Sunday, October 18, 2020

Theatre Days (1983-1984)

Okay, time to wrap up this "Theatre Days" stuff. I've been away from the blog for a bit....I'll try to get back in the saddle here. Uuuupp.....okay, here we go.

The theatre year began with early (January) performances of "The Miracle Worker," and I served as stage manager for those - first and only time I did that. Any of you involved in theatre know that stage manager is the most important crew position; you're the Boss. And responsible for any and every thing. Scary, but totally involving. The funny thing is that other than being pretty wowed by the cast of this one, I don't remember much. The shows must have come off okay. Whew.

The spring of 1983 was a little different for me. The biggest reason was that I got a job at a radio station as an announcer. I forget the specifics of why I went this route, but it must have been because......I needed money!! And so, my theatre availability could have been roughly the same but working weekends during the day was a killer. Saturdays I went into the station at 9 am, and Sundays I went in at (gasp) 4:45 am. Oftentimes, I went in with no sleep. But all that's another story.

Therefore, I laid out of productions in the spring of 1983. "Threepenny Opera" (which I am a fan of) and a show called "Talley's Folly" (?) were produced, but I stayed out of them. I probably acted in a few directing projects (memories are fuzzy), but I kept out of the evening ones. Around this time, I was working in the Department as part of the work-study program, in order to help make rent, etc. So a lot of this semester was a theatre wash for me.

But, in the summer, it was time for PASS once again. And nothing kept me away from that. Now that I think about it, I wonder if I took a couple of those weekends off of work; I might have for PASS. Anyway, the first show up was called "Luv," a ridiculous comedy written by Murray Schisgal in the 60s. It was directed by Jack Strawn, and being the first show of PASS, was rehearsed in late May while school was out - a la "Star Spangled Girl" the year before. The show only had three characters, Harry, who I played, Milt, and Ellen. Harry begins the play suicidal but runs into Milt right before jumping from a bridge. Harry's loneliness gives Milt the idea to pawn his wife Ellen off on Harry (Milt has an affair going on), saving everyone in the process. And it goes from there. I played this one up like almost nothing else, and one memory really stands out. For a dress rehearsal, some students were present. And one of the snootier ones told me after the run-through "I don't think you're really getting to the emotional depth of the character." I took that as a fantastic compliment. This show was far from serious. Rafael Torres played Milt, and my girlfriend at the time, Rise Atkins, played Ellen. And having Jack direct in his usual "hey, Lance, run with it!" way just led to supreme fun.

On to the second show of PASS, and we get "Born Yesterday." Now, this one might seem more familiar, due to the movie remake from the 90s with Melanie Griffith, but I'd never even seen the original film version from 1950. And this was one where I had a lot of trouble. Jim Hawley directed it, and his focus on technical issues meant I didn't have a lot of guidance in the role, which was, well, the handsome romantic male co-lead. Something I wasn't even used to attempting to play. And I still feel like I dropped the ball on this one. Or maybe it's just that I wasn't made to play this kind of role. Nevertheless, I had fun doing it. Kimberly Lewis played the lead, with Chuck Pokorny playing her gruff, uncouth husband. Fun show, I just think I was miscast. So there.

The final two shows of PASS that year I was not in, and other than working on the sound tapes, I'm not sure I had any crew responsibilities.

Later that summer, I had the opportunity to direct something for the Tower Theater in Weslaco. The Tower Theater was a comfortable theater housed inside an old water tower, basically a large cylinder. The Tower's manager was my girlfriend's mother, and so I managed to grab a director position, putting on Neil Simon's "Barefoot in the Park." Rise played Corrie, I played Paul, and most of the rest of the cast were pulled from the Pan Am theatre folks. For my first (and only, as it turned out) somewhat major production, it turned out okay. My mom even made a trip from the Dallas area to see it. Got my picture on the front page of the newspaper as well. Not bad.

Moving to the fall, we began with the old chestnut "You Can't Take It With You." This one was directed by Doug Cummins, and I had the role of Mr. DePinna, who is kind of a cypher in the script. (I had not seen the movie version at this point.) One type of role I thought I was pretty good at playing is the clueless go-along-with-it guy, and this part was certainly that. Mr. DePinna, like a lot of people in this wacky household, just showed up one day and stayed. In this case, he helps the father of the house build fireworks in the basement. And he smokes a pipe all the time, which was new for me. I taped flints to the bottoms of my shoes, so I'd have something to light matches on if the pipe went out. There's one scene where DePinna emerges on stage in a toga, carrying an artist's easel and paints - I forget some of the context. But it's a bit of a surprise, I suppose. One performance, when I strutted onstage with the toga and equipment, the crowd stopped the show dead with applause and laughter. Self-serving, I know, but memories like this are the ones that stick. I've never forgotten it.


On to the final show of 1983, and Dr. Monta was directing "An Evening of Albee," comprising "Zoo Story" and "The American Dream," two one-act plays that are often performed together. I played Grandma in "The American Dream." I did. Old lady wig, dress, everything. I remember one of the first things Dr. Monta had to teach me was how to not sit in that dress with my legs open. I'm sure she had a funny biting quip about it, but I don't remember a specific one. For every one of these shows, I'm trying to think of one memory that stands out, and unfortunately, the one for this isn't a great one. At some point, there were three of us onstage, Veronica Gilchrist as Mommy, Valente Rodriguez as Daddy, and me. Ronnie Gilchrist was a lovely woman to work with, but she had problems remembering lines. And she went completely "up" at this moment. And, I couldn't remember what came next, in an effort to cover her. I could tell Valente didn't, either. We stayed silent onstage for what felt like a minute, although it was probably only 10 or 15 seconds. I don't really remember how we got out of it, but we somehow did. You'd think after all the shows I did at Pan Am in those days, there might have been more of these, but I can't think of any others.


1983's nomination for the Irene Ryan scholastic award I mentioned in the 1982 post went to yours truly for this performance. The sad thing is: I didn't go to the competition. And I can't remember why, other than I might've just been burned out, or needed money, or something. I really do not remember. There's even a small part of my brain saying "you did go!" but I don't think that's accurate.

I put 1983 and 1984 together, as by the spring of 1984, I was ready to do something else, and I largely stayed out of the theatre world. The second spring show of 1984 was "Annie Get Your Gun," directed by Dr. Monta, and I got the role of Pawnee Bill, Buffalo Bill's rival. It was fun, but believe it or not, I sort of took the role under duress. Jeez, that sounds snotty as hell. But I did get to sing "There's No Business Like Show Business" on a stage, so I'll always have that.

But ultimately, I just was not into it. I could feel Dr. Monta's disappointment in my overall direction, but I couldn't help it. It was going to be a different path for me in life after all.

So, I graduated in May, 1984. I stayed in the Valley a year, working radio and saving some money. Then it was off to California in February, 1985, to reconnect with my dad and start a new life.\

These theatre days were the spark to what I ended up doing in music and life in general. As cheesy as it sounds, I own them a lot of my life.

