Friday, November 12, 2010

The GG Rhythm Method


Good day, Fellow Traveler.


Thanks for dropping by The Grimm Generation Sings. Fortuitous timing too, as I was about to launch into The Grimm Generation Manifesto related to musical recording, or creating 'tracks', as we say in the music business. No…I mean 'Music Business'. Ya. That looks right. Very official.

Here in The Grimm Generation., we let it all hang out. Metaphorically. Sometimes phorically. And what that means it we bring the freshest songs to you first. While we while away the days recording our first official CD, we keep writing and recording using the GG Rhythm Method:


one loud stompy foot +

one Lizard Queen vocal +

one beating of acoustic guitar (with accompanying human type wails and harmonies) +

occasional gasps and retorts from a 70's style Kimball Family Organ



= The Grimm Generation sound.

Point being…what your hearing is the sound of the kitchen table. The place where the songs are strung together, or spring fully formed. The place where we plot and plan our own lil World Domination. And we bring it to you. Pure. Cricket-y. In tune and out. Lotsa cars running up and down the Avenue. You could practically smell the cigarette smoke from your speakers.

We are The Grimm Generation and we cant help oursleves. This is what we do. And we hope you like it.




Thursday, October 21, 2010

ALL SYSTEMS GO!

"All Systems Go!" is The Grimm Generation's latest and scariest song to date. It will be available for your trick or treat bag on October 31st by ringing the doorbell at www.thegrimmgeneration.com

In speaking about "All Systems Go!"...

Jason says:

I love October. Its not simply watching the last lush green of September whither to ground (I don’t care for Summer)…nor even the fact that concluding this perfect state of Zen calendaring gets us our only true pagan holiday (I don’t care for Christmas….hmmm…I do sound like a ball of laughs, don’t I?) ….. Nor (I do care for the word 'nor' apparently) is it simply the costuming and the erotic act of masqurade. Its all dat stuff….plus…

October is Love. October in New England is the place to do your spiritual accounting and take stock of what it takes to make you happy. Or if not happy, bearable to others. It’s the season I try on optimism, test drive hope and buy a pumpkin. It’s a season flush with inspiration (the breezes come and blow the bad summer into a thousand back yards to rot away) and full of promise for the first day you don that flannel shirt.

I produce during this season. I create and revise and plan and plot. And now we both do.

If your not one of the three…no four…people to witness it, Carmen and I make up one pretty fine being. Separately, I could give or take us, but together...almost human. And this grows through manic creative hours, long email chains, a suicidal amount of cigarettes and the vision of forming our heaviest thoughts and heartaches into Pop music formats. It reminds me of the Pilgrims and how they had that one cannon to take on the world. They couldn't imagine what was in The New World …so they only hoped a cannon could handle. Our cannon comes with 6 strings, 2 notebooks and two voices. Hope its enough.

Carmen sent me 'All Systems Go' in our usual fashion: it was waiting in my email. The way this works is she sends it, I print it and stick it in my pocket. Every once in a while I will wonder 'what's in my pocket all folded up?'. I open it and say 'Ohhhhh'…and refold it and put it back in my pocket. I do this several times daily. I consider this part of the process but really think maybe I'm just bad at recalling everything I will put in my pocket. Ill show up with a capo at work instead of a phone, stamps instead of picks at a gig. No pocket recall. Its my worst trait (though some could argue).

And I get the song home at long last and grab the guitar and look at it. Certain lines will jump out…others fall off the page completely. Carmen is a fine writer and images and direct thoughts are her game. She will write something that sounds almost emotionally forward. Words that should come with a warning label. I love when she does that. 'All Systems Go' came from a fine bit of writing. But the only one thing hit me and hit me hard 'Rockets! Ignition! All Systems Go! LiftOff! GOGOGOGO!'. How those lines got into a weighty piece about allowing yerself to open to others is a mystery to me, and perhaps to her. But those words came though my head and stopped for a layover.

And what else would you hear? Rockabilly. So with that in my head, and her words in my hand, I started. There was gonna be a gun, I knew that. According to 'The Lost Gospel Of Jason'. That Gospel states 'if your in a bar, and have a girl sing about shooting a gun, someone is gonna 'YeeHaw"…so far proven correct. And the story as it was was about bank robbing (which will be our second career if this whole show biz thing don’t work out). And as I started to pull things apart on the sheet (scratched out words, revised lines, rough approximations of chords), the story came together. So I called down Champagne and we got to work. I come up with a line, she comes up with a line. We work out a melody eventually, this stage is just telling a tale. And as we got deeper into this, the story started walk and talk on its own.

It wasn’t enough to have a bank robber. She had to be…well, a 'she'. And sexy to boot. And it wasn’t enough to be a sexy bank robber, she needed to be dangerous in a way beyond bad intentions and worse addictions. She needed to be Lovecraft-ian in her horror. And 'she' became 'it'.

It gave me opportunity to reflect on what I like about the planet. Which is coffee. And girls. And rockabilly.


