SET LIST
– Way-Too-High Bill Walton
– The longest fucking New Speedway Boogie you’ve ever been a party to.
– Jack Straw, who is from Wichita but didn’t let them stop him.
Musings on the Most Ridiculous Band I Can't Stop Listening To
SET LIST
– Way-Too-High Bill Walton
– The longest fucking New Speedway Boogie you’ve ever been a party to.
– Jack Straw, who is from Wichita but didn’t let them stop him.
[DEEP BREATH]
Go watch Bobby and his Wolf Bros (with special guests) live from the World Famous Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, and maybe throw those poor wind-fucked bastards a couple bucks while you’re at it.
Joan Didion has no opinion on Bobby’s show in Miami; don’t even ask her.
…………………
What is the point? There was one, I am told. Thick, annotated books say that there was a point to all of this. At one point, there was a point.
…………………..
It is far easier to strike up a conversation at a Grateful Dead (Or What’s Left Of ‘Em) show than it is to carry on a conversation.
Tom and Alan. Tom had a pointy shaved head and a beard. Alan did terrible things for the cops; he thought he was boasting, but he was confessing. Tom was an architect who kept talking about his wife and then hitting on me. He points out a Gehry building, but does not call for Gehry’s execution on the charge of Crimes Against Urbanity. I did not fully trust him after that. A person’s aesthetic is a better predictor of behavior than their politics.
………
Johnny Depp used to hang out at the Mac’s Deuce. Johnny Depp used to hang out at every bar in Miami. Johnny Depp still approaches life as though it were fuckable.
………………………..
Information wants to be free, but no one will tell me where the fucking toilets are.
…………………………
In the line for $18 scotches, I started a rumor that BTS was going to sit in. It spread. A chant went up from the crowd during New Speedway Boogie.
“GIVE US JUNGKOOK!” Over and over like an unbound river.
Bobby took no notice, but Jay Lane appeared frightened. Don Was’ expression was, as usual, unreadable.
………………………
Wandered in, out, around the venue.

Guns, swords, children.
If that’s your shopping list, I hope you get in a car accident on the way to the store.
…….
Last year, same venue. Don Was had the same flippity-flops. A lovely Enthusiast sent me a magic cookie, which contained a small but noticeable portion of mushrooms. I went like this:
“Mm-hmmm.”
And:
“Heh heh heh.”
And:
“Oh hey yeeeeeeeeah.”
This year, same venue. Bobby had a hat. I cannot confirm whether it was the same hat, tho it was of the same millinery genus. I went like this:
“AAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHH!”
And:
“THIS IS BULLSHIT, ALL OF THIS, CHRIST IS RISEN AND YOU FUCKERS ARE PAYING TWELVE BUCKS FOR A BEER!”
And:
“ARE YOU MY MOTHER? ANSWER ME!”
Acid is different than mushrooms.
…………………….
Someone explained to me what Art Basel was and I nearly punched them. Motherfucker, I know what Art Basel is.
……………………
It was cold, and so I dug a shirt out of my closet. Second-oldest next to the Voodoo Lounge tee-shirt with the tongue on the front. Brown, denim, button-down. Levi’s made it a long time ago. There’s luck in it. Nothing bad could ever happen to me while it was on.
“Hey, is that vintage?” a guy asked me during half-time.
“Yes, it is,” I told him. “I live here in Miami in a fashionable condo right off Collins Avenue. I saw the 2001 internet bust coming and parlayed my stake into vast financial holdings.”
He didn’t look at my shoes, so I think he believed me. Always look at someone’s shoes.
…………………….
Mac’s Club Deuce in Miami Beach opened in 1964, just six days before the Wayside Inn in Little Aleppo, and seems just as real. The clientele is–now–the Dirtbag Left, dart hustlers, and guys who look like Sam Cutler. Pool table to the left, W-shaped bar to the right. Blow is playing on the teevee with closed captioning. Maybe Johnny Depp will stagger in. You never know in Miami.
I have ordered a Jagermeister and a Heineken, and I will wait until dark to leave. Entering a bar when the sun is up is acceptable (tho degenerate) but leaving one in the scalding bright is out of the question
Foreign lesbians enter, sit next to me. They have been touring the country.
“Where have you been?”
They tell me: New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco.
“What did you think of New York?”
“Like London, but moreso.”
“And Los Angeles?”
“We didn’t get it.”
“San Fran?”
“It would be prettier without all the people shitting on the streets.”
I find no fault in their observations. Go to Vegas, I tell them. The only way to understand America is see Las Vegas. Rent a suite at the Trump International and have the boy fetch you a drink and a Cadillac. Don’t listen to the nabobs, I tell them. The Cadillac is still a superior machine. Johnny Depp won’t drive anything but.
……………………..
And, lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were sore afraid.
………………………
The boy who worked the outside bar was 18, 19. He had thin, ropey arms and sandy hair, and wore a Nirvana shirt. The black one with the smiley face. When I went out to smoke, he was playing this:
Too bad we broke the sky. The kids are all right.
……………………….
What happened to that toilet was a war crime. Jackie Gleason didn’t deserve that.
…………………….
At no point did Bobby and Don Was go back-to-back. This is a classic Rock Move™. The musicians are wobbled from within–the power of Rock, you see–and they need leaning posts. Scapulae against scapulae, but butts do not touch, as that would be gay.
……………………
It was wrong of me to tell that woman I had just returned from Singapore, and then cough on her. Apologize for me if you know her.
……………………
Alan asks me this: “How many shows did you see?”
“Define ‘you,'” I answer while not breaking eye contact.
We have consumed different entheogens, and so he does not understand me. I try to make myself clear.
“I saw 37 shows,” I say. “But three of them were palindromic.”
“What is that?”
“The set lists read the same backwards and forwards.”
“The Grateful Dead never did that.”
“The Grateful who?”
He is less friendly after this exchange. I don’t think it was my breath, as I was chewing prescription-strength gum.
……………………..
Johnny Depp’s not coming, is he?
……………………..
During Eyes, Bobby and Don Was and Jay Lane play a riff like The Other One, a chugging triplet figure with strength and momentum, a high-calorie harmelodic, and the ladies go WOO and the men all go YEAH with their arms around one another or maybe holding $12 beers in a room where Jackie Gleason once promised to beat his teevee wife in a city which will be drenched momentarily–the Gehry notwithstanding–and the music is enormous and plain-spoken, and we spin around and are consumed by fire.
And then they go back in to Eyes.
……………………….
“But you got the blue passports back,” I said.
“That’s right, yeah.”
“They’re made in Poland.”
“I read that, yeah.”
One of the foreign lesbians was British. The other was from Lombardy, where they lived on a dairy farm. Italy did not permit them to marry, because it would have made the Pope sad, and so they had to go to Belgium. The Brit and I try to explain the American primary system to the Italian, fail. I don’t even bring up the Electoral College.
………………………..
Blacks and whites and boutique hotels. Less vaping than previously; cigarettes still, cigarettes always; tables with Cubans smoking shisha. Every Lamborghini is the wrong color. Chokepoints where you let the big guy through first. (There are many big guys. Their girls are tiny, and wrapped around them. You don’t look at their girls.) Face mask or two. Cops rumble by the Ritz-Carlton. Overly-lit swimsuit stores, same as they got on the boardwalk in Wildwood. Side streets with bars tucked in like obedient children. So much ass you can’t believe it.
Señor Frogs, too.
………………………….
At night, we spin around and are consumed by fire.
Mistakes were made.

