Sunday, October 12, 2014

Keith in Laguna Beach -- Sunday, 12Oct2014

I was hoping it would be half as good as Saturday night had been, but no such luck. When I got there, the two guys I least expected to see were occupying the bench, Shirtless Josh (who was supposed to be in jail) and Robo Mike, who I had dropped off at his mom's house a week before, and I'd hoped would stay there (apparently, he sat in the backyard all night, sobered up, and changed his mind about staying there). Across from them on the side bench was Hawaiian Buddha Mark, pulling his "Me Crazy Wildman!" routine, to gales of laughter from the guys. Little Mexican Lady was there, and introduced herself as "Giselle", with the "it's German" 'G' pronounced like the 'ch' in 'Bach'. (Maybe she's actually "Little *German* Lady"?) And then up came Disabled Vet, who launched into a tirade at Josh about his girlfriend.

With this cast of characters installed, this was obviously a lost cause, so I rolled over to the Fingerhut side.

Which wasn't half bad, for a while. I had several vacationing families come by, so I played "Twinkle Twinkle" and the "Frozen" songs. A guy and his wife came by, and he noticed and was completely fascinated by (and had to take pictures of) my phone being attached to the head of my guitar so I can take pictures while I'm playing. Dude, it's just an iPhone and some rubber bands -- I'm no Jony Ive, here...

After an hour, Josh and Mike left, so I rolled over to the ice cream side, where only Disabled Vet was left. He (proudly?) explained that he was "messed up" and "getting myself in trouble with what I'm saying to these girls". Which was entirely too accurate -- he was being incredibly rude and disgusting, which surprised me, 'cuz he's usually a really nice guy. Must have been the girlfriend trouble...

So I played two or three songs and gave up, at only 8:15. I was glad I hadn't called Warren to waste his time on this fiasco. I just hope this isn't a preview of what The Corner will be like going forward -- it's been so nice down there without these guys.


Saturday, October 11, 2014

K&W in Laguna Beach -- Saturday, 11Oct2014

Another terrific night! Lots of friendly people all night long, listening and requesting songs. It's great to be able to get The Corner even starting at 7:00, 'cuz my stuff works better after dark, and my batteries last late into the night. There was a lull around 10:00, but then we had another surge (with backup singers on "Hallelujah", and a great little dance party) and ended up going at it until 12:30 when my batteries died.

We hung around talking with Greeter Mikey for another hour, and he knew why it's been so pleasantly young homeless guy free lately. Turns out that Shirtless Josh was, in fact, the local dealer, and once he got busted and hauled away, the rest of the guys have had no reason to hang around there/him. Thanks, LBPD! But what took you so long?

It's pretty clear that the "normal people" (tourists and locals) feel more comfortable when those guys aren't there, which makes collecting a self-sustaining critical mass of audience much easier for us.

So our only distraction was a brief session with Little Mexican Lady, who managed to keep her pants on this week, but was doing her odd dancing right in the middle of the corner, scaring people away. Warren asked her to do it over at the side, which she did, but then got disinterested and left.

Anyway, it was nice that there were no other players around, so I was able to leave the amp cranked up pretty loud. I don't really need to blow the audience away, but it really helps me to have the monitor speaker up loud so I can hear myself, and I can't control them separately. It was a bit disconcerting to see people three stores away down the street, dancing to my songs, but the cops drove by several times, but never stopped to hassle me.

A guy came by and listened for just one song, but left a tip and his card in the jar, saying that he owns a (tiny) gallery "down the street" (a mile), and we should call him and come play there sometime. It's too far away from downtown to get much traffic for Artwalk, but maybe if he's doing some kind of event or something?

Also, a guy that Warren knows came by to invite us to come play at his Wednesday night gallery art-thing, which features local artists and bands. Sounds like fun -- I'll give it a try.

Around midnight, an apparently homeless guy I've never seen before came by. He was nice enough, and sat on the bench and listened politely for a while. Then he got up and put his "lucky pink dollar" in the jar, explaining that it was all he had. I feel kinda bad about that, but I didn't really get what he was saying until I was counting the jar and, sure enough, found a pink dollar. Considering his condition, I not entirely sure how "lucky" it's actually been for him, but I'll keep it in my pocket and give it back to him if he shows up again.

I had an idea earlier in the day, that when/if somebody wanted an autograph with their CD (case), I could draw my cartoon self-portrait, too. People seldom ask for an autograph, but if I offer, they always take me up on it. So I offered 4 or 5 times last night (out of nine CDs sold -- I'm a little shy about it) and people were always pleasantly surprised when I handed them back the signed and cartooned CD.








Saturday, October 04, 2014

K&W in Laguna Beach -- Saturday, 04Oct2014

Really great night! We had friendly happy people making requests and hanging around to listen all night long. I chose the first three songs and didn't have to choose another one all night long (unless/until I wanted to).

We started around 7:30, and there were only two young homeless guys there. Warren asked them if they'd move over to the side bench, and they just did. Had a bit of trouble from a slightly drunk little middle-aged homeless lady, but not too bad. But more on her later.

We had lots of audience interaction, which makes it so much more fun. I think it was because the environment started off friendly, and stayed that way. Three ladies came by and the college-age daughter asked for "Kiss the Girl". Another lady asked for "Puff, the Magic Dragon", and they danced to it. Never thought of that as a dance tune...

An Asian lady and her boyfriend came by and listened for a while. Another guy came up and said that he'd been looking for me at Spectrum. I told him that I wouldn't be playing Spectrum anymore because they changed the way it's booked. The Asian lady said, "You should play Spectrum." I said that I'd love to, but they won't let me. She repeated, "You should play Spectrum", said that she "lived there" (presumably in the apartments across the street) and then insisted that I *would* play Spectrum, as if she had any say in it. I told her to take my card and give me a call if/when she got me booked.

The little drunk Mexican lady was being a bit distracting, but not nearly as bad as I've had to endure from some of the drunk guys. At one point, she disappeared across the street, and I was hoping she was gone, but she reappeared, walking across the crosswalk and through the crowd, swinging some piece of cloth from her upraised wrist. It was quite a hazard, and as she walked through the crowd, people had to move aside to not get hit. She went over to the ice cream shop, then came back and sat down in an empty spot at the end of the bench.

Pretty quick a cop showed up, beckoned her by name and asked her to follow him across the street, which she obediently did. I was thinking, "Wow! Thanks for removing this drunk distraction, but where are you when it's really bad?" Then three more cop cars pulled up, flashing their lights like it was a cartel bust. One of the cops came over and was asking people if they had been sitting there long, presumably to then ask if they'd seen whatever the issue was. When my song was over he asked me if I'd seen any naked ladies, and I was pretty sure that I'd remember something like that...

Turns out that what the drunk lady was swinging over her head was her shorts, so she was wandering around bottomless. Now, she's quite short, and her T-shirt was long, so, I guess from my high vantage point, she looked perfectly normal. But apparently from the vantage point of the people on the bench, not so much (and one of the ladies called the cops).

The cops left the red and blue flashers going on their cars, which was pretty distracting and made it hard to read the music, but I tried to pretend it was "stage lighting". After a while, they had gotten some jeans and handcuffs on her, and took her (and the distraction) away. Apparently it only takes 4 cop cars and half-a-dozen cops to subdue a 5'-3" Mexican lady.

