Musings on the Most Ridiculous Band I Can't Stop Listening To

Month: October 2016 (Page 16 of 25)

Stormy Weather On Route 77

precarious-winding-moutain-road

In some places the road cracked and buckled, and you could see America crawling up through the broken tarmac, the America that was here before the road got laid and will reclaim its face one day. Dirt and wildflowers and earthworms, plump as a grown man’s ring finger. Where the buffaloes roamed. The road wasn’t alive, but it was embedded in something that was. The inside of the earth spins, and the outside drifts, and the skin pocks and burbles. Nothing was ever truly built, Precarious thought. You set things up and then you maintained them. Nothing in this world is permanent without help, and one day Rushmore will just be a mountain again.

It was getting nippy in Northern California, and Southern California was full of Southern Californians, so Precarious thought about taking a drive. Quick one this time, maybe. Last one, who knows? That would work itself out several horizons from now, and there was packing to do. Not much–Precarious traveled light–but the things he needed, he needed. A carton of unfiltered Camel soft packs was in the glove compartment with the maps, plus lighter fluid and flints for his Zippo, which he kept in the change pocket of his jeans. Just in case, he also had some matches.

There was dope in the car: Precarious had no doubt that he could find whatever it was he wanted, and some stuff he didn’t need, in any of his regular haunts, but he preferred to smoke his own. Or snort. Or whatever. He stuck to weed, mostly, while he was driving, but he wanted to be prepared. Before he’d take off, Precarious would roll a hundred joints or so: he could do it one-handed, but with both hands. Fun trick for parties, but you can roll joints one-handed or you can roll them perfect, and Precarious liked his joints perfect and when he was done rolling them, he put them in a little tin that had a clasp and a faded, stamped-metal cartoon of Tom Mix on the top.

The backup stash got broken into backup stashes and secreted around the car. Precarious was good at finding hidey-holes and nooks, and if he couldn’t find one, he wasn’t averse to getting his tools and making one. Sometimes, he’d just weld a little safe to the chassis. Man had a God-given right to a hidey-hole, he figured. The joints went in the tin with Tom Mix on the top, and the tin went in the briefcase, which was the only piece of luggage Precarious ever took with him when he went for a drive.

It was a custom job, he got one of the extras that Fender made for Garcia. It didn’t do the things Garcia’s did, but it was still tweed like a guitar case, and had a tasteful Stealie embedded near the handle, and Precarious thought it was nifty. He used to bring a duffel bag, and then a backpack, but he had pared it down to the size of a briefcase. Joint tin. Socks, underwear, t-shirts: three of each rolled tight like he was taught in the Army. Shaving kit with a .22 pistol in it. Wallet with two hundred in cash, plus another two grand in the briefcase’s hidden pocket. Paperback. He didn’t need anything else.

There were bucket seats in the 1971 Dodge Challenger, and a 440 cubic inch V8 engine that was so big the hood needed a bulge in it, and Precarious set his briefcase on the passenger’s seat, and turned the key. The engine sounded like your first love’s voice, and Precarious started off with no particular place to go. He figured he would follow the Challenger’s hood for a while, stay right behind it, see where it went. The car had the Top Banana paint scheme. Precarious couldn’t resist: yellow as a child’s crayoned sun, but with bold black stripes down the side. Precarious didn’t know why a car with stripes was better than a car without them, but he figured his ignorance of a root cause didn’t make it any less of a fact.

It was overcast, just a bit, and the Challenger’s stubborn wheels held the road around the curves around the mountains and into America. The highway was a promise, and it was clear from Provo to Portland, either one, and Precarious lit a cigarette and arched his butt up off the seat to put his Zippo back in the pocket of his jeans. He thought about hitting Route 77, but idly, and the sun started peeking out a little, so he flipped the visor down and the on-ramp to Route 77 fell into his lap. There was a discussion about boundaries during which Precarious punched the on-ramp very hard several times, and then he was on the Interstitial Highway System.