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Theatre Days (1982)

Moving on to 1982. The theatre year (for me) began with William Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night," directed by Doug Cummins. I won the part of Sir Andrew Aguecheek, who is pretty much a fool's fool. One of those "inappropriate suitors" who populate Shakespeare's comedies in pretty spectacular numbers. So this one happened around the time we were getting secretive cocaine deliveries to the back of the theatre when rehearsing. Talk about adding extra pressure to yourself. Truthfully though, I rarely imbibed when I had to get on stage and orate, or even gyrate. Most of the time, that was for afterward. Pretty sure no one knew about any of this behavior beside those of us who were in on the purchase. I think the powers that be only thought we were drunks. It was 1982, man.

I had a pink outfit for this one, pink and white, actually. Yep, that added to the manliness of this performance. In this case, you spell "dandy," all uppercase - "DANDY." I was part of the "prose posse" in this play; the nobility and more serious characters spoke in verse, the bawdy low-lifes and such spoke in prose. I was a pink, bawdy low-life, although a "sir."

(I should mention in here that sometime in 1981 - I believe - I began volunteering for people's directing projects. A lot of those I've completely forgotten, but I'll try to pepper these posts with them when I remember. I'm thinking of this now, as I believe I did some project for Bernadette Murray around this time. That one I sort of remember. But that's all I remember about it.)

The next show up was the Peter Shaffer play "Equus," to be directed by Dr. Monta. This one was predicted to be a biggie. The "intelligentsia" among us were pretty sure I was going to be cast as the boy, Alan Strang, if I wanted it. I did. I'd seen the movie once but had never seen the stage production (and still haven't), and they are two completely different animals (pun intended). The story of a psychiatrist on a downslide in life, remarking on the passion of this crazy boy who blinded a bunch of horses in a stable one night, is illustrated on the stage as some sort of modernized Greek play. The players are always on stage and seated to the side of the main stage area when not a part of the action. And all the horses are played by men wearing wire horse's heads and hoof-shoes. For this production, we had a turntable built at the center of the action. At key moments, actors would unlock the turntable and spin it around while lights flashed and crazed sound effects (compiled by yours truly) went off.

I got the part, as predicted by everybody except me. The rest of the cast had some interesting notables. Dan Donahue, who I had never acted with but had seen perform a couple of times, got the lead part of Martin Dysart, the psychiatrist. Doug Cummins had campaigned really obviously for months, trying to get Dr. Monta to cast him as Dysart (it did need an older actor, for sure), but she went with Dan and cast Doug as my father. Dawn Novak, who was one of the shyer people I'd ever met got the part of the mother and rocked it. She used that shyness to fantastic effect. As Jill Mason, the "love interest," but more accurately, the camel that breaks the stable cleaner's back, was Maureen Clifford. I could probably write a whole other post on Maureen, but not now. She was, simply, for me, the big crush. I'd been head over heels for her since I first saw her in late 1980 in a French class. She was a Music major, a great pianist, and we crossed paths a lot until I started getting up the nerve to ask her to do things. But most of the time, when I was around her, I turned to some sort of jelly, and I'm pretty sure Dr. Monta knew this. I've forgotten why she auditioned (maybe I hinted at it); she hadn't done any acting, other than a chorus part in "The Mikado" in 1981. In retrospect, though, it was perfect casting.

Rehearsals were smooth, as I recall. I don't even remember Dr. Monta giving me many notes, and I was just going for it. By then, I had twenty years of crazy built up, and I was letting it loose every night. Especially during the climactic horse-blinding scene. One night, during a dress rehearsal, maybe even the last one, one of the horsemen, played by Nathan Murray (brother of the aforementioned Bernadette) kneed me in the crotch during this scene. And I'm pretty sure he did it on purpose; word was he had really wanted the part I was playing, and I was led to believe by a couple of folks that it was most definitely not an accident. I might've padded during real performances, not sure. It was all still worth it. I remember the school newspaper's review of the show - glowing. I was really, really proud of this one. And again, I owed it to Dr. Monta. I got to go through a weird sort of primal scream therapy every night we did the show. Or at least some of it felt that way. And it was probably the zenith of my short-lived  acting career.

Wrapping up the spring of 1982 was a directing project of Kerri Logsdon's (I think), "You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown." I was pretty impressed that she took on a musical for a direction project (might as well set your stakes high!), and she asked me to be Schroeder in it. That meant I had to sing lead onstage for a couple songs. First time for that. I did okay (still remember the line "A book report....on Peter Rabbit....") and kind of ended up with a girlfriend out of it - I began to see Jackie Linn, who was playing Lucy. And that takes us on to summer.

PASS in 1982 was a blur. I was cast in a leading role in three of the four shows, and I did sound (with my ever present sound tapes) for the other show. The first show, which began rehearsals a couple of weeks before PASS began was Neil Simon's "The Star Spangled Girl." Jack Strawn was directing this one, and joining me were Mark Watson and Anna DeHaro, a tight three-person show. The plot revolves around two young men who publish a subversive magazine (set in the 60s) and the love triangle that develops with their neighbor Sophie, who in today's world would probably only watch Fox news. Why we wanted to update things I don't know (I'm sure it was either Jack or me), but I changed references in the script to bring it up to date and have the guys publishing a left-wing punk rock-oriented 'zine. As a result, I managed to wear out the only Sex Pistols shirt I ever owned. Costuming was quick and easy on this one! And I really enjoyed acting with both Mark, who had become a good friend by this time, and Anna, who was one of the best actresses we had but seemed totally unserious about it all.

The second show was "Bus Stop," which I was not in but spent each night in the sound booth, spinning some reels. Next up was "Arsenic and Old Lace," which you might be familiar with from the movie version, starring Cary Grant. And I had his part, Mortimer Brewster, who discovers his kindly aunts are poisoning old men to "help them along." This one was directed by Jim Hawley, who I haven't mentioned yet but was always great to be around. He was old school technical theatre, chainsmoking, and maybe the most friendly and approachable of our theatre staff. As a director, I always thought he was way more interested in the technical aspects of everything and just kind of let the actors get on with it. Which we did. It was kind of weird to have what I considered to be "the straight part" in something, but I got in a few funny moments. The others in the cast carried most of the comedy weight here, though, and they were fantastic.

The final show of PASS 1982 was the old chestnut "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum." Old chestnut, but I knew nothing about it until auditioning. Chuck Pokorny, who knew all musicals it seemed and later to be my roommate, insisted I would get the part of Hysterium. And he was right. I had a solo song in this one, "I'm Calm," the joke being that this was one of those ever-nervous Don Knotts-type characters. And I went wild with it. Dr. Monta was directing this one, and Jack Strawn was cast as the lead, Pseudolus. If you've seen the movie, with Zero Mostel as Pseudolus, you'd have known Jack was our only choice for Psedolus, although I understand Whoopi Goldberg took a Broadway turn as that character. I'd really like to see a taping of that, if one exists anywhere. Anyway, broad comedy was the palette here, and we all delivered.