And it's good to know that even in Laguna Beach, there are some lines you can't cross...

I had forgotten my iPad which serves as my music book, but fortunately, the paper copy lives in the van, so I used that. It has all the songs on the Request List, but it meant that I couldn't do any new songs. Except -- all week I'd been working on "Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight", and I guess I'd gone through it so many times that I'd memorized it, 'cuz I fired it up for fun, and went all the way through it, surprising myself.

My previous Bluetooth camera shutter remote has quit working, so I got a new, smaller, cheaper one, and this was its first test outing. I rigged up a way that I can step on it with my right foot (as my left handles the harmony box), instead of mounting it on the guitar neck like before. That took too much coordination to try to press the button with my thumb and still squeeze the chords with my fingers. And I couldn't reach it at all if the song happened to be capoed up, which about half of them are. Hopefully I'll get some useful, if muddy in the dim light, shots.


Friday, October 03, 2014

Draft Dodger

On the unexpected occasion of my 60th birthday, I thought I'd write up a few of my Stories, while I can still remember (or make up) a reasonable portion of them, complete with entirely bogus, Photoshopped, or made up, images. None of the following may be terribly true or accurate, but it's how I remember it.

I started my Freshman year at UC Irvine on my eighteenth birthday. This made me all at once an official College Student, an "Adult", able to vote, and liable to be drafted and go to Vietnam. My birth year was the last one that was eligible to be drafted, before they instituted the Volunteer Army.

The draft had become a lottery, and they had one of those ping pong ball machines and everything. There were 365 balls in it, one for every birthday, and the lottery randomized who'd get called up. When they needed more guys, they'd call up all the guys with birthday number 1, then number 2, etc. My October 1st birthday was number 32 -- not as close to 365 as one could wish for...

There were no Student Deferments anymore, but UCI did have a Draft Office. Not really sure why. I guess they were passing out maps to Canada.

Oh, I should mention that in those days, I was skinny. *Really* skinny. You could literally watch my heart beat between my ribs.

So, before I found any Fateful Letters in the mailbox, I went to the Draft Office and asked the lady, "Just how skinny would a guy have to be to not get drafted?" She pulled out a reference chart and asked, "How tall are you?" "Six foot, two." She consulted her chart and said, "132 pounds".

I weighed 128 at the time. I really didn't think I was cut out for guns and jungles and Agent Orange and all (and I'm famously disrespectful of Authority), so I was prepared to go on a crash diet. But I didn't have to. I wouldn't be needing that map to Canada after all.

Fortunately for my fellow eighteen year olds, they were actually starting to pull out of Vietnam that year anyway, so they didn't call anybody up. But especially not *this* skinny kid.



Thursday, October 02, 2014

Solar Eclipse Follies #2

On the unexpected occasion of my 60th birthday, I thought I'd write up a few of my Stories, while I can still remember (or make up) a reasonable portion of them, complete with entirely bogus, Photoshopped, or made up, images. None of the following may be terribly true or accurate, but it's how I remember it.

After the success (?) of our first solar eclipse trip, Johnny and I decided that we needed to see another one, and how could it go any worse than the first time?

It's May 30, 1984, and this time it'll pass over Guadalajara Mexico, which (fortunately) precludes our just driving there like last time. We book flights to, and a hotel in, Guadalajara, and hope that my two years of high school Spanish will get us by. (Johnny had taken Latin, but nobody in "Latin" America actually speaks it. Go figure.)

The flight is uneventful, and when we get to the hotel, Johnny courageously reserves a rental car from a guy sitting behind a card table in the lobby. Let me say that again: A guy sitting behind a card table in the lobby.

The eclipse is at 7:30 the next morning, so we have some time to kill, and go out wandering. All I remember is the "market" that's like a swap meet set up in an abandoned parking structure. Unsurprisingly, we didn't find anything that we couldn't live without...

I do remember a guy selling sodas, and when you'd buy one, he'd pull a bottle out of the ice chest, pop it open, pour it into a "sandwich size" plastic bag, stick a straw in it, and hand it to you, keeping the bottle. Pretty cool -- no need to drag the glass part back to a recycling center. "Have a (baggie of) Coke and a smile." ™

We leave the hotel early in the morning in the rented little red Japanese hatchback. No giant telescope this time, but that's OK -- it's the "big picture" that's more amazing anyway. We head west, for some reason, coming pretty quickly to open country. The sky is nice and clear.

But as the eclipse time approaches, high clouds start to appear. We search the sky for a clear spot, and drive toward it as best we can, given the limited roads out there.

We pass turnouts along the way that have busloads of Eclipse Hunters, setting up telescopes and getting ready. A lot of them have matching T-shirts with some cheap eclipse clipart and a pun-laden name of the eclipse expedition. But others have custom made uber-geeky T-shirts with a minutes and seconds figure on them -- their personal total time spent Under Totality. Which... I think I need one of those...

As the eclipse approaches, we turn south onto a dirt road that leads to a tiny Mexican village that looks like a movie set where the banditos are terrorizing the villagers until the handsome stranger shows up. We start to realize that there's no piece of sky that's clear anymore -- it's early in the morning and the air is cool, and the shadow of the moon itself is causing it to cool down even more, condensing out clouds as it goes.

We're kind of stuck where we are in this village 'cuz there aren't any roads left. We're not really out in the open like last time, so we don't see the shadow of the moon racing towards us, but we are in a rural village so we get to see the truth of the story that the chickens think it's nighttime and try to go to roost.

The eclipse is slightly obscured by the custom-made high clouds, but they're pretty thin so we can still see it reasonably well. The corona's mostly washed out, though.

A couple of minutes and it's all over. Not as mind boggling as the first one (ain't it always that way?), but still worth every nickel.

It's not even 8am, and we have a whole day to kill before our flight home the next day, so we go into downtown Guadalajara for some sight-seeing. Mostly we look at the old buildings which Architect Johnny is far more interested in than I am, but I gotta admit they're pretty cool. We decide to park the car and walk around a while, and pull onto a back street. It's pretty packed with cars, but we find a space.

I really don't remember what we looked at, so it was probably more old buildings, but when we get back to the car, it's gone. We walk up and down the street, thinking we're just lost, but can't find the car. There is, a few blocks away, an almost handmade little sign on a post that might mention something about parking, but I can't really tell with the peeling paint and my limited Spanish. It certainly did *not* say simply "No Parking" (in any language) nor have an easy-to-guess red circle with a slash in it.

Having no other options, we go back to the hotel, wondering if the insurance covers both scratches and out-an-out auto theft. As I calm down I start to think that, since our flight is tomorrow, we don't actually *need* the car any more anyway -- all our stuff is at the hotel and not in the car. Johnny points out that that's not exactly true -- his bookbag that he never goes anywhere without, even to eclipses, was in the car. And what's in the bag? Some books, some papers, and his passport.

When we get back to the hotel lobby, ready to confess, there's nobody at the car rental card table. We wait in the room, freaking out, and keep checking the lobby. We try to come up with alternate plans, but we're not worldly enough to figure out a way to get Johnny out of Mexico without a passport. Where's the Embassy? What's a "Consulate", anyway? We start to wonder what kind of jobs a couple of one-language gringos can get in Guadalajara.

