It’s often assumed that because
I’ve been cast as Crystal’s best friend, I’m also the one who knows most about
her childhood or at least about her life before she became a musician. That’s just
not true. Her husband Mark knew Crystal’s family far better than I ever did.
Mark was never really
a close friend. In fact, I regarded him rather more as a rival. Neither Crystal
nor Mark were jealous lovers but that wasn’t what it was like for me, although
I accepted Crystal’s sexual promiscuity much more easily than I could her almost
uncritical emotional promiscuity.
I know that
Crystal Passion was christened Christine Giordano, that her mother, Marianne, was
Irish and her father, Giuseppe, Italian. And I know that her family home was an
unremarkable semi-detached house in Harrow, North London. I’d also heard the
rumour that Polly Tarantella makes such a big deal about which is that Crystal
was the bastard daughter of a millionaire who was paying her some kind of an
allowance. That would certainly explain why Crystal managed to live relatively
comfortably when Giuseppe’s income was never any more than what you’d expect
for a middle-ranking civil engineer.
As to why she’d
adopted the name Crystal Passion, I guess it was just as accidental as my stage
name of Pebbles. And mine was entirely because of a supposed resemblance to a
character in the Flintstones cartoon series.
All I know
about the circumstances of Crystal’s birth are what Polly discovered in her
research for the biography. How she tells it was that there’d been an outbreak
of Legionnaire’s Disease that closed the local maternity ward in Carlisle where
her parents were living at the time and the result was that Crystal was born instead
in a Lake District cottage, but I don’t attach nearly as much significance to
this accident of birth as Polly does. I think the theory hinted in the chapter of
her biography about Crystal’s birth that her father was a man who wasn’t her
mother’s husband is entirely speculative. Marianne was an old hippy and she gave
birth to her daughter during that time in the 1960s when the practice of free
love was flaunted as a statement of identity. It’d almost be more incredible if
Crystal’s parentage could be verified
without DNA analysis and that wasn’t available in those days. It’s even more unlikely
that this alleged real father would agree to take responsibility for an unplanned
pregnancy.
I’ve met some
of Marianne’s friends from the time of Crystal’s birth. They’re all very nice
people who’re rather bemused and even dismayed that the fashions of their age,
which appeared to herald a long-lasting—even permanent—change, turned out to be
as ephemeral as every other fashion. And I can see where Crystal might have picked
up her attitude regarding habitual nudity and polyamory.
I once spent a
few days with Crystal in a New Forest farm house where her parents previously used
to live. It had been a kind of hippy commune from the late 1960s to nearly the
1980s. It was now wholly owned by Zack and Liz who’d lived there for all of
that time. They were real old hippies in every sense. Long greying hair, ethnic
clothes and always smoking hash and weed. I really enjoyed their company, so it
was pretty much inevitable that Crystal and I should join the two elderly
hippies in bed. I’d never had sex before with people old enough to be my
parents, so this was a first experience for me but not one I made a habit of
until I was pretty much that age myself. I can’t imagine Zack and Liz would be up
to such a vigorous foursome nowadays, especially as, being the only man, Zack had
to invest a disproportionate amount of his energy.
I also met their
son, John Aaronson, but not at the farm house nor indeed with either of his
parents. He’s rather better known as John River, of course: lead singer with the
River Bank. In the early days of Crystal’s musical career, when she was a
History undergraduate, she and John were an acoustic duo prosaically known as
John & Crystal. It could have been called Aaronson & Giordano, but that
was too much of a mouthful. Polly Tarantella dedicates a whole chapter to this
early partnership. She believes Crystal is the natural successor to the River
Bank’s legacy, but I don’t think there’s much in common between John’s music
and Crystal’s. Nothing was recorded from the time they performed together, but
Crystal told me they mostly sang other people’s tunes. And a weird selection it
was too. Songs by Bob Dylan and Nick Drake, of course, but also songs made
famous by Billy Holliday, Everything But the Girl, Abbey Lincoln and an
acoustic version of Big Fun by Inner
City.
John and
Crystal guested on each other’s gigs later on, but this was before the River
Bank did the music for that weird ballet with the Hereford Salon Ensemble that was
infamous for its depiction of violence, nudity and explicit sex on stage. It
was that rather than the River Bank’s version of Al Green’s Take Me to the River or their own Thunder in the Sky that is most in tune
with Crystal’s music.
