate the “Strike … It … Up, Strike Ir… Up!!”s that were being hurled/ Already a baby rock critic in training, even in that moment, I kept watching what was going on. My world didn't dissolve into the vanity of being singled out, pulled up onstage. Though I was grateful for the view - how it looks for them, how different the focus when one looks out versus at. And it was a good trick: melting the membrane between us and the band. As a band the city of Cleveland had invested in as our doppelganger, our shot at the grandest prize: rock stardom. That blurring makes the confusion of who's what even stronger. We are them… after all, 6 or 7 of our friends just got onstage. For all the rock splendor, though, my heart belonged to Alex Bevan, the singer/songwriter who could pick and rhyme quick, extemporaneous hilarity about the right now that was pure New Yorker of the Vicious Circle vintage. Not that he was mean, just that he could skewer hypocrisy with a dram of irony and a smile. The locals loved it, for the wit, but they missed his depths. What got me were the ballads: pretty songs about people seeking lives they dreamed of, the beauty of the Great Lakes and tangled rivers, the human heart and his own frayed adventures and recognitions of the things he was seeking to find. “Silver Wings,” “Grand River Lullabye,” “Rodeo Rider,” “Jazzbo” and “Autumn Melody… It was all fiber that was spun into the yarn of a search for truth and kindness in a childhood that was anything but… It was a line some days I clung to. “Here's a song from bottle of whiskey, here's a song from a Holiday Inn “Here's a song for anyone who's ever watched the daylight creeping in… “It comes from another side of morning, goes to the other side of light “It's where your dreams are, they're only what you make them, “You only make'em if you try…” And I was determined to try. How, what I wasn't sure. But I kept listening, kept believing, kept depressing the pedal in that car without air conditioning, the thick humidity suppressing the oxygen so I was breathing heaviness, breathing the dense environmental presence and moisture even then. That kind of airs settles inside you, holds you down in a way that makes you realize things. It reminds you how real it all is… right here, right now. When you hurl yourself at what was, especially the slightly fuzzy part that the Vaseline on the lens kept you from seeing, there is that sense of not quite knowing what you'll find. It is not necessarily what you're seeking, but it's the thing you must know to finally understand - as much as you can - the ghosts that drive you. It is rarely linear. It is often jarring. It is absolutely the only way. Michael Stanley knows it without knowing. In that set that was set on stun for the ones who came to remember, he kicked back into “Strike Up The Band,” the ultimate crescendo into the ultimate climax for the ones who've come to believe. Having moved into the center section, I stood considering the transaction - watching the exchange, the renewal and the release for audience and musicians alike. During the rave-up, Stanley throws his arms from side to side, exhorting the crowd to do their part… “Strike it up, strike itt up…” And they give back with every bit of breath they can. I am watching, smiling, understanding how potent this is. Somehow, his gaze stops at me, the one who is not flinging her arms or shouting to the band, to the night, to the inertia that holds them there. Without ever breaking his calling for the response, without ever slowing his hips, he regards my being for a couple lines. What is exchanged is never clear, never noticed by anyone else, but it is obvious, I have been seen. Perhaps not as myself, but as someone who came to witness what was as it is, as it can be… and the power that the music holds. Who I am in that moment doesn't matter. Knowing the truth… that 30 years later the power to transfix and transfigure, to dissolve what plagues you is more potent than ever… speaks volumes. It is not about platinum albums and private jets, it's about songs being the ultimate connection to one's better, truer places. With the speakers ringing in my ears, I melt into the the night. I get into the car, and I drive. I listen to Rosanne Cash's undiscovered Right Or Wrong , an album about rejecting the shame of another's blame and Black Cadillac, her song cycle about love lasting beyond death. I listen to Steve Earle's Guitar Town and think about “My Old Friend The Blues,” wondering about my old friends who've been such a part of my life - Steve and Rose and Rodney Crowell', whose Sex & Gasoline illuminates the things that dazzle us to where we distort the things that matter into pornographic proportions and discard the values that sustain. I drive, and I think, and I remember. Not just the artists who've shaped my life, led me away from this place and these things that I have obviously tried to outrun, but remembering the solace they gave a kid from a high impact home, driving and driving and driving, aimlessly in the night - seemingly nowhere to go, yet the songs and the rhythms of the road a lullaby to at least rock me to a quieter place. The resolution of the lost in the found. No better place to be, yet nowhere more alone or more frightening. But even in the broken lamps, the shattered pictures, the vicious acrimony, there was always this… and the refuges that I found. Shaker Heights, Ohio is a place of quiet privilege. Almost unspoken, absolutely understood. The cover charge is the willingness to say nothing, to hold it in, to act as if… everything's alright. And it is. You don't go hungry, you wear nice clean clothes and go to schools that're exemplary. It is perfect: just look at those shining families with the gleaming teeth, long straight hair, the friendly dog when you get your Christmas card portrait every year. Or so it seems. And much of it is not as far afield as the naysayers would suggest. But some of it is beyond the pale. Knowing the difference is harder than you might imagine. It's not about class, it's about emotional treason, knowing the difference, then getting the vertigo that leaves you mute, confused, lost somewhere between right and wrong. It is the betrayal of one's true being, the places where we are honest… and the places where we blur the lines we should we walking without even knowing we've smudged the chalk. Somewhere between here and there are the things we do to get by, the deals we make with our subconscious that we never truly know. Until we know. And then, once you know… you can't not know. In the all of that, so much rushes by. Tiny pieces, perhaps. Increments of progress. The illusion of something more without considering the larger cost. In the brightness of the morning after, I am again behind the wheel. Three hours spent drinking tea with someone who knew me when, who'd seen it all, who'd not seen me in 30 years. They had thrown a rock through the mirror of what I thought - and now I saw behind the coated glass. Not completely unexpected, but clear in the way it is when your eyes adjust to the light. Startling in all of what it was; amazing in how much of what was sold to me wasn't just a lie, but was deliberately set to “cover the table.” People had needs, wants, desires; in the end, it was about doing what was necessary to get to them… and I was the shell-shocked kid who just wanted people to be “okay.” It wasn't your fault this man told me, kindly. But we all saw it… Funny how no one told me. Or perhaps the hyper-functioning, nature beyond my years girl with the poise and the ponytail made them think I was in on the deal, had made my peace with it and was swanlike biding my time on the lake… until the season changed, I could lift my wings, fly away. My friend, once a caddymaster, once a dog catcher, now a successful attorney, had seen it, showed it to me. Sitting there in an upscale shopping center, stealing a few hours from making other people's deals. He never said we all thought you knew, more implied that it was probably best I didn't. The things we lose in the moment, the truth that might be too much to hold. Pettibone Road in Glenwillow, Ohio is closed for 90 days. A small stretch, less than probably 1/3 a mile, but it breaks the artery. Walk down the concrete dusted curves, though, and see a field of low-lying flat roofed anonymous buildings. Shipping centers? Industrial structures? Progress? There used to be a farm there. Something to buffer the cities of Solon and Twinsburg from a fuse factory for an explosive manufacturer. But like so much of the story, it was exquisite perfection - the miles of white fence, the clots of black angus cows grazing against the emerald grass, the red slat barns gently faded with black tar-paper roofs just like the cliché demands - belied the West Virginian factory workers living in the ramshackle shot gun shacks and my father cast out of our house again. The farm was a holy place, Horses, space, room to be. The pastures running on and on to creeks, choking with Queen's Anne Lace and thistles. It was the last place on earth where my innocence lived, this location of my father's exile from our family… and I happily mucked stalls, buried my face under sweaty manes, rode when the barn girls would let me, breathed all the way in. The farm is gone now. It was a slow dismantling, a barn here, the fence there. My last trip in July, only the horse stable left and the white rail fences around it. And now, it, too, is gone. Just broken bits of concrete scattered where the stalls and sweet feed, curry brushes, worming tools, bales of hay and a motley crew of equines assembled. My breath caught. In my moccasins, I couldn't help but be drawn closer… to tip toe into the posted construction zone, to lay my feet upon that hallowed ground one more time. Turning around, arms extending, feeling the last of the open air, sensing the energy of all who'd passed through there. Remembering the freedom, the space, a time when horse barns and cattle farms were part of the program, when explosives could be made there - because the sprawl hadn't tentacled this far out. Indeed, with everything razed, it was possible to walk all the way back… back to where the bog, thick with cat-tails separated the factory from the farm. To peak back at where the tumblers would dry the fuses, knowing occasionally one would go off, tossing you out of bed, window fans crashing down outside the houses. How many weekends? How many doubts for my poor father? How many holidays with all the horror, drama and embarrassment that complicated families manifest? And yet, there were few places holier - and you could still feel it. Feel it fading, flickering, gasping,about to be something that never was. Except to those of us who knew better… Walking up the sun scorched asphalt, you have to wonder if it ever really mattered. All that pain, all the laughter, all the racing into the wind on the back of a black mare named Gypsy, hair in your eyes, snow stinging your skin as it landed. Gone… Just gone. Where the road was blocked, there's a farm house on a small hill. We didn't know the people who lived there, but had a waving relationship, acknowledging the proximity as people do. I'd never been on the property, never considered the lives within the same white clapboard walls that framed the houses my father'd land in when our nuclear family'd crack. Creeping up to the backporch, there was dust and sunshine and brighter places on the walls where stoves and bookcases, refrigerators and whatever had stood for years had been. It was empty, but not quite still. The energy of the people had some residual charge. The curtains, limp and pale from the years, were all that remained. Hung with love, left because window treatments must suit the windows. They were there, suspended in this physical reality with no reason to be. It made me smile: some touch of the caring that had been here A deer cut from behind an equipment shack, startling me back to the moment, the busted front steps and the fact that soon this building, not a home to the people called in for the job, would be toppled. Looking up, the sky was the color of Caribbean water. So clear, so vast, so turquoise... I got in the car. Turned the ignition over. Took one long look, and marveled at how much easier it is to take out every wisp of physical evidence of lives invested than it is to wipe away scars that have grown unknown inside. I didn't want to look over my shoulder, didn't wanna think about how ephemeral it all is. The futility of why does it matter is the ultimate head job. It matters because of the unseen marks we leave that make people more, lift them up, inspire truths and beauty… But it's easy to get lost in the ache. Calling 4-1-1 to get the Request Line for the local country station, I knew just what I wanted to hear. I pushed the sunroof back as I waited, clicking the FM button in my car. They told me requests go to Independence, Ohio, but even before the call can connect, a circling guitar part rises from the speakers, a few stray piano notes fall like rain and fill that 8-year old Audi I can't give up. It is sentimental, but it is more than that. “Better As A Memory” is in some ways an elegy and a benediction. It is a song about the way things look in the rear view mirror - sometimes appearing larger than in real life, but also softened by time, by yearning, by our desire to lessen the horror of what wasn't what we wanted it to be. “I hang on like a sinners prayer… let go like a levee breaks,” Kenny Chesney barely exhales, trying to suspend the moment of recognition. “walk away as if I don't care, learn to shoulder my mistakes/ Built to fade like your favorite song, get reckless when there's no need/ Laugh as your stories ramble on, break my heart, but it won't bleed…” It is obviously the song of a rambler, a man who can never quite be what the person they love deserves. But it's a song for anyone who couldn't cope with where they were, who were sure they weren't enough, who believed the joke was on them and the moment was always destined to evaporate into thin air. “Never sure when the truth won't do,” the song continues tugging at the here and now. “Pretty good on a lonely night/ Move on the way a storm blows through, never stay but then again I might… Struggle sometimes to find the words, always sure until I doubt…” Yeah, well, don't we all. And sometimes we can even make a deal with the future: don't make us look and we won't look down. Put our hand on the wall, feel our way to tomorrow; don't ask any questions. Just keep moving on, moving on, moving on. Until the day it all comes back, only we don't know just what it is. We stand there trembling, not sure which wys to turn. Nowhere to go, not able to run - and it becomes clear. You can't not deal. You have to believe. Whether it's a rock star who almost kinda coulda thirty years down the line… or horses that no one ever saw with their tails lifted high as they chased those pastures that are parking lots now. Somewhere between those fence posts is the steadying to see what happened, to hold it close and let it cry itself out. You can hold it in forever, not know what is wrong, of course. Or you can face it down, look forever in the eye - and know as long as you're on this carousel, you don't have to ride it at your own risk, but rather with the clarity that heals. “My only friends are pirates, it's just who I am…,” Kenny Chesney intones as I turn back towards Chagrin River Road, and its true. Here on the high seas of black top, big trees and sturdy homes with glossy shutters, there is the gateway to getting through. Whether I make it or not, depends on the memories I burn.
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Somebody’s Daughter, Somebodies’ Mother

They're readying her obituary. The Associated Press and appropriate daily newspapers. It is macabre, knowing that a 25-year old's imperviousness to convention is reckless enough to make the final recounting the facts of her life anything but a failsafe against a plane crash or a crazy fan. The news organizations need to get it right; right is tough in a scramble. Better to research and be ready. Especially when the young woman in question is the highly tabloidable Britney Spears, the once Lolita in knee socks, grinding and taunting “Baby… One More Time,” now tragically erratic MILF out of control. Is Britney Spears this bubblegum Courtney Love - without the intellectual punch nor the musical cred? After all, he had her Timberlake, but he found a far more forgiving exit strategy. And yet. Yet, naughty school girl girls who don't get the right kind of spanking end up indulged to where there's no compass of appropriate, allowed or even encouraged to do what they will until the warp destroys the ability to function in this world. In that freefall, it seems, the cries for help, the erratic acting out, the jagged dents in any sort of reason are deafening. So loud we can only stare on frozen, then titter once the moment has imploded. But what's left is a voyeurist's fetishist, crying “look at me,” even as she's incapable of functioning. Is she a freak? A narcissist for whom anything is possible? A mentally unstable young woman whose fame and money masked the issue until it was beyond critical? And if it's the latter, and she's reached majority, how does one pull her back from the edge? Especially since there is so much fiscal reality riding on her next stumble, tumble, fall and… Britney Spears keeps the lawyers busy, the courts in the news, the tabloid tv and weekly magazines buzzing, Perez Hilton hopping. It's about the sustained gaze of the trainwreck slow-mo-ing to its twisted, obvious conclusion. A loud crash, metal collapsing and pounding into itself, the wreckage a colossal, steaming, molten mess that can be picked through for months… There is an old joke about the old Jewish man who marries the 19-year old. Coming back from the honeymoon, his best friend cautions him to be careful, that all that sex could be lethal. Shrugging, the newlywed cavalierly retorts, “Hey, it's okay… If she dies, she dies.” Indeed, if she dies, she dies. For our ennui and entertainment. After all, Britney's always jumpstarted out shock centers. Right from the forbidden frosty virgin schoolgirl tease to the MTV snake performance, kissing Madonna on the mouth, writhing and shimmying in the most prolific pole dancing manner… When the true insane clown posse hijinks began: marrying her friend from back home for 50 hours, crotch shotting the paparazzi in the company of Paris Hilton, GI Girling her own hair in a markedly downscale salon, weeping to Matt Lauer and invoking “I'm country” as if it's a license to be responsibly retarded - and mocking people from small rural towns and backwaters everywhere who live straight up and work hard. Hey, give Britney a break. Or don't. Let her twist… Because aside from the bulls-eye for a nation's libido, the undulating girlwoman also served as a rejoinder to those girls who'd work hard, try to be people. Her message was “be a skank, see where it gets you.” And if those girls who weren't so hot, so taut, so slick found themselves grappling with an unattainable new standard - one that wasn't grounded in merit, but apparent Party Barbie/Girls Gone Wild ethos - there's a certain inherent pleasure in seeing the implosion played out, painful episode by painful episode. She thinks she's all that… Used up and then some… Even the volcanic response to her MTV Awards body - at worst a size 8, and still far from the nation's average of 12 - speaks volumes about what we value. And how much we resent it, too. In the real world, there are other things… Jobs, family, friends, coping. It is not one endless party behind a velvet rope where we can be so much more all that than the herd churning to be like us. Although with fame now being about the ease of recognition instead of achievement, becoming one of them Is easier than ever. Just ask Tila Tequila, or any number for Reality Stars from “The O.C.” to anyone on “Celebrity Rehab.” Rehab is its own set of issues. Certainly for Spears, who has checked in, checked out, dispatched a manager for encouraging it, then been bounced by a management firm for her inability to be respectful and cognizant of one's obligations… always a sign of girl not gone wild, but addicted. Addicted to what? Fame? Bold-faced living? She does love playing for the cameras. Drink? Drugs? Partying? The stories are legend. The drama? If a little girl keeps working and starting fires to get attention, doesn't each achievement or crisis have to be bigger to get the desired result. It is all of it, most likely. Where it leaves her parents, ex-husband Kevin Federline, who hardly seems the choice of a sober-person, nor a fraction of early beau Timberlake, anyone concerned about those two little boys is an uncomfortable balancing act. In Al-Anon, there is the notion on focus on you, do not enable the addicted person. Make sure you're safe, no one gets hurt. The trouble with the very famous is there's always an enabler who will do whatever to have proximity, because proximity gives them privilege - and privilege to the out-of-control commoner, especially one who exults in basking in reflected glory is its own addiction. No amount of humiliation, nit-picking or teeny annoying demand will run the sycophant off. They have found their access point: they will cling by any means necessary. Tape worms are more independent. So, that question: what about the family? Well, their hands are tied. To watch this go down has to be the ultimate heartbreak. This is somebody's daughter… and those parents love that bright-smiled, blond-headed cherub with the far-flung personality and will to sing. Even Federline, who took the ride and had the time, has to recognize that his sons deserve to have a healthy, functioning mother. Having the talk with them in 10, 12, 15 years about who their mother was, and why she isn't here any more can't be something he's relishing… if he's thought it through that far. In a licentious world, though, it's all about thrills. It's all about where the next hit, high, can-you-believe is… Any time, it's somebody else's misfortune, it allows us to reassure ourselves that we're impervious, we're not that bad… never could/would be… So in our cloak or morale high-ground and superiority, we click our tongue against the roof of our head, shake our head and protest that “It's so sad…” when the fact is it's really some kind of life jacket in our own pool of indulgence. If Britney dies, truly, who cares? How would her passing impact most of us? We don't know her, don't rely on her for our living, don't even really listen to her music - as recent album sales suggest. She is our mocking board, the person we've been able to count on for a pop culture punchline whenever we've needed one… But what does that mean, really? So we can talk about cultural erosion, white trash aesthetics becoming the status quo of which we are so much more than… We can sigh and say there was so much promise, feigning tragedy where most everyone had shared the “she's done wha…” discussion… We can actually do something. We can stop embracing the freakshow consciousness that causes us to pause when the news is bad, the slut-embracing pseudo-sexual-insurrection that's all in the streets rather than being a slower burn in the sheets, the reckless rebel oh-yeah entitlement that seems to be so desirable, and turn towards things of real value: kindness, intellect, laughter that's not mocking. Britney Spears, regardless of what happened, has ceased to be human to anyone except her family. She is a little Disney wonder who caught the national libidinal shift in a way no one has since Madonna and wasn't smart enough - unlike Madonna - to handle the ride. Whether it was heartbreak fueled or not, her wicked bad-ass romp over the last years is a rebellion from… handlers? keepers? the good girl definition that had followed her? fear of being normal? It almost doesn't matter. She played to the paparazzi, the sexual zeitgeist and now that which made her is poised to consume her. We can't know how it is to be chased and hunted in the name of a picture, and yet…. How often does she play straight to them? And just because you're complicit in the picture, it doesn't mean you get to pick when and how they shoot you - especially if you choose to mount one of the most public meltdowns since, well, Anna Nicole Smith. Once upon a time, privilege meant responsibility. John F Kennedy espoused “To whom much is given, much is expected.” Those days are gone, and with it, the ability for many of our brightest stars to negotiate the twisted path between reality and the sparkle that is the fantasyland of fame. As for me, I'm sad. Sad the media's been reduced to this, sad that good artists, actors, musicians can't get space, while we wear lobster bibs waiting for the next dangled or dropped morsel of misstep. Sad that a young woman got so caught up in her own backdraft she's being sucked heels over head to her own demise. Sad that we as a culture can't turn away, can't turn towards something more… and send the message of what's valuable - trashy, sleazy, party, greedy, entitled, mean-spirited and condescending - further and further into the future generation's sense of the things that matter. Britney Spears shouldn't die. She should get picked up by the scruff of her neck, then sent somewhere she can't use privilege and fame to scam her way out of the work. Hard as it might be, it'll save the life she deserves to live… and she does. Sometimes reaching into the places that're hollow, hurt, abandoned is the roughest thing we can do. But is it any rougher than being some kinda brokered media whore whose encouraged to - in the long run - harm oneself for the sake of the people feeding on you? When you look at it like that, and also consider the message it sends the zombies paralyzed by Britney's latest escapade, it's amazing the shift. But that shift… That shift will resonate, then exponentiate. It's not an easy thing. Nor popular. But it is perhaps the only morally sound course of action left. Well, beyond getting the facts right should our nation's newspapers suddenly have to package the reprise of a life squandered in the name of gossip mongering and entertainment.
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Fame Kills, Anna Nicole Smith

She was pretty. Very pretty. An almost unearthly marriage -- cast beyond time, more buoyant than gravity -- of Marilyn Monroe's wide-eyed bombshell and Bridgett Bardot's succulent come hither. It was as if she was from outer space, so almost unnatural her beauty, and yet she hailed from a world far more exotic, far more removed: Mexia, Texas. Anna Nicole Smith was mostly a crucible, a cypher… and a projection. She was a giant canvas onto which we cast flickering tongues of fleshly want, human vulnerability, equivocation, innocence, lust, need and enough nervous trainwreck energy to sustain our gaze in that way that paralyzes. You couldn't look away, and in many ways you didn't want to. High school drop-out. High fashion model. Topless dancer. Headline grabber. Supreme Court appealer. Reality show doyenne. Alleged gold-digging widow and absolute April/December bride. Playboy Playmate of the Year. Diet plugger. Icon of fame. The tags go on and on, yet what does one truly know of her? “The Anna Nicole Show” was as much the horror of someone so unaware, so indulged, so out of touch, it was superiority calisthenics for the ones who flexed the hipeoisie factor of there-but-for-the-grace-of-Mr. Blackwell-go-I. Sickly fascinating, the reality of “The Anna Nicole Show” was hard to envision, harder still to believe. People tuned in week after week as she struggled to lose weight, to bear up, to figure out her place in the world -- a world of freakish indulgers, moderate-to-mondosycophants and the reflected aura clingers that surround the famous. For we have become a culture of fame being enough. “I saw you on tv” is a refrain of validity, of wowier than thou. It's about “Haven't I seen you…” being more important than actual talent, achievement, core values. It's a state where beauty is more than plenty to elevate you to a place you can't negotiate… And in that rarified air, there isn't enough oxygen. The terre is hardly firme. The beauty becomes doubly dizzying. Dizzy she was -- or seemed. Caged in the spontaneous combustion her looks inspired. Certainly the excess, the clamoring, the demand set her up to be exploited. In the '80s, Rosanne Cash had a t-shirt emblazoned, “Fame Kills. ” It seemed overly dramatic, diva-ish, perhaps too farflung. That was then, this… is now. A now where the scrutiny was excruciating -- and the ridicule and judgment from those who don't know where your shoes are, let alone have worn them can undermine every last atom of resolve. Beauty, the thing that took a chicken shack worker and made her an object of desire, created frenzy… frenzy spun into a faster and faster whirl that defied common sense and the human eye. After all, how does one go from hard scrabble to supernova and not have issues with re-entering the atmosphere? The media, of course, goes for the simple sell, the han-fisted hook. “The New Marilyn. ” It's obvious -- the exploitation, victimization, tabloid sensationalization, yet it's just too easy. Fame kills. It's cross-hairs and a bull's eye. It's catch me now, hunt me down, scrape me raw, take what you want, say what you will. We build up our icons to devour them… create flashpoints of celebrity to break them down. It's an endless tumble, a free-for-all chase, head over heels over elbows down chutes, then racing up blind allies breathless from urgency. To understand the notion that there's a chasm between public perception and private essence is to thwart the surrender to carefully cultivated image, fantasy realized in the gap between how it is and how we wish to believe it can be. They -- these exalted creatures who are so much more than the rest of us -- embody some mythos beyond our mortal being. They are shiny, gilded, blessed, somehow magical. In that disconnect between believability and fancy, the dogs of “oh, yeah” howl and chase after what is, what denies our idealization, what shatters the illusion we cling to. It's a brutal trade, the shooters, the brokers, the red carpets and events. The famous used as bait, the bored gaping and gauging, gouging when they can get away it. What are they wearing? Eating? Thinking? More valid than the rest of us, because… well, fame. USA Today published a recent Life cover piece on the aspirations of today's youth. Whereas young people once wanted to grow up to make a difference, to be doctors or authors or any number of professions, today's Gen Whatever's top two “what I wanna be when I grow up…” aims are vague, yet specific. They want to be famous, and they want to be rich. Not for anything, mind you, but just because. It's not even an arrogant entitlement, but more the way our kaleidoscopic media foments it. Paris Hilton? The girl who falls down on red carpets, panties optional. Britney Spears, the Lolita Mouskateer who lacks restraint and, well, panties… and so it goes. Until it's gone. Until it's limp and lifeless in a hotel room in -- ironically enough -- a much cheaper variation on the theme. Not Hollywood, that backlit city of movies and superstars, California, but Hollywood, Florida, the on-the-cheap alternative to the “A” communities of Palm Beach and Broward Counties. Not just Hollywood, Florida, either. No beach, no ocean, no sand… but an inland Indian casino, one more outlet of the forced rockabilia franchise gambling outpost that is the Hard Rock Café. Sad, empty, having recently given birth and lost her 20 year old son to a questionable death while he dozed in a chair in her hospital room. To watch her, ditzy at times and too giddy for her own good, there appeared not a malicious bone in her body. Perhaps a little too ripe for manipulation, it's not a crime… certainly not a fault to end up emotionally shipwrecked so far from the sea. Yet, that is the way the fate of the used usually goes - resented for their privilege, consumed for our titillation -- or at least to ease of our ennui. Anna Nicole Smith is gone. To be deified by the media as the shock'n'horror story of the week. A girl famous for being famous. For being pretty. For being a little dumb, but willing to live her life of privilege grasping out in the open. Whatever else isn't so very important… except that it's everything. Somewhere a little girl will never know her mother, and quite possible her actual biological father. A confused 39-year old woman dizzy from the vertigo of flash bulbs and fame stumbled, tumbled and fell. It's kinda like losing your spot on the horizon when you come strutting down the catwalk -- only difference is it's not men brandishing dollars for your G string, but the very breath that keeps you alive. It's black and white, removed from the sound of your laugh, the things that make you weep with joy, the subtle emotional residue that comes from the inside out. These are the photographs that shellac a headful of wind-tossed blond tresses, copious cleavage, a beauty mark and bee stung lips as frozen youth, the denial of time and the dartboard of the promises fame holds out without ever letting you see behind the glossy still. There's really nothing back there… at least nothing that can be served to the voracious horde. As Willie Nelson wrote in his seminal “Nightlife”: “It ain't no good life, but it's my life. ” Only difference is it's community property, and that life is only good for the person living it until its gone. For the rest of us, though, the myth and the images, the conjecture and rumors, the squabbling over who was closest or knew more lives goes on and on. Innuendo and glory and a billion-watt smile sparking above tiny little dresses is all that remains. Tragically, in the world of the bold-faced obsessed culture that is modern living, that's more than plenty -- a statement of fact and sadly the state of our being. Fame -- with its pockets full of cheap plastic toys, Sweet Tarts, shining pennies and bits of strings -- isn't nearly as valuable as it seems. But like the Indians selling land for baubles and trinkets, it's dazzling enough to blind us to its real worth, and that's how it all goes wrong.
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“Let Him Roll”, Guy Clark