Finally Mr. Cardtable comes back and we tell him that the car got stolen. We don't know exactly where -- somewhere in Mexico, we're pretty sure. Surprisingly, he's all smiles and "Ha ha ha! Don't worry about a thing! I'll take care of you!" We're baffled at how he can be so unconcerned, and start to wonder if this not only happens "all the time" but if it happens, *literally*, all the time. Maybe Cardtable here rents the cars out, and his "associates" steal them back. Come to that, where has *he* been all this time...?

Suddenly, the flight tomorrow that seemed so much time to burn away, now feels like a ticking time bomb, without that passport. Will Cardtable find the passport in time for the flight, or will we have to try to get our flights changed to the next day? Or week? Or month?

We sweat out the evening and go to bed. In the morning we go down to the lobby and Ta Daa! "Here's your bag! Everything still in it! You were in a "No Parking" zone and the cops towed the car. Just a misunderstanding! No problem! No extra charge for the towing, fines, bribes, etc.!"

Gee, thanks a million, Mr. Cardtable! We're sorry for all those bad things we said about you last night!

So we make it to our flight on time, and home with no further incidents and with a few more minutes and seconds of Totality under our belts.


Sunday, September 28, 2014

Keith in Laguna Beach -- Sunday, 28Sept2014

When I got there, the bench was literally full of homeless guys, but I overheard some talk of going to get something to eat, so I started to set up anyway. Turned out that the young guys left to eat, but three older, scruffier guys weren't part of the club and got left behind. I know a lost cause when I see it, and rolled across the street to the Fingerhut side.

Where it was completely dead. Hardly anyone even slowed down -- it was just me and the Cat in the Hat. But one girl took a look at the list and was completely thrilled to have me play "A Whole New World" from Aladdin. And two older ladies came by and one of them couldn't even wait until I was done singing "Catch the Wind" to tell me that I had "a *beautiful* voice". Flattering for sure, but she didn't have to act *so* surprised...

Anyway, when nobody is stopping, you have two choices. (A) Play all your best, most polished stuff, hoping to rope somebody in, or (B) Play for yourself: obscure stuff, and songs that need some more work to become A-List.

I did the latter: "Handyman", "Wonderful World", the Everly Brothers' "Dream", "Mexico", "Billy Jean". It was kinda fun. But when one of the homeless guys who can't even say nice things without cursing a blue streak came across the street aggressively demand that I *re*play "Mr. Bojangles" 'cuz it was his mom's favorite, I decided it was time to cut my losses.

But before I left, I went over to tell Shirtless Josh, who acts as a den mother to the rest of the homeless guys, that I had driven "Robo Mike" to his mom's house the night before, and not to worry about him -- his not being around on Sunday was probably a good sign.


Saturday, September 27, 2014

K&W in Laguna Beach -- Saturday, 27Sept2014

Got there at about 7:30, and there was nobody else playing. The great part about starting later is that I have battery life to play later, and we did -- until a little after midnight.

Only one homeless kid, and also the large lady who mimes my songs. Fortunately, she wasn't as drunk as usual and was more restrained. Unfortunately, for some reason they had towels spread out on the bench, taking up even more room. I couldn't tell if they thought they were "saving seats" for their friends, or what. But at least they were at the far end, so the regular people had a place to sit.

It was a pretty great night. Lots of people came by and requested songs and hung around. At 8:30 or so, a pair of couples came by, obviously already pretty well lubricated. They arrived just as I was doing "Let It Be" for a nice proper Chinese lady, and they rudely stood right in front of her and sang along, loudly and badly. Nothing I could do about it, but it was a shame -- I preferred her company to theirs.

One of the guys asked me to play some Jethro Tull. I told him I didn't know any, but then thought better of it, since, come morning, I always regret not taking a risk the night before. So I fired up "Mother Goose", and luckily, they were drunk enough to not notice how badly it went. Later on, I also played "Father and Son" for a lady who requested it, even though it's in my "Still Learning This" section. Born to be wild...

Around 9:30, I was playing "You've Got a Friend" when a young couple came up. The guy spun around to face her, dropped to one knee, and proposed, right there in the middle of the song. I couldn't hear them, but apparently she said yes, 'cuz the cute friendly foreign people sitting next to them on the bench started applauding. After the song, the older couple standing on the other side asked, and were flabbergasted when they confirmed that, yes, he'd proposed, and she'd accepted.

The foreign people were obviously thrilled, too, and after a while the man came over and handed the groom-to-be a big wad of money as an engagement present. The girl was speechless with surprise and gratitude at these perfect strangers' generosity. I've been playing out for people for almost 13 years now, but this was my first live proposal. Flattering that the guy thought that underneath my song was his "perfect moment".

Oddly, the guy asked me to play "Fire and Rain" next, which I did, and refrained pointing out that the girl in the song had committed suicide...

I had equipment trouble all night. The guitar was getting quieter and more distorted all the time, and the distortion get terrible through "Sound of Silence", which was coincidentally a good choice, since the original recording famously features distorted guitar. I should recognize by now that the symptoms mean a dead battery in the "DI" preamp, but I didn't, and replaced the battery inside the guitar that powers its pickup. Twice.

It still didn't work, which finally made it dawn on me that it was the DI, but that one's hard to replace, jammed in the backpack, so I just wired up the guitar bypassing the DI. But pretty soon after I'd finally got the guitar sounding good, I broke the tuning peg button of my A string in half, trying to tune up. I had a nice lady waiting to hear "You'll Be In My Heart" from "Tarzan", so I tried to play it anyway, dodging that now-floppy string by playing alternate bar chord versions, but it was a mess, so that was the last song.

On the way home, at 1:30, I passed by "Robo Mike", one of the nice homeless kids. He was walking up El Toro road through the wilderness down there, so I went back and picked him up. He was pretty high (apparently his self-appointed nickname isn't a reference to "Robocop", but to "Robitussin"), but he had decided to see if his mom would let him come home.

Turns out she lives about a mile from my house, so I took him as far as the gate to the tract, but he couldn't remember the code, and she wouldn't answer the phone, so I had to just leave him there to see if he could figure out a way in. I felt bad about that, but figured, worst case, he'd have to sleep in the bushes there, so he was no worse off than sleeping in the bushes in Laguna. And at least I'd spared him the three-hour walk. On the other hand, he might have been able to make a better case to his mom a bit more sober at 4:30, than so high he couldn't put a sentence together at 1:30.

Clearly he's made some bad decisions, but he's really a pretty good kid, and I hope it works out for him and I never see him again down on The Corner.

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Keith in Laguna Beach -- Sunday, 21Sept2014

Since Saturday was a bit of a disaster, I thought I'd go down about 7 on Sunday and see if I could salvage the weekend. But when I got there, the young homeless guys were camped out on the bench again, and by the time I got back from parking my car, the Two Guys with Guitars from the night before had appeared. But they had only played for a bit last time, so I sat down to wait them out.

Mikey the Greeter came by with his take-out dinner, and we had a nice talk, but the Guys just wouldn't quit. They're not bad, but it's a bit annoying because they're just acoustic and nobody can hear them, and even then, most of the time they're just practicing or jamming, and not really "entertaining" at all.

So I waited and waited, but they never left. Around 8:30, I finally decided that, since I'd drug all this stuff out there, I'd better go play on the Fingerhut side, just to have played at all.