What is this all about?
“The, uh, Wolf Bros have taken on a Pup.”
Don’t call him that.
“Kid’s coming on the tour with us. He’s gonna be New Josh. Just as cute, and far fewer regrettable interviews. And, uh, I can pay him much, much less. Kid’s a winner all the way ’round.”
Do you know his name?
“Not as such. But I could pick him out of a crowd. Especially if the crowd was made up of the Wolf Bros. He stands out.”
Matt Jaffe is his name.
“Oh, no. Matt is Matt Busch’s name. Can’t have two Matts on one bus. Terrible luck.”
Is it?
“It’s like going to the theater when you’re named MacBeth. Bad hoo-doo.”
Didn’t know that.
“Way more name-related superstitions than you’d imagine.”
I learned something here.
TotD will be leaving the house.
On the evening of February 28th, I will be attending the Wolf Bros concert at the Jackie Gleason Theatre in Miami. A report will, as you might expect, follow.
Therefore:
-If anyone’s going and wants to say “hi” or “you’re the greatest writer working in the idiom” or “wow, you’re much more fuckable than I’d imagined,” then drop me a line. If you’re going and wanna say something unpleasant, or even neutral, than keep walking.
– Can someone send me some hallucinogens, please?

Hey, Bobby. You let Parish on the mic, huh?
“This one’s on me, yeah. He said he was gonna introduce the band.”
Is he telling a story that starts off about Garcia, and then switches to being about the best weed he ever smoked in Fresno, and then about different apartments he rented over the years?
“Oh, you’ve heard that one?”
I have.
“Now he’s pitching the crowd on time-shares in Oaxaca.”
Bad investment.
“Sure. Smart money’s in Chiapas.”
I read that.

“Young lady, I’m gonna need you to reassemble my piano right now.”
“It’s a harp, Bob.”
“No, no. You can’t be a harp player; my drummer would be hurling drumsticks at you.”
“I swear to you that what I’m playing is a harp.”
“Uh-huh. And was it invented–”
“Harpo Marx did not invent the harp, Bobby.”
“–by Harpo…ah. So his name was just a coincidence, then?”
“Um, sure, yeah.”
Good to know.”

Hey, Bobby. That man needs some sun.
“You should see him up close. He’s the color of truck stop sushi.”
Truck stops have sushi?
“They have everything now. Truck stops have improved at an astonishing rate over the course of my lifetime. Used to be there were communal showers and real ugly hookers and the cafes served a dish called pastahoochie that you could only get at truck stops.”
Pastahoochie?
“It was like chop suey with a reddish sauce that was advertised as Italian in origin. Usually there was some beef in there. Beef byproducts, maybe. This was the old days, remember: sometimes, you got byproducts.”
Right.
“Only at truck stops, though. But now there’s chain restaurants and everything. There’s stops out there so big there’s room for competing brands. Like, you got a McDonald’s and a Burger King. That’s the big tent Reagan was talking about.”
If you say so.
“They got four haircutting bays. The barbershop is a rectangle, right? Customer seats along the long sides, waiting are in the front, shampoo stations in the back.”
Yeah, Bobby. A barbershop.
“Four of ’em. Lined up. And busy, too. I’ll match our truck stops up with China’s best any day of the week.”
I don’t know, man. China builds big and she keeps laying down highway. There are bound to be some gigantic stops over there.
“Sure, yeah. But can you buy an assault rifle at any of them?”
Absolutely not.
“Freedom wins again.”
Sure. Bobby?
“Uh-huh?”
Will you yell at your bandmates, the werewolf and the disgraced surfing instructor, for dressing too casually?
“No. I’m, uh…no.”
Okay/
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