One instance I was reminded of a few years ago by Mark Watson and Valente Rodriguez: Jack apparently said a line incorrectly or at the wrong time or something that changed the plot in a major way. He did it toward the end of the second act and was pretty upset about it. (I really don't remember much of this, so I'm kind of paraphrasing what Mark and Valente told me.) They said I took a sheet of paper and quickly rewrote the beginning of the third act so everything would be on track again, and those lines were delivered...and all was well. Feels weird to pat yourself on the back when you don't even really remember what you did, but I'll pat myself on the back here. Good job, Lance. Amazing. Overall, the show was a nice way to end this PASS and move on to the fall.

By the fall of 1982, I was almost "old guard" in the Theatre Department (really a part of the Communications Department, but you get it). But, I was about to come down to earth a bit. The first play produced in the fall was "Candida," by George Bernard Shaw and directed here by Doug Cummins. Again, listening to the sound of Chuck Pokorny in my ear..."the Marchbanks part is yours." I don't remember much about the auditions themselves, but Doug cast Valente as Marchbanks, and Mark as Morell. I got the small role of Lexy. I'll admit it, I was a bit shocked. On hindsight, I needed that, though. And it was good to research a smallish part and put everything I had into it. In a weird way, Doug did me a favor, and he gave a great role to Valente, who I'll talk more about later...he went on to earn a living as an actor!


The later fall production was "The Importance of Being Earnest," by Oscar Wilde. Prepping to audition for this one, I read the play for the first time and could not believe how fall-off-your-chair funny it was. I mean, just read it sometime. It's like reading any sort of contemporary comedy. That was my first Wilde to read, and well, it made an impression. Dr. Monta was directing this one, and once again the "venticelli" (stealing from "Amadeus") were predicting Mark as Jack and me as Algernon, which if you're going to cast the both of us made the most sense. Jack is the quick-to-get-flustered character -  while Algernon enjoys life not caring about much of anything. Well, Dr. Monta cast just the opposite, Mark as Algernon, and me as Jack. We were going to have to work at this one. We did. I think it came off all right. I used to have a Beta cassette of the show when we video'd it in the TV studio, but I cannot find it at present. If I ever do, I'll have to get a professional company to transfer it, as I'm pretty sure the lone Beta machine in the garage is a lump of non-workingness. But, in the meantime...

Each year, there were competitions in Dallas for a scholarship named (and I guess, benefacted) for Irene Ryan (who most of you will remember as Granny on "Beverly Hillbillies). And so each year, the Theatre Department would nominate someone to compete for the scholarship. This year, the Department nominated Mark, and he decided he wanted to do a scene from "Earnest" for his turn, and that meant I went with him to Dallas for this. I remember it being a good time, and I went the following year. Wonder if that still exists (it's just a "Google" away!).

Is this the end of 1982? Well, for this story it is. The rest in a bit....


Sunday, August 9, 2020

Theatre Days (1980-1981)

 A few weeks ago, Dr. Marian Monta, former chair of the Communications Department at Pan American University (later University of Texas Pan American, then UTRGV) passed away at the age of 88. Without even having to jot notes and think about it too much, I'd put her in the top five most influential people in my life. And I say that having only seen her twice in the last 33 years. This requires some explanation and much digging in the past. Here we go.

I began college in January of 1980 in Edinburg, Texas, having moved to the Rio Grande Valley with my mother some time after graduating from high school. Originally, I had planned to attend University of Houston, next door to Pearland, where I'd spent my high school years. Mom, in the meantime, had taken a job in McAllen, and rather than be broke all the time, I thought I'd give Pan Am a try, save some dough, and go from there. So, I moved south with her. Once down there I met a few people who were musicians, made some friends, had some fun, etc. I still wanted to be in a band, but there weren't a lot of opportunities there. The RGV at the time was fairly barren musically, unless you wanted to get some dudes together and bang out AC/DC tunes....not unfun by any means, but that's pretty much all you had in the Valley. If you had any other ambitions, well, get prepared to not be able to fulfill them easily. At the time, there were two groups of friends I had, and they were two bands themselves: Masque, who were a progressive rock band, and The Steroids, who were the Valley's only punk/new wave band. Due to my musical upbringing, I identified with both of them. But both drum seats were taken, and frankly, I wasn't very good then anyway. Still new to drumming, in a sense.

But, back to school. I started out in 1980 as a math major, with a computer science minor, so I began by placing into Analytic Geometry on the math side (test scores could move you up in the ranks), and took some computer programming classes - Basic, Fortran, and Cobol, as I recall. Once in the Analytic Geometry class, I quickly realized I didn't care about it. Weird, as I'd been a "math guy" my whole life. But college was different. And looking around at the other people in this class and my computer programming classes as well, I knew I didn't belong there. I quickly lost interest in AG and squeaked by without failing the class. And I mean, squeaked. I took a couple of math classes later in my college career to effectively erase that bad grade. But all this was telling me something. A major change was coming.

I took a couple of basics during the first summer session, just to knock them out of the way. One day I was talking with my mother about how this math thing might not ultimately be for me. She, and to this day I don't know if she was joking or not, suggested Communications. Why not? I think she even said that was Earl Campbell's major at UT. Skoal, brother - I'll give it a shot.

I signed up for Introduction to Communications in the fall and really had no idea what this might entail, other than knowing Radio, TV and Film came under that heading. Maybe this would be fun after all. Anyway, Intro to Communications was taught by Dr. Marian Monta, the department chair. Sounds like she took it seriously; I will, too. Upon first seeing her, I thought this woman is no-nonsense, and yet there was some underlying thing about her that I don't believe I ever really put my finger on, something that had me knowing she had all of our best interests at heart. So, the first thing I did was challenge her. That's right.

Early on in the semester, and before I think I'd even spoken a word to her, she gave us a spelling test, apparently the official Associated Press spelling test. It wasn't long, maybe 25 words or so. When I received the paper back, one of the words was marked as "incorrect." The word was "judgment," which  her marking said should be spelled "judgement." I should mention that I've always been a very good speller, and this did not set well with ol' "I'm Right!" here. In those pre-internet days, I went home that night, got out our trusty Webster's and saw that "judgment" was the American spelling, and that "judgement" was the British spelling. Kind of like "recognize" and "recognise." So the next class day, I marched to her desk to register my complaint. "Pardon me, Dr. Monta, but I spelled this word as an American would. Last time I checked, my citizenship still had 'States' following 'United,' not 'Kingdom.'" I'm sure I didn't say those words, but I probably showed some of the indignance implied in the sentence. After a minute of looking it up herself, she admitted I was right and quickly corrected my submission to reflect a grade of 100%. And from that day forward, she looked at me differently, and not at all in a negative way. What's weird to me is that she must have given that test countless times. Nobody questioned that spelling?? Or maybe it speaks to how commanding a presence she had. Let's move on.