It was fall on Route 77, and the leaves were falling off the trees. They’d hit the ground running, the trees in hot pursuit. There was a nipsey in the air, whispering poetry to drivers with their windows down. Pumpkin growing contests were held, and so were punkin’ chunkin’ contests, and the invariable happened, and many cars were destroyed by 1,500 pound gourds launched from a few miles away. Autumn evenings look like homework and football practice on Route 77, and all the gas stations have added pumpkin spice to their hi-test.

Precarious flew down the road in his Dodge Challenger and thought about nothing at all, but thought very deeply about it. Other times, he would sing along with the radio, but the radio was to be taken with a shaker of salt. There was FM and AM, but there was also PM and you needed to careful with that band of frequencies. One of the stations was real-time 911 calls, and you owe yourself the kindness of never tuning in. There were rock stations that played lost albums, the stuff Skynrd made after they all survived that plane crash, the record Hendrix and Miles David did. A sports talk station had a call-in show that had never had a non-Bababooey caller, and four successive hosts have been driven mad on-air. Art Bell’s show came in crystal clear on Route 77.

Autumn was all right on the Interstitial, Precarious thought, unless an election broke out, and then an election broke out. BAHDAHDAHBWAHBAH! all the stations played at once: John Phillips Sousa was the Emergency Broadcast Signal for elections in Route 77, and Precarious started looking for cover. He tossed his half-smoked Camel out the window and turned off the radio so he could see where he was going. SHWAMP signs on sticks came rocketing out of the ground, impaling several pedestrians. Precarious was halfway to America, on the edge of the desert, and the sky was full of politicians. They swooped and pandered like sleazy eagles, and they smelled a voter in the car.

The gas stations would go partisan next, Precarious knew, and not the whole place at once, either: pump would turn against pump. The billboards would be plastered over with a new image every day, the paint and paper building up on the face of the sign until they began toppling over. This, too, killed pedestrians. Taking advantage of Route 77’s lax adopt-a-highway-section program, campaigns snatched up alternating miles of road, and some of the old-timers remember an election where that didn’t lead to barricades and sabotage within hours, but no one believes them.

Election Day loomed in his rearview, and Precarious gripped the steering wheel with his left hand and reached over to his tweed briefcase with his right, and he took his .22 caliber pistol from the case, making sure the safety was on, and jammed it between his thigh and the leather bucket seat. You can never be too careful with elections, and up ahead was a bar with a motel attached. A couple of drinks and a few hours of sleep sounded like the perfect way to hunker down while the election blew over. The parking lot was not full, and he parked the Challenger easily. The pistol, along with the keys, went in the briefcase, which went with Precarious. He’d watch the worst of it through the window, and when it cleared he would be back on Route 77, which is the road to Little Aleppo. It is a hard truck, but God will forgive you the miles.

A Cult

Go read this: it’s fun. It’s a handy (but not dandy, sadly) checklist to help figure out if you’ve joined a cult, more specifically whether the person in charge of the cult is a false guru. Joining anything, let alone a spiritual movements, isn’t in TotD’s nature: I try to empathize with people who have been suckered into these things, keeping in mind that when folks are in a low and sad place they are susceptible to pernicious ideas, but I can never help thinking that they should have just gotten themselves a substance abuse problem like a rational person.

Leading cults is one of the options available to charismatic male sociopaths; others become lead singers of rock bands. Now, I’m sure there have been some lady cult leaders, but there were also some lady cowboys and lady pirates: this is mostly a bro gig, and a good deal of the reason is that guys start cults to get female followers so they can have sex with them. There’s also the money and the having people pay attention to your bullshit, but a big part of starting a cult is getting laid.

The leader is what makes it a cult: it’s all about one guy. Communes are about, obviously, the community; and organizations are about the goal (make money, go to space, whatever); and political parties are about the positions: Families are about love, hopefully, but the Family was about Manson. (How is it possible the Dead never crossed paths with Charlie? Seems like they would have traveled in the same circles, and they managed to run into every other whackadoodle in the Sixties.)