In Carmen's words:

Jason and Autumn, yes. He made it clear from the day we met (and probably even before that as we met online and got into this immediate and never flailing, back and forth letter writing tryst about everything and anything under the sun) that the Fall was the time of year that he loved the most. And how August, to him, was a sand-filled swimsuit he couldn’t wait to discard. I, on the other hand, LOVED the summertime. For me it was trips to the beach, backyard barbeques and being barefoot whenever possible.

I couldn’t be persuaded from my favorite season until…the summer of 2010. Serious? I don’t recall a hotter summer…ever. Ass Hot will be the only way I refer to it from this day forth. And perhaps it is because I’m not in an air-conditioned office all day anymore. But man oh, man…this past summer has finally changed my tune. Ah…tunes, yes. That’s what this blog is about, isn’t it? I’ll get to that in a moment. I just want to let all you leaf peeping, sweater wearing, cider drinking Fall-crazed nuts know that, yup…move over. I’m joining y’all.

And maybe Jason is on to something. October is Love. It sure has been the theme in what I’m writing about these days. I feel it in the air, love, love, love!! No red lights…only green. Why, I can hardly contain my excitement! Giddy. That’s me. Go, go, go! And that’s where the original concept of All Systems Go sprang from. After an evening of putting my curlicue thoughts down on paper, I hit the Jason Send button (no I don’t have a designated Send button for Jason, but I should) and went to bed.

And once I hit my imaginary Jason Send button…well, it’s Wonka-inspired, what happens after that. You can hear the machine start up, the wheels turning, steam hissing, whistles and bells of a new confection in progress. And the next day, I got an email: I have something, a chorus. It’s going to be a Rock A Billy song. We need to make some changes. And we got together later that evening. The Grimm Candy factory was open for business! With words and guitar and ideas dropped into our Taffy Pull, we got to work. The result was a song that was fun, dangerous and unexpected, bold and a bit uproarious. And too, a perfect ditty for a beloved pagan holiday.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Message in a (Virtual) Bottle

Dear Carmen of The Grimm Generation,

I’m a fan of your music and notice that you list yourself as a Love Activist on your FaceBook profile. It’s what compelled me to write you this email. What do you know about love? I ask because I thought I had it. He is gone though. He says he’s confused and needs time. How could that be? He said he loved me.

Signed,
No Name
No State
No Love

Dear Love,

Wow. Well, wow. I’m flattered you chose to write to me. That is a question, isn’t it? I’m certainly not an expert in the field. I can only answer from my perspective.

You are love. I am love. We all are. And to let it flow freely, without fear…that it is something we can lose…that someone can up and take it away from us…that’s where we go wrong, I think.

This guy…whatever he is or is not feeling about you right now…it’s his prerogative. It’s his life to live. And you have yours. The love you have for him is yours to feel. He can’t take that away from you. No one can. That’s beautiful to me. You can hang on to what is no longer the case between you two. What does that bring you? Pain? Suffering? Rage? Sadness? All those things and more, but it does not bring him back. And feeling all those gut wrenching emotions only serves to incapacitate you, and it drowns out the love that is there inside you.

To honor the love that You are, you need to not resist. You need to recognize when the love You are is not being honored. If it is not being honored, it is of no offense to you because you are love. Recognize this and it’s easy to let go when you need to, and to just go with the flow of love.

I wish you the best, friend.

Sincerely,
Carmen Champagne
Love Activist
The Grimm Generation

Monday, August 30, 2010

The End Of Nostalgia


I have overdosed on nostalgia (my own, others) and it has deposited me here, with this empty page and an odd aftertaste, like copper and chocolate. The copper could be blood. The chocolate is likely chocolate.

I have pored through and re dug the trenches of my hourglass memory, allowed the sand to flow back in and obliterate details, leaving me to restore. I have considered the erotic, the emotional, the historical…reconsidered the erotic (I like the erotic) and tried to walk around within these memories as I am now, keening my hearing to catch the songs playing that allowed the acts to happen, listening to the words of the songs that gave me reason or gave me pause before I made yet again another big, dumb decision.

I'm not sure that these remasterings of the memory make for a better end product or just act as historical lip-synching. I can discuss my first kiss. But what would my first kisser's story be? I could talk about the effects of a national tragedy. But am I really sure I wont lapse into someone else's story of heartbreak, survival, triumph? I can discuss great personal horrors with a laugh and a joke and I can create great (self indulgent) emotionally wracked tales about Van Morrison records. Which I probably stole from Lester Bangs.

The erotic is clear, though. I made it my business to remember every second of minute as they happened. I like the erotic.

I have used my past as a venue that my present plays out of. I'm not even sure it matters that these tales are true, or maybe an amalgam of my smoky memory and 80's sports movies, where we all triumph in the shoes of the loser in the opening scene. Which, of course, could also be me.

