Friday, January 25, 2019

The Cat Nip Studio



The Cat Nip Studio

Floor to ceiling & wall to wall, cat print & music cover it all.
I broadcast from here with things I hold dear, coffee catnip, guitars & gear.
Pictures of the past & books with score, 8 tracks, reel to reels & phonographs & cylinders from door to door.
Cd’s, radio waves & microphones & an old upright piano with synths close by & an old grandfather’s desk by the wall on one side.  Studio tables of chrome & glass, shelves of vinyl that are doors to the past. 
Cat beds & sand box hidden from your eyes & all of the vinyl is alphabetized.
From A to Z each genre is placed, & every cassette & CD has its place.
Stories in music that have been written before,
I’ll create once again when I step thru the door.


Monday, January 21, 2019

Dear Dave


Dear Dave,
  To say things have changed is an understatement.  I thought I would take some time to ponder over it all as I am still processing most of it.  I have been talking to your daughter.  She is lovely. She & I have much in common.  Mostly you.  You will be happy to know that we are exchanging details about things that you shared with us, things we knew about you, things she knew about you…with each other.  Once the memory door is opened things just flood in. Trouble is when you start to write them down, the words fail me.  There are so many things that we laughed & cried over.  It is my intention of sharing things with her that pop into my mind, a story at a time.   Your one liners, she recognizes, the subject matters that defined you are so strong & evident.   I’m gonna start the first memory on what would be your 62nd birthday.   You do know that you sort of got your wish… you said you didn’t wanna get old.  Passing away at age 55 is right in that grey area where you liked to walk a lot.  I know you always wanted to “make it big”.  That was a goal that you got to almost touch many times & in many ways, you made it big to a lot of people.  Everybody you met along the way, felt you if they heard you.  You got to live the life of a rock star… ok a poor rock star but hey… if you are a starving musician you already made one of your goals. You were the best. It would wrong to ignore the fact that as a road musician you really enjoyed the gift of alcohol.  This is how we spent some of the time we were hangin out.  I think I drank more in the times that we were on the road than I ever have in my life.  I was not trying to keep up with you but for me… wow.   I mention this because it is very much apart of the first story I am about to share. 
  We were playin in a town called Gordon Nebraska for a special thing in the town that they have once a  year. The town is close to a reservation so there are many Native Americans in this area, more than Dave had ever seen in one place all at once.  We were there in the local little watering hole in the middle of the town.  It was hot,  down south kinda hot.  Dave slept with the fan on all the time or he couldn’t sleep, but if we were not in the bar setting up or playin,  he spent the time in front of the fan.  No air conditioning in the band house.  When I say band house, it was up stairs above the bar.  Narrow staircase.  Two windows in the area where Dave & Hap the drummer were gonna share.  No cross breeze at all.  My room was a small white room with a black curtain over the area where a door was supposed to be.   Dave popped his head in, looked around the room & of course we started to sing  the song by Cream “In my white room with black curtains”.     Despite the heat & the cramped quarters, once the moods adjusted to the situation, road players just adjust fast.  Grumpy leaves as soon as the music starts.   I felt a bit rebellious & punked out in my attire for the evening, right down to the black lipstick, leather & accessories.   When Rog & I went down to the bar Dave had already been there a while…. He yelled out.. MY PEOPLE!!!    He loved the look of Rock & Roll,  it was mostly the music of it all, but he had that bit of vanity thing that he wanted it to LOOK it as well as feel it.  He was cooling off at the bar… yeah that means exactly what you would think it means.  I knew the music end of things was gonna be interesting to say the least.  
  We started to play, & more drinks started showing up… it was a great crowd, packed house.  David was fascinated at how hard they partied, he was playin his butt off cause the crowd was digging him & he gave it right back.  He was really toasted, but his playin was not toasted at all.   He was not ok to drive by a long shot, but if you put 6 strings in front of him & just listened, you would never know he was that far gone.   After the show we stayed up with the owners & staff, laughing, relaxin into the wee hours of the morning but asleep before sunrise.  Here is where it gets interesting.   Dave didn’t really get hangovers.  You would have to stop drinking to get hangovers.  Sometimes he was just running on empty & needed fuel.  This place was not the lap of luxury, it made us all wanna drink!!!   Daves buzz lasted into his sleep, thru the morning when he opened his eyes.   I am not sure what happened before I heard the scream, but it was loud, accompanied by laughter.   We got up & ran into the main room to see what was going on.  Dave had had a moment…  still tipsy, not fully awake he looked out the window.  Now remember this was a celebration for the town.  There was a parade going on in the street below the windows.  Drums, very loud drums, fancy dancers, lots of em, feathers, head dresses, horses, more feathers, leather, traditional Indian outfits, the street was full of this activity as far as you could see.   In a nutshell, Dave thought we were under attack, or at least the vodka helped him with this idea. He was pretty shook until he saw us all laughing.   He calmed down & enjoyed the rest of the parade from the safety of the upstairs window, in his underwear.   Once he got his whopper, coke & cigarettes he was just fine.  
  It loses something in the telling of this story.  You had to know him to see his facial expressions, his reactions.  We got to tease him for a long time on this one.  He was fascinated with the culture, the place, the people.  He ended up being really good friends with one of our drummers (Mike) who is Native American.  He gave Dave a bone choker necklace that he cherished for years.  They met the 2nd time Dave was on tour with us.  We played 48 weeks out of the year give or take.  We were road dogs after all, you don’t take time off or you don’t make a wage.  When we had down time or a scheduled week off, or just replacing players, we would go to our house.  The couch had many a musician on it on a regular basis.  Dave took residence in my office on the floor, a pile of blankets & pillows.  We had a fog machine that we called Nessy.  We used vanilla fog in her so she smelled purdy.  If you have ever been in a road band, or traveled with one you know how practical jokes happened on a regular basis.   Nessy was part of one of those jokes on Dave.    He was sound asleep in my office at the end of the hall.   We got Nessy out of the van, hooked her up, opened the office door a crack & turned Nessy on.   The entire hallway, kitchen, dinning room & office were full of fog.    To the sleeping beauty who was out cold that was awakened by the smell of vanilla fog it looked like smoke from a fire.   We were all waiting by the door for him as he yelled FIRE!!! EVERYBODY OUT.  He came out of the house with a bunch of fog onto the deck where we waited for him….  First thing out of his mouth was… YOU ASSHOLES…followed by lots of barrel laughing.   Coffee, phone calls, agents, players, repeat.  It was a break in the search for players.  Needed by all of us. 
… drummer was practicing his parts in the band house,  bass player was going over his,  I had headphones on learning my parts, guitar player was workin in the sectioned off living room workin on his parts… Dave had just joined us for tour #2.   He had a big smile on his face, came up and hugged me.  He told me bout the drummer & everyone & said… I KNOW I’m in the right place.     If you knew Dave, you knew what that meant.  The music was everything, playin it, living it, breathing it.
  Dave I know you told people about the memories while you were with us, you had your view on how things went.  Your stories always were delivered from your Rock & Roll state of mind.  I will have a drink for you on your birthday.  The number of your birthday goes up every year.  You will be forever young, well ok maybe not young but forever Rockin.  You told me once Rock & Roll keeps you young.  I believe that, but you forgot to add that it also tires you out the older you get!!!  Stay Tuned, one memory leads to the next my friend.  Your daughter misses you, so do I.  maybe just maybe you gave us a gift for your birthday, the connection of the people that loved you…the memory of Dave Hunt lives on & on & on…