Wednesday, August 6, 2008

"We're With The Band"

That’s what Dave Nachmanoff told us to say if any official looking people at the concert venue hassled us.

The adventure started this past Saturday morning, as Plummeting Tortoises Tim, Robert, and BowlingJoe hit the road from Marysville,WA in a 2005 Toyota Matrix. I’ll first say that many thanks go out to Bowlingwidow for somehow agreeing that it was an acceptable idea to loan her precious vehicle to a bunch of 40 and 50-something males of questionable maturity for an entire weekend. I owe you big time, dear.

Our destination was Moses Lake, Washington where our friend Dave would meet up with Al Stewart for a Saturday night show. Dave (featured in a June BowlingJoe blog that can be found in the archives) has been Al’s accompanying lead guitarist for several years now, in addition to recording and performing his own material, writing songs for others, and doing just about everything else that involves music.

BowlingJoe has been an Al Stewart fan (and darned near a completist) since 1977 on the day that I heard the first song, on vinyl naturally, on his signature “Year of the Cat” album. Tim had bought it and played it for me. The song was called “Lord Grenville” and it sent me scurrying to the library to learn about Sir Richard Grenville, a 16th century Elizabethan era sailor and explorer. His music was and continues to be relevant enough to inspire me to keep going back to the *virtual* library. It is 2008 after all. From the 1973 ballad “Old Admirals” (Admiral Lord Jackie Fisher, who resigned as First Sea Lord in 1915 after a dispute with Winston Churchill) through “Like William McKinley” on his new CD “Sparks of Ancient Light”, which won’t be released until September of this year, it’s always been about an entertaining paper chase for BowlingJoe.

We headed down I-5 and our first stop was to pick Dave up in the Capitol Hill area of Seattle where he played a house concert the night before. Having hosted Dave for a house show last year, it sounded like a fine night and I wish I could have attended. We dodged what looked like some sort of impromptu Seafair parade and were heading east on I-90 at 70mph before we knew it. The three of us and Dave exchanged greetings and told a few stories before we came up with a rough plan. We were clearly aware that, as Dave’s personal handlers, Al Stewart and hundreds of fans literally depended upon us to get him to the venue safely and functioning like a well-oiled machine when we did. I was to take the lead on gathering information on possible dinner ideas for Al. Tim and I would staff the merchandise table while Robert would be in the audience with a video camera filming some of the concert for Dave.

Tim, BowlingJoe, Dave, Robert at the Roslyn mural
Our first and only leg-stretching stop was in the small town of Roslyn, near the not-much-bigger town of Cle Elum in Central Washington. Roslyn was founded in 1886 as a coal mining town. But what it’s really know for is the fact that from 1990–1995, the television series "Northern Exposure" was filmed there. Many citizens of Roslyn appeared as extras in the show that was set in the fictional town of Cicely, Alaska. We took a few pictures, some video and moved on.

Some of you may want to know if we had any drugs for this crazy folk-rock road trip. Well, I’m happy to report that indeed we did. We had an incredible array: Metamucil, Imodium, prescription blood pressure medications, and even some Breathe Right nose strips to curtail the snoring during the anticipated wild evening at the motel.

We arrived at Moses Lake at around 3:15pm and checked into the Ameri-Stay Motel, none the worse for wear. Tim, Robert and I took over the “Al Stewart Suite”, as it turned out that Al and Ron Scott, one of his promoters, would be staying in Spokane that night. Being in a town of less than 18,000 in the middle of the Eastern Washington wilderness is….well….not exactly Al’s thing.

Dave headed to his room to do some ironing and catch his breath for a bit before the sound check that was rapidly approaching at 5:30. He had a pretty big breakfast that his house concert hosts prepared but the rest of us were looking for a little bit of inexpensive grub. We did that, making a very rare appearance at McDonalds, and checked out the only sushi restaurant in Moses Lake in case Al, a big fan of seaweed and raw fish, wanted us to pick something up for him for after the show. Like most restaurants in town, they closed early so delivery would have been the only option. As it turned out, he balked at the idea of less-than-fresh sushi (I can’t say that I blame him) and eventually opted for deli sandwiches that he and Ron went out and procured for after the show.