I set up in my "minimum deployment" mode -- no CDs, songlists, or sign out, 'cuz I was hoping that the Guys would leave and I could roll back over. That never happened, and though I eventually got a songlist out to pass around, I didn't sell any CDs, 'cuz nobody knew I had any.

The good part was that although there wasn't a lot of foot traffic on that side, there was also not much auto traffic behind me, so it was nicely quiet to play in. And I actually got a lot of attention from the passersby. One couple stopped and asked for a couple of songs, and I guess those went well 'cuz they stayed and asked for some more, and some more, interleaved by occasional requests from other people coming up.

One guy asked for "anything by 'The Band'", so I did "The Weight", and he sang along with that one and a few more afterwards. The other couple finally decided that they needed to go home, but the wife suggested that I put an ad for playing parties on Craig's List, which I'd never thought of.

The husband thought I should go try to get in at The Cliff restaurant. I said that I thought they only hired bands that played original material, but he said that they go there all the time and there are lots of cover bands. He said that I needed to talk to "Andrew", and thought that maybe next Saturday he'd come down and somehow hook me up with him. Or maybe convince Andrew to come down and listen.

I just might be getting close to being desperate/brave enough to pursue such a thing.

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Keith in Laguna Beach -- Saturday, 20Sept2014

Since summer is officially over, I decided to take a chance that nobody else would be there, so I wouldn't have to get there so early. So I had dinner at home (instead of in the car on the way down there) and got there at 6:30. Warren had something else going on but would come down as soon as he could.

As I was walking from my car down to the corner, a couple was walking the other way on the sidewalk, and the guy started clapping. I looked at him and he said, "We *love* your music! I have your CD, and I play it all the time!" Pretty cool, getting applause before I even set up...

When I got to the corner one of our homeless friends, who calls himself "Robo Mike" these days, was on the bench, just goofing around on his guitar. He's easy going, and had no problem letting me take over. Unfortunately, he was there with 3 or 4 of the other young homeless guys, who were occupying almost the entire bench.

And worse, they were making incredibly rude comments and offers to all the pretty girls who walked through. It was the kind of stuff you only expect to hear from cartoon construction workers on TV, not in real life. I figured the best I could do would be to start playing and hope to drive them away, or at least, drown them out. So I played all my most sappy songs, hoping they'd get bored and leave, but no luck. But at least the rude comments subsided somewhat.

I had some nice people come by and listen, but since they couldn't sit down, none of them lasted very long. Then at around 8:00, right in the middle of "Mrs. Robinson" (I had given up on boring the guys away by then), the amplification goes dead. There was no power getting to the wireless rigs and harmony box. I got out my pocket knife and rebuilt the connector at the battery, but after twenty minutes of messing with it, decided that it wasn't really the connector -- there just wasn't any charge in the battery.

So just as I was starting to pack up, and was going to text Warren to tell him not to bother, he rolled up. Oh, well. We did get a chance to have a nice long chat.

So I was thwarted by equipment failure just as it was starting to be "prime time". And while I was trying to fix the, the homeless guys had finally gotten bored enough to leave, making it even more frustrating to not be able to play. But maybe it was, at least, a lesson on how to get rid of them...


Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Solar Eclipse Follies #1

My 60th birthday is coming up in a few weeks so I thought I'd write up a few of my Stories, while I can still remember (or make up) a reasonable portion of them, complete with entirely bogus, Photoshopped, made up images. None of the following may be terribly true or accurate, but it's how I remember it.

In 1979, there was a total solar eclipse across the Pacific Northwest. When I was a kid, my answer to, "What do you want to be when you grow up?" was always, "Astronomer". Since this would be the last one on US soil for 38 years, I was determined to go. I was 24 years old, nominally going to Golden West College, and working part time at minimum wage in its library, which somehow paid for my half of an HB ghetto apartment, bad food, and 63 cents/gallon gasoline.

I asked my buddy John to come along. He foolishly agreed. We'd take my 1968 Ford longbed Econoline with "The Blatzmobile" emblazoned on the side, take turns driving, sleep in sleeping bags in the back, catch the eclipse, visit some friends in Seattle, and come on home -- what could go wrong?

I happened to be taking Astronomy 101 as a night class at Golden West at the time, and since I was the only student in the class that was taking it for the content, not the imprint on a transcript, I was the "teacher's pet". I told him about missing a class or two because of the eclipse trip, and he amazingly (and irresponsibly) let me borrow one of the school's eight-inch Celestron telescopes (Spock's favorite!), along with a sun filter. All packed in a strong "footlocker" style case, which turns out to be a good thing...

The eclipse was due to occur around 8 a.m. on February 26th. We stocked up on "Red PVC" (aka "Red Vines" (never "Twizzlers"!)), and left on the 24th.

We make good time that first day, with one exception. Johnny's driving and awkwardly trying to fiddle with the tape player that's on a shelf behind his head, and swerves a little in the process and gets pulled over. The cop ascertains that he's not drunk, just driving like it, and lets us go with a warning.

Later that evening, we're cruising through the forest and coming up on Bend, Oregon. Johnny is driving, and "Steeleye Span" is on the tape player. All is right with the world. The highway through the forest is one lane each way, and we're trapped behind a slow-moving camper truck. Johnny decides to pass him, and creeps out to the left to check on the oncoming traffic.

Background Info: In a normal car, the driver is sitting well behind the wheels that steer the car, and that's how we all learn to drive. In these old-school vans, the steerable wheels are directly underneath the front seats. This has the effect of causing people who aren't used to it to oversteer.

Johnny isn't used to it, so when he sees an oncoming car and turns to bring the van back into our lane, he oversteers. It's February in Oregon, and, unlike quicksand, "black ice" is a real thing, not a Hollywood invention. The back end of the van starts to slide.

Johnny does the exact right thing: steers into the skid, but, again, oversteers, and now we're skidding in the other direction. He (over) corrects that skid, and the next one, and now we're spun around almost 180 degrees and we slide off the road, down a 6 or 8 foot embankment, rolling over all four sides and back onto the wheels again, dead stop.

Side Story: Ever since I'd known him, any time anyone took a turn kinda fast, Johnny would yell out "We're gonna ROOOLLLL!" Here it was actually true for the first time, and he neglects to say it. What a blown opportunity...

The old van just has seat belts, not even shoulder straps, but we're both fine, although unconvinced that "Permanent Press" is the proper setting for a full-sized Econoline. The engine has died, but Maddy Prior is still singing away on the tape player in the otherwise spooky dead silence, which seems wildly inappropriate given the circumstances, so one of us slams the player off. The van's heater barely works, so we've got a lit propane-burning catalytic heater sitting between us, which it seems prudent to shut off, too.

Since we were going backwards when we left the road, the roll goes towards the driver's side first. The initial impact on that side takes the normally square cross section of the van and makes it a right-leaning parallelogram. The rectangular windshield no longer fits in its parallelogramed frame, and gets spit 30 feet away across the clearing, shattered. The passenger door flies open partway through the roll, and is sticking out like a flag in the wind when that side comes around to the dirt, shattering the window, folding the door in half, and breaking it off its hinges.

The stuff in the back of the van looks like it was once mounted on the wall, but the hooks all simultaneously broke and it's on the floor now. My metal toolbox has visited on all four surfaces during the roll, and left triangular holes punched in the cheap paneling on the walls and ceiling. The school's telescope is, luckily, completely unharmed in its well-made footlocker case. It's too bad I won't be sending in a testimonial letter to the manufacturer.