“Guy Clark. ” The voice had no charge, just the flat announcement of someone putting a call through. It was day one on a new job - and I was sitting with the publisher, editor and central nervous center of this inside-the-beltway-real-deal, down-low, those-who-know music trade magazine talking about editorial trajectory… “THE Guy Clark? ” asked the incredulous managing editor. “Well, uh, no, uhm, yeah, ” I stammered. I mean, what do you say? Then in the interest of clarity, I tried explaining, “I mean, he's not THE to me. He's just, you know, Guy…” Yes, he was the kind of songwriter who cast short stories in a matter of moments, picked with an exactitude a surgeon would envy and sang with a unfaltering half-spoken delivery that gave a veracity to his words that was pure hollow-point -- it'd go in clean, the emotions would start taking hold, then broaden out as they passed through you, taking ever widening chunks of your soul in the transit. Not that most people in Los Angeles even knew who my friend was. The pause that was pregnant grew even more pendulous. Then it split open, cavernously gaping and swallowed the moment whole. “WHY…” came the plussed response, “would HE… be calling… you? ” When I impressed upon the receptionist that I needed that call from Guy Clark, she at first thought it was from “some guy, ” and still didn't really understand. Beyond -- in this time before cell phones --- I wouldn't be able to return the call due to his travel constraints. “I don't know, exactly, ” I hedged, blushing at the attention. When I said I had to have the call, I'd not considered this scenario. There were three impatient powerful men looking at me. I wanted to die. I wanted to freeze time, deal and step back in. “I can pick up and find out. ” All four of us looked at the blinking red light, suspended in time like some lighthouse in the fog. Unable to stand the moment, I reached for it. “Hi, ” I said into the receiver while the rest of the room smirked. “No… yeah… of course.. no… absolutely… no, I'd be delighted. The usual then? Okay. I have to go. Long story. ” Guy Clark was changing planes. He didn't have much time either. “The usual? ” The editor said, his delight palpable. “Yeah… he's staying at the hotel he always does…” No one said anything. “I'm picking him up for dinner. ” Hardly call-out brothel service, but sadly the truth. Dinner. Like so many meals in so many cities, in so many nations, in so many states of being. Guy Clark, the Hemingway of Texas and a singer/songwriter who could hew a line to the leanest bit of truth and beauty, anchored with details and shivering with the barest emotions, was capable of far-flung and soul-stirring conversation, and heaven knows we had 'em,. And he didn't need a ride from the airport. “You're having dinner with Guy Clark? ” The managing editor flummoxed, unable to get over it. “Yes, we're friends, ” I said, still too off-kilter to be vexed. “I've known him for years. ” Knowing someone for years is an odd thing when you're 26, and yet… I'd been writing about music in a national level since I was 19… went on the road to report on Neil Young's Old Ways for Tower Records' Pulse magazine at 20… It was the kind of life that wasn't real, and yet, it most certainly was. Late nights often twined around songs, stories told, deep philosophy and old red wine. It was a world beyond imagination; it was the plains where I found my home. You could argue that when someone writes songs like “Instant Coffee Blues, ” “Desparados Waiting For A Train, ” “LA Freeway, ” intimacy is immediate. It's not quite like that, but there is a notion of when you're seen, you're seen deeply -- and when you make friends, it's a fast bond. Dignified. Courtly. Chivalrous. Everything it means to be a man, a man in full. Broad shoulders, broader view of the world. Not one to judge -- too much effort, but also not one to suffer fools gladly. And so, like lacing, he had threaded in and out of my life. And so, like part of the twisted double helix that is the basic genetic code, his melodies ran through my life whenever they suited the moment. Whether I saw him or not, shared a few lost minutes in a late night bar or watching him charm someone I had business with, then wink over their head at me to say “Now they know…, ” he was always just part of who I was and how I rolled. And so, like it always seemed to bubble up from the ground without notice, I wasn't even surprised when his hushed oak baritone began moving through my mind real slow like a freight trains laying off cars in a midnight switching yard in the wake of my mother's death. Strange that. Freefall into shock and mourning, find out how hard-wired you are for song… Sitting at my mother's grave, not quite two decades later, hearing somewhere within that most knowing voice, those utterly clear finger-picked notes of “Let Him Roll” -- a song about a prodigal love that returns for the final good bye -- ran around my head like electric current. Clark's voice like the bellows of a furnace, smelting the regret about a life lived a bit too fully that left frayed edges and cracked moments, soothing me through an odd pain that couldn't be defined and wouldn't leave. Later, upon returning to the house that's been my home for almost a decade and half, that voice that is all strength, musk and wisdom migrated back again, through the verses of “The Randall Knife” to hone in on the verse about returning to the family residence post-casting the-ashes-and-the-roses-to- the-wake, in search of the talisman that's symbolic of it all: “the thing that's haunted. ” A knife that had been through the war, been through the world -- and in spite of it all, found its compromise on a Boy Scout camping trip. A half inch broken off the tip “when I tried to stick it in a tree, ” put up by the father without a word -- and left in a bottom drawer, untouched by light from that day forward. “The thing that's haunted…” All those nights on all those stages, melting into one stretchy surreal moment. Guy Clark, so often in a starched white shirt, black vest, black jacket… Standing straight and resolute, sketching truths and moments, stories and insight, that sweep of hair making him seem a bit like a rogue, those facile fingers saying “detail work is just the beginning. ” Tiny pieces of lyric resonating like the sound of one's own heart, beating between the ears. So thunderously loud, echoing, reminding one of the power and potency of life. Because in the end, that's all there is: the way we embrace what's before us. Tragically, sometimes it means holding onto the painful for all that it's worth. Spending those salty tears -- the ones that burn and seer our flesh -- like it's Saturday night. Just toss 'em out, let 'em flow, let 'em fall like there's no end in sight. Because just as it seems time to build an arc and start gathering animals two-by-two from this endless flood of sorrow tangible, something shifts. You may still be numb, disoriented, punch-drunk, throbbing, but even in all of that, the notion that there's a limit dawns. Not that the sky slams open, the sun pours down and a rainbow turns neon bright. No, it may still be grey and cold and shuddering, but you know that it, too, will pass. Guy Clark is just that alive. Rippling with the force that illuminates -- and animates -- us. The man who reveled about “Homegrown Tomatos, ” who staccatoed through “Texas Cooking, ” who cast a spell of faraway places and interlocked, if disconnected famous faces in “Cold Dog Soup” knows how to put a match to the fuse. Even in the depths of it, the looking up through the rotting leaves collected at the bottom of the cistern, there's the notion that something up there is worth swimming for. There's a sense that once you break the surface, gravity will merely anchor you here, not be a force of destruction; from there, joy will slowly thaw and grow. To hear guitarist, high-tenor moon-beam voice and co-conspirator Verlon Thompson rain down droplets of light as he embroiders the time-honed melodies that're always somewhere between split rail and plain dirt, but utterly breaded in stick-with-you. Laying in the harmony above the sturdy songwriter, the silver-haired guitarist draws the shimmer from inside his acoustic guitar -- and makes that which is already inviting glow. That is part of that gift of Guy Clark: the luminescence of moments. It is common things uncommonly viewed, given a steady, slow examination and rendered from the core out. Craftsmanship to honor the insight more than the sheer execution… because the more elevated and tenderly turned the playing, the more the revelatory nature of the lyrics are set off. The Station Inn is the same kind of place: posters and photos of bands and shows that couldn't even be faded memories, they're so long gone. Mismatched chairs and tables, a counter bar where they sling beer, cardboard pizza, coffee for a dollar -- NO refills, and yet, it feels like home. Shaking off the chill, you find a place, settle in, settle up with how transformative music played well can be. And the people who play here are all business in the celebratory, how well can we play -- versus how much will they pay -- way. No matter who's playing, something good will transpire. But Guy Clark, in a denim shirt, that rebellious shock of hair swooping across his forehead is in the zone. On the brink of releasing Workbench Songs, which is as vital as any collection he's ever made, he has come to both play and savor the gifts of his fellow musicians. Gracious, seasoned, celebrated, aged. He knows he's good; he's content with that, he's wholly present in what he's doing in any given moment, really sinking into what's before him, and yet… He always watches the horizon for what else might be there. Yet… It's not just sorrow, I'm marinating in it. <p>And I know that. Just as I know I'm tired of being tired, lost, sad. And like the man who wrote “The Randall Knife” about the demon blade that broke, then glowed with all the unspoken recriminations, hurt and need for healing, I am drawn to this place -- hand-tooled book of red leather emblazoned with a flaming heart poised for action. I am here to think about what was and what wasn't, what remains and what rises to the top. Somewhere in the past, there are ghosts and there are demons, there are angels and there are saints. They don't always look as they did then, emerging and turning in ways you'd never ever seen them before. <p>Except Guy Clark, who remains valiant, strong, unapologetic. He is a man who has always lived beyond the rules of polite custom, in large part because he bows to the higher authority of his definition of being a man. There are places the lines blur -- for the very reasons lines blur -- but he always measures twice, cuts once and exactingly and paints with a clear-eye and measured stroke. It is the same thing when he writes. That way when he sings, he just has to open his throat; his soul will take care of the rest. And it is the same -- whether singing “Old Friends” nearly two decades ago around a too-close Thanksgiving dinner table to people he'd know almost that long before, or bouncing the ever-elusive, cousin Willard-taunting “Rita Ballou” on his knee in a dry field at an all-day country festival at the turn of the '90s, picking “LA Freeway” as holy as it gets to a hushed over-packed room of Texas refugees at McCabe's Instrument Store's back room performance space or whispering the final verse of “Let Him Roll” to another too-full room of East Coast hipsters at Maxwell's in Hoboken, New Jersey. No matter the place, the man remained unchanged. A temple of consistency and consumption, no matter what the cause. There is Dublin, a relationship starting to blow up in my face… and Guy suggesting that perhaps a drink might help take the edge off, evenly waiting for me to decide while probably dreading the notion of ordering me a pink squirrel. <p>The relief when I said “tequila, straight, no salt” was palpable. And then I ran upstairs to check on the state of my clothes… that they were indeed still inside the closet of the room I was sharing with the man who was on his early stages of becoming my ex-fiancee. I returned a little more grounded, and the guitar pull that was teetering out was now gathering steam. Guy was singing, “Instant Coffee Blues, ” I believe, and the chair next to him was open, a rocks glass more than half full beside it. It smelled exceptionally brutal, acrid and punishing. “What is this? ” I whispered, holding the glass before me. An empty stare is what I got. Not three hours before, this was the man who refused to leave me in a pub in Dublin to wait for the now-aggressively-offending beau who'd been in a huff that I'd had dinner with the songwriter that night with the simple argument, “This is a strange country you have no sense of direction in; it's late and you're alone. If he shows up here, he'll show up at the hotel. ” He not only showed up at the hotel. He was already there… and that was when the fight began. <p>But back at my chair, glass of clear liquid held in the air, Clark only looked at me with a suspended inscrutability and ennui that made me seem dense. He knew I knew it was tequila. What could the problem be? And why would he dignify it? <p>The move was clearly mine. <p>“This… is… a double, ” I protested. <p>Absolutely no traction. “A DOUBLE, ” I said a little more emphatically. He continued to look, just the tiniest bit of amusement wrinkling the corner of his eyes. “It is, ” he confirmed. “What are you trying to do…, ” I asked, a veteran of too many sleazy guys in too many bars to suffer the obvious well. “Well, Holly… No one said you had to drink it all. But the way I see it: it's late and we don't know when we'll see a waitress again. So it's best to have enough than to go wanting… and if they come for another round, I'd recommend getting another double. ” And that was it. It was done. Over. End of discussion. That was Guy Clark's gift. Practical. Unruffled. Whatever, and then what. It wasn't that he didn't care. He'd not left me in that bar alone, with no boyfriend coming to meet me. He knew what I needed, and he'd held steadfast to the sense of it suddenly hit me. And, frankly, over the years, several other not quite worthy potential suitors were dispatched quickly and brusquely, smoke curling around the ultimate gun fighter who chuckled at the weak knees and liver of the dismissed. Guy Clark. He didn't even bother judging. He just was. Still just is. Take him. Leave him. He'll be right there. Singing songs that're better written than most of The New York Times Best Seller List. Not as some kind of flexing struttage, but because Guy Clark has intractable standards: about how to live, how to stand, how to love, how to be there… and naturally, the writing followed. It's the reason he's so damn courtly. As a young publicist for a label not his own, he once sat down with us after a show -- standing mountain tall upon approach and asking if the seat next to me was taken. He then proceeded to regale a tableful of writers I was entertaining with talk of people he and I knew, tales of artists they revered, jokes about things that made them feel included. And then when we were done, he paid the check, had myself and one of the writers join him in the town car and sent us back on into Manhattan in it… Guy Clark didn't even act like he was being a gentleman. That was too obvious. No, not for him gestures for gesture sake, but rather walking as you were meant to. It was just how he rolled. Which is why his songs have a way of gently rising from the morass when trouble hits. He doesn't mean to intone the words in a way that makes them glow like embers forgotten in a fireplace for too long, but still enough fire to flame and catch again. It's just why and how it is. And so the casket lowered and the dirt filled in. The finality of my mother's death concrete and absolute, somehow those songs pulsed and beckoned. They can't undo what's happened… and they can't remove the stains of what was spilt in the name of life lived to another's specifications. Yet somehow, hearing him sing those songs - sing the songs that've been a constant companion since discovering him shortly after realizing Rodney Crowell was a young man, and there were all these spokes extending from Crowell's hub of creativity -- offered some sense of what the future looks like. Gleaming, really, like a charmed jewel beneath the loam… some kind of treasure symbolic of something more. You don't always know what things mean in the moment. Why we are drawn to many of the things that we are… unthinkingly tractor-beamed to the warm, the shiny, the musky. And then there we are, trying to make sense of what happened next. Guy Clark is ever steady. And this night -- in spite of the dance with lymphoma, the continuing standards of execution and excellence, the notion that some of these very songs were older than some of the people sitting on cheap plastic molded or nuagahyde upholstered chairs -- would be no different. It was a show to celebrate 'Workbench Songs', and he played just about all of them. A song about a rodeo clown whose love denied broke his funny bone -- with the simple statement that tears and grease paint do not mix, he wrote volumes in those few short words -- and another about an outlaw who needed to run, but needed his amour to run with him without questions or reservations, and a snapshot of the too-late-routine of any overlooked beer joint's exterior with the drunks, the fights and the carnal mergings all in full rut and revel… and there was more. But equally potent was the respect that honored the songs that came before. Where some artists don't look back or feel imprisoned by the ones that brought them, Clark gave his well-loved classics the same care and concern he gave is newest -- and in that, perhaps the pilot light of creativity stays stoked. For it is rare to encounter an artist whose work is as vital and visceral approaching five decades in as it is to find a master whose early work both holds up and is still give the tender ministrations normally reserved for new loves. So it is, though, that Guy Clark sets a standard, writes definitions of people lives, offers solace in the stumble, heroism in the halting crash of loss, beaming smiles for what's been found. If there is a gift to what Guy does it's that: in every day commonality, he gives us a knighthood that can settle on flannel shoulders or heels clicking along the ground. It is a mantle that sees how well we shore up to the challenges, gives us something more than we perhaps see, even as he strips away the goop and gunk that clogs up how it is. Guy Clark's world is planks to be shaved away into what's within. Like Michelangelo, who sees David in the flawed and rejected marble, he marvels at what's before him… he continues on unflapped, but appreciating what there is. And he invests those who listen with the same compass to navigate this world in which we bump and bruise and spin and whirl. It's not that it's never changing. It's that his response never seems to change. As the winds of experience shift, that's a gift to cling to. Even from 8 rows out, unseen for shadows and footlights, there's plenty to take with you. With grief and tangled stories wrapped around my soul, it is just getting by -- and hoping for the mist to clear. It is the songs that steer me, though, when I cannot steer myself. This night, onstage, an old voice that has echoed down the corridors of moments lived in the world, or perhaps within the decision to be somehow removed from it, it is clear. We all survive. We make of it what we will. If we try to consider the way that Guy does, there's always the opportunity -- within the pain, the loss, the joy, the cost -- to make it something more. With an unwaveringly good band, that is what this moment is: something more. It is playing with sensitivity and gusto; it is singing and story-telling for the sake of being as good as what's been created; it's the man loving what is happening around his songs with a slow-burning smile that is everything we could ever hope to feel about appreciating all that we've been given. And night's like this, what we've been given is more we should expect, indeed.
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Here Be Bards & Dragons

It smelled… like patchouli and musk, the earth, hay, dirty hair, muslin flecked with dry sweat, rotting velvet and absolute anticipation. Not even knowing what the anticipation was for exactly, just that something - whatever it was - was about to happen. Not even really sure how one knew, beyond the strands of talk that trailed after golf pros and baby sitters; but somehow it was all happening, and the news had made it all the way to the plaid pleat'n'knee sock club. In a lot of ways, there was nothing special about it. Local musicians, clustering together, encouraging one and other, sharing songs and stories on their way to nowhere much. But somewhere along the way, there was this guy - this guy with a voice that was shadows and Spanish moss, well-oiled leather and incense - and he understood how to conjure one's destiny with a small hole in the middle. A record… 33 1/3 rotations per minute, a foot in diameter, a whole world emerging from the black vinyl, a universe that made ephemeral and ethereal strangely tactile. John Bassette knew things. Certainly about taking the power of making records into one's own hands - creating art for your sake and selling it directly to the people who would consume it with their ears. That was the pragmatism that both set a scene free and anchored it as something more than just local talent, but as an actual bona fide, real live scene of men and music that was happening. Suddenly, Alex Bevan, who captured the reveling cry of underdog rebellion for the blue collar unseen with the exuberantly euphoric “Skinny (Little Boy From Cleveland, Ohio), ” had the aptly-named Springboard. So did Jim Ballard, with the churningly moody, brooding Thunderhead. And Deadly Ernest & the Honky Tonk Heroes held down jukeboxes with the gate-banging “Don't Make Me Laugh (While I'm Drinking) ” and held-up cash registers with their eponymous-labeled album. Quippy songster Charlie Wiener dropped the ribaldly-titled 12 Inches of Wiener “because it is 12 inches, and it is MY record, ” he'd say with a wink-- and even local rockers Wild Horses put out a 7” of staccato riffage that was as Stones as it was lurching reggae with their “Funky Poodle. ” John Bassette understood the power of having something tangible. A record. A physical manifestation of one's songs that lingered after the singer was a whisper and gone. It must be true - if I read it, see it, buy it, then it leads to the notion that it must be real since I can put it on my record player… And so John Bassette spun melodies with merlot chords and quivering time signatures into truths about the romance of life lived along the seams. But even more importantly, he imbued his world with wonder and the flicker of golden light against brocade tapestries hung to hide the water stains and oriental carpeting that was threadbare in places and unraveled in others. Magic. Everything about him was magical. POOF! And there he was: velvet hood, knee high boots of heavy, cracked mahogany leather and a voice that rolled effortlessly like the dry gentle thunder of summer. You know that sound, that rumble from somewhere deep inside, muffled by all that's between here and there, yet utterly epicentronic. John Bassette could look at you, and everything else melted away. Leaning close, to ask your name again so he could get it right when he signed your record, you felt wrapped in a downy comforter of some kind of expensive satin… and you knew you were cherished, even if you'd never spoken before or would ever see him again. That was some of the beauty of this bard, this troubadour of the Middlestwest. He valued all humanity, saw loveliness in the plainest exchanges. It shone through everything he did, permeated the songs that he wrote, even as he played songs that spoke of wondrous things - “Here Be Dragons” as beyond the realm as they came, yet somehow real when sang of them. There was no limit to the flight of his fancy, just as there was no gap between where and how. “Hessler Street, ” a place most Clevelanders know at least in the passing, swelled to imbue grace to the impossibly common, offered some kind of head-spinning wonder and brought you down easy in the midst of it all. He seemed mythic somehow. More, in a way… almost larger than life, though locked in a conversation about this club or that song, it was the drawing-in-and-drawing-near intimacy of someone you knew well and had no need reason for boundaries with. In that moment, he was just your size and a skosh more… his ability to seek your soul making him fit your reality, his aura - and he most certainly had one, and yes, it was absolutely purple - creating some larger than life sizing that made him a giant at the very same time. Transmutable. In the moment. In the shadows. In the not even there. His potency and power was obvious any time a local musician delved a little deeper into their gift. Not so much because of an implied challenge - because if there's one thing that was unspoken anathema to the deep voiced musician, it was the notion of competitive creativity; no, for him, it was about how good can you make it, how far can you take it, how bright can you polish the gem that you've unearthed. John Bassette made everyone better. As facile as Alex Bevan's wordplay was - and his “Have Another Laugh On Cleveland Blues” opened Newsweek's coverage of the city's bankruptcy all those years ago for its clever mocking of the place already impugned by Randy Newman's “Burn On Big River” - it was when he turned inside that his gift truly shone. Alex Bevan had wings on the tips of his fingers, could pick the gentlest melodies, coaxing them tenderly from a banged up Martin guitar. That feather bed would nestle around love songs to Ohio's prettiest places: Athens, Ohio, the Grand River, a pretty figure skating girl with eyes like springtime skies and a long braid that flew out behind her… Alex Bevan could also write about frustration and being thwarted (“Big City Women”), lift up the dreamers who would jettison security for a shot (“Rodeo Rider”) or never quite get secure (“Jazzbo”). He was willing to hold moments like fireflies in a jar (“Gunfighter's Smile”) and softly exhale through the wreckage of a relationship unraveling around him (“Autumn Melody”). Like his mentor, he wasn't afraid of the unruly or untidy things about humanity, the way the waves of what we want and how we lose it sometimes crash against each other on the beach that is our life… And that was just a part of the gift John Bassette gave the local songwriters. Because even invisible, the notion of anchoring all that music with DIY records - long before punk and the good folks at Twin/Tone made do-it-yourself viable - forged a community that went unspoken. And so it was, that everyone knew what everyone else was doing… projects unfurled… people came together in the name of recording, gigging, writing. When Alex Bevan went to record Grand River Lullabye, his second Fiddler's Wynde project, no less than the Michael Stanley Band - fixing to set the attendance records at Northern Ohio's outdoor amphitheatre Blossom Music Center and also the Richfield Coliseum, where the NBA franchise the Cavaliers held court - came in to record the title track with the young man with the poet's shirt and the sunbeam smile. It was that way. A magical time. One could turn up at any number of local taverns - and run into any number of local folkies, quaffing a few cold ones, talking about records, planning their next adventure. It was a scene, a real live genuine bona fide scene - and people would crane their heads to look at this one or that one, telling their party about some bit of triviality or minutiae they knew of the spotted songwriter. If L. A. had the Troubadour, the Ash Grove, the Whiskey A Go-Go and all of the little clubs cluttered up and down Santa Monica and Sunset Boulevards, from the glistening ocean of Venice, Malibu, Marina Del Ray, the winding roads up Laurel and Beachwood Canyon, twisting their way to the over-the-top rush of Mulholland Drive, that magic quilt was the board for a dynamic merging and converging of talent. John David Souther and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Linda Ronstadt and Maria Muldaur, Don Henley and Glenn Frey and Jackson Browne, Bernie Leadon and David Lindley, Poco and Karla Bonoff were acolytes to a scene that existed at the flanks and hems of Joni Mitchell, David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Neil Young, Cass Elliot and their ilk. The ones following the established superstars were as aspirational as Jim Ballard or the Buckeye Bisquit Band boys - who found a home on local club owner Dewey Forward's wildly inspired homegrown label - were in much the same vein to Bassette, who just moved like a shadow, but was every bit the forerunner of much of what went on. Back then, it was simple. Innocent. Easy. Drink your beer, pound your tequila, marvel at Randy Newman's Rednecks, thrill the evolved locals who were able to hear the revelations in your songs… And if there was no big time record label component to feed the nation's radio, then the local scene would be enough; but it was every bit as interlaced and engaged as what went on in Southern California, where the songs were spun into gold and platinum, cocaine and lear jets, a soundtrack for a nation seeking a peaceful easy - if a bit exclusionary - feeling. The local bards and folkies, troubadours and spinners of song in Cleveland had no chance of that. Even Stanley who lodged at Top 5 hit with his surging merging of populist urban rust beltism and heroic straight up rock never quite got his fingers locked on that brass ring. But in the purity of what they were singing and how they hung together, it didn't matter. If that was all there was, it was plenty. The camaraderie, the joie de vivre, the high times, the lines sketched with chords and single notes, it added up to a fellowship of fellow travelers that fulfilled its own destiny. Sometimes where we are is enough. Sitting wide-eyed under the stairs at Peabody's, drinking in the songs and stories as they unfurled like Japanese flower tea, it was the most alive place I could imagine. I didn't know much of what I was being regaled with firsthand - 14, awkward, steeped in dreams and wondering what life held - but I knew enough to know: this is magic. The idea that songs were precious receptacles for our life, our love, our hopes and yes, our losses had already dawned on me. That people I could be in such close proximity to could create these wondrous bits of music and moments was almost unthinkable - except there they were. Right before me. Out of that beaming amazement, friendships were forged… the recognition of the vision held between us of what it could all mean, Before too long, it would be drinking in taverns with these wild-eyed boys with their time to be killed until it was time to create again. Because, in the end - like all weavers of song - they were human and they were just like we were, except for the part where they stretched how the felt, the things they'd seen and witnessed across notes that rose and fell like the heaving of one's chest. It is in the humanity that the songs took flight. These were people just like we were, yet somehow a bit more backlit. Shying back just the smallest amount, there was surely something different about them, something a little bit sparkly, a little bit more. John Bassette taught us that - the local stars, the folks in the bars. He never came right out and told us, he just showed up and quietly was all that and then some. To see him, to hear him, to be enraptured by him was the understand that the power was your's - that all you had to do was dream or believe, and you could cast off on a sea of what might could should be, too. You didn't need a cape or a hood, a deep throated moan or a guitar to take you there. You just had to know there was uniqueness like that within you, too, along with oceans of emotions that could be sailed with no fear or falter. All you had to do was smile and cast off right where you were sitting. Those were the kind of things John Bassette taught us. With a net he cast into the sky, he hauled in stars of the every day sort - and everyone sparkled with that knowledge that all they had to do was commit to the how of where they are, then drift eyes wide open to the sun or moon as the time would have it. It doesn't sound like much as I write it all down, but it was everything and perhaps even a little bit more. Lost afternoons, drinking green bottled beer or cheap red wine, laughing about nothing, bragging about even less. Breath held against the moment it was over - and a whole crop of boys with guitars and cockeyed smiles who lived to prove Bassette right every chance they got. In that, a corporate housewife in gestation figured out she could go and do whatever the songs might offer. It wasn't what was expected of nd preordained for her, and there was no map to lead her on. But with that laugh and those shining eyes, the route was so much the clearer: follow the songs where they take you, they will not lead you wrong and you can believe in them whenever everything else fails and folds, betrays and falls apart at the seams. All these years and miles later, I marvel at what I didn't know, and he didn't even have to consider. The truest companion isn't necessarily the singers, but the soundtracks that they leave - and somewhere just beyond Hessler Street, the traffic rolls along, a river of metal and rubber and glass. The songs have survived past the singer. A drifter's life of dignity extinguished at 65, with rattling lungs and an erratic return address. The acolytes don't care about that, only the candle he held aloft to light the way: in his honor, they lift it up and pass it down. Somewhere a few states away, I smile and remember when - knowing that without those moments, the rest of my life just might not have turned out the way that is has. After all, impossible dreams defy and mock you. It takes a true heart to lead you on… and if John Bassette had anything to lead with, it was a heart that shot through with all the things you could ever possibly want to behold. He never even thought about the ripples… He left them to find the shore on their own. He liked to watch them bunch up and roll, but he knew they'd get where they were meant to be on their own. He had faith that it was enough, and it was.
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Wings of Warmth, Pools of Sorrow…

