Monday, November 08, 2004
Yin Yang
It never fails. I have a really good day and then something gets fucked up later.
It's freezing in here, the weather guy says frost and worse for the next few days, so I think, okay, even though I hate my basement I'm going down. I have gas heat so I better make sure everything is cool before I turn it on and blow myself up. The kids are at a Project Object concert tonight and I'd hate for them to come home and find pieces of bloody flesh all over the walls. So I work up the guts (cos' I'm also convinced there's critters of some sort living in my cellar) but as it turns out, the door is blocked by a PA system on top of which is a precarious stack of CDs, books, and a half eaten Reese's peanut butter cup.
Note to self: Crack down on domestic goddess duties or make the kids your slaves...or better yet, get them to clean up after themselves without coming off as a nag. Or just say Fuck it who cares like you always do.
Anyway, so now I can't go downstairs so I decide Hey, I know, I'll light the season's first fire in the fireplace.
I dunno, I thought I opened the flue but apparently not. I managed to avert disaster but couldn't get the fire alarm to stop going off. I had to stand on a chair and remove the battery.
So yeah, back to reality. I feel like I just ran a marathon. Didn't buy the Stella yet but I do have Yuengling.
And here's how I intend to spend the money...
Anyone care to join me? Ha!
Sorry. It's not every day I earn $50.00 for one of my stories. Or win anything.
Damn it, why do I have to be stuck at work now! And why does it have to be Monday, my most hated day of the week? I need to celebrate somehow but I guess Stella and I will have to hold off for the weekend.
I can do that.
Maybe.
Oh my god!
I'd like to thank the Academy, my dysfunctional home life, my computer...
Anyway, just got this email. My very first contest winner!
Hi Robin,
Thank you for submitting your essay to Cavern Press. Although we did not receive many entries, I would like to award you the $50.00 prize. Thank you for your courage and honesty. Please let me know what address you would like me to paypal the award. Also, I would like to know if you would be willing to be interviewed. Your identity would be protected of course, but your account is unique. Receiving the award is not contingent on you doing the interview. Again, thank you for submitting to our contest.
Tammy Perron
Cavern Press
Well, since it's now on my publisher's page...
I guess it's okay to post the cover of my novel, due out January, 2005, because it now appears on my publisher's web site along with a synopsis. And yes, I am way, way excited.
But if the picture disappears at some point today because I am in fact not allowed to do this, you'll understand why:
But if the picture disappears at some point today because I am in fact not allowed to do this, you'll understand why:
Sunday, November 07, 2004
Tour pics...
I got nothing. I mean, as concerns the novel. Instead of working on it yesterday, I went off on a tangent and wrote a short story. I'm truly hopeless. Just like I'm dying to post what my novel actually looks like because it's now being advertised on the publisher's page, but I can't remember how to do it. I know I can't copy their address because it takes away from their broadband or something...I dunno, my son explained it to me once...all I know is I have to somehow download it to a server first and he usually does that for me but he didn't come home last night, so I'm helpless. Anyway, it even says "Coming in 2005" on their site. I still haven't grasped this entirely and refuse to fantasize too much, but I must admit, I'm enjoying myself.
I will, however, post some photos I took from the tour. Paul actually made me official concert photographer (anything to make me happy and you'll find out why later)...but it's true, I am nuts with the camera and it's yet another thing I'd be doing if I didn't have that stupid day job.
Here's a shot of the kids doing Devo:
Here's Jeremy, Jimmy Page look and sound a like...wait, I take that back...he's better than Jimmy!
and CJ on guitar, Dom on sax (Jim Morrison all the way) and Napoleon Murphy Brock, who of course played with Frank Zappa for several years and joined the kids for many of their shows...
I will, however, post some photos I took from the tour. Paul actually made me official concert photographer (anything to make me happy and you'll find out why later)...but it's true, I am nuts with the camera and it's yet another thing I'd be doing if I didn't have that stupid day job.
