Showing posts with label November 2015. Show all posts
Showing posts with label November 2015. Show all posts

Chapter One
—Creative Non-Fiction by Caroline Allen

 In which the main character realizes that the old adage from the cheerful poster from the days of yore (her childhood in the sixties), "Today is the first day of the rest of your life," is not only true, but depressing. So much better was the poster of the Siamese kitten struggling to right itself on a horizontal bar, back legs and tail dangling in the air "Hang in there baby!" with it's eyes wide open, as if astonished to even be alive, what's more grasping a bar mid-air because life itself depends on it. But "Today is the first day of the rest of your life," either means: the rest of your life is going to be a lot like this one; or stop wasting time wishing you were doing something else and just do it. After 56 years of hanging in there, the main character feels that either meaning is true and they are not mutually exclusive, the struggles of yesterday are the same struggles of today-- with variations, to be sure, because life is better at middle age than it was in childhood, she has more power and money and personal freedom and self-knowledge; but still she finds herself that same ten year-old girl of a summer afternoon wondering, "What's the point of all this?"

Which, in a ten year old is a bit sad, but probably just means that she has nobody to play with, her mother's at work, her sister is off with her own friends, and she's bored. In this particular fifty-six year-old it means she's lost her focus, she doesn't feel like writing about her adolescent self and all the trauma of her first love, her painting isn't particularly exhilarating, and though she's proud of having gone to a dance class and actually moved her whole body, she knows it was a way to avoid writing.  And it gave her that Ventura Feeling.


Ventura Feeling: noun. 1) A sense of astonishment at how weird and uncool and dated and provincial every building, person and pair of shoes one lays one's eyes upon is. 2) The horrible realization that one belongs there without really fitting in. 3) A state of driving through streets which trigger memories that are both vivid and banal, as if Ventura were only capable of creating vibrantly mediocre experiences. 4)The suspicion that fascinating new art movements and musical groups are blossoming three thousand miles away. 5) A sort of blank unknowingness.

Now she must ask herself, "What was it about the dance class that gave her that Ventura Feeling?" She goes over the sequence of the morning's events. There was the stop at the light after the exit, staring into the distance at that same bright pink house with the tall palm tree in the yard. How many times has she sat there in her air-conditioned Honda and thought about painting that pink house, wondering where she would set up the easel, where she would park the car, if anybody would bother her on the street-- when suddenly the light changes and she drives on and forgets all about the pink house with the palm tree! She parks in the Carl's Junior parking lot next to the dance studio. She sees one of the regular dance class patrons sitting in her car talking on a cell phone with an ear bud in her ear. A friend who used to go to this dance class calls the woman, "The Angry Pixie". She also calls the class, "Prancey Dancey", which our main character, let's call her Sheila, has always found objectionable, accurate though it be. Now Sheila finds herself at the doorway staring into a large room with a padded orange floor, the kind of floor made for martial arts studios, and many people standing up, sitting down, stretching and talking. It's a big class today, about thirty people, maybe more.

The teacher, a tiny muscular woman with brilliant blue eyes and blonde hair calls everybody to stand in a circle. She's smiling and making announcements when a big bald man breaks in and says, "This is a very special day. I happen to know it's somebody's birthday" and he stares at the teacher. The teacher says, "Thank you, Len," and then announces that it's not only her birthday but also the birthday of another person in the class, the beautiful Maureen, a pale willowy woman with long thick yellow hair rolled into a bun.  The two birthday girls stand in the center of the circle and the class sings Happy Birthday. Then the class does The Whoosh, where they all bend down with their arms to their sides, swing their torsos up so they're standing upright with their arms in the air like young gymnasts and all together yell, "Whoosh". They repeat this three times. Then the teacher says she's at least ten years older than Maureen and Maureen denies it and the teacher says she's turning 53 and Maureen is turning 41 and Maureen says she is not, she's turning 46, and everybody is so shocked because they both look so young. Truly dancing keeps one looking good. That, thinks Sheila, and not getting fat. She, herself, has gotten fat. But she prefers not to dwell on it.

"Today we're going to work on strength," says the teacher. "Because I love strength. I love my body's strength, I love the strength of my will, the strength that brought me here to Ventura, the strength that's kept me going." People clap. "And along with strength we have flexibility, those two go perfectly together."