The day after my mother died, I woke disoriented. We had been estranged for years, so it wasn't the loss of a day-to-day presence in my life -- or even someone who'd been part of my thoughts. And yet, I had to grasp the notion that I now really, truly, absolutely was an orphan… the end of the line… the last of the vein.Somehow, numbly and without thinking, I drifted through the day. A day I recollect almost nothing about -- except my best friend's sister's second child was christened, it seemed like there were no chaise lounges at the Colony Hotel's Florida shaped pool and I did some laps across the street at their quiet pool when the sun wasn't searing my flesh in that slightly cool, definitely blunted, but deadly way of early fall. Lying there limp, it was another one of those moments -- in a cranberries-strung-on-fishwire-holiday-garland kind of way -- a moment unnoticeable, yet defining of who I'd come to be. Suspended with no expectation, not even the passage of time registering, and yet it was a moment full of every moment to that point. There is nothing to do. Beyond stay in the moment. And that is how I've come to live these last few weeks. Stay in the moment. Know there's nowhere to go where anything will change. Do what is required. Be hypervigilant for joy and beauty. Seek what is good. Hope it will lift. Have faith that it will. In the blur of what has passed since, much has past. Recognitions of what had to go unseen -- and the wreckage of every moment shattered by the knowledge. It is an almost nails scraping flesh from one's bones sensation, but the numbing that sets in holds, so it's more a heightened state of shock. A zombie-like existence with polaroids and postcards dangling before one's eyes and in the back of one's mind… It is a deal made with the conscious to survive the shock and the pain, an order out of chaos that is neither wanted nor invited, yet must be endured to be survived. There are -- in the wake -- moments of reclamation along the way. People who emerge or return, found like buttons in the deep pocket of a coat, fallen off, but kept to be reattached {rather than merely lost or forgotten about) when a moment presents itself to do so… The riches emerging from sorrow, offering solace and the sparkle of renewed friendship. My friend Ben, always audacious, appearing at the front door with a bottle of French red and a wry smile. He knew my mother, had had an ongoing relationship with her -- one that may've included miles of missed details, but certainly a definite appreciation of the force of her personality. This was a man introduced to me more than two decades ago at my very first Fan Fair, a once downhome gathering of the hillbilly stars and the tribes who adore them out at the hot and dusty Tennessee State Fairgrounds, by a talented not-quite-popped-yet musician named Vince Gill who said, “Anything you won't say, she will… and anything she won't say, you will.” Vince Gill was soothsayer. Though my friend Ben and I have less than no sexual attraction, we have had adventures, Christmas shopped, commiserated, been thrown out of bars (we were so much younger then), been used as bait (well, me) and bodyguard (well, him) on more than one occasion. Our lives interwoven, our truths polemic, our intense passion for living defining. But Ben grew up and became a wine broker. I remained a polisher of stars, a confidant of the famous, a writer of all that I saw. In the gap, the friendship faltered -- not out of indifference, but just the actual physical demands of demand, schedules and location. One draw of the cork, though, and two lives pour from the bottle with the bruised/blood colored liquid. Sorrow binds people together. Nothing quite like the valley of the disconsolate to learn about surrender -- and floating to the top when there's no fight left inside. My friend Ben, whose father died in the past year, understood… and he appeared. As did seeming strangers with deep intimacy and phone calls from friends who recognized the abyss-depths of my emotions. Seeming polarities, intertwined in the notion of finding some refuge from the storm -- or the offer of haven unknown until it arose in a moment. Once upon a time, golf pros would take me to Nighttown , a boite in the intellectual stronghold of Cleveland Heights, to make me feel grown-up. But somehow I ended up there with a man my own age, trying to recapture some innocence and youth lost -- tales spun of the gaps between what was seen, what was known and what was imagined. Cavernous distances that can't quite be closed with red wine and stories, laughter and tears. Yet somewhere in all of that, there is enough genuine hope and a willingness to show and be seen that a connection can be forged, one that embodies the notion of who someone might have been with the courage of getting to where they are today. In the midst of it all, a phone call… from a singer of songs, a dreamer of dreams and a companion of the farthest reaches checking in. Knowing all that had transpired with the death and the loss, Rodney Crowell had battled his own raging flu -- and was now emerging from the miasma to see how his “dear one” was coping, to remind the woman who'd closed down her father's house a few years before with a last letter written from his favorite chair listening to the Grammy-winning songwriter's “I Know Love Is All I Need” with its opening line of “I am an orphan now…” and the recognition that it is in dying that we are set free from our mortal shackles. Indeed, it is. And it is in living, breathing, loving each other that we become so much more vibrant. In our pain and that ache that throbs our veins, makes breathing such an iron-forged-act of will, that we recognize the power of those things we feel. With lunch over, there are still a few hours to be killed. Moments to waste in a way that makes them precious -- recapturing what wasn't with a net of what is ephemerally permanent. It is the actualization of a line by never-quite-huge-rocker-yet-local-hopesafe Michael Stanley that reminds us to be present in the minutes and the seconds: “All you get to keep are the memories/ So you better make the good ones last.” Cold sweat on a green glass bottle, five dollars fed into the jukebox. In a bar with picnic tables littering the floor, scuffed felt pool tables and neon behind the bottles, it is confessions of doubts and what ifs, you didn't knows? and oh, you're kiddings. It is the innocence of Hansel & Gretel, a time reclaimed that wasn't quite lost, just never actually experienced. It is Aerosmith's “Dream On” played through tinny speakers, and the hollow sound of a cue ball striking a 7-ball. In that suspended time, nothing is important, everything resonates and the years wash themselves of everything but what matters. What matters… That's what death shows you. The things that end up being erased and the things that come to the top are object lessons in truth and value. It is the nightmares that shiver you in your sleep, the things that go unseen that become absolute “don't”s in how we walk through the world, but also burdens that become too heavy to continue to carry and too intense to continue to hold back. Sometimes marinating in innocence and wonder, the easy sweetness of nothing more than right now, there is a clarity that emerges. There is an intense past of shared memories -- the roll of a fairway, the feel of a wood floor in a school cafeteria, the bands that were raging, the way being young and not knowing was so thrilling… and that is plenty. As the miles and years roll by, that basic reality gets lost. It's not something you can hold on to, nor something that can exist beyond those rare suspended moments. But it was real -- and it can come to life in the shared recollection, shine and shimmer with the mother of pearl essence of something truly precious. In a pool of grief, those moments are refuges from the anguish. In that clearing of the sorrow, you realize how lucky you are to be able to even see it, taste it, touch it. You're thankful for that beaming smile, that nod of recognition -- and you know that you can somehow go on. It's like putting in The Houston Kid, listening to “I Know Love Is All I Need” again. It is a song that releases the pain and keeps the best intentions. It offers a notion that whatever torture there was, it's over -- and the lost soul is, perhaps, getting the peace they dreamed of. It reminds you, too, that love is something that is created out of appreciation, recognition and embrace. We find love along the way… companions for the journey who see us as our better selves and inspire us to grow in that gentle glow. What we find, we sow… We harvest crops of people who make our lives tender when it hurts, and we try to offer what we have in turn. For Rodney Crowell, calling from Nashville in the wake of the funeral for a friend's mother, it was one more cobblestone in a journey that had been co-mingled most of my adult life… and yet, it was a milestone as much as a rock used as paving. If Guy Clark sang “old friends they shine like diamonds,” it is so. Not much needs to be said in those moments. It is understood -- and just the sound of a voice that is known by heart is plenty. The profundity is as simple as the lost soul turned up: it is understanding that without words, this person understands your pain, your heart, your reason -- and they want you to be okay. Faith in the falter. Faith in the other's ability to rise. They know, and you know they know. Like when Pooh reaches for Christopher Robin's hand only because “I just want to be sure is all…” There is something about the concrete, the tangible that is more than plenty. Nothing more is really needed. Just the there. And in the there, there is everything. Perfectly absolutely all of the solace, the compassion, the mercy that salves us 'til we can make it on our own. And so more time and tears have passed. Sorrow rises and falls, ebbs and flows. It is what it is, and as the tides recede again, it becomes more an act of knowledge than blind faith -- but, whether it's knowing or believing, there's the trust that this, too, shall be weathered with grace, dignity and love. In that, one can let whatever happen however it needs to. That is the greatest truth of all in a valley that seemingly has no end.
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“Paradise”, John Prine

It was a seaside town, a little jewel somehow missed by time. Gulf side, clear water, cerulean on its best days, turtle green on its others. The houses are small and dear, the buildings low to the ground -- all slightly faded, not quite tired, just obviously lived in and loved.And in the Gulfport Casino -- a low ceilinged place with white twinkle lights, several burned out or fizzling like they're bout to and the kind of linoleum floors normally reserved for college cafeterias -- there are too many small pastries, pizzas, steamer trays of pasta, raw bar and coffee with 5 kinds of condiments. It is the bursting horn of plenty for a child of the Midwest, a former postman turned poet, an American institution who touches people's souls with his plainspoken beauty, insight and truth about lives lived beyond the blare and the glare of velvet ropes, klieg lights, bold faces and red carpets. In that tiny space with the big windows and crimson-clothed tables, they have come from Ireland and Texas, Massachusetts and Memphis, New York City and Wisconsin -- all to celebrate the man who gave the world a haunted Viet Nam vet who accidentally became a martyr to his habit “Sam Stone, ” the alienated housewife shipwrecked with a now stranger who share return addresses and a last name and found a refuge in memory-based daydreams “Angel From Montgomery, ” the elderly couple forgotten by society of “Hello In There, ” the abandoned teenage girl of another era sent off to have her baby where no one would know in “Unwed Fathers” and sundry regular Joes who'll never quite get their fingers to close around the brass ring that is the American dream. John Prine. Grammy winner. Regular guy. Candy heart. Dear soul. The original “next Bob Dylan. ” Singer/songwriter, no, the only singer/songwriter to be asked by the Poet Laureate to read at the Library of Congress. Proud father of 3. Devoted and exemplary husband of a woman he fell in love with when “I looked out the window one morning and saw her hanging my white shirts out on the line, and I just lost my heart.” This is an incurable romantic, a believer in love. He is a beacon for old time values and vintage photos that are torn from today's life. With a mandolin and an accordion player, there's a band that can swing from almost cocktail jazz to Appalachian bluegrass to rocked up - and with a coterie of Americana's best kept not-so-secrets ranging from frequent duet partner Iris DeMent and her husband Greg Brown, Irish songbird Maura McConnell, plain as a picket fence rocker Pat McLaughlin, Joplinesque diva Jonelle Moser, silken songstress Beth Neilsen Chapman… a musical feast beyond compare. And then Prine takes the stage himself. Tenderly embracing “Souvenirs, ” a song also recorded by his dear friend Steve Goodman, it is a song about recounting what was, ruing the way time only leaves trinkets -- and that's if you're able to hang on to them along they way. It is a bittersweet, melancholy - if measured -- song that reflects, “Broken hearts and dirty windows make life difficult to see/ That's why late last night and early mornings all look the same to me…” Those lines are the kind of terracotta tile truth that is easily overlooked, yet absolutely what life is made of. Those lines tattooed countless pages of my textbooks in middle school, high school and college -- and obviously spoke to the core of Prine's perspective on living. Yet, just as one would deify the man as a sage of the slightly antiquated values, the wry songwriter can bounce back with “Let's Talk Dirty In Hawaiian” or the insurrectively humorous rejection of consumer-driven living “Blow Up Your TV. ” Then there's the what-the-Hell-went-on reflection of “Jesus, The Missing Years, ” meandering and untangling what the Son of God explored when he went off the radar. Indeed, when Prine was striking a lyrical flint, he could make you laugh and think -- “Your Flag Decal Won't Get You Into Heaven Anymore” an indictment of unthinking jingoistic patriotism, while “Some Humans Ain't Human” takes on the current administration's heartlessness as mirthfully as humanly possible. Prine is a good sort. It is why he could write a song that has become such a standard people don't realize it's not traditional. “Paradise, ” known to casual but committed bluegrassers as “Daddy won't you take me back to Muhlenberg County…” and environmentally-grounded casual lovers of music as “Mr. Peabody's Coal Train (has hauled it away…), ” is a song sung around campfires, at political rallies and bluegrass festivals well into three decades. “Paradise” speaks of the demise of same. It is bucolic, almost Norman Rockwellian in its attention to detail -- “We'd shoot with our pistols, but empty pop bottles are all we would kill” -- and yet, clear-eyed by the demise of a lovely place at the hand of industrial greed. Deceptively melodic, it picks you up, carries you along, makes you smile. And then you listen… Complicatedly direct. Simply, deadly accurate. Absolutely embracing the warmth of family, home, history roots. Spot-on aware of just what's being destroyed - and it's not just the land being strip-mined, but a way of American life that was the core of the nation's foundation. How could one follow a song like “Souvenirs” at a black diamond party, a festivity to celebrate, commemorate six decades well-spent, completely lived? There was only one choice, and it was just to reach for the classic, but to make the standard take on an even deeper resonance. Having been serenaded by Fiona, his lovely Irish bride and her sister, feted by people who've been part of his life for so many years, he called his brothers Frank and Billy to the stage to share “Paradise” with him. In that gesture, in that moment, it was obvious some ties do bind for life. There was clarity about the importance of family, of faith, of coming together from the strength and the glue of memories and moments and heritages shared. Regardless of the wages of strip-mining, the removal of sustainability of the coal-culture of Kentucky, blood lives on. Sitting there, on my folding chair with my very best friend in the world, I felt uneasy. It had been a long week, hard meetings, professional betrayals, bad news, and yet - that wasn't it. Exhausted, yes, but this was something more, a kind of dread that foreshadows what you can't know, but will find out. I looked at Kathie, always placid, always ready for a good time, always amazed by the kindness and the talent of the people I loved, and I shuddered. All I could think was “I hope this isn't the last time I see this sweet man… with the two young sons, the cancer that's been beaten, the songs left to write. ” After all, Prine's songs had not only grown me up, they'd often defined my understanding of complex interpersonal emotional dynamics. Ex-fiancée #3 - the enchantingly nicknamed “BooBoo” -- had come as the result of his Cupid play so many years ago, and there had been long, sweet nights spent talking in too many countries to mention, backstages and hotel rooms and anywhere else we happened to find ourselves. It was a world of unremarkable things becoming noteworthy: pork roasts, candlelight bowling, lost hours, Aqua Velva, ice tinkling in glasses, conversations that meandered around like oleander - sweet and tangled and seeking without a plan, yellow street lights and Wurlitzer jukeboxes, memories of once and then. Then… Having said hello and happy birthday, shared a brief exchange and drinking the love in the room in deeply, I vanished. It was enough. Whatever was ominous, I could not stop -- and I knew it. There were fireworks at the end of a pier. Emerald and sapphire, diamonds and ruby. Flash and burst and pop, one after another -- the sparkling explosions of fairy dust that light up the night. Glittering celestial confirmation that our dear friend was, indeed, another year older, and we were the richer for it. Fading from there was easy. Waking up at 7 was harder. Kathie asking if I was awake, making sure I was all there -- and able to understand, to comprehend. “I tried to wake you at 2:30, ” she apologized, “but you were just too tired, too far asleep…” It made no sense, the apologizing… and why would she try to wake me? “Your aunt called, ” she explained to my mystified face. “Your mother has died…” That was what it was: that feeling of premonition, that notion that someone was slipping away. My mother was sick, absolutely. Conflicting reports -- about why no more chemo, and me keeping score from somewhere beyond the bleachers. But now it was done. Proof positive that even forces of nature eventually turn finite. My mother… Slipped away into the stars. Quietly. Quickly, by most accounts. Really just the way that she'd wanted it. But gone. Absolutely. Positively. So complicated, really. Like the woman herself. A voracious consumer of all that the world offered her - deep passions, deeper discernment. She was a presence to be reckoned with: overwhelming, overpowering, over-the-top. Sometimes with her, you'd need to take cover just for survival. Like a hurricane, she was an absolute rush and a charge and a burst of adrenalin, but also there could be wreckage… and to get the charge, you had to be willing to withstand the damage. One of a kind, she had striped hair set in a Palm Beach crash helmet, blue eye shadow and navy mascara, heavy lace racing stripes on her bright pastel summer shifts and an imperious demeanor that once made the Customs officials in Nassau think she was some kind of royalty. She liked that. Very much. She eloped with my father, later becoming the subject of an article in The Cleveland Plain Dealer's Sunday Magazine bravely titled “I Taught My Bride To Golf. ” She'd had her appendix blow-up, leaving enough adhesions to make pregnancy a difficult proposition, yet when they found out she was pregnant, she thought naming me after the hotel where I was conceived was a suitable tribute to the site of fertility realized. She loved George Feyer, who played society cocktail piano in the Rembrandt Room in Manhattan's elitely boutique Stanhope Hotel, but much preferred the old school standards of the Plaza and the Waldorf Astoria -- even if it meant an inside room. She believed in luxury, buying the best you can afford and making it last, not taking crap from anyone and having your way with the world, especially if it meant having the world on a string. She didn't much care for swimming, though she certainly logged hours at the Shaker Heights Country Club's pool drinking innumerable iced teas until I could be at the pool on my own… and she believed in having lunch out every day, putting me on Cleveland, Ohio's good restaurant circuit each day after Nursery School. This is a woman who responded to one of her friends commenting on my appearance in a Laurel School for Girls Lower School Christmas pageant as an angel, “Yeah, me, too… only the halo's a little tarnished and definitely tilted. ” There wasn't a joke she wouldn't crack, or a line she wouldn't push. Always perfectly turned out. Never a hair -- or in her home a chair -- out of place, Ferol, affectionately known to many as “Fang” or “White Fang, ” defied logic. There was no end to the perfection of her execution -- her house was clean beyond sterile, decorated to the hilt and bordered on a museum for its al-things-in-their-place order and high level of taste, yet she had a thing for Junior League short-cut recipes, Marlboro 100s and Canadian Club on ice. Taken as a whole, it's a very basic equation. My mother loved life. Completely. Utterly. There was nothing she wouldn't say -- and she was quick to laugh the loudest, tell the hardest truth, reach for the unthinkable. She didn't care… figured if you didn't shoot, you didn't score, and like Auntie Mame, it would take a fictitious character to get close to the woman with the high rise hair and the very large pillow cut sapphire, she knew life was a banquet and “most of you poor sons of bitches are starving to death. ” In a world where people are often afraid to live, to truly live -- immerse and experience with every fiber of their being, my mother was fearless. That there was wreckage was part of the price, but to live wholly committed to whatever was before her was the only way. So, so be it. Numbly, I took my shower and made my pilgrimage south to Naples and my Aunt Karen. We compared baseball cards of a life we'd both been part of. Each filling in pieces for the other, marveling at how much ground was both covered and scorched. There was much to consider, images to be harvested and shared. Where my mother went, people rarely forgot. Yet like a too-many-faceted jewel, what you saw depended on where you stood. So many angles and reflected depths, you could loose your moorings without ever shifting position. In that complicated presence, you take the bad with the good, sift for the truth, hope for the broader insights. When someone's being is as farflung, it's hard to hold close, to embrace -- and yet, that's all that left. As the recognition hit me, a few scattered e-mails went out to friends -- all for varying reasons. Given that the funeral was going to be in Cleveland, naturally one went to Michael Stanley, my rock star who should have been the biggest friend mined from the blind of the internet over concern about a friend whose dream had also shipwrecked and was not coping at all. Michael Stanley embodies the oxymoronic notion of the dignity of rock stars. He is elegant, gracious, heroic -- and yet oddly normal. He writes with an a razor-like insight, and he is not afraid to wade deep into the dynamics of life. Though he holds the attendance record at Ohio's vast Blossom Music Center -- a beautifully groomed outdoor amphitheater where the biggest acts of summer al converge -- he never became the Springsteen, the Seger, the Mellencamp that he deserved to be. Yet within that, his writing only got better, his ability to sing from a settled and grounded place in a way that pulls back the veils and the filters have increased. From the solidity of life lived in both the fast lane of celebrity and the mainstream of humanity, he casts his nets and pulls up lyrics that speak deeply. In his note of condolence, which was perfect, he offered me a piece of a song in the works… "Relentless contradictions, are never far behind A gift you never asked for from some forgotten time A legacy of wonder... of sorrow, joy and pain... Same Blood, different vein..." Who knows what a life means? Beyond whatever we produce. Maybe the best we can hope for are the memories we leave behind, the thoughts that jump to mind and make people smile, or laugh. There will be the people we touch, inspire, heal -- and yes, even hurt. Sometimes the pain offers its own lessons. Not every learning experience comes from the good, and that is to be remembered. Sometimes the pain and pressure take out coal and make diamonds… black diamonds and White Fangs and girls who can still find their heart, their tears, the truths in a song. It takes a lot of time to become young. It takes a lot of influences to find your voice. If you stay the course, hold the line, never turn away from what you are shown, there is a phoenix who will emerge from the flames and burned out cinders of what was. And so, at the church where I was raised, baptized, first communion'ed and confirmed, my mother was laid to rest. Zelda the Wonderspaniel shared the mass. Alex Bevan, my first idol, sang of “Gunfighter's Smiles” and the promise of “better days” and “Silver Wings. ” A gentle coterie of people who've passed through my life appeared, reminding me the power of even short times shared. A lady who worked at my first -- and only -- daily newspaper job. A man who created the original major label indie and gave the world Meatloaf, later proving that the little guy can take on a multi-national corporation if he's strong, resolved and willing to serve the truth. Girls that I'd gone to grade school with. A boy who said he spent his youth wondering what it would be like to kiss me, not to mention a rock star Southern belle journalist roman candle who'd driven in from Flint, Michigan and my best friend from Martha's Vineyard who is a quiet spring of resolution and strength… and the ever stoic, ever quietly strong Stanley. Ronnie Dunn, with an intense gospel vein, is nominated for every award imaginable this CMA Awards for “Believe, ” a song that confesses, “You can't tell me that it all ends/ with a slow ride in a hearse…” Dunn, and his partner Kix Brooks, kindly sent flowers. As did Ronnie's wife Janine, with a card that said, “She was a force of nature…” They know, and believe, the meaning is greater even than the lives that we touch… My mother loved flowers, wanted them. An active volunteer, her attitude about death was “forget charity, I want every white flower in Cleveland. ” Every white flower -- and they came; came and came. From John and Fiona Prine, John David and Sara Souther, from an old boyfriend my mother couldn't stand and several of the great loves of my life, from the man who wrote “Anything But Mine” and my old friend Frank Liddell and his traditional thrush of a wife Lee Ann Womack -- a basket of half longstem roses and half spray orchids, from the people at CMT/MTV Networks, Sony/BMG Music and Capitol Nashville, the American Society of Composers, Authors & Publishers, Manuel the man who made Elvis' solid gold suit and his son a designer rising in his own rite, a dealer of so many Warhols and the occasional Basquiat, the woman who made sportscasting safe for women and the most recent ex-fiancée who remains one of my dearest friends in the world. White flowers. Roses. Hydrangeas. Agapanthus. Freesia. All kinds of orchids. Everywhere, and the occasional stalk of Bells of Ireland. Ivy, and pine, and stalks of holly. And a nose gay of lilies of the valley, to be put inside her casket. We all mourn the way that best suits us. My mother wanted flowers, banks and fields of them -- and we did what we could. I live in the songs -- and tI needed to feel alive in this death. So, there I was the night before, making a pilgrimage to a bar called the Sly Fox listening to a band called the Midlife Chryslers churn through one of the best surveys of rock's bedrock ever -- with a pair of guitars that stung, a sax that hung low and soulful, a keyboard that rose and fell and a bassline that undulated around the beat and the melody with that padded rubber bottom that makes music throb. To hear the Stones' “Dead Flowers” done right, by a motley crew of true believers, is to bring it all back home. A song of acceptance, reality, brutality and an odd sort of deliverance by fire, it suited the moment. Covered with sweat, hips moving from side to side, Rolling Rock aloft in the air, it was the kind of recoil and release that a woman whose life was lived on eleven deserved. Somewhere in the night, there was a hole -- and also a current of life coming back at us. It was the sort of transcendence that defies words, begs embracement, finds its own altitude. It was the bridge that carried me to where I needed to be, gave the resolve to sustain in the moments that followed. Sitting crossed ankles in a velvet suit -- last worn for Johnny Cash's funeral to help my friends Rosanne and Hannah and all the rest of the Crowell clan feel stronger in the falter -- near President Garfield's tomb, I felt numb. I was confused and disoriented, trying to get my arms around it all. I knew that I'd had a lunch at Ta-Boo on Worth Avenue with the publisher of The Palm Beach Daily News in her honor -- and bought an Hermes bangle with lions on it to mark her passing. I knew we were heading to the Shaker Heights Country Club for tenderloins on small rolls and chicken salad in puff pastry, which would make her smile. It is all you can do, I guess. Hold on. Remember the things that would make them happy. Celebrate that lust for life with more life -- and wait for the realization to fall. Maybe, too, it's in our living that their embroidery of life goes on. Certainly the songs do, which is why “late last night and early mornings all look the same to me. ”
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Phil Walden, Dave Smith + Magical Kingdoms of Song