From what I’ve
been told, there was nothing very special about Crystal’s school life. She was
a bright pupil and excelled at school, but not so much that she was ever the
star pupil. She was a sort of geek that no one could imagine was destined for a
career as a sexually promiscuous musician. Although she excelled at Music Studies,
she didn’t pursue it as an academic subject. She played guitar with a school
folk group that mostly played covers of Top Thirty songs. The photos of her at
the time show a pretty girl dressed unremarkably for a 1980s teenager. There
are no pictures of her in the nude. Indeed, there are no nude photos of her at
all until Christine Giordano became Crystal Passion. Even so, I’m sure she was
just as habitually naked in the family home with her hippy parents and their
hippy friends as she was in later life. And, despite Polly’s lurid conjectures,
I have no reason to believe she’d ever been exposed to inappropriate sexual
behaviour from within the family circle.
Crystal’s
parents were separated by the time we set off on our American tour but they hadn’t
yet divorced. I think they were waiting for Crystal’s brother, Justin, to
finish university before making it official. I don’t know why they split.
Marianne always seemed to get on just fine with her husband, although Crystal
hinted that another man was involved. And I got the impression that the
extramarital relationship this other man had was with Crystal’s father rather
than with her mother.
Although Crystal
had never been on holiday to America as a child, it was to San Francisco that
Marianne chose to move when she separated from her husband and where she lived with
some English friends who’d settled there in the 1970s. It was a natural
destination I suppose, since San Francisco had once been the beating heart of
the hippy movement. And so she should see her daughter perform on the Crystal
Passion American tour, Marianne was staying at the time with some other friends
who lived in the Pennsylvania countryside. She was scheduled to meet us at our
hotel when we arrived in the City of Philadelphia for our second official gig on
the tour.
Although I’d made
love with Zack and Liz, I’ve never had sex with anyone other than Crystal in her
immediate family. I don’t think Justin would want to have sex with one of his
sister’s friends and Marianne quite simply wasn’t a potential partner. I’m sure
Crystal’s mother had dabbled in Sapphic pleasure in her younger days, but it
was obvious to my now expert eye that she wasn’t truly attracted to other
women. And so I again disagree with Polly who says that Crystal inherited her
sexual proclivities from her mother and that Marianne split up from Giuseppe so
she could shack up with her friend Marcia in San Francisco. Marcia wasn’t gay either.
In fact, I don’t think she’s ever been in a permanent relation. She was far more
devoted to her three young children than she was to any lover.
Before we set
off from New York to Philadelphia, we had the opportunity to perform in the Big
Apple as the full band—albeit at the last minute—in front of a very small
audience in a basement club somewhere in Brooklyn. Homeland Security had
finally released our equipment and Kai Pharrel, or his boyfriend Pedro, arranged
a last-minute gig to support a Math Rock group with the suitably dull name of
Attenuated Dissonance. The MF Club could hold at most a hundred people, but the
number of people who bothered to come and watch us play was barely a quarter of
that.
It was a real
treat to have my Rolands back and even better to perform as part of a full band
with Crystal at the front of the stage with Thelma, the Harlot, Andrea,
Philippa and Judy gathered around her. At the back, and constantly being bumped
into on the small crowded stage, was the rhythm section of Jane and Jacquie and
me. The set was mostly based around material from our third album, Seventy Doctors, and from the unreleased
album, The Last Word, although nobody
in America would know what was new material and what wasn’t.
As always, the
audience was totally bemused by what they heard. There was really nothing in
common between a nerdy three-piece rock band and a ten-piece ensemble of
diversely attired women. And, in Crystal’s case and very nearly Judy’s, not
really attired at all. I was wearing a pretty flowery dress I’d spotted in the
window of a Brooklyn charity shop, so with my shaved head and blood-red
lipstick I definitely looked the part of a Riot Grrrl, as did Thelma and
Philippa. In their tight tank tops and shorts, Jane and Jacquie looked ready
for a real work-out. And for some reason Andrea wore a check shirt with jeans
so with her violin and bushy hair she more resembled a Country & Western fiddler
than whatever else the audience might have expected.