Sheila is glad to be there but thinks about how weak she's been feeling lately, and stiff, and that this class may be just what she needs or it may be much more than she needs and maybe she should just take it easy. But as soon as the music comes on and she recognizes the song she knows she won't hold back, not now anyway, she's just so full of how that music wants her to move, and the teacher leads them into stretches and bends and arm circles to warm them up and pretty soon they're jumping and kicking and prancing around the room and the music changes and they're all kicking up their heels, mingling, making eye contact as they goofily sing along with Mary Poppins' "Supercalifragilisticexpialidotious." 

Sheila loves this kind of silliness and participates whole-heartedly, but there's a part of her that stands outside the group and notices that Len, the big man, is making the face he often makes when he free-dances, a sort of prissy, nose in the air, chin up, affectation of an old lady at a tea-party with an exaggerated hand- flap. Len, a tall, broad-shouldered giant of a man has recently taken to adorning his smooth bald head with a thin scarf across his forehead, a long tail flowing to the side. He sometimes wears robes. Len has dated or tried to date many of the women in the class and has hinted that his feelings are hurt when he feels that the women in the class aren't as friendly with him as they are with each other. Sheila sees him dancing toward her and smiles; he's making the funny teaparty face, long upper lip, eyes half-closed. Then he shimmies up beside her, leans over to rub his shoulder against hers and laughs, "hehehe" with a lecherous intonation and raise of the eyebrows. He quickly pops back into the prissy nose in the air flappy-hand character. They both move on. That shimmy rub and her acceptance proved she wasn't prejudiced against him; now she can avoid his gaze with a clear conscience.

Sheila remembers how her old boyfriend never danced, how he was a musician and thought people looked funny when they danced, "like fish flopping," were his words. Her step-father, in reference to this comment, said, "He's an asshole." Well, yes, he was an asshole. His most salient feature. Assholetry. Assholedom, Assholistic? The quality of aggressive self-confidence based on sharp and mean-spirited criticism of others. She must've liked it at the time. If he could see her now! Skipping around with these sweet, sad, nutty people-- Angry Pixie is doing her best to express joy, smiling broadly, softening her angry eyes, waving happy energy around the room. Beautiful, winsome, 46 year-old Maureen follows close behind, dancing like a real dancer, Sheila thinks. But aren't they all real dancers? That's the problem. They are on one level, and aren't  on another. There are so many experiences in this one room, who can follow or separate any one from the rest? Sheila sees herself dancing like a real dancer in the mirror, blushes at her own self-regard, wondering how it is that she can feel so beautiful, so at ease in the movement, so happy with her plump middle-aged body and its curves. She doesn't think everybody's beautiful. She knows that the man who has cerebral palsy and jerks up and down and side to side in a frenzy of spasmodic inflexible movement is not beautiful, and the poetry he writes and recites before classes is not good poetry, though it's earnest and sends good messages about living life to the fullest. She admires his spirit. She knows that there are only a few beautiful dancers in the room, the ones that actually hear the music with their whole bodies, who have a fluency in dance from years of practice, and that she is one of them, though it's shameful to admit this knowledge, even to herself. She loves the idea of everybody being beautiful in their own way, but deep down inside she doesn't feel it's true. We are separate and different and unequal, she thinks, and this leaves her with the unenlightened, the un-Buddhist, the ones who are living under the delusion (so say the enlightened ones, and she believes them) of being separate when really all things are inextricably connected, right down to the very atoms and subatomic particles they share. How does one become conscious of one's mingling neutrons or electrons or whatever it is that's flying around into everybody else's? If else were a word one could appropriately use in such a situation. Why this insistence on separation? Why not feel the connection and rejoice in it?

Now she's spinning. She loves spins more than anything. She adds leaps to the spin. This is the closest thing to flying she knows, except in dreams, and the speed and precision, the power and lightness of her body, call forth a few seconds of ecstasy as she spins on that invincible core at the very center. The teacher walks toward her, too close, she flinches, almost falls, makes a quick adjustment, keeps spinning-- but something has changed. Instead of the spins propelling her, she's consciously pushing the spins. Spell broken. She will keep dancing and when the teacher says "Now for some strengthening moves" and lunges forward and bobs up and down to really put pressure on the thigh muscles, Sheila goes down but holds back just a little. She's not going to hurt her self. Her Self. Self Self Self. She's suddenly exhausted and walks to the water dispenser in the back of the room. She shakes a small white paper cup out of a stack, fills and drinks, fills and drinks, looking out upon the other people moving, following along. She's happy to be alone there in the corner drinking her water, but suddenly, when they move onto a new dance,  just as happy to join again.