It's Oregon, and for miles in either direction, the highway is bordered by trees. Amazingly, exactly where we left the road there's a clearing for the entrance to a logging road. A hundred yards sooner or later, and we'd'a been smashed into a wall of trees instead of barrel-rolling in the soft thin snow. Nice aim, Johnny!

It's 1979 and even if there were cell phones, neither of us would'a been able to afford one. But the guy in the car behind us, who musta had a great view of the van wagging its fanny and then rolling down the ditch, stopped and said that he'd send a tow truck back once he got into Bend, just a ways up the road.

The tow truck shows up, winches the van back up the embankment (pulling a tire off its rim in the process), and drives us all back to town. We don't know what else to do, so we leave the van in the parking lot of the (now closed) Ford dealer, and, without a van to sleep in (well, without a van with *windows*), we walk across the street to a motel to get a room for the night.

In the morning, we go back to the Ford dealer to explain the busted heap of a van that had magically appeared in their parking lot during the night. At minimum, we'll need a windshield, the tire re-mounted, and to figure out why the engine won't start. They'll look at the latter two, but they don't have a windshield for an 11-year-old van.

But we had an eclipse to get to tomorrow morning anyway, so the plan became to rent a car -- which, small town, they handled -- and fetch a windshield from a junkyard in Portland on the way back.

Being a Ford dealer, the cheapest car they have for rent is a Fiesta. They run a blank tissue-and-carbon-paper form with Johnny's credit card (I didn't even have one at the time) for the rental. We throw the telescope and sleeping bags in the hatchback, and we're off again.

The path of the eclipse runs off the Pacific and through Washington and Idaho, west to east. We're looking to be anywhere along the path that has clear skies. The Cascades run north-south, cutting Washington in half. The radio tells us that the mountains will hold the clouds that form over the ocean on the left hand side, so we go up the right.

By that afternoon we're in central Washington, but the radio has changed its mind -- now the winds off the ocean will keep the western side clear. So we make a left turn toward the mountains.

But as we approach the pass through the Cascades, we hit a traffic jam, completely stopped. Turns out, being February, there's been an avalanche and the pass is closed. We sit there for a while, but finally make a U-turn out of the jam, and find a Washington Highway Patrol office right there at the foot of the mountain, and pull in. We go inside and tell the lady at the front desk that we'll be waiting in the parking lot, and maybe she could come out and let us know if/when they manage get the pass clear.

Which never happens. We spend the night trying to sleep, freezing to death in the parking lot in a Ford Fiesta. I don't recommend it.

In the morning, the pass is still closed, but it doesn't matter 'cuz the radio has changed its mind again -- we're back to the Cascades will block the clouds, and Central Washington is the place to be, the further east, the better. So we defrost the windshield and we're off again, as fast as we can go.

The eclipse is due about 8:15, and we're halfway to Idaho in the middle of nowhere when it comes around, so we just pull over in a likely spot at the side of the road, set up the telescope, and wait.

If there's even the tiniest bit of sun still showing from behind the moon, it's not "total", and you can't look at it. Except with the solar filter on the telescope. But that's boring -- just a shrinking sliver of sun, looking just like a crescent moon. So we just hang around, waiting the last few minutes.

But finally... Since we were in the middle of nowhere in the central plains, there was a small valley in front of us. I guess I should have realized it would happen (it being, like, the definition of an eclipse), but as we looked out across the valley, the Shadow Of The Moon raced across and over us. It Blew. My. Mind. The actual shadow. Of the moon. Cast by the sun. Came racing over our heads.

Suddenly the flat "bowl of the sky" was a 3D *apparatus*. Tangibly. The moon was *here*, and the sun was way out *there*, both zooming around, and we were underneath them. They weren't just glowing circles rolling across the sky every day, they were *things* up there, with relationships to each other in 3D space. You just don't/can't get it, feel it, own it, until you see it happen under an eclipse.

But of course the shadow passing over also meant: totality. I yanked the solar filter off of the telescope. It was amazing. Binoculars, too -- amazing. You can't decide whether to look at the sun, or marvel at the world under the eclipse. It's not exactly "dark", but it's gloomy. Stars are out. The light is weird, silvery, and the world has literally never looked like that before.

You spend two and a half minutes going back and forth between looking around, and up, looking through the binoculars -- which show the whole sun and the corona, and, frankly, looks like the pictures you see in books, but still, better, 'cuz it's *live* -- and looking through the telescope which magnifies the edge and you can see bright pink *prominences* jutting out into space. Completely amazing. Fact is, everything and everywhere you look is completely amazing. You really don't have the capacity to soak it all in.

But it's just two and a half minutes, and the sun peeks over the opposite edge that it disappeared behind, and it's over. You can't look at it anymore, the corona and stars are gone, and the view through the solar filter is just like the pre-show, but backwards, and even more boring than the first time.

So the telescope goes back into its box, and minds blown or not, it's a quick U-turn and off to Portland. I just doesn't seem right to have a Life Altering Cosmic Experience, and then immediately head out for the Junk Yard, but life likes to pull crap like that.

After an old-school session with Yellow Pages and paper maps, we find a junk yard in Portland and are the proud owners of a used, but unshattered, windshield. Getting it back to the van is another problem. It's too long to fit in the back of the tiny Fiesta, so we have to slide it in standing up between the seats, where it forms a "Cone of Silence" barrier between us. Conversation sounds like shouting down a well, all the way back to Bend.

When we get back to the Ford Dealer, they've fixed the tire and reconnected the coil ground wire that was preventing the engine from running. The new old windshield won't properly mount in the now-parallelogram windshield opening, so the guy sticks it to a fat bead of caulking, and covers the edge with duct tape. "You can take it to a real body shop and get it mounted better when you get home." (Which, of course, never happens.) All this goes on Johnny's credit card 'cuz he feels guilty and I'm broke.

When we go around the other side of the building to turn in the rental Fiesta, the lady hands Johnny his copy of the already-signed and now-filled-in form we'd left behind, and says, "You're lucky. There was something wrong with the odometer. It said a thousand and sixty-six miles, so we only charged you for sixty-six."

We're confused by this, but it slowly dawns on us as we walk away that we'd been gone for less than two days, and they couldn't believe that we'd driven over a thousand miles in that time, so they blamed the "mistake" on the odometer. Now, if they'd'a said something to us before writing the total we'd'a probably 'fessed up, but, since the credit card transaction was done already, and all the rest of this is costing (Johnny) a broke-college-kid's fortune, we just accept the gift and let it slide.

So the van runs and has four wheels and a windshield, but the passenger door is windowless and folded in half, and the driver's door is still straight but the van is leaning away from it by 4 or 5 inches.

We drive to a hardware store and buy a rubber mallet and a lot of duct tape. In the parking lot, we set the folded passenger door on a concrete parking berm and jump up and down on it until it's straight enough to duct tape back into its opening, and then fill the entire window cavity with more tape. The driver-side window is miraculously fine, but we have to tape up the 5-inch gap at the top to keep out the February-in-Oregon cold.

The back doors are jammed and unopenable in their parallelogramed frame, so with both front doors taped closed, the only way in or out of the van is through the side doors behind the passenger seat. And since the engine is in a big box between the front seats, that means climbing over it every time. But we're young and flexible, so no big deal.