One of the requirements we had in the Intro to Comm class was lab hours. And you could complete lab hours in a number of ways, such as working in the speech lab or journalism offices, or working crew on one of the university's theatre productions. One day, another department faculty member and play  director, Doug Cummins, walked in to recruit crew members for the production of "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof." It sounded like fun, and I thought that would take care of my lab hour requirement. So I volunteered for sound crew. Doug asked me what experience I had, and I answered that I was familiar with tape recorders and tape editing, etc., and he said "great!" and made me crew chief right there. Uh oh.

I took the job seriously and was in charge of cutting the pre-show and intermission music tapes (a job I kept for pretty much the rest of my Pan Am career) and performing offstage sound effects: telephones, door slams, etc. I had a blast and really enjoyed the cast and other crew members. I thought maybe I'd found a new home. We even took the play to some sort of festival at Sam Houston State in Huntsville and were there for a few days. This was good.

After getting back from Huntsville, it was only a few days later when Dr. Monta asked me if I would be her assistant director for the next production which she was directing. I said yes. The play was "Volpone," written by a contemporary of Shakespeare's named Ben Jonson. AD is one of those jobs that sounds a lot more prestigious than it really is. You get to wrangle everyone for the director, and most importantly for me, as it turned out, you hold book during early read-throughs and fill in for anybody absent. And one of the major character actors was absent for the first couple of read-throughs. The character's name was Corbaccio, and as this was somewhat of a comedy, he was mostly a befuddled old man, a fool. The play was about a lot of people after the inheritance of Volpone, who pretends to be on his deathbed. Corbaccio is one of them after the loot. Even in these early read-throughs, and not really knowing all the context of the piece, I played it up a bit. I guess I was making everybody laugh, and after the cast actor had to bow out of the show, Dr. Monta asked if I wanted to try the role. I said "yes" without even thinking about it. Big turning point here.

I should mention here that I was quite a shy boy. I'd spent a lot of my youth being shuttled between parents, and as an only child, I had become pretty withdrawn. I never really had a problem making friends, but when you're moved around a lot, it's hard to keep any. To this day, there are still several friends I had when I was young that I wonder whatever happened to. My generation doesn't like Facebook a whole lot, it seems. The fall of 1980 changed everything. I was plopped on a stage in an outrageous costume and told "dance, boy!" I did. And I still am, to some extent.

I was off to the races. The show was a success, although Mark Servis, who was playing the lead character, had broken his leg in a caving accident. A special set was built, so he could lie or sit for the majority of the performance, some references being added to his having gout. I played it up, as I really didn't know a whole lot about what I was doing. I Tim Conwayed a lot of it, bumping into the sets, getting immediately confused about where I was going, etc. But whatever I did seemed to work and to please Dr. Monta. The best thing I learned in that first production was the concept of focus, how to pull it, how to give it, etc. To this day, I use that in drumming. Drum fills and general showing off are for when the singer isn't singing and no one else has some sort of featured solo. Sounds simple enough, but a lot of musicians don't think about it. Thanks, Dr. Monta!

Most of the productions at this time were held in the 1000-plus seat Fine Arts Auditorium, a mammoth cave where you really had to project (across an orchestra pit!) and have exaggerated movements. I was good at that sort of stuff, in a way I never could be for the camera.

I rather quickly became omnipresent in Pan Am productions, in one way or another. Mostly on the stage, but sometimes as crew only. In the spring of 1981, I was in the general chorus of "The Mikado," I created the sound tapes for an original show called "Saturday Serial" (don't remember if I auditioned or not), and then it was time for the first Summer Stock session. The biggest change, though, for this time period, was the arrival of one Mark Watson. He would become the closest I had to a constant acting partner during this time....but not yet.

Also, in March of 1981, I had the opportunity to visit NYC for the first time. Each year, theatre patrons would sponsor several students to take in a bunch of Broadway shows - you know, "broad"ening us. That meant we still had some expense, but it cut the costs a lot. So, I got to go to New York for ten days or so. We stayed near Broadway around 45th or 46th street, not far from Times Square. Movies like "Basket Case" show this time period in midtown Manhattan perfectly. Lots o' sleaze. This sheltered boy dug it. I got to go to the record store on Bleecker Street that I'd heard of forever, and I ended up having to ship a whole box of records home (the Valley wasn't the best place for record shopping). We also saw all the hot Broadway hits of that time, like "Barnum," "The Pirates of Penzance," and "A Day in Hollywood/A Night in the Ukraine." We saw an off-Broadway play I cannot remember the name of now, in some small theatre, starring Frances Sternhagen and Ralph Waite (The Waltons' pop!). And, best of all, we saw two performances (some of us had to go back) of "Amadeus," which was brand new then and is still probably the best performance of any play I've ever seen. This starred Ian McKellen, Tim Curry, and Jane Seymour. If you've seen the movie, and that is a good film, sorry, the play blows it away, just in terms of sheer effect - the way it's presented. I saw it one more time when working a touring company performance in 1982 or so, and that was almost as good. It's just a freaking good play. I suppose I should mention some of us also saw "Caligula" (the movie), which was only in release in LA and New York at the time. That was the first and maybe only time someone's passed me a joint in a movie theater. I still remember after we returned to the hotel, a couple of our friends who hadn't gone asked how it was. Tina Atkins said "it sucked. Literally!"

Moving on a few months - Pan American Summer Stock (or PASS) had been running for quite a few years before I did one, and was one solid month of nothing but theatre (maybe a meal occasionally) - and you got six hours of college credit for it. I did three during my theatre days, the first in 2001. The four shows were "The Fourposter" (I cut the sound tapes), "Two By Five," which was a musical revue (I think I cut pre-show music, but this one I don't remember much about), "The Prisoner of Second Avenue," a Neil Simon play directed by Dr. Monta (sound crew for this one again), and "Pippin," directed by Doug Cummins (I was a "player," or chorus member). Despite not being on stage too much, I look at this as one of the happiest summers of my life. It was a frigging blast. One solid month of in-house classes, rehearsals, shows, partying, etc. The finale of this first PASS was the annual parody, which I had some part in writing, and I had the lead part of....whatever we changed Pippin's name to. It was fairly filthy, largely due to Holly Zimmerman, who I was dating at the time and was one of the funniest people I've ever known. As I recall, we showed Pippin's birth by me sliding down the "Pippin" set's slide from way below some poor actress' open legs. I remember a lot of laughter, so it couldn't have been all bad. Plus, frankly, I treated it as another audition, as everyone was there.

The fall of 1981 saw me moving on up, as they say. The first show was "Not By Bed Alone," a French farce where I played the character of Bouzin. Second-billed, not bad. The play was fairly hilarious, with lots of running around, slamming of doors, etc. by the end. Doug Cummins directed it. And now I have a confession to make. When the show was about to be cast, and all of us wanna-be's were reading the script, all I heard about was the character of General Irrigua, a Latin American general who was an obnoxious blowhard and probably the focal point of a lot of the comedy in the show. We all suspected that Rafael Torres, a naturally funny guy from NYC, would get the part, and he did. I liked Rafael a lot; we had fun times and acted in a few other things together. But hearing the constant ha-ha'ing about the General (largely from the director) lit a fire under me. I was determined to make my character even funnier. And I think I did. Art is not a competition; I'll be the first to say that. But at that time, in my life, I constantly felt like I had something to prove. I worked hard.