How can she be connected and not connected at the same time? She stares at the different faces, most of them people she's danced with for years. Sad faces mostly, sad or haggard or a little uneasy, all so human, trying to stay healthy, get happy, just like her.  She quit for years and came back, hadn't missed anybody, not really, and she knows she could quit again and not miss them. What kind of person dances her heart out in the company of people she feels almost nothing for? Is this normal? And when they look at her with that sugary love in their eyes, but more often than not, don't look at her at all, does it mean anything? We're all just hanging in there, she thinks later.  The teacher calls for the dancers to move into a tight crowd in the center of the room, still dancing, singing words about love and gratitude. There's a sweetness in it all that lifts Sheila's spirits, even as she stands just outside the circle, moving to the music, feeling her otherness, almost embracing it, but wishing, wishing...


The end of class, a woman insists on another Whoosh, so they do it. Sheila sometimes lingers  for the chit chat on the benches while people clean their feet with baby-wipes, put their shoes back on, adjust whatever needs to be adjusted to venture out into the world. But today she can't. Outside alone is much better, where the cool shadows of the palm trees stripe the bright sidewalk and a breeze blows in from the ocean. Who else cares if my mother is dead? Sheila finds herself thinking. Who else cares that she died at 56 and that's why I'm taking trips to Europe and Iceland and New Zealand and buying dresses and shoes and hats with the money I inherited and should be saving for retirement? Who else cares that she lived a tragically short life? Why do I feel the need to tell people this? Why do I linger here, Mom is dead, Mom is dead. I'l die too. Enough already, do the work! At which point Sheila fantasizes about the perfect day, the one that's not the first day of the rest of her life, a day that's just a fantasy for the one thing she could imagine herself happily doing right now: She's in the living room with a morphine drip (she's never had a morphine drip, but considering how much she likes Vicodin she's sure she'd enjoy it), all three dogs are sitting on her lap, the t.v. flickers in the dim light of the living room as she watches hour after hour of a streaming comedy that's not really very funny. She longs for a state of effortless euphoria and a story with a happy ending. She knows her earnest but smug college students would snippily denounce that as "a First World problem," and she thinks, "Fuck them! I just want to quit everything." Oh dear, she remembers a time from when she was living with that old boyfriend she's been writing about off and on for ten years. She says to herself:  "Before I know it I'll be writing in my diary, 'I hate everybody!' When probably all I really mean is: I'm bored, I wish I had someone to play with." But that doesn't seem right either. If she could write the first chapter she'd want to be sure everybody knew that the main character turns out all right, at least she gets to live beyond her terrible twenties and have First World problems.


___
Caroline Allen has been a lecturer at the College of Creative Studies at UC Santa Barbara for over 25 years. Her work has appeared in Solo Novo, Lumina, Mary, Spectrum, and The Santa Barbara Independent, among others. She is also a painter.

___ Luka Fisher is a Los Angeles based artist, translator and creative producer known for his frequent collaborations, mixed media projects, and work with musicians and film makers. He helps produce and manage Terminal A, an avant garde electronic death rock band that LA Weekly listed as one of the 15 bands to watch out for in 2015 and several other groups on Records Ad Nauseam. He also publishes an ongoing arts an letters magazine titled "BETEP" (the wind). He has also collaborated with a wide range of artists, writers and photographers including---Dash Hobbeheydar, Brian Pulido, Leila Jarman, Mike Leisz, and Matthew Kaundart. . His work and collaborations have been featured in Cosmopolitan, Ad Week,  Headmaster, Nat Brut, Razorcake,  and in numerous other places.

Once you came to me…
— poetry by Farnood Jahangiri

Once you came to me
And tricked me to give in
And you started to dig up
My land and you found
Almost by accident
My civilization lost.