I’d like to say
the gig was a success. In fact, it was almost the highlight of our tour but at
the time we thought it was just a warm-up for the gig we were due to do at the
folk rock venue Mary Jane’s in Philadelphia. So we were buoyed up with fresh
enthusiasm as we squeezed into the twenty year old Volkswagen camper van loaned
to us by a friend of Kai’s which was festooned with a fading psychedelic mural
and the words
Grateful Dead
emblazoned amongst other lesser tributes to
Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix and Jefferson Airplane. The drive from Manhattan to
Philadelphia took nearly four hours, which was rather longer than we’d
expected, but more time was spent getting lost on the roads out of Manhattan
and those into Philadelphia than on the nearly one hundred miles of interstate
highway between.
The hotel in
Philadelphia was better than the one in Manhattan, but that’s not saying much. We
still had to share three to a room and our only view through the hotel windows was
of a disused car factory. As band leader, Crystal was assigned a room to
herself but she almost immediately offered to share it with me.
And so it was
that when Crystal’s mother came to visit her daughter, she found me sprawled
across the hotel room bed reading a copy of The
Philadelphia Inquirer in more hope than expectation of finding something that
alluded to our upcoming gig at Mary Jane’s.
“Is Chrissie not
here, Simone dear?” Marianne asked after she knocked on the door and we’d
greeted each other. Her blue jeans were a tight fit on her matronly hips. She
was wearing a red tee-shirt that celebrated the Philadelphia Phillies. Her
bushy grey hair was as wild and unruly as ever,
“She’s out with
Tomiko and Jenny,” I said. “They’re doing a recce of the venue we’re playing
tonight.”
“She knew I was
coming, didn’t she?” said Marianne. “I left her a phone message at reception.”
In those days, when
very few people had cell phones, even in the United States, you couldn’t normally
phone someone unless they were in.
“Yeah, sure,” I
said. “She’ll be back soon. Take a seat. D’you wanna share a spliff?”
“I don’t mind
if I do, dear,” said Marianne. “I have to tell you, I’m real freaked out by the
roads in this city. I don’t like to drive, but you just can’t rely on public
transport in America. How’s the tour been so far?”
“Not so good,”
I confessed as I skinned up a concoction of half tobacco and half weed. I told
Crystal’s mother about our trials so far.
“It’s as if the
yanks have got it in for us,” I said.
“Don’t be
silly, dear,” Marianne said. “I don’t think anyone pays attention to what’s
written in the New York Post.” At
this stage we didn’t know about Samuel Hedrick’s rant on talk radio. “Anyway,
you have to expect a bit of the rough with the smooth. If nothing else that’s
what Chrissie learnt when she used to go backpacking.”
“Backpacking?”
“Yes,” Marianne
said. “It was after she’d graduated and before she surprised us all by marrying
her university boyfriend, Mark. Almost unannounced she boarded a ferry from
Folkestone and went hitch-hiking round Europe and Asia. And if that wasn’t bad
enough, despite having so many friends who’d have joined her if she’d asked,
she decided to go all the way by herself. And she was away for very nearly a
whole year.”
“Crystal’s mentioned
her travels but I thought they were spread out over several years.”
“Chrissie’s
always liked traveling. We visited places like Morocco, Kenya and Jamaica when
she was a little girl. And she stayed with us at our friends’ homes in France
and Holland. But it’s one thing to go on holiday for a couple of weeks. It’s
another to be away for a year in one stretch.”
“No, I didn’t
know she’d done that,” I said as Marianne passed the half-finished joint back
to me. “But there’s a lot about Crystal’s life I don’t know about.”
“That’s the
same for me also, dear,” Marianne admitted. “And for Giuseppe as well. Whatever
I might have got up to when I was younger is absolutely nothing compared with
my renegade daughter. We had no idea she was gonna become a folk singer or rock
singer or whatever she is. I didn’t really take her folk duo with John very
seriously. I couldn’t see the two of them doing that for very long, and he’s
done rather better for himself with his group, the River Bank, than he ever
could have done with Chrissie. I think her musical ambition is more a result of
her year of independent travel than her time with John.”
“You don’t
think Crystal was simply inspired by John’s example?”