I did pay for some of this "enthusiasm," though. In the last couple of acts of the show, I had to run around backstage a lot, running to make cues from one side of offstage to the other side, etc. It was an energetic show, in general, and I was just trying to keep up. One night, toward the end of the second of three acts, I got my foot caught under a piece of scenery, up on wheels, when I was trying to get from one side of the darkened offstage to the other, and I heard a crack, followed by screaming pain. During intermission, one of our theatre patrons, a doctor, came back to look at me. He makeshift-wrapped my ankle, and I toughed out the third act. I remember being carried a few times from one offstage side to the other. But I made it through the rest. And went directly to the ER afterward. I was on crutches for about a week after that. It got me out of strike (the dismantling of the set, following the last performance). I have ankle issues to this day - irritating for a drummer.

Following a bit of healing, I did something none too bright. I accepted two roles, one for the Music Department and one for our department, performances happening on the same days. Weirdly, though, the Music Department's show was "A Christmas Carol," and I was cast as Scrooge, a non-singing role in an otherwise opera. For some reason, the MD cast me as Scrooge for the matinee performances and another actor as Scrooge for the evening performances. Weird, but fun, too. I was doing a show in the evenings called "El Grande de Coca Cola," one of the most fun times I've had. The show is a cabaret act happening somewhere in Mexico, and I played the emcee and troupe leader, Don Pepe Hernandez (I think, might have to get the program out). The great thing about this one is - the show was all in Spanish (I knew fifty words, maybe), and largely improvised for the emcee. I had a ball. Jack Strawn directed it, and as he was always wont to do, he let me run wild....whether that was a good thing or not, I don't know. But I'm eternally grateful to Jack (RIP) for his constant encouragement to be as entertaining as I could be. The show, as I mentioned, was a cabaret put on by a family, so every performer was related to Don Pepe in some way. Ridiculous, non-impressive magic acts, terrible humor, it had it all. I would usually pick on a couple of people in the audience for particular barbs. I'm missing it just typing about it. So, in a nutshell, I was performing as Scrooge in "A Christmas Carol" during the afternoon, then washing all the gray out of my hair, etc. to get ready for the evening performances. The "El Grande" performances were held in the cafeteria, for some reason. I guess to get enough people in, but close enough to be able to interact with.

This post is already incredibly long, so I think I'll break the remaining years up....

Monday, May 25, 2020

Rain, Rain, Staying Home, Rain, etc.

Here I'm is again. Since I posted last, a few things have happened of note.

I guess first is that the Hickoids played one of these Facebook livestreams designed to help the Lost Well out, paying their rent, etc. And it turned out to be a fine, fine time. We had not rehearsed for it at all, but I suspect we'd all had some amount of self-practice; I had certainly run through the live album and new songs for it. Wouldn't you know it? Most of the stuff we ended up playing was not stuff I'd practiced at all, but it still went fine. Upon watching some of it later, I thought it was a pretty good show, and John Petri made the whole thing sound pretty fantastic. A lot of money was raised for the LW, which was the important thing. And I had a blast playing again. Unfortunately, I was not able to keep a mask on while playing. I began the set with mine on, but after the song was over, I was a-wheezin'. So, most of the set, I joined Jeff in not wearing a mask. The others all did, admirably. But then, with all the drum equipment around me, I was never close to the others, anyway. I guess.

I did add the sampler to the mix; loading a lot of applause sounds in it, so it was almost like an audience was there! (No, it wasn't.) Along with other goofy interjections, the sampler added to the show. Michelle came out as well, and she had a good time, dancing in front of us and whatnot. We needed that. And I needed it from a playing point of view. I believe the last post mentioned how I was losing some will to play, but naah.....I still got it.

Last Wednesday was Michelle's birthday, so I took the day off work, and we went to Enchanted Rock, a place neither one of us had ever been. It was fun, but we should have gone much earlier. The temperature was in the 90s by the time we were climbing the main rock. Jeeziz! But we did almost make it to the top, and I suspect we'll make a return trip sometime (cooler) and go "all the way." For a time, I thought we'd make it, but it's as well, we didn't. We were both exhausted by the time we got back to the car. Afterward, we went into Llano and bought a night stand table at a thrift shop. It now supports my night lamp and CPAP machine. Looks good. And later, we got food from Asiana, one of Michelle's fave Indian joints.

Friday, Michelle's parents brought us food from El Dorado and her birthday cake. It was good to see them; had been about three months, I believe!

That's all for now. Not feeling especially creative on the writing front!

Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Is This The End?

Not a very cheery title, I admit. And I don't want to be a bummer, for sure. But there's something lately that I can't shake; a feeling that maybe this is the beginning of the end. I don't really know where this comes from. I'm generally a pretty upbeat sort of person, and I can't say I feel depressed or anything, but this shutdown of such a large part of life has me missing certain aspects of it less by the day. As in playing in bands, certainly.

The Hickoids are going to do one of these livestream things on Friday, May 15th, and it should be fun, but I'm having a hard time getting revved up for it. And I cannot pinpoint the reason. I've been practicing regularly since this all hit, playing mostly every day, working on technique as well as soloing and whatnot....sometimes just free-forming it with other recordings. It's always a good time...and good exercise, for certain. But the idea of playing with my bandmates again is waning by the day. Maybe this livestream will change all that. I hope so. Right now, Smitty has asked everyone how we feel about rehearsing once before the livestream, and I haven't answered yet. Mainly because I don't have an answer. Not everyone has answered the thread, though, so maybe if everyone chips in with a "yes," I'll go along with it. I feel fine about my own memory and prospective performance if we do it without rehearsal, but I suspect there are members of the band who won't have practiced at all on their own. I guess there's a part of me that gets a little peeved by that; my time can be ours, certainly, but not because you're lazy. Smitty might need to go full blower with his voice, though, and that I get.

But somehow, this move towards isolating just feels like the beginning of some end. And I'm not entirely uncomfortable with it, as weird and negative as that might sound. Michelle and I have a definite routine we're in now, which is okay. I cook five nights a week (thank you, HelloFresh!), and Friday we do a date night take out, followed by something on Sunday. I still have not set foot in a grocery store since this began, groceries being procured via HEB Curbside and Wal-Mart, depending on who's got a slot open in the calendar. I did have to go to Home Depot last week, due to a shipped lawn mower having an injury upon arrival. Had to return that and get another. But that's been it. Just a couple of convenience stores, and as previously mentioned, restaurants for to-go food. The funny thing is we're probably eating better than before this started.

I remember that Simpsons episode where the statue of Jimmy Carter is unveiled, with the epigraph "Malaise Forever" in full view. Malaise Forever is how I feel right now. Hope that changes soon.