Now I ceaselessly come to you
And beg you to give way
For me to start digging
Your mind solely to find
After countless diggings
My civilization lost.


___
Farnood Jahangiri is Baha'i' and Iranian, became a student of English at BIHE after being expelled from University in Iran, and has been been telling poetry since 15 years old: first in Persian and then in English.

corruption
—a poem by Sheri Vandermolen

obstruction
   privation
      protraction
         induction
            deception
               ignition
                  disruption
                    subversion
                        sedition
                           explosion                                         
                           fruition
                        perversion
                     perception
                  division
               retraction                                
            revision           
         precision
      collusion   
   succession
duration


___
Sheri Vandermolen has served, for fifteen years, as editor in chief of Time Being Books. Her projects have included overseeing the compilation of The Complete Poems of Louis Daniel Brodsky, which comprises thousands of verse pieces, and managing four collected-works editions. She has also facilitated the publication of more than 120 individual poetry and short-fiction volumes. Her verse pieces have been published in various international literary journals, including Ashvamegh, Camel Saloon, Contemporary Literary Review India, Earthen Lamp Journal, Foliate Oak, Muse India, Jersey Devil Press, Papercuts, Shot Glass Journal, Taj Mahal Review, and Verse-Virtual.

Sorry
—a poem by Addison

Sorry,
boy,
guess, maybe, it’s time
a lesson was learnt.
No cryin’, now,
hear?
Or it’s a switch ‘n th’ whippin’ shed.
What’s it gonna be,
boy?
God ain’t yo’ momma,
God ain’t yo’ poppa,
God ain’t gonna save
no child in no burnin’ buildin’.
God ain’t no genie
ya’ll summons at will;
God ain’t no people pleasin’
people person.
He be unmoved
by pain ‘n sufferin’
‘cause it be yo’ pain ‘n sufferin’,
ain’t His,
see?
He don’t need that.
God ain’t into fair ‘n unfair.
Tha’s people b’iness,
how they treats each othe’.
God ain’t got nothin’ t’ do
wit’ nat’ral disaste’s neithe’
‘cause they’s nat’ral,
get out th’ way!
‘N God cert’nly ain’t neve’
into no se’f-game,
God gots no se’f t’ play.
But you’s godlike,
ain’t ya child?
Ain’t none o’ that
gonna come t’ ya
‘cause He ain’t gonna
put up wit’ that kinda nonsense.
Yesum,
it be tailor-made
by yo’ se’f fo’ yo’ se’f.
Imagine that,
all this time
been runnin’
round here,
lookin’ here,
lookin’ there,
gracious me,
sit down child,
sit down!
I get ya some lemonade.
Like that, don’t ya?
Mercy sakes alive…
‘N don’t be puttin’ no feet
on no furniture, now,
hear me,
boy?

Retroactive Metaphor:
Keri Hulme's The Bone People
—Review by Ada Fetters

I genuinely cannot decide whether or not I like Keri Hulme’s The Bone People. The writing itself is beautiful. The characters are strong. The plot is intriguing. The resolution, however, bothers me enough to make me question whether I like the book.

The story revolves around three characters: Joe Gillayley, his adopted son Simon, and their prickly acquaintance Kerewin. All three are trying to escape their past. Seven-year-old Simon was found on the shore several years ago, the only survivor of a terrible shipwreck that left him so traumatized that he refuses to speak. Kerewin is estranged from her family, mostly her own fault. Joe has led a life of disappointment and also can't seem to come to terms with his Maori ancestry.

The book explores themes of culture, love, violence and loss. These things feel very real.
I think I accidentally found one of the influences for The Bone People, that is, the diary of Opal Whitely. Am not saying that this takes away from the writing or makes it less beautiful, just that the kind of person who would write a book like The Bone People would very likely have enjoyed the writings of Opal Whiteley. Also, it is plain that she drew other elements of the book from things around her: the name of Kerewin Holmes, the main character, is very close to the author’s name, Keri Hulme. 

There are strong similarities between Simon Gillayley and Opal Whiteley, or rather, between Simon and people's perception of Opal, which is surprisingly different from the reality.

For those who do not know, Opal Whiteley was born in 1897. She was from a logging town in Oregon but later claimed to be the lost daughter of French nobility. She published several books about nature. Then she published a "diary" she claimed to have written in her childhood, the veracity of which is highly dubious. So here are the similar points between the Opal of the diary and Simon Gillayley.