We get back on track by driving up to Seattle to visit some friends that have moved there. Not much to tell, except the part where the clutch is dying, so we're on a vertically undulating country road on the way to another junk yard to get a clutch, and it gives up entirely and we end up powerless, rolling back and forth between two small hills like the shoop-shoop B-B's in a Hula Hoop.

I have no idea how we made it to the junk yard and got the new clutch, but somehow we were finally on our way home. But then, somewhere in the middle of the Central Valley, barrelling down I-5 just after dark, we get lit up by the CHP. Not *again*...

I'm in a sleeping bag in the back and Johnny's driving again, but not particularly speeding, so we're mystified. He pulls over, and I reluctantly climb out of the entangling sleeping bag and get my shoes on. Johnny has to wait for me to clear the area before climbing over the engine to follow me out the side door.

The sleeping bag and shoe delay, the rigmarole's silhouette on the backdoor window curtains, and the unexplained side door egress freaks the CHP guys out, so they pull their guns and put us "up against the wall" (van).

They run our licenses and all that, but we have nothing, and have done nothing. They only stopped us 'cuz my registration sticker is still sitting in an envelope on my kitchen table back home, and not on the license plate, but they radio in to see that I'm paid up, so they let us go. First and last time I've had a gun pointed at my head. Wasn't on my Bucket List to begin with...

Late that night, we finally make it home -- in one piece, broker, but also richer. Wondering when the next total eclipse is. Best, worst, road trip ever.

Monday, September 15, 2014

My Heart Attack or Two

My 60th birthday is coming up in a few weeks so I thought I'd post a few of my Stories, while I can still remember (or make up) a reasonable portion of them. None of the following may be terribly true or accurate, but it's how I remember it. It's probably appropriate to start with my "Brush with Death".

Around Christmas 2002 I had a heart attack or two, or so they tell me. They weren't the "clutch your left arm, grit your teeth, and fall on the ground (and die, or not, depending on the needs of the script)" kind like you see in the movies, which is probably as fortunate as it is anticlimactic. But to start at the beginning...

For a couple of weeks before Christmas, whenever we'd walk the dogs, I'd get a dull ache in my left wrist. I'd be thinking, "Gee, I don't remember typing all that much today." In retrospect: duh!

Then when I went to bed on Christmas Eve, it felt like I'd wrenched my back. (Along with, you know, like, every other muscle I own. Despite having done nothing all day to wrench anything. *Willfully* stupid, or just *plain* stupid -- you decide.) I tossed and turned, vainly looking for a position that didn't hurt, and eventually managed to get to sleep.

Christmas Day at my mom's house in Downey. The presents are all opened, and most of the relatives have gone home. I mention to my mom that I've been having this pain in my left wrist, and she says "Go see a doctor". I'm like, "Oh, it's not that bad, and only once in a while", and she says, "Go see a doctor". My dad, whose family all dies from heart attacks, and himself a recent recipient of a quintuple bypass, wanders through, and my mom tells him that I'm having pain in my left wrist. He says, "Go see a doctor, it's your heart".

I say, "No, no, no -- it's just a little ache", leaving out the "that happens when I exercise, and creeps further up my arm the more I do, and goes away as I cool down" part, 'cuz I'm not exactly aware of that pattern yet.

My dad says, "I'll prove it to you", and goes and fetches one of his nitroglycerin pills. I put it under my tongue as instructed, in dissolves, and nothing happens, and I say so.

Side Note: Of *course* nothing happened -- there was nothing *to* happen. I realize now that my dad thought that I was having pain *at that moment*, and his "proof" was going to be that the pain went away when I took the nitro. He didn't know I wasn't having any pain to alleviate, and I didn't know what he meant by "proof". Communication Score: 0 out of 10.

So he says, "Oh, they lose potency when the bottle's open. I'll get you a new one". I take that one, and...

Science Note: Nitro stops heart attacks by somehow magically opening up the (clogged up) arteries around your heart, so all your blood can go there. Very clever -- unfortunately, there may not be enough blood left for your head.

... I immediately faint. I'm sitting on the couch, so I just keel over. I wake up moments later to see my dad hovering over me yelling my name, and my wife on the phone, lying to the paramedics about me having a heart attack. All I'm really having is a nitro-overdose-induced fainting spell, but potato, potahto.

Pretty quick the paramedics arrive and come tromping in in their big yellow pants. The guy asks me if I can sit up, and I'm feeling perfectly fine now that there's blood in my brain, so I say, "Sure!", and sit up and almost faint again, and lie back down, and revise my answer to, "No, I guess not". He says that if I can't get over to the stretcher, he has to take me in, and I figure it probably won't count if I crawl over there, so off we go. (By the way, I can definitively state that having a heart attack on Christmas is the *definition* of "Never live it down".)

On the way to the hospital, I imagine they installed the I.V.s with the blood thinners and beta blockers that I ended up with, but I don't like needles so whenever they bring any out I go to my Happy Place and refuse to notice. Is that a squirrel?

At the hospital, they apparently don't have any rooms for me, so I lie on a gurney in the hallway, and as the nitro wears off, I have another "wrenched back" episode. I tell each passing nurse, "Ouch" or words to that effect, and they each respond the way you do when a drunk junkie asks you for spare change from a dark alley -- pretend you didn't hear and walk faster.

They eventually get me into a room, and very eventually the cardiologist shows up (it is Christmas Day, after all), and suddenly it's old home week. The guy is my dad's actual cardiologist, and it's all "Hey, Don! How you doing? This your boy?" My dad sheepishly admits his felony distribution of prescription drugs, and the guy just slaps him on the back and says, "Hey, don't worry about it! I'd'a done the same thing!"

The rest of the hospital stay is a bit of a blur -- no doubt there were needles involved, and, like I say, once those come out, I'm decidedly Not There anymore. Apparently, they decided that they could run a camera up in me to take a look at the trouble, but couldn't be bothered to actually fix it while they were in there. Sure 'nuff, the pictures show that my hereditarily high cholesterol has caused my arteries to jam up like a grease-filled glass pipe in a Drano commercial.

But apparently they can't just throw some Drano into one of these fifty needles that are already installed in me -- they gotta do it old-school like Roto-Rooter and physically scrape the gunk away. And that takes, somehow, more people in the room than the camera work does, even though it's essentially the same procedure. And it's Christmas, so there aren't enough people around to do it. So they decide to (upside!) ambulance me down to my own hospital in Mission Viejo, where I can be closer to my people, and the equipment isn't left over from World War Two.

At Mission, they put me in a room in I.C.U., even though I was really just waiting around for some doctors to get home from their golfing trips in the Bahamas. Apparently they had rooms to spare, 'cuz, surprise!, most folks try to *avoid* the hospital at Christmas time.

I spent most of the time laying around, getting re-poked every half-hour or so (it seemed) by another nurse wanting more blood. I invariably told each of them that I don't like needles, but since needles are a Nurse's Best Friend, they just laughed it off, and didn't notice me not laughing along. Until one guy who said, "Oh, I'll use the tiny needle, then". What?!? There are "tiny needles"?!? And he went to work and I didn't feel a thing. Why is *this* a secret?!?

