1:12 A.M.—I’m in a motel room. It’s a rundown motel with a queen bed that’s about as soft as industrial plywood.
The place smells like mildew. I found a cockroach under my pillow. I named it Bill. I told Bill to get out of my bed and sleep in the bathroom.
The whole world is asleep. I am eating a tuna salad sandwich, watching a holiday special on TV.
I just got in from playing music. I haven’t played with my buddies in awhile, and I didn’t realize how much I missed the old band.
Lately, I have been writing and traveling so much I haven’t gotten to see them. But it all came back to me tonight.
The joint was like every waterhole you’ve ever visited. Neon signs, graffiti in the men’s bathroom, good burgers, a bartender who calls everyone “pal.”
The patrons in this glorified shack were salt-of-the-earth people. They were shouting over each other, laughing, eating. The characters were all the same, but with different
names.
The manager: perpetually mad at the world.
The waitress: tired.
The loud man at the bar: a traveling sales rep.
The musician: refers to everyone as “man.” Even women and innocent children.
I sort of grew up in places like this. These are my people. I was eighteen when I started playing music for a living. In my daytime hours, I would work construction. At nighttime, I would play in spots like this.
On Sundays I would play at church.
The first night I ever played in an actual beer joint was for a Christmas party. I was nervous. People were smoking cigarettes, wearing holiday hats. There were bouncers at the doors. Folks were dancing, holding their belt buckles.
I was raised as a dyed-in-the-wool Baptist. The only dancing I’d ever seen was in a Gene Kelly movie—my mother…