Anyway, if you don’t want to click over there, I’ll tell you some of the items on the list.

HOW DO SPOT A CULT LEADER?

Look for clues. Were you informed it was a cult? If they told you right upfront, then that’s the surest way of knowing you’ve joined  cult. Is the word “cult” mentioned prominently in brochure? Is the group called Glenn’s Cult? Are you in an all-cult softball league?

Does the leader tell you how enlightened he is? That is a sign right there. It’s like bragging about your IQ or calling yourself classy. If there were two people in front of me and asked me which one had the Buddha nature, and one said he was enlightened and the other burned down an orphanage, I would pick the arsonist; he may have  teaching a lesson in the traditional Buddhist way: violently. The other guy is just a douche.

Where’s he from? This is not some sort of cult leader extreme vetting: a good cult leader can come from any stock. What I mean is that you should pat attention to whether the guy’s affect matches his upbringing. White dude from Sheboygan in a turban dropping random Hindi into his lectures? Run. (Good advice in general: white people pretend to be a lot of things, but a white guy pretending to be from India is only after your money. The white guy pretending to be from Japan may have just taken too many karate classes.)

Is he fucking everything in sight constantly? Not everyone who fucks everything in sight constantly is a cult leader, but every cult leader fucks everything in sight constantly.

Where’s your wallet? Sometimes they stop fucking to steal your wallet.

A Terrible Poem About Wonderful Hair

donna-phil-jerry-campus

Mrs. Donna Jean Godchaux,
How, oh how, does your hair grow?

“A hundred strokes of brush and then,
Another hundred strokes again.
Flaxseed oil, shampoos of beer,
(I only cut it once a year.)
I simonize and wash and dry,
And when the moon’s full in the sky,
I sacrifice a virgin fair,
For Sassoon! (He’s the God of Hair.)
The salty blood of my selection
Stains the mouth of my reflection.
Demon? Monster? All beware?
Kiss my ass: I’ve got great hair.”

That got weird.

“You asked, sugar.”

A Short Theological Debate Involving Batman

pope-thinking-jpg

Hey, Pope Francis. Whatcha doing?

“I’m-a thinking. World is-a all screwy.”

No arguments

“Everybody need-a da Jesus.”

At this point, it couldn’t hurt. Wait, which Jesus?

“Which Jesus? Whatsamatta you, which Jesus? Jesus is-a da Jesus.”

Jesus is like Batman, Your Holiness.

“This is-a da blasphemy.”

There’s happy, campy Batman; and grim, gritty Batman; and ben, affleck Batman. Many Batmans. Batmen?”

“Is-a no important. Get-a to da point.”

Jesus is like that: there’s the one from the books, who was frankly terrifying, and then there’s the one on teevee, who is much friendlier and wants you to be rich.

“No, no. Jesus say give-a you money away. Exact-a opposite thing. Capitalist Jesus is-a no Jesus.”

I feel like you’re not getting the nuance of my argument about differential manifestations of character essentialism.

“You keep-a talking da crap, I-a gonna inorcise you.”

Inorcise?

“Exorcise get-a ridda da demon. Inorcise put-a da demon in.”

You can do that?

“Si, si. I’m-a da Pope-a.”

It’s Your Thing

charlie-pride-willie-nelson

Charlie Pride could’ve had a lot less hassle in his life. Hell of a voice: could’ve sang soul or pop or blues or standards or telegrams or anything he wanted to, and been a success with the right material.

But Charlie heard a stampede over the horizon when it was quiet in the house, and saw a cowboy in the mirror. Charlie Pride wanted to sing country music, and so he did, and well. Some people just have to sing songs of their own.

Be like Charlie Pride. (Charlie is seen here with some rando in his band.)

A Terrible Poem For A Wyoming Rancher

The man dies before the name;
The debt outlives them both.

American death, man:
That shit’ll run ya.
CopayPPOdeductibleHMOpremiumPPO
Out of pocket before too long.