Al and Dave during the sound check
After a quick, “I thought YOU knew where the venue was” session between Robert and me that likely made Dave wonder if we were too incompetent to find the damn place, we saw a sign that said “Amphitheater”. We took that left turn thinking that there’s probably only one of those in Moses Lake. Of course we were right.
We parked near the stage at McCosh Park, unloaded Dave’s stuff and immediately set up to go to work. Well, it wasn’t all work. The three “roadies” were fortunate enough to be able to chat with Al for around 10 minutes outside of his temporary Winnebago headquarters. At first he didn’t really know what to make of us, but then seemed delighted that we knew such things as the fact that Tori Amos did vocals on his album “Last Days of the Century” and that he co-wrote an obscure and unreleased song called “No Sign of Rain” with Michelle Shocked. Nope. We weren’t hired hands from Moses Lake after all. We talked about Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan and Elvis Costello. And Al’s new CD of course. Life is a series of moments and this was one of them.

Tim in control at the merchandise table
The show started promptly at 8:00 with Dave performing an excellent three song set (“Square Peg Blues”, “Lucky”, and “Grateful”). The crowd responded well and this was confirmed later with a worthy response at the merchandise table.

Al then took the stage with Dave and started with “House of Clocks” as they often do and then progressed into other things including some songs from the not-yet-released disc. For many in the audience the highlight of the show was a brilliant 9-minute version of the epic song “Roads to Moscow” based on the life of Alexander Solzhenitsyn. Little did any of us in the Moses Lake venue know that Solzhenitsyn would die less than 24 hours later in Moscow at age 89.

Al and Dave giving the Moses Lake crowd what they want

When it was all said and done, Al Stewart turned in yet another outstanding performance with Dave Nachmanoff doing it all on lead guitar. We said goodbye to the Spokane-bound Ron and Al and headed back to the motel while Dave changed back into Levis and a comfortable t-shirt.

The only non-fast food place that was open for food at 11:30 pm in Moses Lake on a Saturday night is a sports bar and casino called Papa’s. And the only food they served at that time was pizza. It was across the parking lot from the motel and since beggars can’t be choosers, the four of us were all over it. The joint is connected to The Lake Bowl bowling center, which would normally make me very happy. But at that time of night it’s all about teenagers, strobe lights, thumping music and disco balls. If BowlingJoe dared to hit the approaches with his 15 pound orb, he’d be more apt to have a seizure than to toss a strike.

We made our way into Papa’s and occupied a booth overlooking the small but very noisy and active casino. Unlike Dave, the three of us tend to (out of necessity) take the “early to bed and early to rise” approach. It seemed odd to us that (a) there are colonies of people who hit their strides after midnight and (b) they all like to gamble.

We ordered a large combo pizza and some hefeweizen to wash it down as we listened to Dave tell some hilarious stories about being on the road and the interesting (often strange) people he’s met and worked with. Before we knew it, it was 1:00am and time to head back across the parking log to get some sleep prior to our 9:15am (a bit on the early side for Dave) gathering in the lobby to prepare for the road back to Seattle.

More laughs ensued on the seemingly fast trip back to “civilization” across the Columbia River and over the Cascade Range at Snoqualmie Pass. We needed music so we slid a Fountains of Wayne CD into the player and bobbed our heads to the great sounds and clever lyrics, following it up with a little bit of Martin Simpson folk flavoring that Tim had brought to finish up the trip. Dave was delivered safely to Sea-Tac airport at one o’ clock in plenty of time for his short flight to Sacramento, followed by a quick ride to Davis, where his family would greet him and celebrate the fact the he, like Al, survived the sojourn into the belly of the Eastern Washington wasteland and emerged unscathed.