Monday, April 27, 2020

The Ups, The Downs

"I Get Up, I Get Down.....I Get Up, I Get Down...."
Jon Anderson from "Close to the Edge" by Yes

And on it goes. I think we're into Week 7 or so of the lockdown. Yes, Week 7...I just checked. A weird thing about it all, and Michelle and I have both been feeling this, is that it doesn't seem that long. Maybe four weeks at most. Seems like that last (maybe?) Honky show was just that long ago, but it was almost twice that.

We're staying healthy and active. The amount that we've both been working out is amazing. I finally added the 410-lb. upgrade to the Bowflex, as well as a nifty rod rejuvenator/organizer that makes using the Bowflex even easier. I had been threatening to add this piece for years, but when my right leg went bad for awhile, I didn't think about it much. Now that I seem to have a mostly functional righty again, it was time to add that. Glad I did. Michelle does all kinds of ab work on the Bowflex now; she just started in January. She was doing something like 500 crunches a day on the floor, so she's well adjusted to this kind of work. And I'm getting back into the full body thing as well. And I can certainly push the leg work once again. Good for us.

But damn, do I miss playing with my bandmates. I've been keeping up drumming on the electric kit, usually every day. So, I think if we were to suddenly get a gig, I'd be able to pull it off. But we all know that ain't happening. Smitty sent us Hickoids all a text asking how we feel about shows if things open up in May. It's been two days, and I still haven't responded. I guess I do feel some trepidation. Rice is the only one who's responded, and he answered in the affirmative...which would be surprising normally, but he's been burning the candle at both ends slaving for HEB Curbside. Anything outside of that might sound good now. Marcello reached out to me a couple of weeks ago about Pocket FishRmen playing one of the streaming shows the Lost Well's been putting on from a warehouse of John Petri's. It would have been the third week it happened, but the guys voted it down. Not sure how I would have voted, anyway. I feel healthy (other than the seasonal allergies), but I have my hesitation. Mainly because of my age and history with respiratory problems.

Work continues along, although I called in today due to extreme allergy issues this morning. Might call in tomorrow, too...we'll see. There's another reason, too. I ordered a new lawn mower from Home Depot and received it via FedEx today....and the control that sets the rear wheel height is bent against the wheel. I'm going to try to return it to Home Depot tomorrow, and they're only open until 6. Glad I hadn't put any oil or gasoline in it before discovering that. It's a pain in the ass, though. I had to take the handle apart again, put it back in the box, and I'll have to dolly that over to my car tomorrow. Ugh. Still, first world problem.

There's probably more to write about, but I'll stop here. Maybe the next post will go back to movie reviews.....cheers, y'all.

Saturday, April 4, 2020

The Never-Ending Quary

Oh, now that's a clever title, eh? Thought about that one for 40 seconds or so.

So, here we sit. Although, I'm doing more than sitting, for sure. Maybe more than in a while. Of course I'm not playing with my friends in musical settings, but I'm still practicing at home on the trusty electro-kit. Not as much as I probably should, but I have a feeling I'll be ramping that up soon.

House/property projects are in the works and on the horizon, for sure. I finally, after Michelle's been casually mentioning it for, oh, ten years or so, began dismantling the large wooden swing set and play structure that's at the back side of our property. So far, it's been surprisingly easy. Bolts and nuts that I thought certainly would be rusted through are coming loose fairly easily. Once nails are out, it's coming apart. I have a little over half of that done. The drawback so far has been almost constant rain on the weekends; I'm still working during the week.

Yes, still working the government training job. Nothing different there, except that I don't have to go into the office at all right now. Hoping that will continue once the virus issue has abated...whenever that is. I am having trouble concentrating on my job, though - that's for certain. I was just given a narration project, though, so I'll be busy early next week. And another long-term project (not really a project, but a problem that needs solving) is coming more into focus. So, I'm still a 40-hour-a-week dude. And I'm counting my lucky stars.

All we can do is wait this out. We do go get take-out food on occasion, but Michelle upped HelloFresh's meal kits to five a week. The only issue with that has been that HelloFresh, probably through sheer overwhelmedness, only sent us three this week. Supposedly, we'll be back to five by next week. We'll see. I've managed to get a couple of HEB Curbsides and Deliveries, and one Walmart Pickup, but that's been all. I've started ordering a few things through Amazon (coffee, trash bags); I don't want to go that route, but these are different times.

That's about it for now.


Sunday, March 22, 2020

The Beginning of the End? Probably Not, but....

And so here we are. Self-quarantined, etc. I'm not someone who likes to talk, let alone write, in superlatives, yet this is truly the weirdest time of my lifetime. An unknowable future. Weird doesn't even scratch the surface as a description.

Things happened so quickly. Only last week I was celebrating a return to Honky and a fun show at Valhalla. The very next day, one week ago, the screws really started tightening down. Within three days, bars and restaurants closed, and here we are. We didn't stock up on any supplies, so we're kind of winging it at the moment. Not really out of anything, but I do hope that the issue of grocery store stock improves soon; I think it will. People have to get used to a new reality, and when they do, I think things will settle down. But then, so much is up in the air.

The few weeks before the Honky show had been a blur of activity. Many rehearsals, an appearance at the workplace of some higher-ups, commanding mandatory attendance....a tiring couple of weeks, for sure.

Honky rehearsed four times (the three of us) and one time with just Jeff and me. And actually, Bobby and I ran through the set ourselves before Jeff got there at one of the aforementioned four. And we were pretty good at the show. Right afterwards, Jeff thought we'd played pretty fast, but I think it was good anyway, and video evidence doesn't really bear that out. Nothing got out of hand, for sure. I had a fantastic time, but playing that stuff is pretty brutal on me now. Hickoids and Pocket FishRmen shows can certainly be draining affairs, but nothing like this. It's probably largely due to the amount of singing I do in Honky. We revived a lot of songs they haven't done in ages, so all three of us were in the same boat for most of it. The night before, they played with a new drummer, Tom, who is their drummer going forward, I believe. But it was nice to be in the saddle one more time with these guys. I hope it's not the last, but chances are, it will be.

The Harvey McLaughlin Quartet (HMLQ) rehearsed a fair amount, working one new song up that's perhaps the most ambitious yet. I'm looking forward to playing that live, whenever that might be. Shane's really making his presence known now; it feels like a real quartet, and we're still not stepping on each other yet. Pretty happy with it.

The Hickoids got one rehearsal in before the shutdown. The new songs are played better each time. Again, can't wait to play 'em live, whenever that is. We had an Alaska trip planned (this is the first time it's been mentioned publicly) for May, but that was cancelled, unsurprisingly. Michelle was going, too, and now we have to figure out what to do with her plane tickets. First world problem.

Pocket FishRmen have two new songs recorded and ready for a single release. More backup vocals have been added to the mixes, and they're sounding great. Again, we'll release them when it's feasible. So concludes the music portion of this post.