I have looked for great meaning in small interactions and looked past tons of bullshit. I haven't considered the worst of these moments…or maybe what I ACTUALLY am is a 'constant state of considering the worst of these moments'.

The things from the past…the important things…I have kept.

Friends and lovers and a thousand practice tapes.

Old books with fresh inscriptions.

Art from first, then second, then third grade (and so on) from Miss C-Rae.

And this still doggedly determined heart that wont allow the past to be my best days. And this mad internal clock that runs backwards and makes me faster and thinner as the world grows fat.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Lying in the Hands of God - Dave Matthews Band

Me and DMB...I was never a big fan, they were okay. Sure I knew all the songs. I even had his solo album in my collection, which I liked a lot. But I never understood the draw...

Last year, the 31 year old I was dating, well, he was a huge DMB fan. As in he was in some Dave Matthews fan club, got first crack at tickets and had pre-ordered the new CD when we were together. The day it was supposed to arrive, he got home and saw that he had missed the delivery from the UPS guy. Argh! He missed it!

So we got into my Jeep and went hunting up and down the city side streets in search of the big brown UPS truck. And sure enough, we found it. He flagged him down and found that indeed, he was the RIGHT delivery guy. The UPS man dug in the back of his truck and pulled out the delivery of Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King. Success!

There had to be a special listening party. I recall thinking...this is it...I am witnessing a full on fanatical DMB moment. And so we picked up burgers from Plan B and ate them as we drove up to the hills in Northwest Connecticut. It was nightfall by then. We were high and it was time to listen to the disk. We drove up and down all these twisty, mostly deserted roads and listened.

And it was "Lying in the Hands of God" that did it. I had my feet up on the dashboard of my Jeep. We were on a particularly hilly road. And I just gave into the song, forgot my inhibitions, the meandering roads and all my anxieties, the green leaves of the trees swaying their company in the night overhead...I was one with it all. It was amazingly intense and I cried...and it was peaceful, and I smiled all the while. When the song ended, he turned the CD player off and pulled over. And we turned to each other...awe...and I knew the experience was mutual.

And so then I finally understood.


"Why I am, still here dancing with the GrooGrux King.
We'll be drinking Big Whiskey while we dance and sing.
And when my story ends it's gonna end with him.
Heaven or hell I'm going there with the GrooGrux King."

Good night, LeRoi...

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

"Pink Champagne" - Joe Liggins and His Honeydrippers

San Francisco's Lombard Street is world-famous for its twists and turns. We made our way up to the top. The homes gracing this slippery serpent are fantastic to behold. And while I always appreciate beautiful architecture, today I'm distracted and anxious to get to the bottom of this curvaceous landmark. For at the bottom of this hill is the Tattoo Art Museum, and today I am going to make my mark.

We find a parking spot right out front. We enter and realize we have the place to ourselves. There are two people behind the counter, a friendly looking brown-haired guy and a very tall, very thin, exotic-looking blonde. We take a look around at all the cool tattoo memorabilia, dating back to the 1800's. This, I think, is the perfect place for me to get a tattoo. I approach the woman behind the counter. I explain to her what I want done. She stares at me intently. It's my honeymoon, I tell her. I took his name, but don't want to lose mine. Could she design a champagne bottle, maybe with a flowery label? She answers me in a heavy German accent.

“Jah. I think I can do that.”

A few minutes later, she shows me her work. It's perfect. A small black champagne bottle with a pink poinsettia at its center.

“Let's do it!” I say.

She begins to work and the sizzling, pleasurable pain begins. The music (isn't it always about the music?) as usual, adds to the ever growing soundtrack of my life.

I say to the guy behind the counter, “Hey, listen to this song! You gotta tell me who it is!”

He cocks an ear towards the speaker.

“Woah! It's perfect, aint it?” He says.

I'm stupidly grinning through the pain.

“The song's called, Pink Champagne, by Joe Liggins and His Honeydrippers."

Need I say more?

Saturday, August 7, 2010

"Lua" - Bright Eyes

'I know its really freezing but I think we got to walk....'
It’s a Tuesday Morning; right after the 4th of July holiday. The humidity is already making its way into my Yankee bones, and when combined with that queasy, vertigo feeling of returning to work after a long holiday weekend, has a hammering effect on the crystal condition of my senses.
I am working; I am driving. The traffic is already snarled by the river. And Morning comes to Middletown.

It’s me and Frank. I am transporting him to his job du jour, this time warehouse work, and we don't talk. I rarely talk to my workers in any type of personal way; I could claim professional decorum, but really its just that I have no ability to edit myself in conversations, even the most casual. I don't want to reveal anything about myself, ever. That could be dangerous. I stare straight out at the morning traffic, as does Frank.

But there are things we share in common, Frank and I. We are both wasted, empty this morning. A too late night before, too many drugs, too many cigarettes, too little sleep.

Frank is a convict, and I was there his first day. The convicts tend to be my best workers; they know what they risk, and have little interest in the drama the addicts rely on for their non pharmaceutical kicks. It’s a circle, of course; every convict is fine till they pick up the needle; every addict is unpredictable till they get out of jail. Roles get reversed, the wheel spins.