“In the sense
that she’d learnt a lot by playing with him, I guess she was. But I don’t think
they ever wrote any songs together, did they? And you can’t hear much of the
River Bank in Chrissie’s music either. John’s much more mainstream than
Chrissie. I think she got more out of listening to Moroccan gnawa and those
Steve Reich and Iannis Xenakis
albums that Giuseppe bought during the time he was
into contemporary classical music. But it’s good that Chrissie got John’s
blessing. I don’t think she’d have got signed to a record label or found a
manager if it hadn’t been for him. And it doesn’t do her any harm to be
associated with a famous rock band.”
“So where did
Crystal go travelling?”
“Well, India
was the most important part of her journey, though she also sent us postcards
from Thailand, Burma, Nepal and Indonesia. She’d probably have gone to a lot
more countries if she could, but there are so many places that aren’t easy to enter
even now the Berlin Wall’s come down. We were out of communication for well
over a month when Chrissie got stuck in a really out of the way place in the
Himalayas, but I get the idea that this was the episode in her travels that had
the biggest effect on her: you know, being totally out of touch with anyone who
could speak much English. I imagine you discover a lot about yourself in that
situation.”
“So, what was
Crystal like when she eventually got home?”
“Terribly thin,
dear. Very thin. I don’t think the climate and the diet did her any favours.
She had terrible diarrhoea and sickness while she was away, but thankfully she didn’t
get hepatitis. We’ve got her habits of good hygiene and of not sharing soggy
roaches to be thankful for there. And of course she was very enthusiastic about
the cities, the deserts and the mountains she’d got to see: all of them much more
impressive than anything in Europe.”
“And then
Crystal got onto a record label, found a manager and recorded her first album,”
I speculated.
“The way you
put it makes it sound so easy, dear,” said Marianne. “I really don’t know how
Chrissie managed to persuade that record label to put out her first record. It
doesn’t sound much like anything else that was on the market and I have no idea
who buys her records. But Chrissie can be very persuasive. And I’m sure her
association with John helped her no end. But yes dear. That’s almost exactly
what happened. My darling daughter returned from travelling round the world,
got married to a boyfriend she’d not seen for over a year and started a career
as a singer-songwriter in the early 1990s when that kind of music was probably
about the least fashionable it’s ever been. That takes extraordinary courage. I
have nothing but admiration for everything Chrissie’s done. And even if it all
ends in tears, I think the experience will have made it all worthwhile.”
It was after
another joint—this time using Marianne’s stash—when Crystal returned to her
room to find her mother in a decidedly mellow mood. She pulled her clothes off with
no ceremony and hugged Marianne close to her bosom. As always I was fascinated
by Crystal’s openness in front of her mother. My parents would never be at ease
if they saw me in the nude. In fact, they weren’t remotely comfortable with even
a single aspect of my career or love-life, however much they were sure it was
just a phase I was going through.
“Mum!” Crystal exclaimed with her chin
over Marianne’s shoulder and her arms around her. “I tried to get here as soon
as I could, but the hotel’s nowhere near the subway and it wasn’t an easy job to
work out the best way back. But I’m glad to see that Pebbles has been keeping
you company.”
“She has. She’s
been very good to me,” said Marianne languidly as she proffered the last hit to
her daughter. “D’you wanna toke?”
“No thanks
Mum,” said Crystal firmly. “I’m fine just as I am.”
“You know,
Chrissie dear,” continued Marianne as she stubbed out the roach in the ash
tray, “Simone and I were chatting about how you gave up everything and took up
a career as a singer songwriter. Didn’t you once tell me that when you were in
India you met a guru who told you that you were destined for great things? Is
that why you became Crystal Passion?”
“There are lots
of reasons, Mum,” said Crystal sitting down on the edge of the bed beside her
mother. “But yes, you’re right. I did meet an Indian guy who predicted that one
day I’d become world famous and that my dream of musical success would live
beyond me. But how much of a guru this guy was, I can’t say. India’s a weird
place when it comes to religion and there are loads of these sadhus and holy
men everywhere. It’s no big deal, Mum. They’re all naked with long hair and
bushy beards. I guess that’s why he liked me. But he knew nothing about the
international music scene. And you can never be sure with these mystics whether
they’re talking metaphorically or literally.”