"Phil Walden's dead" The voice on the other end of the phone was tired, dead tired, but it wasn't the tired of too little sleep and too many miles. It was more the exhaustion that comes from knowing too much, seeing things you never imagined, learning lessons you'd rather not know. For Kenny Chesney, the man who played to over a million fans every summer for the past four summers -- and who found himself in between Bono and Mick Jagger on the cover of the Billboard as one of the three biggest acts of 2005, Phil Walden's passing was the end of the beginning. An innocence lost forever as the man who managed Otis Redding and most recently fostered the jam band movement through his signings of Widespread Panic, 311 and Cake as well as a green hard country singer from Luttrell, Tennessee even though Walden wasn't "in the country music business," but saw something that moved him, had passed away at 66 years of age. For Kenny Chesney, who'd been parking cars, playing third tier writers' nights and gutbucket honky tonks in some of Nashville's seedier parts of town while punching the clock and learning the trade of being a true songwriter at Acuff Rose, where no less than Hank Williams had been signed, Phil Walden was the realization and recognition of the dream. Whether it happened or not, Capricorn Records gave the boy a shot at the prize -- and a shot is more than most of us ever get anyway. Capricorn Records was -- at its zenith - the fertile spawning ground for Southern rock -- though it was so much more sophisticated then than people realized. Blues-steeped, shot through with jazz, aching with ferocious heartbreaks and injected with enough rural soul to give it the complexity of intricate paisley even as it flexed its muscular guitar/bass/Hammond B-3 organ chops with a verve and a density that make one put the pedal down. Starting with the Allman Brothers, but embracing Wet Willie, the Dixie Dregs, Marshall Tucker, Capricorn was as much a lifestyle as a sound scape. Always musically extrusive, there was a reckoning going on that was post-Civil War Southern pride writ large. And it wasn't about waving a flag, so much as it was about "sink into the way we live and understand why kicked back is as intense as anything y'all got going on."I didn't even get to experience it "real time." No, no; for me were the purloined moments with Dave Smith's record collection, the pounding sound of Eat A Peach blaring out of the rolled down windows of his maroon muscle car coming into the back of the house too hard, then pulling up short. That blaring noise, pure siren's song to a Midwest girl curious about it all -- and finding these feverish waves of undulation and consecration between the grooves. Dave Smith, in his polyester pants and white crinkle pseudo-leather Foot Joy teaching shoes -- which looked like golf shoes without the spikes, may well've been the coolest person I'd ever met. A ne'er-do-well golf pro who smoked too much pot, drank too much beer and always had a rejoinder for whatever was thrown at him came to live with us that summer -- and he brought an entire culture with him. The records alone were intense: Horses by Patti Smith, 4 and Physical Graffiti from Led Zeppelin, Tejas on the ZZ Top tip, Blood on the Tracks flexing the urgent inscrutability of Bob Dylan and everything by Todd Rundgren, who absolutely was A Wizard, A True Star. Just as importantly, he'd leave his Rolling Stone magazines lying around, magazines I would look carefully at floor position and angle of open page then gently pull it towards me, crawl under one of the heavy carved wood beds in our attic and inhale dust bunnies and fetid air without oxygen, hungrily devouring all news of that world so far beyond my pink suburban bedroom and 36 holes a day life. Somewhere within the first month, my blind adoration and sheer enthusiasm won him over enough to let me hang around, to allow me to hear his diatribes about music, to be the kid on the pirate ship. And it was in those moments, when it felt like my nerve-endings were outside my body so intense was the pleasure and excitement, that I came to understand the highest temple of them all: Live at the Filmore East. More than a mere live recording, it was the culmination of Duane and Gregg Allman's musical alchemy -- a sound that seamlessly merged so many influences into a whole that was so complicated yet primal, alive yet controlled in its thrilling ability to push a melody, signature riff or even rhythm to new heights. And in that blood and kerosene guitar tone of Duane's, a sound that would set whole coasts aflame with the burning desire and searing regret that is the blues, a whole new way of playing slide and electric guitar was cast into the universe -- all you had to do was lean your head back and close your eyes to be taken places that were full-immersion in the truth and experience. And so it was that I learned to drink beer, to listen to the depths of a record, to feel the energy collecting and pooling in my chest, my gut, in the place just above the root of my being. This was not an intellectual experience, it was something else, something more -- almost a melting and merging into this deeper way of embracing music.Dave Smith was, most likely, a reprobate. A complete scoundrel. He drank way too much, drove entirely too fast, dated the wrong kind of women and played his music voraciously at volumes that defied cogent thought. He loved Filmore East; the aching shake in Gregg's voice as "Whipping Post" threatened to explode from the core of his diaphragm-- and the chugging heartbeat of the straining and relentless thundering in those drums.Oh, the innocence of it all. A young girl not quite understanding the house-rocking references. A child -- truly -- of the night, lost in the swirl of bars she shouldn't have been in, the sparkle of local bands bringing these songs, and their own, to life before her eyes. It was seedy, a little dangerous, absolutely transfixing -- and it was the kind of thing you never recover from.The good news, though, about sitting in that maroon Charger with the speakers rippling from the intensity of the sound is that you bond from such a naive place, your wonder can never truly be taken from you. When you put "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed" on, you're immediately transported to a place where even what you knew -- and I knew more than quite a lot -- is transformed into something almost sweet. The hardness that should've set in, just beads up and rolls off.It is how true believers are forged. Innocence flash-fired into a shining, jubilant surface that sparkles with the pure love that can only come in those sorts of moments. For a 12-year old in a short forest green plaid skirt, it was more than deliverance. It was an entrance to a world so much cooler, so much more alive than the measured Jr. League and charity work fast track to corporate housewifery that I'd already been set on. Those songs, bubbling with emotion, rife with insight into life that most people wouldn't acknowledge let alone talk about, gave me wings. Lying on my back, listening to Joni Mitchell's Ladies of the Canyon on his headphones, I was taken into a world of such depth, intensity and subtlety that it was -- seriously -- almost hard to breathe, yet to not listen, embrace, embody was certainly to suffocate. And at ground zero of that sensibility was a hodgepodge: the free'n'easy "Heard It In A Love Song," with the shimmering flute punctuation bobbing up on the rides like some kind of cork, the staccato bump and dropped-to-knee wail of Wet Willie's empowering "Keep On Smiling" or the cocky contretemps of any version of "One Way Out," the Allmans percolating with hormones and being treed any way they cut it. Just thinking about all those notes that defied words falling from the tips of Steve Morse's fingers whenever the Dregs got pulled from the stack. Like an impossibly dry field that becomes the final resting place for a still glowing cigarette butt, so was my imagination and passion that summer Dave Smith arrived. What he gave me gave me everything I'd need to get through the rest of my life; and in that, it inadvertently set me on the course of a polemic destiny. Five years later, skinny legs and all in a wrap skirt and a monogrammed t-shirt, I sat facedown in Richard Wright's Native Son -- having had a bit too much giddy fun with my "peers" at Grad Nite. Preferring to right my equilibrium with something a little bit serious and certainly more adult, I decided to wait for the next Pure Prairie League show by sitting on a wall near the Tomorrowland Stage at Disneyworld. The singer seemed to play some pretty electrifying electric guitar, molten emotion that dug deeper than the words that melted off his tongue -- and I'd rather a closer look at that than listen to a little more inanity from a bunch of kids who'd never been anywhere. Some guy named "Jeff" in a satin jacket thought that was hilarious. Actually walked me down to the stage before the park employees unchained the area, and when he walked away, I saw the PPL logo on the back. I'd been rescued by "one of them," the people who go "back there" and are not like the rest of us mere mortals. It was exciting -- in that way of moments that are now, but nevermore. They played their show. They merged that Southern rock/country thing with a silky pop sheen -- the kind of thing that had them on the radio with songs like "Still Right Here In My Heart" and "Let Me Love You Tonight," songs that led them a long way from the plain burlap enchantment of the signature "Aimee." Maybe overwhelmed, possibly just exhausted from the 11 pm until 5:30 a. m. timeframe that is Grad Nite's trajectory, or else, perhaps just fate and the hand of God, I didn't rush away when the lights came up and the high school seniors began streaming back towards the rides and the park. In my basking in the moment and the music, I just waited, weightless almost, and then the unconsiderable happened -- some of "them" came out.Real live rock stars, mingling with the kids. Talking about whatever, eyeing the pretty girls, exulting in the adulation. It was benign, and it was also off the charts in term of cool for what the kids attending most Florida high schools back when could comprehend. And in that moment, a kid used to hustling, drew up in those pink canvas espadrilles, smiled knowingly and cast her line. "I hear you play golf," she said flatly. The singer's ear pricked up, he turned, clearly hooked. "You play?" he asked. "A little" I hedged, as my pulse quickened. "Any good?" he asked, not making this reeling in easy. "Depends on who you ask," I deflected, hoping subjectivity would serve as showing off for the rock star, rather the minimizing for conquest. "You have a handicap?" he continued pressing. "Yes," I responded, a little annoyed, hoping that would turn him. "What is it?" he countered, edging towards testy. Cornered, lying wasn't an option. Trying to look as demure as possible, I smiled softly and said with absolutely no flourish, "Six.""You're a six?" It was probably shock, but I read it as doubt -- and it chapped me. "Yeah, I'm a SIX," springing to defend my honor -- guitar player or not. "I was also all-tri-county for my high school.” With that, all barriers between rock stars and high school kids were dissolved. We were both golfers-- and he looked happy. Very happy. Their show in West Palm Beach -- to be played on Thursday -- gave him four days off in one place and a young person of enough skill to keep him engaged on the golf course. And so it was that a rock star didn't kidnap John Gleason's nice Midwestern daughter the way it happened according to William Miller's mother in Cameron Crowe's coming of age as a baby rock critic film "Almost Famous;" but the way a wunderkind musician made friends with a brought-up-on-the-fumes-and-falterings of playing golf-tournaments-on-the-road girl that set her on another path. It was crazy, really. That phone call when I was sure it was all for naught; no rock star would really think about me beyond the moment -- and rushing to the lime green mustang and Ft Lauderdale to pick him up and play; only to realize, I had no idea my new friend's name. Detouring to the Spec's in the mall by my high school, where many lost hours of cutting class had been invested, the manager took pity -- opened a record for me and announced dryly, "His name is Vince Gill." Armed with that knowledge, I continued my speed of sound journey to the Galt Ocean Mile, commandeered my almost famous friend and hit the golf course. It was teasing and barbs and all the cutting and nudging that comes from good natured rivalries. It was talking about cold beer and barbeque, about hearing your songs on the radio and a pretty wife left back home. It was the best round of my life -- a 73 -- and a physics lesson about gravity, mass and motion stemming from a Lincoln that was clocking needing to swing around me because I stopped a little short of a light that was changing. It was also forcing the singer into the humiliating fate of a high school paper interview -- and later harvesting that desperation play on my part following another round with his gentle suggestion that if my injured hand meant I couldn't play golf, I should think about writing about music. "I'm a 17-year old girl," I protested. "So" "Look at me," I protested. "I do interviews all the time," he responded. "You're better than 95% of the people I talk to, and you actually love music. I've read your writing. You can do this. "Rock stars do drugs. It had to be. Squinting at him, I echoed and expanded upon my previous sentiment, "I'm a 17 year old girl -- and I look 12. "With a gentle smile, he nodded and quietly said two words: "Cameron Crowe." Crowe, the 15-year old writer for Rolling Stone in the late 70s, had just seen his undercover as a student look at high school life Fast Times At Ridgemont High turned into a movie. He'd done everything I didn't even know to dream of, yet yearned for; it was so perfect. And he looked young, too. With that, Vince Gill won. And so did I. The thing about living the rock & roll life -- even if you do it with "hillbilly rock stars, out of control" -- is that it puts you in the fastest current, the most concentrated moments. Everything is bigger, harder, more if you're connecting into it; the highs where the air is thin and the rush overloading, the lows where you feel sucked into the mud and then throb with the pain, the doubt, the fear and yes, the frustration. You see the dream; you can touch it, whirl it, swirl it, twirl it; polish it and cut it into the jewel that it is. It's like riding sunbeams or lightning bolts -- fast and hard and blinding, yet thrilling, exhilarating, absolutely in the moment. But to get to that point, there is patience, good decisions, heartache, tiny victories that have to last. And, if you're doing it right, much laughter along the way -- for without that merriment, that sense of the humor within the suck, you'd never make it. And those things are the ties that bind, the doors that open, the reasons to continue. Kenny Chesney knows all this, just like he knows the sound of my voice. It's the fuel that brought him, that drove him, that delivered him. And being tender-hearted, he is sentimental in a way that allows him to connect into the main vein of America's youth. They know what it's like to dream; to believe; to seek. They may not have attained what the young man who plays guitar in football stadiums and has Bruce Spingsteen dedicate songs to him have, but they know that he is what they would be like if they got their shot at the prize. He is them writ superstar -- and while that's not something Kenny Chesney thinks about, it's a reality he carries with dignity and grace. Everybody needs a break, along with a dream to capture their soul. Without those things, you're never going anywhere. Without someone saying, "you can," how can you?And for Kenny Chesney, en route to a party to celebrate three weeks at #1 with "Living In Fast Forward," Phil Walden's death is all about losing not just a piece, but the genesis of the dream coming true.It is a serious thing for a true believer.Just like that at the other end of the phone, a woman bows her head and sheds a tear. Not that anyone cares about my loss -- the loss of not a close friend, but rather a man who paved the way out of the expectations of a good family onto an expressway of emotion, moments and lives lived beyond the rules.Out where the cowboys roam, the rock stars sway, the young girls believe in what the songs offer, it's a whole other kind of outlaw justice. There is an honor among thieves and an elegance to the way the memories turn. If you're brave enough and strong enough to dream, then anything you can believe, you can achieve -- with a little luck, a lotta hard work and more than a passing bit of talent. All you gotta do is hold on -- and be willing to listen to your heart and the voices of those that know the game and the ropes and especially what you're made of. It's easy, if you don't give up. People like Phil Walden got that, made that truth real, created the faith to carry in the falter -- and carried however many dreamers, literally or even by way of the songs, to where they could make their stand. For Kenny Chesney, somewhere in the midst of another tour with a fistful of hits and enough decibels to rock 20,000 a night, it's a comfort in the sadness. For Vince Gill, in a studio, making 4 records at once, it's a harvest. For the Allman Brothers, it's all about the road going on forever. For Dave Smith, lost in the flood of whatever -- purportedly lost to misadventure, he is a memory that blazes like the pilot light in the furnace of who I became. And for me, hiding somewhere unlikely and writing a book, it's about being selfish; making a dream come true for myself rather than someone else; and that, like losing the flickering pulse of a sound that set me afire, may be the scariest thing of all. Still, it takes courage to be happy -- and happiness, like dreams, is a matter of decision. Close your eyes, make up your mind and let go. You're gonna float before you fly, but it you Eat A Peach, the falling will be sweet as the moment it all comes together.
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Send In The Clowns, Richard Pryor

Richard Pryor was frantic, manic, out of control - and almost out of his own skin. To watch him, in his glory days, rant and pant and stalk a stage was to see a heat seeking panther pouncing straight on the truths white people didn't wanna admit and black people were often ashamed to be judged by. And in shooting straight, telling an unburnished truth in a full-tilt, almost confrontational way - as he slipped in and out of streets characters, many lifted directly from his youth growing up in the bars and brothels his grandmother ran in Peoria, Illinois - Pryor tore down the walls of denial, of glossy racial perceptual fronts. Pryor had stopping power. He had veracity. He had the will to tell-it-like-it-is, as fellow African American comic Flip Wilson would crow as his cross-dressing hottie Geraldine would crow. In Richard Pryor, black Americans not only had a voice, they had a champion - a man who could see the rhythm, the language, the truth of the hustlin' black experience and bring a cavalier here-it-is to the table, in a way that told the stories of the street with a humor that disarmed, then charmed and finally electrified people. Richard Pryor was the man, man - and young whites, as well as blacks, responded aggressively to his no-holds-barred comedy. He - like Lenny Bruce, notable for his rant about "The 7 Words" (you can't say on the radio) - shattered the rules, spoke the unspeakable, pulled back the curtains on societal hypocracy. And as a black man, hurled the word "nigger" as a battle cry. By putting such taboos not just front and center, but front, center and loud, the man who started his career working from the fringes to the homogenized mainstream ascended into something more. Because the man who grew up poor, scrappy and struggling - using humor to deflect unwanted aggression and attention - realized that while it was safe to ape the user friendly jokes of Bill Cosby and make a good living doing it, it wasn't authentic to his life, his past or who he was inside. Eschewing the obvious financial security, Pryor went into the theater of his memory and his mind to pull out the irony of every day living in the poor part of town, to seek the characters of his youth and their immutable, incontrovertible way of walking through this world as inspiration. Rather than telling jokes, he brought people to life, let them weave their tales, gave them wings and reacted - coming out of the piece - with a nonplussed pseudo shrug. Not that most people remember the polite standard issue Pryor. No, This Nigger's Crazy blew up any chance of his beige past being a factor. Here was a man who would challenge the stereotypes, working dirty language and bits about the difference between black and white male sexual performance as if he was telling "knock, knock" jokes. And you bet, if it was Pryor, it was way more likely to be knocking the boots than knock, knock who? At a time when there was women's lib, free loe and Black Panthers, Richard Pryor took Red Foxx's blue humor and made it social commentary by bringing to life the people so many never see. He shocked and scandalized, but he electrified - and the envelope ripped open by Bruce was pushed a little farther, like a thumb on a bruised spot. All he had to do was become himself. Like so many poor kids, though, who crave fame as validation, money as liberation and shock as payback, Pryor got vertigo. Trapped in a fuck-you-rock-&-roll lifestyle of cars, broads and drugs, the excess - then living up to others' expectations of said excesses - overwhelmed him. When you'd see him sweat onstage, it seemed like more than the lights. Watching the quick ticks when he'd host "Saturday Night Live" in the '70s, you could call it adrenalin - likening it to the way athletes get revved up before the big game. Renegade comics, after all, get to lead outlaw lives. They are beyond the rules. even when they're getting busted, or turning themselves into human torches, free-basing cocaine in a never-ending quest for the feel-good-high-to-end-all-highs. Sometimes they get trapped in other people's expectations - how wild can they be? - and sometimes they demonstrate kindness in ways that defy the out of control, utter insanity of a comic on the verge. Richard Pryor influenced countless comics. Showed people the way to the prize was by being, or magnifying the things that set them apart. Offer yourself up in extreme - and find a voice that nails hypocracy, mundanity, social inertia. Be as outlandish as you wish, scare/shock/incite - and always tether your humor to the truth. It was another young comic from Peoria, Illinois who embodied that thinking. A chubby kid with a preacher father who lived somewhere on either side of the poverty line. A kid who grew up to teeter on the brink of evangelism, only to get so tangled in the crosswires of faith and finance, that he finally tumbled onto the stage - all fire and brimstone, looking for a place to explode. The person who gave Sam Kinison permission to scream and rage and wail was the brothel boy from the same hometown. If Pryor was a molten ticket for his inner-city truths, then Sam Kinison was a rocker with a penchant for taking on tension and realities between men and women, racial slurs - and the attendant attitudes that inspired them, sexual taboos and yes, old time religion. If Pryor threw down, Kinison seethed - and each struck chords of truths activists couldn't get to in a million years. But just as importantly, Pryor taught Kinison and a lot of the up-and-coming comics about giving back, about being present, about sharing the knowledge with the next wave to come up. Sam Kinison and his best friend Carl LaBove would tell stories about Pryor holding court -- often at the Hyatt House, next door to the legendary Comedy Store, on Sunset, telling them to pay attention to the way they hit their set-ups, the way they focused on the world around them - always looking for the next bit, the next joke, the next punchline. He encouraged. He emboldened. He enlivened. But especially, he cared. And when you're an unknown misfit that's emptying the club - and can only go on in the latest slots - to have a certified master, an absolute groundbreaker, a man who was genius in how he distilled his truth into 180 proof shockwaves pay attention, validate, it can make all the difference in the world. Because in those moments of doubt, knowing someone who knows sees it, it can keep you holding on until the big break comes. Waiting on a dream is a bitch. Waiting on the dream when you're decidedly out of the box, freakish, angry, aggressive or perform in a way that's deemed to confrontational is the worst. Richard Pryor knew that. It's why he made it point to rally the rank and file. He gave them the kind of support for brazen individualism that wasn't necessarily rewarded - and indeed thwarted when he was transitioning from standard-issue-stand-up in the mid-60s to the guy who's upside down attack on the standards netted a Grammy, gold records, sold-out concert tours in the same hockey rinks the biggest rock acts played, a concert film by which all other stand-up comedy movies are judged. Not only did Pryor's fierce individualism set three generations of stand-ups free to be themselves, it reminded them to give back. Kinison took the lead a bit further - putting together the Outlaws of Comedy, to give young renegade voices the opportunity to open for him in major concert halls and possibly develop a voice. Indeed, it's in those unseen ways that Pryor's impact becomes exponential. Yes, he was able to charm America with his big screen roles - playing street-wise guys with a way with a punchline, whether it was the Gene Wilder-goes-ghetto switch-up crime/comedy "Silver Streak" or "XXXXX." He imbued a humanity in black culture that was being lost in non-empiric stereotypes, fear of the unknown and fear of ourselves. Richard Pryor opened up a sense that poor black people were just as no-nonsense and eye-rolling about white people and each other as we were. In telling the truth, he gave us permission to see things for how they were. He may've sent people grafted to the status quo reeling, but he sent the rest of the country free. In laughing at ourselves, we saw a culture that's not easily accessible for what it was - and we were challenged to think about every bias we held. Yes, comics often mine their own trials, tribulations and observations for laughs. But as they say at the gym, "No pain, no gain." Still, there is no greater harvest than laughter and thought-provoking recalibration. because after the laughter and "can you believe THAT guy?"s faded, there were shifts in how we looked at the world. Laughter is perhaps the most dangerous weapon. For in jokes you can say things that are unsayable, tell truths that are unspeakable - and open eyes that are committed to staying shut. The best part is that the people listening go willingly. No harangues, no forced acceptance. They come. They hear. They laugh. They think. And then they are changed. Richard Pryor wasn't a social agitator, nor was he an activist. A trip to Africa -taken after his tragic freebase accident - inspired him to retire the N word forever, out of respect for the black men he saw there, who were leaders and innovators in their countries. Still even before that, he had a consciousness - and that's where most of his best stuff came from. From Richard Pryor's best, we - the fortunate - drew not only laughter, but perspective. It was a helluva way to learn to be open, but it was more fun than almost anything else you could get your hands, eyes or ears on. In the end, that's all that matters. Somewhere, Richard Pryor looks down and laughs. He knew it all along. He just had to get to where he could do it the way he wanted. Ironically, in setting himself free, he took us all along with him - and it was a ride unlike any other.
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New Friends, Old Loves, Reasons To Believe