Meanwhile, I lay my odds not on who will survive, only who will survive the day. I'm a Labor Pimp: I send out people in transition (to put it kindly) to do slave labor for little reward. Its not actual slavery; they make a buck. And sometimes, after the Child Support, after the Garnishments, they get to keep it. This is a circle too; I cant exist without them. And it’s never lost on me that I could be them with a few missteps. They are my errant, addicted, dangerous children.

'But me I'm not a gamble, you can count on me to split'
And a song comes on, pops out of the six CD Changer, in my brand new shiny red car (which I certainly can not afford); Its 'Lua' by Bright Eyes, an album that, despite my best efforts to resist, I have come to love. And especially this song. It’s a broken- hearted, broken-voiced tale of addiction among the privileged youth in Manhattan. It’s a tale told to simple, pretty acoustic guitar and a voice that makes you feel every ounce of the weight of the words. Its locations are actors lofts, and trains; a tale of Manhattan so far away from Middletown, so far away from this tangle of traffic and commuters and pollen on the wing.

'It takes one to know one, kid, and I think you got it bad...'
It’s a tune we both know intimately, though I'm sure he has never heard it before. It’s about desire. Desire for drugs, desire for another night of excess, desire for human touch, for love or simple acknowledgement.

It’s about me, stoned and trawling the web for companionship, holding the hits in deeper and longer till the letters on the screen go fuzzy.

It’s about Frank on the street tonight, copping a dime and shooting up in Harbor Park, watching the sun trip on the water, all beneath the looming shadow of the Portland Bridge.

A privileged kid sings a song of loss, of little hope for his 'model' girlfriend, and a world away, two men ride out of the suburbs to contemplate it. We're all taking too many drugs, too often (only the drugs change). We're all scared about it, and want to stop.

And I watch Frank out of the corner of my eye. And he looks out the window beyond the river and traffic, beyond anything I could see. He is weighing is own desires, and is a million miles away from Middletown now. And I watch his foot raise and fall in beat to the song. As does mine.
'Cause what's so simple in the evening, in the morning, never is'

Friday, August 6, 2010

"Don't Think I Don't Think About It" - Darius Rucker

(The following blog was sent in by a Grimm Generation fan. If you would like to contribute to The Grimm Generation Sings! submit to thegrimmgeneration@gmail.com for consideration.)

Timing is everything. Somehow, in the case of this particular pair, timing was anything but kind. She stumbled across him recently, and a smiled washed over her. The same smile that used to be painted across her face every time she would see him running down the halls in their junior high school. He was the cutest boy she had ever seen and she was the biggest chicken in the world. He was loud, obnoxious, athletic, and maybe the funniest person she had ever known. Everybody liked him. Students, teachers, coaches, everyone.

She heard a song the other day. One she had never heard before and honest to God it made her cry. It made her remember things she had long since forgotten. Things buried so deep into her subconscious that she forgot they were there. She remembered walking her dog on Saturday mornings, going way out of her way just to see if he would be outside shagging balls on the field or having a catch with his partner in crime. She spent endless summer days splashing around in the local pool hoping that he would show up for a swim. Many times it paid off because there he was. It didn't make a difference, however, because she was too afraid to speak to him. The only time she ever got close enough to him to have a conversation is when he was with said partner in crime. And even then all her conversation was directed toward his friend. I don't think she ever once looked this boy in the eyes.

She saw him one night at the local drive-in. She was coming out of the girls room and she heard this loud laughter going on just outside the doors of the concession stand. She and her best girlfriend decided to walk in that direction to see what was so funny. There were the boys, cutting up and having a great time. One boy pushed another and he lost his balance and stumbled right into me. I almost fell over. I surely would have had he not grabbed my arm to get me back in balance. “Oh my God” she thought as she looked up at his handsome face. She had never stood so close to him before. He was so tall!

“You okay?” he asked in a quiet voice that she had never heard before. He was always laughing or yelling or acting a mess but quiet was a new one on her.

“Yeah” She manages as she felt him release her arm. She was sure her face was beet red. Thank God for dimly lit drive-ins. Her friend had know this boy for years and had no problem picking up the conversation. She wasn't sure what they talked about. She just stood there as the words faded to silence and she watched his lips move. Insane, the crush she had on him.

She didn't see him for years after that. She was moving away that next day. Yet another move she didn't want to make, but was not given the option to stay put. She thought about him as she drifted off to sleep on the car ride to her destination. Soon, he was a distant memory.

Listening to this song, over and over, more memories came flooding back. She had moved back in state and during her lunch break one day she heard the whine of a very fast motorcycle. It was close and it caused her to look up. She could not believe her eyes, for there he was...all grown up. She had grown up as well and her inability to speak to him had left her. She smiled that smile, the one she always got when he was around. The smile she thought for sure he had never noticed. They talked awhile and laughed a lot. They talked about getting in touch and they exchanged numbers, but as fate would have it, she was moving again. This time her journey would take her clear across the country. Pretty soon he was back to being a memory.