“So, Crystal. What
did this sadhu have to say?” I asked intrigued, as this wasn’t a story I’d
heard before, though inevitably it’s got a prominent place in Polly Tarantella’s
biography.
“Oh, the usual
nonsense,” she said dismissively. “There was something to do with former lives
and predestination. And how my music would bring light into the darkness and
life after death.”
“Those are bold
claims, Chrissie dear,” said Marianne. “You don’t believe any of it, do you?”
“Of course
not,” said Crystal. “It doesn’t make sense. There’s always something you have
to sacrifice or repent for a prophecy to be fulfilled, isn’t there? And I
haven’t given up or repented anything.”
“You did get married to Mark,” said Marianne
probingly.
“That doesn’t mean
I gave up anything,” said Crystal in reply. “And well you know that, Mum.”
“I must say
yours is a marriage like no other,” said Marianne with a sigh. “Giuseppe and me,
we thought we were open-minded and
free-thinking, but you and Mark…Well!”
“What more did
this sadhu say, Crystal?” I probed further.
“Lots of weird
stuff. Like my music would be enjoyed more in foreign lands rather than in the
land of my birth. That my music wouldn’t be accepted in my own country…”
“I don’t think
that’s so true, dear,” said Marianne. “But I do think you’re very brave not to compromise. But that’s not an
attitude likely to go down well in America. I’d be surprised if you ever got to
be more popular here than in England.”
“What else did
he say?” I persisted.
“That I should
focus on making music that came from within and which was meaningful to me. That
one day such music from the soul would be appreciated by the many rather than
just the few. But most of what this guy had to say was well-meaning gibberish.
I think he was just grateful that we’d had sex together. I don’t think these
sadhus get much opportunity for that.”
“I’m sure
you’re right, dear,” said Marianne.
“You are coming to the gig tonight, aren’t
you?” Crystal asked her mother.
“I wouldn’t
miss it for the world. But let’s hope the Philadelphians appreciate it more
than that crowd in Manchester. If it hadn’t been for what you and your band
look like and dress, I don’t think you’d have had any audience left at the end
of the gig.”
“We were playing support,” Crystal said.
“And I don’t think anyone there had ever heard our music before.”
“I haven’t
heard your music anywhere on the radio over here, Chrissie dear,” said
Marianne. “It’s not played on the Top 40 stations or the Country stations, and
not all on the African-American radio stations. No one knows what to expect.
Are you going to be the headline act tonight?”
“Yes, Mum.”
“Do you have a
support act?”
“I’m not sure.
I think so.”
“Well,
Chrissie, let’s hope that if there is one, they’ll put the audience in the
right mood for you, Simone and the rest of your all-woman ensemble.”
Marianne’s concerns
about the support act were well-intentioned but in the event it was more their
evening than ours. We’d never heard of Josh Jackson and his group the Shackamaxons.
Who had outside of Philadelphia? And despite Mary Jane’s supposedly being a
folk club, there was virtually no folk in their songs which was rock music firmly
in the Bruce Springsteen tradition. Josh Jackson’s songs celebrated an American
blue-collar culture whose concerns were meaningless to an all-woman band from
Central London. But in Philadelphia his music was very popular indeed.
When we arrived
at the club, we were delighted to see a queue gathered outside the venue even
though it was very different from the kind of audience you’d normally expect at
a Crystal Passion gig. Our music didn’t often appeal to an audience of mostly young
men dressed in a uniform of leather jackets, blue jeans and check shirts. Of
course hardly anyone in the queue had heard of Crystal Passion. They were all
there to see Josh Jackson who, in spite of not having yet finalised a record
deal, was going to have no difficulty in selling records to his already devoted
fans.
Although the
music and its cultural references were alien to us (especially to those like me
who weren’t rock fans), Crystal seemed to really enjoy it. And Judy, despite
her loyalty to the main event, echoed Crystal’s favourable assessment.
“These dudes
can play!” she exclaimed pointing at the lead guitarist who, like Josh Jackson
on rhythm guitar, dressed pretty much the same as his audience.
“It’s the
lyrics I like best,” said Crystal.
