“Get in, partner!” said my old man. “We’re late.”
My father was seated behind the wheel of a 1977 F-100. He was dressed in work clothes. Denim. Muddy boots. My father was building the GM plant. He had raccoon eyes from wearing welding goggles, and he smelled worse than a chicken plant burning down.
My father and I piled into the Ford. We drove across Nashville. Whereupon Daddy immediately stopped at Dairy Queen to buy ice cream.
My father was fanatical about his ice cream. In fact—this is true—on weekends when my mother was out of town, my father would eat three square meals of ice cream.
The lady behind the Dairy Queen counter handed us two chocolate dipped cones and an order of fries. We ate them while speeding through Davidson County traffic at dusk.
When we arrived at Opryland. The place was about as big as a subtropical continent. Opryland is home of “The Grand Ole Opry.” It is America’s country-music theme park.
Think: Disneyland with cheating songs.
People filtered into the auditorium to see the Opry.
Families. Kids. Winnebagos with gaggles of Midwestern tourists. Guys wearing cowboy hats. People in gaudy T-shirts. The smell of hotdogs and peanuts was in the air. It was like a baseball game, but with fiddles.
“Well, here we are,” said my father.
I was so excited I almost peed my Levi’s. I was wearing an oversized cowboy hat.
My father slapped my shoulder. “You practice your guitar hard enough, one day you’ll be up there on that stage.”
We found a seat. I watched the show with slack-jawed wonder. Because I’ve always been attracted to music. My music obsession began when I was 3, I watched my aunt play “Lo How a Rose ‘Er Blooming” on the piano.
It changed my life.
You don’t choose to play music, music chooses you. It’s an affliction. A problem. An obsession. A compulsion.
I’ve…