Ronnie Dunn found a Jack of Clubs out there in the desert, where New Mexico rises into mesas and falls into chasms that spill into the Rio Grande River. A weathered card that promises good times and late nights, pitted by sand and wind and life -- and he smiles when he lifts it off the ground, forgotten by the person who brung it, turning it over and displaying the truth.It is a truth he knows by heart. Because while Dunn might be a country music king now, he spent years as a wild-eyed Jack -- sowing sparks and fire, neon and kerosene on the heart of Saturday night as a jukejoint, honky tonk flamestarter Stealth and not being so visible often the truest ally of those who would chase the night. Ali Berlow, mom, wife, NPR sensualist/food essayist, leans back into her seat on the plane lifting off the narrow, cracked runway at Martha's Vineyard Airport and closes her eyes. Her life lies below - and she's spinning into a new orbit for a few days. It's a place where the ponies run wild, the music is life's blood and the friendships form fast and hold fast, starting in the middle And there in Pittsburgh, Bruce Springsteen holds a hushed and holy altar call for the blue collar faithful. He's a solitary man in his unbuttoned low black gypsy shirt, leather chord knotted around his neck, guitar slung low, too. He is handsome in a rugged way that says high plains drifter even if he's more Jersey shore refugee -- and that low flame dignity is what makes him the patron saint and embodiment of the working classes almost 30 years since Born To Run became a classic. Bruce Springsteen understands the dignity of the common schmuck, just as he's not afraid to walk through the valley of his humanity. And it's somewhere between those extremes, the valor of lives overlooked emerges, and it does. For not everyone is bold-faced, back-lit, air-brushed, fluffed and buffed and puffed to perfection. In a world of the real, it is the real who most often get ignored. Not because people aren't dying for it, but because it is so seemingly unexceptional, so common, so not worth noting. Yet in those moments that are the slightly dog-eared just like everybody else -- only maybe a little more distraught -- Bruce Springsteen brings it all back home. As Lester Bangs tells young aspiring writer William Miller in Cameron Crowe's coming of age as a baby rock-crit flick "Almost Famous": "All you have to do is listen." Indeed. To the heartbeat, mocking you with the echoing of that great big empty chamber you can never quite fill.. To the roar of the room in the enveloping silence. To the way the sweat beads and collects in the moments of desperation from too much boredom and not enough prospects. Springsteen's world is where the ceilings are too low -- and the only freedom is the vast expanse between here and the horizon. Two lanes of tar covered ribbon tearing up what lies in front, orchestrating an escape, four bald tires gripping for everything they're worth, self-contained exit a matter of pressing the pedal and not looking back. Within it, though, are truths. Deep essential truths about who we are and how we live our lives. Truths about the scraped, bruised, dinged things that are more precious than rubies -- in part because they are the things we love, but just as importantly because they are within the realm of what can be attained. There are pipe dreams, and there are brass rings. One is just so much ether to make you high, make you forget, wake you up emptier than you started, mocked by an aspiration that was grounded in less than nothing. But the other, well, that is a whole other truth -- the ability to push one's limits, to seek something better, more -- and perhaps if the risk is weighed properly, a ship that could come in. Bruce Springsteen's losers have dreams that could wash up on the shore, that could slightly cracked, definitely chipped, certainly faded come true. As the scrawny, scraggly-headed Romeo pledged to Mary, the object of too many lost souls' desire, as he raged against the less than status quo he's being told to accept, "We're pulling out of here to win," it was about jettisoning the shackles and soaring on opportunities made with one's sweat, muscle and dreams, soaring on the thrilling power of what real love, true love -- the kind of love that lets you know you've truly been seen, seen as you are, not as they try to marginalize you -- embodies. Passion plays. Acts of faith. Ties that bind. Moments that make everything matter more. Revelations that drop illusions. All of it unnoticed, except for the ones caught under the weight of the experience -- or recognition. The people Bruce Springsteen sings about -- the rebels who refuse to die, who get home from work, wash up and go racing in the street. The ones for whom it's not about pink slips, so much as breaking the inertia that pulls you down, that holds you frozen until its beyond too late. And the crisis of faith turns into the clarity that forges steel wills and iron strength. The man in "The River," triumphantly laid back this night at the University of Pittsburgh is reborn of the eternal flame that burns when you see that life ain't a trap, it's a heroic thing if you'll let go of the side, let it wash you clean and feel the power of its smallest triumphs. This is a man who got captured by circumstances, served a meager fate and yet refused to now bow his head. In that eyes aloft pride, he becomes everything powerful about a man. Not that everything is such a test of mettle as that. "Two Hearts" serves as joyous a romp for the music man as the sobering reality that is "Matamoros Banks" illuminates the plain brutality that Springsteen sees as the migrants' fate, or "Youngstown," his moaning a portrait of a proud man who worked hard for the factory only to find that his time was up and his effort meant nothing -- in spite of the high water promises of the ones for whom he contributed to the prophet. But it's in the middles, the recognition that with every tie that binds, there is a knot that gets caught in one's throat, that we can relax and choke down, swallowing whatever comes with it, or merely set and let be what will be. How we choose to deal is as much an element of our priorities as the circumstances we're cast in. Active decisions, though, are where we define the way we live -- and even teetering on the brink only cashes the check The Bible promised, the one about an untested man being neither good, nor evil, but merely unproven. For it is in being decisive that we are defined. Say "Yes." Say "No." Say "When." He'd not yet played The Tunnel of Love's "One Step up," a song about how hard it is to keep the faith, to be married and present in the face of the inevitable erosion of real life -- but recognizing that as easy as it is to fall, it's a damn sight harder to pick up one's gaze after the fait accompli. Sure there's a girl at that bar who's looking single and a focal point narrator who ain't feeling too married -- but in the end, the ties will hold, the honor last, the temptation passes and, hopefully, he goes home to make it stronger. "This one's for Kenny," he says, cryptic, a reference no one understands. "Thanks for the card." The card. Another article of faith. A note about why Bruce Springsteen mattered to a kid from Luttrell, Tennessee who was the slowest running back in the history of Gibbs High School. It was a note that spoke volumes about the power of music to transform the unseen -- and also to validate the power of the connection the makers' of music have to the power of their music being recognized as it reflected their life and so many other's in the process.. The note was 4 years old. The power of its "what those songs mean" message held for a man who's beyond a legend. The power of "what those songs mean" held for everyone in the room, everyone who'd ever believed in a "Thunder Road" or "Mary Queen of Arkansas" or "Sandy" -- and Madame Marie, "Cadillac Ranch"es, floating up into "The Rising." At one point, I look over, and Ali Berlow is crying. She a grown woman of the world, an inhabiter of Africa, a windsurfer in Tobago, a mother of two, a lover of a font maker, a friend, a cook and a nurturer to a changing coterie of strays and fascinating fellow travelers of the world Ali Berlow is lovely -- falling somewhere between Emmylou Harris and Kim Bassinger, and she can teach you to taste things in a fleshy, juicy plum you never imagined existed. She is a pool of unruffled water, depths barely suggested from the surface, yet willing to whoop and dance in front of whomever might watch should the spirit rise. Ali Berlow is a woman so many wish to be. And she is a woman they hardly know. What simmers beyond the obvious is where her treasure truly lies. How many miss it, caught in the dazzle of that which is easily seen? And so Ali Berlow runs off for moments with the circus -- trapeze flyers, true believers, hungry hearts and lion tamers who beckon come on, hungry for the tranquility and the mothering she sows without even knowing, drinking up the thrills they take for granted every day. It's an even trade, this. But also a trade that makes each more. Not just more, so much more. More alive, more vital, more vibrant, more aware of everything around the other. It is more than a halo -- or an aura that is "so purple." It is a truth that makes you see how precious every moment is, every person, every look or smile or tear. It is the reason Ronnie Dunn, too successful for his own good, can find the kick inside and the exuberance of putting it down, pushing a sun-parched blue highway as hard as it can go with the Allman Brothers' Live At the Filmore East set on stun. It is yowling along with the abandon of being 14 and your parents not knowing you've got the car, the liberation of the speed and the sound and the communion of two voices -- one perfectly pitched, powerfully landing square on each note, inflection, intention there, the other person's slightly bent, just missing it by "this much," yet bringing so much heart to the table that accuracy doesn't matter. Ronnie Dunn, preternaturally cool, inscrutable behind those streamlined dark glasses, letting go of the "Ronnie Dunn," descending into the unfettered rapture of songs and moments and an exhilarated uncalibrated soul slung wide across the moment. He's come to Santa Fe to dissect hard truths for a tv camera -- the polemics and dichotomies of growing up in a church-anchored family driven by a truck-drivin', wild-cattin', honky tonk squalorin' father. Ronnie Dunn, who will shoot impossibly high end tequila with the mystical Western artist Bill Worrell at the 5 star Tudor Adobe hotel La Posada, eat eggs at a diner downtown where he knows every waitresses' name, visit the self-portrait of pioneering renegade Indian artist TC Cannon -- cast in blazing indigo and tangerine and lemon and crimson -- he now owns, and can't even believe his luck. Ronnie Dunn is the intersection of contradiction, a man who lives high and lives low with equal appreciation, and that is what makes his art stick. For whether you were a part of the strip mall honky tonk revolution -- with its loud, primary-color block-cut cowboy shirts and herky jerky line dancing -- or maybe didn't scan except as the dudes with attitude and cowboy hats on the Corn Flakes box all those years ago, Brooks & Dunn have been the sterno on the hotplate of country music's fast-forward evolution. Big guitars, bold sonics, crashing cymbals, throbbing bass -- they took everything rock & roll and brought it straight to the behind-chicken-wire beer joints where the jukeboxes bled neon for a hybrid that blew it up. But for all the propulsive throbbage of classic hillbilly music -- figure Waylon Jennings set to 11 with a back of Johnny Cash's thrompier moments -- it was about what Brooks & Dunn meant to the working people. Maybe not as eloquent as Springsteen, but every bit the rallying cry for hard work, American made domestic shoulder-down, sweat-soaked and bliss-within-it-all reality-based programming. Their 3 chord, a cloud of dust and the truth performances were a lot about taking the corner on two wheels, extensions of the F-or-fight club that's Hell on weekend nights, but also true believers in the power of one's own hands getting it done, taking care of one's family and bringing it all back home when the rubber meets the road. It's when you get to "Red Dirt Road," the last song the two both put their names on, that the higher elevations come together. It's the truth about what goes on in the flyover, the places where "I drank my first beer/ It's where I found Jesus/ It's where I wrecked my first car/ I tore it all to pieces" -- and it's also the place that couldn't be jettisoned fast enough only in a perfect siren's song of revenge drew the singer back with even deeper truths than that first motherlode of life, love and lessons. "Red Dirt Road" has a happy ending. The singer gets the girl he never should have lost in the first place. But he also comes to realize that salvation isn't "just for high achievers," a fact that means happiness is found along the way -- like the flowers that grow through the cracks in the sidewalk. Not something that'll go for hothouse prices, but is even lovelier for the circumstances that they bloomed through. That's the thing about these true people truths: they work where they're realized. There is nothing fancy about arrival or awareness or delivery; it happens when and where it does, and you can't be the same after. It's the reality of not being able to not know once you know. Look at Springsteen. All these years later, still showing us the things most people miss; and in those shared visions, overlooked in the blur of getting by, we find out that what makes us similar, special, precious is not just attainable, it just is. And in those visions, seconds, connections, all the futility, invisibility that we feel fades away. In being a number, we become part of the tide of life. Invisible, yet seen by the larger frame condition. Indeed, listening to the Sacred Heart of the Stone Pony strumming that acoustic guitar with a resonance so grand it fills up the University of Pittsburgh's Events Center, it's the things that go unseen that become larger than life. The truth, though, that saves comes at the very end. After performing "Homestead" with the Iron City's troubadour rocker Joe Grushecky, Bruce dug back into the tautly brooding Darkness on the Edge of Town portfolio for "The Promised Land," a song that puts the power of a bankrupt American dream into the manifest destiny of the man witnessing it. "Gonna be a twister to blow everything down/ Ain't got the faith to stand it's own ground," he wails. The anti-hero of "The Promised Land" sees how bereft our way of life has become; recognizes it's barely scraps and getting by for so many factory-men and 9-to-5 women; sees the diminishing rewards for hard work, blue collar values, believing in the promise inherent to this nation. Even as he sees it, though, he's not going to give in. He won't accept what they're selling as the status quo. It is one of those John Steinbeck stark American awakenings. When the song's object raises his fist vocally to declare, "I'm no boy, no I'm a man/ And I believe in the promised land," it is a profound coming of age. Not just for one young man in transition, but for a way of life that plants its truth in the ground -- and is willing to walk the walk of mattering. Because until we recognize and profess our own value, how can we expect anyone else to see it, or more importantly, treat it with the respect we ourselves have not imbued it with? That is the beauty and the brutality of the unseen. It exists beyond cognizance, every bit as precious and valuable, but it isn't worth anything at all, because no one even knows it's there. No, when we are willing to stand up and be counted -- not in insurrection, though that certainly is a truth that holds, but in celebration of all that we are -- we become that which matters. It is in seeing, recognizing, accepting the deepest grace, the proudest reality of our humanity, that our situation no longer defines us. No, we're not just a man, we're golden, we're light, we're everything good and weak and proud and profane about the human condition. In that moment, in that commitment to who we are and the greater commonality of the human truth, where we are is where we need to be. The promised land isn't just where we're standing or trying to get to, it's a state of arrival that is dignity in the downlow, heaven in the here and now and the deliverance of knowing where and what we are is enough -- and enough is more than plenty.
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Open Rag Top: “Reno Bound”, Keith Knudsen

The e-mail was just THERE. With his name in the subject line. Figured it was a new e-mail address or phone number, being passed on by a mutual friend. Passing on was definitely the subject -- but not contact information, unless "care of his eternal reward" was the return address. My dear friend -- and mostly long lost companion -- Keith Knudsen had died of pneumonia at 56. Keith Knudsen, the wiry spider monkey drummer from the Doobie Brothers who propelled "Taking It To The Streets" and "China Grove," left the Doobies Farewell Tour and started a country rock demi-supergroup called Southern Pacific with fellow Doobie John McFee, Creedence Clearwater Revivalist Stu Cook and a hot-as-asphalt singer named Tim Goodman. When Elvis/Emmylou Harris veteran Glenn D Hardin bowed out, they brought in a young turk keyboard player named Kurt Howell -- and they took to the road with a vengeance. Somewhere in the transition, when the hype was boiling and the music was settling, they came to Fan Fair. Big buzz -- the big rock stars. And somehow they ended up with a baby girl rock critic with stars in her eyes, for a dinner at this seafood buffet that reeked of wharf, looked of faded and failing antebellum mansion and hosted major tables. And so it was, this tiny girl made friends -- with the rock stars. The very thing Lester Bangs warns William Miller about in Cameron Crowe's not-so-veiled autobiography "Almost Famous." They were -- all 5 -- smart, urbane, deeply witty. And they could connect both on the surface and deep. It was a magical introduction into one of those bands that every kid I knew growing up adored. Neil Young would be daunting, a measured, pay-attention affair. But Keith Knudsen and his friends, they were far more come-on-down-and-hang -- and they probably removed any sense of gap for my future dealings with other such celestial beings. Over the next three, four years, it seemed, Southern Pacific dotted my life. And as riotous as the times spent were, there were also a great many deeply human moments. Because that was the line Keith Knudsen walked: see the humor, don't miss the grace, share what you've learned, open your heart. From Fan Fair, where everyone clamored for the attention (Doobies! Creedence!) and I watched from the outer banks -- ever so often being beckoned in, the assault on America began. They played anywhere that had a stage, often traveling in vans. These were not superstar premadonnas, but guys who wanted to play -- often, long, hard. They got the joy of the trajectory of a set that went well and they saw the humor in everything that happened along the way. Sitting here dazed, unable to take it in really, the memories melt into one giant tangle. The Labor Day show at Miami Metrozoo, where I convinced the talent buyer to pay them the then-princely sum of $15,000 which helped underwrite the rest of their fall tour, and having far too much coffee at brunch before -- at a time when coffee was something I rarely imbibed -- only to have John McFee walk away from me on the field in front of the stage, muttering, "I can barely understand you when you're not like this, you talk so fast. I can't make out a word you're saying." Telling Knudsen the story backstage moments later, sure I'd scotched it forever, he just laughed and hugged me. Offering the only thing that came to mind, "John's pretty mellow. You're lucky you didn't blow a circuit on him." Or the night -- early on -- in the Chinese restaurant in West Palm Beach, where in the interest of the truth, I had to come clean. "Uhm, uh, I need to tell you guys something," sputtered out like the true confessions of the ever faithless. "I, uhm, I kinda always thought the Doobies were, uh, boring - and when I went to see you guys in the 8th grade, I fell - ah - asleep." I am beading with cold sweat. I am sure this is the end of the line. But I had to tell the truth. I couldn't betray and pretend I was like all the other reverent people who WORSHIPPED their band. They all sat staring at me -- and then the salt-and-pepper-haired drummer just busts out laughing, John McFee right behind him. "You FELL ASLEEP?!" Knudsen said, and he just laughed harder. "THAT'S AWESOME." That was Keith. Quick to see the humor in it all. Quick to make you feel better about whatever felt wrong. And very generous with the moments -- they all were -- calling before getting to town to check about dinner or drinks or coming to the show. Just because they liked you. Just because they were generous with their experience. And so it was, I found myself sitting on countless bars, cold beer or more likely Coca Cola pressed between my thighs, watching the way music -- especially country music that corners like a Mazaratti on a hairpin at 90 -- can be the embodiment of athleticism. Digging in, pressing against each other note-for-note, surging and receding, bring it all to a boil, hitting that PEAK, then winding it down slowly. They never really had meaningful hits, but they sure knew how to pick 'em. Springsteen's "Pink Cadillac" long before the Pointer Sisters, Rodney Crowell's so early Emmylou cut "Bluebird Wine," an insanely intoxicating street corner doo-wop "I Fall To Pieces" with everyone around a single mic fingerpopping and an incendiary take on Tom Petty's "Thing About You," which featured no less than Emmylou Harris slicing through that steely rural rocked-up track. That was, in fact, the thing about these boys. When they got asked to do the first Farm Aid, the big mondo, all the hype, choppers-in-the-air, rock-meets-country tour de force event; no one had asked Emmylou Harris, still then, now and always the reigning queen of ethereal country'n'honky tonk. It was flat wrong to them -- how can you leave the prettiest, nicest girl in school home on the night of the prom -- so she came as their guest to sing that duet. And it flat rocked. Emmylou, straw cowgirl hat, pink boots, looking too beautiful for words, just shredded that bad boy. Even in the bad paneling double wide trailer that you got into 45 minutes before and 30 minutes after your performance, she just took the paint off -- voice entangled with Tim Goodman's leathery male want. I know. Because once again, the girl version of William Miller -- who had no less than Neil Young teach her to cover the big stuff with the admonition, "Holly, it's easy. You book a ticket, you rent a car, you check into a hotel" when I protested I didn't quite know HOW I could cover Farm Aid -- couldn't stand the thought of NOT being where the action was. And like kids who couldn't stand to hear the puppy cry as they pulled out of the driveway, Southern Pacific put me on their pass list for that one day, making me Katy Knudsen, Keith's incredibly vivacious wife. And so as their guest, I wandered from bus to catering to doublewide to University of Iowa Stadium to press tent. Going where I pleased in a pair of hot pink child's size 14 corduroys, wide-eyed and delighted by it all, and more than likely delighting the very people who made it possible. That was the thing about Southern Pacific, and especially Keith. They believed in the possibility of dreams, the wonder of the moment, the power of the music. So many nights after gigs were spent in just those very rooms of thought -- considering the passion and the glimmer and the way things could work if you'd let them. And they never believed they were entitled. Whether it was Country Song Round-Up, the longest running fanzine now defunct, or The Miami Herald, they treated my assignments with equal dignity and respect. And they were generous with the moments when we weren't on the record as fodder for the things I'd write later, in other places, for reasons not quite connected to whatever place we'd been or what they might be doing. Though some things, perhaps the things that really gave me insight into wisdom and humanity and compassion, never needed to be put Off The Record. The long night in a dark Bennigans cocktail lounge where Knudsen explained to me about heroin addiction, how it feels, what it does, what it takes to let go -- and how climbing out impacts you. The Doobies Reunion in 1986 for the Viet Nam vets, where again Knudsen offered such deeply personal experiences of his peers in that conflict that as a child for whom Viet Nam was fuzzy black and white images on the tv during dinner, it all came distinctly into focus. The moment we shared were all color, all research, all fine. You knew where the line was without them drawing it. It was a gift. It was kindness, decency, generosity -- and faith. In a kid finding her way for some very big publications, where the damage could have been exponential. Even the night there'd been a particularly flat show. Sharing a bill with Holly Dunn at the Celebrity Theatre in Anaheim, I'd been sent to review it for The Los Angeles Times. There was no way around how lackluster and lacking in spark it had been. And I felt so conflicted about what I was going to write -- not wanting to betray my friends, knowing I had as my critical obligation to tell the truth. Presenting myself at the stage door -- with no pass (I was working, so I'd not cross that line to need my laminate) -- I found someone from the crew, and asked them to send someone back out to get me. Entering the dressing room with the look of utter sorrow that precedes the kind of news this morning brought me, I couldn't make eye-contact. Finally I got it out, "That wasn't a -- uhm -- very good show." No one responded. "And I am reviewing for the The Los Angeles Times tonight." Still no word, no move, no nothing. "I am so sorry, because I have to write what I saw, and it wasn't what you do best." Quietly, Keith Knudsen just said, "We know. Don't worry about it." It was the moment where the girl reporter came of age. If writing about rock stars and hillbilly singers and songwriters and poets and such had always been a thrill ride through a world that was my rollercoaster, my emotional calibration, my star to steer by, this hurt. I was duty bound. I had no recourse -- and it just plain hurt. By telling me what he did, Keith Knudsen gave me the greatest gift anyone who dances with the media can bestow: he gave me the gift of grace. There was no guilt, no begging, no implication of betraying the friendship -- just the stoic sense that my responsibility was to something larger and needed to be respected. I sat in my car and cried. Then I went to the Sunflower Avenue office and wrote the review that talked about how they let down their ability. No one ever said a word about it. Not me. Not them. Not him. At a New Music Seminar panel on rock criticism in 1988, a writer who played a role in getting me fired from my only staff job as a rock critic took a swing from the floor. "At what point are you too close to the act?" he said looking straight at me. "At what point, can conflict of interest be inevitable?" Dave Marsh took the first pass, after hearing my whispered backstory when I'd seen the guy moving towards the mic. What Dave Marsh didn't know was Southern Pacific knew that I was having trouble with this writer -- that my path at the paper was rocky because he was casting dispersions. In their laugh in the face of adversity way, when they found themselves in a van on the way to an all-day country show with the both of us, Knudsen and McFee decided to play. "Holly, did you get that check we sent you?" said McFee. "Yeah, we're sorry last month's didn't clear," added Knudsen. When I had my meltdown at the venue, Keith again offered a clear voice of reason. "If he thinks that, after what we did, he should feel stupid. Come on, Holly, the truth is obvious as are lies if you put them in the light." And so this guy was there to feel vindicated or justified or just wanting to watch me squirm -- knowing what he was saying to me, while directing it to a panel of The Boston Phoenix's Milo Miles, The Village Voice's Robert Christgau, noted black critic Nelson George, Rolling Stone's Anthony Decurtis. But it was Entertainment Weekly's then music editor Greg Sandow, who'd recently left The Los Angeles Herald-Examiner who gave me the rest of the clarity Knudsen & Co couldn't. Looking at the writer as if he'd missed the point, he posed his own question: "How can you ever really write about something from a place of insight and understanding if you never spend any time with them? How can you do more than rehash what's been said? I think your job as a reporter is to get close, but be aware of your objectivity. If you can't do that, you really shouldn't be doing this." When the band broke up -- as bands do when it's just not coming together after 6, 7 years in the field, everybody scattered. Knudsen and McFee ended up back in the Doobies, playing all those songs that tattooed the airwaves when I was an ironing board little girl golfer going to prep school dances and wondering what the life was like beyond the practice range. I'd had several near misses looking for my friend. We'd spoke on the phone. I'd almost flown in for a show in Sarasota, that a friend from high school did get to -- and Keith was incredibly sweet to this total stranger who'd shared 18 months of my life. And that's just the way that he was. So once again, I'm learning lessons, sitting somewhere with tears on my face 'cause of my dear friend who played those drums like a barn door slamming in a full-tilt storm. Life is precious. It sparkles. It is an opportunity to sow depth and reason and meaning amongst the laughter and the tears. You can love the music, feel the rush of it -- and you can know you're in an amazing place. All you have to do is love people with all your heart, whether they're here or not, remember the lessons they taught you and celebrate the moments you shared. Perhaps Keith Knudsen never knew what he meant to me, one more kid they were being nice to. But something tells he probably did -- and that may be the greatest lesson of them all.
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Ghost of the Midway