I focused my
ear on what Josh Jackson was singing, but it was scarcely poetry and not at all
as allusive or evocative as Crystal’s lyrics.
“It’s all about
car washes, drug stores and Walmart,” I said. “And the rhymes couldn’t be more
obvious. ‘Blue jean’ and ‘you know what I mean’. ‘Cadillac’ and ‘bivouac’. It’s
not gonna give Bob Dylan sleepless nights.”
“No,” admitted
Crystal. “But look at the crowd. They know the words off by heart and it means
everything to them. The songs aren’t like the Beach Boys: all sunshine and sand.
That last one was about a car factory closure.”
“Was it?” I
said, genuinely surprised as I thought it was just a conventional love song.
“And this one’s
about the Gulf War. George Bush isn’t exactly flavour of the month here…”
“Good thing
they got rid of him after just one term then,” said Judy.
Nevertheless,
despite Crystal’s good opinion of Josh Jackson, the audience who’d been so
enthusiastic and lively during his set were clearly rather less bothered about seeing
us perform. Indeed, after Josh Jackson’s second encore when the lights came up
to his fans’ obvious disappointment, the general flow of the crowd was towards
the exit. And by the time we came on stage, there was probably only about a
third as many people in the audience as there’d been before the interval and
almost all of them were clutching bottles of beer.
It was a mix of
subdued cheers and wolf-whistles that greeted the Crystal Passion band as we
came on stage. And the latter was mostly because Crystal was dressed, as
always, in absolutely nothing and Judy with a strap-on dildo and black stickers
over the nipples of her otherwise bare breasts. The rest of us, including me, took
no such risk, although my shaved head, tee-shirt and tight denim shorts might well
have raised eyebrows in an audience more used to watching mainstream rock
bands.
Crystal made an
effort to give a performance that Josh Jackson fans might enjoy. She selected a
repertoire of those songs most likely to appeal to Rock music devotees and she
subtly changed the lyrics to refer to automobiles, side-walks and freeways
rather than cars, pavements and motorways. The audience applauded her politely,
but as the concert went on more than half of our already depleted audience
either made its way towards the bar at the back of the club or left altogether.
None of us were surprised when after the first song, a long-haired bearded guy,
dressed much the same as Josh Jackson but somewhat older, sneaked onto the
stage and whispered to Crystal in an obviously embarrassed way. This wasn’t the
first time in Crystal Passion’s history we’d had an intervention like that so
we knew exactly what instrumental riff to play while Crystal and Judy slipped
off-stage to return more modestly attired. Judy came back dressed in a short
leather skirt with a bikini top, whilst Crystal just slipped on an oversized tee-shirt
that oddly enough celebrated the Franklin Institute, Benjamin Franklin Parkway:
not that any of us had actually visited it.
This concert
was scarcely a huge success although we were politely applauded by the fifty-odd
young men and women who hung around to the end, drinking from bottles of beer
and smoking innocuous cigarettes. We didn’t earn an encore and didn’t really
expect one. Indeed, it was something of a relief to get off stage. I took on the
duty to sell copies of our CDs to the audience after the gig, but I wasn’t too
surprised to have sold only three CDs and they were all copies of Passing Passion with its artistic
portrayal of a clearly naked Crystal crouching by the Serpentine in Kensington
Gardens. That CD was almost always guaranteed to sell more copies than the other
albums whose covers showed no nudity whatsoever.
I wasn’t the
only one selling Crystal’s records. Marianne turned up to the concert just as
she’d promised and helped me sell records at the make-shift stall we set up by
the small bar just outside the concert hall. It was probably more because of
Marianne’s selling skills than mine that we managed to sell any records at all.
When the last guest had left and before she drove back to her friends in rural
Pennsylvania, Marianne chatted about her new life in California and made me
even more eager to travel there some time.
It was only as
Marianne and Crystal were saying goodbye to one another that I remembered that
I hadn’t taken my equipment off the stage. I tried to get back into the concert
hall, but the door was locked. Through its small smoked window I could see my
Roland D-50 on stage along with the rest of my gear, but I couldn’t see a way
to get to it.
“Was that your
synthesiser, honey?” asked the long-haired bearded guy who’d asked Crystal and
Judy to cover themselves up.
