Well, most of my days are weird. Yesterday was especially so.
I was working in the studio and painting up a storm. Since The Good Man was out and about, I took the opportunity to turn on the oldies country station I like. 104.7 out of Albuquerque does an internet stream.
It’s a great station for classic country stuff. I try to spare The Good Man from my country music as much as I can. All for the sake of the marriage and things like that….
So as I painted, on the radio came Merle Haggard, and George Strait, a little Ray Price and even a stab at some Garth Brooks (the old stuff).
Well, it didn’t take but a minute, and I was vacuumed up into the Wayback Machine. I found myself struggling with heart pangs that were hard to ignore.
It doesn’t help that I’m also reading a Max Evan’s book right now. In it, he describes horses and New Mexico plains and mountains…
Well, it’s more than a girl can take.
I tried to fight off the homesick but it started to hurt deep inside.
So I called up my best friend.
“You either gotta come get me out of this wayback machine or you gotta get in here with me,” I left on her voicemail.
She called back quick. “Open the hatch, I’m coming in!” she said.
So being the kind of friend that you keep around for some twenty plus years, she talked me down and reminded me that I’m just a couple weeks from actually *being* in New Mexico again. So could I just hold out a bit?
Feeling a lot better, I hung up the phone and turned off the radio.
Then the Good Man came home and all was right in my world again.
About an hour later, I heard my iPhone buzz.
I picked it up to see that my old boss from Sandia Labs was pinging me. She is a dear friend and the best boss I’ve ever had. She told me that she and her boss (who was my first manager at Sandia and is also a good friend and a fine Aggie alum) were having drinks while out on a business trip. Their conversation had turned to stories about, well, me.
She was recounting a few of them via text messages (we had a lot of fun back in those days…the mid-90’s) and she said, “That was the best time I’ve ever had at work. We should never have let you go to the Bay Area.”
And damnit all if that sharp pang didn’t come right back to my heart.
Now I keep in touch with my former amazing Boss Lady, but we haven’t spoken a lot in the past year (other than to congratulate her on a recent marriage).
Sort of out of nowhere, on a day when I’m homesick anyway, there she was relating stories of a great time in my life back when I lived in Albuquerque.
And I seized up a little.
It was weird how all these events came together on one day.
So I talked it over with The Good Man. I told him I’m afraid of forgetting who I am and where I come from. He suggested that just that fear alone may keep it from being so.
He asked, “Do you want to move back?”
And I said, “No, because I think I’d yearn for San Francisco if I left!”
Over the weekend, we went to see a theater show, “The Tosca Project,” that was so San Francisco and the heart of North Beach that I love profoundly, that it was moving and deeply gratifying to my soul.
The thought of being far away from the soul of that City is a sad thought.
Sometimes I’m a girl caught between all the Karens that make up who I am.
I don’t have any answers. I figure I’m just going to have a very high electrical bill this month, what with all this constant use of the Wayback Machine (it’s not Energy Star rated…..)
I had a rather important work related meeting with some very high level people.
The address of this adventure was simply, One Market, San Francisco.
Now, if you are familiar at all with San Francisco (I know you are, Natalie), then you know that One Market is where the ubiquitous Market (akin to Main street in Any Town, America) meets the Embarcadero at the Ferry Building.
If you are unfamiliar with San Francisco, Market Street is a major avenue that cuts diagonally across the length of San Francisco, ending at the edge of the Bay.
Ends at the very old and beautiful Ferry Building, where, oddly enough, you can catch a ferry. The building is both a beacon and a landmark.
So this morning I put on my best suit of confidence and made my way to the City by the Bay.
I acted like I knew what I was doing the whole time. I drove in, got parked, and walked with my head held high. I heard my high heels click-clack on the polished marble floors and hoped like hell I wouldn’t slip and fall.
I rode the elevator up to the offices and pretended like I was all that ‘n then some.
Once badged up, they led me to a conference room that had a spectacular view of the Bay Bridge.
As I waited for the Vice President of this very successful and well-known company to come to the room, I wondered how this desert rat of a girl ended up here.
I hummed “Oakie from Muskogee” while I waited.
As soon as the executive entered the room, I put away all those thoughts and stopped humming.
Then I acted like a lady, a professional, a woman in command who knows exactly what she’s doing.