Opal claimed her biological parents died in a shipwreck and that no one knew who she was. She claimed she was given to the first person to take her. Simon's biological parents died in a shipwreck. No one knew who they were. He was given to the first person to take him.
Opalites (people who take her story at face value) say that Opal didn't make a bigger fuss over her situation at the time because she didn't know who she was or couldn't say. Simon literally "couldn't say," since he was traumatized by the shipwreck and refused to speak.

Opal claimed her real name was Francois. In his mental narration, Simon calls himself Clare or Claro (means "noble" or "bright.").

Opal claimed to be French. Simon freaks out if he hears French spoken.

In her "childhood diary," Opal claimed that her "adoptive" mother beat her and was abusive. (Though in an earlier work she described her childhood as idyllic. Probably the truth lies somewhere in the middle). Meanwhile, Simon's adoptive father does beat him, often, in uncontrollable rages. Again these are similar if your perception is that Opal was telling the truth.

Simon is mute and is teased for this but chooses to express himself in writing. Opal claimed that she was teased for her failure to communicate properly because she often spoke French. Her childhood diary was (she claimed) the expressive writings of her younger self.

Opal wrote a prodigious amount for a seven-year-old. She also uses precocious words, terms, names and so on. She says things that an adult would find charming for a child to say, such as describing someone as "a multiplication table of comfort."

Simon is also seven. He is extremely precocious in his written vocabulary and in his behavior, to the point that he almost doesn't seem like he is seven.

The Opal of the diary was a child of nature. So was Simon.

The Opal of the diary was willful and did things that made sense to her but that looked disobedient and odd to grownups. So does Simon.

Now that I think of it, the writing in The Bone People is rather like that in Opal's "diary." While reading it I wondered where I'd read a rhythm and phrasing like this before. To wit, Opal wrote, "By the wood-shed is a brook. It goes singing on. It's joy-song does sing in my heart."

Bone People has a similar sing-song, the same use of surprising grammar and "it does" verbs. In this case the writing works to the point that the book is mesmerizing.
Both Opal's works and The Bone People are concerned with the land, with nature, with human brutality to each other and to nature. Both feature societal misfits. Both want to take you on a journey of magical realism.

I enjoy magical realism. Calvino, Rushdie, Eco, Kafka, Marquez, and others expect a person to suspend disbelief and go on a meaningful journey. You want me to think about what happens when a man turns into a beetle in a real-life apartment? I'm game. Steven Millhauser, the author of Dangerous Laughter and We Others, is my most recent favorite in this genre. I can't recommend him highly enough.

Thus it was mystifying to me that I was tripped up at the end of Bone People. The world feels real, the interweaving of Maori culture with the mainstream is earthy without being pretentious, the characters are strong, multidimensional, and (mostly) lovable. Even Joe is not simply presented as an ogre, but as a person who has endured a lifetime of depression and frustration. Kerewin is a prickly person who understands the difficult, willful Simon better than most people. However, even when she finds out about Joe's horrible way of dealing with Simon's behavioral issues, she does not alert anyone. 

Whether you agree with her or not, the decision was handled realistically for that character. Kerewin finds that the little town already knows. Joe's relatives already know. They do not like it but they do not want to separate the two by alerting the authorities, which would mean Simon becoming a ward of the state. Would that really be better for a troubled child who had such a hard time becoming attached to anyone? Kerewin reluctantly adopts a "wait and see" approach, resolving to give Joe an attitude adjustment if she sees him treat Simon harshly.

Eventually the authorities find out anyway (more on that in a bit) and Simon goes to the hospital, Joe goes to prison, and Kerewin takes off for lands unknown.

So we come to the ending, which is what tripped me up.

At the end, Kerewin contracts a fatal disease and goes to a wilderness cabin to die alone but is magically cured. I am not sure why this happened or why it then needed a deus ex machina cure. The "tacked on" aspect of both the disease and cure was annoying; the others had manifest problems that needed curing, so Kerewin needed one, too?