I nodded. “Can
you let me in to pick it up?” I asked.
“’Fraid not,”
he said regretfully. “I don’t have the keys. I think Ben’s the only guy with
keys and he usually quits as soon as he can. Anyhow, he ain’t round here no
more, I can see that. Come back tomorrow and I’m sure old Red will let you in.”
“Red?”
“Yeah, he looks
after Mary Jane’s during the day when it’s more a bar than a club. You’ll recognise
Red. He’s got red hair. That’s why he’s called Red. I reckon you can’t miss
him.”
So there wasn’t
much I could do about it. As we’d be leaving the following day to drive the 300
miles North-East to Boston, I’d have to go to the bar about midday, which was when
it opened. And that also meant I couldn’t accompany the rest of the band on
their planned tourist trip of the historic city of Philadelphia.
Unlike Judy or
Crystal who were never concerned at all about what people might think of them,
I always tried to look as inconspicuous as possible during the day in an
unfamiliar city. Especially over here in America, where I was expecting
gun-toting red-necks to be standing on every street corner, although
Philadelphia seemed to be more a city of check shirts and trainers rather than
Stetsons and Cuban heels. So, I covered my freshly shaved head with a woollen
cap and dressed in jeans and tee-shirt just like almost every other woman in
the city. I wasn’t sure whether a tee-shirt celebrating Orbital would make
sense in Pennsylvania, but at least it wouldn’t antagonise anyone.
“Yeah, Red,
that’s me,” said the ginger-haired and ginger-bearded barman at Mary Jane’s
when I approached the bar. His hair was shoulder-length and tied back, but more
prominent than the colour of his hair was the huge paunch that flopped over the
lip of the bar. “What d’you want?”
“I need to pick
up some equipment I left behind on stage last night,” I said.
“You’ve got a
weird accent, honey,” Red remarked. “You weren’t one of them English dykes we
had last night. Fucking awful they were, I’m told.”
Shit! I didn’t
want trouble. “No, not me,” I said. “I’m a friend of Josh and his band. I just
gave them a loan of my keyboards.”
“Josh Jackson!”
said Red warmly. “He’s one hell of a guy.” He glanced around the bar and
spotted another middle-aged man who was too bald to have long hair, but
compensated as best he could with a luxuriant beard. “Hey, Bob. This chick’s
looking to pick up her gear. You wanna help her?”
“Yeah sure,
Red,” Bob replied as he accepted the keys thrown at him by Red. “Come on, hon,”
he said. “Let’s pick up your electric piano. I saw it there this morning and I
thought: there’ll be someone missing it who’ll be coming round for it tomorrow.
These electric pianos ain’t cheap, are they?”
“No,” I said as
I followed Bob through the doors to the club and into the eerily empty and
echoing space inside.
“So, hon,” said
Bob while I gathered up the leads and packed away my Rolands in the cases I’d
also left behind. “You weren’t with them Limey rock chicks, were you?”
“No, not me,” I
said. “I’m a friend of Josh’s. They borrowed my…er…electric piano last night.”
“I didn’t know
Josh played piano,” said Bob. “Still, I’m glad you ain’t one of those rock
chicks. I’m told a couple of them were goddamn butt naked. Can you believe it!
Mary Jane’s is a music venue, not some kinda strip joint. There’s plenty of
them down by the Delaware if that’s what you want.”
I followed Bob
out of the venue and back to the bar where Bob returned the keys to Red.
“Hey, honey,”
said Red with a quizzical expression. “You sure you’re with Josh and the Shackamaxons?
They’ve played here plenty times and I ain’t seen no chick with them. You sure
you ain’t with this English rock group, what’s it called, Crystal Fashion? You
look like you could be.”
“Not me,” I
said. Even though I’d collected my Rolands and didn’t need to curry any more
favours, I’d dug a hole for myself and I had to stay there.
All of a sudden
there was an awful shriek. I looked around startled, half-expecting to see some
kind of wild monster.
“Fucking juke
box!” Bob exclaimed. “Always starts up too loud. And it’s some fucking heavy
metal crap some kid’s put on.”
“I don’t know
what kids get out of that horse shit,” agreed Red. “Though from what I’ve heard,
this Crystal Fashion chick band’s even worse!”