Weirdly, they bought it.
The ol’ fake it ’til you make it really does work sometimes.
It was a high point to my week, actually.
But for all my high steppin’ in that beautiful City, I was also glad to get in the car and drive back home.
Once home, I tucked into dinner and a glass of something nice and smiled over the rim of my glass.
I love it when I can use my Aggie ingenuity to pull one over on the big boys.
The show started with Kris. Now look, I’m not actually a big fan of Kris as a performer. His voice has always been a bit warbly to my ears. However, I do acknowledge that he is one of America’s premiere songwriters. His name is on many, many of the classics that help make up the tapestry of American music (“Me and Bobby McGee” is only scratching the surface).
So out strolled Kris with and acoustic guitar and a harmonica. Alone. And he played a healthy portion of his own catalog in one hour’s time.
Kris seemed uncomfortable and nervous, but I found his performance immensely intriguing. He laughed when he forgot the lyrics to songs he wrote himself. He rolled his eyes when he hit a bad note on his guitar. And he laughed. It was a really engaging thing to see.
At the end he thanked the crowd for their energy.
Ok, look. Kris Kristoffereson may have just won me over to his side.
Oh, lest I forget. Before Kris left the stage, he invited up a friend. A man by the name of John Prine. Now, I was not familiar with Mr. Prine, but a quick Google led me to volumes of information about the man.
Mr Prine is also a prolific songwriter and responsible for a lot of the heart of folk music. He’s also one of the writers on the song “You Never Even Call Me By My Name” made swaggeringly famous by David Allen Coe.
God, I love that song.
After Kris and John had played a tune, they invited up another friend.
Yeah, look, I’m neither hippie nor baby boomer, but I was still in awe of the talent standing there together on the stage.
It was truly unforgettable.
At the break, there were ladies crying in the restroom, sharing stories of what the music of Joan Baez and John Prine meant to them.
It was less of an emotional thing for me, and more of a “whoa…I’m so proud I got to see this.”
And then…
Oh and then…
Merle finally took the stage. I couldn’t believe it. I might have started to cry a little bit myself.
I kept saying, “I can’t believe I’m here, eight rows away from Merle Haggard!”
Ol’ Merle is 73 years old and survived the removal of a malignant tumor on his right lung a couple years ago.
So he started out a bit slow, and the voice wasn’t quite there.
But he warmed up nicely. Soon enough, he was bringing the heat to songs like “Momma Tried” and “Big City”.
Merle started out the night with “Twinkle Twinkle Lucky Star” and sailed through his own songbook, ending with “Oakie from Muskogee.”
He invited Kris, John and Joan to come up and join him for that last one.
As The Good Man and I first got to the venue and we had to navigate all the Mercedes driving, wine sipping, self-entitled looking Northern California people, I texted my best friend that it was times like this where I question why I ever moved to California.
By the end of the night, looking at four legends of American music on one stage, I remembered. Back in my growing up years in New Mexico, it was unlikely we’d get a show like that. I moved to California for the art, the music, the creativity that runs through the Bay Area.
The kind of place where Joan Baez is just sitting in the audience and is casually invited up on stage.
So ok.
I used The Good Man’s iPhone to capture about 30 seconds of video. The image is terrible but the sound is all right. This is the last 30 seconds of the show, Joan, John and Kris are gathered together at the left. Merle is in the middle.
They are all warbling and off key and Joan’s mic is too loud…and still…it’s a beautiful moment in time….
(may have to double click the box below to get it to play, click again to stop)
If you are a fan of any professional sport, major or minor in their designation, then over the course of your life, you’ve heard a LOT of renditions of the “Star-Spangled Banner”.
T’was written by Francis Scott Key and set to the tune of a drinking song. Where there is beer, oh yes, they’re playing our song!
And, may I quote from Wikipedia, “With a range of one and a half octaves, it is known for being difficult to sing.”
So much so, that large crowds will actually applaud a performer who can hit all the notes. That is a rare performer. Very rare, indeed.
In fact, over the course of my life, I’ve heard quite a few very, very bad renditions of our country’s anthem.
I’m not talking about local first grade choruses limping and wheezing through the tune or the high school marching bands galumphing and cymbaling their way along.
No, no I find those charming, actually.