When you walk the line, sometimes it's hard to keep the faith. While there's nothing harder sometimes than fidelity to another person, there's the even more onerous matter of fidelity to oneself. In that integrity of the soul thing, there may be no more dangerous line to walk than the one between cynicism and innocence -- maintaining that tricky balance high above the unaware human condition of knowing how it is while clinging to the sparkle and the aw shucks. If you fall from the precipice, topple off that narrow wire, the hard knowledge of the way it works will plunge a dagger straight into the heart of wonder -- leaving it cold, rigor mortised, legs akimbo in the air on the side of what ought not to be. Riding the double ribbons of tar that is life on the buses, girl companion to the pirates and the gypsies and the dreamers and cowboy singers, your life becomes a series of towns where you are painfully aware of real life as lived by folks who work hard for their money. People come for the music, for the moment where they can share a communion with the makers of song and feel for a bit a little transformed. There's a connection to someone golden, someone who sings a song about life or love or pain that reflects how they feel -- and if that person can feel that way, too, then they're not so alone, so isolated from the human condition; they're elevated by the overlap with one of the shiny people. And that feels good. Comforting. Reassuring. Better. Those people go back to their lives, burnished by the recognition of themselves in someone they think is a star. They have the gentle solace of real life. And when you make the music, you also often have the time to make a life to hold you when you're not living the dream. It's those of us who stowaway in the hold of these ships who get caught in the jaws of the midnight ride, trying to balance the line: highwire chasing and feeling the music and servicing the dream. Because when everybody goes home to what they have, you merely roll over in the cold burned out ashes of what just happened -- like the Little Matchgirl striking her matches to maintain the vision of the Blessed Virgin -- only to realize that the husk is all that holds you. Those are the moments where the faith can get tricky; the realization that the stakes are high and the price you pay may be even higher. And so it was that the bus rolled into Marietta, Georgia for the North Georgia Fair. Hard packed dirt rolling away from where we parked, a double wide trailer the only air conditioned refuge beyond the rolling dorm that was this act's home on the road. Beyond the folding chairs and outlying bleachers that were set-up under a sprawling roof -- a shelter for several thousand no doubt -- the food stands, the rides and the wash of humanity lost in their Saturday afternoon rhythms lay. It is easy to forget that, to miss the way things like this -- things that're faded, even a little tacky -- are a touchpoint for many. You stay huddled with your band of merry men, laughing about things these people will never know or see or understand, insulated from real life with the smug illusions of someone who's been removed from the how it is. You just show no interest and roll over Or you can dive in. It had been a rough night. A matter of an opinion known by many, voiced by me, drawn and quartered by another. All with a smile and laughter and intellectual deconstruction… But enough tension pulled the air that somehow an escape for three days of swimming pools, chocolate cake, coconut oil, shiny haired women talking about art and commerce and politics and shoes was being jettisoned in the name "where do we go from here?" Pulled away from what was supposed to be relaxation to look at the pieces of somebody's dream. To take them down, wipe them off, turn the over, think about what they really mean with another in the name of making them be everything they can. It is focused work, very exacting to do it right… Exhausting really, with a conversation lasting til 6 in the morning, the streaks of sun threatening to pull the night from the sky. Resuscitated a few hours later in the name of getting out of the way of a voice that is truth and real life and bigger want and deeper commitments, not to mention a solid witness to how it is, the not-shiny, the ties that bind and the ways of the world. I needed a break. And in their zeal to take care of me, my bags had gone missing. Later chiding. "The lengths some people will go to to keep me from running off…" They just forgot: there's nowhere I won't go barefoot. So pants legs rolled, eyes cast down to get the feel for the packed earth that was in places muddy from what I didn't want to think about, I started picking my footing and making my way into the flow of humanity. The families spending an afternoon, the baby adolescents somewhere safe enough their parents figured they could have a little freedom and not be in too much danger, the food wagons, the games for cheap prizes, the gravity-defying rides that leave the weakest stomached ones nauseous, the rest exhilarated from goosing their own adrenalin levels. Later still, post-cat-bath in a dress with pink elephants on it, wandering in search of a merry-go-round for big kids, it is one big skip and hop and laugh. These are people who are more than happy with making this their afternoon. People who will go to church tomorrow, hate their job on Monday, try to find ways to be happy in between -- tugged between the selfish side of what they want and the love they get from what they have. Some win that tug of war, others get torn apart by it, but right now, they're in the moment of delicious escape between the cotton candy and the bumper cars where all that matters is now. Some will come for the country music. To hear the songs of love and life, listen to what the singer has to say. They want to exult in emotions of a life more examined than their own, checking the gate and surfing the insight that lets them comprehend their own tides and currents which lift them up and pull them down without ever being more considered than sad or glad or mad. And this singer is good. Abandoned. Adopted. Addicted. Jailed. Redeemed. Grateful. Thrilled. A captive of the human heart, a believer and bleeder for love. He offers them everything that they'd like their life to be… and the ones who show up, breath held, believing like you can only believe in another person, never yourself - especially someone who seems to be touched with magic. It worked, by the way. The show. The people got what they wanted. They saw themselves not only in someone who glows, but found recognition of things they feel without thinking, hopes they carry without even knowing, struggles they engage in never understanding why -- just that they (amongst the most evolved ones, anyway) were raised that way. After the show, the singer signs. It's his chance to see and touch and listen to the people who've seen themselves in him. He wants to look into their eyes and see the relief, the elevation, whatever else they got -- and to remember how much the same everybody is as his star rises. You can watch the arms flung around the next big thing, the bigger smiles when being seen by the one who sang the songs, the flash of cameras, the flourish of the Sharpie marker making its mark on something brought along. You can try to remember that in what could be an assembly line of transformation, each person's moment is uniquely their own -- but that the singer will hear most of what's said as many times as there are people, and get emotional vertigo or even worse, go numb to it. Knowing that, it's usually a good time to creep away. Get your shower, your book, in your bunk and slip into Morpheus' arms long before the movement even begins. Or you can consider your options. Options, baby, options are what it's about. It had been so long since I'd been on a midway at night. You could hear the pumped in music on the bad speakers, the laughter and squeals of people on the rides, see the winking neon stripes against what was a clear sky. Adventurer that I am, I wanted to see the other side of the fair: after the darkness falls. By now, I had shoes -- less of a bad country music cliché for sure, but still with a heart that's open as wide as I can keep it, ready to see this thing for the fullness of the experience. Beyond the makeshift arena, the neon rises up -- blinking in emerald green, lemon chiffon yellow, fire engine red, tangerine, even some perfectly pink poodle fuchsia, making this a whirl of plugged in Technicolor set against the vastness of the night. And it turns on and off, rises and falls, moves with the motion of the rides. Even the snack stands and the carny games take on a different glow -- one that offers some veneer of glamour, of true love or big hope. You look for a moment upon this walk across the hard packed dirt and what before had been merely benign American tradition now glistens with the quick beam of immaculate seduction. This is the intersection of want-to and ought-not… the place where hormones are safe to frolic, fantasies indulged, moments merged without any sense of the seedy. Until you look closer… For the carnys, who looked mostly sad and tired during the day, take on a waft of danger at night. The backdrop of past-sunfall offers just the teeniest bit of sinister to transform their looking at you from hunger for your money to an invitation to things prurient, things you shouldn't want to know -- fires in oil drums, passing a bottle, deeds behind semis that no one believes. These are people who live lives beyond the limit, freed from the rules by the rootlessness of their lives, delivered from the mundanery by the ease of their exit and released from obligation by the very nature of their lives. The carnys. They will be gone. They know it. You know it. It is a void that speaks volumes. So the young boys and girls -- teenagers beginning to explore the blossoming of their deeper feelings, crossing a bridge from naive child to unfurling adulthood -- move a little closer. The arm around the shoulder, the hand held in hand is as much Hansel and Gretel in the forest as it is player on the prowl. What better way to push the sexes together than a harmless menace that would never cross that line -- let alone walk the line. For places like this have lynching mobs as well as teenagers coming into their own. Young people dying to believe, to feel those throbbing things, the rush of the pulse when the pretty girl smiles at them, the moistening below from the proximity of THAT boy. Not that the stakes aren't high, that everyone gets a happy ending at the fair. There are the ones who shall be ignored, not noticed, as alone when they leave as when they arrive; maybe even moreso. Or the ones who get forsaken for something better… But it's worth the risk. It -- like the games of skee ball and shooting out the target -- offers something ephemeral, but in the moment. Indeed, in the moment, heck, for that moment is tantamount to winning the biggest prize of one's life. For that first moment of connection, when the thrill surges through you like 40,000 watts of pure current, you will never feel more alive. Ever. When the eyes close, the lips meet, maybe even part. That first tentative push of a tongue that sends you back, makes you jump, then realizing that rush is delicious, leaning forward for more. A needle threaded with the notion of l-u-v, a place where you can run headlong into the abyss, safe in the knowledge that the other person is feeling it too. One of the last moments of parity and sweetness, before the ground acquisition games begin… the they-want, we-shall-not-surrender turf war of the little girl's body and the burgeoning teenage boy's libido. Though the days of good girl definitions are in many quarters gone. The erosion of the sanctification of moving through the phases of discovery swept away on a tidal wave of sexualized marketing, Britney Spears' navel and a devaluing of a tongue on the clavicle or a hand on the small of the back that truly is the secret handshake that affords access to deeper gardens of pleasure and response. Tromping amongst the laughing people, as the streaks of buzzing colors whirl and swirl and blur around me, eyes open to the possibilities, the innocence is more blinding than the flashing lights. Here for a night, people either check their knowing or else it's the last stop before cashing out in the name of a nameless kinda nihilism that steals the joy and leaves the empty morning after on the nightstand faster than the actual reason for being there. A faded romantic with a heart that's a little worn around the edges, I still believe in the power of wonder. So I go looking for first kisses. It can't be hard to find in this place… and I set my bright eyes searching right by the pony rides -- junior Black Beauties eating moldy hay while waiting for their turn to be hitched to a lazy susan of little kid delight -- under the shadow of some of the more towering rides.. Just above me, the ferris wheel rises into the night. Lifts up, with the trajectory of promise and comes over with the certainty of the night falling at one's feet. Gently descends from a peak that shows these riders everything that the night, the fair, this town holds. Only to rise again. It's a metaphor for life, if you'll see it as such. Or else, it's a moment near the top where you are as alone as you'll ever be, as pure as you can be in the life you've chosen. You can lean over and find a face, pointed to your's, waiting -- and have that moment of lips upon lips, searching for something in the other person, feeling the current of emotional recognition, the thrill of they-like-me-back. You can cap it with reaching for the hand beside your's and squeezing, holding onto innocence and promise and things beyond words. Or you can be consumed in the beaming wonder of a face consumed by the possibilities of the world beneath them. To see one's place in the world from up above can create a whole different kind of fire -- one most moths hurl themselves at. In that moment, the gazer upon the viewer of potential can only softly, gently brush their lips across the cheek of the one seated next to them -- taste the velvet of young skin and notice the pooling of energy in their own skin. If their fellow rider is in the moment, they may or may not wake from their reverie. But either way, the communion is the same. For dreamers and drivers can't help themselves… Show them a window and they have to jump through it, a horizon and they'll need to cross it. The comfort comes from knowing you are the one who showed them the possibilities. Standing by a low, gnarled tree, arms folded, it's a slow night on the Ferris wheel. Only five first kisses registered, three of the tentative lip-to-lip kind that you hope will erupt into the full-on brushfires that are young love seeking to bring about a transformation that can only come in the hands of another. There was one cheek kiss that was rewarded with a turn and wider eyes and the kind of merger that says this is something deeper even than a crush or a phase that won't outlast the coming frost of early fall. And one where the boy will no doubt chase the night, already moving beyond the fingers of the girl who'd spent the whole summer waiting for this moment only to realize that her kiss on his cheek would be all there was that would have any there there. A brave girl, tucking her hair behind her ears as they stood there on the platform after. Disoriented some, not sure what it all meant -- except that empty place inside would remain so. Around her, the carnys barked their games of chance, the ponies slowly plodded around that well-worn circle, the elephant ears were boiled in fat and behind the makeshift arena, a bus idled. Smiling, I remembered the warm breath of a young boy in my ear. I thought about a moist hand barely holding mine the summer I was 13. The way slow dancing was far more intimate than any number of pleasures experienced as an adult woman. The looking into the sky and seeing the stars and having dreams that had nothing to do with the other person's, except the ferocity with which we held them. Those are the moments that ground us when the night gets cold. Turning away from the platform, I laugh. The promise still holds. The dream remains. You just start to know what you know -- and that takes the wonder in its purest forms. But as long as you want to believe in the moment of sparkle, as long as you're willing to see it as something that offers much softness and gentleness and remain devoted to that, the wonder transforms. Just as those young people are getting their first taste of the thrill of connection and finding themselves craving more, transformed by their want, so are those of us who know better transformed when we recognize the sweetness of innocent pleasure. Knowing too much is worse than knowing nothing at all. Under the tin roof, the country singer is still smiling, still signing, still wrapping his arms around those fans. And they're walking away, chattering happily about how this one's real, this one's not just a good singer, but a good friend. Those folks came to believe, too, and they came to believe in someone who believes in them. In life, there are things that can't be faked. Knowing the difference between paste and the real is tricky business. Except in Marietta, Georgia, deep in the heart of Saturday night. There all it takes is an open heart, a big love for all that is before you and the willingness to not drown in one's sense of what matters… It is a lesson more valuable than all the trinkets and oversized bears of the midway. It is a song and a moment and a midnight ride home… All you have to do is remember.
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A Perfect Day, A More Perfect Night

It's not even 7:30 in the morning, and the Buddy List and AOL Instant Messenger Traffic is already bling-blinging like J-Lo's parting gifts from P-Diddy. Everyone online already knows that "I Just Wanna Be Mad" -- the first single from Terri Clark's just released Pain To Kill is Top 5, making her the only woman in Billboard's Country Singles Top 10 -- but this is the wake-up where we find out how first week sales of the album hailed by The Miami Herald as "her best work yet" and The Minneapolis Star-Tribune as "a triumphant return to form" fared. Like some small town party-line, everyone's asking everyone every few minutes. At home, Terri Clark is contemplating her place in an increasingly Adult Contemporary/Pop marketplace where glamour is far more important than fiddles and anorexia is a better calling card than songs that speak to the gut of working people. And me, I'm sitting at my computer -- knowing the hours invested, hating that it always comes down to this. Always comes down to how does it open, is the single a hit, how do they look. When you live in the star-making machinery that Joni Mitchell so righteously wrote, impaled and sang about, you can often get crushed between the gears. You can give it your heart, work 'round the clock, pull every favor -- and then something unforeseen falls out of the sky, rendering all that exertion moot. So you sit, and you wait, and you hope, and you dread. You deny, fantasize, get real and wait some more. And then the one you've been waiting for: 33,487 - she's #5. Terri Clark, a girl some people felt had checked out with her introspective singer/songwriter project, was back with her biggest opening week position yet. Nestled between the king of rock & roll Elvis Presley and multi-platinum blond Faith Hill. Weighing in between two heavyweights the week following both the People's Choice Awards (where Faith won big) and the American Music Awards (where husband McGraw did even better), with no TV time, just strong connection and fly-over people to carry her. Here was a hard country girl, built like -- as one New Yorker so aptly put it -- "a real wo-man," singing songs that were almost defiantly country, bulked up yet, but not trying to pass for lite rock or a power ballad. Everyone was IMing Terri, telling her to IM her manager. He couldn't IM her, because her privacy filter was intercepting him… and he couldn't get through on her phone, because she had her mother on waiting for the news. And finally, she IMed him. She heard. She knew. She reacted. "I'm going to faint…" she typed. "No, I'm going to throw up." But a #5 debut… especially for a girl the naysayers in a tough industry in a fallow time would argue was about counted out… was an amazing thing! Not quite a miracle like the sightings of the Blessed Virgin or a blind man regaining sight, but something that restores one's faith in the public's willingness to buy country music. Honest to gawd real bone-deep country, that twangs and has fiddles and steel guitars. The stuff about real life, how it is, how it isn't -- not it ought to be -- like some vein let open with a bit of rusty barbed wire, torn jagged and gushing crimson and pain. There was a shrill sound on the other end of the phone. She was giddy, laughing, crying -- all at once -- flooded with every emotion that has anything to do with joy, relief, gratitude. This was the kind of moment artists who're walking the line between in the game and over hold their breath for, the arrival knocking them down from the depravation of denial, the wishful thinking smothered for fear of the jinx. My fingers just kept clicking over the keyboard -- writing the press release, re-writing sections, moving copy around. Looking for quotes. Looking for just the right words to make people who hadn't heard this music understand why it mattered, why this record was important, what this record said about a woman on the verge, words that weren't mine - but some impartial bystanders. And boy, were they there - People ("a forceful declaration of independence"), USA Today ("an unrepentant honky tonker), The New York Post ("an earthy woman who sings about living life to the max"), The Dallas Morning News ("waves the banner for real women everywhere") and The Washington Post ("a straight shooting lonely heart" and "a tough talking cowgirl keeping it real") - loud, proud and openly defiant to conventional 6-1-5 business. Just that morning Clark's face and guitars had appeared on the opening page of USA Today's web site… the cyber version of a profile hailing the 3-time fan voted Canadian Country Music Association's Entertainer of the Year as "the anti-diva." It's some kind of cosmic, karmic alignment when it all goes right: the single is #5, the album is #5 and there's a feature in USA Today and a major review in The Washington Post. ALL the same day…It just doesn't happen like that. We're not even close to open, here at that small freakishly boutique company I run -- and it's already beyond whatever one dares dream for an act trying to punch their way back to the table. After all, Joe's Garage is a place where it's about the music and the story and the reasons for believing. Even with the big clients, there's gotta be a reason to believe -- or there's no reason to be here. And even with all that, there are no guarantees, so you chew your nails, push your cuticles back too hard, scratch your nose and pull your hair… Then sometimes, it works. You don't even wanna believe it's the result of a bunch of people all on the same page, working hard - executing as they're supposed to. It would confound everything that is daily living. Yet… or And so… And there it is. And there it was, too, in USA Today. Considering the course this woman had taken -- inside herself with a fiercely introspective project called Fearless that was the polemic of her rowdy no shame, no gain, you can't get me down cowgrrrrrl-power charged country that had ignited the airwaves on her three previous efforts -- our nation's newspaper recognized that Pain To Kill wasn't a capitulation, but an expansion on both realities. Without blinking, though surely the result of many sleepless night, Terri Clark wove a seamless cloth of soul-searching words and ass-kicking backbeats. And it's not all about shooting out the lights -- none of us have the stamina for that -- but the notion that even a ballad with a backbone can resonate in deeper places if you'll imbue it with some bravery and some insight. There is hard country on Pain To Kill: keening fiddles that bend into each other and steel guitars that collect the notes into buckets of tears and harmonies that are sweetness stretched taut over regret or dignity. And if Terri Clark can plug in, turn up and burn down a whirlwind "I Wanna Do It All," with the hunger for life that most people would find terrifying, she's also able to walk away from something that's close ("I Just Called To Say Good-Bye") with the rhythm of tires circularly swallowing pavement at daybreak and accept that alone can be the better option ("Not A Bad Thing") with grace and tranquility. Pain To Kill is a big girl record. It examines the issues of being more than 20-something with honesty, compassion for self, dignity for everyone involved. It pushes understanding -- even as it refuses to see oneself as diminished. Flourish, damnit, this record says -- through the pain, the disappointment, the getting screwed over. We're put here to thrive, not survive… and as Auntie Mame proclaimed onstage all those years ago, "Life is a banquet and most of you poor so-and-so's are starving to death." Terri Clark refuses to starve. And she also refuses to secede or recede. Yes, she's been hurt, crippled, reduced to quivering tissue and tears. But she knows that to quit trying, to pull up the draw bridges and refuse to come out and play is to begin dying right here, right now. It's not the ache that's gonna get you, she reasons, but the numbness and emotional atrophy that sets in from removing oneself from the rollercoaster that is life. Terri Clark, fresh from a whirlwind 10 days of nonstop promotional activities to set up Pain To Kill, is on the other line -- a little hoarse, but clearly happy. "I can't believe it. I can't believe it," she intones like some mantra doled out by the Maharishi. She didn't give up and she didn't give in… No, the very tall, very solid tomboy dug in, started trying to graft the two things that mattered to her: lyrics that meant something and the will to rock - and she connected. While this was prom day… The one where the results come out…. Terri Clark didn't get to slow down and enjoy it. Oh, no… She had two soundchecks and interviews and stacks of things to sign, people to call, people to see, heck, laundry to do… But by 6 p.m., when the Mirror -- one of those Nashville restaurants that is more for the bohemian crowd -- started to fill with friends and well-wishers, it was clear this was Terri's day. Everyone in attendance, from the head of A&R to the head of programming at Country Music Television to her producer and some of the many writers, was as happy as the artist before them. Treating to the crowd to a few of the songs that brought everyone to that day and celebration, Terri Clark sat on a tall stool, looked out at the crowd and told the story of playing her first industry function. It was a tribute to Merle Haggard and people like Emmylou Harris were onstage playing, but Sony Tree head Donna Hilley believed in getting up the new writers just signed to the hallowed publishing company -- and so the girl who'd spent two years on a stool at Tootsies found herself before this crowd of who's who. "It was the most nerve-wracking thing in the world," she confessed. "And you know… ten years later, looking out at you, I'm still a nervous wreck. The difference is, now the faces are a lot of my friends." She would play a couple more songs for the Invite Only crowd -- clearly shining with her strong, muscular tenor. But it was towards the end of the brief acoustic performance where the real meaning of the day carried. Wiping tears from her eyes, moved in ways one can't describe, Terri Clark collected herself before a business that's not known for its unequivocal support of the fiscally faltering stars. Smiling through the wet, she made one last point, "When I came to this town, I came with a dream… and all these years later, I still believe in the power of a dream and the passion of a song. That's where it begins and ends - and it's what's brought me here, through everything." As powerful as that was - and it was a rare moment of real clarity in a business of façade -- it paled compared to Terri Clark and her band onstage at the place it all-started for the wet-behind-the-ears-teenager-taking -the-bus-to-the-combat-zone-that-was-Lower-Broadway-in-the-90s Tootsies Orchid Lounge. Tootsies, with its long legend of the people who drank their between Grand Ole Opry sets at the Ryman, the losers and dreamers and songwriters with names like Kristofferson who ran tabs and tales on the kindness of the owner Tootsie Bess. But this night -- with a second snow storm blowing in to cripple Music City -- the legend was all Terri Clark's. The story of a girl who believed in a dream and the power of a song, who let it sustain her when many would've flinched at the dip and gone home. Here was a red-blooded woman in a t-shirt and jeans, taking country's legacy back from the phalanx of glamazons in the name of music, bringing it closer to the root of Waylon and Willie than the mainstream's seen in far too long. As the big fat snowflakes spun 'round in the beams being tossed from klieg lights like so much candy sugar sparkling on the night, Terri Clark was flecked with something else that glittered: sweat. Onstage, burning through the songs her fans -- some of whom had brought sleeping bags and had started camping out at 3 p.m. two days prior in the merciless cold -- had come to use to empower their own lives, Terri Clark knew the ultimate release: the force of a song born down hard on and squeezed for every last drop of emotion. It wasn't just her songs, either, taking that serious beating that comes from a no-nonsense working band -- led by a singer who just wants to be one more muscle working with the group rather than bouncing along on top of the collective. Sitting on a stool alone, she re-visited the covers that supported her in that smoke-thickened room -- the Judds and Reba, Tammy Wynette and Loretta Lynn, George Jones and James Taylor's "Bartender Blues" - and grounded the music that defined her sound, that gave her the kick inside. But it was really about a full-immersion "Stay With Me" that made the kohl-eyed beauty every bit the in-command rogue that Rod Stewart was at his peak. It was the grinding commitment of Sippie Wallace's "Love Me Like A Man" that was decimated with a wink and a promise to be the kind of tire-rotating realization most people won't dare dream of, let alone deliver on. There was even a down-in-the-groove workout out on Rufus' "Tell Me Something Good" that turned up the sticky without ever letting go of the wheel. Terri Clark -- who plays her guitar like she means it, who stands and delivers with no fear, who has only herself and her music to bring -- stood on the back stage at Tootsies and gave and gave and gave. At the end of a long day, of too many blessings to consider without buckling under the weight of the gifts, Terri Clark gave it all away - because that's what she does. As one of the people standing in the shadows, midwifing the dream and supporting the process, it was a more perfect night to an already perfect day. We are the ones always coming up short, not quite enough, seeing what could have rather than exulting in what is -- because the stakes are so high, because the dreams are so critical. In my snow boots and my mittens, under a tent that trapped our body heat to make the outdoors patio a little more palatable, the faces before Terri Clark shone with something akin to rapture. They'd come for a release from the frustrations, the tribulations, the stumbles, trips, knots and clots of real life. Terri Clark understood that. And in that one moment, that one place, we all understood how that feels. Union communion whatever. As Clarence Spalding, her hyperintelligent commando manager said with a smile, "Write this all down. Days like this don't happen very often." He was right, of course, and he didn't even know how deep it goes. Somewhere, there is a honky tonk angel with nicotine-stained teeth, big hair and blue eye shadow reaching for a Pabst and nodding knowingly -- right next to a girl in pink and green winking affirmatively.
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Guy Clark Was Right