We can cure you wholesale.
Is the ranch in your name?
What’s in your name?
Whatever you’ve got,
You don’t need.
But what you have,
You don’t want.
Let’s make a deal:
How much for another year?
Lock these prices in now before the holidays.

Sign over all those cattle,
Or you could maybe sell the car.
Do you have a friend with money?
Or a hat and a guitar?

Well, if you didn’t have the cash,
then who told you to get old?

A Guide To Cryptids

Sasquatch Also known as Bigfoot, skunk ape, yowie, or Harry. Giant, furry, uncivilized, and smelly, these inhabitants of the Pacific Northwest are often mistaken for jam band enthusiasts. Virtually no social media presence whatsoever. Some guys like to hunt ‘squatch, which I am sure is a euphemism for jerking off with your buddies in the woods, maybe a little hand-lending, nothing too gay. Just men being together and hunting ‘squatch and pulling pud. Sasquatch is not to be confused with a Yeti.

Yeti Not to be confused with a Sasquatch. Basically an ice ‘squatch, like a Snowtrooper is a variation on a Stormtrooper. Also known as the Abominable Snowman, which is just the best name, but difficult to pronounce after even one drink. (A guy named Henry Newman who wrote for a newspaper in Calcutta came up with it; good job, Henry.) Yeti would occasionally raid the villages in search of children to eat, except he lives in the Himalayas and those are Sherpa villages, and those clambering motherfuckers put up a fight. They’re little, but feisty, and they work together: it’s like that video of the otters fighting the crocodile.

Chupacabra First cryptid on the list to sound truly delicious. (An aside: for a second, I thought “What an odd language Spanish is to have a word for ‘goatsucker’ in it, and then I realized that English also has a word for ‘goatsucker,’ which is the word goatsucker.) So far the list has been things that were probably bears, but the chupacabra is probably coyotes or foxes. Although, it might be a monster or some sort of mobile, hungry time cluster. Probably coyotes, though.

Jackalope From the western United States, the jackalope is a bunny with antlers. Closely related to the Australian drop bear, the Pacific Northwest Tree Octopus, and the snipe. Only one on the list that didn’t start as a misidentified animal: completely, totally, absolutely, 100% begun as a joke to fuck with someone new to the area. Run wild on Route 77; Precarious has run over a number of them (accidentally), and keeps the antlers each time.

Loch Ness Monster Loch Ness’ Nessie is the most famous out of the many monsters named after the bodies of water they supposedly inhabit: Champ lives in Lake Champlain, and Georgie lives in Lake George, and there is also a monster in the Niger River.

Mongolian Death Worm Mongolian death worm fuck you up, boy. Come to your house, spray acid-poop all over your belongings, eat the faces of your pets. Mongolian death worm leave your pets with no faces, radicalize your bathroom: now your shower got a suicide vest on. Mongolian death worm coming to your house, maybe there right now. Never know with Mongolian death worm.

Kraken Much like Bob Dylan, the Kraken shall be released. Reported by Norwegian sailors since there’s been such a thing as Norwegian sailors, the Kraken swallows boats whole and is a whale/squid/octopus deal. Almost certainly real, and I’ll explain why in the next entry.

Megalodon Okay, here’s why: the ocean is not the land. They are different places entirely, although technically there is land under the ocean. On the land, there are roads, and on the roads there are cars, and these cars hit every single thing that lives on earth. Name an animal, and I’ll show you a picture of it as roadkill, including people. You don’t even have to walk across the road to get hit. Look at this poor asshole:

bald-eagle-grille

Everything gets hit by cars. Yet, there’s never been a ‘squatch on the side of the road. This fact alone is enough for me, but the ocean is different than the land. There are far fewer cars, for one thing. If you’re swimming at the very tippy-top of the ocean, then you might get smacked by a boat, or if you are very unlucky, you might careen into a submarine; other than that, collisions are not a worry.

Megalodon is Jaws, but the size of a city bus. So: the scariest thing imaginable. The clowns on the side of the road thing is frightening, but a sixty-foot great white shark is so scary that if you saw one for real, the experience would change you. Hair would go white, or you would immediately quit your job and demand to be called The Baghwan Shree D’Brickashaw. You might very well never stop pooping yourself.