Meanwhile, Joe is deeply depressed but finds a spiritual elder and makes peace with himself. The book really sold that one, though, since the whole point is the uneasy existence of his Maori heritage in a predominantly Westernized culture. This was magical-- the voices of his ancestors speak, he comes into contact with powerful forces-- but it was very believable and a heartfelt resolution to a main plot point.

Simon was beaten so badly by Joe that he is in a coma. When he wakes up he has lost most of his hearing. This brings me to my next sticking point.

Joe Gillayley is an abusive parent. That isn't "tacked on." It is established that he beats Simon with his belt to the point that the kid's back has matted scars all over it, the bone underneath is visible (!) and the wounds are infected (I'd be surprised if they weren't). That's not even what gets him arrested and I do not need to say that this is terrible.

The book goes to great lengths to show that Joe and Simon are deeply attached and love each other. This struck something very true and sad about a child's emotional attachment to his caregiver, or the one person who has shown him any love in his short life, though that love comes with a heavy price. Not many books can do this convincingly but Keri Hulme definitely pulls it off. I was impressed.

So what is the problem, you ask?

Joe goes to prison for child abuse and when he gets out, Simon is allowed to go back to him. I say "Simon is allowed," because Simon communicates that he wants to do this and is so stubborn, with such behavioral issues, that the State allows him to go live with Joe. I guess that's what broke my belief in the story. Not that Simon would want to go back-- abused kids often want to do that-- but that it worked. Not only does a kid's wants cut very little ice with the government and the court, but...

1. The book establishes that Joe never formally adopted Simon. He is not legally the kid's parent.

2. This wasn't a one-off. There is clear evidence that the abuse was severe and ongoing.

3. Joe is a single male with a checkered past and a wrecked marriage.

4. The elephant in the room is that Joe is Maori and Simon is white, which makes the ending even more improbable. Is racism nice? No. Does it exist? Yes. Would it affect the court's decision? It would.

I am not trying to nit-pick little things. This is the ending of the book, the culmination of 500 pages, so the payoff has to be believable. Let's face it. A single Maori male with a history of bad relationships and no legal ties to this white kid, who'd put said kid in a coma, and who now has a prison record, would never get custody of that kid.

Weirdly, if the author had gone for all-out suspension of disbelief it would have felt more real. She spends a lot of time describing how Simon worked through the court system etc. in a way that is supposed to be realistic but is not. The ending to Joe's story, speaking to an ancient god and finding self-acceptance, feels more real because it goes all-out and is a meaningful resolution to a plot point. Kerewin lands between the two, with an odd mix of magic and reality that was singularly odd, even outside the fact that it was a solution to what seemed to be a manufactured problem.

At the end of the book, Kerewin, Joe and Simon are all together in a sort of patchwork family. I know this is supposed to be magical realism and the three main characters are supposed to be symbolic. There are clues that hint at Joe symbolizing Maori culture, Simon symbolizing European culture, and Kerewin is part Maori and part European. Perhaps that is why they had such atonal resolutions to their stories?

They all get together at the end and it's relatively okay. I guess. Except it isn't really. The metaphor is strange because if Simon is supposed to be European culture, why is he a nature-child, almost elemental? Why is Joe, Maori-culture, the powerful one who beats up Simon? Shouldn't it be the other way around?

I have tried to look at this several different ways, with several different metaphors, but none of them work well.

It should be said that the story in itself works the way it is. It works until the ending, which is so odd that it only works as a metaphor, but the possible metaphors do not work retroactively for the rest of the story. 


___
Ada Fetters has been published in The Journal of Humanistic Psychology,  Copperwood Review, Humanist Magazine, Niche, Tertulia, Debris, Poetry Pacific Magazine, Pink.Girl.Ink  and most recently in Bewildering Stories.

Those Early Outlaws
—poetry by John Grey

Girl next door laughed.
I was hiding behind
an old oil drum;
with one eye on the fence palings ~
the Younger gang -
and my finger on the trigger
of a cap gun.

She was standing on a box,
peering over the heads
of the outlaws,
pointing at me
and giggling uncontrollably.

She said to me,
"What a goof.
Still playing cowboys
at your age."
She was a year older than me
as I remember.

In my head, :
the backyard was an open range,
the house was Dodge City.
If not for my imagination,
I would have been
totally confined
to one more suburban lot,
no different from
the one she lived in.