Apparently they can tell if you've had, and count, heart attacks by looking at your blood. There might be tea leaves, a carved bone rattle, and some possum teeth involved, too. They told me I had had two heart attacks. Really?!? When? I don't remember clutching my left arm, gritting my teeth, and falling down. But the possum teeth don't say "when", just if. I reckon they were that toss-and-turn night, and the late evening that I spent invisible on a gurney in the hallway.

I was visited in the hospital by a surprising number of friends and family, who apparently didn't expect me to leave there vertically, but who were civil enough not to mention any money I might owe them. And I spent a lot of time trying to sleep with a dozen stickers with wires attached glued to my chest. I finally decided to (Born to be Wild!) just lose the hospital gown that was making it even worse, having to thread the wires out the neck, and, as we all know, doesn't cover anything anyway.

At one point a pretty nurse came in and asked me if I wanted to, you know, freshen up a little. I thought, "Score! Sponge bath!", but she just tossed a packet of giant wet-naps on the bed and closed the curtains on her way out.

Finally, a cardiologist managed to trade in his golf gloves for some surgical ones and come by to see me. (He was Muslim, but who can blame him for taking advantage of someone else's holiday?) He walked in reading the chart, looked up, and halfway turned around to leave. Apparently, by the chart, he was expecting some 70-year-old fat guy, not a 48-year old skinny one.

He ended up doing the procedure, where they run a mini Doc Ock bendable robot arm up from a cut in the big artery under the fold where your tummy meets your leg, up to your heart, swab it out a little, and leave some expandable ballpoint pen springs in the tight parts to hold 'em open. I'd describe it more fully, but I'm getting woozy just thinking about it.

To make it just that much more fun, they can't put you to sleep for it so you don't have to watch, but they can give you a Valium so you get to watch but you don't care. And actually, given the Valium, it's kind of fun to watch the giant industrial robot arm with the X-ray cam at the end, wooshing around you every which way so the doc can tell what he's doing in there, and not, you know, tear a hole in an artery wall so they have to crack your chest open to fix it (which is, it turns out, why there are so many people around -- just in case).

Of course, you spend an hour or so waiting for everyone to show up and get their stuff, and, you know, the extra needles, ready. And you don't want to be thinking about what they're about to do to you, or all those needles. I spent that time running through the most complicated guitar song I know, "Scarborough Faire", in my head, envisioning the left and right hand patterns in 3D space like a guitar-centric version of the beginning of "Toccata and Fugue" in "Fantasia". The Valium may have helped with that...

Anyway, Spoiler Alert!, it all went fine and I survived to tell the tale. In Downey, they cut into my right leg to run the camera up to my heart. In Mission Viejo, they used the left leg. Afterwards, Mission Viejo put in a single dissolving stitch, and by the time I got home, you couldn't tell anything had happened there. On the other hand (or leg), Downey had put a big wad of gauze and, I'm not making this up, a giant plastic C-clamp around to my buns to hold it. Even six days later, it looked like I'd been hit by a truck. The blood thinners undoubtedly contributed to the bruising, but yeowch! (I have pictures, but you don't want to see them.)

Inexplicably, in the following few days while I was resting up from all the fun, I had an urge to document the experience in cartoon form, despite little or no previous experience (or skill) with drawing cartoons. I'll include those here.

It's been more than a decade since all of this, and I haven't had a twinge of trouble since, so, good job, Doc. And it's strangely comforting to know where your weakest link is. Whenever I do something stupid (like eat something that's fallen on the floor, or drink from a BPA-infested water bottle) and my wife says, "Don't do that", I say, "*This* ain't what's gonna kill me".


Saturday, September 13, 2014

K&W in Laguna Beach -- Saturday, 13Sept2013

This was our first Saturday since the official end of summer, and the lack of traffic and ease of parking were omens of how few people would be out, at least for the first few hours.

But around 8:00 the after-dinner crowd started to arrive, and it turned into a terrific night. The palm frond flower guys are gone, and we had almost no distracting homeless people -- just that one large woman who doesn't so much *like* my songs as worship them, and insists on miming every bit of the lyrics, scaring tourists and small children in the process.

My voice was in inexplicably terrific shape, and I could hit the high notes with incredible ease. I think that the amp was up too loud as well, since there was nobody else out playing to be bothered, and I can sing so much better when the monitor is good and loud so I can hear myself.

My cop "buddy" Darren came by on a bicycle, and listened from across the street for a while (so I played "You've Got a Friend", *really* quietly), but I think he was mostly interrogating Crazy Josh over there. He eventually rolled right on through, and didn't say a word. Later on a different cop came by, but he didn't say anything either. Still, it's unsettling to have so much Law Enforcement attention. But probably "Chilling Effect" is what they're there for.

Still, overall a great night, especially after the discouraging nights we've been having lately. Plenty of nice people listening and putting in requests, and a few of them with foreign accents, so not all of the tourists have gone home yet. I sold 10 CDs and there was an unexpectedly lot of money in the jar.

Around 9:30, there was an empty space, so I tried out the new song I've been messing with, "Sultans of Swing". It sounds pretty cool at home, but totally lame out in real life. But two groups of people (embarrassingly) showed up while I was playing it, and sat down to listen, so maybe it wasn't that bad after all. I might give it one more try...


Saturday, September 06, 2014

Keith at a Private Party -- Saturday, 06Sept2014

My brother got me a gig playing for his Lawyer Club party, so the pressure was on me not to make a fool out of him in front of his peer group. Not to mention that they weren't altogether sure about paying for a pig in a poke.

It was in the huge backyard of a judge, who introduced himself as "Charlie". HIs wife was the twin sister of the mom on "That 70's Show", and a real sweetie. The group turned out to be mostly people in the right age bracket to like my stuff, and it went quite well. Since it was basically a cocktail party, there was no applause, but fortunately, I'm not as sensitive to people not "actively listening" as I used to be. And people did give me a thumbs-up once in a while, and I take it as a compliment whenever someone comes up to request a song, though I suppose It could be them hoping to find something on the list that's better than the crap I've been playing so far...

After cocktails, there was dinner. I tried not to notice that all the tables filled up except the one closest to me. But after dinner, the spell broke somehow -- I guess they finally had nothing in their hands; drink nor fork -- and there started to be applause after the songs, starting, inexplicably, with the Everly Brothers song, "Dream". I guess it sounds pretty great with the harmony box singing the high part. I'll have to try to remember to bring that one out more often.

After everyone was gone and I was packing up, the judge and his wife came over to talk to me, and she must have used the word "perfect" a dozen times, about the songs, my singing and playing, the fit for the party, etc. She made me a grocery bag full of leftover food, tried to give me two bottles or wine, and slid me an additional $60 before I left. Sometimes it's a bit insulting for people to seem so surprised that I'm pretty good, but I'm sure they mean it as a compliment.

Several people came up to take business cards, including one guy who had hosted this apparently-annual party in years past, and presumed that he'd be doing so again. The judge's wife was sure that other people would be contacting me for future parties, so they must have been talking about me behind my back...

I’m just glad it worked out so well, or my brother'd never be able to live it down. And I imagine that whoever "fronted" the $200 won’t have any trouble getting reimbursed, now that everyone in the club has heard what they paid for.