What get’s me are the hand waving, trilling, note runs that many people (especially young ladies) try to throw in there to make you *think* they are hitting the notes, when they are, in fact, not.
I once heard a man at AT&T Park with a deep baritone voice who sang the song and dropped the highest notes of the tune down half an octave, and it sounded fine. Lovely, in fact, and we didn’t have to watch him struggle to hit impossible notes.
I find it’s the people who go easy with it and don’t try too hard that make it through all the ups and downs of the Star Spangled the best.
This past Sunday, just when it appeared the SF Giants vs Oakland A’s game was due to start, The Good Man and I saw a vision in pink descend the steps to the field and enter the grassy area, bowing low to allow her very tall Glinda the Good Witch crown to clear the gate.
BBB is a long running San Francisco musical stage show. Bawdy and very vaudeville in nature, they tend to make fun of current events.
They are also known for their top-notch performers, so I figured this was going to be fun.
On this day, we were treated to a lady by the name of Misa Malone, a recent addition to the BBB cast, and she was out in full Good Witch regalia.
You know, it’s awfully hard to ignore a lovely woman in a huge fluffy pink dress and a bouffant pink wig. It was even harder to ignore Ms Malone who took her time with the Star Spangled and used her immense vocal power to master that difficult song from the first note.
I admired how she used her breath, taking in air in places amateur singers tend to over look, taking air wisely to get power to her pipes in time to hit those high notes.
And hit them, she did, which earned wild cheers and applause from the crowd.
I have to say, not only did she sing the you-know-what out of that very difficult song, she also *owned* that crowd of almost forty thousand people.
We were all paying rapt attention to every note, every syllable, every gorgeous smile she handed out like candy.
THAT is a true performer.
Wouldn’t you love to have the power to command a room, much less a stadium, like that…just once?
I sure would.
____________________
Had I managed to have a memory card in my camera (see yesterday’s post) I would have provided an awesome photograph of Ms Malone at the park.
Instead, you get a photo of Prince Charles looking very awkward with the BBB cast. To the far right is not Ms Malone, but it IS the costume she wore on Sunday.
Yup, that is the motto to which all those two-finger-holder-upper kids with the yellow kerchief around their necks swear to every chance they get.
Ah yes, be prepared. Think ahead. Plan your next move. Expect the worst and all that.
Sometimes, as the grown up I’ve become, I’m quite prepared. Oh I’m thinking about “what’s the worst that could happen and how will I take my bacon back outta the fire when it does.”
And then there are the days where the gas tank light is on and the needle quivers over the E and I forgot the tickets for the event I’m attending and I can’t put my shoes on the correct feet.
So which was it on Sunday? You see, by the good grace of the baseball gods, I had some of the best seats in the major league stadium where I like to watch my favorite baseball team play. On this day of interleague play, my Giants are facing their across the Bay rivals.
Off we go! We get to the park and plop into our seats that are THISCLOSE to the field and oooh, there’s the players almost close enough to touch and what a beautiful day and rock ooooon!
So the game is starting, and what do I do?
Well, I’m a burgeoning photographer! I pull out my carefully packed camera and my 75-300 lens that will get me RIGHT in the middle of the action!
Yes! I even remembered to charge my battery! And the spare battery too!
This is gonna be so great! I’m going to wow the world with these shots! I will win awards! There will be accolades! I will get my invite to be an AP photographer with open access to the camera well on the field.
I am a rock star!!!
And so I begin to snap some photos, looking to take light levels and see about making adjustments for this bright sunlight.
Click goes the shutter.
And click once more.
Then I hit that little play button to review the shots.
And the camera says on its pretty little LCD screen:
No CF card,
NO CF CARD?!?!?!? What the seventeen kinds of sam hell does this damn camera mean no cf card?
And then I remember…
I left the memory card on my desk at home.
I was feeling sooooo Captain Prepared that I was going to do a full clean off of the memory card, reformat and be ready for the game.
Except I forgot to do that with all my attention on all the other careful pre-game preparations.
Uh. Whoops.
So you see, here’s that amazing shot of Aubrey Huff at the plate right before he hit that first homerun:
Oh wait…
And that amazing shot of Pablo Sandoval taking a walk:
Yeah, no.
And that fabulous look of concentration while Andres Torres runs like a cheetah around the bases!