It's just before the 4th of July and it's late in the Ritz Carlton bar… The plane from West Palm Beach had been tremendously late, so we were trying to figure out how much we should order in lieu of a real dinner. Atlanta, Georgia on a holiday weekend -- a reunion of girlfriends in the name of Kenny Chesney and a wild 4th of July party back in the 6-1-5. Amid the laughter and chicken tenders and shared ironies, we were drowning in common happiness. It doesn't get any better -- and we knew it. Until I saw that face, framed in ebony window-paning colored hair with the lead framed glasses and the rumpled expensive suit. Kyle Young, executive director of the Country Music Foundation, had wandered into the bar, looking for a nightcap with a friend. Kyle Young, the dashing expatriated Mississipian who'd poured tequila into me one CMJ Convention to kill the sting of being dissed through an artist I adored courtesy of a vindictive old boyfriend. Kyle Young, who was as Hemingway meets Fitzgerald at Sam Shephard's motel as anyone I'd ever encountered. He was introduced, swooned over a bit. Big smiles for the common miles and the moments shared. It was one of those encounters that reminds us folks who live in the wind: our kind is never much further than our fingertips… never beyond the sound of a voice or the wink of an eye. Growing up, my father couldn't change planes without someone asking, "Aren't you… John Gleason?" The same thing happened at golf courses, good restaurants, hopsitals and churches. Never mind the state or time of day -- and I marveled at the depth of my father's acquaintances, intimidated by his breadth of human contact. Until that moment. Dissolving into giggles as Kyle walked away, smirking at the cute intellectual boy who shared a history, albeit one based in brevity. Because that is the beauty of life in the wind. Like my girlfriends Kathie and Binny, two hotties who have no interest in that sort of thing. Give them snacks and Starbucks -- and they're sated. Maybe the occasional walk on the backstage side. And don't forget to back up a truckload of laughter. That's what matters to the arbiter of Palm Beach style and the wonderful muralist who tosses off the most spiritually connected watercolors you've ever seen. Kathie is Cinderella, the one who gets us all together then recedes, who laughs with more joy than should be allowed, smiles with a devilish glee. All blond and shiny and stylish in that Lauren Bacall way. Binny is the Alice in Wonderland with the dark hair swept back, a bunny's face and a breathy soul that bleeds poetry. In their eyes, the world is all it can be -- and while they can't physically transform that which is, they can take you for a ride on the possibilities. They, too, have charm bracelets hung with those who've passed through, who have yet to land. They take in the world, bathe in the here and now -- and believe in the magic of common experience. They are generous women who need nothing and take less, leaving laughter and light in their wake. They are the kind of people we all, or most of us, would like to think we are in our best moments. And if you've got friends like Binny and Kathie, you can be in their presence. But the gift that is comrades and confidantes of the sparkling ray of sunlight variety, the ones who turn your dust ball into a dancing bit of golden ether twirling in their beam, doesn't happen once… It's the kind of thing that falls across one's life like logs in the path, if you're paying attention. Precious cargo that we carry with us -- even when they're nowhere to be found. The kind of friends that don't require physical manifestation to have their footprints make a mark that makes a difference, whether we know it or not. Just as it is for us, so, too, it can be for those we encounter along the way. A sobering truth, one that brings the blood to the cheeks like a rush of cherries in the snow or roses across typing paper. Well into my 30s before I experienced the phenomenon, I was riding in the back of a girlfriend from high school's Lincoln, and she was trying to explain to a client about who I was back then. "Oh, Holly… she had a double life," she explained with all the drama implied. "We'd all be splitting a six pack between eight of us, and she'd be there, then she'd be gone. You wouldn't even realize, until you recognized she'd disappeared -- just gone! into the night, to some bar most likely, with some band. We all wondered about what she was doing out there, leading that other life." REALLY? Me? The quiet geeky (okay, preppy) one who lived in her books and her records? Sure, the golf pros got me into bars when I was 13. And by befriending the local musicians who were delighted to have insight into their music from a sober, seemingly knowledgeable (albeit sawed off) source, my girlhood was spent as countless people's nieces, daughters, next door neighbors…all in the name of a guest list and the threat of my telling the band. But for all the ones for whom I was mystery, there were the ones who understood. Not necessarily girls (or boys) who'd partake of the lost hours with me -- for that was a solitary pursuit -- but the ones who got it. Like the darling Carl Byron, as close to a knight as I ever encountered, so committed to my dreams and my stories that I smile just thinking of him. Or my young girlhood friend Lynn, the one who was thigh-to-thigh with me through all the channels of growing up as a private school girl in Cleveland, Ohio. A sister in plaid skirts and knee highs, seeking to figure it out without so much adult insight. We had all the same teachers, ate all the same tastefree lunches and ran up and down the same field in the name of soccer and track and whatever else they were calling physical education. Far headier, though, were the common bonds that created definition for young lives desparate to be defined. We fell in love with horses at the same time -- whether it was pretending on the playground to be Beauty or Flicka or Secretariat or surrendering to the rhythms of the ride at Red Raider Day Camp. We were carted back and forth to Mrs. Batzer's Dancing School, where all the right single sex school kids mingled in the name of what was meant to eventually be heterosexual orientation -- wearing our white gloves and anklets and bruises from the little boys who couldn't master the box step or jitterbug to save themselves. We shared school dances. We talked about the boys and the girls and the couples and the moments of horror that came from the melting of our reserves. Even more importantly, we shared music. The bond that was rock and roll… especially the Knights In Satan's Service. Those demonic masters of the comic reality and booming backbeat. KISS! The band, not the action. Painted faces, leather cod pieces, platforms that defied nosebleeds, puking blood and breathing fire. If they were beyond Ringling Brothers and they served up hackneyed cliches -- "Cold Gin," "Strutter," "Deuce" -- they understood the ultimate youthcentric fantasy manifesto: "Rock & Roll All Night (Party Every Day)." We were there almost at the beginning, primal troglodyte reality that was knuckle dragging rock and roll. We were there at the Richfield Coliseum, in a loge for the tour where the Cat (Peter Criss) strangled out that one ballad "Beth" to imbue a sense of humanity into the debauchery. And there in the next loge was Graham Button, the boy who made my palms sweat, who ran his hands through my hair slow dancing to the very same song, who should've been more aggressive… but was too lost in the mystery to get much beyond the gentle swaying. We saw it all, Lynn and I. We laughed and lapped it up. Until Lynn's mom married a plastic surgeon and moved to Beverly Hills. Even over the miles, the friendship didn't die. There were letters about the Cramps, bars called the Lingerie and wild nights that could've been cut from the Jodie Foster/Cheri Curie teen angst treatise "Foxes." Though the distance was bigger than two kids -- and the connection eventually faded and failed. Young girls pushing out in their own directions. Finding their way no doubt, thriving and seeking their dreams at a breakneck pace, the speed of seeking one's fate. Never to speak again… but never to lose the mark of innocence and passion strewn across freezing Midwestern nights, where the chilled breath and bright eyes took it all in and owned that which excited them. Friendships like that: the ones that won't die just because current of life dictated distant, different places set the tone for what's to come. Being able to sustain without the physical manifestation lets later intensity appear and grow and wave. Kathie was an immediate best friend; Binny the same. That we shared nothing common in our past didn't matter… just as Lynn's physical remove did nothing to lessen how she shapes me. From a distance. In a moment. Passion for people is all the same. They get it or they don't. They get you or they won't. And you laugh and you eat onion rings and you whisper about what you see and you wince for the things that suck. It's pretty basic. The lost girl and the right now and even the passing by person who you know even if you don't immerse in will still define who you are. It's the Kyle Youngs and the Lynn Steingass Mandels, the Kathie Orricos and Binny Jollys, just as it's the Eddie Montgomerys, the James Walter Brown the Thirds, the Alex Bevans, the Emily Woods and the Jack Metzgers. To the reader, names on the paper; to the woman living the life, comfort and joy and jokes and songs and advisement and whatever else was needed in the moment -- including the occasional electric french kiss, hard truth, deep disappointment and tossed off wave. It's the thing about life… which Kathie and Binny and I all acknowledged, rolling north out of Atlanta for Nashville and a barn party in honor of our country's birthday at Ronnie Dunn's ramshackle George O'Keefe construction… even when it doesn't seem profound, it's pretty definitive stuff. The time killed is often the sweetest, the friends who just are, the ones most potent. As Guy Clark once professed, "Old friends, they shine like diamonds…" Guy Clark, so tall and broad and solid. A Texan who can build a mandolin, string a moment, eviscerate an ill-tempered suitor and bathe emotions in the golden glow of illumination. Like the others, they bring their truth, they mix with your moments and they leave you richer than you imagined. Richer than diamonds even, which is what the song is all about. -- Holly Gleason July 20, August 18 Nov. 10, 11,12 Atlanta/Cleveland/LA/Nashville
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Close Your Eyes

"The sun is slowly sinking down… "The moon is rising… "This ole world keeps on turnin' 'round… "And I still love you…" It's a quiet profession. A bit tired, worn but knowing. It's the kind of truth one arrives at by finding out what isn't as much as what it is -- and if it's not shiny and happy and beaming, there's a comfort in that deeper no other options knowledge. Introduced by James Taylor with the simple declaration, "This is a lullaby," "You Can Close Your Eyes" was an accepting benediction of that which hurts. It acknowledges the pain that litters lives and it soothes with gentleness that all harrowed beings deserve. On this evening -- to a sold-out crowd at New York City's Madison Square Garden -- it was also gently rocking the loss of a dear friend to a quiet place. Because, quite simply, people die… sometimes suddenly… sometimes out of time… sometimes not when they're supposed to; though who's to say? This was a night to lull the ache that came from the passing of Tim White, one of the last of the true believers in the world of music journalism. White, a man who was fiercely independent in his thinking, married to the notion of good music and committed to getting it heard in any way he knew how, was the kind of life force one can never imagine extinguished. Yet here we were -- along with Brian Wilson, Roger Waters, Jimmy Buffett, Sheryl Crow, Don Henley, Sting and Taylor -- celebrating the unthinkable in today's world: someone who believed music mattered. And in a taped 10 minute tribute/overview of the beaming journalist's life, White himself told the deepest truth, "A hero is someone who faces insurmountable odds -- and fights anyways." In a world where not making waves is the rule, just letting good enough be more than enough and fine is the cancer that's undermined quality and originality in the name of market share and ease of operation (not to mention maximizing profit margins in a business that still corners on excess mandated by ego), Tim White stood down. The artists appreciated that -- and, hopefully, the attendees were inspired by it. Tim White, you see, was both Don Quixote and Sancho Panza. On his own mule, he tilted at the windmills of the music he loved -- regardless of consequences, calling foul where it felt the business was being egregious; aside the Mellencamps, the Marley’s and the Taylor’s, he offered solace, insight, inspiration for staying on the horse. The bow-tied writer with the broad smile and willingness to champion was always passionate about something -- and not afraid to take on the bogus or the undeserving or especially the unfair. And when he suddenly died, it put everything in a pretty harsh light. Because if someone who was all crackling life force could just -- poof! -- be gone, with all that joy, all that appreciation, all that exhilaration, it could happen to any of us. It was a reminder and a caution and a loss... A loss that haunts you in ways you don't even wholly understand. But it's a life to remind us to risk the fury of chasing a dream or the things we love fiercely. In the end, what else is there really? Which begs the dilemma of this incredible night of music and kinship: write an essay about the power of music designed, like Hans Christian Anderson's little match girl's flame, to be held aloft to stay warm and fight back the fear of being alone, or to talk about James Taylor's ability to heal? Because both are valid -- if very different points. Certainly the musicians knew what they lost. Not just in terms of the voice, but the forum. But they performed because they believed in the passion rather than merely stumping for what was, some last hurrah validation grab. And if the fans came solely on marquis drawing power, hopefully they went into the night a little more on fire -- and perhaps ready to make a decision based on what might be rather than what just is. Having lost a lot of friends out of time, the notion of having one's soul torn… that shock of gone when it shouldn't even close to be… the numbing of the incomprehensible… it passes a bit, but never really fades. And that's where the ghosts of what's gone become poltergeists who can mock you if you're not careful. Which is what made James Taylor's "You Can Close Your Eyes" so potent. A lullaby for an ideal gone, a man who shone so others might bask in the light, a faithful believer with a critical eye pushing and encouraging people to be more, better had passed. And in Taylor's elegiac musing of hushed acceptance, there was something to put those challenges to sleep. "Close your eyes, you can close your eyes it's alright," he assured everyone, most of all himself and fellow performers. "I don't know no love songs, but I can't sing the blues anymore…" There it was. So simple. So sweet. So declarative. In this emptiness, there is no spark, but also there are no more tears. The sadness remains; it's what we do with it that matters. In James Taylor's throat -- that voice that's been down quilts, homemade cookies, the first fire of the year and thick corduroys worn with favorite flannel shirts -- it's about the rhythms of sadness that should take us. It's also about comfort sown where confusion, maybe even a little anger, reigns. What is gone is profound, what remains is all there is. Exhaustion permeates, disorientation defines. And in all that… all that… we must find a soft place to fall, to wrap ourselves in that which made the difference and temper the amputation of what is gone with the joy that we experienced it at all. My best friend died of asthmatic arrest 10 years ago. She was 26, and she was gone in less than 5 minutes. There was no more vibrant, more music loving, life-choking human being than Emily, known to those who knew us as Piglet. A trust fund baby, who drove a BMW and was always short of her monthly draw, she knew no fear even when the bank was dry -- and she chased life with that same zeal. I have a close friend now that 'let and I shared. Closer because we both knew her. Closer because I was the one that got the call in response to the tear-stained message from a Brian Wilson recording session (ironically enough) to hear the news, to draw the breath, to blink the jarring understanding of what had happened. We both were bound by that loss. Even as we share the smiles of having known the sparkling Emily Woods. And anyone who ever met Emily through me still talks about her as if she were here. When I have a bad day, it's late so the time zone doesn't work for me, there's no Emily to call, to tell her how mean people are, how petty and venal, how personal agenda undermines the artist's good. To rail against the inertia of it all, I guess, and to hear, "But Holly Geeeeee, that's why you're there…" and then that giggle. Emily knew that some people were born to fight, to thrive, to struggle. She, like Tim White, like me I hope, was a true believer. And the thing about true believers -- again I can only hope -- is that they burn on long after the candle is gone. And if we never ever truly get over those who pass away, it's comforting to know, they never really do. They live on in our hearts, our lives becoming a testimony to what we witnessed amongst the special ones -- and our smiles, our dreams, our tears become the quiet manifestation to the emotion we brought to the plate. Tired, perhaps… Mired in futility, naturally… but euphoric about the possibilities, without a doubt. Even in the darkest hours, lives that have been touched will remain shining witness to that which they saw. And that is the knowledge that offers the deepest solace. That, and the voice of an old friend, who takes the shock off and offers a basic truth. If it's not perfect, not what you want it to be, it's still probably better than it appears - and that is the truth that will lift you up, that will set you on fire again. "Close your eyes, you can close your eyes It's alright I don't know no love songs But I can't sing the blues any more And you can sing this sing… Oh, you can sing this song… When I'm gone." Holly Gleason New York City Nashville 8 October,
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My Friend Bob

Children of the night take their own kind of communion at neon-stained altars in the lost hours when everyone else is home. They chase the darkness, search for answers and consider the metaphysics of the human condition in the name of shooting out the lights or drowning the memories.

If Willie Nelson wrote "the night life ain't no good life, but it's my life…" as an apology or an explanation, we may never know. But there is a crack in the midnight where truths can crawl out, people can shed their bravado and being vulnerable is a whole other kind of armor.

And so it is that I was in a basement bar, watching a few songwriters with an angle work through a handful of their best - nursing a Jack neat, thinking about the poetry in songs, wondering why the lateness always makes me feel most alive.

The thing about these places of convergence - you're never alone, though are if you want to. Pull up a stool, cast a shadow, hunker down into the rocks and the poison. Fix you stare and determine your arc. But those are the nights I usually stay home, girl alone at her computer, hunting and pecking my way to clarity or celebration.

Still music remains the best bait to lure me from the tower - and there's always too much fun to be had once you're out in it. All those people you forget how much you like, how they share your passion and your vision - and they magnify all the things that are good about you to the point where the things you hate hardly seem to matter.

My friend Bob is just that way. Addicted to music - and only the best stuff: Emmylou, Buddy & Julie Miller, killer jazz, Dylan - and quick to talk about the nuance of a track, the turn of a lyric, the way a melody just melts into itself. Bob is one of the ones who's sick with music.

But his illness has carried him across the country, brought him in contact with everyone from underground jam-rockers Widespread Panic to bluegrass demon Ricky Skaggs. Music has taken him on an adventure where he always falls face down in it and swims all the way across the pool, before returning to give us a full report of what he saw and heard and tasted. If you're gonna be taken by a song, there is no fuller emotional spectrum to experience - something that my friend Bob loves most of all.

Not that he would ever warrant the derisive tag music geek. He is smart and sensitive and passionate about it. He reads and he thinks, and he dreams of what it all might mean. Somewhere in that gumbo that is always simmering, there's a poet whose medium is the way he lives his life.

My friend Bob - always quick with a smile, a kind word, a bit of philosophy or bromide that makes you think. With his dark frames and his silvering hair. With his gentle way of looking at the world. He's evolving at a pace that laps most of us.

And this night, leaning against a bar tossing back a bit of gossip with a couple other pals, Bob turned up. His gospel wasn't necessarily music - though he'd want you to know about Nikka Costa, daughter of Don Costa who was one of Sinatra's key arrangers - but it centered on life's turns and bends and shocking wake-up calls.

A mutual friend had been having health problems. They say doing well. This was a mutual friend who'd been a bumpy ride for both of us, someone whose actions didn't always mirror the love in his heart - but then everyone gets sideways as they make their way up the mountain.

Rather than being resigned, shaking one's head in a "oh, well, whatever" kind of way, my friend Bob bypassed the highroad and went straight to the gates of heaven. "Just goes to show you how petty life is," he shrugged, sipping on a high-powered European beer I'd never heard of. "Put it all aside man, he's a great guy… and a good friend, the rest of it don't matter."

Knowing the story, it mattered. But it don't matter now.

And that's Bob.

Bob, who's probably not getting carded anymore. Bob, whose marriage to an incredibly dynamic crazy amazing woman - like so many - busted up. Bob, who's got a big heart that isn't afraid to open up, a psyche that lets him not only respect women but appreciate that which makes them women.

Sure, Bob's charming. Got that in spades. But he's not charming in the predatory lounge lizard sweet-word-panty-removal-system so prevalent amongst the club crawlers and lost angels. No, he just digs people - and people dig Bob.

Chicks, especially, dig Bob. Because he's not a hustler. Quick to tell you the dress is working or the shoes rock. Always ready to listen and willing to share what's on his mind. Bob is the kinda guy every girl dreams of - and has turned into catnip for the 20-something set.

Girls who've never had a man really listen, hear what they're saying and open windows to whole other perspectives they might never have considered otherwise. Girls who maybe have never experienced someone who can talk about Freud as easily as football, who seeks adventure for the sake of the learning curve not the mere thrill, who's probably a lot more concerned about their arrival than his. Girls who've never had a man appreciate the singular things about them.

Shaking his head over his beer, Bob almost blushes. And he'll admit that there are certain aerobic benefits - the kind of benefits a committed practitioner of yoga is supremely poised to appreciate - of having girls that age attracted to you. But there's always a catch to the seeming perfection.

"They just haven't figured it out yet," he confesses. "There's so much angst and drama. The worrying about , well, who they're gonna be."

This is a man who recognizes the truth. He doesn't wanna seem mean, he just doesn't wanna get all caught up in that, either. Because Bob has done the time and he knows who he is.

My friend Bob flaunts every conventional wisdom about men of a certain age. He's not looking for some young girl to validate his eternal youth, plump his flagging libido nor is he chasing what he's already had because it's frivilous and familiar. Bob, also, doesn't drive a Corvette or back comb his chest hair…

He's an anomaly: a man looking for a real live grown-up woman. Someone who's lived and loved and learned about the things that matter. Someone who's an equal and a peer. Someone who can inspire new levels of discovery and awareness.

In a world where Kenny Chesney's upcoming album contains a song he wrote for his mother called "Dreams," inspired by a late night phone call following the break-up with her boyfriend which contained the heartbreaking confession, "It seems all the men my age want someone younger…," men who are entering their grown-up, and even what should be their distinguished years, want anything but women their age. Except for Bob.

Bob is the kind of man who's not afraid of a few lines, a bit of gray. He's the kind of guy who recognizes that a woman who's led and lived her life, as opposed to having it either before her - or else something that just kinda passed her by is the most erotic creature there is. And he's gonna find that woman, wherever she is.

A lesson to all those unhappy middle-agers and beyond, who lead lonely lives of disconnection in the name of "she's so hot." Bob understands the value in knowing, and while he appreciates the sparkle of the transitory he also recognized he wants something that's gonna last as opposed to inevitably unravel.

Because he's willing to look beyond the surface, he has no trouble seeing inside people's hearts. That's where the magic lies. And that's where Bob wants to start - with the magic. He knows there may be mis-starts, balking beginnings, faltering stumbled, maybe even some dents in his already well-worn heart, but that's okay. Because if you don't fall, you don't get hurt… but you don't get to fly, either.