Here's a shot of the kids doing Devo:
Here's Jeremy, Jimmy Page look and sound a like...wait, I take that back...he's better than Jimmy!
and CJ on guitar, Dom on sax (Jim Morrison all the way) and Napoleon Murphy Brock, who of course played with Frank Zappa for several years and joined the kids for many of their shows...
Saturday, November 06, 2004
Happy Saturday...
So last night my publisher sent me the proof for the cover of my novel. Now it finally seems real. I'm of course dying to post it here but something tells me I'd better not. Anyway, the book will be out January, 2005 and to say I'm psyched is putting it mildly. Luckily I have the holidays and my novel in progress to keep me pre-occupied, plus a few upcoming trips, one of which is to Kings Park, New York next weekend for the Night Train reading. I'll post more about that later in the week because I don't want it to sink to the bottom of the blog.
Anyway, I'll post additional excerpts of The Tour later..I'm working on that simultaneously with a flash called "Ten Things I Say to My Imaginary Lover". Here's a tease:
#1. My, what big hands you have!
(heh...to be continued as soon as I think of 9 more without driving myself too, err, crazy)
Friday, November 05, 2004
Oh finally...
So this morning was hell. First I get addicted to this damn site, then I find out I can't log on with any new posts. Typical. I was jonesing in a bad way. Then, I go on line and find out I owe Cingular $417.00 for my kids' cell phone bills for the month of October. Both went way over their minutes on the family plan. I almost had a fucking stroke and called them at school, hollering like a crazy woman. This is not like me at all, and while I'm angry at both of them, I'm just as angry at myself for losing my cool. Fuck it all, it's only money. Okay, $417.00 is a big deal, but at least everyone is healthy. Well, I'm not healthy, my blood pressure is soaring, but at least I'm alive.
Anyway, back to the novel. I don't even remember what pic I am posting - I copied the link before I went to work and emailed it to myself, so I guess I'll be surprised - oh wait, I do remember, it's my son, Eric (the one with the long hair in the dark glasses like his mom) and Brandon, the other drummer, playing congos on Black Magic Woman. And in regard to said novel, when I went to work on it last night and this morning, I realized one of the reasons I was so bored was that I was telling it in too linear a fashion, which I know I have to do because it's non-fiction, but I wanted to excite myself so I started typing up some of my notes from Paul's pre-concert pep talk to the kids on the third day in. This is all raw stuff, but I figure, what the fuck, I'll insert it in its proper place later, severely edited of course. So here it is, more of the tour...
“Alright! I’m going to throw out some songs. I want you to grade them., A, B, C. Black Magic Woman.”
“I think it’s a B”, says Dan, one of the guitarists, a nice kid. It’s not his song so he’s being diplomatic and taking the middle of the road approach.
“Why a B and not an A, Dan?” Paul prods him.
“I dunno,” he mumbles.
“He’s right,” says Haffie, another great guitar god. “ I just don’t think there’s enough energy.”
“You’re making sense, Haf. Phil,” he says, pointing at a handsome seventeen year old guitarist with long wavy hair. “You’re a rock star on that stage, act the part. C’mon dude, you’ve got the looks. Do a solo with C.J. You’ve got to sell the audience, you’ve got to play to them. Dance, talk it up, sell our merchandise. We have t-shirts, sweatshirts, tour shirts. No wait, girls – you do it. Smile at everyone, give a little wiggle, ask them nicely to buy them during the break, tell them how it supports the school”
“Okay, okay,” everyone kind of mumbles.
“Stevie,” he says to his pretty blonde keyboard player/singer. "Listen, no lesbian thing when you and Madison sing You Really Got Me. This isn't Philadelphia - the people don't dig what you're doing. It’s not cool. Instead of smiling at each other, smile at and engage the audience.”
The kids groan. They're older and are into being bored and blasé. Engaging the masses decidedly does not appeal to them and Paul senses it.