The ocean is big, and has more axial planes than the land: you can only live on top of the land, or maybe under it a little tiny bit. But you can live anywhere in the ocean, from the crests of the waves to the depths of the abyssals. We know more about Mars than the ocean. Maybe Megalodon stays deep, and nothing dies in the ocean so much as it makes a violent phase transition into food. The scraps sink to the bottom. The monkeys will never know.

I have now talked myself into believing in giant sharks.

Megaconda Another scaled-up version of a familiar predator, this legendary giant (over 100 feet) snake has been seen in Brazil for hundreds of years and don’t want none unless you got buns, hon.

Jersey Devil This one goes back to Colonial times and involves Benjamin Franklin, I swear to God. The Pine Barrens in South Jersey are a weird and inhospitable place, desolate and spooky even today: it’s the kind of place where a monster would live. Like a man-sized dragon with bat wings, standing on two goat legs. Also a forked tail, because devil. Ironically, would not support the team named after him, being from South Jersey and therefore a Flyers fan.

The best folklorists can figure out is that the stories of seeing creatures in the woods–and I cannot over-emphasize how creepy the Pine Barrens are–got mixed up with a witch story from way back and then Ben Franklin wrote a story throwing the two together and giving the Jersey Devil an origin story: it was the cursed 13th child of a local witch named Mother Leeds, which led to the creature’s alternate name, the Leeds Devil. (Leeds was most likely the name of a political rival of Franklin’s.)

The Jersey Devil emits a bloodcurdling scream, smells like hot fungus, and has already read Bruce Springsteen’s autobiography twice and listened to the audiobook.

 

Hat, Hair

burning-man-top-hat-goggles-hottie

What is with you people and the hats?

“You people? That’s racist.”

You can’t be racist against Burning Man hotties.

“You can be racist against anyone if you try hard enough.”

Today’s racism lacks elbow grease.

“Just no gumption to the bigots lately.”

Tom Hanks?

“He’s lazy, and steals.”

Wow.

“See?”

Why is there something instead of nothing?

“An empty question that self-negates. Nothingness needs somethingness to exist: it is the Other academics love capitalizing so much, but only arises in opposition to Self. Silence is only noticed in the cessation of sound, not measured positively, but in absence of energy.”

What is a ‘thing?’

“That which is not anything else.”

You just started a recursive loop.

“Which started the whole world crying.”

Are there drugs in your hat?

“Yes, there’s drugs in my hat.”

May I buy you a chimichanga?

“Yes, but I have a boyfriend, and all he does is fuck and party.”

What?

chomper-fuck-and-party

Oh.

“ALL I DO IS FUCK AND PARTY!”

I got it.

“COME FUCK AND PARTY WITH ME, BROTHER!”

No, I’m gonna throw myself out the window.

The Title Of This Post Is Not “Bob Weir And Phish”

bobby-phish

“Billy, you look terrible.”

“I’m not Billy, Bob.”

“Mickey?”

“No, we’re Phish.”

“You look like men.”

“With a ‘ph,’ Bob.”

“Obviously: around 7.4, fairly alkaline.”

“We are not the Grateful Dead, Bobby.”

“Not with that attitude. And, uh, actually: one of you is a Grateful Dead. Decade from now or so.”

“What?”

“Nothing. Listen: I’m standing in the middle of musicians being the best-looking one. Sounds like the Dead to me.”

“I’m sorry your friend died, Mr. Bobby. My gerbil died and I cried so hard.”

“Thanks, Page.”

Make Lovefield, Not Warfield

As always, serendipity abounds in the Dead world: concurrent with the video of Phil and his Phishy Phriends going up, a new missive from the invaluable Lost Live Dead about the Warfield Theater (where the show took place) appears. Garcia played there, and the Dead, and Dylan and The Clash and Snazzy Pete Wilkins and Pittsburgh’s own The Pussygrabbers.

Go read it.

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