She played 45's
on a tiny record player,
tried on her mother's lipstick
and insisted she was
going to be a secretary
when she grew up.

I pointed my gun at her and fired,
shouting, "Take that Cole Younger!"
She laughed some more.
I took that as a clean hit.


___
John Grey is an Australian poet, US resident. Recently published in New Plains Review, Perceptions and Sanskrit with work upcoming in Big Muddy Review, Gargoyle, Coal City Review and the Coe Review.

Sideman
—Fiction by Alan Swyer

"I used to be a drunken asshole," Cole acknowledged with no great glee. "But I finally fixed the first part –"

"And?" asked the singer-songwriter, a good ten years younger than Cole, who had requested a face-to-face.

"Now I'm working on the second."

"But you can still blow?"

"Now that I'm sober? Better than ever."

"Okay if I give it some thought?"

"Sure," said Cole, trying not to display his disappointment
.
"What if I say I've been a fan forever?"

"I'll tell you what I used to say –"

"Okay –"

"You're a man of impeccable taste and judgment. Call if you want to talk more."

When he was coming of age as a saxophone player, Cole never dreamed that as he neared forty, he would find himself once again scuffling for gigs. Growing up in a rough section of Houston, he had so thoroughly outdistanced his high school orchestra by midway through his sophomore year that he took to showing up at black clubs where talented older guys did cover versions of the music he adored – Ray Charles, Solomon Burke, and Bobby "Blue" Bland – rather than stuff by Aerosmith, Bon Jovi, or Guns N Roses that meant nothing to him.

Despite his youth – and even more his complexion – it took Cole little time to show both
the musicians and the audiences that he had absorbed plenty from years spent listening to horn players like Hank Crawford, King Curtis, and, going even farther back, Illinois Jacquet.
Using an old music business joke as justification – 

Q: What do you call a horn player with a college degree?

A: Night manager at a McDonald's.

– Cole turned down several scholarship offers, then took off for New Orleans immediately after his high school graduation.

There he immersed himself in a scene where instead of categories, everything was simply termed "Music," which meant that to get work, everyone played not just jazz, or blues, or R&B, or rock, but what was known as "The Book."

That could mean playing "Second Line" for a morning funeral, or backing up Clarence "Frogman" Henry at a festival in the afternoon, or even sitting in with the Dirty Dozen Brass at night.

Rapidly acquiring a reputation as both a soloist and a team player, Cole filled in on local dates by Ray Charles and Al Green, got studio work with Crescent City notables such as Irma Thomas, then started feeling an itch to try an even larger stage.

His initial impulse was to make his way to New York City, where the combination of jazz and the Latin scene held great appeal. But thanks to a wild three-day weekend with a visiting Santa Monica blonde, followed by a tour with a California-based Englishman whose named he would forever after refuse to utter, Cole inevitably found himself headed for Los Angeles.

There, time spent sitting in at local night spots led first to studio work, then to tour after tour with bands whose music ranged from rock to reggae to Blues, plus at one point even Gospel. For Cole it was a dizzying whirl of limos, airports, groupies, and non-stop partying, which also meant an over-abundance of alcohol and other substances.

But life on the road led to a rude awakening. Whereas Cole always felt that it was music first and foremost that counted, he was stunned when, one night after a gig, he approached another British headliner, with whom he was doing a series of dates in Asia.

"What if," Cole suggested as the two of them shared a quiet moment in a hotel bar, "we add a little Mussel Shoals horn section sound to that first number you did as an encore?"

"Mate, that first number," the singer replied, "is the biggest fucking hit you'll ever be lucky enough to play on."

"Still –"

"Still my fucking ass! When something goes platinum, you don't piss on it. Understood?" "I suppose."

"Then try chewing on this. You're a fucking sideman. Get it?"

"Whatever you say."

"Well, here's what I say. Whether it's you or some other twit-for-hire, nobody gives a shit about your opinion. Hear me? It's me they come to see! The rest of you guys? Basically, you're faceless. In fact, except to some chick you get lucky with 'cause she can't get me, you might as well be invisible."