“Listen, have I been wrong yet? Don’t disagree with me, I know what I’m talking about. Look how it is when Joey sings Italian Restaurant. He hams it up and people love it. Remember that dude we saw on Venice Beach playing guitar with his feet? People were lined up watching! You gotta do shit like that!”
More sighs from everyone. And I’m still cringing over the fact that Italian Restaurant is even on the set list.
“Okay, next song. Gimme Shelter - can be A, but not with this group. Madison, you should own that song. You gotta belt it out!”
“Louie!” He shouts to his premier guitarist, also soon to graduate. “You fucked up the solo in Pigs last night. You’re playing on automatic; there’s no enthusiasm.”
“Paul, the sound guy was horrible. The bartender told me it was his first day on the job and he was all stoned.”
“Don’t blame the sound guy. You always blame others for your fuck-ups. And Dan, you need to work the slide better. Other than that, the song was an A. It should be an A. It’s a great fucking tune.”
“Golden Slumbers! Okay, A, the crowd eats it up, especially when Teddie, Gina, and Allie all sing in harmony. Same thing, Paranoid Android. Teddie, Stevie, the Slicks – A plus.”
Oh man, he’s giving my kids a break? With me sitting here? That’s so not Paul.
“Okay, next song. Dogs. Now Slicks, you sucked on that last night. Worst version ever.”
Ha. Now it is.
“Yeah, it figures. Teddie finally gets her guitar solo right but then the Slicks screw up. Julie, Eric, you've got to keep it together. It’s like you never establish any groove.”
“Paul, we tried really hard. That’s the most difficult song we do,” Julie whines.
“What did we do wrong? I thought we did okay,” Eric agrees.
“No, it’s not good enough. Figure it out, but realize it’s better to play the song good than exactly right. No one is telling you to be slavishly tied to the original version. You two are such perfectionists, you’re too literal. You have to liven it up, you’re not tight enough as a unit. I mean, Jesus Christ, Pink Floyd was the tightest unit ever and of course you’ll never do that so cheat, make it yours. Julie, Eric, don’t just stand there looking at each other, just nail it. You guys gotta work on it. Julie, when it comes to the bass break...don't stop when Louie does - hold an open chord.”
“What do you mean?” Julie sputters.
“I don’t know, anything. Play an arbitrary chord,” he says.
The kids all look at each other and I wait to roll my eyes in comradery if only one of them would just look at me.
“Next. Rain Song.”
“A” everyone agrees.
“Yeah, that’s right. It’s an A. Teddie, you nail the vocals – Jeremy, Phil, CJ – you rock on that.”
“21st Century Schizoid Man.”
“Oh, A plus,” Julie says. Sure, her boyfriend plays bass on that.
“You’re right. CJ and Matt rock out on that song.”
“Okay, okay, what else. Can You Hear Me Knocking. I say it’s a B. The guitars need more…something. Guys, do me a favor. Get the CD and listen to it wearing headphones. Get crazy with the rhythm. Cameron, you need to be a little more animated like Ron Wood.”
I stifle a laugh. Animated and Ron Wood used together in the same sentence for some reason cracks me up. And then again, there’s that rumor about him having horrible body odor.
“Next. What is Never Should Be...do Ramble On instead,”
No one disagrees because the same kids play in both.
“LA Woman. Dom, you are Jim Morrison. But people, please...carve out a solo for Grace. Right now it’s a B and it’s usually good but it could be an A. Jam, keep the solo going, and do another jam at the end. Dave – do something other than 4/4 drumbeats. C’mon. You’re an All Star, act like one, otherwise I’m giving the song to Slick or Brandon. And Brandon,” he says to the only black kid on tour. “War Pigs is just B plus – Haffie, that’s your fault and Brandon, you’re behind in the beat and I can't hear the high hat. Remember, once again, good is better than right. Brandon you are the vet here. You have to lead that song!”