My work schedule has been modified to work-at-home-every-day, as expected. I've found it very hard to concentrate on anything work-wise, though. A couple of days were okay this last week; other days, not so much. Maybe this week I can get going on stuff, not that I have that much to do. Putting out fires, mostly. We have a lot of courses with Flash objects embedded in them, and these objects will not work in browsers after November of this year. I've been tasked with finding them and doing something about the situation. Well, I was able to "fix" the two that were mine; others....I just don't know.

Being at home most of the time now (we do go out to get food on occasion) means lots of watching, and maybe I'll detail some of that soon. Michelle's wanted to watch "Tales from the Crypt" and "Night Gallery," so it's been fun beginning to binge those again. And of course, I have a rather large stack of unwatched stuff to go through.

If anyone's reading this, I hope it finds you healthy. I think we'll get through this.

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Energy!

Woke with a vengeance this morning! Well, not a vengeance....I don't feel like I have a vendetta against anything.....except maybe the flu. So, really, I woke with energy! Coming out of these two illnesses is starting to feel really, really good. There's a lot coming up, and much to be happy about.

Undeniably, what's been first on my mind has been the impending Honky reunion (to me, it's a reunion, while for Jeff and Bobby, it may only be a show). I've been running through the songs at home when possible (mostly impossible last week), and they're an intriguing bunch. For the Saturday, March 14th show, the concentration will be on the first two albums, although I suspect other nuggets will be thrown in. Drumbeats and lyrics are coming back to me, but it's a bit of a slow process. When I played with them off and on during 2011-2013, it seemed like the stuff came to me quicker. And maybe since we did some of their newer tunes, there was less of the old material to play. There are a few parts that were probably second nature to me back in the late 90s that are now kind of "huh?"

One striking case in point, and this was a problem in 2011 as well, is "Nice and Tastee." A really simple song through and through (one of the first ideas Carson put forth), but it has a repeated accent part of snare drum-crash/kick, snare drum-crash/kick that is almost foreign to me now and feels completely unnatural. Weird. So, oddly, that song is receiving the most practice from me at home; just to get those accents feeling more natural. Other songs, it's just a matter of getting the grooves down and the number of times for this and that...and of course, the words, if I'm singing. I've only been singing backups in the Hickoids and Pocket FishRmen for a number of years now, although in the Hickoids I do have some solo vocal lines....so that helps a bit. I have to relearn how to carry a song again, assuming I knew how years ago! Hard to believe I used to do most of our stage announcing in the old days; I might've talked more about that in my history of Honky post from way back.

So, that's been on my mind a lot. Jeff and I got together Jan. 29th and ran through some songs, and that's been it so far. Bobby and I are getting together Thursday; maybe Jeff will join us, as I think he'll be back. Fingers crossed for this whole endeavor. I'm treating it as the last time I'll be doing it.

The other bands are doing fine, although illness (mainly mine) have kept us apart. The last Hickoids show was fairly sloppy, so I think we have work to do. Certainly, the future Alaska version does. I suppose we'll get on that next Tuesday; some version, anyway.

I bought tickets today for both Wishbone Ash in San Antonio on Saturday and Dweezil Zappa at the Paramount in Austin on Wednesday, the 26th. Looking forward to both of those. I seldom go to anything but local shows nowadays....not that that's not a good thing!

Tonight, Michelle and I are going to early vote in the primary election. Need to read up on our local contestants. That's about it for now!! Energy!!


Sunday, February 16, 2020

Heartily Getting Over It

Almost back! Despite some weakness, I can almost say I'm back. Pretty brutal, although this stomach flu was not as bad as the one I had in the spring of 1980. That was still probably the sickest I've ever been. The type where you have to hold a bucket as you sit on the toilet, because there will be a dual spray with each heave. (Aren't you glad you're reading this?) Single spray with this illness, folks, single spray. I feel somewhat lucky.

I did not talk about anything else in the last post, because of, well, sick. I did play a couple of shows last weekend that were quite fun. The first one was the Harvey McLaughlin Quartet at the Black Sparrow Music Parlor in Taylor. Nice place. Actually....very nice place. The green room was part of a very fancy apartment in the back of the club, with antique furniture and a wisely-padded-in-certain-places spiral staircase. The staff were really friendly, and I can tell they just want to build something up there. There's even a house drum kit (which is almost a necessity, due to the lack of both parking near the door of the club and no close place to offload gear), although I was told the house kit's hardware is garbage. I did not check it out, though. From a distance, the drums seemed fine, but I had brought my own.

HMQ played a fun set. Harv had problems after his piano slipped off its stand and hit the ground; some of the keys were stuck up or down. Frankly, I couldn't tell audibly. One of our newer songs he could not start due to the key issue, and before we could agree on what to do, Rice fired up the opening riff, and we were off. As bands do. Beautiful. Bigfoot Chester and the Beautiful Delilahs followed us, and we were out at a decent time; the bar closes at midnight. Michelle and I even got Thai food in Manor on the way up. Seems like an odd place, and it was dead for sure, but the food was quite tasty.

The next early evening, the Hickoids kicked it for the first show of the year at the Lonesome Rose in San Antonio. Lonesome Rose has a nice house kit for use that sounds great. I did use my own snare stand and swapped out the drum stool for my own, due to my backward slippage in the first few numbers. We had a sloppy but okay set. It's always wondrous to me the things I forget when we haven't played for awhile. It's never any trickier numbers; it's the ones that I should know without thinking about anything. Still, we did fine overall. We followed the Beaumonts, so it was one of those "homecoming" shows for us. Great crowd, fun time.

Still in recovery mode, so I'm going to leave it at that for now. I'll talk about some movin' pictures next time, maybe....

Friday, February 14, 2020

Another Flu?? Really??

I think my last post had me talking about the regular ol' flu. And that took a good three weeks to get over. And then, hello February, what ya got? How about the stomach flu?

On Monday evening, after dinner at the Texas Chili Parlor and some follow-up yogurt at home, I started getting this bloating sensation in my stomach. I've had light versions of this before, so I took some antacid tablets and thought it would pass (ha ha). It did not. Instead, when I woke up Tuesday, I felt like I'd swallowed a watermelon, and a watermelon that wasn't breaking down. Still, I wasn't nauseous at all and bathroom deposits were normal, so again, I thought I had some weird gas issue. I felt just poorly enough to take the day off work and napped some, especially once I found out others in the Hickoids were ill and we were going to cancel rehearsal anyway.

By Wednesday, nothing had changed. I had even eaten a chicken burger Michelle brought me after she got off work, and again, no nausea. No change in the bathroom. Later Wednesday, the bloating became painful, mostly from pressure, but sometimes sharper. I made dinner that night (unbelievably, I think now), and we ate, and I thought I was fine after that. I even went to Walgreen's to pick up some Gas X to try. But later, even more discomfort, and I called an after hours nurse at ARC to see what they thought. They thought I should come in the next morning, which I did...the office in Buda. The DO I saw seemed pretty thorough in patting me down, etc. and said, yes, stomach flu, or gastroenteritis. And there wasn't anything I could do about it. Just wait. He said I should get some Pepcid and try some probiotics, both of which I acquired. He had some paperwork, which I should have read better before I took the next steps.