We pointed the Matrix north and set it on autopilot. Mission accomplished. We looked at each other and just smiled. No need for words. We have the memory of a fine little weekend and nobody can take it away.
The last men standing: Tim, Dave Nachmanoff, Robert, Al Stewart, BowlingJoe

12 comments:

groovelily said...

Excellent story... i enjoy reading your posts... your obvious joy in life comes through. You do the whole paint the picture thing very well. You manage to write in a manner that i wish i could.... it's obvious the thought and research you put into each one.

:) many thanks

Anonymous said...

Thanks, groovelily. You're WAAAAY too kind to me. I just kind of wing it.

By the way, what's up with your blog? You're pretty good at this thing too and it's just been sitting idle. Don't make me remove my link to it!

groovelily said...

sigh.... i need to get my butt in gear.... kiddos are gone for two weeks, so i hope to be turning productive any minute. (um... alison just came on my finetune player :)). Part of my problem is i need to by the usb plug, or whatever it's called, so i can download pics. But, yes, a new post is in the percolation stage.

David said...

Avoid the brown Breathe Right strips, man...
Great story, BowlingJoe. I'm sending an article from the New York Times your way about a music club in New York that also doubles as a bowling alley, and yes, pizza is involved.

Anonymous said...

Thanks, David, I'm looking forward to it. Music, bowling and pizza. Three of the great pleasures in life if you're me.

I loved your Breathe Right comment. It's a coincidence that on the way to show Tim wondered out loud whether or not Al would make an announcement asking that we "avoid the brown Metimusal".

I'll attempt to answer your Groucho question on Captain ILL's blog, based on some information I got from Tim today. He, like Robert, is one of the great Marx Brothers fans of all time.

Joe

Captain ILL said...

I just passed on the article to Bowlingwidow after taking a look myself, so remind her to give it to you if she forgets. I'm no great bowler as Bowlingjoe will attest, but I'll admit that the combination of bowling, pizza, and music is appealing.

groovelily said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
groovelily said...

hey bowlingjoe.... i had a ton of fun bowling and am looking forward to a rematch... i am determined to kick your a**. (Of course, you need to stop practicing and i need to start). Now you need to take back the comment that you would beat me even if you bowled left handed, blindfolded and backward.

Not too bad for a girl, eh?

:)

Anonymous said...

David, I did get the New York Times article. Thanks for getting that to me. It's interesting to see what kinds of things entertainment businesses are doing in places like New York where you've got CBGB's and other traditional clubs shutting down. I'm more of an "old school" bowler, but if this kind of thing helps keep bowling on the map then so be it. Bowling centers are seeing the wrecking ball more and more these days, because the revenue generated per square foot can't compete with things like condominiums. Sad but that's the economic reality.

BowlingJoe

Anonymous said...

Groovelily, since I didn't actually bowl left-handed, backward, and blindfolded we'll never really know the answer to that question. But I will state publicly that you gave me a run for my money, LEADING BowlingJoe through six frames before taking a whiff of the ammonia, that I keep in my bowling bag for such occasions, that brought me to my senses.

In any event, it was all about having fun and I'm always ready to do it again. Thanks to the the SnoIsle bunch (and Jim S!) for making it a great after-work party.

Unknown said...

BowlingJoe, the last time I saw you bowl, I thought you were bowling blindfolded, backward, and left handed.

Maybe it was just your score that made me think that and I didn't actually see you throw the ball.

All I know is that with the house ball I was relegated to use since discarding my equipment, I might as well have been doing the same, since I pretty much sucked. Of course, I was also dazzled by the fact they had those automagic thingies instead of a bunch of teenagers setting pins.

Anonymous said...

cvow also remembers the days when you had to keep score by hand and the ball return was above the surface of the lane. Hmmm...come to think of it, I remember those days myself!