After a couple years away, she moved back home. She got a job and life was ok. She thought about that boy from time to time. She tried to look him up every now and then too. She ran into a mutual friend at a concert and she asked about him. He was married and had a couple kids. Timing was just as unkind as she had ever been. She was glad that he was doing well and felt a little silly for the tinge of jealousy she felt over her childhood crush being married. Soon, he was a distant memory once more.

The song she heard the other day was one that he had played for her. You see, she ran into him again. Timing being what she has always been caused this encounter to be bittersweet. He was single having gotten divorced but that was not the case for her. She was married. He was still as handsome as he ever was and he still had a smile that would light up the sky if the sun should ever decide to go on strike. The things that killed her about him playing this song is that for all those times that she was afraid to speak to him, for all those opportunities she didn't take to just say hello, for all those extra miles she walked just to catch a glimpse of him...she found out that he felt the same way about her. If timing was unkind, irony was a bitch.

He played this song for her because he remembered that day in the bank parking lot. He remembered the laughter and the smiling. He remembered the exchanging of numbers. He remembered it as being the day that he never saw her again and over the years he has thought to himself about how he should have once again grabbed her by the arm and asked her if she was okay. She would have answered differently that time. Behind her tears there is a smile in knowing that way back where it all began, the shy girl with the huge crush was being crushed on herself.

Timing can be as unkind as she'd like, but she can not steal her smile, her memories, her crush that silently exists...still. Don't think she don't think about it.

~Anonymous

Thursday, August 5, 2010

"Roxanne, Roxanne" - UTFO

Catholic School Kids
It's a big finished basement. The pool table dominates the room. A few of the guys are playing a game. I'm with Daphne. We've been friends since we were four years old. We both moved out of Frog Hollow when we were nine. My family stayed in Hartford, moved to a neighborhood right on the West Hartford/Newington town line. Her family moved to West Hartford. Her high school life includes dating the captain of the football team and a plethora of well-to-do friends. I date the burn outs until they drop out of school and join the service.

I'm sitting on the couch with my bi-level haircut, my favorite blue, Forenza V-neck sweater, black tank top, two-toned Gasoline jeans and my low-heeled, pink leather pumps. The rest of the kids have their jeans tucked into their slouchy socks and white leather high tops. Their crisp buttoned-down shirts have the collars turned up. As usual, I don't fit in.

Suddenly, there's talk of an eight ball, and I know they aren't talking about billiards anymore. A permanently flushed-cheeked boy leaves the house for a bit. When he returns, the room tilts and flocks towards him. Lines are cut and the snorting begins. On the stereo is UTFO's, Roxanne, Roxanne. The city life I am trying so hard to escape from drowns me; my swimming pool of irony. At least I have a straw.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

'Frankenstein' by The Edgar Winter Group

To Build The Perfect Love

Well, first he had to build the Lab
Which was trickier than it looked

Suspending the chains from the ceiling alone
Took a whole afternoon

Then to find the pieces
To Build The Perfect Love
He took the eyes of the saddest girl that he knew
And the hands of the cagiest
The legs of the most graceful
The breasts of the most motherly
The brain of the funniest
And heart of the darkest
And arranged them in a perfect order
Not a stitch was shown
The skin was perfect, uninterrupted
Or maybe just good make up

And raised her to the storm
Coils flashed and beakers bubbled
Thunder and Lightning tore the night sky
To Build The Perfect Love

He lowered her to the floor
Kissed her (like in fairy tales)
she awoke, she arose
And asked one word 'How?'

He told her she was created out of desire
Birthed of electricity
But born of his heart
She kissed him deeply

And crushed the life from him
To go about the business of collecting his heart
Having her own desires
To Build The Perfect Love

Sunday, July 18, 2010

"#1 Crush" - Garbage

It was a Tuesday afternoon in December. She had just gotten out of work and her phone rang. She looked at her cell and saw that, sure enough, it was him. It always was.

What started as a whirlwind romance in October was quickly turning into a shit storm. Declarations of love and being transparent, peppered with grandiose plans both near and far into the future that never seemed to come to fruition were starting to wear on her. Any free time she had was being spent with him. It was all too much, too fast. The last time they were together he gave her the key to his house. She said she had no use for it. He insisted she take it. He asked for her key in return, as he always seemed to be forgetting things at her place. She was reluctant, but thought, “Well, what could it hurt?”

