Every high school talent show
across the land pretty much unfolds in the same way. There are some good acts
and some bad acts and a few individuals who have heard the term tone deaf, but
don’t know it applies to them. Standard fare usually includes a troupe of
dancing girls (containing one leader who has clearly been in competitive dance
since age four, flanked by six others who spend the whole time crashing into
each other, always one beat behind), perhaps a comedy act and some homemade
poetry that may induce motion sickness. But those are not the bones of the
matter. The real spine of the show of course is the bands.
Like the rest of the acts, the
band performances vary according to a number of things such as level of
experience, measure of stage fright, quality of equipment, and plain old talent
– or lack thereof. Granted, it is terribly difficult to sound good in a wide
open cafeteria when you are singing through a guitar amp and you’re bass player
has not actually learned any notes yet.
My firsthand experience in
these matters comes from back in the olden days when I used to host a coffee
house at the school. Through this, I have endured (mostly in good humour) karaoke,
morose singer songwriters and punk bands that have obviously not practiced as a
unit more than three times.
Occasionally, I would become
cranky, like the time I was working the door, and a couple of young punks tried
to get in for free. Two long haired, skinny little metal heads - one blond
wearing a Black Sabbath t-shirt and the other with dark hair sporting a Pantera
t-shirt - just like Beavis and Butthead. It was only a two dollar cover charge which
neither could procure from the depths of their pockets. I think they were about
14 at the time, and had a combined weight of about 150 pounds.
I had to lay it down for them.
“Hey guys…you have to pay to get in, just like everyone else. Even the
performers have to pay to get in.”
“What about if we perform? Can
we pay half? ” Beavis asks, grinning like a maniac.
“Yeah” says Butthead, “We live
like, one block away. We’ll go get our guitars, and find a dollar.”
I agreed to the deal just to
get rid of them, as I was certain they would get distracted along the way and
never return. Besides I was not up for sitting through another desecrating instrumental
version of Stairway to Heaven. Not five minutes went by when I looked out the window and damned if they weren’t trudging across the parking lot,
both with a guitar in hand and carrying a giant amp that banged against their
legs with each step, forcing them to zig zag like drunken sailors. They still
had no money but I let them in anyway because the show was half over. I told
them I would slot them in between angst
ridden poetry girl and bad punk band
with no singer.
Angst
ridden poetry girl finished and the metal head kids set up their
amps, while I braced myself for a cringe-worthy performance of Free Bird… or
worse. And yea, the stars did align,
for the two tiny metal heads did burst forth with great musical ability and stirred
the crowd with a righteous rendition of Green Onions. I’m not kidding. These
little buggers launched into the Booker T classic like they were delta blues
veterans. The way they traded riffs and grooved along you would think you were
standing in a juke joint in Memphis on a Saturday night. It’s get better
though. For the second song, one of them (Black Sabbath shirt) puts down his
guitar and grabs the microphone. Pantera shirt starts into the opening riff of
Rooster by Alice and Chains. By this time I’m grinning like an idiot and
looking over at the punk band who has unenviable task of following this performance. I'm making sure they are watching how it's supposed to be done.
It turns out that Black
Sabbath shirt can sing. I mean he can really sing. Not like a 15 year old
with a shaky voice but more like a front man on the stage at Lollapalooza. They
tore through Rooster with just the
guitar and voice without a hitch. It was a glorious relief to have my
preconceived notions proved wrong. I don’t really remember if punk band with no singer was half decent
or horrible but either way, they didn’t burn a spot in my brain like the two
little metal heads.
A year to two later, I found out that there was a
third long haired guitar player from around the same grade –
we’ll call him Metallica shirt, who, at another talent show joined Pantera shirt onstage for a scorching rendition of Little Wing by Jimi Hendrix. Once
again, they played well beyond their years and in my opinion, stole the show. I don't know if there was something in the water in the neighbourhood where these kids came from, but they sure as hell could play.
Fast forward 10 years or so and you will be happy to know that these boys have done rather well for themselves.
If we are throwing around names, then let it be known that Black Sabbath shirt
is called Taylor Perkins and he sings in a band called Bleeker Ridge, which was
last seen touring across the country with the likes of Papa Roach and Buckcherry.
He is joined in this band by Mike Van Dyk -otherwise known as Metallica t-shirt
- who plays bass. The last character, formerly referred to as Pantera shirt, is
Timmy Kehoe and he holds down the lead guitar spot in a vicious metal band
called Adrenechrome. Mike Van Dyk also plays bass in this band because his love
of metal runs very deep.
And so it stands, that long
ago I was reminded of some life lessons. Don’t judge a CD by its cover, and sometimes
letting a couple of kids in to the coffee house for free is the right thing to
do. Oh…and Kehoe and Perkins, you guys still owe me two bucks.
Noticing this now, great read! proud to have come out of such a talent laden era of Coffee Houses.
ReplyDeleteThose lads contributed largely to my music knowledge. Happy memories having shared the stage with them and you.
Tyler