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September 14, 2001, Friday night,
Blanco's Bar & Grill, Houston, Texas, USA. Three and half
days after the World Trade Center catastrophe which sent the
world's most powerful nation reeling, it was Max Stalling's luck
to have an engagement booked in Houston, 200 miles from his home
in Dallas. He probably could have cancelled, but that's not
the way Max Stalling operates.
Max and the band were working on a sound system problem when
my wife and I, absolutely determined to shut off the television
and make some attempt at normality, arrived about 8:00 o'clock.
They had been tinkering with it a while and just couldn't seem
to find the problem. Seeing my wife and I, Max stepped around
the sound board and extended that massive hand of his.
"Thanks for coming out. It's good to see y'all."
We exchanged the usual pleasantries, everyone avoiding The Subject
that hung in the air like the consarned Houston humidity. There
was no reason to talk about it. Hell, there was nothing to say
that hadn't been said.
The crowd was as sparse as I had ever seen it on a night when
an act of Stalling's quality was on the bill and I told Stalling
I had been wondering on the drive down how many people would
feel like getting out and getting away from reality. Bands work
for the door at Blanco's, so if no one shows the payday can be
dreadfully thin.
"Maybe folks just aren't ready to get out yet,"
Stalling said. "But it's early, we'll see." Still,
there were empty tables in a bar where there are never empty
tables, so it didn't look encouraging.
The sound man finally located a switch on the equalizer that
was in wrong position and Stalling's guitar strum came through
the PA loud and clear. Everyone looked relieved. Stalling tested
his microphone and there was feedback. More wrinkled brows and
knob twisting, more "Test, test, test," more feedback.
The sound engineer went to the stage and tinkered. He decided
to switch out Stalling's microphone with the drummer's.
"Test, test, test." Perfect. With a fill-in bass
player and a new guitarist, the band ran through a sound check
number while the sound engineer tinkered with the levels and
tones. The guitar player switched over to his electric guitar
and the band strummed through another test. All systems were
finally "go," but the band seemed lethargic and less
than inspired. Stalling grabbed a bag of meals from the waitress
and the band left to change clothes at the nearby Days Inn.
We sat drinking with the sound engineer and Stalling's brother,
Jim, who lives outside Houston and had driven down to see the
show and to handle Stalling's merchandise table. He commented
on how few people were showing up. We took a quick count and
there were only about 40 people in the bar and it was after 9:00.
When the band took the stage at 9:30, the crowd had grown
to around 60. Eight of the new guitarist's relatives had come
in to see the show and they grabbed a table at the edge of the
dance floor. There is a regular crowd that shows up at Blanco's
virtually every Thursday and Friday night, and I began to notice
a few of the regulars filtering in.
After a tragedy like we've all just experienced, you wonder
what an artist can do, what song he can sing that will seem appropriate
after such a tragedy. There is a chance of seeming frivolous
or, even worse, flippant or completely insignificant. I've known
Max Stalling a while and if there is an artist who is a smart,
deep, sensitive level-headed guy, it's Max. I felt sure he was
up to the challenge, but I wondered how he'd handle it given
the unusual events of the week and the super-charged atmosphere
througout the country.
When they took the stage, a subdued-looking Stalling didn't
make any introduction or say anything, he just looked around
at his band, counted off the first song, and began. And I knew
it was going to be alright. I looked at my wife and saw that
she knew it too.
Every once in a while I do drift homewards
Sometimes I drive, sometimes I just dream
400 miles in 6 hard pushing hours
To check on a life that is just out of reach
There was no whooping and yee-hawing like there might have
been on another night under different circumstances. But looking
around, I noticed most folks were quietly paying attention, taking
their emotional cues from Stalling. The band swung into the
Mexican-inflected chorus.
I like the sound of a Mexican bass run
I like the feel that it puts in my bones
Sometimes I wonder how I ever got here
I'm just trying to get home
Blanco's is a two-steppers bar if it is anything, that little
15 foot hardwood square as much an attraction as the great Texas
bands that inhabit the tiny stage for a few hours before moving
on to the next town, the next gig. But it was the third song
before one couple decided to step out and be first. Another
couple quickly moved onto the floor to lend support.
Trying to live up to the words that some old writer felt
Spend your youth before you die and don't outlive yourself
But, Lord, that gets expensive on troubadours and minstrels
It's the price of a life of travelin' light
It happened slowly, almost accretively, but by the time the
first set ended, the little bar was actually starting to fill
up. The band took a break and Stalling wandered through the
crowd, shaking hands, talking, making himself accessible. Two
old buddies from his high school football days in Crystal City
had shown up, and he spent a lingering moment with them.
Stalling knew he would eventually have to say something about
The Subject. I thought he handled it with his usual high-mindedness,
down-to-earth simplicity, common folks decency and class.
"Folks, we all know what happened this week. I'm sorry
we don't have any patriotic songs to play, but we just don't.
But I hope you all notice that it took some coordination for
us to be wearing red, white and blue tonight." Indeed,
the guitarist had worn a white cowboy shirt with pearl snaps,
the drummer wore a red polo shirt, and Stalling was clad in navy
blue. The crowd let out a yell.
"Since I don't have a patriotic song ready for you tonight,
I thought the best thing we could do would be to sing one about
home." And he counted off.
I'd rather be in Crystal City with H.R. drinkin' coffee
Down at Bee's Golden Bull, absorbing what he offers me
By the time the band worked its way around to the danceable
"Polka Ranch," which brought a dozen couples to the
dance floor, there was a feeling that despite Osama bin Laden,
despite the Taliban, despite Saddam Hussein life would go on,
that Americans would get back to the business of living and being
who they are. For those who were in attendance at Blanco's Friday
night, it was a piece of the recovery process, an attempt to
quietly demonstrate to the terrorists who may have changed our
lives and our society forever that we are Texans and we Texans
gather in little bars on Friday nights to dance and to listen
to the fine art of gifted people like Max Stalling, to live our
version of the good life. I can't think of another artist who
is more capable of helping us to return to normal.
Good dogs of Dime Box, thanks for your understanding
You know I wouldn't hurt a flea
Your good natured disposition, your kind hearted intuition
Wish that you could talk to her for me
When a man goes drive-about he's got some things to figure
out
And he takes it all out on the blue and wide
And he prays to God and Chevy to lighten up a load that's heavy
Help him understand the how and why
Thanks from all of us, Max.
Visit Max Stalling's site at www.maxstalling.com
Contact William Michael Smith at: wms-at-rockzilla.net
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