“Hello.” She answered the phone. Thankfully he had his children that evening so she knew he wouldn’t be asking to see her. She spoke to him plainly. Mentioned her feelings that things were moving too quick. She needed breathing space. She and her roommate had recently begun writing together again, and now they were singing together too. This excited her to no end. She wanted time to devote to her craft. She was feeling especially creative again. Could they just move a little slower? When she hung up the phone, she felt great. He understood where she was coming from. “No worries.” He said.
Her roommate and she had decided to practice that evening at 8pm. She looked at the clock. It was 4pm. She had four hours to herself. Her children were at their father’s for the night. It was cold and she was tired. She decided a hot soak in the tub, a deep conditioning hair treatment, followed by a nap would be the perfect relaxing interlude before practice. She set her alarm, turned off her phone, got under her flannel sheets and quickly fell asleep.

She awoke to the sound of her name being called. The room was dark. She was groggy, confused. Did she sleep past 8pm? Was it her roommate in her bedroom? He had never stepped foot in her bedroom. They were both very respectful of each other’s privacy. She was confused. No. It was her boyfriend, standing in her darkened house, her dark bedroom, over her bed.

“What are you doing here? You’re supposed to be home with your kids. Why are you in my house? You’re not supposed to be here.”

He saw the look of horror on her face.

“I’m sorry. The kids wanted to go to their mom’s. I thought we could hang out. I tried calling but your phone went straight to voicemail.” He was spitting out excuses.

“I turned my phone off. I was taking a nap. We had just spoken.” She said this as he was backing his way out of her bedroom. “I’m sorry.” He kept muttering. And he left.

Well, she was awake now and distinctly uncomfortable. She headed downstairs to the kitchen, turning all the lights on as she made her way. All the lights were off. Her car was parked in the garage. For all intents and purposes, it didn’t even look like she was home. And he just came in, crept through her home and up into her bedroom. It sent shivers down her spine.

She received a text then. He wanted to come back and explain. No, please don’t. She responded. Yes, he was turning his car around. She told him in no uncertain terms was he to return to her house now. She found herself staying out of sight of any of the windows of her house. She was thankful her roommate was home. He came upstairs from his basement apartment. She explained what had just occurred; and then a loud knock on her kitchen door. She felt anger then.

She opened the door but did not invite him in, told him to leave. He wanted to explain.

“Please, you need to give me time to digest this.” She said. “You don’t want to hear what I’m thinking right now.”

“Yes. Tell me what you’re thinking.” He answered.

And she did.

“You were unable to reach me by phone and you drove to my house. You didn’t see my car in the driveway. The house was dark. And you thought it was okay to just come on in. You were not invited! You walked through my house. You came up into my bedroom and what? What did you think you were going to find? It’s fucking creepy! Get out of here.”

And he did.

Later that evening, practice commenced on time. They had decided earlier in the week to do a cover song, their first. Her roommate hit the four-track recorder and started strumming his guitar. Her cell phone, on mute, glowed insistently the entire time. She started to sing:

I would die for you. I would die for you.
I’ve been dying just to feel you by my side.
To know that you’re mine.

Friday, July 16, 2010

"Supernaut" - Black Sabbath

I spent my 13th year alone, in seclusion. I blew off my few friends, stopped talking to my family (they didn’t notice...), stopped showering, ate too much; my skin a minefield of bad teen living. I did think about girls...but being an utter mess and fairly self aware of it, I figured that would be some other decade.
 
It was a conscious decision. I didn’t need friends or sunlight any more. I didn’t need vitamins or conversation or kissing or any of that low rent crap. I discovered Black Sabbath's 'Volume 4'.

It was a match made in teen heaven. Me, being a curious, dark and fat lil monster, albeit a bright one, I read obsessively, usually dark fat lil books about the Paranormal, ESP, UFO, as well as some classic Anglo (The Black Arrow, Beowulf and Ivanhoe come to mind). My mind was a jock, nimble, quick, good for short distances and long. My body, on the other hand, was a wreck.
 
Which didn’t matter anymore. I discovered Black Sabbath. That year made me what I am....
 
That's the thing the 'cool kids' don't get about metal; It’s a flag, it’s a place. Zeppelin's Valhalla, Deep Purple's Montreux, Black Sabbaths' Candle Lit Graveyard. It’s all a place to us, it’s a place of salvation, sanctuary. It’s where the geeks are muscle-bound and scoring chicks by the yardarm. Where a girl a little too big, in a dress a little too small, can be hooted at and wolf whistled at from the top rows of the New Haven Coliseum (RIP). It’s where you could scream things you never could say, and be joined in unison from the rabble around you.
 
It’s the biggest gang on the f*****g earth.
 
Punk is for college. Indie is for magazine writers. Rock is dead.

Metal perseveres, because there are always gonna be 13 year old boys. In seclusion, and a bit too bright for their own good

Friday, July 9, 2010

'If I Ever Lose Myself In You' - Sting

I went to the party. I went alone. He didn’t want to attend…again. He didn’t like my friends. I don’t think he particularly cared for me either, but we were married and he made do.