Though with time he might have reached such a position anyway, that conversation became what Cole came to think of as a defining moment. No longer was it possible for playing music he didn't particularly care about to be fun. Given that he was largely backing up acts that were almost irrelevant to him – flashes-in-the-pan, as he put it, rather than the likes of Ray Charles, Solomon Burke, or Joe Cocker – being on the road became, as weeks turned to months, then months to years, an ever more onerous grind. Remunerative? No question. But a grind nonetheless.

Worse, even as the post-show parties lost their appeal, Cole's consumption of booze and
drugs continued to grow.

Determined to make music meaningful again, he took to turning down jobs so as to put together a band of his own. Promising others a kind of artistic freedom that was increasingly rare, Cole united kindred spirits with a desire to play a forceful, yet lyrical, jazz-rock blend that eventually coalesced into a group he dubbed Free To Be.

Local club dates were encouraging, but more rewarding artistically than financially. Worse, though the record company execs and A&R men who showed up were outspoken in their praise, no deal was ever broached. Perplexed, Cole called a VP at Warner's named Dunbar
.
"How come no offers?" he asked. "Not even an inquiry."

"We all love what you're doing," he was told.

"But?"

"You know as well as I do that the business has changed."

"Which means?"

"With kids doing the buying, we've got no idea how to market guys your age."

"But what about –" Cole started to say.

"Don't even mention other groups," Dunbar interrupted. "Even if they're not as good as you, the ones with contracts already have names. That, as you know, translates to a kind of loyalty, even if it's only nostalgia-based."

Since it was Cole who was largely underwriting the cost of the band, due to his personal expenses – not just the ones owing to his questionable habits plus a taste for fast cars that over-tapped his resources, but also to two costly failed marriages – the band known as Free To Be ultimately acquired the moniker Used To Be.

For Cole, that meant it was time once again to earn a living. The problem, however, was that having turned down several opportunities, what was available to him was not merely less remunerative, but also far less satisfying.

Obliged to accept anything he could find, Cole did his best to be professional. But whether it owed to substance abuse, resentment, or some combination thereof, no longer did he manage to show up for each and every gig at the designated time. Worse, for someone who always prided himself on boundless creativity, his solos began to take on a sense of sameness, or at least deja vu, making them seem sometimes by rote and other times phoned-in, but rarely either newly discovered or felt.

Dropped from a tour by a band whose manager preferred younger and cheaper musicians, Cole found himself wallowing in misery. While drowning his sorrows at bars in different parts of LA, he bent the ear of anyone who would listen with musician jokes he had assimilated over the years. Foremost was:

Q: What's the difference between a horn player and a large pizza?

A: A pizza can feed a family of four.

Then there was one that seemed even more painful given the instrument he played:

Q: How do you make a chainsaw sound like a saxophone?

A: Add vibrato.

And worse still:

Q: How do you get two horn players to play in unison?

A: Shoot one.

Rock bottom finally came when Cole was hit on the head with a pipe while staggering back to his car after far too much booze, then rolled for his wallet and rings.

A night spent in the Emergency Room led, once he overcame what little was left of his false pride, to a meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous. There, after being greeted by several
musicians whose path he had crossed over the years, Cole finally acknowledged not only to others, but more importantly to himself, who and what he had become.

More significantly, he vowed to make an abrupt change.

Though initially every day was a battle, over time the struggle became less and less difficult, especially when Cole discovered how much he was beginning to enjoy music once again.
Acknowledging that he would likely never reach the heights, commercially or artistically, that once seemed within reach was painful at first, but more and more manageable with both the passage of time and his new-found self-acceptance.

A different kind of satisfaction came into Cole's life after he started taking on students. Then came an unexpected source of gratification when the score he composed as a favor for a friend's documentary led to film work for pay.

Best of all, for someone whose life had rarely encompassed women other than those who came on to him at gigs, Cole actually started spending time with someone whose company he enjoyed not only in bed. Slowly, and somewhat awkwardly, he learned that communication could mean something beyond comparing King Curtis, Stan Getz, and Charlie Parker on the one hand, or telling musician jokes on the other.

Understanding that he was less and less likely to become the star he longed dreamed of becoming, Cole recognized that it was more important to be a better husband. And perhaps, if he kept working at it, a better person.

That, he had finally started to realize, was what life was about.


___
Alan Swyer was once a boxer. Plus, he recently made a documentary about boxing: www.elboxeothemovie.com