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Waving Good-Bye To A Friend, Learning The Here Is Stronger Than The Gone

One gets to an age where certain friendships glow like slow embers - charcoals that're just a little bit golden, throwing comforting warmth and unspoken understanding. Those companions who follow us from youth or college forward through life, the ones who know even before the story is rolled out are the greatest treasure we amass. New friends are thrilling. Colleagues inspiring. Compadres quick to help you shoot out the lights. But old friends as the Texas expatriate poet Guy Clark has always sung "shine like diamonds." The first time I heard Guy Clark sing "Old Friends," it was in Dublin. At a Thanksgiving dinner table surrounded by his peers - John Prine and Joe Ely, Jimmie Dale Gilmore and Marty Stuart, Kieran Kane and Jamie O'Hara (then working as a spare Appalachian duo called the O'Kanes), Rosie Flores and Flaco Jimenez. It was a benediction for the collected and divergent roads these storytellers and gypsies had traveled, and it was sung to Bonnie Garner, who'd managed Willie Nelson and Emmylou Harris amongst so many. At the time I marveled at the intensity of what was unspoken. To have friendships that deep, that strong, that defied time and miles and moments… it was something a young woman couldn't know empirically, but would have to take on faith. Blind faith…something I once wrote "keeps you believing whenever things get too rough, but when you live in the street and all your dreams shatter, is blind faith really enough?" Watching them, though, a-glow from the conversation, the Guinness, the fellowship, there was something so comforting about it all, there seemed no safer harbor. With the softness and familiarity of awell-worn flannel shirt, the shadows whose friendship ran deeper than veins of iron ore were the most intoxicating thing of all. What you don't know when you're young and washed in promise, though, is the fires that forge those friendships can sometimes be too intense to withstand. On one's way to adulthood or knowing or just the passage of enough years and shared memories to transcend the basic plane, there are casualties - of misunderstandings, selfishness, cross-purposes, bad timing or merely outgrowing each other. The weeding process, though painful, is an attrition of the heart. You genuflect before what you believe to be common passions or singular moments - and you believe that they do, too. It is plaited with laughter and tears, lost nights and early mornings, standing by and standing beside and standing up for. And as time passes, you need less to feel more. It is a given. It is a gift. You take the memories with you and you smile at the little triggers life litters across your path. There may be estrangements, but they pass. The friendship is larger than both of you - and time will flow across the wounds and ultimately draw you back together. Every now and then, though, a friendship falls on the rocks. Shattered by doubts or recriminations or outside influences, especially outside influences, there is nothing left but tattered memories and jagged pieces of feelings; it's an ache like a broken rib or the slicing pain of a papercut on the tip of one's finger. In the wake and the wreckage of what was, the abandoned looks around, blinks, wonders what the hell happened. It is a bitter mixture of betrayal and sadness and an emptiness where this faith and friendship had lived quietly for years and years and years. Trying to rub the sand or dust from one's eyes, mistakenly believing it will offer some kind of clarity, some sense of what was done wrong, only makes the tired eyes redder - and leaves nothing but more confusion in its trail. The older one gets, the less it happens. And it's a strange thing with the passage of years: a numbness sets in to offset the loss once you've been to this rodeo a few times. The memories go into softer focus, the feelings mute - and while whatever was precious remains so, there is no pain for what was gone. If someone had told me that this year, perhaps I'd have wrinkled my nose, rolled my eyes and offered an "oh, yeah…" in dubious Minnie Mouse tones. How do you survive the loss of someone whose been there since almost before you can remember? who embodied St. Francis' prayer, especially sowing the gentlest forms of love and kindness to a kid looking for answers and dreams? But you do. You realize how ephemeral it all is. It makes you that much more fierce about telling the people in your life, the ones who choose to be here, the ones who refuse to relinquish the joy and the faith, that you love them, that you miss them, that they matter. There are certain truths to living in the wind and falling through space - which is a job requirement for the way I chose to make my way in this world - and one is that you're always gone, always moving on to the next mountain or moment. It gives you a richness of friendships, but it makes roots something that must anchor in the air. So you tell the people in your life. You invoke the things that make them special, remind them they're precious, leave nothing understood. And you find out people like knowing their place in your world, seeing that sparkle when they view their reflection refracted in your eyes. You stop taking the people who've been there always, or even for however long, for granted. You let 'em know. Celebrate that which is here. It may be gone tomorrow. Whether it's fate's hand, human caprice or petty jealousy. lost a friend like that this year. A quarter century washed away over insecurity, a small light held for poetry and melody snuffed out in the name of terror over a loss of something they believed to be greater. What can be greater than old friends I do not know… But this year I learned, while you mourn those friends who should always be there to hear how rich they make you, the insight they give you, the wisdom and the laughter they bring you, they are gone. Loss is part of life, no doubt. The greater truth, though, is choice - and that which remains. Don't waste time on those who have left by their decision. Invest your heart, your emotions, your sparkle and your passion on those who continue, companions of what it is to come. The friends who bring you diamonds with a few quick words on a stolen late night call or evoke a cheap bottle of something in a couple dashed off lines in cyberspace are the ones who are here - even when their somewhere else, a million miles from your conscious. Postcards from the edge it isn't. But don't think those postcards don't get sent from wherever with nothing much to say, except "I love you." Because old friends shine like diamonds and rubies and saphires - and a candle in the window when you're trying to get home. 29 December 2001
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Viva Las Vegas

It's 4:30 in the morning, and I'm in a hotel room 37 floors above the ground. Thirty-seven floors into the sky, with the promise and the jagged crash laid out before me like the busted dreams of everyone whose ship missed the shore and ended up in shards on the rocks. But from up here, it just looks like a rolling carpet of rhinestones against midnight blue velvet --churning and undulating away from me, away from my fingers and into an ever after that is suspended between how it is and how it might be. Las Vegas. The Radio Music Awards. Lee Ann Womack -- of the 11 weeks at #1 on the Adult Contemporary and 6 weeks on top of the Country Radio charts, of the Grammy, Country Music Association and Academy of Country Music Awards for Song and Single of the Year for "I Hope You Dance" -- to be dressed pretty and sent out to present an award for Top 40 Act of the Year. Lee Ann Womack who proffers potential and the capacity to make it everything one can wish for, who believes in the quality of the music and the power of song. And so I am here, and I am awake, and I am thinking about all that I saw as I swam upstream in a river of whatever you want. Viva Las Vegas and a black velvet Elvis and billboards that make the kinda now and the once were larger than life once again, in a state of suspended superstardom that's never real, but yet indisputable. Great restaurants serving food beyond many of the consumers' palates. High end retailers taking the money of those who don't understand the value of the price, merely the sizzle of the name. And the mid-to-low-end sellers who give people a little more than they could normally buy into, but they get a reprieve from their grooved-in price point from a good couple hands of black jack or one lucky pull on a slot machine. This is the short-term, nominal pay-off on the no impact American Dream -- the I-want-and-it-should-be-mine, which has most likely supplanted the work-hard-for-what-you-want mandate that once drove this nation. Now we're a land of lotteries and scams and quick fixes. It's about Aqua Net and SUVs, Versace fantasies and the promise of notoriety. When N Sync named their latest recording Celebrity, it had the opportunity to be a commentary on fame from the tongues of five Fabians currently being consumed and defined by it. Talented young men? Perhaps. But that's not where they derived their voltage and their value. For we've become a nation where fame has surpassed art, celebrity is the new medium of defining expression -- and we're not sure what to make of insight into the human experience or emotional content. Now it's sizzle and rage and shock. We're about being hot or how it looks. And for every Bob Dylan or Rodney Crowell or Lucinda Williams, or even Lee Ann Womack and Patty Loveless -- two women with their hearts in their throats, the true center must be massaged with some sense of flash, some promise of momentum. <p>It's odd what we've come to value. If Madonna celebrated sexual liberation for us girls and the genius of changing the personna, what does Britney Spears represent? Lolita with a low IQ and the willingness to strip and flip and dance for us? Is she all promise AND an empty, non-threatening delivery? If Madonna reputedly cruised the seedy neighborhoods looking for Latino boys to rough ride the ridge with, would Britney -- America's turbo-virgin --ever do that? If one was a wildcat -- capable of more sexual bravado and libido and teeth gnashing arrival, is the other more of a tame housecat capable of all the machinations but none of the thrilling terror of beyond this one explosive moment? No danger, just a beautiful stranger in a nude bejeweled body suit who will come and writhe and cum and leave without a whimper. There is no fall-out from Britney Spears, just as there's no pushing the flesh or the envelope. This is a two-dimensional automaton of sexual iconography that won't scare, won't impose, won't intimidate. She will be a "Tiny Dancer," a pocket princess to take out and put away on one's whim who's happy enough to be there -- and that is exactly what we've become: a nation of "do ME, baby, then fade to nothing, not even black." <p>It makes me think of Buck Owens and Gram Parson and Emmylou Harris -- hillbilly idols who understood that emptiness isn't nondairy whipped topping that froths and giggles and tricks you into thinking it's lots of fun. For them, emptiness is the echo of regret, the knowledge of what shouldn't have happened, the ghosts of every bad decision and sideways reality that chase you through the lost hours, the buzzing glow of motel lights and the barely humming white noise that is the fringe where the disenfranchised move like the waking dead in the lost hours. "Sin City" is the anti-"Viva Las Vegas." With it's keening melody and plangent harmonies, it turpentines the illusion, leaving a rough streaky truth that is anything but flashy veneer. It is splinters and age and a brittle wood that threatens to bust apart if roughly handled. It is neon that's blinding and neon that's zzzz-zzz'ing out. It's show girls in their sequins and feathered head dresses turning into baggy eyed, aching feet women who just look tired and need to figure out how to fill the gap between child support and what they need now that the BIG STAR ship hasn't come in. Here everything can be had for a price here. Thick steaks. Prettier women than you'll ever find back home, who want to run their fingers through your hair and call you "Big Daddy" and make you feel like John Holmes on holiday. Gold watches. Diamond rings. Italian suits and custom leather. Fine shoes. Every kind of fur. Suites that're larger than most houses. Whatever one desires, it can be created. It can -- as long as the winnings hold out -- be tangible and real. Except, of course, love and happiness -- which come from within and can't be brokered at a baccarat table or through the rounds of a keno girl. Which make them so precious, they flicker beyond the pale, spectres that may not be real -- so why put one's faith there? <p>After all, for a moment or string of moments, Vegas' promise and occasional delivery is more than plenty. More than you'll get back home. And they keep coming back on the promise of what might be. But this town ain't built on winners…and the dreams are even less than the dimestore baubles another generation embraced, long before "Dynasty" and "Dallas" showed us how the other half lived and upped the aspirations of the M-Generation, a generation where material replaces spiritual and what we have substitutes for what we need. Unless you're one of the lucky ones, the ones who surf the moment and blink as the human tide rushes past. Last night, it was a merging of three pretty dominant divergent worlds, creating a surreality that would've made Fellini proud. For not only is Las Vegas a place where a faded someone like Wayne Newton is a big draw and a powerful presence, an electrifying constellation holding down the mainroom and the incoming horde, but it's a place where the bulked-up steroid-thickened Mister and Miss Universe candidates bench their competitive edge as the Pro Bull Riders reach for their 8 seconds of glory and the rockers and the poppers and the gold-roped hip-hoppers wait for word of just who the Radio Music Awards deems the best of the year. They're all out there, these icons in their respective worlds and aspirants stretching for their own grasp of the brass ring, mingling and drinking and playing a little five card stud -- taking in the pleasures and promises. These people have other mandates, but why miss the glory of Vegas? Why lose sight of what makes this town a destination? And they're here with their bravado and their entourages -- relatively pumped up companions, girls in roper boots with heart-shaped asses and little kids in matching cowboy hats or stringy handlers dripping black, squawking into cell phones about limo calls and missing shoes. <p>Does a bull rider have a crew? Does a weight lifter need an posse? And what about Bob and Myrna from Kansas City in their flannel shirt and her over-processed bubble perm? Maybe they're just having a little fun. Not seeking the big cash-out. Catch a show -- "THAT Clint Black. Now THERE'S a star!" -- eat some shrimp, toss back a couple watered down drinks comped from your run at the $5 table. Tell a few tall tales and to the folks back home, you're a high roller. Because compared to the fuzzy gray of back home, this is technicolor. Oz, or at least ahhhhs, to the flatness of Kansas. Oooooh, Las Vegas. It's written in flashing lights, outlined in maribou and set against jet black velvet for maximum pop. Back home, pop is something sitting in your refrigerator waiting to be sucked down -- and if you don't look too close, Vegas isn't a pop, but more a BANG! waiting to suck you in and perhaps suck you dry, strangling you with your own dream of being a big guy for a moment. But, oh, until it does. . . <p>Buck Owens understood that when he wrote the bittersweet "Big In Vegas," a song about hope derailed and hope redefined and accepting what was left on the table. It may be his saddest melody, but it was also one of his truest moments. For while Buck was the happy guy in the Hee Haw overalls, mocking his pain with the superstar pay-out of "Act Naturally," he also defined the California country insurgence with Merle Haggard and Buck's personal Sancho Panza guitarist Don Rich. Vegas for so many is the end of the line … the last, perhaps only, place to feel more than alive. As the movie of Mikal Gilmore's book Shot Through The Heart, about the final days with Gary Gilmore, the brother he barely knew who became the first American to be executed under the reinstatement of capital punishment in the U. S., playing on the t. v. and still no threat of dawn, I think and I type -- just like so many nights. <p>Somewhere in this same hotel, Lee Ann Womack sleeps. Last Sunday, she sang "I Hope You Dance" and "The Preacher (Won't Have To Lie)" for Nashville's concert to raise the spirits of a country demoralized by Sept. 11 and some money to aid the clean-up. They were simple, true wishes -- and they spoke volumes about the little things that truly define us. Or do they? As someone who's always believed in music's power to inspire and elevate, who was heartened by the crossover success of a song about "still feeling small when you stand beside the ocean" and who wants to think when people are ready, they will hear, I'd like to believe there's still room and validity for this other kind of truer truth at our cheaper, faster, harder, now NOW table. <p>Walking through the corridors of Bellagio's shopping concourse and Caesar's Palace's Forum shops, I'm not so sure. Though surely we've not come to believe that a painted sky that never dims is truer than the stars and the sun and the moon. As long as we can walk outside and look up, we can know the difference -- and maybe that's what we need to cling to so we don't get -- as the prophet Springsteen once wrote -- "lost in the flood." I don't know, but as there's still no threat of dawn -- here where we sleep off the losses both fiscal and emotional -- I may as well step outside and look at what's left of the night. Maybe I'll catch a falling star... -- Holly Gleason
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Eddie Montgomery Made Me Cry

The voice on the other end of the phone was thick. It was a mixture of a long afternoon of imbibing low rent liquor, watching the future melt into a promise of violence and upholding values few people ever truly inhabit, but mindlessly invoke to justify macho knee-jerk posturing and, well, the comradeship of the road. Behind the voice, the screen was a parade of talking heads tracking and trafficking the action, the fall-out and the impact of the US military strike against the Taliban, who'd blown-up America's blind faith in our safety being a God-given right. And the call to which the larger-than-life hillbilly singer was grappling was pretty standard issue in the world of the neo-famous. There was a request -- from the Associated Press' broadcast division for country music's names and faces to react and respond to our nation's actions. Eddie Montgomery, half of Montgomery Gentry -- the Lexington, Kentucky-based twosome that upended Brooks & Dunn's longest-winning streak in the history of the Country Music Association's annual Awards when they dark horsed their way into the 2000 Duo of the Year crown, was a logical voice to enlist. The last of the full-grown men in country music, he and his partner Troy Gentry sang about tattoos and scars, lost afternoons and shattered hearts, antique values and veterans who've grown battered by their forgotten role in the world. So one would think a jingoistic request to rah-rah the fighting men would be just the sort of siren song a good ole boy would live for. Bring it on, he'd beller from his bar-stool, let's whip the troops into a frenzy, create a nationalistic battle cry and show those freedom-hating so-and-sos the glory of God and ole glory. But Eddie Montgomery's having none of it at this moment. "What's the doctor saying?" he asks, voice thicker with worry than Beam-infused braggadocio. "When will you know something?" I, too, am on a barstool. Though my drink is water -- my doctor suggesting staying away from the hard stuff as the stitches inside me grapht a new seam to hold me together -- and my request is standard operating procedure as a publicist and apologist for some of the people whose music will no doubt become the soundtrack for the impending engagement. Indeed, Lee Ann Womack's "I Hope You Dance" has been embraced as a song of healing and hope, a remembrance of what this way of life we fought for is made of -- and Brooks & Dunn's "Only In America," sung by vocal flamethrower Ronnie Dunn and written by Louisiana dervish Kix Brooks about the perils and promise of the American Dream, has turned into a self-esteem-steeped call to pride for country music fans that has more verve, more twist, more adrenaline-steeping pump than any latter-day USA-All-The-Way anthem out there. No, not for us the maudlin or the mawkish. We are the proud, the brave, the free. We want to be empowered and emboldened. We want to fly high and show the enemy who's the boss. But right now, my throat is tight. My client isn't so sure about jumping on the phone to tout his point-of-view. What he -- in all his imposing 6' 5" blackclad glory -- wants to know is what the doctor has to say. And as a tear rolls down my cheek, I have to confess that I don't know, won't know 'til midweek because of the legal holiday and the time it takes cells to germinate and generate in a petri dish in a sterile environment somewhere. Even worse, I have to confess that I'm afraid. Afraid of what I don't know -- since I am smart enough to know that whatever is is already. And there is no magic door or wand that can pass over me, taking it all back -- spinning the room, spinning the ugly reality through some fairy dust centrifugal forcefield through a time/space/gravity vortex and into the never was. No, I am afraid. And just as I can hear the Beam and Coors Lite in the client's lazy vowels, he can hear the tentative response, the not sure how much to tell, the not aware of what the most in-control person he knows is giving away in the pauses. "You know, baby doll, it's gonna be fine," he says with a split rail tone that is as solid as the 220 acres of hay he's just baled back home. "You're one of God's angels, and he's not ready to take you from us just yet." "Okay…" comes through the tightness and tentativeness, trying to sound appreciative, trying to ratify the faith that's being served. "No, no," he says. He feels the lack of faith, the tripping over one's confidence. "I mean it, you're one of God's angels here on earth. There ain't nothing wrong with you…just a little scare. There's too much for you to do, to give for this to be anything bad. I promise you: it's gonna be alright." Bad things don't happen to people like me. It's the lie we serve ourselves to fuse the teflon with the kryptonite, just as we don't look down or close our eyes when we must get through. We're pillars more than people, propping up, taking care of others. You need faith? I'll give you mine, You need vision? Look through my eyes. You need passion? I burn so other's can feel the fire and blaze in a way that draws moths to their flame. It is my gift. I am a woman who'd write"midwifing people's dreams" on the Occupation portion of applications. Though the straight world much prefers "Media Relations and Artist Development," as dubious and obscure an explanation as the aforementioned phrase. Having built a life knowing how to deal with anything -- malicious ex-husbands, tawdry inferences, partycentric lifestyles, life-shattering illnesses and a general lack of respect -- and corner with the fastest and bestest, there's a confidence that meets each morning. Bring it on. I am ready. I will make it happen, make it shine, make it sing. I believe in the power of music to imbue life with deeper meaning, to create context for my own unruly emotions, to inspire us all to be more, to reach higher, to believe in what can be rather than whatever mundane "is" may be this moment. Transformation and wings, joy and ache and surviving the devastation. The sketched lines of what we've been and what we wish to be… it's all there, if we'll just allow it to lift us up. Except right now. My resolve falters. I feel a fear that I can't walk through, can't talk through, can't quantify into something more manageable. There was a lump, missed because of thirty pounds of mental bondage and ice cream. Found in my yearly exam. Mammogrammed and ultra-sounded and appearing to be routinely out-of-order…. until the follow-up surgeon bypassed the needle core sample and went straight to the surgical biopsy. Not only straight to it, but straight to it less than 40 hours later. Suddenly the girl who handles everything wasn't so handled or heeled. Having picked up my "films" for the surgical consultation, the resolve had started oozing away -- and knowing a 6 a. m. check-in for a 7:30 cutting was imminent, I tried everything at my disposal. "As if" was enlisted and engaged. A black tie Hall of Fame induction dinner -- wearing floorlength black lace Chanel flapperish body-skimming lusciousness and punk funk hair in a confection of fashion and youthfusion -- where many's moment of glory was marred by timing seemed the perfect denial. Look as beautiful as one can, make the small talk about the big issues, sweep the room and ratify each other's glorious spot in the orbit of the right-now-country-kingdom, while being dwarfed by the accomplishments of the Delmore Brothers, Sam Phillips, Bill Anderson, Waylon Jennings, the Everlys, Don Gibson and the Louvins (among others) -- names that the young'uns and many of the midlevels couldn't explain with a sixshooter to the temple. Pretend it's just another glory night. Smile the smile. Push the food around the plate. Nod with recognition. Smile the smile. Sweep the doubts away. Bask in the plushness of Raul Malo's velour and cohiba voice as he works through a sampling of the inductees best known work. Find an escape. Perhaps have a meaningful exchange amongst the rubble of cocktail talk -- and keep smiling the smile. Smile that smile through the tears as the make-up comes off, the hair comes down and the fear wells back up. Breast cancer is more than pink ribbons and races for the cure. It is 192,000 new invasive cases this year. It is ads that are even found in Gentleman's Quarterly, invoking the real truth of the second most common form of cancer found in women in this country: daughters, sisters, mothers, friends, wives, grandmothers, fighters, survivors victors. But, me? It is a sqeaky voice that asks that question. One that knows the truth is larger than any spin that can be created, any reality that could be shaded. And the fear isn't the fear of failing the client, the song or the dream…. it is the bigger fear: leaving before whatever I've been sent here to do is done. It's not so much mortality -- though come on, who wants to be sick? Let alone sick in a way that could be fatal? -- than it is knowing how much time has been squandered, how little has been accomplished. We are put here to touch people's lives, to inspire, to comfort, to find our way and show others their's. What if I don't? As someone who works incessantly, who fights for the dreams of others, is it vanity or a personal quest? I'd like to think it's the former. And as Buddy and Julie Miller, paint-peeling ache intertwined with broken winged whisper, intertwine on "How She Cries" from their self-titled Hightone release, I ponder the point of it all. I am a true believer. I have to believe in whatever this is. But through the tears and the shaking and the pain and bandages of where they "got it," I'm not strong enough to get there on my own. In these lost hours, in a small apartment over an Italian restaurant on South County Road, I think about an overgrown cowboy and his simple assurance, about a hillbilly guitar slinger who talked me to sleep, about a good friend who shared a glass of cote du Rhone, an old beau who flew down to help pack an apartment so I could embark on what should be the next chapter, a babe-ular girl singer who sent flowers and prayers, a couple long distance calls from back home just to see how the baby rock critic was holding and e-mail to the doctor from a woman no less than TIME proclaimed, "sings the truth and serves it up raw." They say that you don't always get what you want, but sometimes you just might get what you need. As morning streaks across the Atlantic, with the tentative reach and brush of gray with perhaps a hint of warmth shot through, I believe that to be true. We may not always understand the difference between want and need -- just as fear and doubt sometimes blur into each other as a muddy confusion. But in this desolate moment, I see the difference: friends who reach out when you're too paralyzed to let them know you're in bigger need than you ever thought possible. The trouble with fear: you're afraid to voice it. If you tell, it will be become reality. So you suffer in silence. Or let a very few people know. And it grows inside you like a man-eating plant. In the immortal words of Emory Gordy, Junior: "Let your friends do the worrying. You should laugh and enjoy the drugs." It's not really that easy. Just like trusting that your friends can be what you need when it's all vastness and darkness and doubt. The irony, of course, is that they will be far more then you could ever need -- if you'll just let them. Tom Petty knew the waiting was the hardest part. What he missed were the everyday angels that carried you when you couldn't carry yourself. Maybe the answers aren't what you want, but what you learn is a gift that just may sustain no matter what. In a bleak whirl of doubt and heavy sighs, I'll take it.
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exhaling in the pummeling rain on a1a

spent the tail end of yesterday afternoon playing chicken staring down a phone message from my doctor's office WHY would they be calling on monday when they told me there would be no information until wednesday unless the news was so ragingly, painfully bad that there was no point finishing germination? having finally gotten some sleep all day yesterday i was groggy from something other than the pain medication and i found the fear running through my veins again like a train through the mountains rolling with the momentum of a downhill run, rolling with the power of uphill locomotion my heart racing like a rabbit on the discovery channel, about to be dinner for some fanged beast of prey and knowing the observers weren't going to intercede so i went to the grocery store and there in the publix, between the mojo criollo + the fresh fruit, the crunchy peanut butter and the spanish saffron looking way into the "i don't have a problem" DTs it occurred to me (eek): not calling doesn't outrun the outcome bad news is still bad stuff, even if you refuse to let them tell you pick up the phone, stupid, and dial and so i did... there along the ocean highway with the rain coming down sideways, the malibu flashing and crawling my heart pounding harder than tommy lee in motley crue's most rocking days terrified and driving and holding for dr cooper's nurse the poor nurse forced to tell me to get on a plane because, you know, i must be amputated from the waist up "you're cancer free..." WHAT? "your tests are back... cancer and pre-cancer free" I AM? "yes, you have a pappiloma...and dr cooper can explain that when you come in for your follow-up visit." But...I'm...okay? "perfect." and that's when the crying started. sobbing. bawling. then crying all by itself. in classic holly fashion, though, i also threw up... too much adrenalin with nowhere to go so it created its own exit path and then i cried some more relief. joy. surprise. it was all there. everything i was sure i wouldn't be feeling at the end of the phone call terrified that if i told myself it was nothing, fate would not be amused that i wasn't taking this situation seriously and ZOT the hell out of me terrified enough that i wouldnt consider the possibities for fear of making it real fate being cranky with my lack of faith and ZOTTING the hell out of me so somewhere in a reality akin to a green grape suspended in red jello where denial didn't exactly run rampant, nor fatality frolic like a colt in pastures of green i tried to be stoic, gargle with terror and act as if i don't know how i did really i do know that the people i told made me feel better and everyone who responded to the e-mail were angels with wings on their fingers thank you in ways you can't imagine, for things you wouldn't consider fear of being erased is as bad as the fear of pain i'd like to believe that a bad thing wouldn't make people sidestep me the way we sometimes do street people when we know we can't change their fate people are our greatest strength for just when i was sure i wasn't going to make it to wednesday came this outpouring of strength and hope and love it hopefully wasn't too taxing for you but a huge deal for me and i thank you for it know how powerful little things can be give them whenever you can because my doctor was aggressive about something that was potentially life-threatening -- the very same course of action andre agassi's 30 year old sister took + ended up being positive, but now back in step and shape with a perfect recovery rolling out before her) and know somewhere amongst the packing boxes, i am laughing a laugh of the freaked and now settling that awkward sound that means i have seen experienced something bad but it looks like all is okay because that's where i am this morning painfully grateful both for the results and you and eddie montgomery who let me know to let people reach back a-men and then some it ain't an aerosmith review, but to me -- i PROMISE -- it's every bit as exhilerating! ps: the doctor's office had told me it was tuesday or wednesday because if the results had been dodgy, they'd have wanted to run them twice and because my doctor's speaking at a medical conference and wouldn't have been able to make the double-checked call until then and wisely, he didn't think it was something he should palm off on an assistant talk about sigh and the some -- -- Holly Gleason
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