So the other day when my friend Elysa Sunshine (who sang the Chowhound jingle) invited me to her birthday party, and asked me to bring along my trombone, I figured I'd play happily along with nieces and nephews plunking out "Heart & Soul" on the piano, all of us sipping Hawaiian Punch. Nice!
There was some mildly disorganized jamming, which I enjoyed. Then, later, a guitarist appeared, playing dynamite blues. I grabbed my plunger mute - for a funky wa-wa effect - and he kept yelling "Yeah!" as we played together, afterwards telling me how fantastic I sounded. He's from New Orleans, where he leads a well-known blues band (he also regularly appears in that HBO Treme series, which I haven't been watching), and he said he's always looking for trombonists, and that if I ever came to New Orleans, I could work like crazy. The effusive praise went on and on, and seemed heartfelt.
It had been a long time since anyone was so impressed with my playing, and I liked his guitar, too. So I told him that maybe I'd come down one day and we could get together and jam a little more. He smiled enthusiastically, and told me to definitely look him up if I did. And, with that, he turned his head to speak to another partygoer.
I cleared my throat and inquired about how, exactly, I'd go about looking him up if I ever found myself there (like, I should check the phone book under "D" for "Dude from Elysa's Party? I didn't ask that out loud, of course). He stammered uncomfortably, and, finally, obviously feeling cornered, asked me, testily, whether I wanted his phone number. That would help, I replied. He dictated the first three numbers, then paused, and finally, flung me, with suspicious glibness and a flash of contempt, the remaining four. I don't need to try dialing in order to know it was a made up number.
What happened is that, being a TV star, he's being forced to guard his access. And, being a grungy musician, rather than a seasoned public relations professional, he's drawing the line a bit randomly. I sympathize, having had to draw some lines of my own due to Chowhound's popularity. It's not easy to do so without being a jerk.
But from my perspective at that moment, an unsolicited shiny bauble of bait had dropped in my lap, and I gave it only the faintest tug - triggering a gratuitous jerk-around and old familiar feelings of nauseous humiliation. Ah, it's like I never left the music business! You can just imagine how awful it is when actual effort's made to get ahead!
Even beyond music, the determination to rise above is very often futile. No matter how un-needy you make yourself, it's damned hard to maintain any semblance of dignity in this world. Which means, I guess, that the very notion of dignity requires reexamination.
But, hey, I'm just glad someone liked my playing. My musical recuperation continues...to what end, I can't possibly imagine.
But from my perspective at that moment, an unsolicited shiny bauble of bait had dropped in my lap, and I gave it only the faintest tug - triggering a gratuitous jerk-around and old familiar feelings of nauseous humiliation. Ah, it's like I never left the music business! You can just imagine how awful it is when actual effort's made to get ahead!
Even beyond music, the determination to rise above is very often futile. No matter how un-needy you make yourself, it's damned hard to maintain any semblance of dignity in this world. Which means, I guess, that the very notion of dignity requires reexamination.
But, hey, I'm just glad someone liked my playing. My musical recuperation continues...to what end, I can't possibly imagine.