Saturday, August 30, 2014

K&W in Laguna Beach -- Saturday, 30Aug2014

Warren lives a lot closer to The Corner, so he went down around 6:00 to see if there was any chance of it being available, and to our surprise, he got it and called me and I jumped in the van. Parking was another matter, though, and after I surrendered to the Valet parking garage (!), we started around 7:00.

Unfortunately, the Palm Frond Rose operation was in full swing again, taking up most of the bench. Warren asked them to try to leave some space for the tourists, but they weren't very responsive. And indeed, when Angel arrived and heard that Warren was talking to his "crew" he got very angry and threatening. (He later apologized, but explained that they make way more money when they set up like that.)

I get it that this scam really works for them -- they spend their time reworking free materials into something that they get "voluntary tips" for, and they make way more money than just sitting there looking pathetic with a hand-lettered cardboard sign. And of course the cops can't do anything about it, 'cuz they're just "giving flowers to the pretty ladies", totally innocent.

But because they take up almost the whole bench so people can't sit to eat their ice cream, and many people find the interaction with these polite but scruffy guys uncomfortable, they put a huge damper on our ability to get any audience going. Indeed, we played from 7 to 11:00, and brought in a third of what we usually do on a summer Saturday -- the tips not being really the point, but being a pretty clear indicator of how much Not Fun it was.

Helping to ruin the evening on the Fingerhut side was Loud David, the neo-hippie. Warren at least talked him into aiming his amp not directly at us, so it wasn't as bad as last time, but it's still very distracting, and has to be detrimental to the people who'd like to hear me. At least the fire trucks are polite enough to go on by, eventually.

The saving grace was the appearance of two sets of Superfans: the cute and sweet Vietnamese couple, Phuong and Christopher; and young Gabby from Spain with her family. Gabby used to visit me at Spectrum, almost every time I played there for a while. She brought to show me her new pink guitar once, so I asked her if she was learning to play it. She said "A little", and I told her that that was OK, because she was still little.

It's hard for me to believe it, but I have to think that both of them showed up because, since I had advanced notice that I'd be playing on The Corner, I'd posted that we'd be there on my Facebook "Music Page". I suppose I ought to be posting there every time…

Since there was nobody there most of the time, I did have a chance to play a few new songs I've been working on. People keep asking me for Neil Diamond, and I only have "Play Me" in my book 'cuz all of his popular songs are heavily produced (with horn sections, etc.) so I can't make them sound good. (Actually, that's not entirely true -- I also have "Sweet Caroline", but the part that is true is that it doesn't sound very good.)

But it occurred to me that now that I'm strumming not-half-badly, I might be able to pull off "Solitary Man", so I worked it up again. And I guess it's accordingly just about not half bad.

I also re-worked up "Catch the Wind", just 'cuz it sounds so Laguna Beach to me. Donovan plays it in a flat-picking style that's way out of my wheelhouse, but when I have a plastic fingernail glued on, I can almost fake it pretty well. At least Phuong seemed to like it (of course, she likes anything I play).

So, a mostly terrible night, with some bright spots. It's a shame that the environmental conditions have deteriorated to such a point. I'm pretty sure that if it had been like this the first time I went down there, I wouldn't have gone a second time.


Friday, August 29, 2014

Keith in Laguna Beach -- Friday, 29Aug2015

I took aim at 6:30 last night, but there was an accident on Laguna Canyon Road, so after some difficulty parking, I got to the empty corner at 7:15. One of the homeless kids warned me that the cops were giving out tickets today, and apparently expected me to just go home. But I'm not breaking any laws, so I stayed.

Nobody else was down there, but the Flower Kids arrived and set up their workshop on the bench. I requested that they leave some room for the tourists to sit and eat their ice cream, which they readily agreed to, but didn't take to heart, much.

Not a lot of people out on a Friday, though. I got a few friendly groups, and a pretty big Kid Party when I snagged them with "Let It Go", and one little "four and a half" girl who stayed for a dozen songs, practicing her ballet moves.

I was in the middle of "Leavin' on a Jet Plane" when a middle-aged Asian woman came up, singing. She climbed up next to me so she could see the words, and held onto my arm to get in close. Apparently she wanted to share my head mic, but since I'm 6'-5" in my boots, and she was probably all of 5'-5", there wasn't much chance of that -- I can only lean over so far and keep playing the guitar... She sang along an octave higher than me in her church-lady soprano, but then took off just before the end of the song. Strange.

Around 8:30, guitar-scourge Sanchez hustled through, without his guitar, and took several pictures of my sign. Clearly a portent of trouble to come...

And so, at 9:00, as predicted, I was, like Scrooge, visited by three cops, two Beach Patrollers in their polo shorts, and a motorcycle cop who introduced himself as Darren, who did all the talking. He claimed that he'd gotten complaints about the "noise. And when I say 'noise', I don't really mean that, 'cuz I like your music". He said that the complaints were from "a local business". I expressed disbelief, and pointed out that the owner of the ice cream store loves me, and I was way too quiet to be bothering the Fingerhut ladies across the street. He said that he couldn't reveal who had lodged the complaint, and I said, "Of course not" (since it was obviously Sanchez, and not a "business" at all).

He went on to say that I wasn't supposed to have an amp, which I told him wasn't exactly true, and offered to show him the city statute on my iPad, but he declined since he wasn't really gonna ticket or stop me anyway. Apparently, he just needed me to agree to turn it down.

My new buddy Darren also secondarily warned me about complaints of illegal "vending". I pointed out that my sign says "Suggested donation" under the "$5", and he said "That’s just how you’re getting around it", to which I just shrugged, 'cuz, yes, exactly. But is it illegal..?

But to legitimize if it's a "sale" or not, he asked if I chase down people who don’t pay. I told him that I never even look -- they can deposit the money, or not, and just take a CD. Indeed, I sometimes give them away to people who profess a desire for one but a lack of cash on hand. Darren was apparently satisfied by all this, and finally wandered off to chat with his Beach Patrol friends.

(The funny part was that, although I had brought out the CD-holding racks, I'd forgotten to put any CDs on them, so, technically (and accidentally), I wasn't selling any CDs tonight, anyway.)

This second issue was also obviously inspired by Sanchez, who sells his CDs (for $10), but apparently isn't using the "donation" trick on his sign. His getting busted has made him even grumpier, and vindictive.

Anyway, I just stood there and waited for the cops to leave. I didn't want to test Darren's sound level limit, and he couldn't really just ask me to play. I suspect that they were also happy to use the opportunity to intimidate the Flower Kids a bit. And apparently, there's no law against standing on a street corner holding a guitar. After 20 minutes or so, they all finally left.

I did turn down, a lot, but since there was nobody to play for -- whatever. Except a guy came by with his two young teen sons. He sat and listened for quite a while. I thought that he was just stuck there, waiting for the wife or something, but I finally went over and offered him a song list. He said that "Everything you play is great", and told me that he drives down from Pasadena, just to listen to me. Really?!? But he knew that I'm usually there on Saturdays, and he can't be just hanging around South County after work, 'cuz he has his kids with him. Hard to believe, but incredibly flattering.

Anyway, it was a pretty slow night, partially because of summer winding down, and, I think, partially due to the chilling effect of the Flower Kids. Either way, I think Fridays are done until next summer. I did sell one CD to an older foreign lady who apparently figured out from the sign that there were CDs somewhere, and had her daughter translate her request for one. Nice of her to want one bad enough to go to the trouble...