There were lots of people there. Shelly had outdone herself; hired a piano player and a bartender to entertain and lighten the load. I got there. I’d forgotten who everyone was. I busied myself lighting the tea lights that covered every spare inch of counter top, table and sill. People began arriving, piano and ice tinkled in the background. Appetizers were pulled from the oven and refrigerator; the night began in earnest. Shelly checked in and asked if I was having a good time. “Absolutely”, I replied and made a beeline towards the restroom. There was a line. I smoothed back my hair which was pulled back in a high pony tail. Me, in my black, velvet jacket and dark leggings suddenly felt garish and out of place amid the tall, lithe women with their short skirts and shiny straight hair. The bar was set up by the loo. I asked for a drink. “Sure. What’ll you have?” The young and striking bartender asked. “I’m not sure.” I answered. “What’s good?” He offered to make me a margarita. I accepted. The line inched along and he and I started to talk. How did he know Shelly, I asked. And he told me they had met in school. He was handsome, a bit younger than me. The line to the bathroom got shorter. I thanked him for the drink and excused myself.

The night progressed. The piano player packed his things and left. Someone turned on the stereo, cued up some CDs. Sting was in the mix, Ten Summoner’s Tales. I had wound my way back in and out of conversations with the guests, back to the bar. How was the margarita, how was the party, he wanted to know. And I started talking to him. Conversation turned to music and he told me about his studies in music, about his side jobs as a roadie, including being on the Road with Sting himself. I got lost in the conversation; forgot that I was unsure and awkward to be at a party by myself, babies sleeping at home, a husband who didn’t want to be there. I smiled and laughed, excused myself to check on the guests.

The party was winding down. People started to clear out. I hung out, stayed around until the end to help Shelly with the clean up. I don’t even know how it happened. I barely can remember. The bartender was packing up his wares, cleaning off the bar. We talked all the while. Laughed, shared jokes. He was leaving, did I want to join him. “Oh, no thank you” I said. “My husband’s at home.”

“A hug then. It was really nice talking to you”

He wrapped his arms around me. God, I can still remember how he smelled, how he felt. I was so starved for affection, for conversation, for anything from a man. He tried to kiss me. I pulled away. I was married.

If I ever could lose myself though…

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

'Dazed And Confused' by Led Zeppelin

It's the only time I ever was in a VW van, freshman year in high school, the spring of 1982. He had graduated two years before. He played the drums in a local rock band. And he was so cool. I couldn't even fathom talking to him, never mind actually sitting in his van. But Conchetta was a sophomore and ran with the cool kids. For some reason, she had taken a liking to me. So there I sat at 6:45 in the morning, getting ready to smoke a bowl. I'd tried pot for the first time over the summer. This would probably be my fourth time smoking. Of course, I didn't want to look naïve.

I sat in the back seat. Mr. Cool and Conchetta were up front. They made out for a while. I kept tugging at my navy blue uniform skirt pretending not to look. When they were done, Mr. Cool pulled out a plastic baggy filled with big, fat green buds. He had a small silver bowl. I watched as he broke down the buds, carefully separating the weeds from the seeds. And then there was a problem. He didn't have a screen for his bowl. Shit! We couldn't smoke it without a screen. I spoke up from the backseat.
“Your lunch bag.” I said.
“What?” Mr. Cool looked at me with near disgust.
“I see you have a lunch bag there.” I motioned to the space between the two front seats where a brown paper bag was jammed next to a stack of cassettes.
“What about it?” he asked.
“Well, is your sandwich wrapped in tinfoil?” The smile that broke out on his face told me he was now comprehending.
“Yeah, it is. You're pretty smart.”

I sat there glowing that this nearly 20 year old guy not only spoke to me but actually thought I was smart. Mr. Cool pulled out his aluminum foil wrapped sandwich. It was ham, I think. He tore off a piece of the foil and fashioned a screen.

“Do either of you have a safety pin?” He wanted to know.
“No.” Conchetta and I answered simultaneously.
“We need to make holes in the foil.” We all looked around the van for something small enough to do the job. He had a Led Zeppelin lapel pin stuck in his sun visor.
“Oh, look.” I pointed, thrilled that it was me again who solved the dilemma“Now you're thinking!” was my praise. Mr. Cool finished packing the bowl and lit up.

The smoke curled and emitted a pungent smell. Before it was even passed to me, I was flying high.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

'Photograph' by Def Leppard

Moon roof open, and the sun rides on our shoulders, a presence as physical as a particularly wise parrot, whispering suggestions in our ear, recalling stories of the last bikini you saw, the last time you were completely submerged in water, the last time you felt the sun burn your skin to red.

And we race to the shore. By we, I mean all of us, the suburbs have emptied and everyone heads south for the shore. It’s like The Great Expansion…if the settlers had fast Japanese cars. We pass people on the highway and they pass us again. Its like go carts, except everyone also keeps their eyes on the medians, the crossover strips, eyeing state cops, as they settle in for their particular brand of holiday cheer.

And the music is loud, it pours out of the open car windows, flows from the moon roof. It’s Def Leppard playing (her choice)…and it’s perfect. It brings me back to when I first heard these songs (for completists and time chasers, its ‘Pyromania’), when I was 18, when I wouldn’t be seen on a beach without a black heavy metal t-shirt and ripped flannel. It was an open challenge to the season, and we always won. Because the summer didn’t know it was playing. .