Brandon nods. Normally, he’s immune from this stuff. He’s older that the other kids – almost twenty – but he’s Paul’s right hand man, a good natured kid who at least on the surface lets stuff roll off him.
“Now. Four Horsemen. It has to be perfect...there’s no other reason for doing that song other than ‘Look how good we do it’ and let me tell you now, if I’ve just told you your song is good and then you fuck up and don't give it your all and it gets bad again, you're never gonna hear the end of it. I'm gonna haunt you fuckers. Cameron, you had a breakthrough in that song the other night - it's your song, dude, and if you can't hear others you are too loud and you have to turn down your amp. You need other people to quiet down during your solos. You know why it is I always hear solos by the same people? It's because of their attack. Attack!”
The kids are getting restless. They realize Paul is on one of his manic roles and this could go on for hours. They’re hungry and they’re tired but once again, I have to pretend I’m invisible, even though it’s like one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do. That’s my kids sitting there suffering.
Thursday, November 04, 2004
I dunno...
So I've had an epiphany and now I'm way pissed because I realize I don't want to write the book on the tour as part of National Novel Writing Month and I've already wasted four days and am almost 6,000 words in. I want to write the sequel to my novel instead. This is of course particularly amazing since I didn't even know I was going to write a sequel until the publisher said they'd like to see one and I had not one single idea nor did I particularly want to do it anyway until naturally I committed myself to writing the memoir of the tour. I'm also annoyed I haven't written a short story or a flash in almost a month. This totally sucks. I've been walking around the house for two hours, trying to come up with something, and instead my brain keeps droning on with the facts of the tour. My brain is even talking to me in a flat monotone. Oh my god, I'm so bored with the whole narration. I am so not a non fiction writer.
I have an opening line for a flash and I don't know where the hell to take it.
"Her sister has invited her to lunch, but when she arrives, her sister's cat is on the dining room table eating the shrimp while her six year old son crouches underneath, eating a stick of butter".
See how pathetic I am at the moment? That's the best I can do.
Pissed at the world...
I hate everyone today.
Sorry.
Except him:
If you never heard his music, you should remedy that immediately.
Anyway, it's not a great pic, but it's J.J. Cale. Clapton covered some of songs and made them hits and half of the asshole world thinks they were written by EC but they weren't...After Midnight, Cocaine, I'll Make Love to You (any ole' time at all)...anyway, JJ is amazing and if you're gonna start with one CD, buy JJ Cale 5.
That is all.
I'm going back to burying my head in my NaNo novel which I agree, is pure crap, but I know how to fix it. It's one of the few perks of reading like 100 stories a week as an editor.
Sorry.
Except him:
If you never heard his music, you should remedy that immediately.
Anyway, it's not a great pic, but it's J.J. Cale. Clapton covered some of songs and made them hits and half of the asshole world thinks they were written by EC but they weren't...After Midnight, Cocaine, I'll Make Love to You (any ole' time at all)...anyway, JJ is amazing and if you're gonna start with one CD, buy JJ Cale 5.
That is all.
I'm going back to burying my head in my NaNo novel which I agree, is pure crap, but I know how to fix it. It's one of the few perks of reading like 100 stories a week as an editor.
Wednesday, November 03, 2004
I've gotten a grip...
Okay, so I'm feeling better now but of course angry at myself for breaking my #1 and #2 rules.
#1 - Never freak out or get depressed over something that is totally out of my control;
#2 - Never over-estimate the American public. Assume they are all assholes and be pleasantly surprised when proven otherwise. That way, I will always avoid disappointment and will seldom be depressed.
Tonight I plan on getting wasted, blasting some really great music, working on my novel, and talking with a favorite friend. My idea of multi-tasking. (Ugh, spare me that phrase, along with "closure", "my bad", etc.)
So all is cool in my world again. Though I am still planning a major life change...just trying to figure out what.
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