Dispatches From a Parallel Universe
by
Fred Reed
DIGG THIS
Damn! Caint
believe it! Hoo-yeeha-wow! And all.
Let me try
to get this to make sense, though the odds are long. I was tending
the computer in the bedroom of my house in Jocotopec in darkest
Mexico, maybe ten in the morning. The Mamas and the Papas
roared from the speakers, third Negra Modelo gettin low in
the can, big brown-ass hills indolent and shiftless out the window
just like mankind was meant to be but aint got enough sense,
and Im thinking about how the vandals stole the handle and
remembering twisted times in the High Desert back in the Sixties
when Jimmy and I nearly fell down the mine shaft
ah, but the
world I isnt ready for that.
On a vagrant
impulse I fed The Greezy Wheels into Googles maw.
Not a chance,
I figured. What did Google know about high art? Or low dives? It
probably doesnt inhale. The Wheels were a great band,
even if you were straight. Or so Ive heard. That was maybe
1973 in Austin which was the exact temporal point of the Big Bang
or more likely the Great Mushroom, viewed through Window Pane, but
anyway the start of anything that mattered or, I sometimes think,
still does.
Google eructated,
gurp.Hunh?! The Wheels got a freaking web site! Better living
through chem I mean, electronics. How come theyre still
out there? How come I am? Holy fruitcake, Batman.
You gotta understand.
Austin in the Seventies was the great symbiotic corn-fed Texas-plus-hippy
evolutionary musical weirdness center, with these blond strong kids
from the fields who came in from the farm and hit the freak years,
ker-blunch. Young America, the part that mattered anyway, was wobbling
around the continent like carmine particles in some sort of macroscopic
Brownian-motion. Id drifted in from either it was NYC
or it wasnt: Im sure of it to see a friend who
lived in a cardboard shack mostly up on Montopolis on Crumley Lane,
I think. Or somewhere else. It was not a factually fastidious time.
Anyway, the
Wheels were a country band. I mean real country and they felt
the music because it was what they were, but they had perhaps some
slight acquaintance with smokable enlightenment. Maybe not that
slight. I dont know. A kilo here, a kilo there, and it adds
up to drugs. Who can tell? Hey, its how things were. Our childhoods
made us do it.
The head fiddlist
for them (this is all from lengthening memory, but you will have
to deal with it) was Mary Egan who (we understood, anyway) had started
life as a classical violinist and realized her error and took up
the fiddle. Apparently she found it redemptive.
God plays the
fiddle. Everybody knows it. In fact, he only created four instruments,
the soprano recorder, the country fiddle, the mouth harp, and the
clarinet. All the rest are unfortunate derivatives.
Now, Armadillo
World Headquarters this is getting difficult. You probably
didnt know that armadillos had a headquarters. Well, they
did. Theyre more organized than you think. It was an open-air
music-and-lotsa-beer joint where wild bands played seditious music
for dirty rotten anarchistic hippies, like me, and all these Texas
gals, the which there aint no better on this or any other
earth, except maybe in Arkansas, (well, or Alabama, or
.) wandered
around in tight cut-offs and the music soared and flew and flapped
and you hollered LSD! at the waitress, who brought you
a whole mug of it. (It meant Lone Star Draft. At least during working
hours.)
They had this
crazy dog, and youd roll a piece of spongy volcanic rock and
hed run fetch it. I worry about that dog. He may still think
lava is what dogs eat.
Actually, the
Dillo wasnt alone. There was Soap Creek Saloon where
youd get pitchers of beer and listen in thumping dark to some
really good band, which Austin crawled with like ticks on a backwoods
dog, and girls would jump on the tables and dance to the twang-and-whoop were
talking banjos here, five strings and twelve fingers because
in those days it was still America.
You cant
play a banjo right with less than a dozen fingers. Its a scientific
fact. Its why so many banjoists come from West Virginia.
Sometimes the
Soap would have a beer-drinking contest. Youd chug a styrofoam
cup and throw it to show that youd finished. It looked like
a snowstorm. All they needed was penguins. After five rounds they
picked a winner somehow and the prize was
a pitcher of beer.
Which the winner drank on the spot.
Then the
Wheels would get it on. Mary would wail into Orange Blossom
Special on the fiddle and the crowd would yoop and holler and go
wild. It was, after all, Texas.
Anyway, I remember
Mary and Cleve, and Lissa who sang Whatever Happened to Romance,
in the swirling murk of lots of joints and occasional tobacco and
I was in love with her because, well, nothing else made sense. Women
are wonderful creatures when they arent vicious Yankee dykes,
and when they play in bands the wonderfulness goes exponential.
The Wheels would play Okie from Muskogee and it was exactly
right, maybe bettern Merle, cause they were Texans but
it was a joke too given the pharmacological background, or foreground,
of the audience and the times. (White Lightning may have been the
greatest trip but it sure wasnt the only one.)
Then, we heard,
they put Cleve in jail because he was in the airport coming back
from Mexico and his suitcase accidentally fell open, the police
said (uh-huh) and all this Margie Weenie fell out. It wasnt
fair. Im sure he didnt know it was there. I mean, you
cant tell what people will put in your suitcase if you dont
watch it. Anyway it didnt help the band at all, or anyones
spirits. Given that the entire city of Houston with more than a
million dollars in its pocket, which was pretty much the entire
city of Houston, was flying on corruption and cocaine, it didnt
seem right. I guess wed all be better off if the government
just kept its long sticky fingers to itself. Or curled up and died.
Then
I went away. I must have, because Im not still there. Cleve
must have gotten out, because he isnt still in. The years
rolled on, senselessly. Its what they do. I figured the
Wheels had gone extincter than seven mastodons under a park
bench, but no, theyre still there. Maybe theres a little
bit of justice in the world after all, but I doubt it.

Armadillo
World Headquarters, 1974. Shamelessly stolen from their site. The triumph of music over elegance.
August
23, 2006
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well and the just-published
A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Be.
Copyright
© 2006 Fred Reed
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Reed Archives
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