Keep in mind, I hadn't had any nausea yet, and the DO had said as long as I stayed away from dairy, I would probably be okay. Well, when I ran to HEB to get the Pepcid, etc., I picked up a donut (why not?), and figured I'd eat some oatmeal when I got home. The oatmeal was strawberries & cream....hey, Lance! What is cream again? Hoo boy.

By Thursday afternoon, I was a mess. Still not really nauseous, but uncomfortable in the extreme. The only way I could not be moaning in pain was to lie propped up in bed; for some reason that position seemed to work okay. So I fixed my CPAP mask to sleep that way (I normally sleep on my side) and was able to get some fitful sleep in that position. By nighttime, I was feeling a little something finally...something in the way of nausea....not much, but maybe...

After two trips, I had managed to expel the oatmeal and the donut and instantly felt a bit better. Not great, but anything would have been an improvement. Another hour later, and I was able to sleep normally again, and I slept all night. I woke up feeling much, much better, although I'm taking little baby steps now. Nothing but water for awhile. Just a bit ago, I had a piece of unbuttered toast and a few pretzel sticks. And just now, I had some Velitta biscuits. So far, so good.

We had to cancel our Valentine's Day dinner tonight due to all this. I'm bummed about that. But we'll make that up soon enough. Here's hoping your Valentine's Day week was much better than mine, and as I said late last night, I'm glad I was able to get all this out.

Sunday, January 19, 2020

Hi! (cough)

About time to hit the keyboard again. The typing one, that is. Been awhile.

I usually make some sort of lame excuse for not writing more often, but this time it's not so lame. Beginning Monday, January 6th, I sank into some serious illness place. Due to being sneezy and watery with cedar, I chalked it up to that. And by Tuesday, I could barely move. Wednesday, I had a low key gig with Harvey McLaughlin, and I got through that (video evidence shows my droopiness, however), and I felt slightly better on Thursday. But then I relapsed and have been up and down since then. Today's a better day, so far.

And I don't think it was cedar, after all. I had my doubts but had had the requisite flu shot, so I still thought I was in the clear. However, the Friday after I fell ill, Michelle started to feel poorly, and, as she's intelligent, she went to the doctor. A quick swab brought back her diagnosis: flu. So I'm thinking I have it as well. Or had it. I've got to be mostly over it, but this seems to be lingering in a nasty way. This is my first bout with the flu since early 2008, and that year I'd forgotten the flu shot. And paid for it. This time, I got the flu shot, and....well, ya roll the dice, I guess. I cannot wait to be fully well again.

What's new? A few things. As iPods are on their way out, and I like having at least most of my music collection with me most of the time, I spent the latter part of the year researching and shopping for mp3 players. I'm surprised how many are out there, what with most people storing music on their phones. After a year or so of using the phone to store newer music I had, I decided I didn't much like having music on my phone, the player doing battle with other apps on the phone, said app player constantly trying to get me to sign on and spend, etc. I was almost certain I was going to purchase a player that was around $160 and pretty fully featured, I actually took a step back and purchased a FiiO M3K player, around $60. I couldn't be happier with it. It does not have Bluetooth, but I generally only use Bluetooth for podcast listening, and I don't mind using my phone for podcast listening and storage. The player holds up to a 2TB microSD card (which don't exist yet, but that's the spec). So I dropped another $70 on a 512gb card for the player; there is no internal storage. So all my music's gradually being ported over to this card and the player.

The only issue I have with the player is with the way it sorts files and folders on the card. One of the things I wanted to be rid of was the whole "everything based on the id3 tag" in terms of where files ended up in the system, and that's mostly eradicated here. It reminds me a bit of the old Zen Creative player that I had back in the early '00s. However, and I think this is due to the player being a Chinese product, the sorting is not always the best. It seems that if the sort algorithm gets confused, the system reverts to timestamp for order. And it's not often, but hyphens (-) seem to blow its "mind" a bit. Say a file is named "01 - First Song," this will be sorted by timestamp. If you move a whole folder of files with that naming convention to the player's card, it won't be an issue; they were all moved together. But if you do some editing on the actual card, the order will be blown and revert to timestamp. It's a minor thing, really, and I've learned to edit the folder before transferring to the player's card. Also, folders for band names that begin with "The" are sorted by timestamp as well. My "The" bands are not in order; again, not a big deal, but it's peculiar as to what could cause that. I've done a little experimentation but cannot figure out why this happens. Again, not a big deal. Overall, I'm very happy with this little player. I should mention that I can use this player with my massive A-T headphones; iPods had weak output, this player doesn't.

I should mention at this time that some there's about to be a return to familiar musical ground. Jeff Pinkus and I have been talking, and due to a number of factors in the Honky world, we've decided to take the plunge into playing some "Classic Honky" shows. The first will be Saturday, March 14th at Valhalla in Austin. Jeff and Bobby are rehearsing with a new drummer currently, and he will be playing with them at Valhalla the night before. Honky's not really a consistent concern right now, due to both Jeff's and Bobby's schedules; they both have plenty of other projects in the works. But it will be nice to revisit this stuff, and as I'm equipped with my Kat3 kit at home, I'll be able to rehearse sufficiently on my own. Figuring out a set list is a crazy matter, though. I counted 28 things we could play, so I'm trying to whittle some of that down now. I hope to begin rehearsal soon. As soon as I'm well, ha!!

Pocket FishRmen has been rolling along and played a couple of shows recently. Everything's good there. And the Hickoids are doing okay, but we haven't had a show since November 1. We're going to do a short tour in late May (more on that soon), but we'll be doing it as a five-piece; Rice won't be accompanying us. Tom will be playing bass, and I suspect we'll be rehearsing that format soon enough. We've done that for a short trip once before. It's not my favorite incarnation, for sure (we kind of sound like NRBQ, and I like NRBQ). I'll really miss Rice's pumping style, but what are ya gonna do? We'll get it done.

I suppose I would be remiss to not mention the passing of Neil Peart. That was a shock. Around 3:00 on Friday, January 10th, the news started to pour in. I let my great friend Matt know and was a bit dismayed to find I had broken the news to him. I was hoping he already knew. Neil is Matt's favorite drummer of all time, bar none. For me, well, I'm a massive Rush fan, but I think more for the music as a whole than Neil's admittedly great drumming. I tend to admire drummers a bit more who improvise things on the spot, and he was not that kind of drummer. But sheesh, the parts he came up with! Perhaps improvisation was just out of the question. I've been revisiting the catalog, as I'm sure all Rush fans are doing, and the body of work is incredible. It's also one of those things where it does feel as if a large part of your childhood was chipped away. And I'm preparing myself for more of this, for sure. This one stung. Stung hard. RIP, Professor.