Tuesday, January 17, 2006

If I only had my own bus

I've always wanted to be a rock star. O.K. not the kind of rock star from the 80's like Iron Maiden or Twisted Sister, wearing the tight leather pants and face paint, but the kind of star who gets to have someone open for them... and has a bus and roadies.

When I started taking guitar lessons, I was in grade three and eight years old. I thought I was on my way. After a couple of years of lessons, my brother Randy said to me that he thought I would one day be on stage. That made me feel great. My buddies Warren and Brad would often come over and we would jam with our classical guitars, but we wouldn't play the songs we were supposed to be practicing. Instead we would play AC/DC, Led Zeppelin, and Winnepeg's own Harlequin (remember "Innocence"?). We wanted to one day be on stage and have a bus...and roadies...and naked chicks.

One day, while Warren, Brad and I were jamming in my bedroom with the door closed, my dad walked in and said, obviously annoyed, in Low German, "Daut heeat zich frecht" which I took to mean, "That sounds stupid." We quit playing and his words have been burned into my memory ever since. I have always wished for an apology.

To this very day, when I listen to beautiful guitar playing, I imagine myself on a stage and it is me being the one presenting the well thought out progression of chords, notes, and lyric to the receptive audience. I have written several songs and have yet to formalize them and send them off to someone who would care to listen. I imagine the person on the other end listening and thinking to themselves that they need to get me on the phone...I need to meet this guy, he sounds great.

I have worked on my playing style for thirty years and have recently become more proficient in a finger picking style I've been trying to grasp for a very long time. Bruce Cockburn has always been an inspiration to me, both as a guitar player and as an international thinker. I've been to several of his concerts and very closely watched his fingers, made some notes in the dark, and stayed up late afterwards testing my memory. If I was on stage, I would want an audience member like me...taking notes and shaking my head in wonder.

As it is, I do have my own audience. I have had my campers when I was a counsellor at summer camp and the night was hot and no one could sleep. I pretended I was on stage without a spotlight, playing my classical songs that Ben Kehler taught me during those five years of lessons, lulling those hot campers to sleep. I had my fellow tree planters in Northern B.C. where, with borrowed guitar I played a few familiar tunes to make the bugs seem less buggy. I convinced my wife to sing a song with me as I played during our wedding ceremony. We were each other's audience besides the 250 guests. My students can't get enough of my playing and daily yell, "Sing about me...sing about me" as I pick up my guitar yet again and sing "Dog Bones" or a comforting tune I know from my youth, "Land of the Silver Birch".

At home, where I am needed the most, is my best audience. I'm not on a grand stage with a bus and the clapping people taking notes. I can't imagine a better audience where my only applause is the deep slow breathing of a sleeping child. This hasn't happen often, but once is better than a lifetime of unrealized dreaming.

6 comments:

andrea said...

Another fascinating post, Brian. Some people, when they write long posts, make me move on. Yours make me settle in. Is that your dad in the avatar?

Brian the Mennonite said...

I know what you mean when you say settle in. There are a couple of blogs that I visit where I do the same...yours included. Yours is the kind I like to have coffee with and read a few times over in one sitting. My wife's is the other. Yes it is my dad in the avatar...when he was in his thirties (I think).

valerie walsh said...

i love this brian! i was thinking about this subject alot lately, about peoples dreams of their lives and what makes them creative. Usually they are told very early on, you are the creative one, and your sister is good at math, or whatever our parents or teachers decide about us. I am sorry that your dad said that because it is amazing how much influence our family and friends have on our future and our feelings about ourselves. I taught art in school for years and kids stop feeling creative at about 8-10 they start criticizing themselves and if you don't think you are an artist, you just aren't! But it seems like you have done alright. I have spent a lot of time with proffessional musicians and when the lights and people go home they are faced with everyday life just like the rest of us! nice writing brian!

valerie walsh said...

sorry about my atrocious spelling! i guess i should proofread what i write...

Brian the Mennonite said...

Dearest Val: You neverp havel to appoologise to mey abaut your spealling. I, myself, would owe spellcheck hundreds of dollars if they charged for their services on a per-use basis. I am forever calling out to my wife Joyce, "Honey, how do you spell..."
Thank you for visiting my blog today. It always makes my day when someone has something really good to say.

valerie walsh said...

you made me laugh out loud, brian!good one!!!