But that was years ago. And the landscape has certainly changed for the boy. Now, as we fly to the shore, I cast my eye to the passenger seat, and there sits the perfect summer girl. Long dirty blonde hair, makeup that gives a glimmer (gold, of course) to the flash of her blue/green eyes, a two piece bikini (hushed silver metallic), her hand hangs lazily out the passenger window…I allow my eye to follow her gold ringed fingers up her tanned arm, I watch how the wind blows her lace cover all around, a flash of skin, with a maddening repetition; the bikini top revealed, in time with every 10th white line we pass. In time with the kick drum, too.

The music, the clearly 80’s vibe of excess and a certain misogyny, big beats, processed guitars, too many vocals on the choruses, which made every song sound like a keg party you’re bored of. All irrelevant, as the boys from Brighton knew what they were talking about when it came to girls; I watch her sing along to every word, completely unaware that that is something she should be embarrassed of. Except the utter pretentiousness of this thought embarrasses me.

She is singing along, and now I am too…because I know every word also. They are part of me, much better remembered than the Pledge of Allegiance, the Lords Prayer and my mom’s birthday combined. We head to the beach, me and my summer girl, and we smile at each other a lot and kiss at the stoplights.

The question: Do your fantasies at 18, going to the place you never imagined with the company you never expected to have access to, maintain into your fortieth year?

The answer: Damn Fucking Straight.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

'Two Princes' by The Spin Doctors

The language, every language I think (though only know the one...this one,...the one I'm speaking) is a living thing. It gains things that will ultimately be lost, replaced by easier takes on the same subject (thus 'conversate'). It loses words that The Future has no need for any longer (like 'blind date' which due to the access we all have into each other, would require real blind people). We gain weight and shed hair. We get more informed and less involved. We come across words in books we need to define online.

'Cassettes' is one of those lost words, and in 15 years won't even show up on Spell check. The unforgettable plastic on plastic sound that came from shuffling through tape suitcases, the lost art of magnetic tape repair (glue or tape or tape then glue) and mix tapes made from vinyl records, all gone.

Cassettes will never have the cache of the Vinyl LP, nor ease of the CD or MP3. And fact is cassettes sound thin, replaceable. Not permanent. The reason the Bass Boost has become one of those lost words too. It is not a loss to the ages.

But you learn the form from the function, and when I consider The Spin Doctors 'Two Princes', this is how I hear it, in tape cassette fidelity. Not that it wasn't played a lot that year. It was. A lot. Video too. A lot. But when I think on it, I hear it playing a bit warble-y (another lost word, though maybe not a word) out of a 'boom box' (look it up, kids) in the empty corridors of a post workday corporate building, bouncing off the brown glass lobby doors and polished brass accents. Dodging the cleaning crew.

I was in love with a girl (I'm always in love with something or someone, usually me) and we we're both married and she was a genuine beauty and I was her weird friend. When I say genuine beauty, I don't mean that in any deep sense, I mean the girl looked like the girls painted on the sides of B52 bombers, dressed in flags and implied nipples. Blond hair and perfect make up. She drove me crazy every day for years in the same Corporate office. I didn't have a chance. Ever.


But she needed help. She wanted to do some video (video cassette) for an upcoming Valentine Day Gift for her perfect man awaiting her at home. And this video would require an elevator (dancing to 'Love In An Elevator') and pool (with authentic Mermaid costume that we ultimately found out shouldn't be submerged in pool), boom box and slight nudity. She had me at nudity.

And among the songs this perfect pin up o' mine danced to (and she could dance), 'Two Princes' was there, the imploring, demanding 'Well, Go Ahead Now!' in the closed elevator built for two. It played as we drove from one location to the next. 'Go Ahead Now!'. It played, it compelled, it repeated like only a pop songs will "Go Ahead Now! Go Ahead Now'". All with her moving to it, the upbeat beat bouncing and causing her to bounce along.

And I considered. Was there a message here? Was this an invitation? Was this the moment I awaited years for?

It started as a notion and grew into a flurry of pride versus sense, lust versus the visible wedding ring. I did as she asked (and would have done anything that night for her) and videotaped and ran from security and hid from cleaning crews and snorted lines in her Hyundai. And my considering got faster.

'Go Ahead Now!!! GO AHEAD NOW!!!'

Which I didn't. The night ended with a hug and her appreciation. And mention I may see the video some day. Which left open I also may not. She left our job soon after.

And when I hear this...or when I think of her...I always wind my way around to the simplicity of it. The song was 'Two Princes' and I wasn't the one she chose.

Friday, July 2, 2010

The Grimm Generation (definition)

The Grimm Generation (definition):
a. a generation of disenchanted stunted adults
b. online and starting over
c. Primal boy/girl acoustic rock. Folk Noir.